PRUDENTIAL EQUITY FUND
DEFS14A, 1994-04-28
Previous: AMERICAN HOLDINGS INC /DE/, DEFC14A, 1994-04-28
Next: GENERAL MUNICIPAL BOND FUND INC, NSAR-B, 1994-04-28



<PAGE>
                            PRUDENTIAL MUTUAL FUNDS
                               ONE SEAPORT PLAZA
                               NEW YORK, NY 10292

APRIL 18, 1994
RE: IMPORTANT PROXY MATERIAL -- IMMEDIATE ACTION REQUIRED
Dear Shareholder:

    We are pleased to enclose a notice and proxy statement for a special meeting
of  shareholders of the Prudential Mutual Funds to be held on June 23, 1994. You
are being  asked  to approve,  among  other things,  a  proposal to  permit  the
automatic  conversion of  Class B  shares to  Class A  shares after  a specified
number of  years. Thereafter,  converted shares  will be  subject to  the  lower
annual distribution-related fees applicable to Class A shares.

    The   proxy  statement  also  includes   proposals  to  revise  the  current
distribution and  service  plans  for Class  A  and  Class B  shares  and  other
proposals recommended by the Fund's Manager and Subadviser.

    Please  read the enclosed materials carefully. The proxy statement discusses
each proposal in  detail and  the reasons  why the  Board of  Directors/Trustees
recommend that you vote in favor of those proposals.

    The   Fund  is   using  Shareholder  Communications   Corporation  (SCC),  a
professional proxy  solicitation  firm, to  assist  shareholders in  the  voting
process.  If we have not yet received your proxy card as the date of the meeting
approaches, you may receive a telephone call from SCC reminding you to  exercise
your right to vote.

    Your  vote  is  critical  in  allowing your  Fund  to  hold  the  meeting as
scheduled. Please take a  moment now to  sign and return the  proxy card in  the
enclosed  postage-paid envelope. If less than  a majority of the eligible shares
are represented, the Fund,  at shareholders' expense, will  have to continue  to
solicit  votes until a quorum is obtained.  Your prompt attention in this matter
benefits all shareholders. Thank you.

Sincerely,

Lawrence C. McQuade
PRESIDENT

<TABLE>
<S>   <C>                                                 <C>
      SPECIAL NOTE:  If you hold shares in more than one
      Prudential fund, you will receive a separate proxy
      package for each Fund you hold. Please be sure  to
      sign  and return each proxy card regardless of how
      many you receive.
</TABLE>
<PAGE>
   
                            INFORMATION REQUIRED IN
                                PROXY STATEMENT
    

                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

                  Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of
                     the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

Filed by the registrant  /X/
Filed by a party other than the registrant  / /

Check the appropriate box:

   
/ /    Preliminary proxy statement
    

   
/X/    Definitive proxy statement
    

/ /    Definitive additional materials

/ /    Soliciting material pursuant to Section 240.14a-11c or Section 240.14a-12

                          PRUDENTIAL EQUITY FUND, INC.

________________________________________________________________________________
                (NAME OF REGISTRANT AS SPECIFIED IN ITS CHARTER)

                          PRUDENTIAL EQUITY FUND, INC.
________________________________________________________________________________
                   (NAME OF PERSON(S) FILING PROXY STATEMENT)

Payment of filing fee (Check the appropriate box):

/X/    $125 per Exchange Act Rules 0-11(c)(1)(ii), 14a-6(i)(1) or Rule
       14a-6(j)(2).

/ /    $500 per each party to the controversy pursuant to Exchange Act Rule
       14a-6(i)(3).

/ /    Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(4) and 0-11.
<PAGE>
   
                             PRUDENTIAL EQUITY FUND
    
                               ONE SEAPORT PLAZA
                              NEW YORK, N.Y. 10292
                            ------------------------

                   NOTICE OF SPECIAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                            ------------------------

To our Shareholders:

   
    Notice  is hereby given that a Special Meeting of Shareholders of Prudential
Equity Fund, Inc. (the Fund), will be held at 3:00 P.M. on June 23, 1994, at 199
Water Street, New York, N.Y. 10292, for the following purposes:
    

        1.  To elect Directors.

        2.  To approve an amendment  of the Fund's Articles of Incorporation  to
    permit a conversion feature for Class B Shares.

        3.   To approve an amended and restated Class A Distribution and Service
    Plan.

        4.  To approve an amended and restated Class B Distribution and  Service
    Plan.

        5.    To  ratify  the  selection by  the  Board  of  Directors  of Price
    Waterhouse as independent accountants for the year ending December 31, 1994.

        6.  To  transact such  other business as  may properly  come before  the
    Meeting or any adjournment thereof.

   
    Only  shares of Common Stock of the Fund  of record at the close of business
on March 31, 1994 are entitled to notice  of and to vote at this Meeting or  any
adjournment thereof.
    

                                                  S. JANE ROSE
                                                    SECRETARY

   
Dated: April 18, 1994
    

WHETHER OR NOT YOU EXPECT TO ATTEND THE MEETING, PLEASE SIGN AND PROMPTLY RETURN
THE  ENCLOSED PROXY IN  THE ENCLOSED SELF-ADDRESSED ENVELOPE.  IN ORDER TO AVOID
THE ADDITIONAL  EXPENSE  TO  THE  FUND OF  FURTHER  SOLICITATION,  WE  ASK  YOUR
COOPERATION IN MAILING IN YOUR PROXY PROMPTLY.
<PAGE>
   
                             PRUDENTIAL EQUITY FUND
    
                               ONE SEAPORT PLAZA
                              NEW YORK, N.Y. 10292

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

                                PROXY STATEMENT
                            ------------------------

   
    This  statement is furnished by the  Board of Directors of Prudential Equity
Fund, Inc. (the Fund) in connection with its solicitation of proxies for use  at
a  Special Meeting of Shareholders to  be held at 3:00 P.M.  on June 23, 1994 at
199 Water  Street, New  York, New  York 10292,  the Fund's  principal  executive
office.  The purpose  of the Meeting  and the matters  to be acted  upon are set
forth in the accompanying Notice of Special Meeting.
    

    If the accompanying form of Proxy is executed properly and returned,  shares
represented  by  it  will  be  voted  at  the  Meeting  in  accordance  with the
instructions on the  Proxy. However,  if no instructions  are specified,  shares
will be voted for the election of Directors and for each of the other proposals.
A  Proxy may be  revoked at any  time prior to  the time it  is voted by written
notice to  the  Secretary of  the  Fund or  by  attendance at  the  Meeting.  If
sufficient  votes to approve one or more of the proposed items are not received,
the persons named as proxies may propose one or more adjournments of the Meeting
to permit further solicitation of proxies. Any such adjournment will require the
affirmative vote  of  a majority  of  those shares  present  at the  Meeting  or
represented  by proxy. When voting on  a proposed adjournment, the persons named
as proxies  will vote  for the  proposed adjournment  all shares  that they  are
entitled  to vote with respect  to each item, unless  directed to disapprove the
item, in which case such shares will be voted against the proposed adjournment.

    If  a  Proxy  that  is   properly  executed  and  returned  accompanied   by
instructions  to withhold authority to vote represents a broker "non-vote" (that
is, a  Proxy from  a  broker or  nominee indicating  that  such person  has  not
received instructions from the beneficial owner or other person entitled to vote
shares  on a particular matter with respect  to which the broker or nominee does
not have discretionary power), the shares represented thereby will be considered
not to be present at the Meeting for purposes of determining the existence of  a
quorum  for the transaction of  business and be deemed  not cast with respect to
such proposal. If no instructions are received by the broker or nominee from the
shareholder with reference  to routine matters,  the shares represented  thereby
may  be considered  for purposes  of determining the  existence of  a quorum for

                                       1
<PAGE>
the transaction  of  business and  will  be deemed  cast  with respect  to  such
proposal. Also, a properly executed and returned Proxy marked with an abstention
will  be considered present at  the Meeting for the  purposes of determining the
existence of a quorum for the transaction of business. However, abstentions  and
broker  "non-votes" do not constitute a vote  "for" or "against" the matter, but
have the  effect of  a negative  vote on  matters which  require approval  by  a
requisite percentage of the outstanding shares.

   
    The  close of business on  March 31, 1994 has been  fixed as the record date
for the determination of shareholders entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the
Meeting. On  that  date,  the  Fund  had  149,268,139  shares  of  Common  Stock
outstanding  and entitled to  vote, consisting of 17,393,562  Class A shares and
131,874,577 Class B  shares. Each  share will  be entitled  to one  vote at  the
Meeting.  It is expected that the Notice of Special Meeting, Proxy Statement and
form of Proxy will first be mailed to shareholders on or about April 22, 1994.
    

   
    Management does not know of any person or group who owned beneficially 5% or
more of the outstanding shares of either class of Common Stock of the Fund as of
March 31, 1994.
    

    The expense  of solicitation  will be  borne by  the Fund  and will  include
reimbursement  of brokerage  firms and others  for expenses  in forwarding proxy
solicitation material to beneficial owners. The solicitation of proxies will  be
largely by mail. The Board of Directors of the Fund has authorized management to
retain  Shareholder Communications  Corporation, a  proxy solicitation  firm, to
assist in the  solicitation of proxies  for this Meeting.  This cost,  including
specified  expenses, is not expected to exceed $121,000 and will be borne by the
Fund.  In  addition,  solicitation  may  include,  without  cost  to  the  Fund,
telephonic, telegraphic or oral communication by regular employees of Prudential
Securities Incorporated (Prudential Securities) and its affiliates.

                             ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
                                (PROPOSAL NO. 1)

   
    At  the Meeting nine Directors will be elected  to hold office for a term of
unlimited duration until  their successors are  elected and qualify.  It is  the
intention of the persons named in the accompanying form of Proxy to vote for the
election  of Edward D. Beach,  Eugene C. Dorsey, Delayne  Dedrick Gold, Harry A.
Jacobs, Jr., Lawrence C. McQuade, Thomas  T. Mooney, Thomas H. O'Brien,  Richard
A.  Redeker and Nancy H. Teeters, all of whom are currently members of the Board
of Directors. Each  of the  nominees has  consented to  be named  in this  Proxy
Statement  and to serve as  a Director if elected.  All of the Directors, except
Mr. Redeker, have previously been elected by shareholders.
    

                                       2
<PAGE>
Ms. Gold and Mr. O'Brien  have served as Directors of  the Fund since 1982.  Mr.
Jacobs has served as a Director since 1985. Messrs. Beach and Mooney have served
as  Directors since 1986.  Mr. Dorsey has  served as a  Director since 1987. Mr.
McQuade has served as a Director since  1988. Mrs. Teeters and Mr. Redeker  have
served as Directors since August 4, 1992 and November 11, 1993, respectively.

    The  Board of Directors  has no reason  to believe that  any of the nominees
named above will  become unavailable  for election as  a Director,  but if  that
should  occur before the Meeting, proxies will  be voted for such persons as the
Board of Directors may recommend.

    The Fund's By-Laws provide that the Fund will not be required to hold annual
meetings of shareholders if the election of Directors is not required under  the
Investment  Company Act of 1940, as amended  (the Investment Company Act). It is
the present intention of the Board of  Directors of the Fund not to hold  annual
meetings   of  shareholders   unless  such   shareholder  action   is  required.
Accordingly, Directors elected at the Special Meeting will hold office until the
Fund is required by law to hold an election of Directors and successor Directors
are elected and qualify.

                        INFORMATION REGARDING DIRECTORS

   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                       SHARES OF
                                                                                      COMMON STOCK
       NAME, AGE, BUSINESS EXPERIENCE DURING THE               POSITION WITH            OWNED AT
           PAST FIVE YEARS AND DIRECTORSHIPS                       FUND              MARCH 31, 1994
- -------------------------------------------------------        -------------        ----------------
<S>                                                            <C>                  <C>
Edward D.  Beach (69),  President and  Director of  BMC          Director                 -0-
 Fund,  Inc.,  a closed-end  investment  company; prior
 thereto,   Vice   Chairman   of   Broyhill   Furniture
 Industries,   Inc.;   Certified   Public   Accountant;
 Secretary and Treasurer of Broyhill Family  Foundation
 Inc.;  President,  Treasurer  and  Director  of  First
 Financial Fund,  Inc. and  The High  Yield Plus  Fund,
 Inc.;  President and Director  of Global Utility Fund,
 Inc.; Director  of The  Global Government  Plus  Fund,
 Inc., The Global Yield Fund, Inc.,
</TABLE>
    

                                       3
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                       SHARES OF
                                                                                      COMMON STOCK
       NAME, AGE, BUSINESS EXPERIENCE DURING THE               POSITION WITH            OWNED AT
           PAST FIVE YEARS AND DIRECTORSHIPS                       FUND              MARCH 31, 1994
- -------------------------------------------------------        -------------        ----------------
<S>                                                            <C>                  <C>
 Prudential  Adjustable  Rate  Securities  Fund,  Inc.,
 Prudential Equity Fund, Inc., Prudential Global  Gene-
 sis  Fund, Prudential  Global Natural  Resources Fund,
 Prudential GNMA Fund, Prudential Government Plus Fund,
 Prudential  Multi-Sector  Fund,  Inc.  and  Prudential
 Special  Money Market  Fund; Trustee  of The BlackRock
 Government Income Trust, Command Government Fund, Com-
 mand Money  Fund,  Command Tax-Free  Fund,  Prudential
 California  Municipal  Fund, Prudential  Equity Income
 Fund, Prudential FlexiFund, Prudential Municipal  Bond
 Fund and Prudential Municipal Series Fund.
Eugene   C.  Dorsey  (67),   Retired  President,  Chief          Director                 -0-
 Executive  Officer   and   Trustee  of   the   Gannett
 Foundation  (now Freedom  Forum); former  Publisher of
 four Gannett newspapers and Vice President of  Gannett
 Company;  past Chairman,  Independent Sector (national
 coalition  of  philanthropic  organizations);   former
 Chairman   of  the  American  Council  for  the  Arts;
 Director of the Advisory Board of Chase Manhattan Bank
 of Rochester, Prudential Equity Fund,
</TABLE>

                                       4
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                       SHARES OF
                                                                                      COMMON STOCK
       NAME, AGE, BUSINESS EXPERIENCE DURING THE               POSITION WITH            OWNED AT
           PAST FIVE YEARS AND DIRECTORSHIPS                       FUND              MARCH 31, 1994
- -------------------------------------------------------        -------------        ----------------
<S>                                                            <C>                  <C>
 Inc., Prudential GNMA  Fund, Prudential  Institutional
 Liquidity  Portfolio, Inc.  and The  High Yield Income
 Fund, Inc.; Trustee of Prudential California Municipal
 Fund, Prudential Municipal Series Fund and The  Target
 Portfolio Trust.
Delayne  Dedrick  Gold (55),  Marketing  and Management          Director                 992
 Consultant; Director  of  Prudential  Adjustable  Rate
 Securities  Fund, Inc., Prudential  Equity Fund, Inc.,
 Prudential  Global   Fund,   Prudential   GNMA   Fund,
 Prudential  Government  Plus  Fund,  Prudential Growth
 Opportunity  Fund,   Prudential   High   Yield   Fund,
 Prudential  IncomeVertible-R-  Fund,  Inc., Prudential
 MoneyMart Assets, Prudential National Municipals Fund,
 Prudential  Pacific  Growth  Fund,  Inc.,   Prudential
 Short-Term   Global  Income   Fund,  Inc.,  Prudential
 Special  Money  Market  Fund,  Prudential   Structured
 Maturity  Fund,  Prudential Tax-Free  Money  Fund, and
 Prudential Utility  Fund;  Trustee  of  The  BlackRock
 Government  Income  Trust,  Command  Government  Fund,
 Command Money Fund, Command Tax-Free Fund,  Prudential
 California Municipal Fund, Prudential Government Secu-
 rities  Trust,  Prudential Municipal  Series  Fund and
 Prudential U.S. Government Fund.
</TABLE>

                                       5
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                       SHARES OF
                                                                                      COMMON STOCK
       NAME, AGE, BUSINESS EXPERIENCE DURING THE               POSITION WITH            OWNED AT
           PAST FIVE YEARS AND DIRECTORSHIPS                       FUND              MARCH 31, 1994
- -------------------------------------------------------        -------------        ----------------
<S>                                                            <C>                  <C>
*Harry A. Jacobs, Jr. (72), Interim                              Director                7,235
Chief Executive Officer  (June 1993-September 1993)  of
 Prudential  Mutual  Fund  Management,  Inc.  (PMF) and
 Senior Director  (since  January 1986)  of  Prudential
 Securities;   formerly  Chairman   of  the   Board  of
 Prudential Securities (1982-1985) and Chairman of  the
 Board  and Chief Executive Officer of Bache Group Inc.
 (1977-1982);  Director  of  the  Center  for  National
 Policy;   Director   of  Prudential   Adjustable  Rate
 Securities Fund, Inc.,  Prudential Equity Fund,  Inc.,
 Prudential  Global Fund,  Inc., Prudential  GNMA Fund,
 Prudential Government  Plus  Fund,  Prudential  Growth
 Opportunity   Fund,   Prudential   High   Yield  Fund,
 Prudential IncomeVertible-R-  Fund,  Inc.,  Prudential
 MoneyMart Assets, Prudential National Municipals Fund,
 Prudential   Pacific  Growth  Fund,  Inc.,  Prudential
 Short-Term  Global  Income  Fund,  Prudential  Special
 Money  Market  Fund,  Prudential  Structured  Maturity
 Fund,  Prudential  Tax-Free  Money  Fund,   Prudential
 Utility  Fund,  The  First Australia  Fund,  Inc., The
 First Australia Prime  Income Fund,  Inc., The  Global
 Government  Plus Fund, Inc. and The Global Yield Fund,
 Inc.;
</TABLE>

                                       6
<PAGE>

   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                       SHARES OF
                                                                                      COMMON STOCK
       NAME, AGE, BUSINESS EXPERIENCE DURING THE               POSITION WITH            OWNED AT
           PAST FIVE YEARS AND DIRECTORSHIPS                       FUND              MARCH 31, 1994
- -------------------------------------------------------        -------------        ----------------
<S>                                                            <C>                  <C>
 Trustee  of  the  Trudeau  Institute,  The   BlackRock
 Government  Income  Trust,  Command  Government  Fund,
 Command Money Fund, Command Tax-Free Fund,  Prudential
 California Municipal Fund, Prudential Municipal Series
 Fund and Prudential U.S. Government Fund.
*Lawrence C. McQuade (66), Vice                                President and             1,790
Chairman of PMF (since 1988);                                    Director
Managing  Director,  Investment  Banking  of Prudential
 Securities (1988-1991); Director of BUNZL, PLC  (since
 June  1991)  and Quixote  Corporation  (since February
 1992); formerly  Director  of  Kaiser  Tech  Ltd.  and
 Kaiser   Aluminum  and  Chemical  Corp.  (March  1987-
November  1988)  and  Crazy  Eddie  Inc.   (1987-1990);
 Formerly Executive Vice President and Director of W.R.
 Grace  & Company; President and Director of Prudential
 Adjustable  Rate  Securities  Fund,  Inc.,  Prudential
 Equity  Fund,  Inc.,  Prudential  Global  Fund,  Inc.,
 Prudential  Global  Genesis  Fund,  Prudential  Global
 Natural   Resources   Fund,   Prudential   GNMA  Fund,
 Prudential Government  Plus  Fund,  Prudential  Growth
 Fund,   Inc.,  Prudential   Growth  Opportunity  Fund,
 Prudential High Yield Fund, Prudential
 IncomeVertible-R-
</TABLE>
    

                                       7
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                       SHARES OF
                                                                                      COMMON STOCK
       NAME, AGE, BUSINESS EXPERIENCE DURING THE               POSITION WITH            OWNED AT
           PAST FIVE YEARS AND DIRECTORSHIPS                       FUND              MARCH 31, 1994
- -------------------------------------------------------        -------------        ----------------
<S>                                                            <C>                  <C>
 Fund,   Inc.,   Prudential   Institutional   Liquidity
 Portfolio, Inc., Prudential Intermediate Global Income
 Fund,  Inc.,  Prudential MoneyMart  Assets, Prudential
 Multi-Sector   Fund,    Inc.,   Prudential    National
 Municipals Fund, Prudential Pacific Growth Fund, Inc.,
 Prudential  Short-Term Global Income  Fund, Inc., Pru-
 dential  Special   Money   Market   Fund,   Prudential
 Structured  Maturity  Fund, Prudential  Tax-Free Money
 Fund, Prudential Utility  Fund, The Global  Government
 Plus  Fund, Inc., The Global  Yield Fund, Inc. and The
 High Yield Income Fund, Inc.; President and Trustee of
 The  BlackRock   Government  Income   Trust,   Command
 Government  Fund, Command Money Fund, Command Tax-Free
 Fund, Prudential California Municipal Fund, Prudential
 Equity Income Fund,  Prudential FlexiFund,  Prudential
 Government Securities Trust, Prudential Municipal Bond
 Fund,  Prudential  Municipal  Series  Fund, Prudential
 U.S. Government Fund and The Target Portfolio Trust.
Thomas T. Mooney (52), President of                              Director                1,537
the Greater Rochester Metro Chamber of Commerce; former
 Rochester  City  Manager;  Member  of  the  Board   of
 Governors  of the Genesee  Hospital; Trustee of Center
 for Governmental Research, Inc.; Director
</TABLE>

                                       8
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                       SHARES OF
                                                                                      COMMON STOCK
       NAME, AGE, BUSINESS EXPERIENCE DURING THE               POSITION WITH            OWNED AT
           PAST FIVE YEARS AND DIRECTORSHIPS                       FUND              MARCH 31, 1994
- -------------------------------------------------------        -------------        ----------------
<S>                                                            <C>                  <C>
 of  Blue  Cross  of  Rochester,  Monroe  County  Water
 Authority,  Rochester  Jobs,  Inc.,  Northeast Midwest
 Institute,  Executive  Service  Corps  of   Rochester,
 Monroe   County  Industrial  Development  Corporation,
 Global Utility Fund, Inc., Prudential Adjustable  Rate
 Securities  Fund, Inc., Prudential  Equity Fund, Inc.,
 Prudential  Global  Genesis  Fund,  Prudential  Global
 Natural  Resources  Fund, Prudential  GNMA  Fund, Pru-
 dential Government Plus Fund, Prudential  Multi-Sector
 Fund,  Inc.,  First Financial  Fund, Inc.,  The Global
 Government Plus  Fund, Inc.,  The Global  Yield  Fund,
 Inc.  and The  High Yield  Plus Fund,  Inc; Trustee of
 Prudential  California   Municipal  Fund,   Prudential
 Equity  Income Fund,  Prudential FlexiFund, Prudential
 Municipal Bond  Fund and  Prudential Municipal  Series
 Fund.
Thomas H. O'Brien (69), President,                               Director                3,855
O'Brien    Associates    (financial    and   management
 consultants) (since April 1984); formerly President of
 Jamaica  Water  Securities  Corp.  (holding   company)
 (February   1989-August  1990);   Chairman  and  Chief
 Executive Officer (September  1987-February 1989)  and
 Director  (September 1987-April 1991) of Jamaica Water
 Supply  Company;  formerly  Director  of   TransCanada
</TABLE>

                                       9
<PAGE>

   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                       SHARES OF
                                                                                      COMMON STOCK
       NAME, AGE, BUSINESS EXPERIENCE DURING THE               POSITION WITH            OWNED AT
           PAST FIVE YEARS AND DIRECTORSHIPS                       FUND              MARCH 31, 1994
- -------------------------------------------------------        -------------        ----------------
<S>                                                            <C>                  <C>
 Pipelines  U.S.A. Ltd.  (1984-June 1989)  and Winthrop
 University   Hospital   (November   1976-June   1988);
 Director  of  Ridgewood  Savings  Bank,  Yankee Energy
 System, Inc.,  Prudential Adjustable  Rate  Securities
 Fund,  Inc., Prudential Equity  Fund, Inc., Prudential
 GNMA  Fund  and   Prudential  Government  Plus   Fund;
 Secretary  and Trustee of  Hofstra University; Trustee
 of  Prudential  California  Municipal  Fund  and  Pru-
 dential Municipal Series Fund.
*Richard A. Redeker (50), President,                             Director                 -0-
Chief  Executive  Officer and  Director  (since October
 1993), PMF;  Executive  Vice President,  Director  and
 Member  of  the  Operating  Committee  (since  October
 1993), Prudential Securities; Director (since  October
 1993)  of  Prudential  Securities  Group,  Inc. (PSG);
 formerly Senior Executive Vice President and  Director
 of   Kemper   Financial   Services,   Inc.  (September
 1978-September 1993); Director of Global Utility Fund,
 Inc.,  Prudential  Adjustable  Rate  Securities  Fund,
 Inc.,  Prudential Equity Fund, Inc., Prudential Global
 Fund, Inc., Prudential Global Genesis Fund, Prudential
 Global
</TABLE>
    

                                       10
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                       SHARES OF
                                                                                      COMMON STOCK
       NAME, AGE, BUSINESS EXPERIENCE DURING THE               POSITION WITH            OWNED AT
           PAST FIVE YEARS AND DIRECTORSHIPS                       FUND              MARCH 31, 1994
- -------------------------------------------------------        -------------        ----------------
<S>                                                            <C>                  <C>
 Natural  Resources   Fund,   Prudential   GNMA   Fund,
 Prudential  Government  Plus  Fund,  Prudential Growth
 Fund, Inc.,  Prudential  IncomeVertible-R-Fund,  Inc.,
 Prudential  Institutional  Liquidity  Portfolio, Inc.,
 Prudential  Intermediate  Global  Income  Fund,  Inc.,
 Prudential  MoneyMart Assets,  Prudential Multi-Sector
 Fund, Inc.,  Prudential  Pacific  Growth  Fund,  Inc.,
 Prudential   Short-Term  Global   Income  Fund,  Inc.,
 Prudential  Special  Money  Market  Fund,   Prudential
 Structured Maturity Fund, Prudential Utility Fund, The
 Global  Yield Fund,  Inc., The  Global Government Plus
 Fund, Inc.,  and The  High  Yield Income  Fund,  Inc.;
 Trustee  of  The  BlackRock  Government  Income Trust,
 Command Government Fund,  Command Money Fund,  Command
 Tax-Free  Fund, Prudential  California Municipal Fund,
 Prudential Equity Income  Fund, Prudential  FlexiFund,
 Prudential  Municipal Bond  Fund, Prudential Municipal
 Series Fund, Prudential U.S. Government Fund, and  The
 Target Portfolio Trust.
Nancy   H.  Teeters  (63),   Economist;  formerly  Vice          Director                1,668
 President and Chief  Economist (March 1986-June  1990)
 of International Business Machines Corporation; Member
 of   the  Board   of  Governors   of  the   Horace  H.
</TABLE>

                                       11
<PAGE>
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                       SHARES OF
                                                                                      COMMON STOCK
       NAME, AGE, BUSINESS EXPERIENCE DURING THE               POSITION WITH            OWNED AT
           PAST FIVE YEARS AND DIRECTORSHIPS                       FUND              MARCH 31, 1994
- -------------------------------------------------------        -------------        ----------------
<S>                                                            <C>                  <C>
 Rackham School of Graduate  Studies of the  University
 of  Michigan;  Director  of  Inland  Steel  Industries
 (since  July   1991),  Global   Utility  Fund,   Inc.,
 Prudential  Equity Fund,  Inc., Prudential  GNMA Fund,
 Prudential MoneyMart Assets, Prudential Special  Money
 Market Fund, First Financial Fund, Inc. and the Global
 Yield  Fund, Inc.; Trustee of The BlackRock Government
 Income Trust, Command  Government Fund, Command  Money
 Fund,  Command  Tax-Free  Fund,  Prudential California
 Municipal Fund and Prudential Municipal Series Fund.
<FN>
- ------------------------
* Indicates "interested" Director, as defined in the Investment Company Act,  by
  reason of his affiliation with PMF or Prudential Securities.
</TABLE>
    

   
    The  Directors  and  officers of  the  Fund  as a  group  owned beneficially
20,516 shares of the Fund  at March 31, 1994, representing  less than 1% of  the
outstanding shares of the Fund.
    

   
    The  Fund pays  annual compensation  of $7,500,  plus travel  and incidental
expenses, to each  of the six  Directors not affiliated  with PMF or  Prudential
Securities. The Directors have the option to receive the Director's fee pursuant
to a deferred fee agreement with the Fund. Under the terms of the agreement, the
Fund accrues daily the amount of such Directors' fee which accrues interest at a
rate  equivalent to the prevailing rate applicable to 90-day U.S. Treasury bills
at the beginning of each calendar quarter or, pursuant to an exemptive order  of
the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), at the rate of return of the Fund.
Payment  of the interest so accrued is also deferred and accruals become payable
at the  option  of the  Director.  The Fund's  obligation  to make  payments  of
deferred   Directors'  fees,  together  with  interest  thereon,  is  a  general
obligation of the Fund. During the fiscal year ended December 31, 1993, the Fund
paid Directors' fees of $45,000 and travel and incidental expenses of $700.
    

                                       12
<PAGE>
    There were  four regular  meetings of  the Fund's  Board of  Directors  held
during the fiscal year ended December 31, 1993. The Board of Directors presently
has  an Audit  Committee, the members  of which  are Mmes. Gold  and Teeters and
Messrs. Beach, Dorsey, Mooney and O'Brien, the Fund's non-interested  Directors.
The  Audit Committee met twice  during the fiscal year  ended December 31, 1993.
The Audit Committee makes recommendations to the full Board with respect to  the
engagement   of  independent  accountants  and   reviews  with  the  independent
accountants the plan and  results of the audit  engagement and matters having  a
material  effect  upon the  Fund's financial  operations. The  Board also  has a
Nominating Committee, comprised  of the Fund's  non-interested Directors,  which
selects  and proposes  candidates for  election to  the Board  of Directors. The
Nominating Committee met twice during the  fiscal year ended December 31,  1993.
The  Nominating Committee does not consider nominees recommended by shareholders
to fill vacancies on the Board.

    During the fiscal year ended December  31, 1993, no Director attended  fewer
than  75% of  the aggregate  of the  total number  of meetings  of the  Board of
Directors and any committees thereof of which such Director was a member.

   
    The executive officers of the Fund, other than as shown above, are: David W.
Drasnin, Vice President, having held office since March 21, 1985; S. Jane  Rose,
Secretary,  having held office  since September 20, 1984;  Robert F. Gunia, Vice
President, and Susan C. Cote, Treasurer,  both having held office since May  14,
1987;  and Deborah A. Docs, Assistant Secretary, having held office since August
3, 1989. Mr. Drasnin is 57 years old and is Vice President and Branch Manager of
Prudential Securities.  Mr.  Gunia  is  47 years  old  and  is  currently  Chief
Administrative  Officer  (since  July  1990),  Director  (since  January  1989),
Executive Vice  President, Treasurer  and Chief  Financial Officer  (since  June
1987)  of  PMF  and  Senior  Vice President  (since  March  1987)  of Prudential
Securities. He is also Vice President and Director (since May 1989) of The  Asia
Pacific  Fund, Inc. Ms. Cote is  39 years old and is  a Senior Vice President of
PMF (since January 1989)  and a Senior Vice  President of Prudential  Securities
(since   January  1992).   Prior  thereto   she  was   Vice  President  (January
1986-December 1991) of Prudential Securities. Ms.  Rose is 48 years old and  has
served as Senior Vice President (since January 1991), Senior Counsel (since June
1987)  and First Vice President (June 1987-December 1990) of PMF and Senior Vice
President and Senior Counsel (since July  1992) and formerly Vice President  and
Associate General Counsel of Prudential Securities. Prior thereto, she was First
Vice President (June 1987-December 1990) of PMF and Vice President and Associate
General Counsel of Prudential Securities. Ms. Docs is 36 years old and is a Vice
President and Associate General
    

                                       13
<PAGE>
Counsel  (since January  1993) of PMF  and Vice President  and Associate General
Counsel  (since  January  1993)  of  Prudential  Securities.  She  was  formerly
Associate  Vice President (January 1990-December 1992); Assistant Vice President
(January  1989-December   1989)   and  Assistant   General   Counsel   (November
1991-December  1992)  of PMF.  The executive  officers of  the Fund  are elected
annually by the Board of Directors.

REQUIRED VOTE

    Directors must be elected by a vote of a plurality of the shares present  at
the  meeting in person or by proxy and entitled to vote thereupon, provided that
a quorum is present.

                             MANAGEMENT OF THE FUND

THE MANAGER

    Prudential Mutual Fund Management,  Inc. (PMF or  the Manager), One  Seaport
Plaza, New York, New York 10292, serves as the Fund's Manager under a management
agreement dated as of May 2, 1988 (the Management Agreement).

    The  Management Agreement was last approved by the Board of Directors of the
Fund, including a majority of the Directors who are not parties to such contract
or interested persons of such parties (as defined in the Investment Company Act)
on May 6, 1993 and was approved by shareholders on April 29, 1988.

TERMS OF THE MANAGEMENT AGREEMENT

    Pursuant to the Management Agreement, PMF, subject to the supervision of the
Fund's Board of  Directors and  in conformity with  the stated  policies of  the
Fund,  is  responsible  for managing  or  providing  for the  management  of the
investment of the Fund's assets. In this regard, PMF provides supervision of the
Fund's investments, furnishes  a continuous  investment program  for the  Fund's
portfolio  and places purchase  and sale orders for  portfolio securities of the
Fund  and  other  investments.  The  Prudential  Investment  Company  (PIC),   a
wholly-owned   subsidiary  of  The  Prudential   Insurance  Company  of  America
(Prudential), provides such  services pursuant to  a subadvisory agreement  (the
Subadvisory  Agreement)  with PMF.  PMF  also administers  the  Fund's corporate
affairs, subject to the  supervision of the Fund's  Board of Directors, and,  in
connection  therewith, furnishes the Fund  with office facilities, together with
those ordinary clerical and bookkeeping  services which are not being  furnished
by the Fund's Transfer and Dividend Disbursing Agent and Custodian.

                                       14
<PAGE>
    PMF  has authorized  any of its  directors, officers and  employees who have
been elected as Directors or officers of the Fund to serve in the capacities  in
which they have been elected. All services furnished by PMF under the Management
Agreement  may be furnished by any such directors, officers or employees of PMF.
In connection with its administration of the corporate affairs of the Fund,  PMF
bears the following expenses:

        (a)  the salaries  and expenses  of all personnel  of the  Fund and PMF,
    except the fees  and expenses of  Directors not affiliated  with PMF or  the
    Fund's investment adviser;

        (b)  all expenses  incurred by  PMF or  by the  Fund in  connection with
    administering the ordinary course of  the Fund's business, other than  those
    assumed by the Fund, as described below; and

        (c)  the costs and  expenses payable to PIC  pursuant to the Subadvisory
    Agreement.

    The Fund pays PMF for the services performed and the facilities furnished by
it a fee at an annual rate of .50  of 1% of the Fund's average daily net  assets
up  to and including  $500 million, .475 of  1% of the  Fund's average daily net
assets from $500 million to $1 billion and .45 of 1% of the Fund's average daily
net assets in excess of $1 billion. This fee is computed daily and paid monthly.
For the fiscal year ended  December 31, 1993, PMF  received a management fee  of
$8,086,967.

    The  Management  Agreement  provides  that,  if  the  expenses  of  the Fund
(including  the  fees   of  PMF,  but   excluding  interest,  taxes,   brokerage
commissions,  distribution fees and litigation  and indemnification expenses and
other extraordinary expenses not incurred in  the ordinary course of the  Fund's
business)  for  any  fiscal year  exceed  the lowest  applicable  annual expense
limitation established and enforced pursuant  to the statutes or regulations  of
any  jurisdiction in which shares  of the Fund are  then qualified for offer and
sale, the compensation due PMF will be reduced by the amount of such excess, or,
if such reduction exceeds the compensation payable to PMF, PMF will pay the Fund
the amount of such reduction which exceeds the amount of such compensation.  Any
such reductions or payments are subject to readjustment during the year. No such
reductions  or payments were required during  the fiscal year ended December 31,
1993. The  Fund believes  the most  restrictive of  such annual  limitations  is
2  1/2% of the Fund's average daily net assets up to $30 million, 2% of the next
$70 million of such assets and 1 1/2% of such assets in excess of $100 million.

                                       15
<PAGE>
   
    Except as  indicated above,  the Fund  is responsible  under the  Management
Agreement  for the payment  of its expenses,  including (a) the  fees payable to
PMF, (b) the fees and expenses of  Directors who are not affiliated with PMF  or
the  investment  adviser,  (c)  the  fees and  certain  expenses  of  the Fund's
Custodian and  Transfer and  Dividend Disbursing  Agent, including  the cost  of
providing  records of the Fund  and of pricing Fund  shares, (d) the charges and
expenses of the Fund's legal counsel and independent accountants, (e)  brokerage
commissions and any issue or transfer taxes chargeable to the Fund in connection
with  its securities transactions,  (f) all taxes and  corporate fees payable by
the Fund to  governmental agencies,  (g) the fees  of any  trade association  of
which  the  Fund  may  be a  member,  (h)  the cost  of  any  share certificates
representing shares  of  the  Fund,  (i) the  cost  of  fidelity  and  liability
insurance,  (j) the  fees and expenses  involved in  registering and maintaining
registration of the Fund and of its shares with the SEC and registering the Fund
and qualifying its shares under state securities laws, including the preparation
and printing of  the Fund's  registration statements and  prospectuses for  such
purposes,  (k)  allocable  communications  expenses  with  respect  to  investor
services and all expenses of shareholders' and Board of Directors' meetings  and
of preparing, printing and mailing prospectuses and reports to shareholders, (l)
litigation  and indemnification  expenses and  other extraordinary  expenses not
incurred in the  ordinary course  of the  Fund's business  and (m)  distribution
fees.
    

    The  Management Agreement provides that  PMF will not be  liable to the Fund
for any  error of  judgment by  PMF or  for any  loss suffered  by the  Fund  in
connection  with the matters to which  the Management Agreement relates except a
loss resulting from willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless
disregard of duty. The Management Agreement also provides that it will terminate
automatically if assigned and that it  may be terminated without penalty by  the
Board  of Directors of the Fund, by vote of a majority of the Fund's outstanding
voting securities (as defined in the Investment Company Act) or by either party,
upon not more than 60 days' nor less than 30 days' written notice.

INFORMATION ABOUT PMF

    PMF, a subsidiary  of Prudential  Securities and  an indirect,  wholly-owned
subsidiary  of Prudential, was organized in May 1987 under the laws of the State
of Delaware. Prudential's address is Prudential Plaza, Newark, New Jersey 07102.
PMF acts as manager for the following investment companies:

        Open-End  Management  Investment  Companies:  Command  Government  Fund,
    Command Money Fund, Command Tax-Free Fund, Prudential

                                       16
<PAGE>
    Adjustable Rate Securities Fund, Inc., Prudential California Municipal Fund,
    Prudential  Equity  Fund, Inc.,  Prudential  Equity Income  Fund, Prudential
    FlexiFund, Prudential  Global Fund,  Inc., Prudential-Bache  Global  Genesis
    Fund,  Inc. (d/b/a Prudential Global  Genesis Fund), Prudential-Bache Global
    Natural Resources  Fund, Inc.  (d/b/a  Prudential Global  Natural  Resources
    Fund),  Prudential-Bache  GNMA  Fund,  Inc.  (d/b/a  Prudential  GNMA Fund),
    Prudential-Bache Government  Plus Fund,  Inc. (d/b/a  Prudential  Government
    Plus  Fund), Prudential Government Securities Trust, Prudential Growth Fund,
    Inc., Prudential-Bache  Growth  Opportunity  Fund,  Inc.  (d/b/a  Prudential
    Growth  Opportunity  Fund), Prudential-Bache  High  Yield Fund,  Inc. (d/b/a
    Prudential  High  Yield   Fund),  Prudential  IncomeVertible-R-Fund,   Inc.,
    Prudential-Bache  MoneyMart  Assets Fund,  Inc. (d/b/a  Prudential MoneyMart
    Assets), Prudential Multi-Sector Fund, Inc., Prudential Municipal Bond Fund,
    Prudential Municipal Series Fund, Prudential-Bache National Municipals Fund,
    Inc. (d/b/a Prudential National Municipals Fund), Prudential Pacific  Growth
    Fund,  Inc.,  Prudential  Short-Term  Global  Income  Fund, Prudential-Bache
    Special Money  Market  Fund, Inc.  (d/b/a  Prudential Special  Money  Market
    Fund),  Prudential-Bache  Structured Maturity  Fund, Inc.  (d/b/a Prudential
    Structured Maturity Fund), Prudential-Bache Tax-Free Money Fund, Inc. (d/b/a
    Prudential  Tax-Free   Money  Fund),   Prudential  U.S.   Government   Fund,
    Prudential-Bache   Utility  Fund,  Inc.  (d/b/a  Prudential  Utility  Fund),
    Prudential Institutional Liquidity Portfolio, Inc., Prudential  Intermediate
    Global  Income  Fund, Inc.,  Global  Utility Fund,  Inc., Nicholas-Applegate
    Fund, Inc. and The BlackRock Government Income Trust.

        Closed-End Management Investment Companies:  The Global Government  Plus
    Fund, Inc., The Global Yield Fund, Inc. and The High Yield Income Fund, Inc.

    The consolidated statement of financial condition of PMF and subsidiaries as
of December 31, 1993 is set forth as Exhibit A to this Proxy Statement.

    Certain information regarding the directors and principal executive officers
of  PMF is set forth  below. Except as otherwise  indicated, the address of each
person is One Seaport Plaza, New York, New York 10292.

   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
NAME AND ADDRESS               POSITION WITH PMF     PRINCIPAL OCCUPATIONS
- -----------------------------  --------------------  ------------------------------
<S>                            <C>                   <C>
Brendan D. Boyle.............  Executive Vice        Executive Vice President and
                                 President and         Director of Marketing, PMF
                                 Director of
                                 Marketing
</TABLE>
    

                                       17
<PAGE>
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
NAME AND ADDRESS               POSITION WITH PMF     PRINCIPAL OCCUPATIONS
- -----------------------------  --------------------  ------------------------------
<S>                            <C>                   <C>
John D. Brookmeyer, Jr.        Director              Senior Vice President,
  Two Gateway Center                                   Prudential
  Newark, NJ 07102
Susan C. Cote ...............  Senior Vice           Senior Vice President, PMF;
                                 President             Senior Vice President,
                                                       Prudential Securities
Fred A. Fiandaca ............  Executive Vice        Executive Vice President,
  Raritan Plaza One              President, Chief      Chief Operating Officer and
  Edison, NJ 08847               Operating Officer     Director, PMF; Chairman,
                                 and Director          Chief Operating Officer and
                                                       Director, Prudential Mutual
                                                       Fund Services, Inc.
Stephen P. Fisher ...........  Senior Vice           Senior Vice President, PMF;
                                 President             Senior Vice President,
                                                       Prudential Securities
Frank W. Giordano ...........  Executive Vice        Executive Vice President,
                                 President, General    General Counsel and
                                 Counsel and           Secretary, PMF; Senior Vice
                                 Secretary             President, Prudential
                                                       Securities
Robert F. Gunia .............  Executive Vice        Executive Vice President,
                                 President, Chief      Chief Financial and
                                 Financial and         Administrative Officer,
                                 Administrative        Treasurer and Director, PMF;
                                 Officer, Treasurer    Senior Vice President,
                                 and Director          Prudential Securities
Eugene B. Heimberg ..........  Director              Senior Vice President,
  Prudential Plaza                                     Prudential; President,
  Newark, NJ 07101                                     Director and Chief
                                                       Investment Officer, PIC
</TABLE>
    

                                       18
<PAGE>
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
NAME AND ADDRESS               POSITION WITH PMF     PRINCIPAL OCCUPATIONS
- -----------------------------  --------------------  ------------------------------
<S>                            <C>                   <C>
Lawrence C. McQuade .........  Vice Chairman         Vice Chairman, PMF
Leland B. Paton .............  Director              Executive Vice President and
                                                       Director, Prudential
                                                       Securities; Director, PSG
Richard A. Redeker ..........  President and Chief   President and Chief Executive
                                 Executive Officer     Officer and Director, PMF;
                                 and Director          Executive Vice President,
                                                       Director and Member of the
                                                       Operating Committee,
                                                       Prudential Securities;
                                                       Director, PSG
S. Jane Rose ................  Senior Vice           Senior Vice President, Senior
                                 President, Senior     Counsel and Assistant
                                 Counsel and           Secretary, PMF; Senior Vice
                                 Assistant             President and Senior
                                 Secretary             Counsel, Prudential
                                                       Securities
Donald G. Southwell .........  Director              Senior Vice President,
  213 Washington Street                                Prudential; Director, PSG
  Newark, NJ 07102
</TABLE>
    

THE SUBADVISER

    Investment advisory services  are provided to  the Fund by  PMF through  its
affiliate,  The  Prudential  Investment  Corporation  (PIC  or  the Subadviser),
Prudential Plaza, Newark, New Jersey  07102, under a Subadvisory Agreement.  The
Subadvisory  Agreement was  approved by shareholders  on April 29,  1988 and was
last approved by the Board of Directors of the Fund, including a majority of the
Directors who are  not parties to  such contract or  interested persons of  such
parties (as defined in the Investment Company Act), on May 6, 1993.

TERMS OF THE SUBADVISORY AGREEMENT

    Pursuant  to the Subadvisory  Agreement, PIC, subject  to the supervision of
PMF and the Board of Directors and in conformity with the stated policies of the
Fund, manages the investment operations of  the Fund and the composition of  the
Fund's   portfolio,  including  the  purchase,   retention  and  disposition  of

                                       19
<PAGE>
securities and other investments. PIC is reimbursed by PMF for reasonable  costs
and  expenses incurred by it  in furnishing such services.  The fees paid by the
Fund to PMF under  the Management Agreement  with PMF are  not affected by  this
arrangement.  PIC  keeps certain  books and  records  required to  be maintained
pursuant to the Investment Company Act. The investment advisory services of  PIC
to  the Fund are not exclusive under  the terms of the Subadvisory Agreement and
PIC is free to, and does, render investment advisory services to others.

    PIC has authorized any of its  directors, officers and employees who may  be
elected as Directors or officers of the Fund to serve in the capacities in which
they  have  been  elected.  Services  furnished  by  PIC  under  the Subadvisory
Agreement may be furnished by any such directors, officers or employees of  PIC.
The Subadvisory Agreement provides that PIC shall not be liable for any error of
judgment  or for  any loss suffered  by the Fund  or PMF in  connection with the
matters to which the Subadvisory Agreement relates, except a loss resulting from
willful misfeasance,  bad  faith  or  gross negligence  on  PIC's  part  in  the
performance  of  its  duties  or  from  its  reckless  disregard  of  duty.  The
Subadvisory Agreement provides that it shall terminate automatically if assigned
or upon termination of  the Management Agreement and  that it may be  terminated
without  penalty by either  party upon not more  than 60 days'  nor less than 30
days' written notice.

INFORMATION ABOUT PIC

    PIC was organized in June  1984 under the laws of  the State of New  Jersey.
The business and other connections of PIC's directors and executive officers are
as set forth below. Except as otherwise indicated, the address of each person is
Prudential Plaza, Newark, New Jersey 07102.

   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
NAME AND ADDRESS               POSITION WITH PIC        PRINCIPAL OCCUPATIONS
- -----------------------------  -----------------------  ---------------------------
<S>                            <C>                      <C>
Martin A. Berkowitz .........  Senior Vice President    Senior Vice President and
                                 and Chief Financial      Chief Financial and
                                 and Compliance           Compliance Officer, PIC;
                                 Officer                  Vice President,
                                                          Prudential
William M. Bethke ...........  Senior Vice President    Senior Vice President,
  Two Gateway Center                                      Prudential; Senior Vice
  Newark, NJ 07102                                        President, PIC
John D. Brookmeyer, Jr.        Senior Vice President    Senior Vice President,
  Two Gateway Center                                      Prudential; Senior Vice
  Newark, NJ 07102                                        President, PIC
</TABLE>
    

                                       20
<PAGE>
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
NAME AND ADDRESS               POSITION WITH PIC        PRINCIPAL OCCUPATIONS
- -----------------------------  -----------------------  ---------------------------
<S>                            <C>                      <C>
Eugene B. Heimberg ..........  President, Director and  Senior Vice President,
                                 Chief Investment         Prudential; President,
                                 Officer                  Director and Chief
                                                          Investment Officer, PIC
Garnett L. Keith, Jr. .......  Director                 Vice Chairman and Director,
                                                          Prudential; Director, PIC
Harry E. Knapp, Jr. .........  Vice President           Vice President, Prudential;
  Four Gateway Center                                     Vice President, PIC
  Newark, NJ 07102
William P. Link .............  Senior Vice President    Executive Vice President,
  Four Gateway Center                                     Prudential; Senior Vice
  Newark, NJ 07102                                        President, PIC
Robert E. Riley .............  Executive Vice           Executive Vice President,
  800 Boylston Avenue            President                Prudential; Executive
  Boston, MA 02199                                        Vice President, PIC;
                                                          Director, PSG
James W. Stevens ............  Executive Vice           Executive Vice President,
  Four Gateway Center            President                Prudential; Executive
  Newark, NJ 07102                                        Vice President, PIC;
                                                          Director, PSG
Robert C. Winters ...........  Director                 Chairman of the Board and
                                                          Chief Executive Officer,
                                                          Prudential; Director,
                                                          PIC; Chairman of the
                                                          Board, PSG
Claude J. Zinngrabe, Jr. .     Executive Vice           Vice President, Prudential;
                                 President                Executive Vice President,
                                                          PIC
</TABLE>
    

                                       21
<PAGE>
THE DISTRIBUTORS

    Prudential  Mutual Fund  Distributors, Inc.  (PMFD), One  Seaport Plaza, New
York, New York 10292, acts as the distributor of the Class A shares of the Fund.
Prudential Securities, One Seaport Plaza, New York, New York 10292, acts as  the
distributor of the Class B shares of the Fund.

   
    Under  separate Distribution  and Service  Plans (the  Class A  Plan and the
Class B Plan,  collectively, the  Plans) adopted by  the Fund  under Rule  12b-1
under  the  Investment Company  Act  and separate  distribution  agreements (the
Distribution Agreements),  PMFD  and Prudential  Securities  (collectively,  the
Distributor)  incur the expenses of distributing the  Fund's Class A and Class B
shares, respectively.
    

   
    The Plans were last approved by the Board of Directors, including a majority
of the Directors  who are not  interested persons of  the Fund and  who have  no
direct or indirect financial interest in the operation of the Class A or Class B
Plan  or in any agreement related to  either Plan (the Rule 12b-1 Directors), on
May 6,  1993. The  Class A  Plan was  approved by  the Class  A shareholders  on
December  19, 1990. The  Class B Plan  was approved by  shareholders of the Fund
(the Class B shareholders) on January 11, 1990.
    

    The Plans are proposed to be amended as  set forth in Proposals No. 3 and  4
below.

    CLASS  A PLAN.   Under the  Class A Plan,  the Fund reimburses  PMFD for its
distribution-related expenses with respect to Class  A shares at an annual  rate
of  up to .30 of 1%  of the average daily net assets  of the Class A shares. The
Class A Plan provides that (i) up to  .25 of 1% of the average daily net  assets
of the Class A shares may be used for personal service and/or the maintenance of
shareholder  accounts (service fee) and  (ii) total distribution fees (including
the service fee of .25 of 1%) may not exceed .30 of 1% of the average daily  net
assets   of   the   Class   A   shares.  PMFD   has   advised   the   Fund  that
distribution-related expenses  of the  Fund will  not exceed  .25 of  1% of  the
average  daily  net assets  of the  Class A  shares for  the fiscal  year ending
December 31, 1994.

    For the  fiscal year  ended December  31, 1993,  PMFD received  payments  of
$381,556  under the Class A Plan representing .20 of 1% of the average daily net
assets of  the  Class A  Shares  as reimbursement  of  expenses related  to  the
distribution  of Class A  Shares. This amount was  primarily expended on account
servicing fees to  Prudential Securities  and Pruco  Securities Corporation,  an
affiliated  broker-dealer (Prusec), for payment  to financial advisers and other
salespersons who sell  Class A Shares.  For the fiscal  year ended December  31,
1993, PMFD also received $2,373,000 in initial sales charges.

                                       22
<PAGE>
    CLASS  B  PLAN.   Under the  Class  B Plan,  the Fund  reimburses Prudential
Securities for its distribution-related expenses with respect to Class B  shares
at  an annual rate  of up to  .75 of 1% of  the average daily  net assets of the
Class B shares. The Class B Plan also provides for the payment of a service  fee
to  Prudential Securities at a rate not to exceed .25 of 1% of the average daily
net assets of Class B shares. The aggregate distribution fee for Class B  shares
(asset-based  sales charge plus service  fee) will not exceed  1% of the average
daily net assets of the Class B Shares.

   
    For the fiscal year ended December 31, 1993, Prudential Securities  received
$15,229,923  from  the  Fund under  the  Class  B Plan  and  spent approximately
$18,649,600 in distributing the Fund's Class  B shares. It is estimated that  of
the  latter  amount,  approximately 0.5%  ($86,300)  was spent  on  printing and
mailing of prospectuses  to other  than current shareholders  during the  fiscal
year  ended December 31, 1993; 15.1% ($2,825,000) on compensation to Prusec, for
commissions  to  its  financial  advisers  and  other  expenses,  including   an
allocation  of overhead  and other branch  office distribution-related expenses,
incurred by it  for distribution  of Fund shares  during the  fiscal year  ended
December  31, 1993; 2.7%  ($505,100) in interest  and/or carrying charges during
the fiscal year ended December 31,  1993; 81.2% ($15,147,000) during the  fiscal
year ended December 31, 1993, on the aggregate of (i) payments of commissions to
financial  advisers (37.0% or  $6,902,400 during the  fiscal year ended December
31,  1993),  and  (ii)  an  allocation  of  overhead  and  other  branch  office
distribution-related  expenses (44.2% or $8,244,600 during the fiscal year ended
December   31,   1993).   The   term   "overhead   and   other   branch   office
distribution-related   expenses"  represents  (a)   the  expenses  of  operating
Prudential Securities branch offices in connection with the sale of Fund shares,
including lease  costs, the  salaries and  employee benefits  of operations  and
sales  support personnel, utility  costs, communications costs  and the costs of
stationery and supplies, (b) the costs of client sales seminars, (c) expenses of
mutual fund sales coordinators to promote the sale of Fund shares and (d)  other
incidental expenses relating to branch promotion of Fund sales.
    

    Prudential  Securities  also receives  the  proceeds of  contingent deferred
sales charges paid  by holders  of Class B  shares upon  certain redemptions  of
Class  B shares.  Under the  current Class  B Plan,  the amount  of distribution
expenses reimbursable by Class B shares of the Fund is reduced by the amount  of
such  contingent deferred sales charges. For  the fiscal year ended December 31,
1993, Prudential  Securities  received approximately  $1,957,000  in  contingent
deferred  sales  charges.  As of  December  31,  1993, the  aggregate  amount of
unreimbursed  distribution  expenses   for  the  Fund's   Class  B  shares   was
approximately $16,074,000.

                                       23
<PAGE>
    The Class A and Class B Plans continue in effect from year to year, provided
that  each such continuance is approved at least annually by a vote of the Board
of Directors, including  a majority vote  of the Rule  12b-1 Directors, cast  in
person  at a meeting called  for the purpose of  voting on such continuance. The
Class A and Class B Plans may  each be terminated at any time, without  penalty,
by  the vote of  a majority of the  Rule 12b-1 Directors  who are not interested
persons or by the vote of the holders of a majority of the outstanding shares of
the applicable class on not more than 30 days' written notice to any other party
to the Plans. Neither Plan may be amended to increase materially the amounts  to
be spent for the services described therein without approval by the shareholders
of the applicable class, and all material amendments are required to be approved
by  the  Board  of Directors  in  the  manner described  above.  Each  Plan will
automatically terminate in  the event of  its assignment. The  Fund will not  be
contractually  obligated to pay expenses incurred  under either the Class A Plan
or the Class  B Plan  if it  is terminated  or not  continued. In  the event  of
termination  or noncontinuation of the Class B  Plan, the Board of Directors may
consider the appropriateness of having the Fund reimburse Prudential  Securities
for the outstanding carryforward amounts plus interest thereon.

    Pursuant  to each Plan, the Board of  Directors reviews at least quarterly a
written report of the  distribution expenses incurred on  behalf of the Class  A
and  Class B shares of the Fund by PMFD and Prudential Securities, respectively.
The report includes an itemization of the distribution expenses and the purposes
of such expenditures. In addition,  as long as the  Plans remain in effect,  the
selection  and nomination of Rule 12b-1 Directors shall be committed to the Rule
12b-1 Directors.

    Pursuant to each Distribution  Agreement, the Fund  has agreed to  indemnify
PMFD and Prudential Securities to the extent permitted by applicable law against
certain  liabilities under the  Securities Act. Each  Distribution Agreement was
last approved by the Board of Directors, including a majority of the Rule  12b-1
Directors, on May 6, 1993.

PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS

    The Manager is responsible for decisions to buy and sell securities, options
on  such securities and stock indices and  stock index futures for the Fund, the
selection of brokers/dealers  and futures  commissions merchants  to effect  the
transactions  and the  negotiation of  brokerage commissions,  if any.  The term
"Manager" as  used in  this subsection  includes the  Subadviser. Purchases  and
sales  of securities, options and  futures on an exchange  or board of trade are
effected through brokers who charge a negotiated commission for their  services.

                                       24
<PAGE>
On  a  foreign securities  exchange,  commissions may  be  fixed. Orders  may be
directed to  any broker  and  futures commissions  merchants including,  to  the
extent and in the manner permitted by applicable law, Prudential Securities.

    In  the over-the-counter market, securities are  generally traded on a "net"
basis with dealers acting as principal  for their own accounts without a  stated
commission,  although the price of the security usually includes a profit to the
dealer. In underwritten  offerings, securities  are purchased at  a fixed  price
which  includes an amount of compensation to the underwriter, generally referred
to as  the underwriter's  concession  or discount.  On occasion,  certain  money
market  instruments may be purchased  directly from an issuer,  in which case no
commissions or  discounts are  paid.  The Fund  will  not deal  with  Prudential
Securities  or any affiliate  in any transaction  in which Prudential Securities
acts as principal. Thus,  it will not deal  in the over-the-counter market  with
Prudential  Securities or any affiliate acting as  market maker, and it will not
execute a  negotiated  trade with  Prudential  Securities or  any  affiliate  if
execution  involves Prudential Securities  or any affiliate  acting as principal
with respect to any part of the Fund's order.

    In placing  orders for  portfolio securities  of the  Fund, the  Manager  is
required to give primary consideration to obtaining the most favorable price and
efficient  execution.  This means  that the  Manager will  seek to  execute each
transaction at a price and commission, if any, which provide the most  favorable
total  cost or  proceeds reasonably attainable  in the  circumstances. While the
Manager generally seeks reasonably competitive spreads or commissions, the  Fund
will not necessarily be paying the lowest spread or commission available. Within
the  framework of this policy, the Manager will consider research and investment
services provided by brokers or dealers  who effect or are parties to  portfolio
transactions  of  the Fund,  the Manager  or the  Manager's other  clients. Such
research and investment  services are those  which brokerage houses  customarily
provide to institutional investors and include statistical and economic data and
research  reports on particular companies and industries. Such services are used
by the Manager in connection with all of its investment activities, and some  of
such  services obtained in connection with the execution of transactions for the
Fund may  be used  in managing  other investment  accounts. Conversely,  brokers
furnishing  such services may  be selected for the  execution of transactions of
such other accounts, whose  aggregate assets are far  larger than the Fund,  and
the  services furnished by such brokers may  be used by the Manager in providing
investment management for the Fund. Commission rates are established pursuant to
negotiations with the  broker based  on the  quality and  quantity of  execution
services  provided by  the broker  in light  of generally  prevailing rates. The
Manager is authorized to  pay higher commissions  on brokerage transactions  for
the Fund to brokers other than Prudential Securities in order to secure research
and    investment   services    described   above,   subject    to   review   by

                                       25
<PAGE>
the Fund's  Board  of  Directors  from  time  to  time  as  to  the  extent  and
continuation  of this practice.  The allocation of orders  among brokers and the
commission  rates  paid  are  reviewed  periodically  by  the  Fund's  Board  of
Directors.  Portfolio securities may  not be purchased  from any underwriting or
selling syndicate of which Prudential Securities (or any affiliate), during  the
existence  of  the syndicate,  is  a principal  underwriter  (as defined  in the
Investment Company  Act), except  in  accordance with  rules  of the  SEC.  This
limitation, in the opinion of the Fund, will not significantly affect the Fund's
ability  to pursue its  present investment objective. However,  in the future in
other circumstances,  the  Fund  may  be  at  a  disadvantage  because  of  this
limitation  in comparison to other funds with similar objectives but not subject
to such limitations.

    Subject  to  the  above  considerations,  the  Manager  may  use  Prudential
Securities  or any affiliate as a broker  or futures commission merchant for the
Fund. In  order  for  Prudential  Securities or  any  affiliate  to  effect  any
portfolio transactions for the Fund, the commissions, fees or other remuneration
received  by Prudential Securities or any  affiliate must be reasonable and fair
compared to the commissions, fees or other remuneration paid to other brokers or
futures  commission  merchants  in   connection  with  comparable   transactions
involving  similar securities or futures being  purchased or sold on an exchange
or board of trade during a comparable period of time. This standard would  allow
Prudential  Securities or any affiliate to receive no more than the remuneration
which would be  expected to  be received by  an unaffiliated  broker or  futures
commission  merchant in a commensurate arms-length transaction. Furthermore, the
Board of  Directors  of  the  Fund,  including a  majority  of  the  Rule  12b-1
Directors,  has adopted procedures which are reasonably designed to provide that
any commissions, fees or other remuneration paid to Prudential Securities or any
affiliate are consistent with the foregoing standard. In accordance with Section
11(a) of the  Securities Exchange  Act of  1934, Prudential  Securities may  not
retain compensation for effecting transactions on a national securities exchange
for  the Fund  unless the  Fund has expressly  authorized the  retention of such
compensation. Prudential Securities must furnish to the Fund at least annually a
statement setting  forth  the  total  amount of  all  compensation  retained  by
Prudential  Securities  from  transactions  effected  for  the  Fund  during the
applicable period.  Brokerage transactions  with  Prudential Securities  or  any
affiliate  are also subject to  such fiduciary standards as  may be imposed upon
Prudential Securities or such affiliate by applicable law.

                                       26
<PAGE>
    The table presented below shows certain information regarding the payment of
commissions  by  the Fund,  including  the amount  of  such commissions  paid to
Prudential Securities, for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1993.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                      YEAR ENDED
                                                  DECEMBER 31, 1993
                                                  ------------------
            <S>                                   <C>
            Total brokerage commissions paid by
             the Fund..........................       $1,616,768
            Total brokerage commissions paid to
             Prudential Securities.............       $ 351,201
            Percentage of total brokerage
             commissions paid to Prudential
             Securities........................           21.7%
</TABLE>

   
    The Fund effected  approximately 27.0%  of the  total dollar  amount of  its
transactions  involving the payment of commissions through Prudential Securities
during the  fiscal  year  ended  December  31,  1993.  Of  the  total  brokerage
commissions  paid during the fiscal year ended December 31, 1993, $1,358,085 (or
83.9%) were paid to firms which provided research, statistical or other services
to the Manager. PMF has not separately identified the portion of such  brokerage
commissions which relate to the provision of such research, statistical or other
services.
    

                        APPROVAL OF A PROPOSAL TO AMEND
                      THE FUND'S ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION
              TO PERMIT THE IMPLEMENTATION OF A CONVERSION FEATURE
     (FOR CONSIDERATION BY CLASS A AND CLASS B SHAREHOLDERS VOTING JOINTLY)
                                (PROPOSAL NO. 2)

    The  Board  of  Directors  is  recommending  that  shareholders  approve  an
amendment to the Fund's Articles  of Incorporation to permit the  implementation
of a conversion feature for Class B shares. The conversion feature is authorized
pursuant  to an exemptive order of the SEC (the SEC Order) and would provide for
the automatic conversion of  Class B shares  to Class A  shares at relative  net
asset value approximately seven years after purchase. Class A shares are subject
to  a  lower  annual  distribution  and service  fee  than  Class  B  shares and
conversions would occur without the imposition of any additional sales charge. A
description of the  conversion feature  is set  forth in  greater detail  below.
Amendment  of the Articles  of Incorporation requires approval  by a majority of
the Fund's outstanding shares.

THE CLASSES OF SHARES

    The Fund currently offers two classes  of shares, designated as Class A  and
Class  B shares, pursuant to the Alternative  Purchase Plan in reliance upon the
SEC Order. Class A shares are currently offered with an initial sales charge  of

                                       27
<PAGE>
up  to 5.25% of the offering price and are subject to an annual distribution and
service fee of up to .30  of 1% of the average daily  net assets of the Class  A
shares pursuant to a Rule 12b-1 plan. This fee is currently charged at a rate of
.25  of 1% of the  average daily net assets  of the Class A  shares and PMFD has
agreed to so limit its fee  under the Class A Plan to  .25 of 1% for the  fiscal
year  ending December 31, 1994. Class B  shares are currently offered without an
initial sales charge but  are subject to a  contingent deferred sales charge  or
CDSC  (declining from  5% to zero  of the lesser  of the amount  invested or the
redemption proceeds) on certain redemptions  generally made within six years  of
purchase  and to an annual distribution and service fee pursuant to a Rule 12b-1
plan of up to 1% of the average daily net assets of the Class B shares.

   
    In accordance with the  SEC Order, the Board  of Directors may, among  other
things,  authorize the  creation of  additional classes  of shares  from time to
time. The Board of Directors has approved the offering of a new class of shares,
to be designated Class C shares,  which will be offered simultaneously with  the
offering  of  Class  B  shares  with  the  proposed  conversion  feature.  It is
anticipated that Class C shares will be offered without an initial sales  charge
but  will be subject to an annual distribution  and service fee not to exceed 1%
of the average daily net assets of  the Class C shares and, subject to  approval
by the Board of Directors, a 1% CDSC on certain redemptions made within one year
of  purchase.  If the  proposed conversion  feature  for Class  B shares  is not
approved, Class C shares will not be offered.
    

THE PROPOSED CONVERSION FEATURE

    On May 6, 1993, the Fund's Board  of Directors, including a majority of  the
Directors  who  are not  "interested persons"  of  the Fund  (as defined  in the
Investment Company  Act),  approved  an  amendment to  the  Fund's  Articles  of
Incorporation  to  permit the  implementation of  a  conversion feature  for the
Fund's Class B shares. A copy of  the proposed amendment to the Fund's  Articles
of Incorporation is attached hereto as Exhibit B.

   
    If  this proposal is approved, it is currently contemplated that conversions
of  Class  B  shares  to  Class  A  shares  will  occur  on  a  quarterly  basis
approximately  seven years from purchase. The  The first conversion is currently
anticipated to occur  in or  about January  1995. Conversions  will be  effected
automatically  at  relative  net  asset  value  without  the  imposition  of any
additional sales charge. Class B  shareholders will benefit from the  conversion
feature because they will thereafter be subject to the lower annual distribution
and service fee applicable to Class A shares.
    

    Since  the Fund tracks amounts paid rather  than the number of shares bought
on each  purchase  of Class  B  shares, it  is  currently anticipated  that  the

                                       28
<PAGE>
   
number of Class B shares eligible to convert to Class A shares (excluding shares
acquired   through   the   automatic  reinvestment   of   dividends   and  other
distributions) (the Eligible Shares) will be determined on each conversion  date
in  accordance with the following formula: (i) the ratio of (a) the amounts paid
for Class B shares purchased at least  seven years prior to the conversion  date
to (b) the total amount paid for all Class B shares purchased and then held in a
shareholder's account (ii) multiplied by the total number of Class B shares then
held  in  such  shareholder's  account.  Each  time  any  Eligible  Shares  in a
shareholder's  account  convert  to  Class  A  shares,  all  shares  or  amounts
representing  Class B shares then in such account that were acquired through the
automatic reinvestment  of dividends  and other  distributions will  convert  to
Class A shares.
    

   
    For  purposes of determining the  number of Eligible Shares,  if the Class B
shares in  a shareholder's  account on  any conversion  date are  the result  of
multiple  purchases  at different  net  asset values  per  share, the  number of
Eligible Shares calculated as described above  will generally be either more  or
less  than the  number of  shares actually  purchased approximately  seven years
before such conversion date. For example, if 100 shares were initially purchased
at $10 per share (for a total of $1,000) and a second purchase of 100 shares was
subsequently made at $11 per share (for  a total of $1,100), 95.24 shares  would
convert  approximately  seven  years  from the  initial  purchase  (I.E., $1,000
divided by $2,100 (47.62%), multiplied by  200 shares equals 95.24 shares).  The
Manager  reserves the right to modify the  formula for determining the number of
Eligible Shares in the future as it deems appropriate on notice to shareholders.
    

   
    If the net asset value per share of  Class A is higher than that of Class  B
at  the  time  of  conversion (which  may  be  the case  because  of  the higher
distribution and service fee  applicable to Class  B shares), shareholders  will
receive  fewer  Class  A shares  than  Class  B shares  converted,  although the
aggregate dollar value will be the same.
    

    For purposes of calculating the  applicable holding period for  conversions,
all  payments for purchases of  Class B shares during a  month will be deemed to
have been made  on the last  day of the  month, or for  Class B shares  acquired
through  exchange, or  a series of  exchanges, on the  last day of  the month in
which the original payment for purchases of  such Class B shares were made.  For
Class  B shares previously exchanged for shares of a money market fund, the time
period during which  such shares  were held  in the  money market  fund will  be
excluded.  For example, Class B shares held in  a money market fund for a period
of one year will not convert to  Class A shares until approximately eight  years
from purchase. For purposes of measuring the time period during which shares are
held   in  a  money  market  fund,  exchanges   will  be  deemed  to  have  been

                                       29
<PAGE>
made on the last day of the month. Class B shares acquired through exchange will
convert to Class A shares after  expiration of the conversion period  applicable
to  the original purchase of such shares. As of the date of the first conversion
(which, as noted above,  is currently anticipated to  occur in or about  January
1995)  all  amounts  representing Class  B  shares then  outstanding  beyond the
expiration of the  applicable conversion  period will  automatically convert  to
Class  A shares, together with all shares or amounts representing Class B shares
acquired through the automatic reinvestment of dividends and distributions  then
held in the shareholder's account.

   
    The  Fund  has  obtained  an  opinion of  counsel  to  the  effect  that the
conversion of Class B shares into Class  A shares does not constitute a  taxable
event  for U.S. income tax purposes. However, such opinion is not binding on the
Internal Revenue Service.
    

   
    If approved by shareholders,  the conversion feature may  be subject to  the
continuing  availability  of  opinions of  counsel  or rulings  of  the Internal
Revenue Service (i) that the dividends  and other distributions paid on Class  A
and  Class  B  shares will  not  constitute "preferential  dividends"  under the
Internal Revenue  Code of  1986, as  amended, and  (ii) that  the conversion  of
shares  does not constitute  a taxable event.  The conversion of  Class B shares
into Class A shares may be suspended  if such opinions or rulings are no  longer
available.  If  conversions  are suspended,  Class  B  shares of  the  Fund will
continue  to  be  subject,  possibly   indefinitely,  to  their  higher   annual
distribution and service fee.
    

REQUIRED VOTE

    The  proposed amendment to the Fund's Articles of Incorporation to implement
the conversion feature requires the affirmative vote of a majority of the Fund's
outstanding shares. In  the event shareholders  of the Fund  do not approve  the
proposed  amendment, the conversion feature will not be implemented for the Fund
and  Class  B  shares  of  the  Fund  will  continue  to  be  subject,  possibly
indefinitely, to their higher annual distribution and service fee.

    THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE "FOR" THIS PROPOSAL NO. 2.

                                       30
<PAGE>
                                  APPROVAL OF
                   AMENDED AND RESTATED CLASS A DISTRIBUTION
                                AND SERVICE PLAN
   (FOR CONSIDERATION BY CLASS A AND CLASS B SHAREHOLDERS VOTING SEPARATELY)
                                (PROPOSAL NO. 3)

   
    On  May  6, 1993,  the Fund's  Board  of Directors  approved an  amended and
restated Class A Distribution and Service Plan pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under  the
Investment  Company Act and an amended  and restated Distribution Agreement with
PMFD for Class A shares of the Fund (the Proposed Class A Plan and the  Proposed
Class  A Distribution Agreement, respectively)  and recommends submission of the
Proposed Class  A  Plan to  the  Fund's Class  A  shareholders for  approval  or
disapproval  at this Special Meeting of Shareholders. As contemplated by the SEC
Order (previously defined under Proposal No. 2 above), the Proposed Class A Plan
is also being submitted for approval by Class B shareholders because, subject to
approval of Proposal No. 2, Class B shares will automatically convert to Class A
shares  approximately  seven  years  after   purchase.  The  Proposed  Class   A
Distribution  Agreement  does  not  require  and  is  not  being  submitted  for
shareholder approval.
    

   
    The purpose  of  the  Proposed Class  A  Plan  is to  compensate  PMFD,  the
distributor  of the Fund's Class A shares, for providing distribution assistance
to  broker/dealers,  if  any,   including  Prudential  Securities  and   Prusec,
affiliated  broker/dealers, and  other qualified  broker/dealers, if  any, whose
customers invest in  Class A  shares of  the Fund and  to defray  the costs  and
expenses,  including  the payment  of account  servicing  fees, of  the services
provided and activities  undertaken to distribute  Class A shares  (Distribution
Activities).
    

    The  Board of  Directors previously adopted  a plan of  distribution for the
Fund's Class A shares  pursuant to Rule 12b-1  under the Investment Company  Act
which was approved by shareholders on December 19, 1990 and last approved by the
Board  of Directors on May 6, 1993  (the Existing Class A Plan). Shareholders of
the Fund's Class A and Class B  shares are being asked to approve amendments  to
the  Existing Class A  Plan that change it  from a reimbursement  type plan to a
compensation type plan. The amendments do not change the maximum annual fee that
may be paid to PMFD  under the Existing Class  A Plan, although the  possibility
exists  that  expenses incurred  by  PMFD and  for which  it  is entitled  to be
reimbursed under the Existing Class  A Plan may be less  than the fee PMFD  will
receive  under the Proposed Class  A Plan. The amendments  are being proposed to
facilitate administration and accounting. The  Board of Directors believes  that
the Proposed Class A Plan is in the

                                       31
<PAGE>
best interest of the Fund and is reasonably likely to benefit the Fund's Class A
shareholders.  A copy of the Proposed Class A Plan is attached hereto as Exhibit
C.

THE EXISTING CLASS A PLAN

    Under the  Existing Class  A Plan,  the Fund  reimburses PMFD  for  expenses
incurred for Distribution Activities at an annual rate of up to .30 of 1% of the
average  daily net assets of  the Class A shares  (up to .25 of  1% of which may
constitute a  service  fee for  the  servicing and  maintenance  of  shareholder
accounts).  Article III, Section 26 of the NASD Rules of Fair Practice (the NASD
Rules) places an annual limit of .25 of  1% on fees that may be imposed for  the
provision  of personal  service and/or  the maintenance  of shareholder accounts
(service fees) and an annual limit of .75 of 1% on asset-based sales charges (as
defined in the NASD  Rules). Subject to  these limits, the  Fund may impose  any
combination  of  service  fees  and asset-based  sales  charges  under  both the
Existing Class A Plan  and the Proposed  Class A Plan;  provided that the  total
fees  do not exceed .30 of  1% per annum of the  average daily net assets of the
Class A shares.

    The Existing Class  A Plan  may not be  amended to  increase materially  the
amount  to be  spent for  the services described  therein without  approval by a
majority of the  holders of the  Class A shares  of the Fund.  In addition,  all
material  amendments  thereof must  be approved  by  vote of  a majority  of the
Directors, including a majority of the Rule 12b-1 Directors, cast in person at a
meeting called for the purpose  of voting on the Plan.  So long as the  Existing
Class  A  Plan is  in effect,  the selection  and nomination  of the  Rule 12b-1
Directors will be committed to the discretion of the Rule 12b-1 Directors.

    The Existing Class A Plan may be  terminated at any time without payment  of
any penalty by the vote of a majority of the Rule 12b-1 Directors or by the vote
of  a majority of the outstanding Class A  shares of the Fund (as defined in the
Investment Company Act) on written  notice to any other  party to such plan  and
will  automatically terminate in the event of  its assignment (as defined in the
Investment Company Act). For a more detailed description of the Existing Class A
Plan, see "Management of the Fund -- The Distributors -- Class A Plan."

THE PROPOSED CLASS A PLAN

    The Proposed Class A Plan amends the  Existing Class A Plan in one  material
respect.  Under the Existing Class A Plan, the Fund reimburses PMFD for expenses
actually incurred for Distribution Activities up to  a maximum of .30 of 1%  per
annum   of  the  average   daily  net  assets   of  the  Class   A  shares.  The

                                       32
<PAGE>
Proposed Class A Plan authorizes  the Fund to pay  PMFD the same maximum  annual
fee  as compensation for its Distribution  Activities regardless of the expenses
incurred by PMFD for Distribution  Activities. The Distributor may, however,  as
it  currently does, voluntarily agree to limit its fee to an amount that is less
than the maximum  annual fee.  In contrast  to the  Existing Class  A Plan,  the
amounts  payable  by the  Fund  under the  Proposed Class  A  Plan would  not be
directly related to the expenses actually incurred by PMFD for its  Distribution
Activities.  Consequently, if  PMFD's expenses  for Distribution  Activities are
less than the distribution and service fees it receives under the Proposed Class
A Plan, it will retain its full fees and realize a profit.

   
    Since inception  of the  Existing Class  A Plan,  the reimbursable  expenses
incurred  thereunder  by PMFD  have generally  equalled  or exceeded  the amount
reimbursed by the Fund. For  each of the fiscal  years ended December 31,  1991,
1992  and  1993,  PMFD received  payments  of $115,691,  $222,978  and $381,556,
respectively, under the  Existing Class  A Plan representing  .20 of  1% of  the
average  daily net  assets of  the Class A  shares as  reimbursement of expenses
incurred for Distribution  Activities. Although  PMFD agreed to  limit its  fees
under  the Existing Class A Plan to .20 of 1% for the fiscal year ended December
31, 1991 and .25 of 1% for the fiscal years ended December 31, 1992 and 1993, it
in fact further limited  its fee to .20  of 1% for all  three fiscal years  even
though  its direct and indirect reimbursable distribution expenses exceeded such
amount. PMFD  believes that  it would  have similarly  limited its  fee had  the
Proposed  Class  A Plan  been  in effect  during  the past  three  fiscal years,
although it could have assessed the maximum annual fee of .30 of 1%.  Regardless
of which plan will be in effect, the Distributor has voluntarily agreed to limit
its  fees for Distribution Activities  to no more than .25  of 1% of the average
daily net assets of the Class A  shares for the fiscal year ending December  31,
1994.  Other expenses incurred by PMFD for Distribution Activities have been and
will continue to be paid from the proceeds of initial sales charges.
    

    Among the major perceived benefits of a compensation type plan, such as  the
Proposed  Class A  Plan, over  a reimbursement type  plan, such  as the Existing
Class A  Plan,  is the  facilitation  of administration  and  accounting.  Under
reimbursement  plans, all  expenses must  be specifically  accounted for  by the
Distributor and attributed to the specific class of shares of a fund in order to
qualify for reimbursement. Although the Proposed  Class A Plan will continue  to
require quarterly reporting to the Board of Directors of the amounts accrued and
paid under the Plan and of the expenses actually borne by the Distributor, there
will  be  no need  to match  specific  expenses to  reimbursements as  under the
Existing Class A Plan. Thus, the accounting for the Proposed Class A Plan  would
be

                                       33
<PAGE>
simplified and the timing of when expenditures are to be made by the Distributor
would  not  be  an issue.  These  considerations, combined  with  the reasonable
likelihood, although there  is no  assurance, that  the per  annum payment  rate
under  the Proposed Class A  Plan will not exceed  the expenses incurred by PMFD
for Distribution Activities, suggest that the costs and efforts associated  with
a reimbursement plan are unwarranted.

   
    In  considering whether to approve the  Proposed Class A Plan, the Directors
reviewed, among  other  things, the  nature  and scope  of  the services  to  be
provided  by  PMFD,  the  purchase  options  available  to  investors  under the
Alternative Purchase Plan, the amount of expenditures under the Existing Class A
Plan, the relationship of such expenditures to the overall cost structure of the
Fund and comparative data with  respect to distribution arrangements adopted  by
other  investment companies. Based upon such  review, the Directors, including a
majority of the  Rule 12b-1  Directors, determined  that there  is a  reasonable
likelihood  that the Proposed Class A Plan will benefit the Fund and its Class A
shareholders.
    

    If approved by  shareholders, the  Proposed Class  A Plan  will continue  in
effect  from  year  to year,  provided  such  continuance is  approved  at least
annually by vote of a majority of  the Board of Directors, including a  majority
of the Rule 12b-1 Directors.

REQUIRED VOTE

   
    If  Proposal No. 2  is approved by  shareholders, the Proposed  Class A Plan
will require the approval of a majority of the Fund's outstanding Class A shares
and Class B shares (as defined in the Investment Company Act) voting separately.
If Proposal No. 2  is not approved  by shareholders, the  Proposed Class A  Plan
will  only require the approval of a  majority of the Fund's outstanding Class A
shares. Under the  Investment Company Act,  a majority of  a class'  outstanding
voting shares is defined as the lesser of (i) 67% of a class' outstanding voting
shares represented at a meeting at which more than 50% of the outstanding shares
of  the class are present  in person or represented by  proxy, or (ii) more than
50% of a class' outstanding voting shares.  If the Proposed Class A Plan is  not
approved  as described  above, the  Existing Class A  Plan will  continue in its
present form.
    

    THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE "FOR" THIS PROPOSAL NO. 3.

                                       34
<PAGE>
                                  APPROVAL OF
                   AMENDED AND RESTATED CLASS B DISTRIBUTION
                                AND SERVICE PLAN
                (FOR CONSIDERATION BY CLASS B SHAREHOLDERS ONLY)
                                (PROPOSAL NO. 4)

    On May  6, 1993,  the Fund's  Board  of Directors  approved an  amended  and
restated  Class B Distribution and Service Plan pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the
Investment Company  Act  and  an  amended  and  restated  Class  B  Distribution
Agreement  with  Prudential  Securities for  Class  B  shares of  the  Fund (the
Proposed  Class  B  Plan  and  the  Proposed  Class  B  Distribution  Agreement,
respectively)  and recommends  submission of  the Proposed  Class B  Plan to the
Fund's Class B shareholders for approval or disapproval at this Special  Meeting
of  Shareholders. The Proposed  Class B Distribution  Agreement does not require
and is not being submitted for shareholder approval.

   
    The purpose  of  the Proposed  Class  B  Plan is  to  compensate  Prudential
Securities,  the  distributor  of  the  Fund's  Class  B  shares,  for providing
distribution assistance  to  broker/dealers,  including  Prusec,  an  affiliated
broker/dealer,  and  other  qualified broker/dealers,  if  any,  whose customers
invest in Class  B shares  of the  Fund and to  defray the  costs and  expenses,
including  the payment of  account servicing fees, of  the services provided and
activities undertaken to distribute Class B shares (Distribution Activities).
    

    The Board of  Directors previously adopted  a plan of  distribution for  the
Fund's  Class B shares pursuant  to Rule 12b-1 under  the Investment Company Act
which was approved by shareholders on January 11, 1990 and last approved by  the
Board  of Directors on May 6, 1993  (the Existing Class B Plan). Shareholders of
the Fund's Class B shares are being asked to approve amendments to the  Existing
Class  B Plan that  change it from  a reimbursement type  plan to a compensation
type plan. The amendments do not change the maximum annual fee that may be  paid
to  Prudential  Securities  under  the  Existing  Class  B  Plan,  although  the
possibility exists that expenses incurred by Prudential Securities and for which
it is entitled to be reimbursed under the Existing Class B Plan may be less than
the fee Prudential Securities will receive under the Proposed Class B Plan.  The
amendments  are being proposed to  facilitate administration and accounting. The
Board of  Directors believes  that the  Proposed Class  B Plan  is in  the  best
interest  of the  Fund and is  reasonably likely  to benefit the  Fund's Class B
shareholders. A copy of the Proposed Class B Plan is attached hereto as  Exhibit
D.

                                       35
<PAGE>
THE EXISTING CLASS B PLAN

   
    Under  the Existing Class B Plan,  the Fund reimburses Prudential Securities
for expenses incurred for Distribution Activities at an annual rate of up to  1%
of  the average daily net assets of the Class B shares (up to .25 of 1% of which
may constitute a service  fee for the servicing  and maintenance of  shareholder
accounts).  Amounts reimbursable under  the Plan that are  not paid because they
exceed the  maximum  fee payable  thereunder  are  carried forward  and  may  be
recovered  in  future  years  by Prudential  Securities  from  asset-based sales
charges imposed on Class B shares, to the extent such charges do not exceed  .75
of  1% per annum of the average daily net assets of the Class B shares, and from
contingent deferred sales charges received from certain redeeming  shareholders,
subject  to the limitations  of Article III,  Section 26 of  the NASD Rules. The
NASD Rules place an annual limit of  .75 of 1% on asset-based sales charges  (as
defined  in the NASD Rules) and an annual limit of .25 of 1% on fees that may be
imposed for  the  provision  of  personal  service  and/or  the  maintenance  of
shareholder  accounts  (service fees).  Subject to  these  limits, the  Fund may
impose any combination of service fees and asset-based sales charges under  both
the Existing Class B Plan and the Proposed Class B Plan; provided that the total
fees  do not exceed 1% per annum of the  average daily net assets of the Class B
shares. Pursuant to  the NASD Rules,  the aggregate deferred  sales charges  and
asset-based  sales charges  on Class B  shares of  the Fund may  not, subject to
certain exclusions, exceed 6.25% of total gross sales of Class B shares.
    

   
    The Existing Class  B Plan  may not be  amended to  increase materially  the
amount  to be  spent for  the services described  therein without  approval by a
majority of the  holders of the  Class B shares  of the Fund.  In addition,  all
material  amendments thereof must be approved by  vote of a majority of the Rule
12b-1 Directors, cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of voting on
the Plan. So long as the Existing Class  B Plan is in effect, the selection  and
nomination  of the Rule 12b-1  Directors will be committed  to the discretion of
the Rule 12b-1 Directors.
    

    The Existing Class B Plan may be  terminated at any time without payment  of
any penalty by the vote of a majority of the Rule 12b-1 Directors or by the vote
of  a majority of the outstanding Class B  shares of the Fund (as defined in the
Investment Company Act) on written  notice to any other  party to such plan  and
will  automatically terminate in the event of  its assignment (as defined in the
Investment Company Act). For a more detailed description of the Existing Class B
Plan, see "Management of the Fund --The Distributors -- Class B Plan."

                                       36
<PAGE>
THE PROPOSED CLASS B PLAN

   
    The Proposed Class B Plan amends the  Existing Class B Plan in one  material
respect.  Under  the  Existing  Class B  Plan,  the  Fund  reimburses Prudential
Securities for expenses actually  incurred for Distribution  Activities up to  a
maximum  of 1% per annum of the average  daily net assets of the Class B shares.
The Proposed Class B Plan authorizes  the Fund to pay Prudential Securities  the
same  maximum  annual  fee  as  compensation  for  its  Distribution  Activities
regardless of the  expenses incurred by  Prudential Securities for  Distribution
Activities. In contrast to the Existing Class B Plan, the amounts payable by the
Fund  under  the Proposed  Class B  Plan would  not be  directly related  to the
expenses  actually  incurred  by  Prudential  Securities  for  its  Distribution
Activities.  Consequently, if Prudential Securities'  expenses are less than its
distribution and  service fees,  it will  retain  its full  fees and  realize  a
profit.  However, if Prudential Securities' expenses exceed the distribution and
service fees received under the Proposed Class  B Plan, it will no longer  carry
forward such amounts for reimbursement in future years.
    

    Since  inception of the  Existing Class B  Plan, the cumulative reimbursable
expenses incurred thereunder by Prudential Securities have exceeded the  amounts
reimbursed  by  the Fund.  As  of December  31,  1993, the  aggregate  amount of
distribution expenses incurred and not yet  reimbursed by the Fund or  recovered
through contingent deferred sales charges was approximately $16,074,000.

    For  the fiscal  years ended  December 31,  1991, 1992  and 1993, Prudential
Securities received $7,574,846, $10,420,280 and $15,229,923, respectively,  from
the  Fund under the Existing Class B  Plan, representing 1.00%, 1.00% and 1.00%,
respectively, of the average daily net assets  of the Class B shares, and  spent
approximately   $11,871,300,  $13,728,500  and  $18,649,600,  respectively,  for
Distribution Activities. Since the maximum annual fee under the Existing Class B
Plan is the same as under the Proposed Class B Plan, Prudential Securities would
have received the  same annual fee  under the Proposed  Class B Plan  as it  did
under  the Existing Class B  Plan for the fiscal  years ended December 31, 1991,
1992 and 1993.

    Among the major perceived benefits of a compensation type plan, such as  the
Proposed  Class B  Plan, over  a reimbursement type  plan, such  as the Existing
Class B  Plan,  is the  facilitation  of administration  and  accounting.  Under
reimbursement  plans, all  expenses must  be specifically  accounted for  by the
Distributor and attributed to the specific class of shares of a fund in order to
qualify for reimbursement. Although the Proposed  Class B Plan will continue  to
require quarterly reporting to the Board of Directors of the amounts accrued and
paid

                                       37
<PAGE>
   
under the Plan and of the expenses actually borne by the Distributor, there will
be  no need to match specific expenses to reimbursements and no carrying forward
of such amounts, as under  the Existing Class B  Plan. Thus, the accounting  for
the  Proposed  Class  B  Plan  would  be  simplified  and  the  timing  of  when
expenditures are to be made by the Distributor would not be an issue. Currently,
because the  Existing Class  B Plan  is a  reimbursement plan,  the  Distributor
retains  an  independent  expert  to  perform a  study  of  its  methodology for
determining  and  substantiating  which  of  its  expenses  should  properly  be
allocated  to the Fund's Class B shares  for reimbursement, the cost of which is
borne by the  Fund and  other funds for  which Prudential  Securities serves  as
distributor.  These considerations, combined  with the fact  that the cumulative
expenses incurred  by Prudential  Securities  for Distribution  Activities  have
exceeded  the amounts reimbursed  by the Fund  under the Existing  Class B Plan,
suggest that the  costs and  efforts associated  with a  reimbursement plan  are
unwarranted.
    

    In  considering whether to approve the  Proposed Class B Plan, the Directors
reviewed, among  other  things, the  nature  and scope  of  the services  to  be
provided  by Prudential Securities, the  purchase options available to investors
under the  Alternative  Purchase Plan,  the  amount of  expenditures  under  the
Existing Class B Plan, the relationship of such expenditures to the overall cost
structure  of  the  Fund  and  comparative  data  with  respect  to distribution
arrangements adopted by other investment companies. Based upon such review,  the
Directors,  including a  majority of the  Rule 12b-1  Directors, determined that
there is a reasonable likelihood that the Proposed Class B Plan will benefit the
Fund and its Class B shareholders.

    If approved by Class B shareholders, the Proposed Class B Plan will continue
in effect from  year to  year, provided such  continuance is  approved at  least
annually  by vote of a majority of  the Board of Directors, including a majority
of the Rule 12b-1 Directors.

REQUIRED VOTE

   
    The Proposed Class B Plan requires the approval of a majority of the  Fund's
outstanding  Class B  shares as  defined in  the Investment  Company Act  and as
described in Proposal No. 3. If the  Proposed Class B Plan is not approved,  the
Existing Class B Plan will continue in its present form.
    

   
    THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS YOU VOTE "FOR" THIS PROPOSAL NO. 4.
    

                                       38
<PAGE>
                    RATIFICATION OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
                                (PROPOSAL NO. 5)

    The  Board of  Directors of  the Fund, including  the Directors  who are not
interested persons of  the Fund,  has selected Price  Waterhouse as  independent
accountants  for the  Fund for  the fiscal  year ending  December 31,  1994. The
ratification of the selection of independent accountants is to be voted upon  at
the  Meeting and it is intended that the persons named in the accompanying Proxy
will vote  for  Price  Waterhouse.  No representative  of  Price  Waterhouse  is
expected to be present at the Meeting of Shareholders.

    The  policy  of  the  Board  of  Directors  regarding  engaging  independent
accountants' services  is  that  management  may  engage  the  Fund's  principal
independent   accountants  to  perform  any   service(s)  normally  provided  by
independent accounting firms, provided that such service(s) meet(s) any and  all
of  the independence requirements of the  American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants and the Securities and Exchange Commission. In accordance with  this
policy,  the Audit Committee  reviews and approves all  services provided by the
independent accountants prior to their being rendered. The Board of Directors of
the Fund receives  a report from  its Audit Committee  relating to all  services
after they have been performed by the Fund's independent accountants.

REQUIRED VOTE

    The  affirmative vote of a  majority of the shares  present, in person or by
proxy, at the Meeting is required for ratification.

    THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE "FOR" THIS PROPOSAL NO. 5.

                                 OTHER MATTERS

    No business other than as  set forth herein is  expected to come before  the
Meeting,  but should  any other matter  requiring a vote  of shareholders arise,
including any question as to an adjournment of the Meeting, the persons named in
the enclosed Proxy  will vote thereon  according to their  best judgment in  the
interests of the Fund.

                             SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS

    The  Fund is not  required to hold  annual meetings of  shareholders and the
Board of  Directors currently  does  not intend  to  hold such  meetings  unless
shareholder  action is required in accordance with the Investment Company Act or
the Fund's  By-laws. A  shareholder proposal  intended to  be presented  at  any

                                       39
<PAGE>
   
meeting  of shareholders of the Fund hereinafter  called must be received by the
Fund a  reasonable time  before the  Board of  Directors' solicitation  relating
thereto  is made in order to be included  in the Fund's Proxy Statement and form
of Proxy  relating  to that  meeting  and presented  at  the meeting.  The  mere
submission  of a proposal by a shareholder does not guarantee that such proposal
will be included in the proxy statement because certain rules under the  federal
Securities  laws  must be  complied  with before  inclusion  of the  proposal is
required.
    

                                                  S. JANE ROSE
                                                    SECRETARY
   
Dated: April 18, 1994
    

    SHAREHOLDERS WHO DO NOT EXPECT TO BE PRESENT AT THE MEETING AND WHO WISH  TO
HAVE  THEIR SHARES VOTED ARE  REQUESTED TO DATE AND  SIGN THE ENCLOSED PROXY AND
RETURN IT IN  THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE.  NO POSTAGE  IS REQUIRED IF  MAILED IN  THE
UNITED STATES.

                                       40
<PAGE>
                                                                       EXHIBIT A

            PRUDENTIAL MUTUAL FUND MANAGEMENT, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                 CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL CONDITION
                               DECEMBER 31, 1993

                                     ASSETS

<TABLE>
<S>                                                     <C>
CASH AND SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS.......................  $42,667,507
LOAN TO AFFILIATE.....................................   85,000,000
MANAGEMENT, ADMINISTRATION AND OTHER FEES
 RECEIVABLE...........................................   17,897,292
TRANSFER AGENCY AND FIDUCIARY FEES RECEIVABLE.........    3,744,874
FURNITURE, EQUIPMENT AND LEASEHOLD IMPROVEMENTS,
 NET..................................................   10,495,702
OTHER ASSETS..........................................    4,676,430
                                                        -----------
                                                        $164,481,805
                                                        -----------
                                                        -----------
               LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
LIABILITIES:
  Due to affiliates...................................  $48,794,366
  Accounts payable and accrued expenses...............   11,208,209
  Income taxes payable to affiliate -- net............    2,937,828
                                                        -----------
                                                         62,940,403
                                                        -----------
COMMITMENTS (Note 6)
STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY:
  Class A common stock, $1 par value (1,000 shares
   authorized, 850 shares outstanding)................          850
  Class B common stock, $1 par value (1,000 shares
   authorized, 150 shares outstanding)................          150
  Additional paid-in capital..........................   24,999,000
  Retained earnings...................................   76,541,402
                                                        -----------
                                                        101,541,402
                                                        -----------
                                                        $164,481,805
                                                        -----------
                                                        -----------
</TABLE>

          See notes to consolidated statement of financial condition.

                                      A-1
<PAGE>
            PRUDENTIAL MUTUAL FUND MANAGEMENT, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
             NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL CONDITION
                               DECEMBER 31, 1993

1.  SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
    Prudential  Mutual  Fund  Management,  Inc.  ("PMF")  and  subsidiaries (the
"Company"), an  indirect wholly-owned  subsidiary  of The  Prudential  Insurance
Company  of America (the "Prudential"), were  created to operate as the manager,
distributor and/or transfer agent for investment companies.

    PRINCIPLES OF CONSOLIDATION

    The consolidated financial statement  includes the accounts  of PMF and  its
wholly-owned  subsidiaries, Prudential  Mutual Fund Services,  Inc. ("PMFS") and
Prudential Mutual Fund  Distributors, Inc. ("PMFD").  All intercompany  profits,
transactions and balances have been eliminated.

    INCOME TAXES

    The  Company is a  member of a  group of affiliated  companies which join in
filing a consolidated Federal  income tax return. Pursuant  to a tax  allocation
agreement,  tax expense is  determined for individual  profitable companies on a
separate return basis. Profit members pay  this amount to an affiliated  company
which  in turn apportions  the payment among  the loss members  in proportion to
their losses.  In  January 1993,  the  Company adopted  Statement  of  Financial
Accounting  Standards No.  109, "Accounting  for Income  Taxes" (SFAS  109). The
adoption of SFAS 109 did not have  a material effect on the Company's  financial
position.

2.  SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS
    At  December 31, 1993, the Company had invested $35,411,571 in several money
market funds which PMF manages.

3.  FURNITURE, EQUIPMENT AND LEASEHOLD IMPROVEMENTS
    Furniture, equipment and leasehold improvements consist of the following:

<TABLE>
<S>                                              <C>
Furniture......................................  $6,481,799
Equipment......................................   9,181,984
Leasehold improvements.........................   3,407,213
                                                 ----------
                                                 19,070,996
Less accumulated depreciation and
 amortization..................................   8,575,294
                                                 ----------
                                                 $10,495,702
                                                 ----------
                                                 ----------
</TABLE>

                                      A-2
<PAGE>
4.  RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS
    In the ordinary course of business, the Company participates in a variety of
financial and administrative transactions with affiliates.

    The loan to affiliate  bears interest at 3.45  percent at December 31,  1993
and is due on demand.

    The  caption "Due to  affiliates" includes $18,241,795  at December 31, 1993
for  reimbursement   of   employee   compensation  and   benefits,   and   other
administrative  and operating  expenses. This amount  is noninterest-bearing and
payable on demand.

    The Company  has entered  into subadvisory  agreements with  The  Prudential
Investment  Corporation ("PIC"), a wholly-owned  subsidiary of Prudential. Under
these agreements, PIC  furnishes investment advisory  services to  substantially
all  the funds for which the Company acts as Manager. At December 31, 1993 there
were unpaid fees  due to PIC  of $23,926,277,  included in the  caption "Due  to
affiliates."

    Distribution  expenses include  commissions and account  servicing fees paid
to, or on account of,  financial advisors of Prudential Securities  Incorporated
("Prudential   Securities")   and  Pruco   Securities   Corporation  ("PruSec"),
affiliated broker-dealers and indirect wholly-owned subsidiaries of  Prudential,
advertising expenses, the cost of printing and mailing prospectuses to potential
investors,  and indirect and overhead costs of Prudential Securities and PruSec,
including lease,  utility,  communications  and  sales  promotion  expenses.  At
December  31,  1993 there  were  unpaid distribution  expenses  of approximately
$6,626,000, included in the caption "Due to affiliates."

5.  CAPITAL
    PMFD is subject  to the SEC  Uniform Net Capital  Rule (Rule 15c3-1),  which
requires  the maintenance of minimum net capital  and requires that the ratio of
aggregate indebtedness to net capital, both  as defined, shall not exceed 15  to
1.  At  December  31,  1993,  PMFD had  net  capital  of  $2,308,981,  which was
$1,859,405 in excess of its required net  capital of $449,576. PMFD had a  ratio
of aggregate indebtedness to net capital of 2.9 to 1.

                                      A-3
<PAGE>
6.  COMMITMENTS
    The Company leases office space under operating leases expiring in 2003. The
leases  are  subject to  escalation  based upon  certain  costs incurred  by the
lessor. Future minimum rentals, as of  December 31, 1993, under the leases,  are
as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
YEAR                                                       MINIMUM RENTAL
- --------------------------------------------------------  ----------------
<S>                                                       <C>
1994....................................................   $    2,738,000
1995....................................................        2,865,000
1996....................................................        3,375,000
1997....................................................        3,385,000
1998....................................................        3,230,000
Thereafter..............................................       13,800,000
                                                          ----------------
                                                           $   29,393,000
                                                          ----------------
                                                          ----------------
</TABLE>

7.  PENSION AND OTHER POSTRETIREMENT BENEFITS
    The Company has two defined benefit pension plans (the "Plans") sponsored by
the  Prudential and Prudential Securities. The  Plans cover substantially all of
the Company's employees. The funding policy is to contribute annually the amount
necessary  to  satisfy  the  Internal  Revenue  Service  funding  standards.  In
addition,  the Company  has two  defined benefit  plans for  key executives, the
Supplemental Retirement  Plan  (SRP)  for  which  estimated  pension  costs  are
currently accrued but not funded.

    The  Company provides  certain health care  and life  insurance benefits for
eligible retired  employees.  Effective January  1,  1993, the  Company  adopted
Statement  of Financial Accounting Standards No. 106, "Employers' Accounting for
Postretirement Benefits Other Than Pensions" ("SFAS 106"). SFAS 106 changed  the
practice of accounting for postretirement benefits on a cash basis to an accrual
basis,  whereby employers  record the  projected future  cost of  providing such
postretirement benefits as  employees render services  instead of when  benefits
are paid. This new accounting method has no effect on the Company's cash outlays
for  these  retirement benefits.  The adoption  of SFAS  106 did  not materially
impact the Company's financial position.

    The Financial Accounting Standards Board  has issued Statement of  Financial
Accounting   Standards  No.  112,   "Employers'  Accounting  for  Postemployment
Benefits," ("SFAS  112") which  is effective  for fiscal  years beginning  after
December  15, 1993. Although several benefits  are fully insured which result in
no SFAS 112 obligation,  the Company currently has  an obligation and  resulting

                                      A-4
<PAGE>
7.  PENSION AND OTHER POSTRETIREMENT BENEFITS (CONTINUED)
expense under SFAS 112 for medical benefits provided under long-term disability.
The  Company will adopt  SFAS 112 on  January 1, 1994.  Management believes that
implementation will have no material effect on the Company's financial position.

8.  CONTINGENCY
    On October 12, 1993, a purported class action lawsuit was instituted against
PMF, et al and certain  current and former directors of  a fund managed by  PMF.
The  plaintiffs seek damages  in an unspecified  amount for excessive management
and distribution fees they allege were incurred by them. Although the outcome of
this litigation cannot be  predicted at this time,  the defendants believe  they
have  meritorious defenses to the claims asserted in the complaint and intend to
defend this action vigorously. In any case, management does not believe that the
outcome of  this action  is likely  to have  a material  adverse effect  on  the
Company's financial position.

                                      A-5
<PAGE>
                          INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT

To the Stockholders and Board of Directors of
Prudential Mutual Fund Management, Inc.:

    We  have  audited  the  accompanying  consolidated  statement  of  financial
condition of  Prudential Mutual  Fund Management,  Inc. and  subsidiaries as  of
December  31, 1993. This consolidated  financial statement is the responsibility
of the Company's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on this
consolidated financial statement based on our audit.

    We conducted  our  audit  in accordance  with  generally  accepted  auditing
standards.  Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the consolidated financial statement is  free
of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence
supporting  the  amounts  and  disclosures  in  the  consolidated  statement  of
financial condition. An audit also includes assessing the accounting  principles
used  and significant  estimates made by  management, as well  as evaluating the
overall financial statement presentation. We  believe that our audit provides  a
reasonable basis for our opinion.

    In  our opinion, such consolidated statement of financial condition presents
fairly, in all material  respects, the financial  position of Prudential  Mutual
Fund  Management, Inc. and subsidiaries at  December 31, 1993 in conformity with
generally accepted accounting principles.

DELOITTE & TOUCHE
New York, New York
January 26, 1994

                                      A-6
<PAGE>
                                                                       EXHIBIT B

                 FORM OF AMENDMENT TO ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION

   
    Article  V, Section 1 of the Fund's Articles of Incorporation is proposed to
be amended and restated as follows:
    

                                   Article V
                                  COMMON STOCK

    Section 1.    The  total  number  of  shares  of  capital  stock  which  the
Corporation shall have authority to issue is 750 million shares of the par value
of  $.01 per share  and of the aggregate  par value of  $7,500,000 to be divided
initially into three classes, consisting of 250 million shares of Class A Common
Stock, 250 million  shares of Class  B Common  Stock and 250  million shares  of
Class C Common Stock.

   
        (a)  Each share  of Class  A, Class B  and Class  C Common  Stock of the
    Corporation shall represent the  same interest in  the Corporation and  have
    identical  voting, dividend,  liquidation and  other rights  except that (i)
    Expenses related to the distribution of each class of shares shall be  borne
    solely  by such class; (ii) The bearing of such expenses solely by shares of
    each class shall be appropriately reflected (in the manner determined by the
    Board of  Directors) in  the net  asset value,  dividends, distribution  and
    liquidation  rights of the  shares of such  class; (iii) The  Class A Common
    Stock shall  be  subject  to  a  front-end  sales  load  and  a  Rule  12b-1
    distribution  fee as determined by the Board of Directors from time to time;
    (iv) The Class  B Common  Stock shall be  subject to  a contingent  deferred
    sales charge and a Rule 12b-1 distribution fee as determined by the Board of
    Directors  from time  to time;  and (v)  The Class  C Common  Stock shall be
    subject to a contingent deferred sales charge and a Rule 12b-1  distribution
    fee as determined by the Board of Directors from time to time. All shares of
    each  particular class  shall represent  an equal  proportionate interest in
    that class, and each share  of any particular class  shall be equal to  each
    other share of that class.
    

        (b)  Each share of the Class B  Common Stock of the Corporation shall be
    converted automatically, and without any action or choice on the part of the
    holder thereof, into  shares (including  fractions thereof) of  the Class  A
    Common  Stock  of  the  Corporation  (computed  in  the  manner  hereinafter
    described), at the applicable net asset value of each Class, at the time  of
    the  calculation of the net asset value of such Class B Common Stock at such
    times,   which   may   vary    between   shares   originally   issued    for

                                      B-1
<PAGE>
    cash  and shares purchased  through the automatic  reinvestment of dividends
    and distributions with  respect to  Class B Common  Stock (each  "Conversion
    Date"),  determined by the Board of  Directors in accordance with applicable
    laws, rules, regulations and interpretations of the Securities and  Exchange
    Commission  and  the National  Association of  Securities Dealers,  Inc. and
    pursuant to such procedures as may be  established from time to time by  the
    Board   of  Directors  and  disclosed  in  the  Corporation's  then  current
    prospectus for such Class A and Class B Common Stock.

        (c) The number of shares of the Class A Common Stock of the  Corporation
    into  which a  share of the  Class B  Common Stock is  converted pursuant to
    Section (1)(b) hereof  shall equal  the number (including  for this  purpose
    fractions  of a share) obtained by dividing the net asset value per share of
    the Class B Common  Stock for purposes of  sales and redemptions thereof  at
    the time of the calculation of the net asset value on the Conversion Date by
    the  net asset value per  share of the Class A  Common Stock for purposes of
    sales and redemptions  thereof at  the time of  the calculation  of the  net
    asset value on the Conversion Date.

        (d)  On the Conversion Date,  the shares of the  Class B Common Stock of
    the Corporation converted into shares of the Class A Common Stock will cease
    to accrue dividends and will no longer be outstanding and the rights of  the
    holders  thereof will cease (except the right to receive declared but unpaid
    dividends to the Conversion Date).

   
        (e) The Board of Directors shall have full power and authority to  adopt
    such  other terms and conditions concerning  the conversion of shares of the
    Class B Common  Stock to shares  of the Class  A Common Stock  as they  deem
    appropriate;  provided such terms  and conditions are  not inconsistent with
    the terms contained  in this Section  1 and subject  to any restrictions  or
    requirements  under  the  Investment  Company Act  of  1940  and  the rules,
    regulations  and  interpretations  thereof  promulgated  or  issued  by  the
    Securities  and Exchange Commission, any conditions or limitations contained
    in an order issued by the  Securities and Exchange Commission applicable  to
    the  Corporation,  or any  restrictions or  requirements under  the Internal
    Revenue  Code  of  1986,  as   amended,  and  the  rules,  regulations   and
    interpretations promulgated or issued thereunder.
    

                                      B-2
<PAGE>
                                                                       EXHIBIT C

                             PRUDENTIAL EQUITY FUND
                         DISTRIBUTION AND SERVICE PLAN
                                (CLASS A SHARES)
                                  INTRODUCTION

    The  Distribution  and Service  Plan  (the Plan)  set  forth below  which is
designed to  conform to  the requirements  of Rule  12b-1 under  the  Investment
Company  Act of 1940 (the Investment Company Act) and Article III, Section 26 of
the Rules of Fair  Practice of the National  Association of Securities  Dealers,
Inc.  (NASD)  has been  adopted  by Prudential  Equity  Fund (the  Fund)  and by
Prudential  Mutual  Fund  Distributors,   Inc.,  the  Fund's  distributor   (the
Distributor).

   
    The  Fund has  entered into a  distribution agreement pursuant  to which the
Fund will employ the Distributor to distribute Class A shares issued by the Fund
(Class A shares). Under the Plan, the Fund intends to pay to the Distributor, as
compensation for its services,  a distribution and service  fee with respect  to
Class A shares.
    

    A  majority of the Board  of Directors of the  Fund, including a majority of
those Directors who are not "interested persons" of the Fund (as defined in  the
Investment Company Act) and who have no direct or indirect financial interest in
the  operation of  this Plan  or any  agreements related  to it  (the Rule 12b-1
Directors), have determined by votes cast in person at a meeting called for  the
purpose  of  voting on  this Plan  that  there is  a reasonable  likelihood that
adoption of this Plan will benefit  the Fund and its shareholders.  Expenditures
under  this Plan  by the  Fund for  Distribution Activities  (defined below) are
primarily intended to result in  the sale of Class A  shares of the Fund  within
the  meaning of paragraph (a)(2) of  Rule 12b-1 promulgated under the Investment
Company Act.

    The purpose of the  Plan is to create  incentives to the Distributor  and/or
other   qualified  broker-dealers  and  their   account  executives  to  provide
distribution assistance to  their customers who  are investors in  the Fund,  to
defray  the costs  and expenses  associated with  the preparation,  printing and
distribution of  prospectuses and  sales literature  and other  promotional  and
distribution  activities and  to provide  for the  servicing and  maintenance of
shareholder accounts.

                                      C-1
<PAGE>
                                    THE PLAN

    The material aspects of the Plan are as follows:

1.  DISTRIBUTION ACTIVITIES

    The Fund shall engage  the Distributor to distribute  Class A shares of  the
Fund  and to  service shareholder  accounts using all  of the  facilities of the
distribution  networks   of  Prudential   Securities  Incorporated   (Prudential
Securities) and Pruco Securities Corporation (Prusec), including sales personnel
and  branch  office  and central  support  systems,  and also  using  such other
qualified broker-dealers  and  financial  institutions as  the  Distributor  may
select. Services provided and activities undertaken to distribute Class A shares
of the Fund are referred to herein as "Distribution Activities."

2.  PAYMENT OF SERVICE FEE

    The Fund shall pay to the Distributor as compensation for providing personal
service  and/or maintaining shareholder accounts a service  fee of .25 of 1% per
annum of the average daily net assets  of the Class A shares (service fee).  The
Fund  shall calculate and accrue daily amounts  payable by the Class A shares of
the Fund hereunder and shall pay such amounts monthly or at such other intervals
as the Board of Directors may determine.

3.  PAYMENT FOR DISTRIBUTION ACTIVITIES

    The Fund shall  pay to the  Distributor as compensation  for its services  a
distribution fee, together with the service fee (described in Section 2 hereof),
of  .30 of 1% per annum of the average daily net assets of the Class A shares of
the Fund  for  the  performance  of  Distribution  Activities.  The  Fund  shall
calculate  and accrue daily  amounts payable by  the Class A  shares of the Fund
hereunder and shall pay such amounts monthly  or at such other intervals as  the
Board  of  Directors may  determine.  Amounts payable  under  the Plan  shall be
subject to the limitations of Article III, Section 26 of the NASD Rules of  Fair
Practice.

    Amounts  paid to the Distributor by the Class  A shares of the Fund will not
be used to  pay the  distribution expenses incurred  with respect  to any  other
class  of shares of  the Fund except that  distribution expenses attributable to
the Fund as a  whole will be allocated  to the Class A  shares according to  the
ratio  of the sales  of Class A shares  to the total sales  of the Fund's shares
over the Fund's  fiscal year  or such other  allocation method  approved by  the
Board  of Directors. The allocation of  distribution expenses among classes will
be subject to the review of the Board of Directors.

                                      C-2
<PAGE>
    The Distributor  shall  spend  such  amounts  as  it  deems  appropriate  on
Distribution Activities which include, among others:

        (a)  amounts paid to Prudential Securities for performing services under
    a  selected  dealer   agreement  between  Prudential   Securities  and   the
    Distributor  for  sale  of  Class  A shares  of  the  Fund,  including sales
    commissions and  trailer commissions  paid  to, or  on account  of,  account
    executives  and  indirect and  overhead  costs associated  with Distribution
    Activities, including central office and branch expenses;

        (b) amounts  paid to  Prusec for  performing services  under a  selected
    dealer  agreement between  Prusec and  the Distributor  for sale  of Class A
    shares of the Fund, including sales commissions and trailer commissions paid
    to, or on account of, agents and indirect and overhead costs associated with
    Distribution Activities;

        (c) advertising  for the  Fund in  various forms  through any  available
    medium,  including  the  cost  of printing  and  mailing  Fund prospectuses,
    statements of  additional information  and  periodic financial  reports  and
    sales literature to persons other than current shareholders of the Fund; and

        (d)  sales commissions  (including trailer  commissions) paid  to, or on
    account of, broker-dealers and financial institutions (other than Prudential
    Securities and Prusec)  which have entered  into selected dealer  agreements
    with the Distributor with respect to Class A shares of the Fund.

4.  QUARTERLY REPORTS; ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

    An appropriate officer of the Fund will provide to the Board of Directors of
the  Fund  for  review,  at  least quarterly,  a  written  report  specifying in
reasonable detail the  amounts expended for  Distribution Activities  (including
payment  of the service fee)  and the purposes for  which such expenditures were
made in compliance  with the requirements  of Rule 12b-1.  The Distributor  will
provide to the Board of Directors of the Fund such additional information as the
Board  shall from time  to time reasonably  request, including information about
Distribution Activities undertaken or to be undertaken by the Distributor.

    The Distributor  will inform  the Board  of  Directors of  the Fund  of  the
commissions  and account servicing fees to be paid by the Distributor to account
executives of the Distributor and  to broker-dealers and financial  institutions
which have selected dealer agreements with the Distributor.

                                      C-3
<PAGE>
5.  EFFECTIVENESS; CONTINUATION

    The  Plan shall not  take effect until it  has been approved by  a vote of a
majority of  the outstanding  voting securities  (as defined  in the  Investment
Company Act) of the Class A shares of the Fund.

    If  approved by a vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of
the Class A shares  of the Fund,  the Plan shall,  unless earlier terminated  in
accordance  with its terms, continue in full  force and effect thereafter for so
long as  such  continuance is  specifically  approved  at least  annually  by  a
majority  of the Board of Directors of the Fund and a majority of the Rule 12b-1
Directors by votes cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of  voting
on the continuation of the Plan.

6.  TERMINATION

    This  Plan may be terminated at  any time by vote of  a majority of the Rule
12b-1 Directors or by  vote of a majority  of the outstanding voting  securities
(as defined in the Investment Company Act) of the Class A shares of the Fund.

7.  AMENDMENTS

    The  Plan may not be amended to change the combined service and distribution
expenses to be paid as provided for in Sections 2 and 3 hereof so as to increase
materially the amounts payable  under this Plan unless  such amendment shall  be
approved  by the  vote of  a majority of  the outstanding  voting securities (as
defined in the Investment Company  Act) of the Class A  shares of the Fund.  All
material  amendments of the Plan shall be approved by a majority of the Board of
Directors of the Fund and a majority  of the Rule 12b-1 Directors by votes  cast
in person at a meeting called for the purpose of voting on the Plan.

8.  RULE 12B-1 DIRECTORS

    While  the Plan is in effect, the selection and nomination of the Rule 12b-1
Directors shall be committed to the discretion of the Rule 12b-1 Directors.

9.  RECORDS

    The Fund shall preserve  copies of the Plan  and any related agreements  and
all reports made pursuant to Section 4 hereof, for a period of not less than six
years  from the date of  effectiveness of the Plan,  such agreements or reports,
and for at least the first two years in an easily accessible place.

Dated:

                                      C-4
<PAGE>
                                                                       EXHIBIT D

                             PRUDENTIAL EQUITY FUND
                         DISTRIBUTION AND SERVICE PLAN
                                (CLASS B SHARES)
                                  INTRODUCTION

    The Distribution  and Service  Plan  (the Plan)  set  forth below  which  is
designed  to  conform to  the requirements  of Rule  12b-1 under  the Investment
Company Act of 1940 (the Investment Company Act) and Article III, Section 26  of
the  Rules of Fair  Practice of the National  Association of Securities Dealers,
Inc. (NASD) has been adopted by Prudential  Equity Fund, Inc. (the Fund) and  by
Prudential   Securities   Incorporated  (Prudential   Securities),   the  Fund's
distributor (the Distributor).

   
    The Fund has  entered into a  distribution agreement pursuant  to which  the
Fund will employ the Distributor to distribute Class B shares issued by the Fund
(Class  B shares). Under the Plan, the Fund wishes to pay to the Distributor, as
compensation for its services,  a distribution and service  fee with respect  to
Class B shares.
    

    A  majority of the Board  of Directors of the  Fund including a majority who
are not "interested persons" of the  Fund (as defined in the Investment  Company
Act)  and who have no direct or  indirect financial interest in the operation of
this Plan  or any  agreements related  to it  (the Rule  12b-1 Directors),  have
determined by votes cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of voting
on  this Plan that there  is a reasonable likelihood  that adoption of this Plan
will benefit the Fund and its shareholders. Expenditures under this Plan by  the
Fund  for  Distribution Activities  (defined  below) are  primarily  intended to
result in the sale of Class B shares of the Fund within the meaning of paragraph
(a)(2) of Rule 12b-1 promulgated under the Investment Company Act.

    The purpose of the  Plan is to create  incentives to the Distributor  and/or
other   qualified  broker-dealers  and  their   account  executives  to  provide
distribution assistance to  their customers who  are investors in  the Fund,  to
defray  the costs  and expenses  associated with  the preparation,  printing and
distribution of  prospectuses and  sales literature  and other  promotional  and
distribution  activities and  to provide  for the  servicing and  maintenance of
shareholder accounts.

                                      D-1
<PAGE>
                                    THE PLAN

    The material aspects of the Plan are as follows:

1.  DISTRIBUTION ACTIVITIES

    The Fund shall engage  the Distributor to distribute  Class B shares of  the
Fund  and to  service shareholder  accounts using all  of the  facilities of the
Prudential Securities distribution network including sales personnel and  branch
office  and central support systems, and also using such other qualified broker-
dealers and  financial institutions  as the  Distributor may  select,  including
Pruco   Securities  Corporation  (Prusec).   Services  provided  and  activities
undertaken to distribute Class B  shares of the Fund  are referred to herein  as
"Distribution Activities."

2.  PAYMENT OF SERVICE FEE

    The Fund shall pay to the Distributor as compensation for providing personal
service  and/or maintaining shareholder accounts a service  fee of .25 of 1% per
annum of the average daily net assets  of the Class B shares (service fee).  The
Fund  shall calculate and accrue daily amounts  payable by the Class B shares of
the Fund hereunder and shall pay such amounts monthly or at such other intervals
as the Board of Directors may determine.

3.  PAYMENT FOR DISTRIBUTION ACTIVITIES

    The Fund shall  pay to the  Distributor as compensation  for its services  a
distribution  fee of .75 of 1% per annum  of the average daily net assets of the
Class B shares of the Fund  for the performance of Distribution Activities.  The
Fund  shall calculate and accrue daily amounts  payable by the Class B shares of
the Fund hereunder and shall pay such amounts monthly or at such other intervals
as the Board of Directors may determine. Amounts payable under the Plan shall be
subject to the limitations of Article III, Section 26 of the NASD Rules of  Fair
Practice.

    Amounts  paid to the Distributor by the Class  B shares of the Fund will not
be used to  pay the  distribution expenses incurred  with respect  to any  other
class  of shares of  the Fund except that  distribution expenses attributable to
the Fund as a  whole will be allocated  to the Class B  shares according to  the
ratio of the sale of Class B shares to the total sales of the Fund's shares over
the  Fund's fiscal year or such other allocation method approved by the Board of
Directors. The allocation of distribution expenses among classes will be subject
to the review of the Board of Directors.

                                      D-2
<PAGE>
    The Distributor  shall  spend  such  amounts  as  it  deems  appropriate  on
Distribution Activities which include, among others:

        (a)  sales commissions  (including trailer  commissions) paid  to, or on
    account of, account executives of the Distributor;

        (b) indirect  and  overhead costs  of  the Distributor  associated  with
    performance  of Distribution Activities, including central office and branch
    expenses;

        (c) amounts  paid to  Prusec for  performing services  under a  selected
    dealer  agreement between  Prusec and  the Distributor  for sale  of Class B
    shares of the Fund, including sales commissions and trailer commissions paid
    to, or on account of, agents and indirect and overhead costs associated with
    Distribution Activities;

        (d) advertising  for the  Fund in  various forms  through any  available
    medium,  including  the  cost  of printing  and  mailing  Fund prospectuses,
    statements of  additional information  and  periodic financial  reports  and
    sales literature to persons other than current shareholders of the Fund; and

        (e)  sales commissions  (including trailer  commissions) paid  to, or on
    account of,  broker-dealers and  other  financial institutions  (other  than
    Prusec)  which  have  entered  into  selected  dealer  agreements  with  the
    Distributor with respect to Class B shares of the Fund.

4.  QUARTERLY REPORTS; ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

    An appropriate officer of the Fund will provide to the Board of Directors of
the Fund  for  review,  at  least quarterly,  a  written  report  specifying  in
reasonable  detail the  amounts expended for  Distribution Activities (including
payment of the service  fee) and the purposes  for which such expenditures  were
made  in compliance  with the requirements  of Rule 12b-1.  The Distributor will
provide to the  Board of Directors  of the Fund  such additional information  as
they  shall from  time to time  reasonably request,  including information about
Distribution Activities undertaken or to be undertaken by the Distributor.

    The Distributor  will inform  the Board  of  Directors of  the Fund  of  the
commissions  and account servicing fees to be paid by the Distributor to account
executives  of  the  Distributor  and  to  broker-dealers  and  other  financial
institutions which have selected dealer agreements with the Distributor.

                                      D-3
<PAGE>
5.  EFFECTIVENESS; CONTINUATION

    The  Plan shall not  take effect until it  has been approved by  a vote of a
majority of  the outstanding  voting securities  (as defined  in the  Investment
Company Act) of the Class B shares of the Fund.

    If  approved by a vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of
the Class B shares  of the Fund,  the Plan shall,  unless earlier terminated  in
accordance  with its terms, continue in full  force and effect thereafter for so
long as  such  continuance is  specifically  approved  at least  annually  by  a
majority  of the Board of Directors of the Fund and a majority of the Rule 12b-1
Directors by votes cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of  voting
on the continuation of the Plan.

6.  TERMINATION

    This  Plan may be terminated at  any time by vote of  a majority of the Rule
12b-1 Directors, or by vote of  a majority of the outstanding voting  securities
(as defined in the Investment Company Act) of the Class B shares of the Fund.

7.  AMENDMENTS

    The  Plan may not be amended to change the combined service and distribution
expenses to be paid as provided for in Sections 2 and 3 hereof so as to increase
materially the amounts payable  under this Plan unless  such amendment shall  be
approved  by the  vote of  a majority of  the outstanding  voting securities (as
defined in the Investment Company  Act) of the Class B  shares of the Fund.  All
material  amendments of the Plan shall be approved by a majority of the Board of
Directors of the Fund and a majority  of the Rule 12b-1 Directors by votes  cast
in person at a meeting called for the purpose of voting on the Plan.

8.  RULE 12B-1 DIRECTORS

    While  the Plan is in effect, the selection and nomination of the Rule 12b-1
Directors shall be committed to the discretion of the Rule 12b-1 Directors.

9.  RECORDS

    The Fund shall preserve  copies of the Plan  and any related agreements  and
all reports made pursuant to Section 4 hereof, for a period of not less than six
years  from the date of  effectiveness of the Plan,  such agreements or reports,
and for at least the first two years in an easily accessible place.

Dated:

                                      D-4
<PAGE>
PLEASE MARK, SIGN,
DATE AND RETURN THE PROXY CARD PROMPTLY USING THE ENCLOSED
ENVELOPE.

PROXY (CLASS A)

YOUR PROXY WILL BE ELECTRONICALLY SCANNED.
CAREFULLY DETACH HERE AND RETURN BOTTOM PORTION ONLY.

PRUDENTIAL EQUITY FUND, INC.
ONE SEAPORT PLAZA
NEW YORK, NEW YORK  10292

THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS.

The undersigned hereby appoints Susan C. Cote, S. Jane Rose and Deborah A. Docs
as proxies, each with the power of substitution, and hereby authorizes each of
them to represent and to vote, as designated below, all the shares of Class A
common stock of Prudential Equity Fund, Inc. held of record by the undersigned
on March 31, 1994 at the Special Meeting of Shareholders to be held on
June 23, 1994, or any adjournment thereof.

THIS PROXY WHEN PROPERLY EXECUTED WILL BE VOTED IN THE MANNER DIRECTED HEREIN
BY THE UNDERSIGNED SHAREHOLDER(S). IF NO DIRECTION IS MADE, THIS PROXY WILL BE
VOTED FOR ALL THE PROPOSALS LISTED BELOW.

Your Account No.:
Your voting shares are:

PLEASE MARK, SIGN, DATE AND RETURN THE PROXY CARD PROMPTLY USING THE ENCLOSED
ENVELOPE.

1.  Election of Directors

APPROVE ALL NOMINEES   WITHHELD ALL NOMINEES   WITHHELD THOSE LISTED ON BACK

TO WITHHOLD AUTHORITY FOR ANY INDIVIDUAL NOMINEE, PLEASE WRITE NAME ON BACK OF
FORM.

Edward D. Beach
Eugene C. Dorsey
Delayne D. Gold
Harry A. Jacobs, Jr
Lawrence C. McQuade
Thomas T. Mooney
Thomas H. O'Brien
Richard A. Redeker
Nancy H. Teeters

<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                    <C>     <C>         <C>
2.  To approve an amendment of the Fund's Articles of Incorporation to permit a        FOR     AGAINST     ABSTAIN
conversion feature for Class B shares.                                                 / /       / /         / /

3.  To approve an amended and restated Class A Distribution and Service Plan.          / /       / /         / /

4.  Not applicable to Class A shareholders.                                            / /       / /         / /

5.  To ratify the selection by the Board of Directors of Price Waterhouse as
independent accountants for the fiscal year ending December 31, 1994.                  / /       / /         / /

6.  To transact such other business as may properly come before the meeting of
any adjournments thereof.                                                              / /       / /         / /
</TABLE>

Only shares of common stock of the Fund of record at the close of business on
June 23, 1994 are entitled to notice of and to vote at the Meeting or any
adjournment thereof.

Please sign exactly as name appears at left. When shares are held by joint
tenants, both should sign. When signing as attorney, executor, administrator,
trustee or guardian, please give full title as such. If a corporation, please
sign in full corporate name by president or other authorized officer. If a
partnership, please sign in partnership name by authorized person.

___________________________________
SIGNATURE                  DATE

___________________________________
SIGNATURE (JOINT OWNERSHIP)
<PAGE>
PLEASE MARK, SIGN,
DATE AND RETURN THE PROXY CARD PROMPTLY USING THE ENCLOSED
ENVELOPE.

PROXY (CLASS B)

YOUR PROXY WILL BE ELECTRONICALLY SCANNED.
CAREFULLY DETACH HERE AND RETURN BOTTOM PORTION ONLY.

PRUDENTIAL EQUITY FUND, INC.
ONE SEAPORT PLAZA
NEW YORK, NEW YORK  10292

THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS.

The undersigned hereby appoints Susan C. Cote, S. Jane Rose and Deborah A. Docs
as proxies, each with the power of substitution, and hereby authorizes each of
them to represent and to vote, as designated below, all the shares of Class B
common stock of Prudential Equity Fund, Inc. held of record by the undersigned
on March 31, 1994 at the Special Meeting of Shareholders to be held on
June 23, 1994, or any adjournment thereof.

THIS PROXY WHEN PROPERLY EXECUTED WILL BE VOTED IN THE MANNER DIRECTED HEREIN
BY THE UNDERSIGNED SHAREHOLDER(S). IF NO DIRECTION IS MADE, THIS PROXY WILL BE
VOTED FOR ALL THE PROPOSALS LISTED BELOW.

Your Account No.:
Your voting shares are:

PLEASE MARK, SIGN, DATE AND RETURN THE PROXY CARD PROMPTLY USING THE ENCLOSED
ENVELOPE.

1.  Election of Directors

APPROVE ALL NOMINEES   WITHHELD ALL NOMINEES   WITHHELD THOSE LISTED ON BACK

TO WITHHOLD AUTHORITY FOR ANY INDIVIDUAL NOMINEE, PLEASE WRITE NAME ON BACK OF
FORM.

Edward D. Beach
Eugene C. Dorsey
Delayne D. Gold
Harry A. Jacobs, Jr.
Lawrence C. McQuade
Thomas T. Mooney
Thomas H. O'Brien
Richard A. Redeker
Nancy H. Teeters

<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                      <C>     <C>         <C>

2.  To approve an amendment of the Fund's Articles of Incorporation to permit a          FOR     AGAINST     ABSTAIN
conversion feature for Class B shares.                                                   / /       / /         / /

3.  To approve an amended and restated Class A Distribution and Service Plan.            / /       / /         / /

4.  To approve an amended and restated Class B Distribution and Service Plan.            / /       / /         / /

5.  To ratify the selection by the Board of Directors of Price Waterhouse as             / /       / /         / /
independent accountants for the fiscal year ending December 31, 1994.

6.  To transact such other business as may properly come before the meeting of           / /       / /         / /
any adjournment thereof.
</TABLE>

Only shares of common stock of the Fund of record at the close of business on
March 31, 1994 are entitled to notice of and to vote at the Meeting or any
adjournment thereof.

Please sign exactly as name appears at left. When shares are held by joint
tenants, both should sign. When signing as attorney, executor, administrator,
trustee or guardian, please give full title as such. If a corporation, please
sign in full corporate name by president or other authorized officer. If a
partnership, please sign in partnership name by authorized person.

__________________________________
SIGNATURE               DATE

__________________________________
SIGNATURE (JOINT OWNERSHIP)


© 2022 IncJournal is not affiliated with or endorsed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission