FORUM FUNDS
485APOS, 2000-10-17
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    As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on October 17, 2000

                         File Nos. 2-67052 and 811-3023

                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                              WASHINGTON, DC 20549

                                    FORM N-1A

                        REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE
                             SECURITIES ACT OF 1933

                         Post-Effective Amendment No. 84

                                       AND

                        REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE
                         INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940

                                Amendment No. 86

                                   FORUM FUNDS
                         (Formerly "Forum Funds, Inc.")

                               Two Portland Square
                              Portland, Maine 04101
                                 (207) 879-1900

                              Leslie K. Klenk, Esq.
                            Forum Fund Services, LLC
                               Two Portland Square
                              Portland, Maine 04101

                                   Copies to:

                            Anthony C.J. Nuland, Esq.
                               Seward & Kissel LLP
                               1200 G Street, N.W.
                             Washington, D.C. 20005

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

It is proposed that this filing become effective:


[ ]     immediately  upon  filing  pursuant  to  Rule  485,  paragraph  (b)
[ ]     on __________________ pursuant  to Rule 485,  paragraph  (b) 60 days
[ ]     after filing  pursuant  to Rule 485,  paragraph  (a)(1)
[ ]     on _________________ pursuant to Rule 485, paragraph (a)(1)
[X]     75 days after filing pursuant to Rule 485,  paragraph  (a)(2)
[ ]     on _________________ pursuant to Rule 485, paragraph (a)(2)

[ ]     this post-effective amendment designates a new effective date for a
        previously filed post-effective amendment.


Title of Securities Being Registered: Shares of BrownIA Maryland Bond Fund.

<PAGE>

                                        1

                                   PROSPECTUS

                           _____________________, 2000

                           BROWNIA MARYLAND BOND FUND

            The Fund seeks a high level of current income exempt from
              both Federal and Maryland State income taxes without
             assuming undue risk by investing primarily in municipal
                                   securities.

                  You may purchase Fund shares without a sales
                   charge. The Fund does not incur Rule 12b-1
                              (distribution) fees.

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

                 The Securities and Exchange Commission has not
                    approved or disapproved the Fund's shares
                    or determined whether this Prospectus is
                              accurate or complete.
            Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.


<PAGE>


TABLE OF CONTENTS

RISK/RETURN SUMMARY                                             3

PERFORMANCE                                                     4

FEE TABLE                                                       5

INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE, PRINCIPAL INVESTMENT STRATEGIES
AND PRINCIPAL RISKS                                             6

MANAGEMENT                                                      9

YOUR ACCOUNT                                                    11

         How to Contact the Fund                                11
         General Information                                    11
         Buying Shares                                          12
         Selling Shares                                         17
         Exchange Privileges                                    19

OTHER INFORMATION                                               20

FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS                                            21


<PAGE>



RISK/RETURN SUMMARY
<TABLE>
                <S>                                                             <C>
CONCEPTS TO UNDERSTAND               INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE

DEBT SECURITY means a security       BrownIA Maryland Bond Fund (the "Fund") seeks high current income exempt from
such as a bond or note that          both Federal and Maryland state income taxes.
obligates the issuer to pay the
security owner a specified sum of    PRINCIPAL INVESTMENT STRATEGIES
money (interest) at set intervals
as well as to repay the principal    The Fund invests primarily in investment grade Maryland municipal securities,
amount of the security at its        municipal securities issued by U.S. territories and possessions, and U.S.
maturity.                            Government securities.  Generally, the weighted average maturity of the Fund's
                                     portfolio securities is between 5 and 10 years.
MATURITY means the date on which a
debt security is (or may be) due     PRINCIPAL RISKS OF INVESTING IN THE FUND
and payable.
                                     An investment in the Fund is not a deposit of a bank and is not insured or
BOND means a debt security with a    guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or any other government
long-term maturity, usually 5        agency.  You could lose money on your investment in the Fund or the Fund could
years or longer.                     underperform other investments. The principal risks of an investment in the
                                     Fund include:
NOTE means a debt security with a
short-term maturity, usually less    o       The Fund's share price, yield, and total return will fluctuate in
than 1 year.                                 response to price movements in the debt securities markets
                                     o       The value of most debt securities fall when interest rates rise; the
NRSRO means a "nationally                    longer a debt  security's  maturity and the lower its credit quality, the
recognized statistical rating                more its value typically falls in response to an increase in interest
organization,"  such as Standard &           rates
Poor's,  that rates debt  securities o       The Fund  cannot  collect  interest and principal  payments on a debt
by relative  credit  risk.                   security if the issuer defaults
                                     o       Issuers may prepay fixed rate securities when interest rates fall,
INVESTMENT GRADE SECURITY means a            forcing the Fund to invest in securities with lower interest rates
debt security rated in one of the    o       The Fund is non-diversified. The Fund may focus its investments in the
four highest long-term or two                securities of a comparatively small number of issuers. Concentration of
highest short-term ratings                   the Fund in securities of a limited number of issuers exposes it to
categories by an NRSRO or unrated            greater market risk and potential monetary losses than if its assets
and determined to be of comparable           were diversified among the securities of a greater number of issuers
quality by the Fund's Adviser at     o       Economic and political changes in Maryland may have a greater effect
the time of purchase.                        on the Fund than if the Fund invested in municipal securities of
                                             various states
MUNICIPAL SECURITY means a debt      o       The Fund's investment adviser (the "Adviser") may make poor investment
security issued by or on behalf of           decisions
a state, its local governments and
public financing authorities, and
by U.S. territories and
possessions.
</TABLE>

                                       3
<PAGE>

WHO MAY WANT TO INVEST IN THE FUND

The Fund may be appropriate for you if you:
     o    A Maryland resident
     o    Are an  income-oriented  investor  in a high tax  bracket  and  desire
          tax-exempt income
     o    Seek income and more price  stability than stocks offer o Seek capital
          preservation
     o    Are pursuing a long-term goal

The Fund may not be appropriate for you if you:
     o    Are not a Maryland resident
     o    Are pursuing a short-term goal or are investing emergency reserves
     o    Are investing funds in a tax-deferred  or tax-exempt  account (such as
          an IRA)
     o    Do not desire tax-exempt income

PERFORMANCE

Performance  information  is not  provided  because  the Fund had not  commenced
operations prior to the date of this Prospectus.







                                       4
<PAGE>

FEE TABLE

The following tables describe the various fees and expenses that you will pay if
you  invest in the  Fund.  Shareholder  fees are  charges  you pay when  buying,
selling, or exchanging shares of a Fund. Operating expenses,  which include fees
of the Adviser, are paid out of a Fund's assets and are factored into the Fund's
share price rather than charged directly to shareholder accounts.

SHAREHOLDER FEES (FEES PAID DIRECTLY FROM YOUR INVESTMENT)
    Maximum Sales Charge (Load) Imposed on Purchases (as a percentage of
    the offering price)                                                     None
    Maximum Sales Charge (Load) Imposed on Reinvested Distributions         None
    Maximum Deferred Sales Charge (Load)                                    None
    Redemption Fee                                                          None
    Exchange Fee                                                            None

ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES
(EXPENSES THAT ARE DEDUCTED FROM FUND ASSETS)
     Management Fees                                                       0.50%
     Distribution (12b-1) Fees                                              None
     Other Expenses                                                        0.60%
     TOTAL ANNUAL FUND OPERATING EXPENSES(1)                               1.10%
     Fee Waiver and Expense Reimbursement(2)                               0.50%
     Net Expenses                                                          0.60%

(1) Based on estimated amounts for the Fund's fiscal year ending May 31, 2001.

(2) Based on certain contractual fee waivers and expense reimbursements that may
change after September 30, 2000.

EXAMPLE

The following is a hypothetical example intended to help you compare the cost of
investing  in the Fund to the cost of  investing  in other  mutual  funds.  This
example  assumes  that you  invest  $10,000  in the  Fund  for the time  periods
indicated,  you pay the maximum  sales charge and then redeem all of your shares
at the end of each period.  The example also assumes that your  investment has a
5% annual return,  that the Fund's  operating  expenses  remain as stated in the
above table and that  distributions  are reinvested.  Although your actual costs
may be higher or lower, based on these assumptions your costs would be:

 1 YEAR             3 YEARS                5 YEARS                   10 YEARS
 $62                  $350                  $606                       $1,340


                                       5
<PAGE>

INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE, PRINCIPAL INVESTMENT STRATEGIES
AND PRINCIPAL RISKS
<TABLE>
           <S>                                                  <C>
CONCEPTS TO UNDERSTAND        INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE

YIELD  CURVE  means a graph   The Fund  seeks to  provide a high  level of current income  exempt from both Federal and
that plots the yield of all   Maryland  State income.
bonds of  similar  quality
against  the bonds'           INVESTMENT  STRATEGIES
maturities.
                              THE ADVISER'S PROCESS  The Adviser continuously monitors economic factors such as
PRIVATE ACTIVITY BOND means   interest rate outlooks and technical factors such as the shape of the yield curve in
a bond that is issued by or   combination with the stated objective of the Fund to determine an appropriate maturity
on behalf of public           profile for the Fund's investment portfolio.  The Adviser then principally searches for
authorities to finance        securities that satisfy the maturity profile of the Fund and that provide the greatest
privately operated            potential return relative to the risk of the security.  The Adviser may sell a debt
facilities.  Private          security if:
Activity Bonds are
primarily revenue             o    Revised economic forecasts or interest rate outlook requires a repositioning
securities.                        of the portfolio
                              o    The security subsequently fails to meet the Adviser's investment criteria
GENERAL OBLIGATION  SECURITY  o    A more attractive  security is found or funds are needed for another  purpose
means a security  whose       o    The Adviser  believes that the  security  has reached its  appreciation  potential
principal  and interest
payments  are secured by a    INVESTMENT  POLICIES  The Fund  invests  primarily in investment grade Maryland  municipal
municipality's  full  faith   securities, municipal  securities  issued by U.S.  territories or possessions,  and U.S.
and credit and taxing  power. Government  securities.  The Fund may also  invest inmunicipal securities issued by
                              other states.  Normally, the Fund will invest at least 80% of the Fund's total assets
REVENUE SECURITY means a      in securities the interest of which are exempt from Federal and Maryland State income
security whose principal      taxes.
and interest generally are
payable from revenues of a    Municipal securities include municipal bonds, notes, and leases.  Municipal leases are
particular facility, class    securities that permit government issuers to acquire property and equipment without the
of facilities or from the     security being subject to constitutional and statutory requirements for the issuance of
proceeds of a special         long-term debt securities.  The Fund invests in general obligation securities and
excise or other tax.          revenue securities,  including private activity bonds.  Generally, the average weighted
                              maturity of the Fund's portfolio securities is between 5 and 10 years.
</TABLE>



                                       6
<PAGE>

TEMPORARY DEFENSIVE MEASURES In order to respond to adverse market,  economic or
other conditions,  the Fund may assume a temporary defensive position and invest
without  limit in cash and prime  quality cash  equivalents  such as  commercial
paper  and money  market  instruments.  As a  result,  the Fund may be unable to
achieve its investment objective.

INVESTMENT RISKS

GENERAL The Fund's net asset value and total  return will  fluctuate  based upon
changes in the value of its portfolio securities. The market value of securities
in which the Fund invests is based upon the market's  perception of value and is
not  necessarily  an objective  measure of the  securities'  value.  There is no
assurance that the Fund will achieve its investment objective.  An investment in
the Fund is not by itself a complete or balanced investment program.

The value of your  investment  in the Fund may change in  response to changes in
interest  rates.  An increase in interest rates  typically  causes a fall in the
value of the  securities in which the Fund invests.  An additional  risk is that
issuers may prepay fixed rate securities  when interest rates fall,  forcing the
Fund to invest in securities with lower interest rates.

Your  investment  in the Fund is also  subject  to the risk  that the  financial
condition of an issuer of a security held by the Fund may cause it to default or
become  unable to pay  interest  or  principal  due on the  security.  This risk
generally increases as security credit ratings fall.

Your  investment  in the Fund is subject to the risk that the  Adviser  may make
poor investment decisions.

The  Fund is  non-diversified.  The Fund may  focus a larger  percentage  of its
assets  in the  securities  of  fewer  issuers.  Concentration  of the  Fund  in
securities of a limited number of issuers  exposes it to greater market risk and
potential  monetary  losses  than  if its  assets  were  diversified  among  the
securities of a greater number of issuers.

SPECIFIC RISKS INVOLVING  MARYLAND  MUNICIPAL  SECURITIES  Economic or political
factors  in  Maryland  may  adversely  affect  issuers  of  Maryland   municipal
securities.  Adverse  economic or  political  factors will affect the Fund's net
asset  value  more  than if the Fund  invested  in more  geographically  diverse
investments.  As a result,  the value of the Fund's  assets may  fluctuate  more
widely than the value of shares of a fund investing in securities  relating to a
number of different states.

The  following  is a  summary  of  the  NRSRO  ratings  for  Maryland  municipal
securities. As of ______, 2000, Maryland general obligation bonds were rated Aaa
by Moody's  Investor  Services and AAA by Standard & Poor's and Fitch IBCA, Inc.
There  can  be no  assurance  that  Maryland  general  obligation  bonds  or the
securities of any Maryland political


                                       7
<PAGE>

subdivision,  authority  or  corporation  owned by the Fund will be rated in any
category or will not be downgraded by an NRSRO.  Further information  concerning
the State of Maryland is contained in the Statement of Additional Information.






                                       8
<PAGE>


MANAGEMENT

The Fund is a series of Forum  Funds  (the  "Trust"),  an  open-end,  management
investment  company (mutual fund).  The business of the Trust and of the Fund is
managed under the direction of the Board of Trustees  (the  "Board").  The Board
formulates the general policies of the Fund and meets periodically to review the
Fund's  performance,  monitor investment  activities and practices,  and discuss
other matters affecting the Fund. Additional information regarding the Board, as
well as the Trust's executive officers, may be found in the SAI.

THE ADVISER

The Fund's  Adviser is Brown  Advisory  Inc.,  Furness  House,  19 South Street,
Baltimore,  Maryland  21202.  The Adviser is a fully owned  subsidiary  of Brown
Investment Advisory & Trust Company, a trust company operating under the laws of
Maryland.  Brown Investment Advisory & Trust Company is a fully owned subsidiary
of Brown Capital Holdings Incorporated, a holding company incorporated under the
laws of Maryland in 1998.  Prior,  to 1998,  Brown  Investment  Advisory & Trust
Company operated as a subsidiary of Alex Brown Capital Advisory & Trust Company.

Subject to the  general  control  of the Board,  the  Adviser  makes  investment
decisions  for the Fund.  The Adviser  receives an advisory fee of 0.50% of the
average daily net assets of the Fund.

As of ____________,  2000, the Adviser and its affiliates had approximately $___
billion of assets under management.

A committee of investment  professionals makes all investment  decisions for the
Fund and no other person is primarily responsible for making  recommendations to
that committee.

OTHER SERVICE PROVIDERS

Forum Financial  Group,  LLC and its affiliates  (collectively  "Forum") provide
services to the Fund. As of _________,  2000, Forum provided  administration and
distribution  services to investment  companies and collective  investment funds
with assets of approximately $____ billion.

Forum Fund Services, LLC, a registered  broker-dealer and member of the National
Association  of  Securities  Dealers,   Inc.,  is  the  distributor   (principal
underwriter) of the Fund's shares. The distributor acts as the representative of
the Trust in connection with the offering of the Fund's shares.  The distributor
may enter  into  arrangements  with  banks,  broker-dealers  or other  financial
institutions  through which  investors may purchase or redeem shares and may, at
its own expense,  compensate persons who provide services in connection with the
sale or expected sale of the Fund's shares.

                                       9
<PAGE>

Forum Administrative Services, LLC provides administrative services to the Fund,
Forum Accounting Services, LLC is the Fund's fund accountant,  Forum Shareholder
Services,  LLC ("Transfer Agent") is the Fund's transfer agent, and Forum Trust,
LLC is the Fund's custodian.

FUND EXPENSES

The Fund pays for all of its expenses.  The Fund's expenses are comprised of its
own expenses as well as Trust expenses that are allocated among the Fund and the
other funds of the Trust.  The Adviser or other service  providers may waive all
or any portion of their fees and/or reimburse  certain expenses of the Fund. Any
waiver or expense reimbursement  increases the Fund's performance for the period
during which the waiver or reimbursement is in effect and may not be recouped at
a later date.

Certain  service  providers  have  undertaken  to waive a portion  of their fees
and/or to  reimburse  certain  expenses  in order to limit the  Fund's  expenses
(excluding taxes,  interest,  portfolio  transaction  expenses and extraordinary
expenses) to 0.60% or less of the average daily net assets of the Fund. Waivers
may be reduced or eliminated at any time.







                                       10
<PAGE>

YOUR ACCOUNT

HOW TO CONTACT THE FUND             GENERAL INFORMATION
<TABLE>
                <S>                                                     <C>
WRITE TO US AT:                     You may purchase or sell (redeem) shares at the net asset value of a share (NAV)
  BrownIA Funds                     next calculated after the Transfer Agent receives your request in proper form.
  P.O. Box 446                      For instance, if the Transfer Agent receives your purchase request in proper
  Portland, Maine 04112             form after 4:00 p.m., Eastern time, your transaction will be priced at the next
                                    business day's NAV.  The Fund cannot accept orders that request a particular day
OVERNIGHT ADDRESS:                  or price for the transaction or any other special conditions.
  BrownIA Funds
  Two Portland Square               The Fund does not issue share certificates.
  Portland, Maine 04101
                                    If you purchase shares directly from the Fund, you will receive monthly
TELEPHONE US AT:                    statements and a confirmation of each transaction.  You should verify the
  (800) 540-6807 (toll free) or     accuracy of all transactions in your account as soon as you receive your
  (207) 879-0001                    confirmations.

WIRE INVESTMENTS                    The Fund reserves the right to waive minimum investment amounts and may
(OR ACH PAYMENTS)                   temporarily suspend (during unusual market conditions) or discontinue any
TO US AT:                           service or privilege.
  Bankers Trust Company
  New York, New York                WHEN AND HOW NAV IS DETERMINED The Fund  calculates its NAV as of the close of
  ABA #021001033                    the New York Stock Exchange  (normally 4:00 p.m., Eastern time) on each weekday
                                    except days when the New York Stock Exchange is closed.  The time at which NAV
  FOR CREDIT TO:                    is calculated  may change in case of an  emergency.  The Fund's NAV is determined
  Forum Shareholder Services, LLC   by taking the market value of all  securities owned by the Fund (plus all other
  Account # 01-465-547              assets such as cash), subtracting liabilities and then  dividing the result (net
  BrownIA  Maryland Bond Fund       assets) by the number of shares outstanding. The Fund values securities for
  (Your Name)                       which market quotations are readily available at current market value. If
  (Your Account Number)             market  quotations are not readily available, the Fund values securities at fair
                                    value pursuant to procedures adopted by the Board.
</TABLE>



                                       11
<PAGE>

TRANSACTIONS  THROUGH  THIRD  PARTIES  If you  invest  through a broker or other
financial institution,  the policies and fees (other than sales charges) charged
by  that  institution  may  be  different  than  those  of the  Fund.  Financial
institutions  may  charge   transaction  fees  and  may  set  different  minimum
investments or limitations on buying or selling shares.  These  institutions may
also  provide you with certain  shareholder  services  such as periodic  account
statements and trade confirmations summarizing your investment activity. Consult
a representative of your financial institution for more information.

BUYING SHARES

HOW TO MAKE PAYMENTS  All investments must be in U.S. dollars and checks must be
drawn on U.S. banks.

CHECKS For individual,  sole  proprietorship,  joint, Uniform Gift to Minors Act
("UGMA") or Uniform Transfers to Minors Act ("UTMA") accounts, the check must be
made  payable  to "Forum  Funds" or to one or more  owners  of the  account  and
endorsed  to "Forum  Funds."  For all  other  accounts,  the check  must be made
payable  on its face to  "Forum  Funds."  No other  method of check  payment  is
acceptable (for instance, you may not pay by traveler's check).

PURCHASES  BY  AUTOMATED  CLEARING  HOUSE  ("ACH")  This  service  allows you to
purchase  shares  through an  electronic  transfer  of money from a checking  or
savings account.  When you make a payment by telephone,  the Transfer Agent will
automatically  debit your  pre-designated  bank account for the desired  amount.
Your financial  institution may charge you a fee for this service.  You may call
(800) 94FORUM or (800) 943-6786 to request an ACH transaction.

WIRES Instruct your  financial  institution to make a Federal Funds wire payment
to us. Your financial institution may charge you a fee for this service.

MINIMUM  INVESTMENTS  The Fund  accepts  investments  in the  following  minimum
amounts:
<TABLE>
                        <S>                          <C>                          <C>
                                                MINIMUM INITIAL      MINIMUM ADDITIONAL INVESTMENT
                                                  INVESTMENT
Standard Accounts                                   $5,000                        $100
Accounts With Systematic Investment Plans           $2,000                        $100
</TABLE>



                                       12
<PAGE>

ACCOUNT REQUIREMENTS
<TABLE>
                        <S>                                                             <C>
                      TYPE OF ACCOUNT                                              REQUIREMENT

INDIVIDUAL, SOLE PROPRIETORSHIP AND JOINT ACCOUNTS           o   Instructions must be signed by all persons
Individual accounts are owned by one person, as are sole         required to sign exactly as their names appear on
proprietorship accounts. Joint accounts have two or more         the account
owners  (tenants)
GIFTS OR  TRANSFERS  TO A MINOR (UGMA,  UTMA)                o   Depending  on  state  laws,  you  can set up a
These  custodial accounts  provide a way to give money to a      custodial account under the UGMA or the UTMA
child and obtain tax benefits                                o   The custodian must sign instructions in a
                                                                  manner indicating custodial capacity
BUSINESS ENTITIES                                            o    Submit a Corporate/Organization Resolution
                                                                  form or similar document
TRUSTS                                                       o    The trust must be established before an
                                                                  account can be opened
                                                             o    Provide a certified trust document, or the
                                                                  pages from the trust document, that identify the
                                                                  trustees






                                       13
<PAGE>

INVESTMENT PROCEDURES

                  HOW TO OPEN AN ACCOUNT                                HOW TO ADD TO YOUR  ACCOUNT
BY CHECK                                                      BY CHECK
o    Call or write us for an account application (and         o    Fill  out an investment slip from a
     Corporate/Organization Resolution form if applicable)         confirmation or write us a letter
o    Complete  the  application  (and  resolution  form)      o    Write  your account number on your check
o    Mail us your  application (and resolution form)          o    Mail us the slip (or your letter) and the check
     and a check
BY WIRE                                                      BY WIRE
o    Call or write us for an  account  application  (and      o    Call to  notify us of your incoming wire
     Corporate/Organization  Resolution form if applicable)   o    Instruct your bank to wire your money to us
o    Complete the application (and resolution form)
o    Call us to fax the completed application (and
     resolution form) and we will assign you an account
     number
o    Mail us your original application (and resolution
     form)
o    Instruct your bank to wire your money to us


                                       14
<PAGE>

BY ACH PAYMENT                                               BY SYSTEMATIC INVESTMENT

o    Call or write us for an account application (and          o    Complete the systematic investment section of
     Corporate/Organization Resolution form if applicable)          the application
o    Complete the application (and resolution form)            o    Attach a voided check to your application
o    Call us to fax the completed application (and             o    Mail us the completed application and voided
     resolution form) and we will assign you an account             check
     number

o    Mail us your original application (and resolution
     form)
o    Make an ACH payment
</TABLE>



                                       15
<PAGE>

SYSTEMATIC  INVESTMENTS  You may invest a specified  amount of money in the Fund
once or twice a month on  specified  dates.  These  payments are taken from your
bank account by ACH payment. Systematic investments must be for at least $100.

LIMITATIONS  ON  PURCHASES  The Fund  reserves  the right to refuse any purchase
(including exchange) request,  particularly requests that could adversely affect
the Fund or its  operations.  This includes  those from any  individual or group
who, in the Fund's view, is likely to engage in excessive trading (including two
or more  substantial  redemptions  or  exchanges  out of the  Fund  followed  by
substantial repurchases into the Fund within a calendar year).

CANCELED OR FAILED  PAYMENTS The Fund accepts  checks and ACH  transfers at full
value  subject to  collection.  If the Fund does not  receive  your  payment for
shares  or you pay with a check  or ACH  transfer  that  does  not  clear,  your
purchase will be canceled.  You will be  responsible  for any losses or expenses
incurred by the Fund or the Transfer  Agent,  and the Fund may redeem shares you
own in the account (or another identically  registered account that you maintain
with the  Transfer  Agent) as  reimbursement.  The Fund and its agents  have the
right to reject or cancel any purchase or exchange due to nonpayment.

                                       16
<PAGE>

SELLING SHARES

The Fund processes  redemption  orders promptly.  Generally,  the Fund will send
redemption  proceeds  to you  within a week.  Delays  may occur in cases of very
large redemptions,  excessive trading,  or during unusual market conditions.  If
the Fund has not yet  collected  payment for the shares you are selling,  it may
delay sending redemption proceeds up to 15 calendar days.

                      HOW TO SELL SHARES FROM YOUR ACCOUNT

BY MAIL
o    Prepare a written request including:
        o    Your name(s) and signature(s)
        o    Your account number
        o    The Fund name
        o    The dollar amount or number of shares you want to sell
        o    How and where to send the redemption  proceeds
o    Obtain a signature  guarantee (if required)
o    Obtain other  documentation  (if required)
o    Mail us your request and  documentation
BY WIRE
o    Wire redemptions are only available if your redemption is for $5,000 or
     more and you did not decline wire redemptions on your account application
o    Call us  with  your  request  (unless  you  declined  telephone  redemption
     privileges on your account application) (See "By Telephone") or
o    Mail us your request (See "By Mail")
BY TELEPHONE
o    Call us  with  your  request  (unless  you  declined  telephone  redemption
     privileges on your account application)
o    Provide the following information:
        o    Your account number
        o    Exact name(s) in which the account is registered
        o    Additional form of identification
o    Redemption proceeds will be:
        o    Mailed to you or
        o    Wired to you  (unless  you  declined  wire  redemption  privileges
             on your account application) (See "By Wire")
SYSTEMATICALLY
o    Complete the systematic withdrawal section of the application
o    Attach a voided check to your application
o    Mail us the completed application

                                       17
<PAGE>

WIRE  REDEMPTION  PRIVILEGES  You may  redeem  your  shares by wire  unless  you
declined wire  redemption  privileges on your account  application.  The minimum
amount that may be redeemed by wire is $5,000.

TELEPHONE  REDEMPTION  PRIVILEGES You may redeem your shares by telephone unless
you declined telephone redemption  privileges on your account  application.  You
may be responsible  for any fraudulent  telephone  order as long as the Transfer
Agent takes reasonable measures to verify the order.

SYSTEMATIC  WITHDRAWALS  You may  redeem a  specified  amount of money from your
account  once a month on a specified  date.  These  payments  are sent from your
account to a designated bank account by ACH payment. Systematic withdrawals must
be for at least $250.

SIGNATURE  GUARANTEE  REQUIREMENTS  To protect you and the Fund  against  fraud,
signatures on certain  requests  must have a "signature  guarantee." A signature
guarantee  verifies the authenticity of your signature.  You can obtain one from
most banking  institutions or securities brokers,  but not from a notary public.
For requests made in writing,  a signature  guarantee is required for any of the
following:

     o  Sales of over $50,000 worth of shares
     o  Changes to a shareholder's record name
     o  Redemptions   from  an  account   for  which  the   address  or  account
        registration has changed within the last 30 days
     o  Sending redemption  proceeds to any person,  address, brokerage firm, or
        bank account not on record o Sending redemption proceeds to an account
        with a different  registration  (name or  ownership)  from  yours
     o  Changes to systematic investment or withdrawals, distribution, telephone
        redemption or exchange option, or any other election in connection with
        your account

SMALL ACCOUNTS If the value of your account falls below $1,000, the Fund may ask
you to increase your  balance.  If the account value is still below $1,000 after
60 days,  the Fund may close your  account and send you the  proceeds.  The Fund
will not close your account if it falls below this amount  solely as a result of
a reduction in your account's market value.

REDEMPTIONS  IN KIND The Fund reserves the right to pay  redemption  proceeds in
portfolio  securities  rather than in cash. These  redemptions "in kind" usually
occur if the  amount  to be  redeemed  is large  enough  to  affect  the  Fund's
operations (for example, if it represents more than 1% of the Fund's assets).

                                       18
<PAGE>

LOST   ACCOUNTS  The  Transfer   Agent  will   consider  your  account  lost  if
correspondence  to your address of record is returned as  undeliverable,  unless
the Transfer  Agent  determines  your new address.  When an account is lost, all
distributions  on the account will be reinvested in additional  Fund shares.  In
addition,  the amount of any outstanding  (unpaid for six months or more) checks
for  distributions  that  have  been  returned  to the  Transfer  Agent  will be
reinvested and the checks will be canceled.

EXCHANGE PRIVILEGES

You may exchange  your Fund shares and buy shares of other Trust series  managed
by the Adviser.  You may also exchange  Fund shares for Investors  Shares of the
Trust's money market fund.  Because exchanges are a sale and purchase of shares,
they may have tax consequences.

REQUIREMENTS You may make exchanges only between identically registered accounts
(name(s),  address,  and  taxpayer ID number).  There is  currently  no limit on
exchanges,  but the Fund reserves the right to limit exchanges. You may exchange
your  shares by mail or  telephone,  unless you  declined  telephone  redemption
privileges  on  your  account  application.  You  may  be  responsible  for  any
fraudulent  telephone  order  as long as the  Transfer  Agent  takes  reasonable
measures to verify the order.

                                 HOW TO EXCHANGE

BY MAIL
o    Prepare a written request including:
o    Your name(s) and signature(s)
o    Your account number
o    The names of each fund you are exchanging
o    The dollar amount or number of shares you want to sell (and exchange)
o    Open a new account and complete an account application if you are
     requesting different shareholder privileges
o    Mail us your request and documentation
BY TELEPHONE
o    Call us with your request (unless you declined telephone redemption
     privileges on your account application)
o    Provide the following information:
        o    Your account number
        o    Exact  name(s) in which account is registered
        o    Additional  form of identification


                                       19
<PAGE>

OTHER INFORMATION

DISTRIBUTIONS

The Fund  distributes its net investment  income monthly and net capital gain at
least annually.

All  distributions  are  reinvested  in additional  shares,  unless you elect to
receive  distributions  in cash. For Federal income tax purposes,  distributions
are treated the same  whether they are  received in cash or  reinvested.  Shares
become entitled to receive distributions on the day after the shares are issued.

TAXES

The Fund  generally  intends  to  operate  in a manner  such that it will not be
liable for Federal income or excise taxes.

Generally,  you are not subject to Federal or Maryland State income taxes on the
Fund's  distribution of tax-exempt  interest income. The Fund's  distribution of
taxable  interest,  other  investment  income and  short-term  capital  gain are
taxable to you as ordinary income. The Fund's  distribution of long-term capital
gain is taxable to you as long-term capital gain regardless of how long you have
held your Fund shares.  It is anticipated that  substantially  all of the Fund's
net income will be exempt from Federal and  Maryland  State  income  taxes.  The
income of certain  securities  held by the Fund may be  subject  to  Alternative
Minimum Tax ("AMT").

If you are a "substantial  user" or a "related  person" of a substantial user of
facilities  financed by private activity bonds held by the Fund, you may have to
pay Federal  income tax on your pro rata share of the net income  generated from
these  securities.  Distributions of interest income on certain private activity
bonds are an item of tax  preference  for purposes of  individual  and corporate
Federal  AMT.  Distributions  of net  income  from  tax-exempt  obligations  are
included  in  "adjusted  current  earnings"  of  corporations  for  Federal  AMT
purposes.

If you buy shares shortly before the Fund makes a distribution,  you may pay the
full  price for the  shares  and then  receive a portion  of the price back as a
distribution that may be taxable to you.

The sale or exchange of Fund shares is a taxable  transaction for Federal income
tax purposes.

The Fund will send you  information  about the  income  tax status of the Fund's
distributions paid during the year shortly after December 31 of each year.

                                       20
<PAGE>

For  further  information  about  the tax  effects  of  investing  in the  Fund,
including  state and local tax matters,  please see the SAI and consult your tax
adviser.

ORGANIZATION

The  Trust is a  Delaware  business  trust.  The Fund  does not  expect  to hold
shareholders'  meetings unless required by Federal or Delaware law. Shareholders
of each  series of the  Trust are  entitled  to vote at  shareholders'  meetings
unless a matter relates only to specific series (such as approval of an advisory
agreement for the Fund).  From time to time, large  shareholders may control the
Fund or the Trust.

FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS

Financial  highlights  are not  provided  because  the  Fund  had not  commenced
operations prior to the date of this prospectus.










                                       21
<PAGE>


                           BROWNIA MARYLAND BOND FUND

FOR MORE INFORMATION

The following documents are available free upon request:

                           ANNUAL/SEMI-ANNUAL REPORTS

      Additional information about the Fund's investments will be available
   in the Fund's annual and semi-annual reports to shareholders. In the Fund's
             annual report, you will find a discussion of the market
   conditions and investment strategies that significantly affected the Fund's
                       performance during its last year.

                   STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ("SAI")
          The SAI provides more detailed information about the Fund and
               is incorporated by reference into this Prospectus.

                               CONTACTING THE FUND
            You can get free copies of both reports (when available)
              the SAI, request other information, and discuss your
               questions about the Fund by contacting the Fund at:

                                  BrownIA Funds
                                  P.O. Box 446
                              Portland, Maine 04112
                            800-540-6807 (toll free)
                                  207-879-0001

                 SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION INFORMATION
       You can also review the Fund's reports (when available) and SAI at
            the Public Reference Room of the Securities and Exchange
              Commission ("SEC"). The scheduled hours of operation
         ofthe Public Reference Room may be obtained by calling the SEC
           at (202) 942-8090. You can get copies of this information,
                     for a fee, by e-mail or by writing to:

                              Public Reference Room

                       Securities and Exchange Commission

                           Washington, D.C. 20549-6009

                       E-mail address: [email protected]

  Free copies of the reports and SAI are available from the SEC's Internet Web
                           Site at http://www.sec.gov.

                    Investment Company Act File No. 811-3023.


<PAGE>

                                        STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
[FORUM
LOGO]
                                        _____________, 2000

INVESTMENT ADVISER:                     BROWNIA MARYLAND BOND FUND

Brown Advisory Inc.
Furness House
19 South Street

Baltimore, Maryland  21202

ACCOUNT INFORMATION AND SHAREHOLDER
SERVICES:

Forum Shareholder Services, LLC
P.O. Box 446
Portland, Maine 04112
(800) 805-8258
(207) 879-0001








INFORMATION   CONTAINED  HEREIN  IS  SUBJECT  TO  COMPLETION  OR  AMENDMENT.   A
REGISTRATION  STATEMENT  RELATING  TO THESE  SECURITIES  HAS BEEN FILED WITH THE
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION. THESE SECURITIES MAY NOT BE SOLD NOR MAY ANY
OFFERS TO BUY BE ACCEPTED PRIOR TO THE TIME THE REGISTRATION  STATEMENT  BECOMES
EFFECTIVE.  THIS  STATEMENT  OF  ADDITIONAL  INFORMATION  DOES NOT  CONSTITUTE A
PROSPECTUS.

This Statement of Additional  Information (the "SAI") supplements the Prospectus
dated  ________,  2000, as may be amended from time to time,  offering shares of
BrownIA  Maryland  Bond Fund, a series of Forum Funds,  a  registered,  open-end
management  investment company.  This SAI is not a prospectus and should only be
read in conjunction with the Prospectus.  You may obtain the Prospectus  without
charge by contacting Forum Shareholder Services, LLC at the address or telephone
number listed above.


<PAGE>



                                TABLE OF CONTENTS

GLOSSARY                                                                   2


1.  INVESTMENT POLICIES AND RISKS                                          2


3.  INFORMATION CONCERNING THE STATE OF MARYLAND                           7


4.  INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS                                                 8


5.  PERFORMANCE DATA AND ADVERTISING                                      10


6.  MANAGEMENT                                                            14


7.  PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS                                                20


8.  PURCHASE AND REDEMPTION INFORMATION                                   23


9.  TAXATION                                                              25


10.  OTHER MATTERS                                                        28


APPENDIX A - DESCRIPTION OF SECURITIES RATINGS                           A-1


APPENDIX B - MISCELLANEOUS TABLES                                        B-1


APPENDIX C - PERFORMANCE DATA                                            C-1



<PAGE>





GLOSSARY
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


As used in this SAI, the following terms have the meanings listed.

         "Adviser" means Brown Advisory Inc.

         "Board" means the Board of Trustees of the Trust.

         "CFTC" means Commodities Future Trading Commission.

         "Code" means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.

         "Custodian" means the Forum Trust, LLC, custodian of the Fund's assets.

         "FAcS" means Forum Accounting Services, LLC, the fund accountant of the
         Fund.

         "FAdS" means Forum Administrative  Services,  LLC, the administrator of
         the Fund.

         "FFS" means Forum Fund  Services,  LLC, the  distributor  of the Fund's
         shares.

         "Fitch" means Fitch IBCA, Inc.

         "FSS" means Forum Shareholder Services,  LLC, the transfer agent of the
         Fund.

         "Fund" means BrownIA Maryland Bond Fund.

         "IRS" means Internal Revenue Service.

         "Moody's" means Moody's Investors Service.

         "NAV" means net asset value per share.

         "NRSRO" means a nationally recognized statistical rating organization.

         "SAI" means Statement of Additional Information.

         "SEC" means the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

         "S&P"  means  Standard & Poor's  Corporation,  A Division of the McGraw
         Hill Companies.

         "Trust" means Forum Funds.

         "U.S. Government Securities" means obligations issued or guaranteed by
         the U.S. Government, its agencies or instrumentalities.

         "1933 Act" means the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.

         "1940 Act" means the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended.


                                       1
<PAGE>

The Fund is a  non-diversified  series of the Trust.  This section  discusses in
greater detail than the Fund's Prospectus certain  investments that the Fund can
make.

1.  INVESTMENT POLICIES AND RISKS
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

A.       DEBT SECURITIES

1.       GENERAL

MUNICIPAL  SECURITIES  The Fund may invest in  municipal  securities.  Municipal
securities are issued by the states,  territories  and possessions of the United
States,  their political  subdivisions (such as cities,  counties and towns) and
various  authorities  (such as public  housing  or  redevelopment  authorities),
instrumentalities,  public  corporations  and special  districts (such as water,
sewer or sanitary districts) of the states, territories,  and possessions of the
United States or their political subdivisions. In addition, municipal securities
include  securities  issued by or on behalf of  public  authorities  to  finance
various privately  operated  facilities,  such as industrial  development bonds,
that are backed  only by the assets and  revenues of the  non-governmental  user
(such as  hospitals  and  airports).  The Fund may  invest up to 5% of its total
assets in  municipal  securities  of  issuers  located in any one  territory  or
possession of the United States.

Municipal  securities  are  issued  to  obtain  funds  for a  variety  of public
purposes,  including  general  financing  for state and  local  governments,  or
financing for specific projects or public facilities.  Municipal  securities are
classified as general  obligation or revenue bonds or notes.  General obligation
securities  are secured by the  issuer's  pledge of its full  faith,  credit and
taxing power for the payment of principal and interest.  Revenue  securities are
payable from revenue derived from a particular facility, class of facilities, or
the proceeds of a special excise tax or other specific  revenue source,  but not
from the issuer's  general taxing power.  The Fund will not invest more than 25%
of its total assets in a single type of revenue bond. Private activity bonds and
industrial  revenue  bonds do not carry the pledge of the credit of the  issuing
municipality,  but  generally are  guaranteed  by the corporate  entity on whose
behalf they are issued.

Municipal leases are entered into by state and local governments and authorities
to  acquire  equipment  and  facilities  such as fire and  sanitation  vehicles,
telecommunications equipment, and other assets. Municipal leases (which normally
provide  for title to the leased  assets to pass  eventually  to the  government
issuer) have evolved as a means for governmental issuers to acquire property and
equipment without meeting the constitutional and statutory  requirements for the
issuance of debt. The debt-issuance  limitations of many state constitutions and
statutes are deemed to be  inapplicable  because of the inclusion in many leases
or contracts of  "non-appropriation"  clauses that provide that the governmental
issuer has no  obligation  to make future  payments  under the lease or contract
unless money is  appropriated  for such purpose by the  appropriate  legislative
body on a yearly or other periodic basis.

U.S. GOVERNMENT  SECURITIES The Fund may invest in U.S.  Government  Securities.
U.S. Government Securities include securities issued by the U.S. Treasury and by
U.S. Government agencies and  instrumentalities.  U.S. Government Securities may
be  supported  by the full faith and credit of the  United  States  (such as the
mortgage-related securities and certificates of the Government National Mortgage
Association and securities of the Small Business  Administration);  by the right
of the issuer to borrow from the U.S.  Treasury (for example,  Federal Home Loan
Bank securities); by the discretionary authority of the U.S. Treasury to lend to
the issuer (for  example,  Fannie Mae (formerly  the Federal  National  Mortgage
Association)  securities);  or solely by the creditworthiness of the issuer (for
example, Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation securities).

Holders of U.S. Government Securities not backed by the full faith and credit of
the United States must look principally to the agency or instrumentality issuing
the  obligation  for repayment and may not be able to assert a claim against the
United States in the event that the agency or instrumentality  does not meet its
commitment.  No assurance  can be given that the U.S.  Government  would provide
support if it were not  obligated to do so by law.  Neither the U.S.  Government
nor any of its agencies or instrumentalities  guarantees the market value of the
securities they issue.

                                       2
<PAGE>

VARIABLE  AND  FLOATING  RATE  SECURITIES  The Fund may invest in  variable  and
floating rate  securities.  Debt securities that have variable or floating rates
of interest,  may under certain limited  circumstances,  have varying  principal
amounts.  These securities pay interest at rates that are adjusted  periodically
according to a specified formula, usually with reference to one or more interest
rate indices or market  interest rates (the  "underlying  index").  The interest
paid on these  securities is a function  primarily of the underlying  index upon
which the  interest  rate  adjustments  are based.  These  adjustments  minimize
changes  in the  market  value of the  obligation.  Similar  to fixed  rate debt
instruments,  variable and floating rate  instruments  are subject to changes in
value  based on changes  in market  interest  rates or  changes in the  issuer's
creditworthiness.  The  rate  of  interest  on  securities  may be  tied to U.S.
Government  Securities or indices on those  securities as well as any other rate
of interest or index.

Variable and floating rate demand notes of  corporations  are redeemable  upon a
specified period of notice.  These obligations  include master demand notes that
permit investment of fluctuating  amounts at varying interest rates under direct
arrangements with the issuer of the instrument.  The issuer of these obligations
often has the right,  after a given period, to prepay the outstanding  principal
amount of the obligations upon a specified number of days' notice.

Certain  securities may have an initial  principal  amount that varies over time
based on an interest rate index, and, accordingly, the Fund might be entitled to
less than the  initial  principal  amount of the  security  upon the  security's
maturity.  The Fund intends to purchase these  securities  only when the Adviser
believes the interest  income from the instrument  justifies any principal risks
associated with the  instrument.  The Adviser may attempt to limit any potential
loss of principal by purchasing similar instruments that are intended to provide
an offsetting increase in principal.  There can be no assurance that the Adviser
will be able to limit the effects of principal  fluctuations  and,  accordingly,
the Fund may incur losses on those  securities even if held to maturity  without
issuer default.

There may not be an active  secondary  market  for any  particular  floating  or
variable rate instruments, which could make it difficult for the Fund to dispose
of the  instrument  during periods that the Fund is not entitled to exercise any
demand rights it may have. The Fund could,  for this or other reasons,  suffer a
loss with respect to those  instruments.  The Adviser  monitors the liquidity of
the Fund's investment in variable and floating rate  instruments,  but there can
be no guarantee that an active secondary market will exist.

2.       RISKS

GENERAL The market value of the  interest-bearing  debt  securities  held by the
Fund will be affected by changes in interest rates. There is normally an inverse
relationship  between the market value of  securities  sensitive  to  prevailing
interest  rates and actual changes in interest  rates.  The longer the remaining
maturity  (and  duration) of a security,  the more  sensitive the security is to
changes in  interest  rates.  All debt  securities,  including  U.S.  Government
Securities,  can  change  in value  when  there is a change in  interest  rates.
Changes in the ability of an issuer to make  payments of interest and  principal
and in the markets' perception of an issuer's  creditworthiness will also affect
the market value of that issuer's debt securities. As a result, an investment in
the Fund is subject to risk even if all debt securities in the Fund's investment
portfolio are paid in full at maturity. In addition, certain debt securities may
be subject to  extension  risk,  which refers to the change in total return on a
security resulting from an extension or abbreviation of the security's maturity.

Yields on debt securities,  including municipal  securities,  are dependent on a
variety of factors,  including  the general  conditions  of the debt  securities
markets, the size of a particular  offering,  the maturity of the obligation and
the rating of the issue.  Under normal  conditions,  debt securities with longer
maturities  tend to offer  higher  yields and are  generally  subject to greater
price  movements  than  obligations  with shorter  maturities.  A portion of the
municipal  securities  held by the Fund may be supported by credit and liquidity
enhancements,  such as  letters  of credit  (which  are not  covered  by federal
deposit  insurance)  or  puts  or  demand  features  of  third  party  financial
institutions, generally domestic and foreign banks.

                                       3
<PAGE>

The issuers of debt  securities  are subject to the  provisions  of  bankruptcy,
insolvency  and other laws  affecting the rights and remedies of creditors  that
may  restrict the ability of the issuer to pay,  when due, the  principal of and
interest on its debt securities.  The possibility exists,  therefore,  that as a
result of bankruptcy,  litigation or other conditions,  the ability of an issuer
to pay,  when due,  the  principal of and  interest on its debt  securities  may
become impaired.

2.       CREDIT RISK

The Fund's  investment in debt securities is subject to the credit risk relating
to the financial condition of the issuers of the securities that the Fund holds.
To limit credit risk, the Fund may only invest in debt securities that are rated
"Baa" or higher by  Moody's  or "BBB" or higher by S&P at the time of  purchase.
The Fund may purchase  unrated debt securities if, at the time of purchase,  the
Adviser  believes that they are of comparable  quality to rated  securities that
the Fund may purchase.  It is anticipated  that the average credit rating of the
debt securities held by the Fund will be "Aa" as per Moody's or "AA" as per S&P.
The Fund will limit its investment in debt securities  rated "Baa" by Moody's or
"BBB" by S&P to 10% of the Fund's total assets.

The Fund may retain  securities  whose rating has been lowered  below the lowest
permissible  rating  category  if the Adviser  determines  that  retaining  such
security is in the best interests of the Fund. Because a downgrade often results
in a reduction  in the market  price of the  security,  the sale of a downgraded
security may result in a loss.

Moody's,  S&P and other NRSROs are private  services that provide ratings of the
credit  quality  of  debt  obligations,   including  convertible  securities.  A
description of the range of ratings assigned to various types of bonds and other
securities by several  NRSROs is included in Appendix A to this SAI. The Adviser
may use these ratings to determine whether to purchase, sell or hold a security.
Ratings are general and are not absolute  standards of quality.  Securities with
the same maturity,  interest rate, and rating may have different  market prices.
If an issue of  securities  ceases to be rated or if its rating is reduced after
it is purchased by the Fund, the Adviser will determine  whether the Fund should
continue to hold the  obligation.  To the extent  that the  ratings  given by an
NRSRO may change as a result of changes in such  organizations  or their  rating
systems,  the Adviser  will attempt to  substitute  comparable  ratings.  Credit
ratings attempt to evaluate the safety of principal and interest payments and do
not evaluate the risks of  fluctuations in market value.  Also,  rating agencies
may fail to make timely changes in credit ratings. An issuer's current financial
condition may be better or worse than a rating indicates.

B.       FUTURES

1.       GENERAL

The Fund may purchase futures contracts to: (1) enhance the Fund's  performance;
or (2) to hedge against a decline in the value of  securities  owned by the Fund
or an increase in the price of securities  that the Fund plans to purchase.  The
Fund may invest in futures contracts on market indices based in whole or in part
on securities in which the Fund may invest.

A futures  contract is a bilateral  agreement  where one party agrees to accept,
and the other  party  agrees to make,  delivery  of cash or an  underlying  debt
security,  as called for in the contract,  at a specified  date and at an agreed
upon price.  The Fund may invest in municipal bond futures and Treasury bond and
note futures.

A municipal bond futures  contract is based on the value of the Bond Buyer Index
("BBI") which is comprised of 40 actively traded general  obligation and revenue
bonds.  The rating of a BBI issue must be at least "A".  To be  considered,  the
issue  must have at least 19 years  remaining  to  maturity,  a first  call date
between 7 and 16 years,  and at least  one call at par prior to  redemption.  No
physical  delivery of the  securities is made in connection  with municipal bond
futures.  Rather  these  contracts  are usually  settled in cash of they are not
closed out prior to their expiration date.

A Treasury bond futures contract is based on the value of an equivalent 20 year,
6% Treasury bond. Generally, any Treasury bond with a remaining maturity or term
to call of 15 years as of the first day of the month in which the

                                       4
<PAGE>

contracts are scheduled to be exercised  will qualify as a deliverable  security
pursuant to a Treasury bond futures  contract.  A Treasury note futures contract
is based on the value of an equivalent 10 year, 6% Treasury note. Generally, any
Treasury  note with a  remaining  maturity  or term to call of 6 1/2 years or 10
years, respectively, as of the first day of the month in which the contracts are
scheduled to be exercised  will qualify as a  deliverable  security  pursuant to
Treasury note futures contract.

Since a number  of  different  Treasury  notes  will  qualify  as a  deliverable
security upon the exercise of the option, the price that the buyer will actually
pay for those  securities  will  depend on which  ones are  actually  delivered.
Normally, the exercise price of the futures contract is adjusted by a conversion
factor that takes into consideration the value of the deliverable security if it
were  yielding  6% as of the first day of the  month in which  the  contract  is
scheduled to be exercised.

2.       RISKS

Use of these  instruments  is  subject to  regulation  by the SEC,  the  futures
exchanges on which  futures are traded or by the CFTC. No assurance can be given
that any hedging or income strategy will achieve its intended result.

There are certain investment risks associated with futures  transactions.  These
risks  include:  (1) imperfect  correlation  between  movements in the prices of
futures and movements in the price of the securities (or indices) hedged or used
for cover which may cause a given hedge not to achieve  its  objective;  (2) the
fact that the  skills  and  techniques  needed to trade  these  instruments  are
different  from those needed to select the securities in which the Fund invests;
and (3) lack of  assurance  that a liquid  secondary  market  will exist for any
particular  instrument at any particular time,  which,  among other things,  may
hinder the Fund's  ability to limit  exposures  by closing  its  positions.  The
potential  loss  to  the  Fund  from  investing  in  certain  types  of  futures
transactions is unlimited.

Other  risks  include  limitation  by the  futures  exchanges  on the  amount of
fluctuation permitted in certain futures contract prices during a single trading
day.  The Fund may be forced,  therefore,  to  liquidate  or close out a futures
contract position at a  disadvantageous  price. The Fund may use various futures
contracts  that are  relatively new  instruments  without a significant  trading
history. As a result,  there can be no assurance that an active secondary market
in those contracts will develop or continue to exist.  The Fund's  activities in
the futures market may result in higher portfolio  turnover rates and additional
brokerage costs, which could reduce the Fund's yield.

If the Fund will be financially  exposed to another party due to its investments
in  futures,  the Fund  will  maintain  either:  (1) an  offsetting  ("covered")
position in the underlying  security or an offsetting  futures contract;  or (2)
cash,  receivables  and liquid debt  securities  with a value  sufficient at all
times  to  cover  its  potential  obligations.  The Fund  will  comply  with SEC
guidelines  with respect to coverage of these  strategies and, if the guidelines
require,  will set aside cash, liquid  securities and other  permissible  assets
("Segregated  Assets")  in a  segregated  account  with  the  Custodian  in  the
prescribed  amount.  Segregated  Assets  cannot be sold or closed  out while the
hedging strategy is outstanding,  unless the Segregated Assets are replaced with
similar  assets.  As a result,  there is a possibility  that the use of cover or
segregation  involving a large  percentage  of the Fund's  assets  could  impede
portfolio  management or the Fund's ability to meet redemption requests or other
current obligations.

C.       REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS

1.       GENERAL

The Fund  may  enter  into  repurchase  agreements.  Repurchase  agreements  are
transactions  in which the Fund purchases  securities  from a bank or securities
dealer and simultaneously commits to resell the securities to the bank or dealer
at an  agreed-upon  date and at a price  reflecting  a market  rate of  interest
unrelated to the purchased security.  During the term of a repurchase agreement,
the Fund's custodian  maintains  possession of the purchased  securities and any
underlying  collateral,  which  is  maintained  at not  less  than  100%  of the
repurchase  price.  Repurchase  agreements  allow the Fund to earn income on its
uninvested  cash  for  periods  as  short  as  overnight,  while  retaining  the
flexibility to pursue longer-term investments.

                                       5
<PAGE>

2.       RISKS

Repurchase  Agreements  involve  credit  risk.  Credit  risk is the risk  that a
counterparty to a transaction will be unable to honor its financial  obligation.
In the event that  bankruptcy,  insolvency or similar  proceedings are commenced
against a counterparty,  the Fund may have difficulties in exercising its rights
to the underlying  securities or currencies,  as applicable.  The Fund may incur
costs and expensive time delays in disposing of the underlying securities and it
may suffer a loss.  Failure by the other party to deliver a security or currency
purchased by the Fund may result in a missed  opportunity to make an alternative
investment.  Favorable  insolvency laws that allow the Fund, among other things,
to  liquidate  the  collateral  held  in  the  event  of the  bankruptcy  of the
counterparty  reduce  counterparty  insolvency  risk with respect to  repurchase
agreements.

D.       BORROWING

1.       GENERAL

The Fund may borrow money from banks for  temporary or emergency  purposes in an
amount up to 33 1/3% of the Fund's total  assets.  The purchase of securities is
prohibited if a Fund's borrowing exceeds 5% or more of the Fund's total assets.

2.       RISKS

Borrowing  creates  the risk of  magnified  capital  losses.  If the  Fund  buys
securities  with borrowed  funds and the value of the securities  declines,  the
Fund may be required to provide the lender with  additional  funds or  liquidate
its position in these  securities  to continue to secure or repay the loan.  The
Fund  may  also be  obligated  to  liquidate  other  portfolio  positions  at an
inappropriate  time  in  order  to pay off the  loan  or any  interest  payments
associated with the loan. To the extent that the interest  expense involved in a
borrowing  transaction  approaches  the  net  return  on the  Fund's  investment
portfolio,  the  benefit of  borrowing  will be reduced,  and,  if the  interest
expense is  incurred as a result of  borrowing  were to exceed the net return to
investors,  the Fund's use of  borrowing  would result in a lower rate of return
than if the Fund did not borrow.  The size of any loss  incurred by the Fund due
to  borrowing  will depend on the amount  borrowed.  The greater the  percentage
borrowed, the greater potential of gain or loss to the Fund.

E.       LEVERAGE TRANSACTIONS

1.       GENERAL

The Fund may use  leverage  to increase  potential  returns.  Leverage  involves
special risks and may involve speculative investment techniques. Leverage exists
when cash made available to the Fund through an investment  technique is used to
make additional Fund investments. Lending portfolio securities and entering into
purchasing  securities on a when-issued,  delayed delivery or forward commitment
basis are transactions  that result in leverage.  The Fund uses these investment
techniques  only when the Adviser  believes that the  leveraging and the returns
available  to the  Fund  from  investing  the  cash  will  provide  investors  a
potentially higher return.

SECURITIES LENDING The Fund may lend portfolio securities in an amount up to 10%
of its total  assets to  brokers,  dealers  and  other  financial  institutions.
Securities  loans must be  continuously  collateralized  and the collateral must
have market value at least equal to the value of the Fund's  loaned  securities,
plus accrued interest.  In a portfolio securities lending transaction,  the Fund
receives from the borrower an amount equal to the interest paid or the dividends
declared  on the  loaned  securities  during the term of the loan as well as the
interest  on the  collateral  securities,  less any fees  (such  as  finders  or
administrative fees) the Fund pays in arranging the loan. The Fund may share the
interest it receives on the collateral  securities with the borrower.  The terms
of the Fund's  loans  permit the Fund to  reacquire  loaned  securities  on five
business  days'  notice or in time to vote on any  important  matter.  Loans are
subject to  termination  at the option of the Fund or the  borrower at any time,
and the borrowed securities must be returned when the loan is terminated.

                                       6
<PAGE>

WHEN-ISSUED  SECURITIES AND FORWARD COMMITMENTS The Fund may purchase securities
offered  on a  "when-issued"  basis and may  purchase  or sell  securities  on a
"forward  commitment" basis. When these transactions are negotiated,  the price,
which is generally expressed in yield terms, is fixed at the time the commitment
is made, but delivery and payment for the securities take place at a later date.
Normally,  the  settlement  date occurs after 15-45 days after the  transaction.
During the period  between a commitment and  settlement,  no payment is made for
the securities  purchased by the purchaser and thus, no interest  accrues to the
purchaser  from the  transaction.  At the time the Fund makes the  commitment to
purchase  securities on a when-issued or delayed  delivery basis,  the Fund will
record the  transaction as a purchase and thereafter  reflect the value each day
of such securities in determining its net asset value.

The Fund  will not enter  into a  when-issued  or  forward  commitment  if, as a
result,  more than 25% of the Fund's  total  assets  would be  committed to such
transactions.

2.       RISKS

Leverage  creates the risk of magnified  capital losses.  Losses incurred by the
Fund may be magnified by borrowings and other liabilities that exceed the equity
base of the Fund. Leverage may involve the creation of a liability that requires
the Fund to pay interest or the creation of a liability that does not entail any
interest costs (for instance, forward commitment costs).

The risks of leverage include a higher  volatility of the net asset value of the
Fund's  securities and the  relatively  greater effect on the net asset value of
the securities caused by favorable or adverse market movements or changes in the
cost of cash obtained by leveraging and the yield from invested cash. So long as
the Fund is able to realize a net  return on its  investment  portfolio  that is
higher than interest expense  incurred,  if any,  leverage will result in higher
current net investment  income for the Fund than if the Fund were not leveraged.
Changes  in  interest  rates  and  related  economic  factors  could  cause  the
relationship  between  the cost of  leveraging  and the  yield to change so that
rates involved in the leveraging arrangement may substantially increase relative
to the yield on the  obligations  in which the proceeds of the  leveraging  have
been invested.  To the extent that the interest  expense  involved in leveraging
approaches  the net return on the Fund's  investment  portfolio,  the benefit of
leveraging will be reduced,  and, if the interest  expense on borrowings were to
exceed the net return to investors, the Fund's use of leverage would result in a
lower rate of return than if the Fund were not leveraged. In an extreme case, if
the Fund's  current  investment  income were not sufficient to meet the interest
expense of leveraging,  it could be necessary for the Fund to liquidate  certain
of its investments at an inappropriate time.

SEGREGATED ACCOUNTS. In order to attempt to reduce the risks involved in various
transactions  involving  leverage,  the  Fund's  custodian  will set  aside  and
maintain,  in a segregated  account,  cash and liquid securities.  The account's
value,  which is marked to market  daily,  will be at least  equal to the Fund's
commitments under these transactions.

F.       TEMPORARY DEFENSIVE POSITION

The  Fund  may  invest  in  prime  quality  money  market  instruments,  pending
investment  of cash  balances.  The Fund may also assume a  temporary  defensive
position and may invest without limit in prime quality money market instruments.
Prime quality instruments are those instruments that are rated in one of the two
highest short-term rating categories by an NRSRO or, if not rated, determined by
the Adviser to be of comparable quality.

Money market  instruments  usually have maturities of one year or less and fixed
rates of  return.  The money  market  instruments  in which the Fund may  invest
include  short-term  U.S.  Government  Securities,  commercial  paper,  bankers'
acceptances,  certificates  of  deposit,  interest-bearing  savings  deposits of
commercial banks,  repurchase agreements concerning securities in which the Fund
may invest, and money market mutual funds.

                                       7
<PAGE>

G.       CORE AND GATEWAY(R)

The Fund may seek to achieve its  investment  objective by  converting to a Core
and Gateway  structure.  The Fund operating  under a Core and Gateway  structure
holds,  as its only  investment,  shares of another  investment  company  having
substantially  the same  investment  objective and policies.  The Board will not
authorize  conversion  to a Core and Gateway  structure  if it would  materially
increase costs to the Fund's  shareholders.  The Board will not convert the Fund
to a Core and Gateway structure without notice to the shareholders.

3.  INFORMATION CONCERNING THE STATE OF MARYLAND
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Material in this section was compiled  from several  public  sources,  including
statements  from the  State of  Maryland  Office of the  Treasurer  and the 1999
Comprehensive  Annual  Financial  Report of the State of Maryland.  Although the
information  is believed to be accurate,  none of the  information  obtained has
been verified  independently.  While the following  summarizes  the most current
information   available  from  these  sources,  it  does  not  reflect  economic
conditions  or  developments  that may have  occurred  or  trends  that may have
materialized since the dates indicated.

The State of Maryland has a population of approximately  5.1 million.  Services,
trade,  and  government  are  among the  leading  areas of  employment.  Growth,
generally,  slowed in 1999 from an  average  annual  rate of 4.2% over the prior
four years.  Construction  and services have  experienced  the highest levels of
growth,  3.7% and 3.8%,  respectively.  The  telecommunications  sector  remains
strong with  anticipated  annual  growth  rates of  approximately  2%.  Overall,
non-agricultural  employment  rates  increased  2.1% in 1999 and are expected to
slow to 1.6% in 2000 and rebound again to 2.1% in 2001. Maryland's  unemployment
rate as of fiscal  1999 was 4.0%.  A tight  labor  market and strong wage growth
contributed  to a 5.7% increase in personal  income in 1999.  It is  anticipated
that personal  income  levels will remain  stable in 2000 and increase  again in
2001.

The State of  Maryland  enacts its budget  annually.  The budget  uses a legally
mandated  budgetary fund structure.  Maryland also maintains accounts to conform
with generally accepted accounting principles but financial control is exercised
under the  budgetary  system.  The largest  sources of revenues are  broad-based
taxes, including income, sales, motor vehicle, and property taxes.

Maryland general obligation bonds are rated Aaa by Moody's,  and AAA by both S&P
and Fitch. As of June 30, 1999, Maryland had $5.1 billion in State tax-supported
debt. Authorized but unissued general obligation bonds totaled $1 billion.

4.  INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

For  purposes  of all  investment  policies  of the Fund:  (1) the term 1940 Act
includes the rules thereunder,  SEC interpretations and any exemptive order upon
which the Fund may rely;  and (2) the term Code  includes the rules  thereunder,
IRS  interpretations  and any private  letter ruling or similar  authority  upon
which the Fund may rely.

Except as required by the 1940 Act or the Code, if any percentage restriction on
investment or  utilization  of assets is adhered to at the time an investment is
made, a later change in percentage  resulting from a change in the market values
of the  Fund's  assets  or  purchases  and  redemptions  of  shares  will not be
considered a violation of the limitation.

A fundamental  policy of the Fund and the Fund's investment  objective cannot be
changed  without  the  affirmative  vote  of  the  lesser  of:  (1)  50%  of the
outstanding  shares of the Fund; or (2) 67% of the shares of the Fund present or
represented at a  shareholders  meeting at which the holders of more than 50% of
the outstanding shares of the Fund are present or represented.  A nonfundamental
policy of the Fund may be changed by the Board without shareholder approval.

                                       8
<PAGE>

A.       FUNDAMENTAL LIMITATIONS

The Fund has  adopted  the  following  investment  limitations,  that  cannot be
changed by the Board without shareholder approval. The Fund may not:

BORROWING MONEY

Borrow money,  except for temporary or emergency purposes (including the meeting
of  redemption  requests)  and  except  for  entering  into  reverse  repurchase
agreements,  and provided  that  borrowings  do not exceed 33 1/3% of the Fund's
total assets (computed immediately after the borrowing).

CONCENTRATION

Purchase a security  if, as a result,  more than 25% of the Fund's  total assets
would be invested in securities of issuers  conducting their principal  business
activities in the same industry.  For purposes of this  limitation,  there is no
limit  on:  (1)  investments  in  U.S.  Government  Securities,   in  repurchase
agreements covering U.S. Government Securities,  in tax-exempt securities issued
by the states,  territories  or  possessions  of the United  States  ("municipal
securities") or in foreign government securities;  or (2) investments in issuers
domiciled in a single jurisdiction. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, to
the  extent  permitted  by the 1940  Act,  the Fund  may  invest  in one or more
investment  companies;  provided that,  except to the extent the Fund invests in
other investment  companies pursuant to Section 12(d)(1)(A) of the 1940 Act, the
Fund treats the assets of the  investment  companies  in which it invests as its
own for purposes of this policy.

DIVERSIFICATION

Purchase a security  (other  than a U.S.  Government  Security or security of an
investment company) if, as a result: (1) with respect to 50% of the Fund's total
assets,  more  than 5% of the  Fund's  total  assets  would be  invested  in the
securities  of a single  issuer;  or (2) with respect to 50% of the Fund's total
assets, the Fund would own more than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of
any single  issuer;  or (3) more than 25% of the Fund's  total  assets  would be
invested in the securities of any single issuer.

The District of Columbia, each state and territory,  each political subdivision,
agency,  instrumentality  and authority thereof,  and each multi-state agency of
which the District of Columbia, a state or territory is a member is deemed to be
a  separate  "issuer."  When the assets and  revenues  of an agency,  authority,
instrumentality or other political  subdivision are separate from the government
creating  the  subdivision  and the  security  is backed  only by the assets and
revenues  of the  subdivision,  such  subdivision  is  treated  as  the  issuer.
Similarly,  in the case of private activity bonds, if the bond is backed only by
the assets and revenues of the  nongovernmental  user, then the  nongovernmental
user is  treated  as the  issuer.  If in  either  case,  however,  the  creating
government  or some other  agency  guarantees  a  security,  that  guarantee  is
considered a separate  security and is treated as an issue of such government or
other agency.

UNDERWRITING ACTIVITIES

Underwrite (as that term is defined in the 1933 Act) securities  issued by other
persons  except,  to the extent that in connection  with the  disposition of the
Fund's assets, the Fund may be deemed to be an underwriter.

LENDING

Make loans to other  parties.  For purposes of this  limitation,  entering  into
repurchase agreements,  lending securities,  and acquiring any debt security are
not deemed to be the making of loans.

                                       9
<PAGE>

PURCHASES AND SALES OF REAL ESTATE

Purchase  or sell  real  estate  unless  acquired  as a result of  ownership  of
securities  or other  instruments  (but  this  shall not  prevent  the Fund from
investing in securities backed by real estate or securities of companies engaged
in the real estate business).

PURCHASES AND SALES OF COMMODITIES

Purchase or sell physical  commodities  unless acquired as a result of ownership
of  securities  or other  instruments  (but this shall not prevent the Fund from
purchasing  or  selling  options  or  futures  contracts  or from  investing  in
securities or other instruments backed by physical commodities).

ISSUANCE OF SENIOR SECURITIES

Issue senior securities to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act.

B.       NON - FUNDAMENTAL LIMITATIONS

The Fund has adopted the following investment limitations that may be changed by
the Board without shareholder approval. The Fund may not:

SECURITIES OF INVESTMENT COMPANIES

Invest  in the  securities  of  any  investment  company  except  to the  extent
permitted by the 1940 Act.

SHORT SALES

Sell  securities  short,  unless it owns or has the  right to obtain  securities
equivalent in kind and amount to the securities sold short (short sales "against
the box"), and provided that transactions in futures contracts are not deemed to
constitute selling securities short.

PURCHASES ON MARGIN

Purchase  securities on margin,  except that the Fund may use short-term  credit
for the  clearance of the Fund's  transactions,  and  provided  that initial and
variation  margin  payments  in  connection  with  futures  contracts  shall not
constitute purchasing securities on margin.

LIQUIDITY

Invest  more  than  15% of its net  assets  in  illiquid  assets  such  as:  (i)
securities  that cannot be disposed of within  seven days at their  then-current
value,  (ii)  repurchase  agreements  not  entitling  the  holder to  payment of
principal within seven days and (iii) securities  subject to restrictions on the
sale of the  securities to the public  without  registration  under the 1933 Act
("restricted  securities") that are not readily  marketable.  The Fund may treat
certain  restricted  securities as liquid pursuant to guidelines  adopted by the
Board.

OPTIONS AND FUTURES

Invest in futures or options contracts regulated by the CFTC except for (1) bona
fide  hedging  purposes  within the meaning of the rules of the CFTC and (2) for
other  purposes if, as a result,  no more than 5% of the Fund's net assets would
be invested in initial margin and premiums  (excluding  amounts  "in-the-money")
required to establish the contracts.

                                       10
<PAGE>

BORROWING

Purchase or otherwise  acquire any security  if, the total of  borrowings  would
exceed 5% of the value of its total assets.

EXERCISING CONTROL OF ISSUERS

Make investments for the purpose of exercising control of an issuer. Investments
by the Fund in entities  created under the laws of foreign  countries  solely to
facilitate  investment  in  securities  in that  country  will not be deemed the
making of investments for the purpose of exercising control.

5.  PERFORMANCE DATA AND ADVERTISING
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

A.       PERFORMANCE DATA

The Fund may quote  performance  in various ways.  All  performance  information
supplied  in  advertising,  sales  literature,  shareholder  reports,  or  other
materials is historical and is not intended to indicate future returns.

The Fund may compare any of its performance information with:

     o    Data published by independent  evaluators such as  Morningstar,  Inc.,
          Lipper,   Inc.,   iMoneyNet,   Inc.  (IBC   Financial   Data,   Inc.),
          CDA/Wiesenberger,  or  other  companies  which  track  the  investment
          performance of investment companies ("Fund Tracking Companies").

     o    The performance of other mutual funds.

     o    The  performance  of  recognized   stock,   bond  and  other  indices,
          including, but not limited to, the Standard & Poor's 500(R) Index, the
          Russell 2000(R) Index, the Russell MidcapTM Index, the Russell 1000(R)
          Value Index,  the Russell  2500(R) Index,  the Morgan Stanley  Capital
          International - Europe,  Australasia and Far East Index, the Dow Jones
          Industrial Average,  the Salomon Smith Barney Indices, the Lehman Bond
          Indices,  U.S.  Treasury  bonds,  bills or notes,  and  changes in the
          Consumer Price Index as published by the U.S. Department of Commerce.

Performance  information may be presented  numerically or in a table,  graph, or
similar illustration.

Indices are not used in the  management  of the Fund but rather are standards by
which the Fund's  Adviser and  shareholders  may compare the  performance of the
Fund to an unmanaged  composite of securities  with similar,  but not identical,
characteristics as the Fund.

The Fund may refer to: (1) general  market  performances  over past time periods
such as those  published  by Ibbotson  Associates  (for  instance,  its "Stocks,
Bonds, Bills and Inflation Yearbook");  (2) mutual fund performance rankings and
other  data  published  by  Fund  Tracking  Companies;   and  (3)  material  and
comparative  mutual fund data and ratings  reported in independent  periodicals,
such as newspapers and financial magazines.

The Fund's performance will fluctuate in response to market conditions and other
factors.

                                       11
<PAGE>

B.       PERFORMANCE CALCULATIONS

The Fund's performance may be quoted in terms of yield or total return.  Table 1
in Appendix C includes

1.       SEC YIELD

Standardized  SEC  yields  for the Fund  used in  advertising  are  computed  by
dividing the Fund's interest  income (in accordance  with specific  standardized
rules) for a given 30 day or one month period,  net of expenses,  by the average
number of shares  entitled to receive  income  distributions  during the period,
dividing  this  figure by the Fund's net asset value per share at the end of the
period, and annualizing the result (assuming compounding of income in accordance
with  specific  standardized  rules) in order to arrive at an annual  percentage
rate.

Capital gains and losses generally are excluded from these calculations.

Income  calculated for the purpose of determining  the Fund's yield differs from
income as determined  for other  accounting  purposes.  Because of the different
accounting  methods  used,  and  because  of the  compounding  assumed  in yield
calculations,  the  yield  quoted  for the  Fund  may  differ  from  the rate of
distribution  of income from the Fund over the same period or the rate of income
reported in the Fund's financial statements.

Although  published  yield  information  is useful to investors in reviewing the
Fund's  performance,  investors should be aware that the Fund's yield fluctuates
from  day to day and  that the  Fund's  yield  for any  given  period  is not an
indication or  representation by the Fund of future yields or rates of return on
the Fund's  shares.  Financial  intermediaries  may charge their  customers that
invest in the Fund fees in connection with that  investment.  This will have the
effect of reducing the Fund's after-fee yield to those shareholders.

The Fund may also quote tax equivalent  yields,  which show the taxable yields a
shareholder  would have to earn to equal a fund's  tax-free yield after taxes. A
tax  equivalent  yield is calculated by dividing a fund's  tax-free yield by one
minus a stated Federal, state or combined Federal and state tax rate.

The yields of the Fund are not fixed or  guaranteed,  and an  investment  in the
Fund is not insured or guaranteed.  Accordingly, yield information should not be
used to compare shares of the Fund with  investment  alternatives,  which,  like
money market instruments or bank accounts, may provide a fixed rate of interest.
Also, it may not be appropriate to compare the Fund's yield information directly
to similar information regarding investment  alternatives,  which are insured or
guaranteed.

Yield is calculated according to the following formula:
                        a - b
         Yield = 2[(------ + 1)6  - 1]
                         cd

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

2.       TOTAL RETURN CALCULATIONS

The Fund's total return shows its overall change in value,  including changes in
share price, and assumes all of the Fund's distributions are reinvested.

                                       12
<PAGE>

AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURN  Average  annual total return is calculated  using a
formula prescribed by the SEC. To calculate standard average annual total return
the Fund:  (1)  determines  the  growth or  decline  in value of a  hypothetical
historical  investment in the Fund over a stated period;  and (2) calculates the
annually compounded  percentage rate that would have produced the same result if
the rate of growth or decline in value had been  constant  over the period.  For
example,  a  cumulative  return of 100% over ten years would  produce an average
annual  total  return  of  7.18%.  While  average  annual  total  returns  are a
convenient means of comparing investment alternatives,  investors should realize
that  performance is not constant over time but changes from  year-to-year,  and
that average annual total returns  represent  averaged figures as opposed to the
actual year-to-year performance of the Fund.

Average annual total return is calculated according to the following formula:

         P(1+T)n = ERV

         Where:
                  P        =        a hypothetical initial payment of $1,000
                  T        =        average annual total return
                  N        =        number of years
                  ERV      =        ending redeemable  value: ERV is the value,
                                    at the end of the applicable  period, of a
                                    hypothetical $1,000 payment made at the
                                    beginning of the applicable period

Because average annual total returns tend to smooth out variations in the Fund's
returns,  shareholders  should  recognize  that  they are not the same as actual
year-by-year results.

OTHER  MEASURES  OF  TOTAL  RETURN  Standardized  total  return  quotes  may  be
accompanied by  non-standardized  total return figures calculated by alternative
methods.  For  instance,  the Fund may  quote  unaveraged  or  cumulative  total
returns,  which  reflect the Fund's  performance  over a stated  period of time.
Moreover,  total returns may be stated in their components of income and capital
(including  capital gains and changes in share price) in order to illustrate the
relationship of these factors and their contributions to total return.

Any total return may be quoted as a percentage or as a dollar amount, and may be
calculated for a single  investment,  a series of investments and/or a series of
redemptions over any time period

Period total return is calculated according to the following formula:

         PT = (ERV/P-1)

         Where:
                  PT       =        period total return
                  The other definitions are the same as in average annual total
return above

3.       OTHER MATTERS

The Fund may also include a variety of  information  in its  advertising,  sales
literature,  shareholder reports, or other materials including,  but not limited
to: (1) portfolio holdings and portfolio allocation as of certain dates, such as
portfolio  diversification  by instrument  type, by  instrument,  by location of
issuer,  or by  maturity;  (2)  statements  or  illustrations  relating  to  the
appropriateness  of types of securities and/or mutual funds that may be employed
by an investor to meet specific  financial  goals,  such as funding  retirement,
paying for children's education,  and financially  supporting aging parents; (3)
information   (including  charts  and  illustrations)  showing  the  effects  of
compounding  interest  (compounding  is  the  process  of  earning  interest  on
principal plus interest that was earned  earlier;  interest can be compounded at
different  intervals,  such as annually,  quarterly,  or daily); (4) information
relating to  inflation  and its effects on the dollar  (for  example,  after ten
years the purchasing power of $25,000 would shrink to $16,621, $14,968, $13,465,
and $12,100, respectively, if the annual rates of inflation were 4%, 5%, 6%, and
7%, respectively); (5) information regarding the effects of automatic investment
and  systematic  withdrawal  plans,   including  the  principal  of  dollar-cost
averaging;  (6) biographical  descriptions of the Fund's portfolio  managers and


                                       13
<PAGE>

the portfolio  management staff of the Fund's investment  adviser,  summaries of
the views of the portfolio  managers with respect to the financial  markets,  or
descriptions  of  the  nature  of  the  Adviser's  and  its  staff's  management
techniques;  (7) the  results of a  hypothetical  investment  in the Fund over a
given number of years,  including the amount that the investment would be at the
end of the period; (8) the effects of investing in a tax-deferred  account, such
as an individual retirement account or Section 401(k) pension plan; (9) the NAV,
net assets,  or number of shareholders of the Fund as of one or more dates;  and
(10) a comparison of the Fund's  operations to the  operations of other funds or
similar  investment  products,  such as a comparison  of the nature and scope of
regulation  of  the  products  and  the  products'  weighted  average  maturity,
liquidity,  investment  policies,  and the manner of  calculating  and reporting
performance.

As an example of compounding,  $1,000 compounded  annually at 9.00% will grow to
$1,090 at the end of the first year (an  increase  in $90) and $1,188 at the end
of the second year (an increase in $98). The extra $8 that was earned on the $90
interest  from the first year is the compound  interest.  One  thousand  dollars
compounded  annually  at 9.00%  will  grow to $2,367 at the end of ten years and
$5,604 at the end of 20 years. Other examples of compounding are as follows:  at
7% and 12% annually, $1,000 will grow to $1,967 and $3,106, respectively, at the
end of ten  years,  and $3,870 and  $9,646,  respectively,  at the end of twenty
years. These examples are for illustrative  purposes only and are not indicative
of the Fund's performance.

The  Fund  may  advertise   information  regarding  the  effects  of  systematic
investment and systematic  withdrawal  plans,  including the principal of dollar
cost averaging.  In a dollar-cost averaging program, an investor invests a fixed
dollar amount in the Fund at periodic intervals, thereby purchasing fewer shares
when prices are high and more shares when prices are low.  While such a strategy
does not  insure a profit or guard  against a loss in a  declining  market,  the
investor's  average cost per share can be lower than if fixed  numbers of shares
had been  purchased at those  intervals.  In evaluating  such a plan,  investors
should consider their ability to continue  purchasing  shares through periods of
low price levels. For example,  if an investor invests $100 a month for a period
of six months in a fund, the following will be the relationship  between average
cost per share ($14.35 in the example given) and average price per share:

             SYSTEMATIC                    SHARE                    SHARES
PERIOD       INVESTMENT                    PRICE                   PURCHASED
------       ----------                    -----                   ---------
   1            $100                        $10                      10.00
   2            $100                        $12                       8.33
   3            $100                        $15                       6.67
   4            $100                        $20                       5.00
   5            $100                        $18                       5.56
   6            $100                        $16                       6.25
                ----                        ---                       ----
Total Invested  $600      Average Price   $15.17       Total Shares   41.81

In  connection  with its  advertisements,  the Fund may  provide  "shareholder's
letters" which serve to provide  shareholders  or investors with an introduction
into the Fund's, the Trust's,  or any of the Trust's service providers' policies
or business practices.

6.  MANAGEMENT
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

A.       TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS

The names of the  Trustees and officers of the Trust,  their  position  with the
Trust,  address,  date of birth and principal  occupations  during the past five
years are set forth  below.  Each  Trustee  who is an  "interested  person"  (as
defined by the 1940 Act) of the Trust is indicated by an asterisk (*).

                                       14
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
                        <S>                                                     <C>
NAME, POSITION WITH THE TRUST,               PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION(S) DURING
DATE OF BIRTH AND ADDRESS                    PAST 5 YEARS
-------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------------------------------------

-------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
John Y. Keffer*,  Chairman and President     Member and Director, Forum  Financial Group, LLC (a mutual fund
Born:  July 15, 1942                         services  holding  company)
Two Portland  Square                         Director,  Forum  Fund  Services,  LLC  (Trust's  underwriter)
Portland,  ME 04101                          Officer of six other  investment  companies for which Forum Financial
                                             Group, LLC provides services
-------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
Costas Azariadas, Trustee                    Professor of Economics, University of California-Los Angeles
Born:  February 15, 1943                     Visiting Professor of Economics, Athens University of Economics and
Department of Economics                      Business 1998 - 1999
University of California                     Trustee of one other investment company for which Forum Financial
Los Angeles, CA 90024                        Group, LLC provides services
-------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
James C. Cheng, Trustee                      President, Technology Marketing Associates
Born:  July 26, 1942                         (marketing company for small and medium size businesses in New
27 Temple Street                             England)
Belmont, MA 02718                            Trustee of one other investment company for which Forum Financial
                                             Group, LLC provides services
-------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
J. Michael Parish, Trustee                   Partner, Thelen Reid & Priest LLP (law firm) since 1995
Born:  November 9, 1943                      Partner, Winthrop, Stimson, Putnam & Roberts (law firm) 1989 - 1995
40 West 57th Street                          Trustee of one other  investment  company  for which  Forum  Financial
New York, NY 10019                           Group, LLC provides services
-------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
Thomas G. Sheehan, Vice President            Managing Director, Forum Financial Group, LLC
Born:  July 15, 1954                         Officer of five other  investment  companies for which Forum Financial
Two Portland Square                          Group, LLC provides services
Portland, ME 04101
-------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
David I. Goldstein, Vice President           Managing Director, Business Development and Client Services, Forum
Born:  August 3, 1961                        Financial Group LLC
Two Portland Square                          Officer of five other investment companies for which Forum Financial
Portland, ME 04101                           Group, LLC provides services

-------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ronald  H.  Hirsch,   Treasurer              Managing  Director, Operations/Finance and Operations/Sales,  Forum
Born:  October 14, 1943                      Financial Group, LLC since 1999
Two Portland Square                          Member of the Board - Citibank Germany 1991 - 1998
Portland, ME 04101                           Officer of six other investment companies for which Forum Financial
                                             Group, LLC provides services
-------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
Leslie K. Klenk, Secretary                   Counsel, Forum Financial Group, LLC since 1998
Born:  August 24, 1964                       Associate General Counsel,  Smith Barney Inc.  (brokerage firm) 1993 -
Two Portland Square                          1998
Portland, ME 04101                           Officer of one other  investment  company  for which  Forum  Financial
                                             Group, LLC provides services
-------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>


                                       15
<PAGE>

B.       COMPENSATION OF TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS

Each  Trustee of the Trust is paid a  quarterly  retainer  fee of $1,750 for his
service to the Trust.  In addition,  each Trustee will be paid a fee of $500 for
each Board meeting attended (whether in person or by electronic  communication).
Trustees  are also  reimbursed  for  travel and  related  expenses  incurred  in
attending  Board  meetings.  Mr.  Keffer  receives no  compensation  (other than
reimbursement for travel and related expenses) for his service as Trustee of the
Trust.  No officer of the Trust is  compensated  by the Trust but  officers  are
reimbursed for travel and related expenses  incurred in attending Board meetings
held outside of Portland, Maine.

The following  table sets forth the estimated fees to be paid to each Trustee by
the Fund and the Fund  Complex,  which  includes  all  series  of the  Trust and
another  investment  company  for which  Forum  Financial  Group,  LLC  provides
services for the fiscal year ended May 31, 2001.

                             Compensation      Total Compensation from the
         Trustee            from the Funds            Fund Complex*
-------------------------- ------------------ -------------------------------
-------------------------- ------------------ -------------------------------
John Y. Keffer                    $0                        $0
-------------------------- ------------------ -------------------------------
-------------------------- ------------------ -------------------------------
Costas Azariadis               $525.21                  $18,000
-------------------------- ------------------ -------------------------------
-------------------------- ------------------ -------------------------------
James C. Cheng                 $525.21                  $18,000
-------------------------- ------------------ -------------------------------
-------------------------- ------------------ -------------------------------
J. Michael Parish              $525.21                  $18,000
-------------------------- ------------------ -------------------------------

C.       INVESTMENT ADVISER

1.       SERVICES OF ADVISER

The Adviser  serves as investment  adviser to the Fund pursuant to an investment
advisory agreement with the Trust.  Under its agreement,  the Adviser furnishes,
at its  own  expense,  all  services,  facilities  and  personnel  necessary  in
connection  with  managing  the  Fund's  investments  and  effecting   portfolio
transactions for the Fund.

2.       OWNERSHIP OF ADVISER

The Adviser is a fully owned  subsidiary  of Brown  Investment  Advisory & Trust
Company, a trust company operating under the laws of Maryland.  Brown Investment
Advisory & Trust Company is a fully owned  subsidiary of Brown Capital  Holdings
Incorporate, a holding company incorporated under the laws of Maryland in 1998.

3.       FEES

The  Adviser's  fee is  calculated  as a  percentage  of the Fund's  average net
assets. The fee, if not waived, is accrued daily by the Fund and is paid monthly
based on average net assets for the previous month.

                                       16
<PAGE>

In addition to receiving  its  advisory fee from the Fund,  the Adviser may also
act and be  compensated  as  investment  manager for its clients with respect to
assets they invested in the Fund. If you have a separately  managed account with
the Adviser with assets  invested in the Fund, the Adviser will credit an amount
equal to all or a  portion  of the fees  received  by the  Adviser  against  any
investment management fee received from you.

Table 1 in Appendix B shows the dollar amount of the fees payable by the Fund to
the  Adviser,  the amount of fees  waived by the  Adviser,  and the actual  fees
received  by the  Adviser.  The data are for the past  three  fiscal  years  (or
shorter period depending on the Fund's commencement of operations).

4.       OTHER PROVISIONS OF ADVISER'S AGREEMENT

The  Adviser's  agreement  remains  in effect for a period of two years from the
date of its  effectiveness  and then the  agreement  must be approved  annually.
Subsequently,  the Adviser's agreement must be approved at least annually by the
Board or by majority vote of the shareholders,  and in either case by a majority
of the Trustees who are not parties to the  agreement or  interested  persons of
any such party (other than as Trustees of the Trust).

The Adviser's  agreement is terminable without penalty by the Trust with respect
to the Fund on 60 days'  written  notice when  authorized  either by vote of the
Fund's  shareholders or by a majority vote of the Board, or by the Adviser on 60
days' written notice to the Trust.  The agreement  terminates  immediately  upon
assignment.

Under its  agreement,  the  Adviser  is not  liable  for any error of  judgment,
mistake of law, or in any event whatsoever except for willful  misfeasance,  bad
faith,  or gross  negligence  in the  performance  of its duties or by reason of
reckless disregard of its obligations and duties under the agreement.

B.       DISTRIBUTOR

1.       DISTRIBUTOR; SERVICES AND COMPENSATION OF DISTRIBUTOR

FFS, the distributor (also known as principal  underwriter) of the shares of the
Fund,  is  located at Two  Portland  Square,  Portland,  Maine  04101.  FFS is a
registered  broker-dealer  and  is a  member  of  the  National  Association  of
Securities Dealers, Inc.

FFS, FAdS, FAcS and FSS are each controlled indirectly by Forum Financial Group,
LLC, which is controlled by John Y. Keffer.

Under a distribution  agreement (the  "Distribution  Agreement") with the Trust,
FFS acts as the agent of the Trust in connection  with the offering of shares of
the Fund.  FFS  continually  distributes  shares  of the Fund on a best  efforts
basis. FFS has no obligation to sell any specific quantity of Fund shares.

FFS may enter into  arrangements  with various  financial  institutions  through
which you may  purchase or redeem  shares.  FFS may, at its own expense and from
its own resources, compensate certain persons who provide services in connection
with the sale or expected sale of shares of the Fund.

FFS may enter into  agreements  with selected  broker-dealers,  banks,  or other
financial  institutions  for distribution of shares of the Fund. These financial
institutions  may charge a fee for their  services  and may receive  shareholder
service  fees even though  shares of the Fund are sold  without a sales  charge.
These financial institutions may otherwise act as processing agents, and will be
responsible for promptly transmitting purchase, redemption and other requests to
the Fund.

Investors who purchase  shares in this manner will be subject to the  procedures
of the institution through whom they purchase shares, which may include charges,
investment  minimums,  cutoff times,  and other  restrictions in addition to, or
different  from,  those listed  herein.  Information  concerning  any charges or
services will be provided to customers by the financial  institution.  Investors
purchasing  shares of the Fund in this manner should  acquaint  themselves  with
their  institution's  procedures and should read this  Prospectus in conjunction
with any materials and

                                       17
<PAGE>

information provided by their institution.  The financial  institution,  and not
its customers,  will be the shareholder of record,  although  customers may have
the right to vote shares depending upon their arrangement with the institution.

FFS does  not  receive  a fee for  services  performed  under  the  Distribution
Agreement.

2.       OTHER PROVISIONS OF THE DISTRIBUTOR'S AGREEMENT

The  Distribution  Agreement  with respect to the Fund must be approved at least
annually by the Board or by majority vote of the  shareholders of that Fund, and
in  either  case by a  majority  of the  Trustees  who are  not  parties  to the
agreement or interested persons of any such party (other than as Trustees of the
Trust).

The  Distribution  Agreement  is  terminable  without  penalty by the Trust with
respect to the Fund on 60 days' written notice when authorized either by vote of
the Fund's  shareholders,  or by a majority  vote of the Board,  or by FFS on 60
days' written notice to the Trust.

Under the Distribution Agreement,  FFS is not liable to the Trust or the Trust's
shareholders  for any error of judgment or mistake of law,  for any loss arising
out of any  investment,  or for any act or  omission in the  performance  of its
duties  to the  Fund,  except  for  willful  misfeasance,  bad  faith  or  gross
negligence in the  performance of its duties or by reason of reckless  disregard
of its obligations and duties under the agreement.

Under the Distribution Agreement, FFS and certain related parties (such as FFS's
officers and persons that control FFS) are  indemnified by the Trust against all
claims and expenses in any way related to alleged untrue  statements of material
fact contained in the Trust's Registration  Statement or any alleged omission of
a material  fact  required to be stated in the  Registration  Statement  to make
statements  contained  therein  not  misleading.  The Trust,  however,  will not
indemnify  FFS for any such  misstatements  or  omissions  if they  were made in
reliance  upon  information  provided in writing by FFS in  connection  with the
preparation of the Registration Statement.

C.       OTHER FUND SERVICE PROVIDERS

1.       ADMINISTRATOR

As administrator,  pursuant to an administration  agreement with the Trust, FAdS
is  responsible  for the  supervision  of the overall  management  of the Trust,
providing  the Trust with  general  office  facilities,  and  providing  persons
satisfactory to the Board to serve as officers of the Trust.

For its  services,  FAdS receives a fee from the Fund at an annual rate of 0.10%
of the first $100  million of the Fund's  average  daily net assets and 0.75% of
the Fund's  average  daily net  assets in excess of $100  million , subject to a
minimum fee of $40,000. The fee is accrued daily by the Fund and is paid monthly
based on average net assets for the previous month.

The Administration  Agreement with respect to the Fund must be approved at least
annually by the Board or by majority vote of the  shareholders of that Fund, and
in  either  case by a  majority  of the  Trustees  who are  not  parties  to the
agreement or interested persons of any such party (other than as Trustees of the
Trust). The Administration  Agreement is terminable without penalty by the Trust
or by FAdS with respect to the Fund on 60 days' written notice to the Trust.

Under  the  Administration  Agreement,  FAdS is not  liable  to the Trust or the
Trust's  shareholders for any act or omission,  except for willful  misfeasance,
bad faith, or gross  negligence in the performance of its duties or by reason of
reckless disregard of its obligations and duties under the agreement.  Under the
agreement, FAdS and certain related parties (such as FAdS's officers and persons
who control  FAdS) are  indemnified  by the Trust against any and all claims and
expenses  related to FAdS's actions or omissions that are consistent with FAdS's
contractual standard of care.

Table 2 in Appendix B shows the dollar amount of the fees payable by the Fund to
FAdS,  the amount of the fee waived by FAdS,  and the actual  fees  received  by
FAdS. The data is for the past three fiscal years (or shorter  period  depending
on the Fund's commencement of operations).

                                       18
<PAGE>

2.       FUND ACCOUNTANT

As fund  accountant,  pursuant to an agreement  with the Trust (the  "Accounting
Agreement"),  FAcS provides fund accounting services to the Fund. These services
include  calculating  the NAV of the Fund and  preparing  the  Fund's  financial
statements and tax returns.

For its services, FAcS receives a fee from the Fund at an annual rate of $36,000
plus $3,000 for the preparation of tax returns and certain surcharges based upon
the number and type of the Fund's portfolio transactions and positions.  The fee
is accrued daily by the Fund and is paid monthly based on the  transactions  and
positions for the previous month.

The  Accounting  Agreement  with  respect to the Fund must be  approved at least
annually by the Board or by  majority  vote of the  shareholders,  and in either
case by a majority  of the  Trustees  who are not  parties to the  agreement  or
interested  persons of any such party (other than as Trustees of the Trust). The
Accounting  Agreement is terminable without penalty by the Trust or by FAcS with
respect to the Fund on 60 days' written notice.

Under the Accounting Agreement, FAcS is not liable for any action or omission in
the performance of its duties to the Fund, except for willful  misfeasance,  bad
faith,  gross negligence,  or by reason of reckless disregard of its obligations
and duties under the agreement.  Under the agreement,  FAcS and certain  related
parties (such as FAcS's  officers and persons who control FAcS) are  indemnified
by the Trust against any and all claims and expenses  related to FAcS's  actions
or omissions that are consistent with FAcS's contractual standard of care.

Under the Accounting  Agreement,  in calculating  the Fund's NAV, FAcS is deemed
not to have  committed an error if the NAV it calculates is within 1/10 of 1% of
the actual NAV (after recalculation). The agreement also provides that FAcS will
not be liable to a shareholder for any loss incurred due to an NAV difference if
such  difference  is less  than or equal  to 1/2 of 1% or less  than or equal to
$10.00. In addition, FAcS is not liable for the errors of others,  including the
companies that supply securities prices to FAcS and the Fund.

Table 3 in Appendix B shows the dollar amount of the fees payable by the Fund to
FAcS,  the amount of the fee waived by FAcS,  and the actual  fees  received  by
FAcS. The data is for the past three fiscal years (or shorter  period  depending
on the Fund's commencement of operations).

3.       TRANSFER AGENT

As transfer agent and distribution  paying agent,  pursuant to an agreement with
the Trust  ("Transfer  Agency  Agreement"),  FSS  maintains  an account for each
shareholder of record of the Fund and is responsible for processing purchase and
redemption  requests and paying  distributions to shareholders of record. FSS is
located at Two Portland  Square,  Portland,  Maine 04101 and is  registered as a
transfer agent with the SEC.

For its services,  FSS receives a fee from the Fund at an annual rate of $18,000
plus $25 per  shareholder  account.  The fee is accrued daily by the Fund and is
paid monthly based on the average net assets for the previous month.

The Transfer Agency Agreement with respect to the Fund must be approved at least
annually by the Board or by  majority  vote of the  shareholders,  and in either
case by a majority  of the  Trustees  who are not  parties to the  agreement  or
interested  persons of any such party (other than as Trustees of the Trust). The
Transfer Agency  Agreement is terminable  without penalty by the Trust or by FFS
with respect to the Fund on 60 days' written notice.

Under  the  Transfer  Agency  Agreement,  FSS is not  liable  for any act in the
performance  of its duties to the Fund,  except  for  willful  misfeasance,  bad
faith, or gross negligence in the performance of its duties under the agreement.
Under the agreement, FSS and certain related parties (such as FSS's officers and
persons who control FSS) are indemnified by the Trust against any and all claims
and expenses  related to FSS's  actions or omissions  that are  consistent  with
FSS's contractual standard of care.

                                       19
<PAGE>

Table 4 in Appendix B shows the dollar amount of the fees payable by the Fund to
FSS, the amount of the fee waived by FSS,  and the actual fees  received by FSS.
The data is for the past three fiscal years (or shorter period  depending on the
Fund's commencement of operations).

4.       SHAREHOLDER SERVICING AGENT

Pursuant to a Shareholder  Service Plan (the "Plan")  between the Trust and FAdS
effective  December 31, 2000, FAdS is authorized to perform,  or arrange for the
performance of, certain activities  relating to the servicing and maintenance of
shareholder  accounts  not  otherwise  provided by FSS  ("Shareholder  Servicing
Activities"). Under the Plan, FAds may enter into shareholder service agreements
with financial  institutions or other persons who provide Shareholder  Servicing
Activities for their clients invested in the Fund.

Shareholder Servicing Activities shall include one or more of the following: (1)
establishing and maintaining  accounts and records for shareholders of the Fund;
(2)  answering  client  inquiries  regarding  the  manner  in  which  purchases,
exchanges  and  redemptions  of shares of the  Trust may be  effected  and other
matters pertaining to the Trust's services;  (3) providing  necessary  personnel
and  facilities  to establish  and  maintain  client  accounts and records;  (4)
assisting clients in arranging for processing purchase,  exchange and redemption
transactions;   (5)  arranging  for  the  wiring  of  funds;   (6)  guaranteeing
shareholder  signatures in connection with  redemption  orders and transfers and
changes in shareholder-designated  accounts; (7) integrating periodic statements
with other  shareholder  transactions;  and (8)  providing  such  other  related
services as the shareholder may request.

As compensation  for the Shareholder  Servicing  Activities,  the Trust pays the
shareholder servicing agent, through FAdS, with respect to the Fund, a fee of up
to  0.25% of that  Fund's  average  daily  net  assets  of the  shares  owned by
investors  for which the  shareholder  servicing  agent  maintains  a  servicing
relationship.

Any material  amendment  to the Plan must be approved by the Board,  including a
majority  of the  Disinterested  Trustees.  The Plan may be  terminated  without
penalty  at any  time:  (1) by vote of a  majority  of the  Board,  including  a
majority of the Trustees who are not parties to the Plan or  interested  persons
of any such party; or (2) by FAdS.

5.       CUSTODIAN

As  custodian,  pursuant  to an  agreement  with  the  Trust,  Forum  Trust  LLC
safeguards and controls the Fund's cash and securities,  determines  income, and
collects interest on Fund investments. The Custodian may employ subcustodians to
provide  custody of the Fund's  domestic and foreign  assets.  The  Custodian is
located at Two Portland Square, Portland, Maine 04101.

For its services, the Custodian receives an annualized percentage of the average
daily net assets of the Fund. The Fund also pays an annual domestic  custody fee
as well as certain other  transaction  fees. These fees are accrued daily by the
Fund and are paid monthly based on average net assets and  transactions  for the
previous month.

6.       LEGAL COUNSEL

Seward & Kissel LLP, 1200 G Street,  N.W.,  Washington,  D.C.  20005 passes upon
legal matters in connection with the issuance of shares of the Trust.

7.       INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

[Name of Independent  Auditor],  [Address of Independent  Auditor],  independent
auditors,  have been selected as independent  auditors for the Fund. The auditor
audits the annual financial statements of the Fund and provides the Fund with an
audit opinion.  The auditors also review certain  regulatory filings of the Fund
and the Fund's tax returns.

                                       20
<PAGE>

7.  PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

A.       HOW SECURITIES ARE PURCHASED AND SOLD

Purchases  and sales of portfolio  securities  that are fixed income  securities
(for instance,  money market instruments and bonds, notes and bills) usually are
principal transactions. In a principal transaction, the party from whom the Fund
purchases  or to whom the Fund sells is acting on its own behalf (and not as the
agent of some other party such as its customers).  These securities normally are
purchased  directly from the issuer or from an  underwriter  or market maker for
the  securities.  There  usually  are no  brokerage  commissions  paid for these
securities.

Purchases  and sales of portfolio  securities  that are equity  securities  (for
instance common stock and preferred  stock) are generally  effected:  (1) if the
security is traded on an exchange,  through brokers who charge commissions;  and
(2) if the security is traded in the "over-the-counter"  markets, in a principal
transaction  directly from a market maker. In  transactions on stock  exchanges,
commissions   are   negotiated.   When   transactions   are   executed   in   an
over-the-counter  market,  the Adviser will seek to deal with the primary market
makers;  but when necessary in order to obtain best execution,  the Adviser will
utilize the services of others.

The price of securities  purchased from underwriters  includes a disclosed fixed
commission or concession  paid by the issuer to the  underwriter,  and prices of
securities  purchased from dealers  serving as market makers reflects the spread
between the bid and asked price.

In the case of fixed income and equity securities traded in the over-the-counter
markets, there is generally no stated commission, but the price usually includes
an undisclosed commission or markup.

B.       COMMISSIONS PAID

Table 5 in Appendix B shows the aggregate brokerage commissions paid by the Fund
as  well  as  aggregate  commissions  paid to an  affiliate  of the  Fund or the
Adviser.  The data  presented  are for the past three  fiscal  years (or shorter
period depending on the Fund's commencement of operations).

C.       ADVISER RESPONSIBILITY FOR PURCHASES AND SALES

The  Adviser  places  orders  for  the  purchase  and  sale of  securities  with
broker-dealers selected by and in the discretion of the Adviser. The Fund has no
obligation  to deal  with a  specific  broker  or  dealer  in the  execution  of
portfolio  transactions.  Allocations of transactions to brokers and dealers and
the frequency of transactions are determined by the Adviser in its best judgment
and in a manner deemed to be in the best interest of the Fund rather than by any
formula.

The Adviser seeks "best  execution" for all portfolio  transactions.  This means
that the Adviser seeks the most  favorable  price and execution  available.  The
Adviser's primary consideration in executing transactions for the Fund is prompt
execution  of orders in an  effective  manner  and at the most  favorable  price
available.

D.       CHOOSING BROKER-DEALERS

The Fund may not always pay the lowest commission or spread  available.  Rather,
in determining the amount of commissions (including certain dealer spreads) paid
in  connection  with  securities  transactions,  the Adviser  takes into account
factors such as size of the order,  difficulty of  execution,  efficiency of the
executing broker's facilities  (including the research services described below)
and any risk assumed by the executing broker.

Consistent with applicable rules and the Adviser's duties,  the Adviser may: (1)
consider  sales  of  shares  of  the  Fund  as a  factor  in  the  selection  of
broker-dealers to execute portfolio  transactions for the Fund; and (2) payments
made by brokers effecting  transactions for the Fund (these payments may be made
to the Fund or to other  persons on behalf of the Fund for services  provided to
the Fund for which those other persons would be obligated to pay).

                                       21
<PAGE>

E.       OBTAINING RESEARCH FROM BROKERS

The Adviser may give  consideration to research services furnished by brokers to
the  Adviser  for its use and may cause  the Fund to pay these  brokers a higher
amount of  commission  than may be charged by other  brokers.  This  research is
designed to augment the Adviser's own internal research and investment  strategy
capabilities.  This  research  may be used by the  Adviser  in  connection  with
services to clients  other than the Fund,  and not all research  services may be
used by the Adviser in  connection  with the Fund.  The  Adviser's  fees are not
reduced by reason of the Adviser's receipt of research services.

The Adviser has full brokerage discretion. It evaluates the range and quality of
a  broker's   services  in  placing  trades   including   securing  best  price,
confidentiality,  clearance and settlement capabilities, promptness of execution
and the financial stability of the broker-dealer.  Under certain  circumstances,
the  value of  research  provided  by a  broker-dealer  may be a  factor  in the
selection of a broker.  This research  would include  reports that are common in
the  industry.  Typically,  the  research  will be used  to  service  all of the
Adviser's  accounts,  although a particular  client may not benefit from all the
research  received on each  occasion.  The nature of the  services  obtained for
clients include industry  research reports and periodicals,  quotation  systems,
software for portfolio management and formal data bases.

Occasionally,  the  Adviser  utilizes  a  broker  and  pays  a  slightly  higher
commission than another might charge.  The higher  commission is paid because of
the Adviser's need for specific research, for specific expertise a firm may have
in a particular type of transaction (due to factors such as size or difficulty),
or for  speed/efficiency  in execution.  Since most of the  Adviser's  brokerage
commissions  for  research are for  economic  research on specific  companies or
industries,  and since the Adviser follows a limited number of securities,  most
of the commission dollars spent for industry and stock research directly benefit
the Adviser's clients and the Fund's investors.

There are occasions on which portfolio  transactions  may be executed as part of
concurrent  authorizations to purchase or sell the same securities for more than
one account  served by the  Adviser.  Although  such  concurrent  authorizations
potentially could be either  advantageous or  disadvantageous to any one or more
particular  accounts,  they will be effected only when the Adviser believes that
to do so will be in the  best  interest  of the  affected  accounts.  When  such
concurrent authorizations occur, the objective will be to allocate the execution
in a manner equitable to the accounts involved.  Clients are typically allocated
securities with prices averaged on a per-share or per-bond basis.

1.       COUNTERPARTY RISK

The  Adviser  monitors  the  creditworthiness  of  counterparties  to the Fund's
transactions  and intends to enter into a transaction only when it believes that
the counterparty presents minimal and appropriate credit risks.

2.       TRANSACTIONS THROUGH AFFILIATES

The  Adviser  may effect  transactions  through  affiliates  of the  Adviser (or
affiliates of those persons) pursuant to procedures adopted by the Trust.

3.       OTHER ACCOUNTS OF THE ADVISER

Investment  decisions  for the Fund are made  independently  from  those for any
other account or investment  company that is or may in the future become advised
by the Adviser or its affiliates.  Investment  decisions are the product of many
factors,  including  basic  suitability  for  the  particular  client  involved.
Likewise,  a particular  security may be bought or sold for certain clients even
though it could  have been  bought or sold for other  clients  at the same time.
Likewise,  a particular  security may be bought for one or more clients when one
or more clients are selling the security. In some instances, one client may sell
a particular  security to another client.  In addition,  two or more clients may
simultaneously  purchase or sell the same security,  in which event,  each day's
transactions in such security are, insofar as is possible,  averaged as to price
and allocated between such clients in a manner which,

                                       22
<PAGE>

in the Adviser's opinion, is equitable to each and in accordance with the amount
being purchased or sold by each.  There may be  circumstances  when purchases or
sales of a portfolio  security  for one client  could have an adverse  effect on
another client that has a position in that security. In addition, when purchases
or sales of the same security for the Fund and other client accounts  managed by
the  Adviser  occurs  contemporaneously,  the  purchase  or sale  orders  may be
aggregated  in  order  to  obtain  any  price  advantages   available  to  large
denomination purchases or sales.

4.       PORTFOLIO TURNOVER

The  frequency of portfolio  transactions  of the Fund (the  portfolio  turnover
rate) will vary from year to year depending on many factors.  From time to time,
the Fund may  engage in active  short-term  trading to take  advantage  of price
movements  affecting  individual issues,  groups of issues or markets. An annual
portfolio turnover rate of 100% would occur if all the securities in a fund were
replaced once in a period of one year. High portfolio  turnover rates may result
in increased  brokerage costs to the Fund and a possible  increase in short-term
capital gains or losses.

5.       SECURITIES OF REGULAR BROKER-DEALERS

From  time to time,  the Fund may  acquire  and hold  securities  issued  by its
"regular  brokers and dealers" or the parents of those brokers and dealers.  For
this purpose,  regular brokers and dealers means the 10 brokers or dealers that:
(1) received the greatest amount of brokerage commissions during the Fund's last
fiscal year;  (2) engaged in the largest  amount of principal  transactions  for
portfolio  transactions  of the Fund during the Fund's last fiscal year;  or (3)
sold the largest amount of the Fund's shares during the Fund's last fiscal year.
Table 6 in Appendix B lists the  regular  brokers and dealers of the Funds whose
securities  (or the securities of the parent  company) were acquired  during the
past  fiscal  year and the  appropriate  value of the Funds'  holdings  at those
securities as of the Funds most recent fiscal year.

8.  PURCHASE AND REDEMPTION INFORMATION
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

A.       GENERAL INFORMATION

You may effect purchases or redemptions or request any shareholder  privilege in
person at FSS's offices located at Two Portland Square, Portland, Maine 04101.

The Fund accepts  orders for the purchase or redemption of shares on any weekday
except days when the New York Stock Exchange is closed.

Not all classes or funds of the Trust may be available  for sale in the state in
which you reside. Please check with your investment  professional to determine a
class or fund's availability.

B.       ADDITIONAL PURCHASE INFORMATION

Shares  of the Fund are sold on a  continuous  basis by the  distributor  at net
asset value ("NAV")  without any sales charge.  Accordingly,  the offering price
per share is the same as the NAV.

The Fund reserves the right to refuse any purchase request.

Fund shares are  normally  issued for cash only.  In the  Adviser's  discretion,
however,  the Fund may  accept  portfolio  securities  that meet the  investment
objective  and  policies of the Fund as payment for Fund  shares.  The Fund will
only accept  securities  that:  (1) are not restricted as to transfer by law and
are not illiquid;  and (2) have a value that is readily  ascertainable  (and not
established only by valuation procedures).

                                       23
<PAGE>

C.       UGMAS/UTMAS

If the custodian's name is not in the account registration of a gift or transfer
to minor  ("UGMA/UTMA")  account,  the custodian must provide  instructions in a
manner indicating custodial capacity.

D.       PURCHASES THROUGH FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS

You may purchase and redeem shares  through  certain  broker-dealers,  banks and
other financial institutions.  Financial institutions may charge their customers
a fee for their services and are responsible for promptly transmitting purchase,
redemption and other requests to the Fund.

If you purchase shares through a financial  institution,  you will be subject to
the institution's procedures, which may include charges, limitations, investment
minimums, cutoff times and restrictions in addition to, or different from, those
applicable  when you invest in the Fund  directly.  When you purchase the Fund's
shares through a financial institution, you may or may not be the shareholder of
record and, subject to your institution's  procedures,  you may have Fund shares
transferred into your name. There is typically a three-day settlement period for
purchases and redemptions through broker-dealers. Certain financial institutions
may also enter purchase orders with payment to follow.

You may not be  eligible  for certain  shareholder  services  when you  purchase
shares through a financial  institution.  Contact your financial institution for
further  information.  If you hold shares through a financial  institution,  the
Fund may confirm purchases and redemptions to the financial  institution,  which
will provide you with  confirmations  and periodic  statements.  The Fund is not
responsible  for the  failure  of any  financial  institution  to carry  out its
obligations.

Investors  purchasing shares of the Fund through a financial  institution should
read any materials and  information  provided by the  financial  institution  to
acquaint  themselves  with its procedures and any fees that the  institution may
charge.

E.       ADDITIONAL REDEMPTION INFORMATION

The Fund may redeem shares involuntarily to: (1) reimburse the Fund for any loss
sustained  by reason of the failure of a  shareholder  to make full  payment for
shares  purchased;  or (2) collect any charge relating to transactions  effected
for the benefit of a  shareholder  which is  applicable  to the Fund's shares as
provided in the Prospectus.

F.       SUSPENSION OF RIGHT OF REDEMPTION

The right of  redemption  may not be  suspended,  except for any  period  during
which:  (1) the New York Stock Exchange is closed (other than customary  weekend
and holiday closings) or during which the SEC determines that trading thereon is
restricted;  (2) an emergency  (as  determined by the SEC) exists as a result of
which disposal by the Fund of its securities is not reasonably practicable or as
a result  of which  it is not  reasonably  practicable  for the Fund  fairly  to
determine  the value of its net assets;  or (3) the SEC may by order  permit for
the protection of the shareholders of the Fund.

G.       REDEMPTION-IN-KIND

Redemption  proceeds  normally  are  paid in cash.  If  deemed  appropriate  and
advisable  by the  Adviser,  the Fund may satisfy a  redemption  request  from a
shareholder by distributing  portfolio securities pursuant to procedures adopted
by the Board. The Trust has filed an election with the SEC pursuant to which the
Fund may only effect a redemption  in  portfolio  securities  if the  particular
shareholder  is  redeeming  more than  $250,000  or 1% of the  Fund's  total net
assets, whichever is less, during any 90-day period.

H.       NAV DETERMINATION

In  determining  the Fund's NAV,  securities  for which  market  quotations  are
readily  available are valued at current market value using the valuation  price
provided by an independent pricing service. If an independent pricing

                                       24
<PAGE>

service  is unable to  provide a  valuation  for a  security  held in the Fund's
portfolio, the security is reported the average of the last bid and ask price is
used. If no average price is available, the last bid price is used. If valued at
fair value as determined by the Board (or its delegate).

I.       DISTRIBUTIONS

Distributions  of net  investment  income will be  reinvested  at the Fund's NAV
(unless  you elect to receive  distributions  in cash) as of the last day of the
period with respect to which the distribution is paid.  Distributions of capital
gain  will be  reinvested  at the  Fund's  NAV  (unless  you  elect  to  receive
distributions in cash) on the payment date for the  distribution.  Cash payments
may be made more than seven days following the date on which distributions would
otherwise be reinvested.

9.  TAXATION
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The tax  information  set forth in the  Prospectus  and the  information in this
section relates solely to U.S.  federal income tax law and assumes that the Fund
qualifies  as  a  regulated   investment  company  (as  discussed  below).  This
information is only a summary of certain key federal  income tax  considerations
affecting the Fund and its  shareholders  and is in addition to the  information
provided  in the  Prospectus.  No  attempt  has been made to  present a complete
explanation of the federal tax treatment of the Fund or the tax  implications to
shareholders.  The  discussions  here and in the  Prospectus are not intended as
substitutes for careful tax planning.

This  "Taxation"  section  is based on the Code and  applicable  regulations  in
effect on the date hereof. Future legislative or administrative changes or court
decisions may significantly  change the tax rules applicable to the Fund and its
shareholders.  Any of these  changes or court  decisions  may have a retroactive
effect.

All investors  should  consult  their own tax advisor as to the federal,  state,
local and foreign tax provisions applicable to them.

A.       QUALIFICATION AS A REGULATED INVESTMENT COMPANY

The Fund  intends,  for each tax year,  to  qualify as a  "regulated  investment
company"  under the  Code.  This  qualification  does not  involve  governmental
supervision of management or investment practices or policies of the Fund.

The tax year end of the Fund is May 31 (the same as the Fund's fiscal year end).

B.       MEANING OF QUALIFICATION

As a  regulated  investment  company,  the Fund will not be  subject  to federal
income tax on the portion of its  investment  company  taxable  income (that is,
taxable  interest,  dividends,  net  short-term  capital gains and other taxable
ordinary  income,  net of expenses) and net capital gain (that is, the excess of
net  long-term  capital  gains  over  net  short-term  capital  losses)  that it
distributes  to  shareholders.  In order to qualify  to be taxed as a  regulated
investment company the Fund must satisfy the following requirements:

     o    The Fund  must  distribute  at  least  90% of its  investment  company
          taxable income for the tax year.  (Certain  distributions  made by the
          Fund  after  the  close of its tax year are  considered  distributions
          attributable  to the previous tax year for purposes of satisfying this
          requirement.)

     o    The Fund must  derive at least 90% of its gross  income  from  certain
          types of income  derived  with respect to its business of investing in
          securities.

     o    The Fund must satisfy the following asset  diversification test at the
          close of each quarter of the Fund's tax year:  (1) at least 50% of the
          value of the Fund's  assets must consist of cash and cash items,  U.S.
          Government  securities,   securities  of  other  regulated  investment
          companies,  and  securities of other issuers

                                       25
<PAGE>

          (as to which  the Fund has not  invested  more than 5% of the value of
          the Fund's total assets in securities of an issuer and as to which the
          Fund does not hold more than 10% of the outstanding  voting securities
          of the  issuer);  and (2) no more than 25% of the value of the  Fund's
          total  assets  may be  invested  in the  securities  of any one issuer
          (other  than  U.S.  Government  securities  and  securities  of  other
          regulated investment  companies),  or in two or more issuers which the
          Fund  controls and which are engaged in the same or similar  trades or
          businesses.

C.       FAILURE TO QUALIFY

If for any tax year the Fund does not qualify as a regulated investment company,
all of its taxable  income  (including  its net capital gain) will be subject to
tax  at  regular   corporate  rates  without  any  deduction  for  dividends  to
shareholders,  and the dividends will be taxable to the shareholders as ordinary
income to the extent of the Fund's current and accumulated earnings and profits.

Failure to qualify as a regulated  investment company would thus have a negative
impact on the Fund's income and  performance.  It is possible that the Fund will
not qualify as a regulated investment company in any given tax year.

D.       FUND DISTRIBUTIONS

The Fund anticipates  distributing  substantially all of its investment  company
taxable  income for each tax year.  These  distributions  are  taxable to you as
ordinary income.

The Fund anticipates distributing  substantially all of its net capital gain for
each tax year. These distributions  generally are made only once a year, usually
in November or December,  but the Fund may make additional  distributions of net
capital gain at any time during the year. These distributions are taxable to you
as long-term  capital gain  regardless  of how long you have held shares.  These
distributions do not qualify for the dividends-received deduction.

Distributions  by the Fund that do not constitute  ordinary income  dividends or
capital gain dividends will be treated as a return of capital. Return of capital
distributions  reduce  your tax basis in the shares and are treated as gain from
the sale of the shares to the extent your basis would be reduced below zero.

All  distributions  by the Fund will be treated in the  manner  described  above
regardless  of  whether  the  distribution  is paid in  cash  or  reinvested  in
additional shares of the Fund (or of another Fund). If you receive distributions
in  the  form  of  additional  shares,  you  will  be  treated  as  receiving  a
distribution in an amount equal to the fair market value of the shares received,
determined as of the reinvestment date.

You may  purchase  shares  whose  NAV at the  time  reflects  undistributed  net
investment income or recognized capital gain, or unrealized  appreciation in the
value of the assets of the Fund.  Distributions  of these amounts are taxable to
you in the  manner  described  above,  although  the  distribution  economically
constitutes a return of capital to you.

Ordinarily,  you are required to take  distributions by the Fund into account in
the year in which they are made. A distribution declared in October, November or
December of any year and payable to  shareholders  of record on a specified date
in those months, however, is deemed to be received by you (and made by the Fund)
on December 31 of that  calendar  year if the  distribution  is actually paid in
January of the following year.

You will be advised  annually as to the U.S.  federal income tax consequences of
distributions made (or deemed made) during the year.

E.       CERTAIN TAX RULES APPLICABLE TO THE FUNDS' TRANSACTIONS

Certain  regulated   futures  contracts  and  forward  currency   contracts  are
considered  "Section 1256  contracts" for federal  income tax purposes.  Section
1256  contracts  held by the Fund at the end of each tax  year  are  "marked  to
market"  and treated  for  federal  income tax  purposes as though sold for fair
market value on the last business day of

                                       26
<PAGE>

the tax year.  Gains or losses  realized by the Fund on Section  1256  contracts
generally  are  considered  60% long-term  and 40%  short-term  capital gains or
losses. The Fund can elect to exempt its Section 1256 contracts that are part of
a "mixed straddle" (as described below) from the application of Section 1256.

Any  futures  contract  or other  position  entered  into or held by the Fund in
conjunction with any other position held by the Fund may constitute a "straddle"
for federal income tax purposes.  A straddle of which at least one, but not all,
the positions are Section 1256 contracts,  may constitute a "mixed straddle." In
general,  straddles  are subject to certain  rules that may affect the character
and timing of the Fund's gains and losses with respect to straddle  positions by
requiring, among other things, that: (1) the loss realized on disposition of one
position  of a straddle  may not be  recognized  to the extent that the Fund has
unrealized  gains with respect to the other position in such  straddle;  (2) the
Fund's  holding  period in straddle  positions be  suspended  while the straddle
exists  (possibly  resulting in gain being  treated as  short-term  capital gain
rather than long-term  capital gain); (3) the losses  recognized with respect to
certain  straddle  positions  which are part of a mixed  straddle  and which are
non-Section  1256  positions  be treated  as 60%  long-term  and 40%  short-term
capital loss; (4) losses  recognized with respect to certain straddle  positions
which  would  otherwise  constitute  short-term  capital  losses be  treated  as
long-term capital losses; and (5) the deduction of interest and carrying charges
attributable to certain straddle  positions may be deferred.  Various  elections
are available to the Fund, which may mitigate the effects of the straddle rules,
particularly  with respect to mixed  straddles.  In general,  the straddle rules
described  above do not  apply to any  straddles  held by the Fund if all of the
offsetting positions consist of Section 1256 contracts.

F.       FEDERAL EXCISE TAX

A 4% non-deductible excise tax is imposed on a regulated investment company that
fails to  distribute  in each  calendar  year an amount equal to: (1) 98% of its
ordinary  taxable  income for the calendar year; and (2) 98% of its capital gain
net income for the one-year period ended on October 31 of the calendar year. The
balance of the Fund's income must be distributed  during the next calendar year.
The Fund will be treated as having distributed any amount on which it is subject
to income tax for any tax year.

For purposes of  calculating  the excise tax, the Fund:  (1) reduces its capital
gain net income  (but not below its net  capital  gain) by the amount of any net
ordinary loss for the calendar year; and (2) excludes foreign currency gains and
losses  incurred  after  October  31 of any year in  determining  the  amount of
ordinary  taxable  income for the current  calendar  year. The Fund will include
foreign  currency  gains and losses  incurred  after  October 31 in  determining
ordinary taxable income for the succeeding calendar year.

The Fund intends to make sufficient distributions of its ordinary taxable income
and  capital  gain net income  prior to the end of each  calendar  year to avoid
liability  for the excise tax.  Investors  should note,  however,  that the Fund
might in certain circumstances be required to liquidate portfolio investments to
make sufficient distributions to avoid excise tax liability.

G.       SALE OR REDEMPTION OF SHARES

In general,  you will recognize gain or loss on the sale or redemption of shares
of the Fund in an amount  equal to the  difference  between the  proceeds of the
sale or redemption  and your adjusted tax basis in the shares.  All or a portion
of any loss so recognized  may be  disallowed  if you purchase (for example,  by
reinvesting  dividends)  other shares of the Fund within 30 days before or after
the sale or redemption (a so called "wash sale").  If disallowed,  the loss will
be reflected in an upward  adjustment to the basis of the shares  purchased.  In
general,  any gain or loss arising from the sale or  redemption of shares of the
Fund will be considered  capital gain or loss and will be long-term capital gain
or loss if the  shares  were held for longer  than one year.  Any  capital  loss
arising  from the sale or  redemption  of  shares  held for six  months or less,
however,  is treated as a long-term  capital loss to the extent of the amount of
distributions  of net capital gain received on such shares.  In determining  the
holding  period of such shares for this  purpose,  any period  during which your
risk of loss is offset by means of options,  short sales or similar transactions
is not counted.  Capital losses in any year are deductible only to the extent of
capital gains plus, in the case of a non-corporate taxpayer,  $3,000 of ordinary
income.

                                       27
<PAGE>

H.       BACKUP WITHHOLDING

The Fund will be  required in certain  cases to  withhold  and remit to the U.S.
Treasury 31% of distributions,  and the proceeds of redemptions of shares,  paid
to any  shareholder:  (1)  who  has  failed  to  provide  its  correct  taxpayer
identification  number;  (2) who is subject to backup withholding by the IRS for
failure to report the receipt of interest or dividend  income  properly;  or (3)
who has  failed  to  certify  to the  Fund  that  it is not  subject  to  backup
withholding  or that it is a  corporation  or other "exempt  recipient."  Backup
withholding  is not an  additional  tax; any amounts so withheld may be credited
against a shareholder's federal income tax liability or refunded.

I.       FOREIGN SHAREHOLDERS

Taxation  of  a  shareholder  who,  under  the  Code,  is  a  nonresident  alien
individual,  foreign trust or estate, foreign corporation or foreign partnership
("foreign  shareholder"),  depends  on  whether  the  income  from  the  Fund is
"effectively  connected" with a U.S. trade or business carried on by the foreign
shareholder.

If the income from the Fund is not  effectively  connected  with a U.S. trade or
business carried on by a foreign  shareholder,  distributions of ordinary income
(and short-term capital gains) paid to a foreign  shareholder will be subject to
U.S.  withholding tax at the rate of 30% (or lower applicable  treaty rate) upon
the gross amount of the distribution. The foreign shareholder generally would be
exempt from U.S.  federal  income tax on gain  realized on the sale of shares of
the Fund and distributions of net capital gain from the Fund.

If the  income  from  the Fund is  effectively  connected  with a U.S.  trade or
business   carried  on  by  a  foreign   shareholder,   then   ordinary   income
distributions,  capital gain distributions,  and any gain realized upon the sale
of shares of the Fund will be  subject to U.S.  federal  income tax at the rates
applicable to U.S. citizens or U.S. corporations.

In the case of a non-corporate foreign shareholder,  the Fund may be required to
withhold  U.S.  federal  income tax at a rate of 31% on  distributions  that are
otherwise exempt from withholding (or taxable at a reduced treaty rate),  unless
the  shareholder  furnishes  the Fund with  proper  notification  of its foreign
status.

The tax consequences to a foreign shareholder  entitled to claim the benefits of
an applicable tax treaty may be different from those described herein.

The tax rules of other countries with respect to distributions from the Fund can
differ from the U.S.  federal  income  taxation  rules  described  above.  These
foreign  rules  are not  discussed  herein.  Foreign  shareholders  are urged to
consult their own tax advisers as to the  consequences of foreign tax rules with
respect to an investment in the Fund.

J.       STATE AND LOCAL TAXES

The tax rules of the various  states of the U.S.  and their local  jurisdictions
with  respect to  distributions  from the Fund can differ from the U.S.  federal
income  taxation  rules  described  above.  These  state and local rules are not
discussed herein. Shareholders are urged to consult their tax advisers as to the
consequences  of state and local tax rules with respect to an  investment in the
Fund.

K.       FOREIGN INCOME TAX

Investment income received by the Fund from sources within foreign countries may
be subject to foreign income taxes withheld at the source. The United States has
entered into tax treaties with many foreign countries that entitle the Fund to a
reduced  rate of such  taxes  or  exemption  from  taxes on such  income.  It is
impossible to know the effective rate of foreign tax in advance since the amount
of  the  Fund's  assets  to be  invested  within  various  countries  cannot  be
determined.

                                       28
<PAGE>

10.  OTHER MATTERS
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

A.       THE TRUST AND ITS SHAREHOLDERS

1.       GENERAL INFORMATION

Forum  Funds was  organized  as a business  trust under the laws of the State of
Delaware  on August 29,  1995.  On January  5, 1996 the Trust  succeeded  to the
assets and liabilities of Forum Funds, Inc.

The Trust is registered as an open-end,  management investment company under the
1940 Act. The Trust offers  shares of beneficial  interest in its series.  As of
the date hereof,  the Trust  consisted  of the  following  shares of  beneficial
interest:

Austin Global Equity Fund                       Investors Equity Fund
BrownIA Growth Equity Fund                      Investors Growth Fund
BrownIA Small-Cap Growth Fund                   Investors High Grade Bond Fund
BrownIA Maryland Bond Fund                      Maine TaxSaver Bond Fund
Daily Assets Cash Fund(1)                       Mastrapasqua Growth Value Fund
Daily Assets Government Fund(1)                 New Hampshire TaxSaver Bond Fund
Daily Assets Government Obligations Fund(1)     Payson Balanced Fund
Daily Asset Municipal Fund(1)                   Payson Value Fund
Daily Assets Treasury Obligations Fund(1)       Polaris Global Value Fund
Equity Index Fund                               TaxSaver Bond Fund
Investors Bond Fund                             The Advocacy Fund

 (1) The  Trust  offers  shares  of  beneficial  interest  in an  institutional,
institutional service, and investor share class of these series.

The Trust has an unlimited number of authorized  shares of beneficial  interest.
The Board may, without shareholder  approval,  divide the authorized shares into
an  unlimited  number of separate  series and may divide  series into classes of
shares; the costs of doing so will be borne by the Trust.

The Trust,  the Funds'  investment  adviser and the principal  underwriter  have
adopted  codes of ethics under Rule 17j-1,  as amended,  of the 1940 Act.  These
codes permit personnel  subject to the codes to invest in securities,  including
securities that may be purchased or held by the Fund.

The Trust and the Fund will continue indefinitely until terminated.

2.       SERIES AND CLASSES OF THE TRUST

Each  series or class of the Trust may have a  different  expense  ratio and its
expenses will effect each class' performance.

3.       SHAREHOLDER VOTING AND OTHER RIGHTS

Each  share of each  series  of the Trust  and each  class of  shares  has equal
dividend,  distribution,  liquidation and voting rights,  and fractional  shares
have  those  rights  proportionately,   except  that  expenses  related  to  the
distribution  of the shares of each series or class (and certain other  expenses
such as transfer agency,  shareholder  service and administration  expenses) are
borne  solely by those  shares and each  series or class votes  separately  with
respect to the provisions of any Rule 12b-1 plan which pertains to the series or
class and other matters for which separate series or class voting is appropriate
under applicable law.  Generally,  shares will be voted separately by individual
series except if: (1) the 1940 Act requires  shares to be voted in the aggregate
and not by  individual  series;  and (2) when the  Trustees  determine  that the
matter  affects  more than one series and all  affected  series  must vote.  The
Trustees may also determine that a matter only affects certain series or classes
of the Trust and thus only those such series or classes are  entitled to vote on
the matter.  Delaware law does not require the Trust to hold annual  meetings of
shareholders,  and it is anticipated that shareholder meetings will be held only
when  specifically  required by federal or state law. There are no conversion or
preemptive rights in connection with shares of the Trust.

                                       29
<PAGE>

All shares,  when issued in accordance  with the terms of the offering,  will be
fully paid and nonassessable.

A shareholder in a series is entitled to the shareholder's pro rata share of all
distributions  arising from that series' assets and, upon redeeming shares, will
receive  the  portion of the  series'  net assets  represented  by the  redeemed
shares.

Shareholders  representing 10% or more of the Trust's (or a series') shares may,
as set forth in the Trust Instrument, call meetings of the Trust (or series) for
any  purpose  related  to the Trust  (or  series),  including,  in the case of a
meeting of the Trust, the purpose of voting on removal of one or more Trustees.

4.       CERTAIN REORGANIZATION TRANSACTIONS

The Trust or any  series  may be  terminated  upon the sale of its assets to, or
merger with, another open-end,  management investment company or series thereof,
or upon liquidation and distribution of its assets. Generally, such terminations
must be approved  by the vote of the  holders of a majority  of the  outstanding
shares of the Trust or the Fund. The Trustees,  may,  without prior  shareholder
approval change the form of  organization of the Trust by merger,  consolidation
or  incorporation.  Under  the  Trust  Instrument,  the  Trustees  may,  without
shareholder vote, cause the Trust or certain series to merge or consolidate into
one or more  trusts,  partnerships  or  corporations,  or cause  the Trust to be
incorporated under Delaware law, so long as the surviving entity is an open-end,
management  investment  company  that  will  succeed  to or assume  the  Trust's
registration statement.

5.       FUND OWNERSHIP

As of ______________,  2000, the officers and Trustees of the Trust, as a group,
owned less than 1% of the shares of the Fund.

From time to time, certain shareholders may own a large percentage of the shares
of the Fund.  Accordingly,  those shareholders may be able to greatly affect (if
not  determine)  the outcome of a shareholder  vote. As of  ___________________,
2000, and prior to the public offering of the Fund,  Forum Financial  Group, LLC
or its  affiliates,  beneficially  owned  100% of the Fund and may be  deemed to
control the Fund.  "Control" for this purpose is the ownership of 25% or more of
the Fund's voting securities. It is not expected that Forum Financial Group, LLC
will continue to control the Fund after its public offering.

6.       LIMITATIONS ON SHAREHOLDERS' AND TRUSTEES' LIABILITY

Delaware  law  provides  that  Fund   shareholders  are  entitled  to  the  same
limitations  of  personal   liability   extended  to   stockholders  of  private
corporations  for profit.  In the past,  the Trust  believes that the securities
regulators of some states,  however,  have indicated that they and the courts in
their states may decline to apply Delaware law on this point.  The Trust's Trust
Instrument  (the document  that governs the operation of the Trust)  contains an
express  disclaimer  of  shareholder  liability  for  the  debts,   liabilities,
obligations and expenses of the Trust. The Trust's Trust Instrument provides for
indemnification  out of each  series'  property  of any  shareholder  or  former
shareholder held personally liable for the obligations of the series.  The Trust
Instrument  also  provides  that each series  shall,  upon  request,  assume the
defense of any claim made against any  shareholder  for any act or obligation of
the series and satisfy any judgment  thereon.  Thus,  the risk of a  shareholder
incurring  financial  loss on account  of  shareholder  liability  is limited to
circumstances in which Delaware law does not apply, no contractual limitation of
liability  was in effect and the  portfolio  is unable to meet its  obligations.
FAdS believes that, in view of the above, there is no risk of personal liability
to shareholders.

                                       30
<PAGE>

The  Trust  Instrument  provides  that the  Trustees  shall not be liable to any
person  other  than the  Trust  and its  shareholders.  In  addition,  the Trust
Instrument  provides  that the  Trustees  shall  not be liable  for any  conduct
whatsoever,  provided that a Trustee is not  protected  against any liability to
which he would otherwise be subject by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith,
gross negligence or reckless  disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of
his office.

B.       REGISTRATION STATEMENT

This SAI and the Prospectus do not contain all the  information  included in the
Trust's  registration  statement  filed  with  the SEC  under  the 1933 Act with
respect to the securities offered hereby. The registration statement,  including
the  exhibits  filed  therewith,  may be  examined  at the  office of the SEC in
Washington, D.C.

Statements  contained  herein and in the  Prospectus  as to the  contents of any
contract or other documents are not necessarily complete, and, in each instance,
are  qualified  by,  reference to the copy of such  contract or other  documents
filed as exhibits to the registration statement.

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

Financial  statements  are not  available  because  the Fund  had not  commenced
operations prior to the date of this SAI.







                                       31
<PAGE>

APPENDIX A - DESCRIPTION OF SECURITIES RATINGS
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

BONDS (INCLUDING CONVERTIBLE BONDS)

MOODY'S INVESTORS SERVICE

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

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

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

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

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

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

CAA      Bonds which are rated Caa are of poor  standing.  Such issues may be in
         default  or there may be present  elements  of danger  with  respect to
         principal  or   interest.   Ca  Bonds  which  are  rated  Ca  represent
         obligations  which are  speculative  in a high degree.  Such issues are
         often in default or have other marked shortcomings.

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

NOTE
         Moody's applies numerical  modifiers 1, 2, and 3 in each generic rating
         classification  from Aa 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.

                                      A-1
<PAGE>

STANDARD & POOR'S CORPORATION

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

         The  "r"  symbol  is  attached  to  the  ratings  of  instruments  with
         significant  noncredit  risks.  It  highlights  risks to  principal  or
         volatility  of expected  returns  which are not addressed in the credit
         rating.  Examples include:  obligations  linked or indexed to equities,
         currencies,  or commodities;

                                      A-2
<PAGE>

          obligations exposed to severe prepayment risk-such as interest-only or
          principal-only  mortgage  securities;  and obligations  with unusually
          risky interest terms, such as inverse floaters.

DUFF & PHELPS CREDIT RATING CO.

AAA      Highest credit quality. The risk factors are negligible, being only
         slightly more than for risk-free U.S. Treasury debt.

AA+
AA       High credit quality.  Protection factors are strong. Risk is modest but
         may vary slightly from time to time because of economic conditions.

A+
A, A-    Protection  factors are average but adequate. However, risk factors are
         more variable in periods of greater economic stress.

BBB+
BBB
BBB-     Below-average  protection  factors but still considered  sufficient for
         prudent  investment.  Considerable  variability in risk during economic
         cycles.

BB+
BB
BB-      Below  investment grade but deemed likely to meet obligations when due.
         Present or prospective financial protection factors fluctuate according
         to industry conditions.  Overall quality may move up or down frequently
         within this category.

B+
B, B-    Below investment grade and possessing risk that obligations will not
         be met when due.  Financial  protection  factors will fluctuate  widely
         according  to  economic  cycles,  industry  conditions  and/or  company
         fortunes.  Potential  exists for frequent  changes in the rating within
         this category or into a higher or lower rating grade.

CCC      Well below investment-grade securities. Considerable uncertainty exists
         as to timely  payment of  principal,  interest or preferred  dividends.
         Protection  factors  are  narrow  and  risk  can  be  substantial  with
         unfavorable   economic/industry  conditions,  and/or  with  unfavorable
         company developments.

DD       Defaulted debt obligations.  Issuer failed to meet scheduled principal
         and/or interest payments.

DP       Preferred stock with dividend arrearages.

FITCH IBCA, INC.

         INVESTMENT GRADE

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

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

A        High credit  quality.  `A' ratings  denote a low  expectation of credit
         risk.  The capacity  for timely  payment of  financial  commitments  is
         considered strong. This capacity may, nevertheless,  be more vulnerable

                                      A-3
<PAGE>

         to changes in circumstances or in economic  conditions than is the case
         for higher ratings.

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

         SPECULATIVE GRADE

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

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

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

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

PREFERRED STOCK

MOODY'S INVESTORS SERVICE

AAA      An issue  which  is  rated  "aaa"  is  considered  to be a  top-quality
         preferred  stock.  This rating  indicates good asset protection and the
         least risk of dividend  impairment  within the  universe  of  preferred
         stocks.

AA       An issue  which is rated "aa" is  considered  a high-  grade  preferred
         stock.  This rating indicates that there is a reasonable  assurance the
         earnings and asset protection will remain relatively well maintained in
         the foreseeable future.

A        An issue which is rated "a" is considered to be an  upper-medium  grade
         preferred stock.  While risks are judged to be somewhat greater then in
         the "aaa" and "aa"  classification,  earnings and asset protection are,
         nevertheless, expected to be maintained at adequate levels.

BAA      An issue  which  is rated  "baa"  is  considered  to be a  medium-grade
         preferred stock, neither highly protected nor poorly secured.  Earnings
         and asset protection appear adequate at present but may be questionable
         over any great length of time.

                                      A-4
<PAGE>

BA       An issue which is rated "ba" is considered to have speculative elements
         and its future  cannot be considered  well assured.  Earnings and asset
         protection may be very moderate and not well safeguarded during adverse
         periods. Uncertainty of position characterizes preferred stocks in this
         class.

B        An issue which is rated "b" generally  lacks the  characteristics  of a
         desirable investment. Assurance of dividend payments and maintenance of
         other terms of the issue over any long period of time may be small.

CAA      An issue  which is rated  "caa" is likely to be in arrears on  dividend
         payments.  This rating  designation  does not  purport to indicate  the
         future status of payments.

CA       An issue  which is rated "ca" is  speculative  in a high  degree and is
         likely to be in arrears on dividends with little likelihood of eventual
         payments.

C        This is the lowest rated class of preferred or preference stock. Issues
         so rated can thus be regarded as having  extremely  poor  prospects  of
         ever attaining any real investment standing.

 NOTE    Moody's  applies  numerical  modifiers  1,  2,  and  3 in  each  rating
         classification: the modifier 1 indicates that the security ranks in the
         higher end of its generic rating  category;  the modifier 2 indicates a
         mid-range  ranking and the modifier 3 indicates that the issue ranks in
         the lower end of its generic rating category.

STANDARD & POOR'S CORPORATION

AAA      This is the highest rating that may be assigned by Standard & Poor's to
         a preferred  stock issue and indicates an extremely  strong capacity to
         pay the preferred stock obligations.

AA       A  preferred  stock issue rated AA also  qualifies  as a  high-quality,
         fixed-income  security. The capacity to pay preferred stock obligations
         is very strong, although not as overwhelming as for issues rated AAA.

A        An issue  rated A is backed by a sound  capacity  to pay the  preferred
         stock  obligations,  although it is somewhat  more  susceptible  to the
         adverse effects of changes in circumstances and economic conditions.

BBB      An issue rated BBB is regarded as backed by an adequate capacity to pay
         the preferred stock obligations.  Whereas it normally exhibits adequate
         protection   parameters,   adverse  economic   conditions  or  changing
         circumstances  are more  likely to lead to a weakened  capacity to make
         payments for a preferred  stock in this category than for issues in the
         A category.

BB
B, CCC   Preferred  stock rated BB, B, and CCC is regarded,  on balance,  as
         predominantly  speculative with respect to the issuer's capacity to pay
         preferred  stock  obligations.   BB  indicates  the  lowest  degree  of
         speculation  and CCC the  highest.  While such  issues will likely have
         some quality and  protective  characteristics,  these are outweighed by
         large uncertainties or major risk exposures to adverse conditions.

CC       The  rating CC is  reserved  for a  preferred  stock  issue  that is in
         arrears on dividends or sinking  fund  payments,  but that is currently
         paying.

C        A preferred stock rated C is a nonpaying issue.

D        A preferred  stock rated D is a nonpaying  issue with the issuer in
         default on debt instruments.

                                      A-5
<PAGE>

N.R.     This  indicates  that no  rating  has  been  requested,  that  there is
         insufficient  information on which to base a rating, or that Standard &
         Poor's does not rate a  particular  type of  obligation  as a matter of
         policy.

NOTE     Plus  (+) or  minus  (-).  To  provide  more  detailed  indications  of
         preferred stock quality,  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.

SHORT TERM RATINGS

MOODY'S INVESTORS SERVICE

Moody's  employs the following three  designations,  all judged to be investment
grade, to indicate the relative repayment ability of rated issuers:

PRIME-1  Issuers  rated  Prime-1 (or  supporting  institutions)  have a superior
         ability for repayment of senior  short-term debt  obligations.  Prime-1
         repayment  ability  will often be  evidenced  by many of the  following
         characteristics:
     o    Leading market positions in well-established industries.
     o    High rates of return on funds employed.
     o    Conservative  capitalization  structure with moderate reliance on debt
          and ample asset protection.
     o    Broad margins in earnings coverage of fixed financial charges and high
          internal cash generation
     o    Well-established  access to a range of  financial  markets and assured
          sources of alternate liquidity.

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

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

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

STANDARD & POOR'S

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

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

                                      A-6
<PAGE>

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

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

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

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

FITCH IBCA, INC.

F1       Obligations  assigned this rating have the highest  capacity for timely
         repayment  under Fitch IBCA's  national  rating scale for that country,
         relative  to other  obligations  in the same  country.  This  rating is
         automatically  assigned to all obligations  issued or guaranteed by the
         sovereign  state.  Where issues  possess a  particularly  strong credit
         feature, a "+" is added to the assigned rating.

F2       Obligations  supported  by  a  strong  capacity  for  timely  repayment
         relative to other obligors in the same country.  However,  the relative
         degree of risk is slightly  higher than for issues  classified  as `A1'
         and capacity for timely  repayment may be susceptible to adverse change
         sin business, economic, or financial conditions.

F3       Obligations  supported  by an adequate  capacity  for timely  repayment
         relative to other  obligors in the same country.  Such capacity is more
         susceptible  to adverse  changes in  business,  economic,  or financial
         conditions than for obligations in higher categories.

B        Obligations  for which the capacity  for timely  repayment is uncertain
         relative to other obligors in the same country. The capacity for timely
         repayment is susceptible to adverse changes in business,  economic,  or
         financial conditions.

C        Obligations for which there is a high risk of default to other obligors
         in the same country or which are in default.








                                      A-7
<PAGE>


APPENDIX B - MISCELLANEOUS TABLES
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

TABLE 1 - INVESTMENT ADVISORY FEES

The following  table shows the dollar amount of fees payable to the Adviser with
respect to the Fund,  the amount of fee that was waived by the Adviser,  if any,
and the actual fees received by the Adviser.
<TABLE>
                                                       <S>                      <C>                     <C>
                                             ADVISORY FEE PAYABLE     ADVISORY FEE WAIVED     ADVISORY FEE RETAINED

Advisory  fee  information  is not provided  because the Fund had not  commenced
operations prior to the date of this SAI.

TABLE 2 - ADMINISTRATION FEES

The following table shows the dollar amount of fees payable to FAdS with respect
to the Fund,  the amount of fee that was waived by FAdS,  if any, and the actual
fees received by FAdS.

                                              ADMINISTRATION FEE       ADMINISTRATION FEE      ADMINISTRATION FEE
                                                    PAYABLE                  WAIVED                 RETAINED

Administration  fee  information  is not  provided  because  the  Fund  had  not
commenced operations prior to the date of this SAI.

TABLE 3 - ACCOUNTING FEES

The following table shows the dollar amount of fees paid to FAcS with respect to
the Fund, the amount of fee that was waived by FAcS, if any, and the actual fees
received by FAcS.

                                            ACCOUNTING FEE PAYABLE   ACCOUNTING FEE WAIVED   ACCOUNTING FEE RETAINED

Accounting fee  information  is not provided  because the Fund had not commenced
operations prior to the date of this SAI.

TABLE 4 - TRANSFER AGENCY FEES

The following  table shows the dollar amount of fees payable to FSS with respect
to the Fund,  the amount of fee that was waived by FSS,  if any,  and the actual
fees received by FSS.

                                              TRANSFER AGENCY FEE     TRANSFER AGENCY FEE      TRANSFER AGENCY FEE
                                                    PAYABLE                  WAIVED                 RETAINED
</TABLE>

Transfer  agency  fee  information  is not  provided  because  the  Fund had not
commenced operations prior to the date of this SAI.




                                      B-1
<PAGE>



TABLE 5 - COMMISSIONS

The following table shows the brokerage commissions of the Fund. The data is for
the past three fiscal years (or shorter period if the Fund has been in operation
for a shorter period).
<TABLE>
                                                <S>                   <C>               <C>                <C>
                                                               TOTAL BROKERAGE    % OF BROKERAGE
                                                               COMMISSIONS ($)     COMMISSIONS           % OF
                                                                  PAID TO AN        PAID TO AN       TRANSACTIONS
                                             TOTAL BROKERAGE     AFFILIATE OF      AFFILIATE OF     EXECUTED BY AN
                                             COMMISSIONS ($)     THE FUND OR       THE FUND OR     AFFILIATE OF THE
                                                                   ADVISER           ADVISER        FUND OR ADVISER
</TABLE>

Brokerage  commission  information  is not  provided  because  the  Fund had not
commenced operations prior to the date of this SAI.

TABLE 6 - SECURITIES OF REGULAR BROKERS OR DEALERS

The  following  table  lists the  regular  brokers and dealers of the Fund whose
securities  (or the securities of the parent  company) were acquired  during the
past  fiscal  year and the  aggregate  value  of the  Fund's  holdings  of those
securities as of the Fund's most recent fiscal year.

REGULAR BROKER OR DEALER                              VALUE HELD

Information  regarding  securities  positions  held in the securities of regular
brokers  and dealers of the Fund is not  included as the Fund had not  commenced
operations prior to the date of this SAI.










                                      B-2
<PAGE>

APPENDIX C - PERFORMANCE DATA
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

TABLE 1 - TOTAL RETURNS & 30 DAY YIELDS

Performance  information  is not  provided  because  the Fund had not  commenced
operations prior to the date of this SAI.










                                      C-1
<PAGE>

                                     PART C
                                OTHER INFORMATION

ITEM 23.  EXHIBITS


(a)      Trust Instrument of Registrant as amended and restated on on August 14,
         2000  (Exhibit  incorporated  by  reference  as filed as Exhibit (a) in
         post-effective  amendment  No.  83 via  EDGAR on  September  29,  2000,
         accession number 0001004402-00-000327).


(b)      By-Laws of Registrant (Exhibit incorporated by reference as filed as
         Exhibit (2) in post-effective amendment No. 43 via EDGAR on
         July 31, 1997, accession number 0000912057-97-025707).

(c)      See Sections 2.04 and 2.07 of the Trust Instrument as filed as
         Exhibit (a).

(d) (1)       Investment  Advisory Agreement between Registrant and H.M. Payson
              & Co.  relating  to Payson  Value Fund and Payson  Balanced  Fund
              dated  December 18, 1995  (Exhibit  incorporated  by reference as
              filed as Exhibit  (5)(a) in  post-effective  amendment No. 62 via
              EDGAR on May 26, 1998, accession number 0001004402-98-000307).

    (2)       Investment  Advisory  Agreement  between  Registrant  and  Austin
              Investment Management, Inc. relating to Austin Global Equity Fund
              dated as of June 14, 1996 (Exhibit  incorporated  by reference as
              filed as Exhibit  (5)(d) in  post-effective  amendment No. 62 via
              EDGAR on May 26, 1998, accession number 0001004402-98-000307).

    (3)       Investment   Advisory   Agreement  between  Registrant  and  Forum
              Investment   Advisors,   LLC  relating  to  Investors  Bond  Fund,
              Investors  Growth  Fund,  Investors  High Grade  Bond Fund,  Maine
              TaxSaver Bond Fund, New Hampshire  TaxSaver Bond Fund and TaxSaver
              Bond Fund  dated as of January 2, 1998  (Exhibit  incorporated  by
              reference as filed as Exhibit (5)(p) in  post-effective  amendment
              No.  56  via  EDGAR  on  December  31,  1997,   accession   number
              0001004402-97-000281).

    (4)       Investment  Advisory  Agreement  between  Registrant  and Polaris
              Capital  Management,  Inc.  dated  as of  June 1,  1998  (Exhibit
              incorporated   by  reference  as  filed  as  Exhibit   (5)(h)  in
              post-effective  amendment  No.  63 via  EDGAR  on June  8,  1998,
              accession number 0001004402-98-000339).

    (5)       Investment   Advisory   Agreement  between  Registrant  and  Brown
              Investment  Advisory & Trust Company relating to BrownIA Small-Cap
              Growth  Fund and BrownIA  Growth  Equity Fund dated as of June 29,
              1999 (Exhibit incorporated by reference as filed as Exhibit (d)(7)
              in  post-effective  amendment  No. 73 via EDGAR on July 30,  1999,
              accession number 0001004402-99-000341).

    (6)       Investment  Advisory Agreement between Registrant and Mastrapasqua
              & Associates relating to Mastrapasqua Growth Value Fund dated July
              1, 2000  (Exhibit  incorporated  by  reference as filed as Exhibit
              (d)(8) in  post-effective  amendment  No. 81 via EDGAR on July 31,
              2000, accession number 0001004402-00-000261).


    (7)       Investment  Advisory  Agreement  between  Registrant  and Trillium
              Asset  Management   Corporation  relating  to  The  Advocacy  Fund
              (Exhibit  incorporated  by reference as filed as Exhibit (d)(9) in
              post-effective  amendment  No. 82 via EDGAR on  August  14,  2000,
              accession number 0001004402-00-000283).

    (8)       Investment   Advisory   Agreement  between   Registrant  and  The
              Stratevest  Group,  N.A. relating to Investors Equity Fund, dated
              as of August 14, 2000 (Exhibit incorporated by reference as filed
              as Exhibit (d)(8) in post-effective amendment No. 83 via EDGAR on
              September 29, 2000, accession number 0001004402-00-000327).

    (9)       Form of Investment Advisory Agreement between Registrant and Brown
              Advisory, Inc. relating to BrownIA Maryland Bond Fund (Filed
              herewith).


(e) (1)       Form  of  Selected  Dealer  Agreement   between  Forum  Financial
              Services,  Inc. and securities  brokers (Exhibit  incorporated by
              reference as filed as Exhibit (6)(a) in post-effective  amendment

<PAGE>

              No.   62  via   EDGAR   on  May  26,   1998,   accession   number
              0001004402-98-000307).

    (2)       Form of Bank Affiliated  Selected Dealer Agreement  between Forum
              Financial   Services,   Inc.   and   bank   affiliates   (Exhibit
              incorporated   by  reference  as  filed  as  Exhibit   (6)(b)  in
              post-effective  amendment  No.  62 via  EDGAR  on May  26,  1998,
              accession number 0001004402-98-000307).


    (3)       Distribution   Agreement   between   Registrant  and  Forum  Fund
              Services,  LLC relating to, Austin  Global  Equity Fund,  BrownIA
              Small-Cap Growth Fund, BrownIA Growth Equity Fund, , Equity Index
              Fund,  Investors  Bond Fund,  Investors  Equity  Fund,  Investors
              Growth Fund,  Investors High Grade Bond Fund, Maine TaxSaver Bond
              Fund, Mastrapasqua Growth Value Fund, New Hampshire TaxSaver Bond
              Fund,  Payson  Balanced Fund,  Payson Value Fund,  Polaris Global
              Value Fund,  TaxSaver Bond Fund,  The Advocacy Fund, and Investor
              Shares,  Institutional Shares and Institutional Service Shares of
              Daily Assets Treasury  Obligations  Fund, Daily Assets Government
              Fund, Daily Assets Government Obligations Fund, Daily Assets Cash
              Fund and Daily  Assets  Municipal  Fund dated as of February  28,
              1999 (Exhibit incorporated by reference as filed as Exhibit (e)(3)
              in post-effective amendment No. 82 via EDGAR on August 14, 2000,
              accession number 0001004402-00-000283).

    (4)       Form of Distribution  Agreement between Registrant and Forum Fund
              Services,  LLC relating to, Austin  Global  Equity Fund,  BrownIA
              Small-Cap  Growth  Fund,  BrownIA  Growth  Equity  Fund,  BrownIA
              Maryland  Bond Fund,  Equity  Index  Fund,  Investors  Bond Fund,
              Investors  Equity Fund,  Investors  Growth Fund,  Investors  High
              Grade Bond Fund,  Maine TaxSaver Bond Fund,  Mastrapasqua  Growth
              Value Fund,  New Hampshire  TaxSaver Bond Fund,  Payson  Balanced
              Fund, Payson Value Fund, Polaris Global Value Fund, TaxSaver Bond
              Fund,  The  Advocacy  Fund,  and Investor  Shares,  Institutional
              Shares and Institutional  Service Shares of Daily Assets Treasury
              Obligations  Fund,  Daily Assets  Government  Fund,  Daily Assets
              Government  Obligations  Fund,  Daily  Assets Cash Fund and Daily
              Assets  Municipal  Fund  dated as of  February  28,  1999  (Filed
              herewith).


(f)      None.


(g)  (1)       Custodian  Agreement between  Registrant and Forum Trust, LLC
               dated May 12, 1999 relating to Austin Global Equity Fund, BrownIA
               Small-Cap Growth Fund,  BrownIA Growth Equity Fund,  Equity Index
               Fund,  Investors  Bond Fund,  Investors  Equity  Fund,  Investors
               Growth Fund,  Investors High Grade Bond Fund, Maine TaxSaver Bond
               Fund, Mastrapasqua Growth Value Fund, New Hampshire TaxSaver Bond
               Fund,  Payson  Balanced Fund,  Payson Value Fund,  Polaris Global
               Value Fund,  TaxSaver Bond Fund,  The Advocacy Fund, and Investor
               Shares,  Institutional Shares and Institutional Service Shares of
               Daily Assets Treasury  Obligations  Fund, Daily Assets Government
               Fund, Daily Assets Government Obligations Fund, Daily Assets Cash
               Fund and Daily Assets  Municipal  Fund (Exhibit  incorporated  by
               reference as filed as Exhibit (g)(1) in post-effective  amendment
               No.  82  via  EDGAR  on  August  14,   2000,   accession   number
               0001004402-00-000283).

    (2)       Form of Custodian  Agreement between  Registrant and Forum Trust,
              LLC dated May 12, 1999  relating to Austin  Global  Equity  Fund,
              BrownIA  Small-Cap  Growth  Fund,  BrownIA  Growth  Equity  Fund,
              BrownIA  Maryland Bond Fund,  Equity Index Fund,  Investors  Bond
              Fund,  Investors Equity Fund,  Investors  Growth Fund,  Investors
              High Grade  Bond Fund,  Maine  TaxSaver  Bond Fund,  Mastrapasqua
              Growth  Value Fund,  New  Hampshire  TaxSaver  Bond Fund,  Payson
              Balanced  Fund,  Payson  Value Fund,  Polaris  Global Value Fund,
              TaxSaver  Bond Fund,  The Advocacy  Fund,  and  Investor  Shares,
              Institutional  Shares and  Institutional  Service Shares of Daily
              Assets Treasury  Obligations  Fund, Daily Assets Government Fund,
              Daily Assets Government  Obligations Fund, Daily Assets Cash Fund
              and Daily Assets Municipal Fund (Filed herewith).

    (3)       Master Custodian  Agreement  between Forum Trust, LLC and Bankers
              Trust  Company  relating to Austin  Global  Equity Fund,  BrownIA
              Small-Cap  Growth Fund,  BrownIA  Growth  Equity Fund,  BrownIA ,
              Equity Index Fund,  Investors Bond Fund,  Investors  Equity Fund,
              Investors  Growth  Fund,  Investors  High Grade Bond Fund,  Maine
              TaxSaver Bond Fund, Mastrapasqua Growth Value Fund, New Hampshire
              TaxSaver  Bond Fund,  Payson  Balanced  Fund,  Payson Value Fund,
              Polaris Global Value Fund, TaxSaver Bond Fund, The Advocacy Fund,
              and  Investor  Shares,  Institutional  Shares  and  Institutional
              Service Shares of Daily Assets Treasury  Obligations  Fund, Daily
              Assets Government Fund, Daily Assets Government Obligations Fund,
              Daily  Assets  Cash Fund and Daily  Assets  Municipal  Fund dated
              April 20, 1999  (Exhibit  incorporated  by  reference as filed as
              Exhibit  (g)(2) in  post-effective  amendment No. 82 via EDGAR on
              August 14, 2000, accession number 0001004402-00-000283).


    (4)       Form of Master Custodian  Agreement  between Forum Trust, LLC and
              Bankers  Trust  Company  relating to Austin  Global  Equity Fund,
              BrownIA  Small-Cap  Growth  Fund,  BrownIA  Growth  Equity  Fund,
              BrownIA  Maryland Bond Fund,  Equity Index Fund,  Investors  Bond
              Fund,  Investors Equity Fund,  Investors  Growth Fund,  Investors
              High Grade  Bond Fund,  Maine  TaxSaver  Bond Fund,  Mastrapasqua
              Growth  Value Fund,  New  Hampshire  TaxSaver  Bond Fund,  Payson
              Balanced  Fund,  Payson  Value Fund,  Polaris  Global Value Fund,
              TaxSaver  Bond Fund,  The Advocacy  Fund,  and  Investor  Shares,
              Institutional  Shares and  Institutional  Service Shares of Daily
              Assets Treasury  Obligations  Fund, Daily Assets Government Fund,
              Daily Assets Government  Obligations Fund, Daily Assets Cash Fund
              and Daily  Assets  Municipal  Fund dated  April 20,  1999  (Filed
              herewith).

(h) (1)       Administration   Agreement  between  Registrant  and  Forum
              Administrative  Services,  LLC relating to Austin  Global  Equity
              Fund,  BrownIA Small-Cap Growth Fund, BrownIA Growth Equity Fund,
              Equity Index Fund,  Investors Bond Fund,  Investors  Equity Fund,
              Investors  Growth  Fund,  Investors  High Grade Bond Fund,  Maine
              TaxSaver Bond Fund, Mastrapasqua Growth Value Fund, New Hampshire
              TaxSaver  Bond Fund,  Payson  Balanced  Fund,  Payson Value Fund,
              Polaris Global Value Fund, TaxSaver Bond Fund, The Advocacy Fund,
              and  Investor  Shares,  Institutional  Shares  and  Institutional
              Service Shares of Daily Assets Treasury  Obligations  Fund, Daily
              Assets Government Fund, Daily Assets Government Obligations Fund,
              Daily Assets Cash Fund and Daily Assets  Municipal  Fund dated as
              of June 19,  1997 and  amended as of  December  5, 1997  (Exhibit
              incorporated   by  reference  as  filed  as  Exhibit   (h)(1)  in
              post-effective  amendment  No. 82 via EDGAR on August  14,  2000,
              accession number 0001004402-00-000283).


    (2)       Form of  Administration  Agreement  between  Registrant and Forum
              Administrative  Services,  LLC relating to Austin  Global  Equity
              Fund,  BrownIA Small-Cap Growth Fund, BrownIA Growth Equity Fund,
              BrownIA  Maryland Bond Fund, Equity Index Fund,  Investors  Bond
              Fund,  Investors Equity Fund,  Investors  Growth Fund,  Investors
              High Grade  Bond Fund,  Maine  TaxSaver  Bond Fund,  Mastrapasqua
              Growth  Value Fund,  New  Hampshire  TaxSaver  Bond Fund,  Payson
              Balanced  Fund,  Payson  Value Fund,  Polaris  Global Value Fund,
              TaxSaver  Bond Fund,  The Advocacy  Fund,  and  Investor  Shares,
              Institutional  Shares and  Institutional  Service Shares of Daily
              Assets Treasury  Obligations  Fund, Daily Assets Government Fund,
              Daily Assets Government  Obligations Fund, Daily Assets Cash Fund
              and Daily  Assets  Municipal  Fund dated as of June 19,  1997 and
              amended as of December 5, 1997 (Filed herewith).

    (3)        Fund Accounting Agreement between Registrant and Forum Accounting
               Services,  LLC relating to Austin  Global  Equity  Fund,  BrownIA
               Small-Cap Growth Fund,  BrownIA Growth Equity Fund,  Equity Index
               Fund,  Investors  Bond Fund,  Investors  Equity  Fund,  Investors
               Growth Fund,  Investors High Grade Bond Fund, Maine TaxSaver Bond
               Fund, Mastrapasqua Growth Value Fund, New Hampshire TaxSaver Bond
               Fund,  Payson  Balanced Fund,  Payson Value Fund,  Polaris Global
               Value Fund,  TaxSaver Bond Fund,  The Advocacy Fund, and Investor
               Shares,  Institutional Shares and Institutional Service Shares of
               Daily Assets Treasury  Obligations  Fund, Daily Assets Government
               Fund, Daily Assets Government Obligations Fund, Daily Assets Cash
               Fund and Daily Assets  Municipal  Fund dated as of June 19, 1997,
               as amended December 5, 1997 (Exhibit incorporated by reference as
               filed as Exhibit  (h)(2) in  post-effective  amendment No. 82 via
               EDGAR on August 14, 2000, accession number 0001004402-00-000283).
<PAGE>

    (4)       Form of Fund Accounting  Agreement  between  Registrant and Forum
              Accounting  Services,  LLC relating to Austin Global Equity Fund,
              BrownIA  Small-Cap  Growth  Fund,  BrownIA  Growth  Equity  Fund,
              BrownIA  Maryland Bond Fund,  Equity Index Fund,  Investors  Bond
              Fund,  Investors Equity Fund,  Investors  Growth Fund,  Investors
              High Grade  Bond Fund,  Maine  TaxSaver  Bond Fund,  Mastrapasqua
              Growth  Value Fund,  New  Hampshire  TaxSaver  Bond Fund,  Payson
              Balanced  Fund,  Payson  Value Fund,  Polaris  Global Value Fund,
              TaxSaver  Bond Fund,  The Advocacy  Fund,  and  Investor  Shares,
              Institutional  Shares and  Institutional  Service Shares of Daily
              Assets Treasury  Obligations  Fund, Daily Assets Government Fund,
              Daily Assets Government  Obligations Fund, Daily Assets Cash Fund
              and Daily Assets  Municipal  Fund dated as of June 19,  1997,  as
              amended December 5, 1997 (Filed herewith).

     (5)       Transfer  Agency and Services  Agreement  between  Registrant and
               Forum Shareholder Services,  LLC relating to Austin Global Equity
               Fund,  BrownIA Small-Cap Growth Fund, BrownIA Growth Equity Fund,
               Equity Index Fund,  Investors Bond Fund,  Investors  Equity Fund,
               Investors  Growth  Fund,  Investors  High Grade Bond Fund,  Maine
               TaxSaver Bond Fund, Mastrapasqua Growth Value Fund, New Hampshire
               TaxSaver  Bond Fund,  Payson  Balanced  Fund,  Payson Value Fund,
               Polaris Global Value Fund, TaxSaver Bond Fund, The Advocacy Fund,
               and  Investor  Shares,  Institutional  Shares  and  Institutional
               Service Shares of Daily Assets Treasury  Obligations  Fund, Daily
               Assets Government Fund, Daily Assets Government Obligations Fund,
               Daily Assets Cash Fund and Daily Assets  Municipal  Fund (Exhibit
               incorporated   by  reference  as  filed  as  Exhibit   (h)(3)  in
               post-effective  amendment  No. 82 via EDGAR on August  14,  2000,
               accession number 0001004402-00-000283).

    (6)       Form of Transfer Agency and Services Agreement between Registrant
              and Forum  Shareholder  Services,  LLC relating to Austin  Global
              Equity Fund, BrownIA Small-Cap Growth Fund, BrownIA Growth Equity
              Fund,  BrownIA Maryland Bond Fund,  Equity Index Fund,  Investors
              Bond  Fund,   Investors  Equity  Fund,   Investors  Growth  Fund,
              Investors  High  Grade  Bond  Fund,  Maine  TaxSaver  Bond  Fund,
              Mastrapasqua Growth Value Fund, New Hampshire TaxSaver Bond Fund,
              Payson  Balanced  Fund,  Payson Value Fund,  Polaris Global Value
              Fund, TaxSaver Bond Fund, The Advocacy Fund, and Investor Shares,
              Institutional  Shares and  Institutional  Service Shares of Daily
              Assets Treasury  Obligations  Fund, Daily Assets Government Fund,
              Daily Assets Government  Obligations Fund, Daily Assets Cash Fund
              and Daily  Assets  Municipal  Fund (Filed herewith).


    (7)       Shareholder  Service Plan of Registrant dated December 5, 1997 and
              Form of Shareholder Service Agreement relating to the Daily Assets
              Treasury  Obligations  Fund,  Daily Assets  Government Fund, Daily
              Assets  Government  Obligations  Fund,  Daily Assets Cash Fund and
              Daily Assets Municipal Fund (Exhibit  incorporated by reference as
              filed as Exhibit  (9)(c) in  post-effective  amendment  No. 50 via
              EDGAR    on    November     12,     1997,     accession     number
              0001004402-97-000189).

    (8)       Shareholder  Service Plan of  Registrant  dated March 18, 1998 and
              Form of Shareholder  Service Agreement  relating to Polaris Global
              Value Fund (Exhibit  incorporated by reference as filed as Exhibit
              (9)(d) in  post-effective  amendment No. 65 via EDGAR on September
              30, 1998, accession number 0001004402-98-000530).

    (9)        Shareholder  Service  Plan of  Registrant  dated  March  1,  2000
               relating to BrownIA  Small Cap Growth  Fund,  and BrownIA  Growth
               Equity  Fund  (Exhibit  incorporated  by  reference  as  filed as
               Exhibit  (h)(6) in  post-effective  amendment No. 78 via EDGAR on
               April 17, 2000, accession number 0001004402-00-000112).

    (10)      Form of Shareholder Service Plan of Registrant dated March 1, 2000
              relating to BrownIA Small Cap Growth Fund,  BrownIA  Growth Equity
              Fund and BrownIA Maryland TaxSaver Bond Fund, (Filed herewith).

    (11)      Shareholder  Service Plan of Registrant dated July 1, 2000 related
              to  Mastrapasqua  Growth  Value  Fund  (Exhibit   incorporated  by
              reference as filed as Exhibit (h)(7) in  post-effective  amendment
              No.  82  via  EDGAR  on  August   14,   2000,   accession   number
              0001004402-00-000283).


(i) (1)       Opinion of Seward & Kissel LLP dated  January 5, 1996 (Exhibit
              incorporated   by  reference  as  filed  as  Exhibit   (10)(a)  in
              post-effective  amendment  No. 33 via EDGAR on  January  5,  1996,
              accession number 0000912057-96-000216).

    (2)       Consent  of  Seward & Kissel  LLP  dated  June 14,  2000  (Exhibit
              incorporated   by  reference   as  filed  as  Exhibit   (i)(2)  in
              post-effective  amendment  No.  80 via  EDGAR  on June  30,  2000,
              accession number 0001004402-00-000233).

(j)      None.

(k)      None.

(l)      Investment  Representation  letter of Reich & Tang,  Inc.  as original
         purchaser of shares of Registrant  (Exhibit  incorporated by reference
         as filed as Exhibit (13) in post-effective  amendment No. 62 via EDGAR
         on May 26, 1998, accession number 0001004402-98-000307).

(m)  (1)      Rule 12b-1  Plan  effective  January  1, 1999  adopted by the
              Investor Shares of Daily Assets Treasury  Obligations Fund, Daily
              Assets Government Fund, Daily Assets Government Obligations Fund,
              Daily Asset Cash Fund and Daily Assets  Municipal  Fund  (Exhibit
              incorporated by

<PAGE>

              reference as filed as Exhibit (15)(b) in post-effective amendment
              No.  69  via  EDGAR  on  December  15,  1998,   accession  number
              0001004402-98-000648).


     (2)      Rule 12b-1 Plan effective August 15, 2000 adopted by the Trillium
              Asset Management Advocacy Fund (Exhibit incorporated by reference
              as filed as Exhibit (m)(2) in post-effective amendment No. 82 via
              EDGAR on August 14, 2000, accession number 0001004402-00-000283).


(n)      18f-3 plan adopted by Registrant (Exhibit incorporated by reference as
         filed as Exhibit (18) in post-effective  amendment No. 62 via EDGAR on
         May 26, 1998, accession number 0001004402-98-000307).

(p) (1)       Code of Ethics  adopted by Registrant  (Exhibit  incorporated  by
              reference as filed as Exhibit (p)(1) in post-effective  amendment
              No.  83  via  EDGAR  on  September  29,  2000,  accession  number
              0001004402-00-000327).


    (2)       Code of  Ethics  adopted  by Brown  Investment  Advisory  & Trust
              Company  Exhibit  incorporated  by  reference as filed as Exhibit
              (p)(1) in post-effective  amendment No. 83 via EDGAR on September
              29, 2000, accession number 0001004402-00-000327).


    (3)       Code of Ethics adopted by H.M. Payson & Co (Exhibit  incorporated
              by  reference  as  filed  as  Exhibit  (p)(3)  in  post-effective
              amendment  No.  83 via EDGAR on  September  29,  2000,  accession
              number 0001004402-00-000327).


    (4)       Code of Ethics  adopted  by Austin  Investment  Management,  Inc.
              (Exhibit  incorporated by reference as filed as Exhibit (p)(4) in
              post-effective  amendment  No. 82 via EDGAR on August  14,  2000,
              accession number 0001004402-00-000283).


    (5)       Code of Ethics  adopted  by Forum  Fund  Services,  LLC and Forum
              Investment  Advisors,  LLC (Exhibit  incorporated by reference as
              filed as Exhibit  (p)(5) in  post-effective  amendment No. 78 via
              EDGAR on April 17, 2000, accession number 0001004402-00-000112).


    (6)       Code of  Ethics  adopted  by  Polaris  Capital  Management,  Inc.
              (Exhibit  incorporated by reference as filed as Exhibit (p)(6) in
              post-effective  amendment  No. 82 via EDGAR on August  14,  2000,
              accession number 0001004402-00-000283).

    (7)       Code of Ethics adopted by The  Stratevest  Group,  N.A.  (Exhibit
              incorporated   by  reference  as  filed  as  Exhibit   (p)(7)  in
              post-effective  amendment  No. 82 via EDGAR on August  14,  2000,
              accession number 0001004402-00-000283).


    (8)       Code of Ethics  adopted by Wells Capital  Management  Incorporated
              (Exhibit  incorporated  by reference as filed as Exhibit (p)(8) in
              post-effective  amendment  No.  78 via  EDGAR on April  17,  2000,
              accession number 0001004402-00-000112).

    (9)       Code  of  Ethics  adopted  by  Wells  Fargo  Bank  N.A.  (Exhibit
              incorporated   by  reference  as  filed  as  Exhibit   (p)(9)  in
              post-effective  amendment  No. 78 via  EDGAR on April  17,  2000,
              accession number 0001004402-00-000112).

    (10)      Joint Code of Ethics  adopted by Wells  Fargo Funds  Trust,  Wells
              Fargo   Variable   Trust  and  Wells  Fargo  Core  Trust  (Exhibit
              incorporated   by  reference  as  filed  as  Exhibit   (p)(10)  in
              post-effective  amendment  No.  78 via  EDGAR on April  17,  2000,
              accession number 0001004402-00-000112).

    (11)      Code of Ethics  adopted  by  Mastrapasqua  &  Associates  (Exhibit
              incorporated   by  reference  as  filed  as  Exhibit   (p)(11)  in
              post-effective  amendment  No.  79  via  EDGAR  on May  31,  2000,
              accession number 0001004402-00-000185).


    (12)      Code of Ethics  adopted by Trillium Asset  Management  Corporation
              (Exhibit  incorporated by reference as filed as Exhibit (p)(12) in
              post-effective  amendment  No. 82 via EDGAR on  August  14,  2000,
              accession number 0001004402-00-000283).

    (13)      Code of Ethics  adopted by Brown Advisory Inc. will be filed at a
              later date.


Other Exhibits:

(A)      Power of Attorney for James C. Cheng,  Costas Azariadis and J. Michael
         Parish,  Trustees of Registrant (Exhibit  incorporated by reference as
         filed as Other Exhibit in post-effective amendment No. 34 via EDGAR on
         May 9, 1996, accession number 0000912057-96-008780).
<PAGE>

(B)      Power of Attorney for John Y. Keffer,  Trustee of  Registrant  (Exhibit
         incorporated  by reference as filed as Other Exhibit in  post-effective
         amendment  No. 65 via EDGAR on  September  30, 1998,  accession  number
         0001004402-98-000530).

(C)      Power of Attorney for John Y. Keffer, James C. Cheng, Costas Azariadis
         and J.  Michael  Parish,  Trustees of Core Trust  (Delaware)  (Exhibit
         incorporated by reference as filed as Other Exhibit in  post-effective
         amendment  No. 15 to the  registration  statement of Monarch Funds via
         EDGAR on December 19, 1997, accession number 0001004402-97-000264).

(D)      Powers of Attorney for the Trustees of Wells Fargo Core Trust  (Exhibit
         incorporated by reference as filed as exhibits (j)(1),  (j)(2), (j)(3),
         (j)(4), (j)(5), (j)(6),  (j)(7), (j)(8), (j)(9),  (j)(10),  (j)(11) and
         (j)(12) as filed in post-effective amendment No. 10 to the registration
         statement  of Wells  Fargo  Funds  Trust  via  EDGAR  on May 10,  2000,
         accession number 0000925421-00-000034).

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

         Daily Assets Treasury  Obligations  Fund, Daily Assets  Government Fund
         and Daily Assets  Municipal Fund may be deemed to control Treasury Cash
         Portfolio,   Government   Portfolio  and  Municipal   Cash   Portfolio,
         respectively, each a series of Core Trust (Delaware).

ITEM 25.  INDEMNIFICATION

         In  accordance  with Section 3803 of the Delaware  Business  Trust Act,
         Section 10.02 of Registrant's Trust Instrument provides as follows:

         "10.02.  INDEMNIFICATION.

         (a)      Subject to the exceptions and limitations contained in Section
         (b) below:

                  "(i) Every Person who is, or has been, a Trustee or officer of
         the Trust  (hereinafter  referred  to as a "Covered  Person")  shall be
         indemnified by the Trust to the fullest extent permitted by law against
         liability and against all expenses  reasonably  incurred or paid by him
         in connection  with any claim,  action,  suit or proceeding in which he
         becomes  involved as a party or  otherwise by virtue of being or having
         been a Trustee or officer and against  amounts  paid or incurred by him
         in the settlement thereof;

                  (ii) The words  "claim,"  "action,"  "suit,"  or  "proceeding"
         shall  apply  to all  claims,  actions,  suits or  proceedings  (civil,
         criminal or other,  including  appeals),  actual or threatened while in
         office or thereafter,  and the words  "liability" and "expenses"  shall
         include, without limitation, attorneys' fees, costs, judgments, amounts
         paid in settlement, fines, penalties and other liabilities.

         (b)      No indemnification shall be provided hereunder to a Covered
         Person:

                  (i) Who shall have been  adjudicated by a court or body before
         which the  proceeding  was brought (A) to be liable to the Trust or its
         Holders by reason of willful  misfeasance,  bad faith, gross negligence
         or  reckless  disregard  of the duties  involved  in the conduct of the
         Covered  Person's  office or (B) not to have acted in good faith in the
         reasonable belief that Covered Person's action was in the best interest
         of the Trust; or

                  (ii) In the  event of a  settlement,  unless  there has been a
         determination  that such  Trustee or officer  did not engage in willful
         misfeasance,  bad faith,  gross negligence or reckless disregard of the
         duties involved in the conduct of the Trustee's or officer's office,

                           (A) By the court or other body approving the
         settlement;

                           (B) By at least a majority of those  Trustees who are
         neither  Interested  Persons of the Trust nor are parties to the matter
         based upon a review of readily  available  facts (as  opposed to a full
         trial-type inquiry); or
<PAGE>

                           (C) By written  opinion of independent  legal counsel
         based upon a review of readily  available  facts (as  opposed to a full
         trial-type inquiry);

         provided,   however,   that  any  Holder  may,  by  appropriate   legal
         proceedings,  challenge  any such  determination  by the Trustees or by
         independent counsel.

         (c) The  rights  of  indemnification  herein  provided  may be  insured
         against by policies maintained by the Trust, shall be severable,  shall
         not be  exclusive  of or affect any other  rights to which any  Covered
         Person may now or hereafter be entitled,  shall continue as to a person
         who has ceased to be a Covered Person and shall inure to the benefit of
         the  heirs,  executors  and  administrators  of such a person.  Nothing
         contained  herein shall affect any rights to  indemnification  to which
         Trust personnel,  other than Covered Persons,  and other persons may be
         entitled by contract or otherwise under law.

         (d) Expenses in connection with the  preparation and  presentation of a
         defense to any  claim,  action,  suit or  proceeding  of the  character
         described in paragraph (a) of this Section 5.2 may be paid by the Trust
         or Series  from time to time prior to final  disposition  thereof  upon
         receipt of an  undertaking  by or on behalf of such Covered Person that
         such  amount  will be paid  over by him to the Trust or Series if it is
         ultimately  determined that he is not entitled to indemnification under
         this  Section  5.2;  provided,  however,  that either (a) such  Covered
         Person shall have provided  appropriate  security for such undertaking,
         (b) the Trust is insured against losses arising out of any such advance
         payments  or (c)  either a majority  of the  Trustees  who are  neither
         Interested  Persons  of  the  Trust  nor  parties  to  the  matter,  or
         independent legal counsel in a written opinion,  shall have determined,
         based  upon a review  of  readily  available  facts  (as  opposed  to a
         trial-type  inquiry  or full  investigation),  that  there is reason to
         believe   that  such   Covered   Person  will  be  found   entitled  to
         indemnification under this Section 5.2.

         (e) Conditional advancing of indemnification  monies under this Section
         5.2 for  actions  based  upon  the  1940  Act  may be made  only on the
         following conditions: (i) the advances must be limited to amounts used,
         or to be used, for the  preparation or presentation of a defense to the
         action, including costs connected with the preparation of a settlement;
         (ii) advances may be made only upon receipt of a written promise by, or
         on behalf of, the  recipient to repay that amount of the advance  which
         exceeds  that  amount  which  it is  ultimately  determined  that he is
         entitled to receive  from the Trust by reason of  indemnification;  and
         (iii) (a) such promise must be secured by a surety bond, other suitable
         insurance  or an  equivalent  form of security  which  assures that any
         repayments  may be obtained by the Trust without  delay or  litigation,
         which bond, insurance or other form of security must be provided by the
         recipient of the advance,  or (b) a majority of a quorum of the Trust's
         disinterested, non-party Trustees, or an independent legal counsel in a
         written  opinion,  shall  determine,  based  upon a review  of  readily
         available facts,  that the recipient of the advance  ultimately will be
         found entitled to indemnification.

         (f) In case any Holder or former  Holder of any Series shall be held to
         be  personally  liable  solely by reason of the Holder or former Holder
         being or having  been a Holder of that  Series  and not  because of the
         Holder or former Holder acts or omissions or for some other reason, the
         Holder or former  Holder  (or the  Holder  or  former  Holder's  heirs,
         executors,  administrators or other legal  representatives,  or, in the
         case of a corporation  or other entity,  its corporate or other general
         successor)  shall  be  entitled  out of  the  assets  belonging  to the
         applicable Series to be held harmless from and indemnified  against all
         loss and expense arising from such  liability.  The Trust, on behalf of
         the affected  Series,  shall,  upon  request by the Holder,  assume the
         defense of any claim made against the Holder for any act or  obligation
         of the Series and satisfy any  judgment  thereon from the assets of the
         Series."

         With  respect  to  indemnification  of an  adviser  to the  Trust,  the
         Investment  Advisory Agreements between the Trust and Austin Investment
         Management,  Inc., H.M. Payson & Co.,  Peoples  Heritage Bank and Forum
         Investment  Advisers,  LLC (Investors  Bond Fund,  Investors High Grade

<PAGE>

         Bond Fund,  TaxSaver Bond Fund, Maine TaxSaver Bond Fund, New Hampshire
         TaxSaver Bond Fund and Investors  Growth Fund) include language similar
         to the following:

         "Section  4. We shall  expect of you,  and you will give us the benefit
         of, your best judgment and efforts in rendering  these  services to us,
         and we agree as an inducement to your  undertaking  these services that
         you shall not be liable hereunder for any mistake of judgment or in any
         event whatsoever,  except for lack of good faith, provided that nothing
         herein shall be deemed to protect,  or purport to protect,  you against
         any  liability  to us or to our  security  holders  to which  you would
         otherwise  be subject by reason of  willful  misfeasance,  bad faith or
         gross  negligence in the  performance of your duties  hereunder,  or by
         reason  of your  reckless  disregard  of your  obligations  and  duties
         hereunder."

         With  respect  to  indemnification  of an  adviser  to the  Trust,  the
         Investment  Advisory  Agreements  between the Trust and Polaris Capital
         Management,  Inc., Mastrapasqua & Associates, Brown Investment Advisors
         & Trust  Company and  Trillium  Asset  Management  Corporation  provide
         similarly as follows:

         "SECTION  5.  STANDARD  OF CARE.  (a) The  Trust  shall  expect  of the
         Adviser,  and the  Adviser  will  give the Trust the  benefit  of,  the
         Adviser's  best  judgment and efforts in rendering  its services to the
         Trust.  The Adviser shall not be liable hereunder for error of judgment
         or mistake of law or in any event  whatsoever,  except for lack of good
         faith,  provided  that nothing  herein  shall be deemed to protect,  or
         purport to protect,  the Adviser  against any liability to the Trust or
         to the Trust's security holders to which the Adviser would otherwise be
         subject by reason of willful misfeasance, bad faith or gross negligence
         in the performance of the Adviser's duties  hereunder,  or by reason of
         the  Adviser's   reckless  disregard  of  its  obligations  and  duties
         hereunder.  (b) The Adviser shall not be  responsible or liable for any
         failure or delay in performance of its obligations under this Agreement
         arising out of or caused,  directly  or  indirectly,  by  circumstances
         beyond its reasonable control including,  without  limitation,  acts of
         civil or military authority,  national emergencies,  labor difficulties
         (other than those related to the Adviser's employees), fire, mechanical
         breakdowns, flood or catastrophe, acts of God, insurrection, war, riots
         or failure of the mails, transportation, communication or power supply.

         With  respect  to  indemnification  of the  underwriter  of the  Trust,
         Section 8 of the Distribution Agreement provides:

         "(a) The Trust will  indemnify,  defend and hold the  Distributor,  its
         employees,  agents,  directors and officers and any person who controls
         the Distributor  within the meaning of section 15 of the Securities Act
         or  section  20 of the 1934 Act  ("Distributor  Indemnitees")  free and
         harmless from and against any and all claims, demands,  actions, suits,
         judgments,  liabilities,  losses, damages,  costs, charges,  reasonable
         counsel  fees  and  other   expenses  of  every  nature  and  character
         (including the cost of investigating or defending such claims, demands,
         actions,  suits or liabilities and any reasonable counsel fees incurred
         in connection  therewith)  which any Distributor  Indemnitee may incur,
         under the Securities Act, or under common law or otherwise, arising out
         of or based  upon any  alleged  untrue  statement  of a  material  fact
         contained in the Registration  Statement or the Prospectuses or arising
         out of or based upon any  alleged  omission  to state a  material  fact
         required  to be  stated in any one  thereof  or  necessary  to make the
         statements in any one thereof not misleading,  unless such statement or
         omission was made in reliance upon, and in conformity with, information
         furnished in writing to the Trust in connection with the preparation of
         the Registration Statement or exhibits to the Registration Statement by
         or on behalf of the Distributor ("Distributor Claims").

         After receipt of the Distributor's  notice of termination under Section
         13(e), the Trust shall indemnify and hold each  Distributor  Indemnitee
         free and harmless  from and against any  Distributor  Claim;  provided,
         that the term  Distributor  Claim for purposes of this  sentence  shall
         mean any  Distributor  Claim  related  to the  matters  for  which  the
         Distributor has requested  amendment to the Registration  Statement and
         for which the Trust has not filed a Required
<PAGE>

         Amendment,  regardless  of with  respect to such  matters  whether any
         statement in or omission from the  Registration  Statement was made in
         reliance  upon, or in conformity  with,  information  furnished to the
         Trust by or on behalf of the Distributor.

         (b) The Trust may assume the defense of any suit brought to enforce any
         Distributor Claim and may retain counsel of good standing chosen by the
         Trust and  approved by the  Distributor,  which  approval  shall not be
         withheld  unreasonably.  The Trust shall advise the Distributor that it
         will assume the defense of the suit and retain  counsel within ten (10)
         days of receipt of the notice of the claim.  If the Trust  assumes  the
         defense of any such suit and retains counsel, the defendants shall bear
         the fees and expenses of any  additional  counsel that they retain.  If
         the  Trust  does  not  assume  the  defense  of any  such  suit,  or if
         Distributor does not approve of counsel chosen by the Trust or has been
         advised  that it may have  available  defenses  or claims  that are not
         available to or conflict with those  available to the Trust,  the Trust
         will reimburse any  Distributor  Indemnitee  named as defendant in such
         suit for the  reasonable  fees and  expenses of any counsel that person
         retains. A Distributor Indemnitee shall not settle or confess any claim
         without the prior written consent of the Trust, which consent shall not
         be unreasonably withheld or delayed.

         (c) The Distributor  will indemnify,  defend and hold the Trust and its
         several officers and trustees (collectively,  the "Trust Indemnitees"),
         free  and  harmless  from  and  against  any and all  claims,  demands,
         actions,  suits,  judgments,   liabilities,   losses,  damages,  costs,
         charges, reasonable counsel fees and other expenses of every nature and
         character  (including  the  cost of  investigating  or  defending  such
         claims,  demands,  actions,  suits or  liabilities  and any  reasonable
         counsel fees incurred in connection therewith),  but only to the extent
         that such claims,  demands,  actions,  suits,  judgments,  liabilities,
         losses,  damages,  costs,  charges,  reasonable  counsel fees and other
         expenses result from, arise out of or are based upon:

         (i) any alleged  untrue  statement of a material fact  contained in the
         Registration  Statement  or  Prospectus  or any  alleged  omission of a
         material fact required to be stated or necessary to make the statements
         therein not  misleading,  if such  statement  or  omission  was made in
         reliance upon,  and in conformity  with,  information  furnished to the
         Trust in writing in connection with the preparation of the Registration
         Statement or Prospectus by or on behalf of the Distributor; or

         (ii)  any  act  of,  or  omission  by,  the  Distributor  or its  sales
         representatives that does not conform to the standard of care set forth
         in Section 7 of this Agreement ("Trust Claims").

         (d) The  Distributor  may  assume the  defense  of any suit  brought to
         enforce any Trust Claim and may retain counsel of good standing  chosen
         by the Distributor and approved by the Trust,  which approval shall not
         be withheld  unreasonably.  The Distributor shall advise the Trust that
         it will  assume the defense of the suit and retain  counsel  within ten
         (10) days of receipt of the  notice of the  claim.  If the  Distributor
         assumes  the  defense  of  any  such  suit  and  retains  counsel,  the
         defendants  shall bear the fees and expenses of any additional  counsel
         that they retain. If the Distributor does not assume the defense of any
         such suit,  or if the Trust does not  approve of counsel  chosen by the
         Distributor or has been advised that it may have available  defenses or
         claims that are not  available to or conflict  with those  available to
         the  Distributor,  the Distributor  will reimburse any Trust Indemnitee
         named as defendant in such suit for the reasonable fees and expenses of
         any counsel that person retains. A Trust Indemnitee shall not settle or
         confess any claim without the prior written consent of the Distributor,
         which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld or delayed.

         (e)  The  Trust's  and  the   Distributor's   obligations   to  provide
         indemnification under this Section is conditioned upon the Trust or the
         Distributor   receiving   notice  of  any  action  brought   against  a
         Distributor Indemnitee or Trust Indemnitee, respectively, by the person
         against whom such action is brought  within  twenty (20) days after the
         summons or other first legal process is served. Such notice shall refer
         to the  person or  persons  against  whom the  action is  brought.  The
         failure to provide such notice shall not relieve the party  entitled to
         such  notice  of any  liability  that it may  have  to any  Distributor
         Indemnitee or Trust Indemnitee except to the extent that the ability of

<PAGE>

         the  party  entitled  to such  notice to defend  such  action  has been
         materially adversely affected by the failure to provide notice.

         (f) The provisions of this Section and the parties' representations and
         warranties in this Agreement  shall remain  operative and in full force
         and effect regardless of any investigation  made by or on behalf of any
         Distributor  Indemnitee or Trust  Indemnitee and shall survive the sale
         and redemption of any Shares made pursuant to subscriptions obtained by
         the Distributor.  The  indemnification  provisions of this Section will
         inure  exclusively  to  the  benefit  of  each  person  that  may  be a
         Distributor  Indemnitee  or Trust  Indemnitee  at any  time  and  their
         respective  successors and assigns (it being intended that such persons
         be deemed to be third party beneficiaries under this Agreement).

         (g) Each  party  agrees  promptly  to  notify  the  other  party of the
         commencement  of any litigation or proceeding of which it becomes aware
         arising  out of or in any way  connected  with the  issuance or sale of
         Shares.

         (h) Nothing contained herein shall require the Trust to take any action
         contrary to any  provision of its Organic  Documents or any  applicable
         statute or  regulation  or shall  require the  Distributor  to take any
         action  contrary to any provision of its Articles of  Incorporation  or
         Bylaws or any applicable statute or regulation; provided, however, that
         neither the Trust nor the Distributor may amend their Organic Documents
         or Articles of Incorporation  and Bylaws,  respectively,  in any manner
         that would result in a violation of a  representation  or warranty made
         in this Agreement.

         (i) Nothing contained in this section shall be construed to protect the
         Distributor  against any liability to the Trust or its security holders
         to which the  Distributor  would  otherwise be subject by reason of its
         failure to satisfy the  standard of care set forth in Section 7 of this
         Agreement."

ITEM 26.  BUSINESS AND OTHER CONNECTIONS OF INVESTMENT ADVISER

(a)      Forum Investment Advisors, LLC

         The description of Forum Investment  Advisors,  LLC (investment adviser
         to  Investors  High  Grade Bond Fund,  Investors  Bond Fund,  Investors
         Growth Fund,  Maine  TaxSaver Bond Fund,  New  Hampshire  TaxSaver Bond
         Fund, TaxSaver Bond Fund and the Institutional,  Institutional  Service
         and Investor classes of Daily Assets Treasury  Obligations  Fund, Daily
         Assets Government Fund, Daily Assets Government Obligations Fund, Daily
         Assets Cash Fund and Daily Assets  Municipal Fund) contained in Parts A
         and  B  of   post-effective   amendment   No.  83   (accession   number
         0001004402-00-000327)   to  the  Trust's  Registration   Statement,  is
         incorporated by reference herein.

         The following are the members of Forum  Investment  Advisors,  LLC, Two
         Portland  Square,  Portland,  Maine  04101,  including  their  business
         connections, which are of a substantial nature.

                           Forum Holdings Corp. I., Member.
                           Forum Trust, LLC, Member.

         Both Forum  Holdings  Corp.  I. and Forum  Trust,  LLC are  controlled
         indirectly   by  John  Y.  Keffer,   Chairman  and  President  of  the
         Registrant.  Mr.  Keffer is President  of Forum  Trust,  LLC and Forum
         Financial Group,  LLC. Mr. Keffer is also a director and/or officer of
         various  registered  investment  companies for which the various Forum
         Financial Group's operating subsidiaries provide services.

         The  following  are the  officers of Forum  Investment  Advisors,  LLC,
         including their business  connections that are of a substantial nature.
         Each officer may serve as an officer of various  registered  investment
         companies for which the Forum Financial Group provides services.
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
                        <S>                                     <C>                             <C>
         Name                                 Title                               Business Connection
         .................................... ................................... ..................................
         David I. Goldstein                   Secretary                           Forum Investment Advisors, LLC
                                              ................................... ..................................
                                              ................................... ..................................
                                              General Counsel                     Forum Financial Group, LLC
                                              ................................... ..................................
                                              ................................... ..................................
                                              Officer                             Other Forum affiliated companies
         .................................... ................................... ..................................
         .................................... ................................... ..................................
         Marc D. Keffer                       Assistant Secretary                 Forum Investment Advisors, LLC
                                              ................................... ..................................
                                              ................................... ..................................
                                              Corporate Counsel                   Forum Financial Group, LLC
                                              ................................... ..................................
                                              ................................... ..................................
                                              Officer                             Other Forum affiliated companies
</TABLE>



(b)      H.M. Payson & Co.

         The  description of H.M.  Payson & Co.  (investment  adviser to Payson
         Value  Fund,  Payson  Balanced  Fund)  contained  in  Parts A and B of
         post-effective  amendment No. 81 to the Trust's Registration Statement
         (accession number 0001004402-00-000261),  is incorporated by reference
         herein.

         The following are the  directors and principal  executive  officers of
         H.M. Payson & Co., including their business connections,  which are of
         a substantial nature. The address of H.M. Payson & Co. is One Portland
         Square, Portland, Maine 04101.
<TABLE>
                        <S>                                     <C>                             <C>
         Name                                  Title                              Business Connection
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Adrian L. Asherman                    Managing Director                  H.M. Payson & Co.
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         John C. Downing                       Managing Director, Treasurer       H.M. Payson & Co.
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Thomas M. Pierce                      Managing Director                  H.M. Payson & Co.
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Peter E. Robbins                      Managing Director                  H.M. Payson & Co.
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         John H. Walker                        Managing Director, President       H.M. Payson & Co.
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Teresa M. Esposito                    Managing Director                  H.M. Payson & Co.
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         John C. Knox                          Managing Director                  H.M. Payson & Co.
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Harold J. Dixon                       Managing Director                  H.M. Payson & Co.
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Michael R. Currie                     Managing Director                  H.M. Payson & Co.
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         William O. Hall, III                  Managing Director                  H.M. Payson & Co.
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         William N. Weikert                    Managing Director                  H.M. Payson & Co.
</TABLE>


(c)      Austin Investment Management, Inc.

         The  description of Austin  Investment  Management,  Inc.  (investment
         adviser to Austin  Global  Equity Fund)  contained in Parts A and B of
         post-effective  amendment No. 81 to the Trust's Registration Statement
         (accession number 0001004402-00-000261),  is incorporated by reference
         herein.

         The following is the director and principal executive officer of Austin
         Investment Management, Inc., 375 Park Avenue, New York, New York 10152,
         including his business connections, which are of a substantial nature.
<TABLE>
                        <S>                                     <C>                                <C>
         Name                                  Title                              Business Connection
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Peter Vlachos                         Director, President, Treasurer,    Austin Investment Management Inc.
                                               Secretary
</TABLE>



(d)      The Stratevest Group, N. A.


         The   description  of  The  Stratevest   Group,   N.A.   ("Stratevest")
         (investment  adviser to Investors Equity Fund) contained in Parts A and
         B of  post-effective  amendment  No.  83 to  the  Trust's
<PAGE>

          Registration  Statement  (accession number  0001004402-00-000327),  is
          incorporated by reference herein.


         The  following are the  principal  executive  officers and directors of
         Stratevest   including  their  business  connections  which  are  of  a
         substantial  nature.  The  address of  Stratevest  is 111 Main  Street,
         Burlington,  VT,  05401 and,  unless  otherwise  indicated  below,  the
         address  is  the  principal  address  of any  company  with  which  the
         principal executive officers and directors are connected.
<TABLE>
                        <S>                                     <C>                             <C>
         Name                                  Title                              Business Connection
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Richard E. Johnson                    CEO and Director                   Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Robert B. Esau                        Executive Vice President           Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Gary L. Robinson                      Executive Vice President           Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         James W. Gribbons                     Sr. Executive Vice President       Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Robert A. Knowles, Jr.                Sr. Executive Vice President       Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         William S. Wolff                      Sr. Vice President                 Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Molly Dillon                          Sr. Vice President                 Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         John M. Fullerton                     Sr. Vice President                 Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Robert Wiseman                        Sr. Vice President                 Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Walter L. Parr                        Sr. Vice President                 Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Jonathan W. White                     Sr. Vice President                 Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Robert E. Hussey                      Sr. Vice President                 Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Dana Mitiguy                          Sr. Vice President                 Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Dorothy Wentworth                     Sr. Vice President                 Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Christopher G. Chapman                Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Perry Condon                          Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         A. James Cota                         Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         J. Alan Day                           Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Carol P. Smith                        Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Sandy Baker                           Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         H. Ashley Smith, Jr.                  Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         William J. Judge                      Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Leila J. Baroody                      Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Reginald P. Vincent                   Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Frederick G. Natale, Jr.              Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Thomas E. Malinowski                  Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         William Smith                         Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Melissa Whitmore                      Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         John Conroe                           Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Sandra J. Kidwell                     Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Mark Nagelsmith                       Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Sharry Rutzken                        Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Judith E. Zalansky                    Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Christopher W. McCarthy               Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Nancy S. Hudson                       Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
<PAGE>

         Name                                  Title                              Business Connection
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Timothy J. O'Malley                   Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Peter C. Armbuster                    Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Steven Kalloch                        Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Thomas J. Christensen                 Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Jeffrey Oldfield                      Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Don Smith                             Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Robert P. Dinan                       Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Michael B. MacDonald                  Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Bruce L. Poznak                       Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Arlene C. Folsom                      Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Brian S. Wallace                      Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Debra A. Patten                       Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Kevin Brown                           Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Steve Eddy                            Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         John Gibbons                          Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Larry Pelletier                       Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Carolyn May                           Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Kathryn Dion                          Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         James Hillman                         Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Janet Milley                          Vice President                     Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         John H. Budd                          Director                           Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Mirick O'Connell                      Director                           Stratevest
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                                                                  1700 BankBoston Tower
                                                                                  Worcester, MA 01608-1477
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Gretchen B. Morse                     Director                           Stratevest
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                                                                  United Way of Chittenden County
                                                                                  95 St. Paul Street
                                                                                  Burlington, VT  05401
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Joseph S. Pieciak, Jr.                Director                           Stratevest
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                                                                  Joseph Pieciak & Co., P.C.
                                                                                  4 Park Place  P.O. Box 797
                                                                                  Brattelboro, VT  05301-0797
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Barry N. Stone                        Director                           Stratevest
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                                                                  Barry Stone Insurance Agency
                                                                                  P.O. Box 9507
                                                                                  S. Burlington, VT  05407-9507
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         George Smith                          Director                           Stratevest
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                                                                  George Smith, CPA
                                                                                  406 Main Street
                                                                                  Great Barrington, MA  01230
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Jeffrey Cook                          Director                           Stratevest
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                                                                  Cain, Hibbard, Myers & Cook
                                                                                  66 West Street
                                                                                  Pittsfield, MA  01201-5764
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Joseph A. Desmond                     Director                           Stratevest
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                                                                  The Concord Group
                                                                                  4 Bouton Street
                                                                                  Concord, NH  03301-05023
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
<PAGE>

         Name                                  Title                              Business Connection
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         John E. Menario                       Director                           Stratevest
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
                                                                                  Banknorth Group
                                                                                  One Portland Square
                                                                                  P.O. Box 9540
                                                                                  Portland, ME  04112-9540
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Andrew W. Mickey                      Director                           Stratevest
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                                                                  Banknorth Group
                                                                                  One Portland Square
                                                                                  P.O. Box 9540
                                                                                  Portland, ME  04112-9540
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................

(e)      Brown Investment Advisory & Trust Company

         The   description  of  Brown   Investment   Advisory  &  Trust  Company
         ("Brown")(investment  adviser to BrownIA Bond Fund,  BrownIA  Small-Cap
         Growth Fund and BrownIA Growth Equity Fund)  contained in Parts A and B
         of this post-effective amendment to the Trust's Registration Statement,
         is incorporated by reference herein.

         The following are the  directors  and principal  executive  officers of
         Brown, including their business connections, which are of a substantial
         nature.  The  address  of  Brown is  Furness  House,  19 South  Street,
         Baltimore,  Maryland 21202 and, unless otherwise  indicated below, that
         address is the principal business address of any company with which the
         directors and principal executive officers are connected.

         Name                                  Title                              Business Connection
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Michael D. Hankin                     President, Chief Executive         Brown
                                               Officer, Trustee
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               President                          The Maryland Zoological Society
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee                            The Valleys Planning Council
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         David L. Hopkins, Jr.                 Chairman                           Brown
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Westvaco Corporation
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Metropolitan Opera Association
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee and Chairman, Finance      Episcopal Church Foundation
                                               Committee
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee                            Maryland Historical Society
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... ..................................
         Charles W. Cole, Jr.                  Vice Chairman of the Board of      Brown
                                               Trustees
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Flag Investors Mutual Funds
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Provident Bankshares Corporation
                                                                                  and Provident Bank of Maryland
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director, Chairman of Investment   The University of Maryland
                                               Committee                          Foundation
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Board of Regents                   The University of Maryland Systems
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Member                             The Governor's Committee on
                                                                                  School Funding
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Member                             Investment Committee of Helix
                                                                                  Health System
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Chairman of Investment Committee   France-Merrick Foundation
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee and Chairman               Baltimore Council on Foreign
                                                                                  Affairs
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
<PAGE>


         Name                                  Title                              Business Connection
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Truman T. Semans                      Vice Chairman of the Board of      Brown

                                               Trustees
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee, Member and Former         Duke University
                                               Chairman of Investment Committee
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee, Chairman of Finance       Lawrenceville School
                                               Committee and Member of
                                               Investment and Executive
                                               Committees
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Board of Directors, Member of      Chesapeake Bay Foundation
                                               Investment and Executive
                                               Committees
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Chairman                           Flag Investors Mutual Funds
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Investment Committee Member        Mercy Medical Center
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Investment Committee Member        St. Mary's Seminary
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Investment Committee Member        Archdiocese of Baltimore
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Investment Committee Member        Robert E. Lee Memorial Foundation
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Investment Committee Member        W. Alton Jones Foundation
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         William C. Baker                      Trustee                            Brown
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               President and Chief Executive      Chesapeake Bay Foundation
                                               Officer
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee                            John Hopkins Hospital
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Member                             Washington College Board of
                                                                                  Visitors and Governors
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Baltimore Community Foundation
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Jack S. Griswold                      Trustee                            Brown
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Managing Director                  Armata Partners
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Alex. Brown Realty
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee                            The Baltimore Community Foundation
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee                            The Chesapeake Bay Foundation
                                                                                  Living Classrooms
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Chairman                           Maryland Historical Society
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Member                             Washington College Board of
                                                                                  Visitors and Governors
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Treasurer                          Washington College
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Chair                              Campaign for Washington's College
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
<PAGE>

         Name                                  Title                              Business Connection
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Earl L. Linehan                       Trustee                            Brown
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               President                          Woodbrook Capital, Inc.
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Chairman                           Strescon Industries
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Chairman                           UMBC Board of Visitors
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Chairman Investment Committee      Gilman School
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Board of Directors Member          Stoneridge, Inc.
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Board of Directors Member          Sagemaker, Inc.
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Board of Directors Member          Medical Mutual Liability
                                                                                  Insurance Society of Maryland
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Board of Directors Member          Heritage Properties, Inc.
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Board of Directors Member          St. Mary's Seminary & University
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Board of Directors Member          St. Ignatius Loyola Academy
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Board of Directors Member          University of Notre Dame Advisory
                                                                                  Council
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Walter D. Pinkard, Jr.                Trustee                            Brown
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               President and Chief Executive      Colliers Pinkard
                                               Officer
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Chairman                           The Americas Region of Colliers
                                                                                  International
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Vice President                     France Foundation
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Chairman                           The Baltimore Community Foundation
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Board of Directors Member          France-Merrick Foundation
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee                            The John Hopkins University
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee                            The Greater Baltimore Committee
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee                            Gilman School
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee                            Calvert School
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee                            The Baltimore Community Foundation
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee                            The East Baltimore Community
                                                                                  Development Bank
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee                            The Greater Baltimore Alliance
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Baltimore Reads, Inc.
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee                            The Downtown Baltimore District
                                                                                  Authority
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee                            The Yale University Development
                                                                                  Board
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee                            The Maryland Business Roundtable
                                                                                  for Education
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
<PAGE>

         Name                                  Title                              Business Connection
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         John J.F. Sherrerd                    Trustee                            Brown
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Provident Mutual Life Insurance
                                                                                  Company
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           C. Brewer and Company
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee, Vice Chairman of          Princeton University
                                               Executive Committee
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee, Chairman of Investment    The Robertson Foundation
                                               Committee
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee                            GESU School
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director and Executive Committee   Princeton Investment Management
                                               Member
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Board of Overseers                 University of Pennsylvania
                                                                                  Wharton School
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         David M. Churchill, CPA               Chief Financial Officer            Brown

(f)      Brown Advisory, Inc.

         The description of Brown Advisory Inc. ("Brown")(investment adviser to
         BrownIA Bond Fund,  BrownIA  Small-Cap  Growth Fund and BrownIA Growth
         Equity Fund)  contained in Parts A and B of  post-effective  amendment
         No.  83 to  the  Trust's  Registration  Statement,  (accession  number
         0001004402-00-000327) is incorporated by reference herein.

         The following are the  directors  and principal  executive  officers of
         Brown, including their business connections, which are of a substantial
         nature.  The  address  of  Brown is  Furness  House,  19 South  Street,
         Baltimore,  Maryland 21202 and, unless otherwise  indicated below, that
         address is the principal business address of any company with which the
         directors and principal executive officers are connected.

         Name                                  Title                              Business Connection
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Michael D. Hankin                     President and Director             Brown
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               President, Chief Executive         Brown Investment Advisory & Trust Co.
                                               Officer, Trustee
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               President                          The Maryland Zoological Society
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee                            The Valleys Planning Council
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         David L. Hopkins, Jr.                 Treasurer and Director             Brown
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Chairman                           Brown Investment Advisory & Trust Co.
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Westvaco Corporation
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Metropolitan Opera Association
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee and Chairman, Finance      Episcopal Church Foundation
                                               Committee
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee                            Maryland Historical Society
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Edward Dunn III                       Secretary                          Brown

(g)      Polaris Capital Management, Inc.

         The    description    of    Polaris    Capital     Management,     Inc.
         ("Polaris")(investment  adviser to Polaris Global Value Fund) contained
         in Parts A and B of  post-effective  amendment No. 83 (accession number
         0001004402-00-000327)   to  the  Trust's  Registration   Statement,  is
         incorporated by reference herein.

         The following are the  directors  and principal  executive  officers of
         Polaris,   including  their  business  connections,   which  are  of  a
         substantial  nature.  The  address of  Polaris  is 125  Summer  Street,
         Boston, Massachusetts 02110 and, unless otherwise indicated below, that
         address is the principal business address of any company with which the
         directors and principal executive officers are connected.

         Name                                  Title                              Business Connection
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Bernard R. Horn, Jr.                  President, Portfolio Manager       Polaris
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Edward E. Wendell, Jr.                Treasurer                          Polaris
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               President                          Boston Investor Services, Inc.
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................


(g)      Mastrapasqua & Associates

         The       description      of       Mastrapasqua      &      Associates
         ("Mastrapasqua")(investment  adviser to Mastrapasqua Growth Value Fund)
         contained in Parts A and B of  post-effective  amendment  No. 80 to the
         Trust's Registration Statement (accession number 0001004402-00-000233),
         is incorporated by reference herein.

         The following are the  directors  and principal  executive  officers of
         Mastrapasqua,  including  their  business  connections,  which are of a
         substantial  nature.  The address of Mastrapasqua is 814 Church Street,
         Suite 600, Nashville,  Tennessee, 37203 and, unless otherwise indicated
         below,  that address is the principal  business  address of any company
         with  which  the  directors  and  principal   executive   officers  are
         connected.

         Name                                  Title                              Business Connection
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Frank Mastrapasqua                    Chairman, CEO and Portfolio        Mastrapasqua
                                               Manager
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Thomas A. Trantum                     President, Portfolio Manager and   Mastrapasqua
                                               Security Analyst

(h)      Trillium Asset Management Corporation

         The  description  of  Trillium  Asset   Management   Corporation   (the
         "Adviser") (investment adviser to The Advocacy Fund) contained in Parts
         A and B of post-effective  amendment No. 82
<PAGE>

         to   the   Trust's    Registration    Statement    (accession   number
         0001004402-00-000283), is incorporated by reference herein.

         The following are the directors and principal executive officers of the
         Adviser,   including  their  business  connections,   which  are  of  a
         substantial  nature. The address of the Adviser is 711 Atlantic Avenue,
         Boston, Massachusetts 02111-2809 and, unless otherwise indicated below,
         that  address is the  principal  business  address of any company  with
         which the directors and principal executive officers are connected.

         Name                                  Title                              Business Connection
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Joan Bavaria                          President, Board of Directors      Adviser
                                               Member, Treasurer
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               President, Treasurer and Director  FRDC California Corporation
                                                                                  (dissolved)
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               President, Treasurer and           Franklin Insight, Inc. (Purchased
                                               Director (formerly)                by the Adviser)
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Founding Co-Chair                  Coalition for Environmentally
                                                                                  Responsible Economies
                                                                                  Boston, MA
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director (formerly)                Green Seal
                                                                                  Washington, DC
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Lighthawk
                                                                                  San Francisco, CA
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Advisory Board                     The Greening of Industry
                                                                                  Worcester, MA
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
                                               Director (formerly)                Social Investment Forum
                                                                                  Boston, MA
                                               .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
                                               Chair (formerly)                   National Advisory Committee for
                                                                                  Policy and Technology's
                                                                                  Subcommittee, Community Based
                                                                                  Environmental Policy
                                                                                  Washington, DC
                                               .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................

         Patrick J. McVeigh                    Executive Vice President           Adviser

                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           SEED Haiti Community Development
                                                                                  Loan Fund
                                                                                  99 High Street,
                                                                                  Brookline, MA 02445
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
         Shelley Alpern                        Director, Assistant Vice           Adviser
                                               President
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Student (formerly)                 University of Texas
                                                                                  Austin, TX
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Samuel B. Jones, Jr., CFA             Senior Vice President, Chief       Adviser
                                               Investment Officer
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Chairman 1991-1997                 Standards and Policy
                                               Member 1982-1999                   Subcommittee, Association for
                                                                                  Investment Management and Research
                                                                                  Charlottesville, VA 22903
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Member (formerly)                  Council of Examiners, Institute
                                                                                  of Chartered Financial Analysts
                                                                                  Charlottesville, VA 22903
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         F. Farnum Brown, Jr., Ph.D.           Senior Vice President              Adviser327 West Main Street
                                                                                  Durham, NC 27701-3215
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director (until 6/98)              Durham Community Land Trust
                                                                                  1401 Morehead Avenue
                                                                                  Durham, NC 27707
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
<PAGE>

         Name                                  Title                              Business Connection
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Susan Baker Martin                    Vice President                     Adviser
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee                            Congregational Church of South
                                                                                  Dartmouth
                                                                                  Middle Street
                                                                                  Dartmouth, MA
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Lisa Leff, CFA                        Vice President                     Adviser
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director and Employee (until       Smith Barney Asset Management
                                               1999)                              388 Greenwich Street
                                                                                  New York, NY 10013
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director (until 1999)              Social Investment Forum
                                                                                  Washington, DC
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Founder and Co-Chair (until 1999)  Social Investment Security
                                                                                  Analysts Group, New York Society
                                                                                  of Security Analysts
                                                                                  New York, NY
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Verite
                                                                                  Amherst, MAs
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director (until 1999)              Maternity Center Association
                                                                                  23rd and Park Avenue
                                                                                  New York, NY
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Stephanie R. Leighton, CFA            Vice President                     Adviser
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Treasurer                          Local Enterprise Assistance Fund,
                                                                                  Boston, MA
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Executive Committee Member         New England Chapter of the Social
                                                                                  Investment Forum
                                                                                  Boston, MA
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Cheryl I. Smith, CFA                  Vice President                     Adviser
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Finance Committee (Director,       Resist
                                               formerly)                          259 Elm Street, Suite 201
                                                                                  Somerville, MA 02144
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Treasurer                          Performing Artists at Lincoln
                                                                                  School
                                                                                  Kennard Road
                                                                                  Brookline, MA 02445
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Eric Becker, CFA                      Vice President                     Adviser
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Interlock Media, Inc.
                                                                                  Cambridge, MA
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Linnie McLean                         Senior Vice President              Adviser
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Loan Committee                     Boston Community Loan Fund
                                                                                  Boston, MA
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Patricia L. Davidson                  Vice President                     Adviser
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Member                             Program Committee, The Women's
                                                                                  Foundation
                                                                                  340 Pine Street
                                                                                  San Francisco, CA 94104
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Diane M. DeBono                       Senior Vice President              Adviser
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         James Crawford, JD                    Board of Directors Member          Adviser
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Professor, Associate Dean          University of California,
                                               (retired)                          Berkley, CA
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
<PAGE>

         Name                                  Title                              Business Connection
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Thomas Gladwin, Ph.D.                 Board of Directors Member          Adviser
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Professor                          New York University
                                                                                  Stern School of Business
                                                                                  44 W. 4th Street
                                                                                  New York, NY
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Max McGraw Professorship of        University of Michigan
                                               Sustainable Enterprise and         Ann Arbor, MI 48109
                                               Associated Directorship
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Robert Glassman                       Board of Directors Member          Adviser
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Chairman and Co-Chairman           Wainwright Bank & Trust Company
                                                                                  63 Franklin Street
                                                                                  Boston, MA 02110
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Chairman Investment Committee      The Boston Foundation
                                                                                  Boston, MA
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Sally Greenberg, JD                   Board of Directors Member          Adviser
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Senior Product Safety Counsel      Consumers Union
                                                                                  1666 Connecticut Avenue N.W.
                                                                                  Washington, DC 20009
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               President (past)                   Massachusetts Women's Bar
                                                                                  Association
                                                                                  Boston, MA
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Eastern States Civil Rights        Anti-Defamation League
                                               Counsel                            1 Lincoln Plaza
                                                                                  Boston, MA
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Charles Grigsby                       Board of Directors Member          Adviser
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Senior Vice President              Mass Capital Resource Company
                                                                                  420 Boylston Street
                                                                                  Boston, MA 02116
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director and Acting Deputy         City of Boston Neighborhood
                                                                                  Development Department
                                                                                  26 Court Street
                                                                                  Boston, MA 02108
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Member (formerly)                  Federal Reserve Bank Small
                                                                                  Business Advisory Committee
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Member (formerly)                  Massachusetts State Board of
                                                                                  Education
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Milton Moskowitz                      Board of Directors Member          Adviser
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Writer                             Mill Valley, CA 94941
                                               .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Carol O'Cleireacain, Ph.D.            Board of Directors Member
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Economic Consultant                New York, NY
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Senior Fellow                      Brookings Institution, Center on
                                                                                  Urban and Metropolitan Policy
                                                                                  1775 Massachusetts Avenue N.W.,
                                                                                  Washington, DC 20036
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Chair (formerly)                   Council of Institutional
                                                                                  Investors Executive Committee
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
<PAGE>

         Name                                  Title                              Business Connection
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         John Plukas                           Board of Directors Member          Adviser
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               President and Co-Chairman          Wainwright Bank & Trust Company
                                                                                  63 Franklin Street
                                                                                  Boston, MA 02110
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           New England Foundation for the
                                                                                  Arts
                                                                                  Boston, MA
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
         George Rooks                          Portfolio Manager, Board of        Adviser
                                               Directors Member
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               President and Owner                Heritage Capital Management
                                                                                  31 Milk Street
                                                                                  Boston, MA
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Investment Manager                 J.L. Kaplan Associates
                                                                                  29 Commonwealth Avenue
                                                                                  Boston, MA
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               President (formerly)               First Capital Corporation of
                                                                                  Boston
                                                                                  Boston, MA
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               President (formerly)               First Venture Capital Corporation
                                                                                  Boston, MA
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Portfolio Manager (formerly)       BankBoston

                                                                                  Boston, MA
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee                            Jewish Federation of the North
                                                                                  Shore
                                                                                  Boston, MA

         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Elliot Sclar, Ph.D.                   Chairman, Board of Directors       Adviser
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Professor                          Columbia University School of
                                                                                  Architecture
                                                                                  New York, NY

                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director, Vice President           Franklin Insight, Inc.
                                               (Formerly)
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Wainwright Bank & Trust Company
                                                                                  63 Franklin Street
                                                                                  Boston, MA 02110
                                               .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         William Torbert, Ph.D.                Board of Directors Member          Adviser
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Professor                          Boston College
                                                                                  Chestnut Hill, MA


(i)      Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.

         The  description of Wells Fargo Bank,  N.A.  ("Wells Fargo Bank"),  the
         investment  adviser  for the  Portfolio  in  which  Equity  Index  Fund
         invests,  contained in Parts A and B of post-effective amendment No. 83
         (accession  number  0001004402-00-000327)  to the Trust's  Registration
         Statement, is incorporated by reference herein.

         The following are the  directors  and principal  executive  officers of
         Wells Fargo Bank, including their business connections,  which are of a
         substantial  nature.  The address of Wells Fargo Bank is 420 Montgomery
         Street, San Francisco, California 94105 and, unless otherwise indicated
         below,  that address is the principal  business  address of any company
         with  which  the  directors  and  principal   executive   officers  are
         connected.

<PAGE>


         Name                                  Title                              Business Connection
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         H. Jesse Arnelle                      Director                           Wells Fargo Bank
         455 Market                            .................................. ...................................
         Street San Francisco, CA 94105        Senior Partner                     Arnelle, Hastie, McGee, Willis &
                                                                                  Greene

                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................

                                               Director                           Armstrong World Industries, Inc.
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Eastman Chemical Corporation
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           FPL Group, Inc.

         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................

         Michael R. Bowlin                     Director                           Wells Fargo Bank
         Highway 150                           .................................. ...................................
         Santa Paula, CA 93060                 .................................. ...................................
                                               Chairman of the Board of           Atlantic Richfield Co. (ARCO)
                                               Directors, Chief Executive
                                               Officer, Chief Operating Officer
                                               and President

         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................

         Edward Carson                         Director                           Wells Fargo Bank
         633 West Fifth Street                 .................................. ...................................
         Los Angeles, CA 90071                 .................................. ...................................
                                               Chairman of the Board and Chief    First Interstate Bancorp
                                               Executive Officer

                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................

                                               Director                           Aztar Corporation
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Castle & Cook, Inc.
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Terra Industries, Inc.

         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................

         William S. Davilla                    Director                           Wells Fargo Bank
         618 Michillinda Ave.                  .................................. ...................................
         Arcadia, CA 91007                     .................................. ...................................
                                               President (Emeritus) and           The Vons Companies, Inc.
                                               Director

                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................

                                               Director                           Pacific Gas & Electric Company


         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................

         Rayburn S. Dezember                   Director                           Wells Fargo Bank
         3200 San Fernando Road                .................................. ...................................
         Los Angeles, CA 90065                 .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           CalMat Co.


                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................

                                               Director                           Tejon Ranch Company
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           The Bakersfield Californian
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Trustee                            Whittier College

         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................

         Paul Hazen                            Chairman of the Board of           Wells Fargo Bank
                                               Directors
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Chairman of the Board of           Wells Fargo & Company
                                               Directors
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Phelps Dodge Corporation
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Safeway, Inc.

         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................

         Robert K. Jaedicke                    Director                           Wells Fargo Bank
         Graduate School of Business           .................................. ...................................
         Stanford University                   .................................. ...................................
         Stanford, CA 94305                    Professor (Emeritus)               Graduate School of Business
                                               Stanford University

                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................

                                               Director                           Bailard Biehl & Kaiser Real
                                                                                  Estate Investment Trust, Inc.

                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................

                                               Director                           Boise Cascade Corporation
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           California Water Service Company
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Enron Corporation
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           GenCorp, Inc.
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Homestake Mining Company

         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................

         Thomas L. Lee                         Director                           Wells Fargo Bank
         10302 Avenue 7 1/2                    .................................. ...................................
         Firebaugh, CA 93622                   .................................. ...................................
                                               Chairman and Chief Executive       The Newhall Land and Farming
                                               Officer                            Company

                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................

                                               Director                           CalMat Co.

                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................

                                               Director                           First Interstate Bancorp

         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
<PAGE>


         Name                                  Title                              Business Connection
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Ellen Newman                          Director                           Wells Fargo Bank
         323 Geary Street                      .................................. ...................................
         Suite 507                             .................................. ...................................
         San Francisco, CA 94102               President                          Ellen Newman Associates

                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................

                                               Chair (Emeritus) of the Board of   University of California at San
                                               Trustees                           Francisco Foundation

                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................

                                               Director                           California Chamber of Commerce

         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................

         Philip J. Quigley                     Director                           Wells Fargo Bank
         130 Kearney Street Rm. 3700 San       .................................. ...................................
         Francisco, CA 94108                   .................................. ...................................
                                               Chairman, President and Chief      Pacific Telesis Group
                                               Executive Officer
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Carl E. Reichardt                     Director                           Wells Fargo Bank

                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................

                                               Director                           Columbia/HCA Healthcare
                                                                                  Corporation

                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................

                                               Director                           Ford Motor Company
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Newhall Management Corporation
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Pacific Gas and Electric Company
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Retired Chairman of the Board of   Wells Fargo & Company
                                               Directors and Chief Executive
                                               Officer

         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................

         Donald B. Rice                        Director                           Wells Fargo Bank
         2049 Century Park East                .................................. ...................................
         Los Angeles, CA 90067                 .................................. ...................................
                                               President and Chief Executive      Teledyne, Inc.
                                               Officer

                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................

                                               Retired Secretary                  The United States Air Force

                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................

                                               Director                           Vulcan Materials Company

         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................

         Richard J. Stegemeier                 Director                           Wells Fargo Bank
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Chairman (Emeritus)                Unocal Corporation
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Foundation Health Corporation
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Halliburton Company
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Northrop Grumman Corporation
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Outboard Marine Corporation
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Pacific Enterprises
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           First Interstate Bancorp

         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................

         Susan G. Swenson                      Director                           Wells Fargo Bank
         651 Gateway Blvd.                     .................................. ...................................
         San Francisco, CA 94080               .................................. ...................................
                                               President and Chief Executive      Cellular One
                                               Officer
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         David M. Tellep                       Director                           Wells Fargo Bank

                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................

                                               Retired Chairman of the Board      Martin Lockheed Corporation
                                               and Chief Executive Officer

                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................

                                               Director                           Edison International and Southern
                                                                                  California Edison Company

                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................

                                               Director                           First Interstate Bancorp

         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................

         Chang-Lin Tien                        Director                           Wells Fargo Bank

                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................

                                               Chancellor                         University of California at
                                                                                  Berkeley

                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................

                                               Director                           Raychem Corporation

         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
<PAGE>


         Name                                  Title                              Business Connection
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         John A. Young                         Director                           Wells Fargo Bank
         3000 Hanover Street                   .................................. ...................................
         Palo Alto, CA 9434                    .................................. ...................................
                                               President, Chief Executive         Hewlett-Packard Company
                                               Officer and Director

                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................

                                               Director                           Chevron Corporation
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Lucent Technologies
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Novell, Inc.
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           Shaman Pharmaceuticals Inc.

         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................

         William F. Zuendt                     Director                           Wells Fargo Bank
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               President                          Wells Fargo & Company
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           3Com Corporation
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               .................................. ...................................
                                               Director                           California Chamber of Commerce


(j)      Wells Capital Management Incorporated

         The description of Wells Capital  Management.  ("WCM"),  the investment
         sub-adviser  for the  Portfolio  in which  Equity  Index Fund  invests,
         contained  in  Parts  A  and  B  of  post-effective  amendment  No.  83
         (accession  number  0001004402-00-000327)  of the Trust's  Registration
         Statement, is incorporated by reference herein.

         The following are the  directors  and principal  executive  officers of
         WCM, including their business  connections,  which are of a substantial
         nature.  The  address  of WCM  is 525  Market  Street,  San  Francisco,
         California 94105 and, unless otherwise indicated below, that address is
         the principal  business address of any company with which the directors
         and principal executive officers are connected.

         Name                                  Title                              Business Connection
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Allen J. Ayvazian                     Chief Equity Officer               WCM
                                               .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Robert Willis                         President and Chief Investment     WCM
                                               Officer
                                               .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Brigid Breen                          Chief Compliance Officer           WCM
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Jose Casas                            Chief Operating Officer            WCM
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Larry Fernandes                       Principal                          WCM
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Jacqueline Anne Flippin               Principal                          WCM
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Stephen Galiani                       Senior Principal Director          WCM
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Madeleine Gish                        Senior Principal                   WCM
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Kelli Ann Lee                         Managing Director                  WCM
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Melvin Lindsey                        Managing Director                  WCM
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Clark Messman                         Chief Legal Officer                WCM
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Brian Mulligan                        Managing Director                  WCM
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Thomas O'Malley                       Managing Director                  WCM
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Clyde Ostler                          Director                           WCM
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Guy Rounsaville                       Director                           WCM
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Katherine Schapiro                    Senior Principal                   WCM
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Gary Schlossbertg                     Economist                          WCM
<PAGE>

ITEM 27.  PRINCIPAL UNDERWRITERS

(a)      Forum  Fund  Services,   LLC,  Registrant's   underwriter,   serves  as
         underwriter for the following investment companies registered under the
         Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended:

         The Cutler Trust                             Monarch Funds
         Memorial Funds                               Sound Shore Fund, Inc.
         Forum Funds                                  TrueCrossing Funds

(b)      The following  officers of Forum Fund Services,  LLC, the  Registrant's
         underwriter,  hold the following  positions with the Registrant.  Their
         business address is Two Portland Square, Portland, Maine 04101.

         Name                                      Position with Underwriter           Position with Registrant
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         John Y. Keffer                                    President                     Chairman, President
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         David I. Goldstein                                Secretary                        Vice President
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         ..................................... .................................. ...................................
         Ronald H. Hirsch                                  Treasurer                          Treasurer
</TABLE>


(c)      Not Applicable.

ITEM 28.  LOCATION OF ACCOUNTS AND RECORDS

         The majority of the accounts,  books and other documents required to be
         maintained by Section 31(a) of the  Investment  Company Act of 1940 and
         the  Rules   thereunder   are   maintained  at  the  offices  of  Forum
         Administrative  Services, LLC and Forum Shareholder Services,  LLC, Two
         Portland  Square,  Portland,  Maine 04101.  The records  required to be
         maintained  under Rule 31a-1(b)(1) with respect to journals of receipts
         and deliveries of securities and receipts and disbursements of cash are
         maintained  at the  offices of the  Registrant's  custodian,  as listed
         under "Custodian" in Part B to this Registration Statement. The records
         required  to be  maintained  under  Rule  31a-1(b)(5),  (6) and (9) are
         maintained at the offices of the Registrant's adviser or subadviser, as
         listed in Item 26 hereof.

ITEM 29.  MANAGEMENT SERVICES

         Not Applicable.

ITEM 30.  UNDERTAKINGS

         None.



<PAGE>


                                   SIGNATURES


Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,  and the
Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended,  the Registrant has duly caused this
amendment  to its  registration  statement  to be  signed  on its  behalf by the
undersigned,  duly  authorized,  in the City of Portland,  and State of Maine on
October 17, 2000.


                                            FORUM FUNDS


                                            By: /s/ John Y. Keffer
                                                     John Y. Keffer, President


Pursuant to the  requirements  of the Securities  Act of 1933, as amended,  this
registration statement has been signed below by the following persons on October
17, 2000.


(a)      Principal Executive Officer

         /s/ John Y. Keffer
         John Y. Keffer
         President and Chairman

(b)      Principal Financial Officer

         /s/ Ronald H. Hirsch
         Ronald H. Hirsch
         Treasurer

(c)      A majority of the Trustees

         /s/ John Y. Keffer
         John Y. Keffer
         Trustee

         James C. Cheng, Trustee
         J. Michael Parish, Trustee
         Costas Azariadis, Trustee

         By: /s/ John Y. Keffer
         John Y. Keffer
         Attorney in Fact*

*Pursuant  to powers of  attorney  previously  filed as Other  Exhibits  to this
Registration Statement.


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                                INDEX TO EXHIBITS

(d)(9)   Form of Investment Advisory Agreement between Registrant and Brown
         Investment Advisory & Trust Company.

(e)(3)   Form of Distribution Agreement between Registrant and Forum Fund
         Services, LLC.

(g)(1)   Form of Custodian Agreement between Registrant and Forum Trust, LLC.

(g)(2)   Form of Master Custodian Agreement between Forum Trust and Bankers
         Trust Company.

(h)(1)   Form of Administration Agreement between Registrant and Forum
         Administrative Services, LLC.

(h)(2)   Form of Fund Accounting Agreement between Registrant and Forum
         Accounting Services, LLC.

(h)(3)   Form of Transfer Agency Agreement between Registrant and Forum
         Shareholder Services, LLC.

(h)(6)   Form of Shareholder Service Plan of Registrant.





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