OPPENHEIMER GROWTH FUND
497, 2000-12-29
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Oppenheimer
Growth Fund



Prospectus dated January 1, 2001



                                          Oppenheimer  Growth  Fund is a mutual
                                          fund that seeks capital  appreciation
                                          to  make  your  investment  grow.  It
                                          currently  emphasizes  investments in
                                          stocks  of  mid-cap   and   large-cap
                                          companies.
                                             This Prospectus contains
                                          important information about the
                                          Fund's objective, its investment
                                          policies, strategies and risks. It
                                          also contains important information
                                          about how to buy and sell shares of
                                          the Fund and other account features.
                                          Please read this Prospectus
                                          carefully before you invest and keep
                                          it for future reference about your
                                          account.
As with all mutual funds, the
Securities and Exchange Commission
has not approved or disapproved the
Fund's securities nor has it
determined that this Prospectus is
accurate or complete. It is a
criminal offense to represent
otherwise.





<PAGE>


CONTENTS


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


                    ABOUT THE FUND

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


                    ABOUT YOUR ACCOUNT

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

                    Special Investor Services
                    AccountLink
                    PhoneLink
                    OppenheimerFunds Internet Web Site
                    Retirement Plans

                    How to Sell Shares
                    By Mail
                    By Telephone

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

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



<PAGE>


ABOUT THE FUND

The Fund's Investment Objective and Strategies
WHAT IS THE FUND'S INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE? The Fund seeks capital appreciation.

WHAT DOES THE FUND MAINLY INVEST IN? The Fund invests mainly in common stocks
of "growth companies."   The Fund currently focuses on stocks of companies
having a large capitalization or mid-size capitalization, but this could
change over time. The Fund can invest in domestic companies and foreign
companies, although most of its investments are in stocks of U.S. companies.

HOW DOES THE PORTFOLIO MANAGER DECIDE WHAT SECURITIES TO BUY OR SELL?   The
Fund's portfolio manager looks for high-growth companies. Currently, the
portfolio manager looks for:

     o  Companies that have exceptional revenue growth
     o  Companies with above-average earnings growth
     o  Companies that can sustain exceptional revenue and earnings growth
     o  Companies that are well established as leaders in high growth markets

WHO IS THE FUND DESIGNED FOR? The Fund is designed for investors seeking
capital appreciation over the long term. Those investors should be willing to
assume the risks of short-term share price fluctuations that are typical for
a growth fund focusing on stock investments. Since the Fund does not seek
income and its income from investments will likely be small, it is not
designed for investors needing current income. Because of its focus on
long-term growth, the Fund may be appropriate for a portion of a retirement
plan investment. This Fund is not a complete investment program.

Main Risks of Investing in the Fund

All investments have risks to some degree.  The Fund's investments in stocks
are subject to changes in their value from a number of factors described
below. There is also the risk that poor security selection by the Fund's
investment Manager, OppenheimerFunds, Inc., will cause the Fund to
underperform other funds having a similar objective.

RISKS OF  INVESTING IN STOCKS.  Because the Fund  invests  primarily in common
stocks of U.S.  companies,  the value of the Fund's portfolio will be affected
by changes in the U.S. stock  markets.  Market risk will affect the Fund's net
asset  value per  share,  which  will  fluctuate  as the  values of the Fund's
portfolio  securities  change. The prices of individual stocks do not all move
in the same direction  uniformly or at the same time.  Different stock markets
may behave differently from each other.

     Other  factors  can  affect  a  particular  stock's  price,  such as poor
earnings  reports by the issuer,  loss of major  customers,  major  litigation
against the issuer, or changes in government  regulations affecting the issuer
or its industry.

The Manager may increase the relative emphasis of the Fund's  investments in a
particular  industry  from time to time.  Stocks of  issuers  in a  particular
industry  may be  affected  by  changes  in  economic  conditions,  changes in
government regulations,  availability of basic resources or supplies, or other
events that  affect that  industry  more than  others.  To the extent that the
Fund  increases  the  relative  emphasis of its  investments  in a  particular
industry,  its share values may fluctuate in response to events affecting that
industry.

     HOW RISKY IS THE FUND OVERALL?  The risks described above collectively
form the overall risk profile of the Fund, and can affect the value of the
Fund's investments, its investment performance and its prices per share.
Particular investments and investment strategies also have risks.  These
risks mean that you can lose money by investing in the Fund. When you redeem
your shares, they may be worth more or less than what you paid for them.
There is no assurance that the Fund will achieve its investment objective.

     In the short term, the stock markets can be volatile, and the price of
the Fund's shares can go up and down substantially. Growth stocks may be more
volatile than other equity investments. The Fund generally does not use
income-oriented investments to help cushion the Fund's total return from
changes in stock prices. In the OppenheimerFunds spectrum, the Fund is
generally more aggressive than funds that invest in both stocks and bonds or
in investment grade debt securities, but may be less volatile than small-cap
and emerging markets stock funds.

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


The Fund's Past Performance

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

Annual Total Returns (Class A) (as of 12/31 each year)

[See appendix to prospectus for data in bar chart showing annual total
returns]

For the period from 1/1/00 through 9/30/00, the cumulative return (not
annualized) for Class A shares was 19.34%. Sales charges are not included in
the calculations of return in this bar chart, and if those charges were
included, the returns would be less than those shown.
During the period shown in the bar chart, the highest return (not annualized)
for a calendar quarter was 30.16% (4Q'99) and the lowest return (not
annualized) for a calendar quarter was (18.35)% (3Q'90).







                                                    5 Years        10 Years
Average Annual Total Returns                      (or life of    (or life of
for the periods ended December        1 Year         class,         class,
31, 1999                                            if less)       if less)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A Shares (inception             38.30%         24.74%         17.59%
3/15/73)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
S&P 500 Index                         19.53%         26.18%        15.31%1
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B Shares (inception             40.57%         24.99%         20.35%
8/17/93)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C Shares (inception             44.60%         22.48%          N/A
11/1/95)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class Y Shares (inception 6/1/94)     47.10%         26.47%         23.63%
----------------------------------

1.   From 12/31/89.
The Fund's average annual total returns include the applicable sales charge:
for Class A, the current maximum initial sales charge of 5.75%; for Class B,
the contingent deferred sales charges of 5% (1-year), 2% (5-year) and 1%
(life of class) (because Class B shares convert to Class A shares 72 months
after purchase, the "life of class" return for Class B uses Class A
performance for the period after conversion); for Class C, the 1% contingent
deferred sales charge for the 1-year period. There is no sales charge for
Class Y shares. Because Class N shares were not offered for sale during the
Fund's fiscal year ended August 31, 2000, no performance information is
included in the table above for Class N shares.
The returns measure the performance of a hypothetical account and assume that
all dividends and capital gains distributions have been reinvested in
additional shares. The Fund's performance is compared to the S&P 500 Index,
an unmanaged index of equity securities.  The index performance reflects the
reinvestment of income but does not consider the effects of capital gains or
transaction costs.  The Fund's investments vary from the securities in the
index.

Fees and Expenses of the Fund

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

Shareholder Fees (charges paid directly from your investment):

 ------------------------------------
                                     Class A Class B  Class C Class N  Class Y
                                     Shares   Shares  Shares   Shares  Shares
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Maximum Sales Charge (Load) on
 Purchases (as % of offering price)   5.75%    None    None     None    None
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Maximum Deferred Sales Charge
 (Load)
 (as % of the lower of the original   None1    5%2      1%3     1%4     None
 offering
 price or redemption proceeds)
 ------------------------------------

  1. A contingent deferred sales charge may apply to redemptions of
  investments of $1 million or more ($500,000 for retirement plan accounts)
  of Class A shares. See "How to Buy Shares" for details.
  2. Applies to redemptions in first year after purchase. The contingent
  deferred sales charge declines to 1% in the sixth year and is eliminated
  after that.
  3. Applies to shares redeemed within twelve (12) months of purchase.
  4. Applies to shares redeemed within eighteen (18) months of retirement
  plan's first purchase of Class N shares.

Annual Fund Operating Expenses (deducted from Fund assets):
(% of average daily net assets)

 -------------------------------
                                 Class A  Class B   Class C  Class N  Class Y
                                 Shares    Shares   Shares    Shares   Shares
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Management Fees                  0.61%    0.61%     0.61%    0.61%    0.61%
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Distribution and/or Service      0.23%    1.00%     1.00%    0.50%     N/A
 (12b-1) Fees
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Other Expenses                   0.17%    0.17%     0.17%    0.12%    0.12%
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Total Annual Operating           1.01%    1.78%     1.78%    1.23%    0.73%
 Expenses
 -------------------------------

 Expenses may vary in future years.  "Other expenses" include transfer
 agent fees, custodial expenses, and accounting and legal expenses the Fund
 pays. Class N shares were not offered for sale during the Fund's last
 fiscal year. The expenses above for Class N shares are based on the
 anticipated expenses for that class of shares for the current fiscal year.

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

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

 ----------------------------------
 If shares are redeemed:           1 Year     3 Years    5 Years   10 Years(1)
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Class A Shares                    $672       $878       $1,101    $1,740
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Class B Shares                    $681       $860       $1,164    $1,705
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Class C Shares                    $281       $560       $964      $2,095
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Class N Shares                    $225       $390       $676      $1,489
 ----------------------------------           -----------          ------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Class Y Shares                    $75        $233       $406      $906
 ----------------------------------

 ----------------------------------
 If shares are not redeemed:       1 Year     3 Years    5 Years   10 Years(1)
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Class A Shares                    $672       $878       $1,101    $1,740
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Class B Shares                    $181       $560       $964      $1,705
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Class C Shares                    $181       $560       $964      $2,095
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Class N Shares                    $125       $390       $676      $1,489
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Class Y Shares                    $75        $233       $406      $906
 ----------------------------------

 In the first example, expenses include the initial sales charge for Class A
 and the applicable Class B, Class C or Class N contingent deferred sales
 charges.  In the second example, the Class A expenses include the sales
 charge, but Class B, Class C and Class N expenses do not include the
 contingent deferred sales charges.
 1. Class B expenses for years 7 through 10 are based on Class A expenses,
 since Class B shares automatically convert to Class A after 6 years.


About the Fund's Investments
THE FUND'S PRINCIPAL INVESTMENT POLICIES. The allocation of the Fund's
portfolio among different investments will vary over time based on the
Manager's evaluation of economic and market trends. The Fund's portfolio
might not always include all of the different types of investments described
below. The Statement of Additional Information contains more detailed
information about the Fund's investment policies and risks.

     The Manager  tries to reduce  risks by carefully  researching  securities
before they are purchased.  The Fund attempts to reduce its exposure to market
risks by diversifying its  investments,  that is, by not holding a substantial
amount  of  stock  of any  one  company  and  by not  investing  too  great  a
percentage  of the Fund's assets in any one company.  Also,  the Fund does not
concentrate 25% or more of its assets in investments in any one industry.

     However,  changes in the overall market prices of securities can occur at
any time.  The share  prices of the Fund will change daily based on changes in
market prices of  securities  and market  conditions  and in response to other
economic events.

Stock Investments. The Fund currently focuses on larger, more established
     U.S. growth companies that exhibit strong internal revenue growth.
     Growth companies, for example, may be developing new products or
     services, or they may be expanding into new markets for their products.
     Newer growth companies tend to retain a large part of their earnings for
     research, development or investment in capital assets. Therefore, they
     do not tend to emphasize paying dividends and may not pay any dividends
     for some time. The Manager looks for stocks of growth companies for the
     Fund's portfolio that the Manager believes will increase in value over
     time.

      The Fund does not limit  its  investments  to  issuers  in a  particular
market  capitalization  range or  ranges,  although  it  currently  focuses on
large-cap and mid-cap  issuers.  "Market  capitalization"  refers to the total
market  value of an  issuer's  common  stock.  The stock  prices of  large-cap
issuers  tend to be less  volatile  than the prices of mid-cap  and  small-cap
companies  in the short  term,  but these  companies  may not  afford the same
growth opportunities as mid-cap and small-cap companies.

Industry Focus.  Stocks of issuers in a particular  industry might be affected
     by  changes  in  economic   conditions   or  by  changes  in   government
     regulations,  availability  of  basic  resources  or  supplies,  or other
     events that affect that  industry  more than  others.  To the extent that
     the Fund has a greater emphasis on investments in a particular  industry,
     its share  values may  fluctuate  in  response to events  affecting  that
     industry.

Portfolio Turnover. A change in the securities held by the Fund is known as
     "portfolio turnover". The Fund may engage in short-term trading to try
     to achieve its objective. It might have a turnover rate in excess of
     100% annually. Portfolio turnover affects brokerage costs the Fund pays.
     If the Fund realizes capital gains when it sells its portfolio
     investments, it must generally pay those gains out to the shareholders,
     increasing their taxable distributions. The Financial Highlights table
     at the end of this Prospectus shows the Fund's portfolio turnover rate
     during past fiscal years.

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


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

Other  Equity  Securities.  While the Fund  emphasizes  investments  in common
     stocks, it can also buy preferred stocks and securities  convertible into
     common stock.  The Manager  considers some  convertible  securities to be
     "equity  equivalents"  because of the conversion feature and in that case
     their rating has less impact on the  Manager's  investment  decision than
     in the case of other debt securities.

Risks of Foreign Investing.   The  Fund  can  buy  foreign   equity  and  debt
     securities.   The  Fund  currently  limits  its  investments  in  foreign
     securities to not more than 10% of its total assets,  although it has the
     ability to invest up to 25% of its total assets.

     While foreign  securities offer special  investment  opportunities,  they
     also have  special  risks.  The  change  in value of a  foreign  currency
     against the U.S.  dollar will result in a change in the U.S. dollar value
     of securities  denominated in that foreign currency.  Foreign issuers are
     not subject to the same  accounting and disclosure  requirements to which
     U.S.  companies  are  subject.  The value of foreign  investments  may be
     affected   by   exchange    control    regulations,    expropriation   or
     nationalization  of  a  company's  assets,   foreign  taxes,   delays  in
     settlement of transactions,  changes in governmental economic or monetary
     policy in the U.S. or abroad, or other political and economic factors.

Illiquid and Restricted  Securities.  Investments may be illiquid because they
     do not have an active trading  market,  making it difficult to value them
     or  dispose  of  them  promptly  at  an  acceptable   price.   Restricted
     securities  may have terms that limit their resale to other  investors or
     may require  registration  under federal  securities laws before they can
     be sold  publicly.  The Fund  will not  invest  more  than 10% of its net
     assets in illiquid or restricted securities.  The Board can increase that
     limit to 15%. Certain restricted  securities that are eligible for resale
     to qualified  institutional  purchasers may not be subject to that limit.
     The Manager monitors holdings of illiquid  securities on an ongoing basis
     to determine whether to sell any holdings to maintain adequate liquidity.

Derivative Investments.  The Fund can invest in a number of different kinds of
     "derivative"  investments.  In general terms, a derivative  investment is
     an  investment  contract  whose value depends on (or is derived from) the
     value of an underlying  asset,  interest  rate or index.  In the broadest
     sense,  options,  futures  contracts,  and other hedging  instruments the
     Fund might use may be considered  "derivative"  investments.  In addition
     to using  derivatives  for hedging,  the Fund might use other  derivative
     investments  because they offer the potential for  increased  value.  The
     Fund  currently does not use  derivatives to a significant  degree and is
     not required to use them in seeking its objective.

     Derivatives  have risks. If the issuer of the derivative  investment does
     not pay the amount due,  the Fund can lose money on the  investment.  The
     underlying  security or investment  on which a derivative  is based,  and
     the derivative  itself,  may not perform the way the Manager  expected it
     to. As a result of these risks the Fund could  realize less  principal or
     income  from  the  investment   than  expected  or  its  hedge  might  be
     unsuccessful.  As a result,  the Fund's share prices could fall.  Certain
     derivative investments held by the Fund might be illiquid.

  o  Hedging.  The  Fund  can buy and  sell  futures  contracts,  put and call
     options,  and forward  contracts.  These are all  referred to as "hedging
     instruments."  The Fund does not  currently  use hedging  extensively  or
     for  speculative   purposes.   It  has  limits  on  its  use  of  hedging
     instruments and is not required to use them in seeking its objective.

     Some of these strategies  would hedge the Fund's portfolio  against price
     fluctuations.  Other hedging strategies,  such as buying futures and call
     options,  would tend to increase  the Fund's  exposure to the  securities
     market.

     There are also special risks in particular hedging strategies.  Options
     trading involves the payment of premiums and can increase portfolio
     turnover.  If the Manager used a hedging instrument at the wrong time or
     judged market conditions incorrectly, the strategy could reduce the
     Fund's return.

Temporary  Defensive  Investments.  In times of  unstable  adverse  market  or
     economic  conditions,  the Fund can  invest  up to 100% of its  assets in
     temporary   defensive   investments.   Generally   they   would  be  cash
     equivalents  (such  as  commercial  paper),   money  market  instruments,
     short-term debt securities,  U.S.  government  securities,  or repurchase
     agreements and may include other investment  grade debt  securities.  The
     Fund could also hold these types of securities  pending the investment of
     proceeds from the sale of Fund shares or portfolio  securities or to meet
     anticipated  redemptions  of Fund shares.  To the extent the Fund invests
     defensively  in these  securities,  it might not achieve  its  investment
     objective of capital appreciation.

How the Fund Is Managed
THE MANAGER. The Manager chooses the Fund's investments and handles its
day-to-day business.  The Manager carries out its duties, subject to the
policies established by the Fund's Board of Trustees, under an investment
advisory agreement that states the Manager's responsibilities. The agreement
sets the fees the Fund pays to the Manager and describes the expenses that
the Fund is responsible to pay to conduct its business.

     The Manager has been an investment adviser since January 1960.  The
Manager (including subsidiaries) managed more than $125 billion in assets as
of November 30, 2000, including other Oppenheimer funds with more than 5
million shareholder accounts.  The Manager is located at Two World Trade
Center, 34th Floor, New York, New York 10048-0203.

Portfolio Manager. The Fund's portfolio manager is Bruce Bartlett, who is the
     person primarily responsible for the day-to-day management of the Fund's
     portfolio. Mr. Bartlett is a Vice President of the Fund and of the
     Manager and is a portfolio manager of other Oppenheimer funds. Mr.
     Bartlett became the Fund's portfolio manager on December 22, 1998. Prior
     to joining the Manager in April, 1995, Mr. Bartlett was a Vice President
     and Senior Portfolio Manager with First of America Investment
     Corporation.

Advisory Fees.  Under the investment advisory agreement, the Fund pays the
     Manager an advisory fee at an annual rate that declines as the Fund's
     assets grow: 0.75% of the first $200 million of average annual net
     assets of the Fund, 0.72% of the next $200 million, 0.69% of the next
     $200 million; 0.66% of the next $200 million; 0.60% of the next $700
     million; 0.58% of the next $1.0 billion; 0.56% of the next $2.0 billion,
     and 0.54% of the average annual net assets in excess of $4.5 billion.
     The Fund's management fee for its fiscal year ended August 31, 2000 was
     0.61% of average annual net assets for each class of shares.


ABOUT YOUR ACCOUNT

How to Buy Shares
HOW DO YOU BUY SHARES? You can buy shares several ways, as described below.
The Fund's Distributor, OppenheimerFunds Distributor, Inc., may appoint
servicing agents to accept purchase (and redemption) orders. The Distributor,
in its sole discretion, may reject any purchase order for the Fund's shares.

Buying Shares Through Your Dealer. You can buy shares through any dealer,
     broker or financial institution that has a sales agreement with the
     Distributor. Your dealer will place your order with the Distributor on
     your behalf.
Buying Shares Through the Distributor. Complete an OppenheimerFunds New
     Account Application and return it with a check payable to
     "OppenheimerFunds Distributor, Inc." Mail it to P.O. Box 5270, Denver,
     Colorado 80217.  If you don't list a dealer on the application, the
     Distributor will act as your agent in buying the shares.  However, we
     recommend that you discuss your investment with a financial advisor
     before you make a purchase to be sure that the Fund is appropriate for
     you.
  o  Paying by Federal Funds Wire.  Shares purchased through the Distributor
     may be paid for by Federal Funds wire.  The minimum investment is
     $2,500.  Before sending a wire, call the Distributor's Wire Department
     at 1.800.525.7048 to notify the Distributor of the wire, and to receive
     further instructions.
  o  Buying Shares Through OppenheimerFunds AccountLink.  With AccountLink,
     you pay shares by electronic funds transfer from your bank account.
     Shares are purchased for your account by a transfer of money from your
     bank through the Automated Clearing House (ACH) system. You can provide
     those instructions automatically, under an Asset Builder Plan, described
     below, or by telephone instructions using OppenheimerFunds PhoneLink,
     also described below. Please refer to "AccountLink," below for more
     details.
  o  Buying Shares Through Asset Builder Plans.  You may purchase shares of
     the Fund (and up to four other Oppenheimer funds) automatically each
     month from your account at a bank or other financial institution under
     an Asset Builder Plan with AccountLink. Details are in the Asset Builder
     Application and the Statement of Additional Information.

HOW MUCH MUST YOU INVEST? You can buy Fund shares with a minimum initial
investment of $1,000. You can make additional investments at any time with as
little as $25. There are reduced minimum investments under special investment
plans.
  o  With Asset Builder Plans, 403(b) plans, Automatic Exchange Plans and
     military allotment plans, you can make initial and subsequent
     investments for as little as $25. You can make additional purchases of
     at least $25 through AccountLink.
  o  Under retirement plans, such as IRAs, pension and profit-sharing plans
     and 401(k) plans, you can start your account with as little as $250. If
     your IRA is started under an Asset Builder Plan, the $25 minimum
     applies. Additional purchases may be as little as $25.
  o  The minimum investment requirement does not apply to reinvesting
     dividends from the Fund or other Oppenheimer funds (a list of them
     appears in the Statement of Additional Information, or you can ask your
     dealer or call the Transfer Agent), or reinvesting distributions from
     unit investment trusts that have made arrangements with the Distributor.

AT WHAT PRICE ARE SHARES SOLD? Shares are sold at their offering price, which
is the net asset value per share plus any initial sales charge that applies.
The offering price that applies to a purchase order is based on the next
calculation of the net asset value per share that is made after the
Distributor receives the purchase order at its offices in Colorado, or after
any agent appointed by the Distributor receives the order and sends it to the
Distributor.

Net Asset Value The Fund calculates the net asset value of each class of
     shares as of the close of The New York Stock Exchange, on each day the
     Exchange is open for trading (referred to in this Prospectus as a
     "regular business day"). The Exchange normally closes at 4:00 P.M., New
     York time, but may close earlier on some days. All references to time in
     this Prospectus mean "New York time."

     The net asset value per share is determined by dividing the value of the
     Fund's net assets attributable to a class by the number of shares of
     that class that are outstanding.  To determine net asset value, the
     Fund's Board of Trustees has established procedures to value the Fund's
     securities, in general based on market value.  The Board has adopted
     special procedures for valuing illiquid and restricted securities and
     obligations for which market values cannot be readily obtained. Because
     foreign securities trade in markets and exchanges that operate on
     holidays and weekends, the value of the Fund's foreign investments might
     change significantly on days when investors cannot buy or redeem Fund
     shares.
The Offering Price. To receive the offering price for a particular day, in
     most cases the Distributor or its designated agent must receive your
     order by the time of day The New York Stock Exchange closes that day. If
     your order is received on a day when the Exchange is closed or after it
     has closed, the order will receive the next offering price that is
     determined after your order is received.
Buying Through a Dealer. If you buy shares through a dealer, your dealer must
     receive the order by the close of The New York Stock Exchange and
     transmit it to the Distributor so that it is received before the
     Distributor's close of business on a regular business day (normally 5:00
     P.M.) to receive that day's offering price. Otherwise, the order will
     receive the next offering price that is determined.








------------------------------------------------------------------------------
WHAT CLASSES OF SHARES DOES THE FUND OFFER?  The Fund offers investors five
(5) different classes of shares.  The different classes of shares represent
investments in the same portfolio of securities, but the classes are subject
to different expenses and will likely have different share prices.  When you
buy shares, be sure to specify the class of shares.  If you do not choose a
class, your investment will be made in Class A shares.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A Shares.  If you buy Class A shares, you pay an initial sales charge
     (on investments up to $1 million for regular accounts or $500,000 for
     certain retirement plans).  The amount of that sales charge will vary
     depending on the amount you invest. The sales charge rates are listed in
     "How Can I Buy Class A Shares?" below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B Shares.  If you buy Class B shares, you pay no sales charge at the
     time of purchase, but you will pay an annual asset-based sales charge,
     and if you sell your shares within six years of buying them, you will
     normally pay a contingent deferred sales charge. That contingent
     deferred sales charge varies depending on how long you own your shares,
     as described in "How Can I Buy Class B Shares?" below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C Shares.  If you buy Class C shares, you pay no sales charge at the
     time of purchase, but you will pay an annual asset-based sales charge,
     and if you sell your shares within 12 months of buying them, you will
     normally pay a contingent deferred sales charge of 1%, as described in
     "How Can I Buy Class C Shares?" below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class N Shares.  Class N shares are offered only through retirement plans
     (including IRAs and 403(b) plans) that purchase $500,000 or more of
     Class N shares of one or more Oppenheimer funds or through retirement
     plans (not including IRAs and 403(b) plans) that have assets of $500,000
     or more or 100 or more eligible plan participants.  Non-retirement plan
     investors cannot buy Class N shares directly.  If you buy Class N
     shares, you pay no sales charge at the time of purchase, but you will
     pay an annual asset-based sales charge.  If you sell your shares within
     eighteen (18) months of the retirement plan's first purchase of Class N
     shares, you may pay a contingent deferred sales charge of 1.0%, as
     described in "How Can You Buy Class N Shares?" below.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class Y Shares.  Class Y shares are offered only to certain institutional
     investors that have special agreements with the Distributor.

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

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

How Long Do You Expect to Hold Your Investment?  While future financial needs
     cannot be predicted with certainty, knowing how long you expect to hold
     your investment will assist you in selecting the appropriate class of
     shares.  Because of the effect of class-based expenses, your choice will
     also depend on how much you plan to invest.  For example, the reduced
     sales charges available for larger purchases of Class A shares may, over
     time, offset the effect of paying an initial sales charge on your
     investment, compared to the effect over time of higher class-based
     expenses on shares of Class B, Class C or Class N.

  o  Investing for the Shorter Term. While the Fund is meant to be a
     long-term investment, if you have a relatively short-term investment
     horizon (that is, you plan to hold your shares for not more than six
     years), you should probably consider purchasing Class A or Class C
     shares rather than Class B shares. That is because of the effect of the
     Class B contingent deferred sales charge if you redeem within six years,
     as well as the effect of the Class B asset-based sales charge on the
     investment return for that class in the short-term.  Class C shares
     might be the appropriate choice (especially for investments of less than
     $100,000), because there is no initial sales charge on Class C shares,
     and the contingent deferred sales charge does not apply to amounts you
     sell after holding them one year.

     However, if you plan to invest more than $100,000 for the shorter term,
     then as your investment horizon increases toward six years, Class C
     shares might not be as advantageous as Class A shares.  That is because
     the annual asset-based sales charge on Class C shares will have a
     greater impact on your account over the longer term than the reduced
     front-end sales charge available for larger purchases of Class A shares.

     And for investors who invest $1 million or more, in most cases Class A
     shares will be the most advantageous choice, no matter how long you
     intend to hold your shares.  For that reason, the Distributor normally
     will not accept purchase orders of $500,000 or more of Class B shares or
     $1 million or more of Class C shares from a single investor.

  o  Investing for the Longer Term. If you are investing less than $100,000
     for the longer-term, for example for retirement, and do not expect to
     need access to your money for seven years or more, Class B shares may be
     appropriate.

Are There Differences in Account Features That Matter to You?  Some account
     features may not be available to Class B, Class C or Class N
     shareholders. Other features may not be advisable (because of the effect
     of the contingent deferred sales charge) for Class B, Class C or Class N
     shareholders. Therefore, you should carefully review how you plan to use
     your investment account before deciding which class of shares to buy.

     Additionally, the dividends payable to Class B, Class C and Class N
     shareholders will be reduced by the additional expenses borne by those
     classes that are not borne by Class A shares, such as the Class B, Class
     C and Class N asset-based sales charge described below and in the
     Statement of Additional Information.  Share certificates are not
     available for Class B, Class C and Class N shares, and if you are
     considering using your shares as collateral for a loan, that may be a
     factor to consider.

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

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

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

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

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                   Front-End    Front-End Sales
                                     Sales        Charge As a    Commission As
                                  Charge As a    Percentage of   Percentage of
Amount of Purchase               Percentage of        Net          Offering
                                 Offering Price Amount Invested      Price
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Less than $25,000                    5.75%           6.10%           4.75%
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$25,000 or more but less than        5.50%           5.82%           4.75%
$50,000
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$50,000 or more but less than        4.75%           4.99%           4.00%
$100,000
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$100,000 or more but less than       3.75%           3.90%           3.00%
$250,000
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$250,000 or more but less than       2.50%           2.56%           2.00%
$500,000
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$500,000 or more but less than       2.00%           2.04%           1.60%
$1 million
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Class A Contingent  Deferred  Sales  Charge.  There is no initial sales charge
     on  purchases  of  Class A shares  of any one or more of the  Oppenheimer
     funds  aggregating  $1  million  or  more  or for  certain  purchases  by
     particular  types of  retirement  plans  described in the Appendix to the
     Statement of  Additional  Information.  The  Distributor  pays dealers of
     record  commissions in an amount equal to 1.0% of purchases of $1 million
     or more other than by those  retirement  accounts.  For those  retirement
     plan  accounts,  the  commission is 1.0% of the first $2.5 million,  plus
     0.50% of the next $2.5 million,  plus 0.25% of purchases over $5 million,
     based on cumulative  purchases during the prior 12 months ending with the
     current  purchase.  In either case, the  commission  will be paid only on
     purchases  that were not previously  subject to a front-end  sales charge
     and dealer commission.1 That  commission will not be paid on purchases of
     shares  in  amounts  of $1  million  or  more  (including  any  right  of
     accumulation)  by a retirement  plan that pays for the purchase  with the
     redemption  of Class C shares of one or more  Oppenheimer  funds  held by
     the plan for more than one year.
     If you redeem any of those shares within an 18 month "holding period"
     measured from the end of the calendar month of their purchase, a
     contingent deferred sales charge (called the "Class A contingent
     deferred sales charge") may be deducted from the redemption proceeds.
     That sales charge will be equal to 1.0% of the lesser of (1) the
     aggregate net asset value of the redeemed shares at the time of
     redemption (excluding shares purchased by reinvestment of dividends or
     capital gain distributions) or (2) the original net asset value of the
     redeemed shares.  However, the Class A contingent deferred sales charge
     will not exceed the aggregate amount of the commissions the Distributor
     paid to your dealer on all purchases of Class A shares of all
     Oppenheimer funds you made that were subject to the Class A contingent
     deferred sales charge.

Can You Reduce Class A Sales Charges? You may be eligible to buy Class A
shares at reduced sales charge rates under the Fund's "Right of Accumulation"
or a Letter of Intent, as described in "Reduced Sales Charges" in the
Statement of Additional Information:

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

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

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

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

Automatic Conversion of Class B Shares. Class B shares automatically convert
     to Class A shares 72 months after you purchase them. This conversion
     feature relieves Class B shareholders of the asset-based sales charge
     that applies to Class B shares under the Class B Distribution and
     Service Plan, described below. The conversion is based on the relative
     net asset value of the two classes, and no sales load or other charge is
     imposed. When any Class B shares you hold convert, a prorated portion of
     your Class B shares that were acquired by reinvesting dividends and
     distributions on the converted shares will also convert to Class A
     shares.  For further information on the conversion feature and its tax
     implications, see "Class B Conversion" in the Statement of Additional
     Information.
HOW CAN YOU BUY CLASS C SHARES? Class C shares are sold at net asset value
per share without an initial sales charge. However, if Class C shares are
redeemed within a holding period of 12 months from the end of the calendar
month of their purchase, a contingent deferred sales charge of 1.0% will be
deducted from the redemption proceeds. The Class C contingent deferred sales
charge is paid to compensate the Distributor for its expenses of providing
distribution-related services to the Fund in connection with the sale of
Class C shares.

HOW CAN YOU BUY  CLASS N  SHARES?  Class N shares  are  offered  only  through
retirement plans  (including IRAs and 403(b) plans) that purchase  $500,000 or
more of Class N shares of one or more Oppenheimer funds or through  retirement
plans (not  including  IRAs and 403(b)  plans) that have assets of $500,000 or
more or 100 or  more  eligible  participants.  Non-retirement  plan  investors
cannot buy Class N shares directly.

A contingent deferred sales charge of 1.0% will be imposed if:

o     The retirement  plan (not including IRAs and 403(b) plans) is terminated
            or Class N shares of all  Oppenheimer  funds are  terminated as an
            investment  option  of the plan and  Class N shares  are  redeemed
            within  18 months  after  the  plan's  first  purchase  of Class N
            shares of any Oppenheimer fund, or

o     With respect to an individual  retirement  plan or 403(b) plan,  Class N
            shares are redeemed  within 18 months of the plan's first purchase
            of Class N shares of any Oppenheimer fund.

      Retirement  plans that offer  Class N shares may impose  charges on plan
participant  accounts.  The  procedures  for buying,  selling,  exchanging and
transferring  the Fund's  other  classes of shares  (other than the time those
orders must be received by the  Distributor or Transfer Agent in Colorado) and
the special account  features  applicable to purchasers of those other classes
of  shares  described  elsewhere  in this  prospectus  do not apply to Class N
shares offered through a group retirement  plan.  Instructions for purchasing,
redeeming,  exchanging or transferring  Class N shares offered through a group
retirement  plan must be submitted by the plan, not by plan  participants  for
whose benefit the shares are held.

WHO CAN BUY CLASS Y SHARES?  Class Y shares are sold at net asset value per
share without sales charge directly to certain institutional investors that
have special agreements with the Distributor for this purpose.  They may
include insurance companies, registered investment companies and employee
benefit plans.  For example, Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company, an
affiliate of the Manager, may purchase Class Y shares of the Fund and other
Oppenheimer funds (as well as Class Y shares of funds advised by MassMutual)
for asset allocation programs, investment companies or separate investment
accounts it sponsors and offers to its customers.  Individual investors
cannot buy Class Y shares directly.

     An institutional investor that buys Class Y shares for its customers'
accounts may impose charges on those accounts. The procedures for buying,
selling, exchanging and transferring the Fund's other classes of shares
(other than the time those orders must be received by the Distributor or
Transfer Agent) and the special account features available to purchasers of
those other classes of shares described elsewhere in this Prospectus do not
apply to Class Y shares.  Instructions for purchasing, redeeming, exchanging
or transferring Class Y shares must be submitted by the institutional
investor, not by its customers for whose benefit the shares are held.

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

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

     The asset-based sales charge and service fees increase Class B and Class
     C expenses by up to 1.00% and increase Class N expenses by up to 0.50%
     of the net assets per year of the respective class. Because these fees
     are paid out of the Fund's assets on an on-going basis, over time these
     fees will increase the cost of your investment and may cost you more
     than other types of sales charges.

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

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

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

     The  Distributor  currently  pays a  sales  concession  of  0.75%  of the
     purchase  price of Class N shares to dealers  from its own  resources  at
     the time of sale.  Including  the advance of the service  fee,  the total
     amount  paid by the  Distributor  to the  dealer  at the  time of sale of
     Class  N  shares  is  therefore   1.00%  of  the  purchase   price.   The
     Distributor retains the asset-based sales charge on Class N shares.

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

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

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

CAN YOU SUBMIT TRANSACTION REQUESTS BY FAX? You may send requests for certain
types of account transactions to the Transfer Agent by fax (telecopier).
Please call 1.800.525.7048 for information about which transactions may be
handled this way. Transaction requests submitted by fax are subject to the
same rules and restrictions as written and telephone requests described in
this Prospectus.

OPPENHEIMERFUNDS INTERNET WEB SITE. You can obtain information about the
Fund, as well as your account balance, on the OppenheimerFunds Internet web
site, at http://www.oppenheimerfunds.com. Additionally, shareholders listed
in the account registration (and the dealer of record) may request certain
account transactions through a special section of that web site.  To perform
account transactions, you must first obtain a personal identification number
(PIN) by calling the Transfer Agent at 1.800.533.3310.  If you do not want to
have Internet account transaction capability for your account, please call
the Transfer Agent at 1.800.525.7048.  At times, the web site may be
inaccessible or its transaction features may be unavailable.

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

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

RETIREMENT PLANS. You may buy shares of the Fund for your retirement plan
account. If you participate in a plan sponsored by your employer, the plan
trustee or administrator must buy the shares for your plan account. The
Distributor also offers a number of different retirement plans that
individuals and employers can use:

Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs). These include regular IRAs, Roth IRAs,
SIMPLE IRAs, rollover IRAs and Education IRAs.

SEP-IRAs. These are Simplified Employee Pensions Plan IRAs for small business
owners or self-employed individuals.

403(b)(7) Custodial Plans. These are tax deferred plans for employees of
eligible tax-exempt organizations, such as schools, hospitals and charitable
organizations.

401(k) Plans. These are special retirement plans for businesses.

Pension and Profit-Sharing Plans. These plans are designed for businesses and
self-employed individuals.

Please call the Distributor for OppenheimerFunds retirement plan documents,
which include applications and important plan information.

How to Sell Shares

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

Certain Requests Require a Signature Guarantee.  To protect you and the Fund
     from fraud, the following redemption requests must be in writing and
     must include a signature guarantee (although there may be other
     situations that also require a signature guarantee):

  o  You wish to redeem more than $100,000 or more and receive a check
  o  The redemption check is not payable to all shareholders listed on the
account statement
  o  The redemption check is not sent to the address of record on your
account statement
  o  Shares are being transferred to a Fund account with a different owner or
name
  o  Shares are being redeemed by someone (such as an Executor) other than
the owners

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

o     a U.S. bank, trust company, credit union or savings association,
o     a foreign bank that has a U.S. correspondent bank,
o     a U.S. registered dealer or broker in securities, municipal securities
     or government securities, or
o     a U.S. national securities exchange, a registered securities
     association or a clearing agency.

      If you are signing on behalf of a corporation, partnership or other
business or as a fiduciary, you must also include your title in the signature.

Retirement Plan Accounts.  There are special procedures to sell shares in an
     OppenheimerFunds retirement plan account. Call the Transfer Agent for a
     distribution request form. Special income tax withholding requirements
     apply to distributions from retirement plans. You must submit a
     withholding form with your redemption request to avoid delay in getting
     your money and if you do not want tax withheld. If your employer holds
     your retirement plan account for you in the name of the plan, you must
     ask the plan trustee or administrator to request the sale of the Fund
     shares in your plan account.

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

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

HOW DO YOU SELL SHARES BY TELEPHONE? You and your dealer representative of
record may also sell your shares by telephone. To receive the redemption
price calculated on a particular regular business day, your call must be
received by the Transfer Agent by the close of The New York Stock Exchange
that day, which is normally 4:00 P.M., but may be earlier on some days.  You
may not redeem shares held in an OppenheimerFunds retirement plan account or
under a share certificate by telephone.

o     To redeem shares through a service representative, call 1.800.852.8457
o     To redeem shares automatically on PhoneLink, call 1.800.533.3310

      Whichever method you use, you may have a check sent to the address on
the account statement, or, if you have linked your Fund account to your bank
account on AccountLink, you may have the proceeds sent to that bank account.

Are There Limits On Amounts Redeemed By Telephone?

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

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

HOW  CONTINGENT  DEFERRED SALES CHARGES  AFFECT  REDEMPTIONS.  If you purchase
shares  subject to a Class A, Class B, Class C or Class N contingent  deferred
sales  charge and redeem any Class A, Class B or Class C shares or all Class N
shares  during the  applicable  holding  period  for the class of shares,  the
contingent  deferred  sales  charge  will  be  deducted  from  the  redemption
proceeds  (unless you are  eligible for a waiver of that sales charge based on
the   categories   listed  in  Appendix  C  to  the  Statement  of  Additional
Information  and you advise the  Transfer  Agent of your  eligibility  for the
waiver  when you place  your  redemption  request).  With  respect  to Class N
shares, a 1.0% contingent deferred sales charge will be imposed if:

o     The retirement  plan (not including IRAs and 403(b) plans) is terminated
         or Class N shares  of all  Oppenheimer  funds  are  terminated  as an
         investment  option of the plan and Class N shares are redeemed within
         18 months  after the plan's  first  purchase of Class N shares of any
         Oppenheimer fund, or,

o     With respect to an individual retirement plan or 403(b) plan, Class N
         shares are redeemed within 18 months of the plan's first purchase of
         Class N shares of any Oppenheimer fund.

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

     To determine whether the contingent deferred sales charge applies to a
     redemption, the Fund redeems shares in the following order:
  1. shares acquired by reinvestment of dividends and capital gains
          distributions,
2.    shares held for over 12 months, and
3.    shares held the longest during the 12-month period.

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

How to Exchange Shares

Shares of the Fund may be exchanged for shares of certain Oppenheimer funds
at net asset value per share at the time of exchange, without sales charge.
Shares of the Fund can be purchased by exchange of shares of other
Oppenheimer funds on the same basis.  To exchange shares, you must meet
several conditions:

  o  Shares of the fund selected for exchange must be available for sale in
     your state of residence.
  o  The prospectus of both funds must offer the exchange privilege.
  o  You must hold the shares you buy when you establish your account for at
     least 7 days before you can exchange them. After the account is open 7
     days, you can exchange shares every regular business day.
  o  You must meet the minimum purchase requirements for the fund whose
     shares you purchase by exchange.
  o  Before exchanging into a fund, you must obtain and read its prospectus.

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

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

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

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

Shareholder Account Rules and Policies

More information about the Fund's policies and procedures for buying, selling
and exchanging shares is contained in the Statement of Additional Information.

The Offering of Shares may be suspended during any period in which the
     determination of net asset value is suspended, and the offering may be
     suspended by the Board of Trustees at any time the Board believes it is
     in the Fund's best interest to do so.

Telephone transaction privileges for purchases, redemptions or exchanges may
     be modified, suspended or terminated by the Fund at any time.  If an
     account has more than one owner, the Fund and the Transfer Agent may
     rely on the instructions of any one owner. Telephone privileges apply to
     each owner of the account and the dealer representative of record for
     the account unless the Transfer Agent receives cancellation instructions
     from an owner of the account.

The Transfer Agent will Record any Telephone Calls to verify data concerning
     transactions and has adopted other procedures to confirm that telephone
     instructions are genuine, by requiring callers to provide tax
     identification numbers and other account data or by using PINs, and by
     confirming such transactions in writing. The Transfer Agent and the Fund
     will not be liable for losses or expenses arising out of telephone
     instructions reasonably believed to be genuine.

Redemption or Transfer Requests will not be Honored until the Transfer Agent
Receives All Required Documents in Proper Form.
     From time to time, the Transfer Agent in its discretion may waive
     certain of the requirements for redemptions stated in this Prospectus.

Dealers that can Perform Account Transactions for their Clients by
     Participating in
NETWORKING  through the National Securities Clearing Corporation are
     responsible for obtaining their clients' permission to perform those
     transactions, and are responsible to their clients who are shareholders
     of the Fund if the dealer performs any transaction erroneously or
     improperly.

The Redemption Price for Shares Will Vary from day to day because the value
     of the securities in the Fund's portfolio fluctuates. The redemption
     price, which is the net asset value per share, will normally differ for
     each class of shares.  The redemption value of your shares may be more
     or less than their original cost.

Payment for Redeemed Shares ordinarily is made in cash. It is forwarded by
     check or through AccountLink (as elected by the shareholder) within
     seven days after the Transfer Agent receives redemption instructions in
     proper form. However, under unusual circumstances determined by the
     Securities and Exchange Commission, payment may be delayed or
     suspended.  For accounts registered in the name of a broker-dealer,
     payment will normally be forwarded within three business days after
     redemption.

The Transfer Agent May Delay Forwarding a Check or processing a payment via
     AccountLink for recently purchased shares, but only until the purchase
     payment has cleared.  That delay may be as much as 10 days from the date
     the shares were purchased.  That delay may be avoided if you purchase
     shares by Federal Funds wire or certified check, or arrange with your
     bank to provide telephone or written assurance to the Transfer Agent
     that your purchase payment has cleared.

Involuntary Redemptions of Small Accounts may be made by the Fund if the
     account value has fallen below $500 for reasons other than the fact that
     the market value of shares has dropped. In some cases involuntary
     redemptions may be made to repay the Distributor for losses from the
     cancellation of share purchase orders.

Shares May be "Redeemed in Kind" under unusual circumstances (such as a lack
     of liquidity in the Fund's portfolio to meet redemptions). This means
     that the redemption proceeds will be paid with liquid securities from
     the Fund's portfolio.

"Backup Withholding" of Federal income tax may be applied against taxable
     dividends, distributions and redemption proceeds (including exchanges)
     if you fail to furnish the Fund your correct, certified Social Security
     or Employer Identification Number when you sign your application, or if
     you under-report your income to the Internal Revenue Service.

To avoid sending duplicate copies of materials to households, the Fund will
     mail only one copy of each prospectus, annual and semi-annual report to
     shareholders having the same last name and address on the Fund's
     records.  The consolidation of these mailings, called householding,
     benefits the Fund through reduced mailing expense.

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

Dividends, Capital Gains and Taxes
DIVIDENDS.  The Fund intends to declare dividends separately for each class
of shares from net investment income annually and to pay dividends to
shareholders in December on a date selected by the Board of Trustees.
Dividends and distributions paid on Class A and Class Y shares will generally
be higher than dividends for Class B, Class C and Class N shares, which
normally have higher expenses than Class A and Class Y.  The Fund has no
fixed dividend rate and cannot guarantee that it will pay any dividends or
distributions.
CAPITAL GAINS. The Fund may realize capital gains on the sale of portfolio
securities.  If it does, it may make distributions out of any net short-term
or long-term capital gains in December of each year. The Fund may make
supplemental distributions of dividends and capital gains following the end
of its fiscal year. There can be no assurance that the Fund will pay any
capital gains distributions in a particular year.

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

TAXES. If your shares are not held in a tax-deferred retirement account, you
should be aware of the following tax implications of investing in the Fund.
Distributions are subject to federal income tax and may be subject to state
or local taxes. Dividends paid from short-term capital gains and net
investment income are taxable as ordinary income.  Long-term capital gains
are taxable as long-term capital gains when distributed to shareholders. It
does not matter how long you have held your shares. Whether you reinvest your
distributions in additional shares or take them in cash, the tax treatment is
the same.

     Every year the Fund will send you and the IRS a statement showing the
amount of any taxable distribution you received in the previous year. Any
long-term capital gains will be separately identified in the tax information
the Fund sends you after the end of the calendar year.

Avoid "Buying a Dividend."  If you buy shares on or just before the
     ex-dividend date or just before the Fund declares a capital gain
     distribution, you will pay the full price for the shares and then
     receive a portion of the price back as a taxable dividend or capital
     gain.
Remember There May be Taxes on Transactions.  Because the Fund's share price
     fluctuates, you may have a capital gain or loss when you sell or
     exchange your shares.  A capital gain or loss is the difference between
     the price you paid for the shares and the price you received when you
     sold them. Any capital gain is subject to capital gains tax.
Returns of Capital Can Occur.  In certain cases, distributions made by the
     Fund may be considered a non-taxable return of capital to shareholders.
     If that occurs, it will be identified in notices to shareholders.

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

Financial Highlights
The Financial Highlights Table is presented to help you understand the Fund's
financial performance for the past 6 fiscal periods. Certain information
reflects financial results for a single Fund share. The total returns in the
table represent the rate that an investor would have earned (or lost) on an
investment in the Fund (assuming reinvestment of all dividends and
distributions). This information has been audited by KPMG LLP, the Fund's
independent auditors, whose report, along with the Fund's financial
statements, is included in the Statement of Additional Information, which is
available on request. Class N shares were not offered for sale during the
periods shown below. Therefore, information on Class N shares is not included
in the following tables or in the Fund's other financial statements.


<PAGE>


INFORMATION AND SERVICES

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

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

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


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

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

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

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

                                         The Fund's shares are distributed by:
                                                    [logo] OppenheimerFunds(R)
                                                             Distributor, Inc.
The Fund's SEC File No. is 811-2306.
PR0270.001.0101
Printed on recycled paper.


<PAGE>


FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                  YEAR                     YEAR
                                                                                  ENDED                    ENDED
                                                                               AUG. 31,                  JUNE 30,
CLASS A                                          1999       1998        1997       1996(1)     1996          1995
=================================================================================================================
<S>                                            <C>       <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING DATA

Net asset value, beginning of period           $31.54    $40.42      $33.69      $33.43      $30.80        $26.65
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Income (loss) from investment operations:

Net investment income (loss)                      .10       .73         .62         .08         .44           .36
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)         11.69     (5.05)      10.37         .18        5.70          6.83
                                              -------------------------------------------------------------------

Total income (loss) from
investment operations                           11.79     (4.32)      10.99         .26        6.14          7.19
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dividends and distributions to shareholders:
Dividends from net investment income             (.48)     (.66)       (.49)         --        (.41)         (.24)
Distributions from net realized gain            (3.08)    (3.90)      (3.77)         --       (3.10)        (2.80)
                                              -------------------------------------------------------------------
Total dividends and distributions
to shareholders                                 (3.56)    (4.56)      (4.26)         --       (3.51)        (3.04)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Net asset value, end of period                 $39.77    $31.54      $40.42      $33.69      $33.43        $30.80
                                              ===================================================================

=================================================================================================================
TOTAL RETURN, AT NET ASSET VALUE(2)             39.39%   (11.62)%     35.03%       0.78%      21.00%        29.45%

=================================================================================================================
RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA

Net assets, end of period (in millions)        $1,730    $1,357      $1,591      $1,128      $1,120        $  861
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Average net assets (in millions)               $1,620    $1,640      $1,369      $1,101      $1,018        $  727
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ratios to average net assets:(3)
Net investment income (loss)                     0.24%     1.90%       1.74%       1.50%       1.43%         1.31%
Expenses                                         1.05%     1.00%(4)    1.01%(4)    1.03%(4)    1.06%(4)      1.05%(4)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Portfolio turnover rate(5)                        106%       34%         25%          6%         38%           35%
</TABLE>

1. For the two months ended August 31, 1996. The Fund changed its fiscal year
end from June 30 to August 31.

2. Assumes a $1,000 hypothetical initial investment on the business day before
the first day of the fiscal period (or inception of offering), with all
dividends and distributions reinvested in additional shares on the
reinvestment date, and redemption at the net asset value calculated on the
last business day of the fiscal period. Sales charges are not reflected in the
total returns. Total returns are not annualized for periods of less than one
full year.

3. Annualized for periods of less than one full year.

4. Expense ratio reflects the effect of expenses paid indirectly by the Fund.

5. The lesser of purchases or sales of portfolio securities for a period,
divided by the monthly average of the market value of portfolio securities
owned during the period. Securities with a maturity or expiration date at the
time of acquisition of one year or less are excluded from the calculation.
Purchases and sales of investment securities (excluding short-term securities)
for the period ended August 31, 1999 were $2,172,876,594 and $1,955,034,523,
respectively.



                          28  OPPENHEIMER GROWTH FUND


<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                    YEAR                 YEAR
                                                                                   ENDED                ENDED
                                                                                AUG. 31,             JUNE 30,
CLASS B                                            1999       1998       1997       1996(1)   1996       1995
==================================================================================================================
<S>                                            <C>       <C>          <C>        <C>      <C>        <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING DATA
Net asset value, beginning of period            $ 30.54    $ 39.34    $ 32.94    $ 32.74    $30.36    $ 26.44
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income (loss) from investment operations:
Net investment income (loss)                       (.20)       .43        .36        .04       .23        .20
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)           11.32      (4.89)     10.08        .16      5.53       6.65
                                                ------------------------------------------------------------------
Total income (loss) from
investment operations                             11.12      (4.46)     10.44        .20      5.76       6.85
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dividends and distributions to shareholders:
Dividends from net investment income               (.21)      (.44)      (.27)        --      (.28)      (.13)
Distributions from net realized gain              (3.08)     (3.90)     (3.77)        --     (3.10)     (2.80)
                                                ------------------------------------------------------------------
Total dividends and distributions
to shareholders                                   (3.29)     (4.34)     (4.04)        --     (3.38)     (2.93)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Net asset value, end of period                   $38.37     $30.54     $39.34     $32.94    $32.74     $30.36
                                                ==================================================================

==================================================================================================================
TOTAL RETURN, AT NET ASSET VALUE(2)               38.27%    (12.32)%    33.93%      0.61%    19.95%     28.22%

==================================================================================================================
RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA

Net assets, end of period (in millions)            $446       $330       $284       $137      $129        $43
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average net assets (in millions)                   $410       $354       $204       $131       $91        $19
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ratios to average net assets:(3)
Net investment income (loss)                      (0.58)%     1.08%      0.92%      0.61%     0.60%      0.44%
Expenses                                           1.86%      1.81%(4)   1.84%(4)   1.92%(4)  1.89%(4)   2.02%(4)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Portfolio turnover rate(5)                          106%        34%         25%        6%       38%        35%

</TABLE>

1. For the two months ended August 31, 1996. The Fund changed its fiscal year
end from June 30 to August 31.

2. Assumes a $1,000 hypothetical initial investment on the business day before
the first day of the fiscal period (or inception of offering), with all
dividends and distributions reinvested in additional shares on the reinvestment
date, and redemption at the net asset value calculated on the last business day
of the fiscal period. Sales charges are not reflected in the total returns.
Total returns are not annualized for periods of less than one full year.

3. Annualized for periods of less than one full year.

4. Expense ratio reflects the effect of expenses paid indirectly by the Fund.

5. The lesser of purchases or sales of portfolio securities for a period,
divided by the monthly average of the market value of portfolio securities
owned during the period. Securities with a maturity or expiration date at the
time of acquisition of one year or less are excluded from the calculation.
Purchases and sales of investment securities (excluding short-term securities)
for the period ended August 31, 1999 were $2,172,876,594 and $1,955,034,523,
respectively.



                          29  OPPENHEIMER GROWTH FUND

<PAGE>

FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS  Continued
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                YEAR       PERIOD
                                                                               ENDED        ENDED
                                                                            AUG. 31,     JUNE 30,
CLASS C                                        1999      1998        1997       1996(1)      1996(2)
=====================================================================================================
<S>                                         <C>       <C>         <C>        <C>         <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING DATA

Net asset value, beginning of period        $ 30.93   $ 39.87     $ 33.42    $ 33.22      $ 33.44
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income (loss) from investment operations:
Net investment income (loss)                   (.20)      .46         .42        .02          .40
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)       11.47     (4.99)      10.17        .18         2.88
                                            ---------------------------------------------------------
Total income (loss) from
investment operations                         11.27     (4.53)      10.59        .20         3.28
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dividends and distributions to shareholders:
Dividends from net investment income           (.21)     (.51)       (.37)        --         (.40)
Distributions from net realized gain          (3.07)    (3.90)      (3.77)        --        (3.10)
                                            ---------------------------------------------------------
Total dividends and distributions
to shareholders                               (3.28)    (4.41)      (4.14)        --        (3.50)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Net asset value, end of period               $38.92    $30.93      $39.87     $33.42       $33.22
                                            =========================================================

=====================================================================================================
TOTAL RETURN, AT NET ASSET VALUE(2)           38.28%   (12.33)%     33.93%      0.60%       10.07%

=====================================================================================================
RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA

Net assets, end of period (in millions)         $58       $44         $28         $5           $4
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average net assets (in millions)                $54       $44         $14         $4           $2
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ratios to average net assets:(3)
Net investment income (loss)                  (0.58)%    1.06%       0.95%      0.44%        0.65%
Expenses                                       1.86%     1.81%(4)    1.84%(4)   2.10%(4)     1.81%(4)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Portfolio turnover rate(5)                      106%       34%         25%         6%          38%
</TABLE>



1. For the two months ended August 31, 1996. The Fund changed its fiscal year
end from June 30 to August 31.

2. Assumes a $1,000 hypothetical initial investment on the business day before
the first day of the fiscal period (or inception of offering), with all
dividends and distributions reinvested in additional shares on the reinvestment
date, and redemption at the net asset value calculated on the last business day
of the fiscal period. Sales charges are not reflected in the total returns.
Total returns are not annualized for periods of less than one full year.

3. Annualized for periods of less than one full year.

4. Expense ratio reflects the effect of expenses paid indirectly by the Fund.

5. The lesser of purchases or sales of portfolio securities for a period,
divided by the monthly average of the market value of portfolio securities
owned during the period. Securities with a maturity or expiration date at the
time of acquisition of one year or less are excluded from the calculation.
Purchases and sales of investment securities (excluding short-term securities)
for the period ended August 31, 1999, were $2,172,876,594 and $1,955,034,523,
respectively.

6. For the period from November 1, 1995 (inception of offering) to June 30,
1996.

                           30 OPPENHEIMER GROWTH FUND
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                   YEAR                        YEAR
                                                                                  ENDED                       ENDED
                                                                               AUG. 31,                    JUNE 30,
CLASS Y                                          1999        1998        1997      1996(1)        1996         1996
=======================================================================================================================
<S>                                           <C>         <C>         <C>        <C>         <C>           <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING DATA
Net asset value, beginning of period          $ 31.54     $ 40.43     $ 33.69   $ 33.42        $ 30.80      $ 26.64
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income (loss) from investment operations:
Net investment income (loss)                      .18         .87         .66         .08          .46          .30
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)         11.69       (5.09)      10.42         .19         5.70         6.92
                                              -------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total income (loss) from
investment operations                           11.87       (4.22)      11.08         .27         6.16         7.22
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dividends and distributions to shareholders:
Dividends from net investment income             (.58)       (.77)       (.57)         --         (.44)        (.26)
Distributions from net realized gain            (3.07)      (3.90)      (3.77)         --        (3.10)       (2.80)
                                              -------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total dividends and distributions
to shareholders                                 (3.65)      (4.67)      (4.34)         --        (3.54)       (3.06)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net asset value, end of period                 $39.76      $31.54      $40.43      $33.69       $33.42       $30.80
                                              =========================================================================

=======================================================================================================================
TOTAL RETURN, AT NET ASSET VALUE(2)             39.74%     (11.38)%     35.36%       0.81%       21.10%       29.59%

=======================================================================================================================
RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA

Net assets, end of period (in millions)          $ 94        $132         $97         $18          $16           $3
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average net assets (in millions)                 $117        $135         $63         $17          $ 9           $1
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ratios to average net assets:(3)
Net investment income (loss)                     0.65%       2.16%       2.00%       1.67%        1.56%        1.54%
Expenses                                         0.80%       0.71%(4)    0.77%(4)    0.87%(4)     0.94%(4)     1.04%(4)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Portfolio turnover rate(5)                        106%         34%         25%          6%          38%          35%
</TABLE>


1. For the two months ended August 31, 1996. The Fund changed its fiscal year
end from June 30 to August 31.

2. Assumes a $1,000 hypothetical initial investment on the business day before
the first day of the fiscal period (or inception of offering), with all
dividends and distributions reinvested in additional shares on the reinvestment
date, and redemption at the net asset value calculated on the last business day
of the fiscal period. Sales charges are not reflected in the total returns.
Total returns are not annualized for periods of less than one full year.

3. Annualized for periods of less than one full year.

4. Expense ratio reflects the effect of expenses paid indirectly by the Fund.

5. The lesser of purchases or sales of portfolio securities for a period,
divided by the monthly average of the market value of portfolio securities
owned during the period. Securities with a maturity or expiration date at the
time of acquisition of one year or less are excluded from the calculation.
Purchases and sales of investment securities (excluding short-term securities)
for the period ended August 31, 1999, were $2,172,876,594 and $1,955,034,523,
respectively.

6. For the period from November 1, 1995 (inception of offering) to June 30,
1996.
<PAGE>




                          Appendix to Prospectus of
                           Oppenheimer Growth Fund

      Graphic Material included in the Prospectus of Oppenheimer  Growth Fund:
"Annual Total Returns (Class A) (% as of 12/31 each year)":

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

Calendar          Oppenheimer
Year              Growth Fund
Ended             Class A Shares

12/31/99          46.73%
12/31/98          10.95%
12/31/97          18.12%
12/31/96          23.46%
12/31/95          34.95%
12/31/94            2.38%
12/31/93            2.72%
12/31/92          13.37%
12/31/91          44.02%
12/31/90          (2.53)%


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


<PAGE>


Oppenheimer Growth Fund
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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

Statement of Additional Information dated January 1, 2001

      This  Statement of  Additional  Information  is not a  Prospectus.  This
document  contains  additional  information  about  the Fund  and  supplements
information  in the  Prospectus  dated  January  1,  2001.  It  should be read
together  with the  Prospectus.  You can obtain the  Prospectus  by writing to
the  Fund's  Transfer  Agent,  OppenheimerFunds  Services,  at P.O.  Box 5270,
Denver,  Colorado  80217,  or by calling the Transfer  Agent at the  toll-free
number shown above,  or by downloading it from the  OppenheimerFunds  Internet
web site at www.oppenheimerfunds.com.

Contents
                                                                        Page
About the Fund
Additional Information About the Fund's Investment Policies and Risks.. 2
    The Fund's Investment Policies..................................... 2
    Other Investment Techniques and Strategies......................... 4
    Investment Restrictions............................................ 16
How the Fund is Managed ............................................... 18
    Organization and History........................................... 18
    Trustees and Officers of the Fund.................................. 20
    The Manager........................................................ 25
Brokerage Policies of the Fund......................................... 26
Distribution and Service Plans......................................... 28
Performance of the Fund................................................ 31

About Your Account
How To Buy Shares...................................................... 35
How To Sell Shares..................................................... 44
How To Exchange Shares................................................. 48
Dividends, Capital Gains and Taxes..................................... 51
Additional Information About the Fund.................................. 52

Financial Information About the Fund
Independent Auditors' Report........................................... 54
Financial Statements................................................... 55

Appendix A: Industry Classifications................................... A-1
Appendix B: Special Sales Charge Arrangements and Waivers.............. B-1




<PAGE>


                                      53
ABOUT THE FUND

Additional Information About the Fund's Investment Policies and Risks

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

The Fund's  Investment  Policies.  The composition of the Fund's portfolio and
the  techniques  and  strategies  that the Fund's Manager may use in selecting
portfolio  securities will vary over time. The Fund is not required to use all
of the investment  techniques and strategies  described  below at all times in
seeking its goal.  It may use some of the special  investment  techniques  and
strategies at some times or not at all.

      |X| Cyclical  Opportunities.  The Fund might also seek to take advantage
of changes in the business  cycle by investing in companies that are sensitive
to those  changes if the  Manager  believes  they have growth  potential.  For
example,  when the economy is  expanding,  companies in the consumer  durables
and   technology   sectors   might   benefit   and  offer   long-term   growth
opportunities.  Other cyclical industries include insurance,  for example. The
fund  focuses on  seeking  growth  over the long term,  but could seek to take
tactical   advantage  of  short-term  market  movements  or  events  affecting
particular issuers or industries.

      |X| Investments in Equity  Securities.  The Fund focuses its investments
in  equity  securities  of  mid-cap  issuers  (having  market  capitalizations
between $1 billion  and $5  billion)  and  large-cap  issuers  (having  market
capitalizations  greater than $5 billion).  At times,  the market may favor or
disfavor  securities  of  issuers  of  a  particular   capitalization   range.
Therefore  the Fund may focus its equity  investments  in  securities of large
cap or mid cap issuers,  or a combination  of the two  capitalization  ranges,
based upon the Manager's  judgment of where are the best market  opportunities
to seek the  Fund's  objective.  Current  income  is not a  criterion  used to
select portfolio securities.

      The Fund can also  invest in  securities  of small cap  issuers  (having
market  capitalizations  of  less  than  $1  billion).   Securities  of  small
capitalization  issuers may be subject to greater price  volatility in general
than securities of large-cap and mid-cap companies.  Therefore,  to the degree
that the Fund has investments in smaller capitalization  companies at times of
market volatility,  the Fund's share price may fluctuate more. As noted below,
the Fund limits such investments in unseasoned small cap issuers.

            |_| Convertible  Securities.  While  convertible  securities are a
form of debt  security  in many  cases,  their  conversion  feature  (allowing
conversion into equity  securities) causes them to be regarded more as "equity
equivalents."  As a result,  the  rating  assigned  to the  security  has less
impact on the  Manager's  investment  decision  with  respect  to  convertible
securities than in the case of non-convertible fixed income securities.

            To determine whether convertible  securities should be regarded as
"equity equivalents," the Manager examines the following factors:

(1)   whether, at the option of the investor,  the convertible security can be
         exchanged  for a fixed  number  of  shares  of  common  stock  of the
         issuer,
(2)   whether  the  issuer of the  convertible  securities  has  restated  its
         earnings  per  share  of  common  stock  on  a  fully  diluted  basis
         (considering   the   effect   of   conversion   of  the   convertible
         securities), and
(3)   the extent to which the convertible  security may be a defensive "equity
         substitute,"   providing   the   ability   to   participate   in  any
         appreciation in the price of the issuer's common stock.

      |X| Foreign  Securities.  The Fund can purchase equity securities issued
or  guaranteed  by  foreign  companies  or debt  securities  issued by foreign
governments.  "Foreign  securities"  include  equity  and debt  securities  of
companies  organized  under the laws of countries other than the United States
and debt securities  issued by foreign  governments  and their agencies.  They
may  be  traded  on   foreign   securities   exchanges   or  in  the   foreign
over-the-counter markets.

      Securities  of  foreign   issuers  that  are   represented  by  American
Depository  Receipts  or that are  listed  on a U.S.  securities  exchange  or
traded  in the  U.S.  over-the-counter  markets  are not  considered  "foreign
securities"  for the  purpose of the Fund's  investment  allocations.  That is
because they are not subject to many of the special  considerations and risks,
discussed below, that apply to foreign securities traded and held abroad.

      Investing in foreign  securities offers potential benefits not available
from  investing  solely in  securities of domestic  issuers.  They include the
opportunity  to  invest  in  foreign  issuers  that  appear  to  offer  growth
potential,  or in foreign  countries with economic policies or business cycles
different  from  those of the U.S.,  or to reduce  fluctuations  in  portfolio
value by taking  advantage  of  foreign  stock  markets  that do not move in a
manner parallel to U.S.  markets.  The Fund will hold foreign currency only in
connection with the purchase or sale of foreign securities.

      |_| Risks of Foreign  Investing.  Investments in foreign  securities may
offer special  opportunities for investing but also present special additional
risks  and  considerations  not  typically   associated  with  investments  in
domestic securities. Some of these additional risks are:

o     reduction of income by foreign taxes;
o     fluctuation in value of foreign  investments  due to changes in currency
         rates  or  currency  control   regulations  (for  example,   currency
         blockage);
o     transaction charges for currency exchange;
o     lack of public information about foreign issuers;
o     lack of uniform  accounting,  auditing and financial reporting standards
         in foreign  countries  comparable  to those  applicable  to  domestic
         issuers;
o     less volume on foreign exchanges than on U.S. exchanges;
o     greater  volatility  and less  liquidity on foreign  markets than in the
         U.S.;
o     less  governmental  regulation of foreign  issuers,  stock exchanges and
         brokers than in the U.S.;
o     greater difficulties in commencing lawsuits;
o     higher brokerage commission rates than in the U.S.;
o     increased  risks of delays in  settlement of portfolio  transactions  or
         loss of certificates for portfolio securities;
o     possibilities   in  some   countries  of   expropriation,   confiscatory
         taxation,  political,  financial  or social  instability  or  adverse
         diplomatic developments; and
o     unfavorable differences between the U.S. economy and foreign economies.

      In  the  past,  U.S.   Government   policies  have  discouraged  certain
investments abroad by U.S. investors,  through taxation or other restrictions,
and it is possible that such restrictions could be re-imposed.

      |X|  Portfolio  Turnover.  "Portfolio  turnover"  describes  the rate at
which the Fund traded its  portfolio  securities  during its last fiscal year.
For  example,  if a fund  sold all of its  securities  during  the  year,  its
portfolio  turnover rate would have been 100%. The Fund's  portfolio  turnover
rate  will  fluctuate  from  year to  year,  although  the Fund  might  have a
portfolio  turnover  rate of more  than  100%  annually.  Increased  portfolio
turnover  creates higher  brokerage and transaction  costs for the Fund, which
could  reduce  its  overall  performance.  Additionally,  the  realization  of
capital gains from selling  portfolio  securities may result in  distributions
of  taxable  long-term  capital  gains to  shareholders,  since  the Fund will
normally  distribute  all of its capital  gains  realized  each year, to avoid
excise taxes under the Internal Revenue Code.

Other  Investment  Techniques and  Strategies.  In seeking its objective,  the
Fund may from time to time  employ  the  types of  investment  strategies  and
investments  described  below.  It  is  not  required  to  use  all  of  these
strategies at all times, and at times may not use them.

      |X|  Investing in Small,  Unseasoned  Companies.  The Fund can invest in
securities of small, unseasoned companies.  These are companies that have been
in  operation  for less than three  years,  including  the  operations  of any
predecessors.  Securities  of these  companies may be subject to volatility in
their  prices.  They may have a limited  trading  market,  which may adversely
affect  the  Fund's  ability  to  dispose of them and can reduce the price the
Fund might be able to obtain  for them.  Other  investors  that own a security
issued by a small,  unseasoned  issuer for which  there is  limited  liquidity
might  trade  the  security  when the Fund is  attempting  to  dispose  of its
holdings of that  security.  In that case the Fund might receive a lower price
for its holdings than might otherwise be obtained.

      As a fundamental  policy,  the Fund cannot make an investment  that will
result in more than 15% of the  Fund's  total  assets  being  invested  in the
securities  of small,  unseasoned  companies.  The Fund  currently  intends to
invest no more than 5% of its net assets in those securities.

      |X| Repurchase  Agreements.  The Fund can acquire  securities subject to
repurchase   agreements.   It  may  do  so  for  liquidity  purposes  to  meet
anticipated  redemptions  of Fund  shares,  or pending the  investment  of the
proceeds  from sales of Fund shares,  or pending the  settlement  of portfolio
securities  transactions,  or for temporary defensive  purposes,  as described
below.

      In a  repurchase  transaction,  the  Fund  buys  a  security  from,  and
simultaneously   resells  it  to,  an  approved  vendor  for  delivery  on  an
agreed-upon  future date.  The resale price  exceeds the purchase  price by an
amount that reflects an  agreed-upon  interest  rate  effective for the period
during which the repurchase  agreement is in effect.  Approved vendors include
U.S.  commercial banks, U.S. branches of foreign banks, or broker-dealers that
have been  designated as primary dealers in government  securities.  They must
meet credit  requirements  set by the Fund's  Board of  Trustees  from time to
time.



      The  majority of these  transactions  run from day to day,  and delivery
pursuant  to the  resale  typically  occurs  within  one to  five  days of the
purchase.  Repurchase  agreements  having a  maturity  beyond  seven  days are
subject to the Fund's limits on holding  illiquid  investments.  The Fund will
not enter into a  repurchase  agreement  that  causes more than 10% of its net
assets to be subject to repurchase  agreements  having a maturity beyond seven
days.  There is no limit on the amount of the  Fund's  net assets  that may be
subject to repurchase agreements having maturities of seven days or less.

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

      |X|  Illiquid  and  Restricted   Securities.   Under  the  policies  and
procedures   established  by  the  Fund's  Board  of  Trustees,   the  Manager
determines the liquidity of certain of the Fund's  investments.  To enable the
Fund to sell its holdings of a restricted  security not  registered  under the
Securities  Act of 1933,  the Fund may have to cause  those  securities  to be
registered.   The  expenses  of  registering   restricted  securities  may  be
negotiated  by the  Fund  with  the  issuer  at the  time  the  Fund  buys the
securities.  When the Fund must arrange  registration  because the Fund wishes
to sell the security,  a  considerable  period may elapse between the time the
decision is made to sell the security and the time the security is  registered
so that the Fund could sell it. The Fund would bear the risks of any  downward
price fluctuation during that period.

      The  Fund  may  also  acquire  restricted   securities  through  private
placements.  Those  securities have  contractual  restrictions on their public
resale.  Those  restrictions  might limit the Fund's ability to dispose of the
securities and might lower the amount the Fund could realize upon the sale.

      The  Fund  has  limitations   that  apply  to  purchases  of  restricted
securities, as stated in the Prospectus.  Those percentage restrictions do not
limit  purchases  of  restricted  securities  that  are  eligible  for sale to
qualified  institutional  purchasers  under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of
1933,  if those  securities  have been  determined to be liquid by the Manager
under  Board-approved  guidelines.  Those  guidelines  take into  account  the
trading  activity for such securities and the availability of reliable pricing
information,  among other factors. If there is a lack of trading interest in a
particular  Rule 144A  security,  the Fund's  holdings of that security may be
considered to be illiquid.

      Illiquid securities include repurchase  agreements maturing in more than
seven  days and  participation  interests  that do not have  puts  exercisable
within seven days.

      |X|  Loans  of  Portfolio  Securities.   To  raise  cash  for  liquidity
purposes,  the Fund can lend its portfolio securities to brokers,  dealers and
other  types  of  financial  institutions  approved  by the  Fund's  Board  of
Trustees.  These  loans are  limited  to not more than 25% of the value of the
Fund's total assets.  The Fund currently does not intend to engage in loans of
securities  in the coming year,  but if it does so, such loans will not likely
exceed 5% of the Fund's total assets.

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

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

      |X|  Borrowing  for  Leverage.  The Fund has the  ability to borrow from
banks on an  unsecured  basis  to  invest  the  borrowed  funds  in  portfolio
securities.  This  speculative  technique is known as "leverage." The Fund may
borrow only from banks. Under current regulatory requirements,  borrowings can
be made only to the  extent  that the  value of the  Fund's  assets,  less its
liabilities  other  than  borrowings,  is  equal  to  at  least  300%  of  all
borrowings  (including  the  proposed  borrowing).  If the value of the Fund's
assets  fails to meet  this 300%  asset  coverage  requirement,  the Fund will
reduce  its bank debt  within 3 days to meet the  requirement.  To do so,  the
Fund  might  have to sell a portion of its  investments  at a  disadvantageous
time.

      The Fund will pay interest on these  loans,  and that  interest  expense
will raise the  overall  expenses  of the Fund and reduce its  returns.  If it
does borrow,  its expenses will be greater than  comparable  funds that do not
borrow for leverage.  Additionally, the Fund's net asset value per share might
fluctuate  more than that of funds  that do not  borrow.  Currently,  the Fund
does not  contemplate  using  this  technique,  but if it does so, it will not
likely do so to a substantial degree.

      |X|  Derivatives.  The  Fund  can  invest  in a  variety  of  derivative
investments to seek income for liquidity needs or for hedging  purposes.  Some
derivative  investments the Fund can use are the hedging instruments described
below in this Statement of Additional Information.  However, the Fund does not
use,  and  does  not  currently  contemplate  using,  derivatives  or  hedging
instruments to a significant degree.

      Some  of the  derivative  investments  the  Fund  can use  include  debt
exchangeable for common stock of an issuer or "equity-linked  debt securities"
of an issuer. At maturity,  the debt security is exchanged for common stock of
the issuer or it is payable  in an amount  based on the price of the  issuer's
common stock at the time of maturity.  Both  alternatives  present a risk that
the amount  payable at maturity will be less than the principal  amount of the
debt because the price of the issuer's  common stock may not be as high as the
Manager expected.

      |X| Hedging.  Although the Fund does not anticipate the extensive use of
hedging  instruments,  the Fund can use  hedging  instruments.  To  attempt to
protect  against  declines  in the market  value of the Fund's  portfolio,  to
permit  the  Fund  to  retain  unrealized  gains  in the  value  of  portfolio
securities which have  appreciated,  or to facilitate  selling  securities for
investment reasons, the Fund could:

      |_|   sell futures contracts,
      |_|   buy puts on such futures or on securities, or
      |_|   write covered  calls on  securities or futures.  Covered calls may
         also be used to increase the Fund's income,  but the Manager does not
         expect to engage extensively in that practice.

      The Fund can use  hedging  to  establish  a position  in the  securities
market as a temporary  substitute for  purchasing  particular  securities.  In
that case the Fund would  normally  seek to purchase the  securities  and then
terminate  that hedging  position.  The Fund might also use this type of hedge
to attempt to protect  against the possibility  that its portfolio  securities
would not be fully  included  in a rise in value of the  market.  To do so the
Fund could:

      |_|   buy futures, or
      |_|   buy calls on such futures or on securities.

      The Fund's  strategy of hedging with futures and options on futures will
be incidental  to the Fund's  activities in the  underlying  cash market.  The
particular hedging  instruments the Fund can use are described below. The Fund
may employ new hedging instruments and strategies when they are developed,  if
those investment  methods are consistent with the Fund's investment  objective
and are permissible under applicable regulations governing the Fund.

      |_| Futures.  The Fund may buy and sell futures contracts that relate to
(1)  broadly-based  stock  indices  (these  are  referred  to as "stock  index
futures"),  (2) other broadly-based  securities indices (these are referred to
as "financial  futures") and (3) foreign  currencies (these are referred to as
"forward contracts").

      A  broadly-based  stock  index is used as the  basis for  trading  stock
index  futures.  They may in some  cases be based on  stocks of  issuers  in a
particular  industry or group of  industries.  A stock index assigns  relative
values to the common stocks included in the index and its value  fluctuates in
response  to the  changes in value of the  underlying  stocks.  A stock  index
cannot be purchased or sold directly.  Financial futures are similar contracts
based on the  future  value of the  basket of  securities  that  comprise  the
index.  These contracts  obligate the seller to deliver,  and the purchaser to
take,  cash to settle the futures  transaction.  There is no delivery  made of
the underlying  securities to settle the futures obligation.  Either party may
also settle the transaction by entering into an offsetting contract.

      No payment is paid or received by the Fund on the  purchase or sale of a
future.  Upon entering into a futures  transaction,  the Fund will be required
to deposit an initial  margin  payment  with the futures  commission  merchant
(the "futures  broker").  Initial  margin  payments will be deposited with the
Fund's  Custodian bank in an account  registered in the futures broker's name.
However,  the  futures  broker  can gain  access to that  account  only  under
specified  conditions.  As the future is marked to market  (that is, its value
on the  Fund's  books is  changed)  to reflect  changes  in its market  value,
subsequent  margin payments,  called variation  margin,  will be paid to or by
the futures broker daily.

      At any time prior to  expiration  of the  future,  the Fund may elect to
close out its position by taking an opposite  position,  at which time a final
determination  of  variation  margin is made and any  additional  cash must be
paid by or  released  to the  Fund.  Any  loss or gain on the  future  is then
realized  by the Fund  for tax  purposes.  All  futures  transactions  (except
forward  contracts) are effected  through a clearinghouse  associated with the
exchange on which the contracts are traded.

      |_| Put and Call  Options.  The Fund can buy and sell  certain  kinds of
put options  ("puts")  and call options  ("calls").  The Fund can buy and sell
exchange-traded  and  over-the-counter  put and call options,  including index
options,  securities options,  currency options, options on commodity indices,
and options on the other types of futures described above.

            o Writing  Covered  Call  Options.  The Fund can  write  (that is,
sell)  covered  calls.  If the Fund sells a call  option,  it must be covered.
That means the Fund must own the  security  subject to the call while the call
is  outstanding,  or, for certain  types of calls,  the call may be covered by
segregating  liquid  assets to enable the Fund to satisfy its  obligations  if
the call is exercised.  Up to 25% of the Fund's total assets may be subject to
calls the Fund writes.

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

      When the Fund writes a call on an index,  it receives  cash (a premium).
If the  buyer of the call  exercises  it,  the Fund will pay an amount of cash
equal  to the  difference  between  the  closing  price  of the  call  and the
exercise price,  multiplied by a specified  multiple that determines the total
value  of  the  call  for  each  point  of  difference.  If the  value  of the
underlying  investment  does not rise above the call price,  it is likely that
the call will lapse  without  being  exercised.  In that case,  the Fund would
keep the cash premium.

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

      When the Fund writes an  over-the-counter  ("OTC") option, it will enter
into an arrangement  with a primary U.S.  government  securities  dealer which
will  establish a formula price at which the Fund will have the absolute right
to repurchase that OTC option.  The formula price will generally be based on a
multiple of the premium received for the option,  plus the amount by which the
option is exercisable below the market price of the underlying  security (that
is, the option is "in the  money").  When the Fund  writes an OTC  option,  it
will treat as illiquid (for purposes of its  restriction  on holding  illiquid
securities) the  mark-to-market  value of any OTC option it holds,  unless the
option is subject to a buy-back agreement by the executing broker.


      To  terminate  its  obligation  on a call it has  written,  the Fund may
purchase a corresponding  call in a "closing  purchase  transaction." The Fund
will then  realize a profit or loss,  depending  upon  whether  the net of the
amount of the option  transaction  costs and the premium  received on the call
the Fund  wrote is more or less than the price of the call the Fund  purchases
to  close  out the  transaction.  The Fund may  realize  a profit  if the call
expires unexercised,  because the Fund will retain the underlying security and
the  premium  it  received  when it  wrote  the  call.  Any such  profits  are
considered  short-term  capital gains for Federal income tax purposes,  as are
the premiums on lapsed calls.  When  distributed  by the Fund they are taxable
as ordinary income.  If the Fund cannot effect a closing purchase  transaction
due to the lack of a  market,  it will  have to hold the  callable  securities
until the call expires or is exercised.

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

            o  Writing  Put  Options.  The Fund can  sell put  options.  A put
option on securities  gives the  purchaser  the right to sell,  and the writer
the obligation to buy, the underlying  investment at the exercise price during
the option  period.  The Fund will not write  puts if, as a result,  more than
25% of the Fund's net assets would be required to be  segregated to cover such
put options.

      If the Fund writes a put, the put must be covered by  segregated  liquid
assets.  The premium the Fund receives from writing a put represents a profit,
as long as the price of the  underlying  investment  remains equal to or above
the exercise price of the put.  However,  the Fund also assumes the obligation
during the option period to buy the  underlying  investment  from the buyer of
the put at the  exercise  price,  even if the  value of the  investment  falls
below the exercise price.  If a put the Fund has written expires  unexercised,
the Fund  realizes a gain in the amount of the  premium  less the  transaction
costs incurred. If the put is exercised,  the Fund must fulfill its obligation
to purchase the underlying  investment at the exercise price.  That price will
usually  exceed the market value of the investment at that time. In that case,
the Fund may incur a loss if it sells  the  underlying  investment.  That loss
will be equal to the sum of the sale price of the  underlying  investment  and
the premium  received minus the sum of the exercise price and any  transaction
costs the Fund incurred.

      When  writing a put option on a security,  to secure its  obligation  to
pay for the underlying  security the Fund will deposit in escrow liquid assets
with a value equal to or greater  than the  exercise  price of the  underlying
securities.  The Fund  therefore  forgoes the  opportunity  of  investing  the
segregated assets or writing calls against those assets.

      As long as the Fund's obligation as the put writer continues,  it may be
assigned an exercise  notice by the  broker-dealer  through  which the put was
sold.  That notice will  require the Fund to take  delivery of the  underlying
security and pay the exercise price.  The Fund has no control over when it may
be required to purchase the underlying  security,  since it may be assigned an
exercise  notice at any time prior to the termination of its obligation as the
writer of the put. That  obligation  terminates upon expiration of the put. It
may also  terminate  if,  before it  receives  an  exercise  notice,  the Fund
effects a closing purchase  transaction by purchasing a put of the same series
as it sold.  Once the Fund has been  assigned  an exercise  notice,  it cannot
effect a closing purchase transaction.

      The Fund may decide to effect a closing purchase  transaction to realize
a profit  on an  outstanding  put  option it has  written  or to  prevent  the
underlying  security from being put. Effecting a closing purchase  transaction
will also permit the Fund to write another put option on the  security,  or to
sell the security and use the  proceeds  from the sale for other  investments.
The Fund will  realize a profit  or loss from a closing  purchase  transaction
depending  on  whether  the cost of the  transaction  is less or more than the
premium  received  from writing the put option.  Any profits from writing puts
are  considered  short-term  capital gains for Federal tax purposes,  and when
distributed by the Fund, are taxable as ordinary income.

            o  Purchasing  Calls  and  Puts.  The Fund can  purchase  calls to
protect   against  the  possibility   that  the  Fund's   portfolio  will  not
participate in an anticipated  rise in the  securities  market.  When the Fund
buys  a call  (other  than  in a  closing  purchase  transaction),  it  pays a
premium.  The Fund then has the right to buy the underlying  investment from a
seller of a corresponding  call on the same investment  during the call period
at a fixed  exercise  price.  The Fund benefits only if it sells the call at a
profit or if,  during  the call  period,  the market  price of the  underlying
investment is above the sum of the call price plus the  transaction  costs and
the premium  paid for the call and the Fund  exercises  the call.  If the Fund
does not exercise  the call or sell it (whether or not at a profit),  the call
will become  worthless at its expiration date. In that case the Fund will have
paid the premium but lost the right to purchase the underlying investment.

      The Fund can buy puts whether or not it holds the underlying  investment
in its  portfolio.  When the Fund  purchases  a put,  it pays a  premium  and,
except as to puts on indices, has the right to sell the underlying  investment
to a seller of a put on a corresponding  investment during the put period at a
fixed  exercise  price.  Buying a put on  securities  or futures the Fund owns
enables the Fund to attempt to protect  itself during the put period against a
decline in the value of the underlying  investment below the exercise price by
selling  the  underlying  investment  at the  exercise  price to a seller of a
corresponding  put. If the market price of the underlying  investment is equal
to or above the exercise  price and, as a result,  the put is not exercised or
resold,  the put will become  worthless at its  expiration  date. In that case
the Fund will have paid the premium but lost the right to sell the  underlying
investment.  However, the Fund may sell the put prior to its expiration.  That
sale may or may not be at a profit.

      When the Fund  purchases a call or put on an index or future,  it pays a
premium,  but  settlement is in cash rather than by delivery of the underlying
investment  to the  Fund.  Gain or loss  depends  on  changes  in the index in
question  (and thus on price  movements in the  securities  market  generally)
rather than on price movements in individual securities or futures contracts.

      The Fund may buy a call or put only if,  after the  purchase,  the value
of all call and put options  held by the Fund will not exceed 5% of the Fund's
total assets.

            o Buying and Selling Options on Foreign  Currencies.  The Fund can
buy and sell  calls and puts on  foreign  currencies.  They  include  puts and
calls  that  trade  on  a  securities  or  commodities   exchange  or  in  the
over-the-counter  markets  or are quoted by major  recognized  dealers in such
options.  The Fund could use these  calls and puts to try to  protect  against
declines  in the  dollar  value of foreign  securities  and  increases  in the
dollar cost of foreign securities the Fund wants to acquire.

      If the  Manager  anticipates  a rise in the  dollar  value of a  foreign
currency in which  securities  to be acquired are  denominated,  the increased
cost of those  securities  may be  partially  offset  by  purchasing  calls or
writing puts on that foreign  currency.  If the Manager  anticipates a decline
in the dollar value of a foreign currency,  the decline in the dollar value of
portfolio  securities  denominated in that currency might be partially  offset
by writing calls or purchasing  puts on that foreign  currency.  However,  the
currency rates could fluctuate in a direction  adverse to the Fund's position.
The Fund will then have  incurred  option  premium  payments  and  transaction
costs without a corresponding benefit.

      A call the Fund writes on a foreign  currency is  "covered"  if the Fund
owns the underlying  foreign  currency  covered by the call or has an absolute
and immediate right to acquire that foreign currency  without  additional cash
consideration  (or it can do so for additional  cash  consideration  held in a
segregated  account by its  Custodian  bank) upon  conversion  or  exchange of
other foreign currency held in its portfolio.

      The Fund  could  write a call on a foreign  currency  to provide a hedge
against a decline in the U.S.  dollar value of a security  which the Fund owns
or has  the  right  to  acquire  and  which  is  denominated  in the  currency
underlying  the  option.  That  decline  might  be one that  occurs  due to an
expected   adverse  change  in  the  exchange   rate.   This  is  known  as  a
"cross-hedging"  strategy. In those circumstances,  the Fund covers the option
by maintaining cash, U.S.  government  securities or other liquid,  high grade
debt  securities in an amount equal to the exercise price of the option,  in a
segregated account with the Fund's Custodian bank.

      |_| Risks of  Hedging  with  Options  and  Futures.  The use of  hedging
instruments  requires  special  skills and knowledge of investment  techniques
that are different than what is required for normal portfolio  management.  If
the  Manager  uses a hedging  instrument  at the wrong  time or judges  market
conditions  incorrectly,  hedging strategies may reduce the Fund's return. The
Fund could also  experience  losses if the prices of its  futures  and options
positions were not correlated with its other investments.

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

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

      If a covered  call  written by the Fund is  exercised  on an  investment
that has increased in value,  the Fund will be required to sell the investment
at the  call  price.  It  will  not be  able  to  realize  any  profit  if the
investment has increased in value above the call price.
      An option  position  may be closed  out only on a market  that  provides
secondary  trading for options of the same  series,  and there is no assurance
that a liquid secondary market will exist for any particular  option. The Fund
might  experience  losses if it could not close out a  position  because of an
illiquid market for the future or option.

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

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

      The ordinary  spreads between prices in the cash and futures markets are
subject to  distortions,  due to  differences  in the nature of those markets.
First,  all  participants  in the futures market are subject to margin deposit
and maintenance  requirements.  Rather than meeting  additional margin deposit
requirements,   investors  may  close  futures  contracts  through  offsetting
transactions which could distort the normal relationship  between the cash and
futures  markets.  Second,  the  liquidity  of the futures  market  depends on
participants  entering  into  offsetting  transactions  rather  than making or
taking delivery.  To the extent  participants decide to make or take delivery,
liquidity in the futures market could be reduced,  thus producing  distortion.
Third, from the point of view of speculators,  the deposit requirements in the
futures  market are less onerous than margin  requirements  in the  securities
markets.  Therefore,  increased  participation  by  speculators in the futures
market may cause temporary price distortions.

      The Fund can use  hedging  instruments  to  establish  a position in the
securities  markets as a temporary  substitute  for the purchase of individual
securities  (long  hedging) by buying  futures  and/or calls on such  futures,
broadly-based  indices or on  securities.  It is  possible  that when the Fund
does so the market might decline.  If the Fund then concludes not to invest in
securities  because of concerns that the market might  decline  further or for
other reasons,  the Fund will realize a loss on the hedging  instruments  that
is not offset by a reduction in the price of the securities purchased.

      |_| Forward  Contracts.  Forward contracts are foreign currency exchange
contracts.  They are used to buy or sell foreign  currency for future delivery
at a fixed price.  The Fund uses them to "lock in" the U.S.  dollar price of a
security  denominated in a foreign  currency that the Fund has bought or sold,
or to protect  against  possible losses from changes in the relative values of
the U.S.  dollar  and a foreign  currency.  The Fund  limits its  exposure  in
foreign currency  exchange  contracts in a particular  foreign currency to the
amount of its assets  denominated  in that  currency  or a  closely-correlated
currency.  The Fund may also use "cross-hedging" where the Fund hedges against
changes in currencies  other than the currency in which a security it holds is
denominated.

      Under a forward  contract,  one party  agrees to  purchase,  and another
party agrees to sell, a specific  currency at a future date.  That date may be
any  fixed  number of days from the date of the  contract  agreed  upon by the
parties.  The  transaction  price is set at the time the  contract  is entered
into. These contracts are traded in the inter-bank  market conducted  directly
among currency traders (usually large commercial banks) and their customers.

      The Fund may use forward  contracts to protect  against  uncertainty  in
the level of future  exchange  rates.  The use of forward  contracts  does not
eliminate the risk of fluctuations in the prices of the underlying  securities
the Fund owns or intends to  acquire,  but it does fix a rate of  exchange  in
advance.  Although  forward  contracts  may  reduce  the  risk of loss  from a
decline in the value of the hedged  currency,  at the same time they limit any
potential gain if the value of the hedged currency increases.

      When the Fund  enters  into a  contract  for the  purchase  or sale of a
security denominated in a foreign currency,  or when it anticipates  receiving
dividend  payments in a foreign  currency,  the Fund might desire to "lock-in"
the U.S.  dollar price of the security or the U.S.  dollar  equivalent  of the
dividend payments.  To do so, the Fund could enter into a forward contract for
the  purchase  or sale of the  amount  of  foreign  currency  involved  in the
underlying  transaction,  in a fixed  amount of U.S.  dollars  per unit of the
foreign currency.  This is called a "transaction hedge." The transaction hedge
will  protect the Fund  against a loss from an adverse  change in the currency
exchange  rates  during the period  between the date on which the  security is
purchased or sold or on which the payment is  declared,  and the date on which
the payments are made or received.

      The Fund could also use  forward  contracts  to lock in the U.S.  dollar
value of  portfolio  positions.  This is called a "position  hedge."  When the
Fund  believes  that  foreign  currency  might  suffer a  substantial  decline
against the U.S.  dollar,  it could  enter into a forward  contract to sell an
amount of that foreign currency  approximating the value of some or all of the
Fund's portfolio  securities  denominated in that foreign  currency.  When the
Fund believes that the U.S. dollar might suffer a substantial  decline against
a  foreign  currency,  it could  enter  into a  forward  contract  to buy that
foreign  currency for a fixed  dollar  amount.  Alternatively,  the Fund could
enter into a forward  contract  to sell a  different  foreign  currency  for a
fixed U.S.  dollar amount if the Fund  believes that the U.S.  dollar value of
the foreign  currency to be sold  pursuant to its forward  contract  will fall
whenever there is a decline in the U.S.  dollar value of the currency in which
portfolio  securities  of the Fund are  denominated.  That is referred to as a
"cross hedge."

      The Fund will cover its short  positions  in these cases by  identifying
to its Custodian  bank assets having a value equal to the aggregate  amount of
the Fund's  commitment under forward  contracts.  The Fund will not enter into
forward  contracts  or  maintain  a net  exposure  to  such  contracts  if the
consummation  of the contracts would obligate the Fund to deliver an amount of
foreign currency in excess of the value of the Fund's portfolio  securities or
other assets  denominated  in that  currency or another  currency  that is the
subject of the hedge.

      However,  to avoid excess  transactions and transaction  costs, the Fund
may  maintain a net  exposure to forward  contracts  in excess of the value of
the  Fund's  portfolio  securities  or other  assets  denominated  in  foreign
currencies if the excess amount is "covered" by liquid securities  denominated
in any  currency.  The cover must be at least equal at all times to the amount
of that  excess.  As one  alternative,  the Fund may  purchase  a call  option
permitting  the Fund to purchase the amount of foreign  currency  being hedged
by a forward  sale  contract at a price no higher  than the  forward  contract
price. As another  alternative,  the Fund may purchase a put option permitting
the Fund to sell the amount of foreign  currency subject to a forward purchase
contract at a price as high or higher than the forward contact price.

      The precise  matching of the amounts  under  forward  contracts  and the
value of the securities  involved  generally will not be possible  because the
future value of securities  denominated in foreign currencies will change as a
consequence  of market  movements  between  the date the  forward  contract is
entered into and the date it is sold.  In some cases the Manager  might decide
to sell the  security  and deliver  foreign  currency  to settle the  original
purchase  obligation.  If the market  value of the  security  is less than the
amount of foreign  currency the Fund is  obligated to deliver,  the Fund might
have to purchase  additional  foreign  currency on the "spot"  (that is, cash)
market to settle  the  security  trade.  If the market  value of the  security
instead  exceeds  the  amount of foreign  currency  the Fund is  obligated  to
deliver to settle the  trade,  the Fund might have to sell on the spot  market
some of the foreign  currency  received upon the sale of the  security.  There
will be additional transaction costs on the spot market in those cases.

      The  projection of  short-term  currency  market  movements is extremely
difficult,  and the successful  execution of a short-term  hedging strategy is
highly  uncertain.   Forward  contracts  involve  the  risk  that  anticipated
currency  movements  will not be  accurately  predicted,  causing  the Fund to
sustain losses on these  contracts and to pay additional  transactions  costs.
The  use  of  forward  contracts  in  this  manner  might  reduce  the  Fund's
performance  if there  are  unanticipated  changes  in  currency  prices  to a
greater degree than if the Fund had not entered into such contracts.

      At or before the maturity of a forward  contract  requiring  the Fund to
sell a  currency,  the Fund might sell a portfolio  security  and use the sale
proceeds to make delivery of the currency.  In the  alternative the Fund might
retain the  security  and offset its  contractual  obligation  to deliver  the
currency by  purchasing a second  contract.  Under that contract the Fund will
obtain,  on the same maturity date, the same amount of the currency that it is
obligated to deliver.  Similarly,  the Fund might close out a forward contract
requiring  it to  purchase a  specified  currency  by  entering  into a second
contract  entitling  it to sell the same  amount of the same  currency  on the
maturity date of the first contract.  The Fund would realize a gain or loss as
a result of entering into such an  offsetting  forward  contract  under either
circumstance.  The  gain or loss  will  depend  on the  extent  to  which  the
exchange  rate or rates  between the  currencies  involved  moved  between the
execution dates of the first contract and offsetting contract.

      The costs to the Fund of  engaging  in  forward  contracts  varies  with
factors such as the  currencies  involved,  the length of the contract  period
and the market  conditions  then  prevailing.  Because  forward  contracts are
usually  entered into on a principal  basis,  no brokerage fees or commissions
are involved.  Because these contracts are not traded on an exchange, the Fund
must evaluate the credit and performance risk of the  counterparty  under each
forward contract.

      Although the Fund values its assets daily in terms of U.S.  dollars,  it
does not intend to  convert  its  holdings  of  foreign  currencies  into U.S.
dollars on a daily basis.  The Fund may convert foreign  currency from time to
time,  and will  incur  costs in doing so.  Foreign  exchange  dealers  do not
charge a fee for  conversion,  but they do seek to  realize a profit  based on
the  difference  between  the  prices  at  which  they  buy and  sell  various
currencies.  Thus, a dealer might offer to sell a foreign currency to the Fund
at one rate,  while  offering a lesser rate of exchange if the Fund desires to
resell that currency to the dealer.

      |_| Regulatory  Aspects of Hedging  Instruments.  When using futures and
options on futures,  the Fund is required to operate within certain guidelines
and  restrictions  with  respect to the use of futures as  established  by the
Commodities Futures Trading Commission (the "CFTC").  In particular,  the Fund
is exempted from  registration with the CFTC as a "commodity pool operator" if
the Fund complies with the  requirements  of Rule 4.5 adopted by the CFTC. The
Rule does not limit the  percentage  of the Fund's assets that may be used for
futures margin and related options premiums for a bona fide hedging  position.
However,  under the Rule,  the Fund must limit its aggregate  initial  futures
margin  and  related  options  premiums  to not more than 5% of the Fund's net
assets  for  hedging  strategies  that are not  considered  bona fide  hedging
strategies  under  the  Rule.  Under  the  Rule,  the Fund must also use short
futures and options on futures  solely for bona fide hedging  purposes  within
the meaning and intent of the applicable  provisions of the Commodity Exchange
Act.

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

      Under the Investment  Company Act, when the Fund purchases a future,  it
must maintain cash or readily  marketable  short-term  debt  instruments in an
amount  equal to the market  value of the  securities  underlying  the future,
less the margin  deposit  applicable  to it. The account  must be a segregated
account or accounts held by the Fund's Custodian bank.

      |_|  Tax  Aspects  of  Certain  Hedging  Instruments.   Certain  foreign
currency  exchange  contracts  in which the Fund may  invest  are  treated  as
"Section 1256 contracts"  under the Internal  Revenue Code. In general,  gains
or  losses  relating  to  Section  1256  contracts  are  characterized  as 60%
long-term and 40% short-term capital gains or losses under the Code.  However,
foreign  currency gains or losses arising from Section 1256 contracts that are
forward  contracts  generally  are  treated  as  ordinary  income or loss.  In
addition,  Section 1256  contracts held by the Fund at the end of each taxable
year are  "marked-to-market,"  and  unrealized  gains or losses are treated as
though they were realized.  These contracts also may be  marked-to-market  for
purposes  of  determining  the excise tax  applicable  to  investment  company
distributions  and for other purposes under rules  prescribed  pursuant to the
Internal  Revenue  Code.  An election  can be made by the Fund to exempt those
transactions from this marked-to-market treatment.

      Certain   forward   contracts   the  Fund  enters  into  may  result  in
"straddles"  for Federal  income tax purposes.  The straddle  rules may affect
the  character  and  timing of gains  (or  losses)  recognized  by the Fund on
straddle  positions.  Generally,  a loss  sustained  on the  disposition  of a
position  making up a  straddle  is allowed  only to the extent  that the loss
exceeds  any  unrecognized  gain in the  offsetting  positions  making  up the
straddle.  Disallowed loss is generally allowed at the point where there is no
unrecognized gain in the offsetting  positions making up the straddle,  or the
offsetting position is disposed of.

      Under the  Internal  Revenue  Code,  the  following  gains or losses are
treated as ordinary income or loss:

      (1) gains or losses  attributable to fluctuations in exchange rates that
          occur   between  the  time  the  Fund  accrues   interest  or  other
          receivables or accrues expenses or other liabilities  denominated in
          a foreign  currency  and the time the Fund  actually  collects  such
          receivables or pays such liabilities, and
      (2) gains or  losses  attributable  to  fluctuations  in the  value of a
          foreign  currency between the date of acquisition of a debt security
          denominated  in a  foreign  currency  or  foreign  currency  forward
          contracts and the date of disposition.

      Currency  gains and losses are offset against market gains and losses on
each  trade  before  determining  a net  "Section  988" gain or loss under the
Internal  Revenue  Code for that trade,  which may  increase  or decrease  the
amount of the Fund's  investment  company income available for distribution to
its shareholders.

      |X|  Temporary  Defensive   Investments.   When  market  conditions  are
unstable,  or the  Manager  believes  it is  otherwise  appropriate  to reduce
holdings in stocks,  the Fund can invest in a variety of debt  securities  for
defensive purposes.  The Fund can also purchase these securities for liquidity
purposes to meet cash needs due to the  redemption of Fund shares,  or to hold
while  waiting  reinvest  cash  received  from  the  sale of  other  portfolio
securities. The Fund can buy:

|_|   high-quality    (rated   in   the   top   two   rating   categories   of
          nationally-recognized  rating organizations or deemed by the Manager
          to be of comparable  quality),  short-term money market instruments,
          including  those  issued by the U. S.  Treasury or other  government
          agencies,
|_|   commercial paper  (short-term,  unsecured,  promissory notes of domestic
          or foreign companies),
|_|   short-term debt obligations of corporate issuers,
|_|   certificates  of  deposit  and  bankers'  acceptances  of  domestic  and
          foreign banks and savings and loan associations, and
|_|   repurchase agreements.

      These  short-term  debt  securities  would be selected for  defensive or
cash  management  purposes  because  they can normally be disposed of quickly,
are not generally  subject to significant  fluctuations in principal value and
their value will be less subject to interest rate risk than  longer-term  debt
securities.  If securities of foreign companies are selected,  the issuer must
have assets of at least (U.S.) $1 billion.

            Investment Restrictions
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

      |X| What Are  "Fundamental  Policies?"  Fundamental  policies  are those
policies  that the Fund has  adopted  to govern  its  investments  that can be
changed  only by the vote of a  "majority"  of the Fund's  outstanding  voting
securities.  Under the Investment Company Act, a "majority" vote is defined as
the vote of the holders of the lesser of:

      |_|         67% or more of the shares  present or  represented  by proxy
         at a  shareholder  meeting,  if the  holders  of more than 50% of the
         outstanding shares are present or represented by proxy, or
      |_|         more than 50% of the outstanding shares.

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

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

      |_| The Fund  cannot  buy  securities  issued or  guaranteed  by any one
issuer if more than 5% of its total assets would be invested in  securities of
that  issuer  or if it would  then own more than 10% of that  issuer's  voting
securities.  That restriction  applies to 75% of the Fund's total assets.  The
limit does not apply to  securities  issued by the U.S.  government  or any of
its agencies or instrumentalities.

      |_| The Fund cannot deviate from the percentage  restrictions that apply
to its investments in small, unseasoned companies,  borrowing for leverage and
loans of portfolio securities.

      |_| The Fund  cannot  lend  money.  However,  it can  invest in all or a
portion of an issue of bonds,  debentures,  commercial  paper or other similar
corporate  obligations.  The  Fund  may also  lend  its  portfolio  securities
subject  to  the  percentage   restrictions   state  in  "Loans  of  Portfolio
Securities."

      |_| The Fund  cannot  concentrate  investments.  That  means  it  cannot
invest 25% or more of its total assets in any industry.

      |_| The Fund cannot  purchase  securities on margin.  However,  the Fund
may make margin  deposits in  connection  with any of the hedging  instruments
permitted by any of its other fundamental policies.

      |_| The Fund  cannot  invest  in real  estate  or in  interests  in real
estate.  However,  the  Fund can  purchase  readily-marketable  securities  of
companies holding real estate or interests in real estate.

      |_| The Fund cannot invest in commodities or commodity  contracts  other
than  the  hedging  instruments  permitted  by any of  its  other  fundamental
policies,  whether  or not  such  hedging  instrument  is  considered  to be a
commodity or commodity contract.

      |_|  The  Fund  cannot  underwrite  securities  of  other  companies.  A
permitted  exception  is in case it is deemed to be an  underwriter  under the
Securities  Act of  1933  when  reselling  any  securities  held  in  its  own
portfolio.

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

      |_| The Fund cannot  invest in other  open-end  investment  companies or
invest  more than 5% of its net  assets in  closed-end  investment  companies,
including small business investment  companies.  The Fund cannot make any such
investment at commission rates in excess of normal brokerage commissions.

      |_| The Fund cannot pledge,  mortgage or hypothecate  any of its assets.
However,  this does not prohibit the escrow  arrangements or other  collateral
or margin  arrangements  in connection with covered call writing or any of the
hedging instruments permitted by its other fundamental policies.
      The Fund  currently has an operating  policy (which is not a fundamental
policy but will not be changed  without the  approval of a  shareholder  vote)
that prohibits the Fund from issuing senior securities.  However,  that policy
does not prohibit  certain  investment  activities  that are  permitted by the
Fund's other policies,  including, for example,  borrowing money, and entering
into  contracts  to buy or sell  derivatives,  hedging  instruments,  options,
futures and the related margin, collateral or escrow arrangements.

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

      For purposes of the Fund's policy not to concentrate  its investments as
described above, the Fund has adopted the industry  classifications  set forth
in  Appendix A to this  Statement  of  Additional  Information.  This is not a
fundamental policy.

How the Fund is Managed

Organization  and  History.  The Fund is an open-end,  diversified  management
investment   company  with  an  unlimited  number  of  authorized   shares  of
beneficial interest.  The Fund was organized as a Maryland corporation in 1972
and reorganized as a Massachusetts business trust in July 1988.

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

      |_|  Classes of Shares.  The Board of  Trustees  has the power,  without
shareholder  approval,  to divide unissued shares of the Fund into two or more
classes.  The Board has done so, and the Fund  currently  has five  classes of
shares:  Class A, Class B, Class C,  Class N and Class Y. All  classes  invest
in the same investment portfolio.  Each class of shares:

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

      Shares  are  freely  transferable,  and each share of each class has one
vote at shareholder meetings,  with fractional shares voting proportionally on
matters  submitted  to the  vote  of  shareholders.  Each  share  of the  Fund
represents  an interest in the Fund  proportionately  equal to the interest of
each other share of the same class.

      The  Trustees  are  authorized  to create  new  series  and  classes  of
shares.  The  Trustees  may  reclassify  unissued  shares  of  the  Fund  into
additional  series or  classes  of  shares.  The  Trustees  also may divide or
combine  the  shares  of a class  into a greater  or  lesser  number of shares
without  changing the  proportionate  beneficial  interest of a shareholder in
the Fund.  Shares  do not have  cumulative  voting  rights  or  preemptive  or
subscription   rights.   Shares  may  be  voted  in  person  or  by  proxy  at
shareholder meetings.

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

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

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

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

Trustees and Officers of the Fund. The Fund's  Trustees and officers and their
principal  occupations and business  affiliations  and occupations  during the
past five years are listed below.  Trustees denoted with an asterisk (*) below
are  deemed  to be  "interested  persons"  of the Fund  under  the  Investment
Company Act.  All of the  Trustees are Trustees or Directors of the  following
New York-based Oppenheimer funds2:

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

      Ms.  Macaskill and Messrs.  Spiro,  Donohue,  Wixted,  Zack,  Bishop and
Farrar  respectively  hold the same  offices  with the  other  New  York-based
Oppenheimer  funds as with the Fund. As of December 5, 2000,  the Trustees and
officers of the Fund as a group owned of record or  beneficially  less than 1%
of each class of shares of the Fund. The foregoing  statement does not reflect
ownership  of shares of the Fund held of record by an  employee  benefit  plan
for employees of the Manager,  other than the shares  beneficially owned under
the plan by the  officers  of the Fund listed  above.  Ms.  Macaskill  and Mr.
Donohue  are  trustees of that plan.  Mr.  Bartlett,  as the Fund's  portfolio
manager,  receives  advice and  counsel  from other  members of the  Manager's
Equity Department.

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

Donald W. Spiro, Vice Chairman of the Board of Trustees, Age: 75.
399 Ski Trail, Smoke Rise, New Jersey 07405
Formerly he held the following  positions:  Chairman  Emeritus  (August 1991 -
August 1999),  Chairman (November 1987 - January 1991) and a director (January
1969  -  August   1999)   of  the   Manager;   President   and   Director   of
OppenheimerFunds  Distributor,  Inc.,  a  subsidiary  of the  Manager  and the
Fund's Distributor (July 1978 - January 1992).

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Russell S. Reynolds, Jr., Trustee, Age: 69.
8 Sound Shore Drive, Greenwich, Connecticut 06830
Chairman  of  The  Directorship  Search  Group,  Inc.  (corporate   governance
consulting  and  executive  recruiting);  a  director  of  Professional  Staff
Limited (a U.K. temporary  staffing company);  a life trustee of International
House (non-profit  educational  organization),  and a trustee of the Greenwich
Historical Society.

Clayton K. Yeutter, Trustee, Age: 70.
10475 E. Laurel Lane, Scottsdale, Arizona 85259
Of  Counsel,   Hogan  &  Hartson  (a   Washington,   D.C.  law  firm).   Other
directorships:  Allied Zurich Pl.c;  ConAgra,  Inc.; FMC Corporation;  Farmers
Group Inc.;  Oppenheimer Funds; Texas Instruments  Incorporated;  Weyerhaeuser
Co. and Zurich Allied AG.

Bruce Bartlett, Vice President and Portfolio Manager, Age: 50.
Two World Trade Center, New York, New York 10048-0203
Senior Vice  President  (since  January  1999) of the Manager;  an officer and
portfolio manager of other Oppenheimer  funds, prior to joining the Manager in
April,  1995, he was a Vice President and Senior Portfolio Manager at First of
America Investment Corp. (September 1986 - April 1995).

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

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

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

Robert J. Bishop, Assistant Treasurer, Age: 42.
6803 South Tucson Way, Englewood, Colorado 80112
Vice President of the  Manager/Mutual  Fund  Accounting  (since May 1996);  an
officer of other  Oppenheimer  funds;  formerly an Assistant Vice President of
the  Manager/Mutual  Fund  Accounting  (April  1994  - May  1996)  and a  Fund
Controller of the Manager.

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

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



<PAGE>

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                    Total
------------------------                       Retirement       Compensation
                                                Benefits          from all
                             Aggregate      Accrued as Part    New York based
                            Compensation        of Fund          Oppenheimer
Trustee's Name               from Fund1         Expenses      Funds (29 Funds)2
and Position
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Leon Levy                     $32,860           $14,552           $166,700
Chairman
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Robert G. Galli               $11,148             None            $177,7153
Study Committee Member
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Phillip Griffiths             $4,0314             None             $5,125

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Benjamin Lipstein             $32,864           $17,037           $144,100
Study Committee
Chairman,
Audit Committee Member
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Elizabeth B. Moynihan         $11,604             $744            $101,500
Study Committee Member
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Kenneth A. Randall            $18,904            $9,033            $93,100
Audit Committee Member
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Edward V. Regan                $9,854             None             $92,100
Proxy Committee
Chairman, Audit
Committee Member
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Russell S. Reynolds, Jr.      $10,078            $2,706            $68,900
Proxy Committee Member
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Donald Spiro                  $ 4,730             None             $10,250
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Clayton K. Yeutter            $6,6925             None             $51,675
Proxy Committee Member
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1. Aggregate  compensation includes fees, deferred  compensation,  if any, and
   retirement plan benefits accrued for a Trustee or Director.
2. For the 1999 calendar year.
3. Total  compensation  for  the  1999  calendar  year  includes  compensation
   received for serving as Trustee or Director of ten other Oppenheimer funds.
4. Includes  $4,031which  was deferred  under the Deferred  Compensation  Plan
described below.
5. Includes  $1,673which  was deferred  under the Deferred  Compensation  Plan
described below.

      |X|  Retirement  Plan for  Trustees.  The Fund has adopted a  retirement
plan that  provides for payments to retired  Trustees.  Payments are up to 80%
of the average  compensation  paid during a Trustee's five years of service in
which the highest  compensation was received.  A Trustee must serve as trustee
for any of the New  York-based  Oppenheimer  funds for at least 15 years to be
eligible for the maximum  payment.  Each  Trustee's  retirement  benefits will
depend on the  amount  of the  Trustee's  future  compensation  and  length of
service.  Therefore the amount of those benefits  cannot be determined at this
time,  nor can we estimate  the number of years of credited  service that will
be used to determine those benefits.

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

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

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

      Merrill  Lynch  Pierce  Fenner & Smith  Inc.,  4800 Deer Lake  Drive E.,
      Floor 3,  Jacksonville,  Florida 32246,  which owned 173,263.816 Class C
      shares (5.26% of the Class C shares then  outstanding),  for the benefit
      of its customers;  and Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company, 1295
      State  Street,  Springfield,   Massachusetts  01111-0001,   which  owned
      3,086,879.261  Class  Y  shares  (99.49%  of the  Class  Y  shares  then
      outstanding), for the benefit of its institutional clients.

There are no  persons  who owned of record or who were  known by the Fund to own
beneficially 5% or more of the Fund's outstanding Class A and Class B shares.

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

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

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

      |X| The Investment Advisory  Agreement.  The Manager provides investment
advisory  and  management  services to the Fund under an  investment  advisory
agreement  between the Manager and the Fund.  The Manager  selects  securities
for the Fund's  portfolio and handles its day-to-day  business.  The portfolio
manager  of the Fund is  employed  by the  Manager  and is the  person  who is
principally   responsible   for  the  day-to-day   management  of  the  Fund's
portfolio.  Other members of the Manager's  Equity  Portfolio Team provide the
portfolio manager with counsel and support in managing the Fund's portfolio.

      The agreement requires the Manager,  at its expense, to provide the Fund
with adequate  office space,  facilities and  equipment.  It also requires the
Manager to provide and supervise  the  activities  of all  administrative  and
clerical personnel required to provide effective  administration for the Fund.
Those  responsibilities  include the  compilation  and  maintenance of records
with  respect to its  operations,  the  preparation  and  filing of  specified
reports,  and composition of proxy materials and  registration  statements for
continuous public sale of shares of the Fund.

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

 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   Fiscal Year ended 8/31:     Management Fees Paid to OppenheimerFunds, Inc.
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
             1998                               $13,742,084
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
             1999                               $13,894,842
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
             2000                               $20,119,482
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------

      The investment  advisory agreement states that in the absence of willful
misfeasance,  bad faith,  gross negligence in the performance of its duties or
reckless  disregard  of  its  obligations  and  duties  under  the  investment
advisory  agreement,  the Manager is not liable for any loss the Fund sustains
for any investment  adoption of any investment  policy, or the purchase,  sale
or retention of any security.

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

Brokerage Policies of the Fund

Brokerage  Provisions of the Investment Advisory Agreement.  One of the duties
of the  Manager  under the  investment  advisory  agreement  is to arrange the
portfolio   transactions  for  the  Fund.  The  advisory   agreement  contains
provisions  relating to the employment of  broker-dealers to effect the Fund's
portfolio  transactions.  The Manager is authorized by the advisory  agreement
to employ  broker-dealers,  including  "affiliated"  brokers,  as that term is
defined in the Investment  Company Act. The Manager may employ  broker-dealers
that the Manager thinks,  in its best judgment based on all relevant  factors,
will implement the policy of the Fund to obtain,  at reasonable  expense,  the
"best execution" of the Fund's portfolio transactions.  "Best execution" means
prompt and reliable  execution at the most  favorable  price  obtainable.  The
Manager need not seek competitive commission bidding.  However, it is expected
to be aware of the  current  rates of eligible  brokers  and to  minimize  the
commissions  paid to the extent  consistent with the interests and policies of
the Fund as established by its Board of Trustees.

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

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

      Transactions  in  securities  other than those for which an  exchange is
the primary  market are generally done with  principals or market  makers.  In
transactions  on  foreign  exchanges,  the Fund may be  required  to pay fixed
brokerage  commissions  and therefore would not have the benefit of negotiated
commissions  available  in  U.S.  markets.   Brokerage  commissions  are  paid
primarily for  transactions in listed  securities or for certain  fixed-income
agency transactions in the secondary market.  Otherwise brokerage  commissions
are paid only if it appears  likely that a better  price or  execution  can be
obtained by doing so. In an option  transaction,  the Fund ordinarily uses the
same broker for the purchase or sale of the option and any  transaction in the
securities  to which the option  relates.  Other funds  advised by the Manager
have investment  policies  similar to those of the Fund. Those other funds may
purchase  or sell the  same  securities  as the  Fund at the same  time as the
Fund,  which could  affect the supply and price of the  securities.  If two or
more funds  advised by the Manager  purchase the same security on the same day
from the same  dealer,  the  transactions  under  those  combined  orders  are
averaged as to price and  allocated  in  accordance  with the purchase or sale
orders actually placed for each account.

      Most purchases of debt  obligations  are principal  transactions  at net
prices.  Instead of using a broker for those  transactions,  the Fund normally
deals  directly  with the  selling or  purchasing  principal  or market  maker
unless  the  Manager  determines  that a  better  price  or  execution  can be
obtained  by  using  the   services  of  a  broker.   Purchases  of  portfolio
securities  from  underwriters  include a commission or concession paid by the
issuer to the  underwriter.  Purchases  from dealers  include a spread between
the bid and asked prices.  The Fund seeks to obtain prompt  execution of these
orders at the most favorable net price.

The investment advisory agreement permits the Manager to allocate brokerage for
research services.  The research services provided by a particular broker may
be useful only to one or more of the advisory accounts of the Manager and its
affiliates.  The investment research received for the commissions of those
other accounts may be useful both to the Fund and one or more of the
Manager's other accounts.  Investment research may be supplied to the Manager
by a third party at the instance of a broker through which trades are placed.

      Investment   research  services  include  information  and  analysis  on
particular  companies and industries as well as market or economic  trends and
portfolio strategy,  market quotations for portfolio evaluations,  information
systems,  computer  hardware and similar products and services.  If a research
service  also  assists  the  Manager  in  a  non-research  capacity  (such  as
bookkeeping or other  administrative  functions),  then only the percentage or
component   that  provides   assistance  to  the  Manager  in  the  investment
decision-making process may be paid in commission dollars.

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

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

  -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Fiscal Year Ended 8/31:     Total Brokerage Commissions Paid by the Fund1
  -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
  -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
              1998                               $1,809,272
  -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
  -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
              1999                               $4,535,097
  -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
  -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
              2000                               $1,551,0402
  -----------------------------------------------------------------------------

  1. Amounts do not include  spreads or concessions on principal  transactions
   on a net trade basis.
  2. In the fiscal year ended  8/31/00,  the amount of  transactions  directed
   to brokers for  research  services was  $691,230,606  and the amount of the
   commissions paid to broker-dealers for those services was $624,828.

Distribution and Service Plans

The Distributor.  Under its General Distributor's Agreement with the Fund, the
Distributor acts as the Fund's principal  underwriter in the continuous public
offering of the Fund's classes of shares.  The Distributor is not obligated to
sell a specific number of shares.  Expenses normally attributable to sales are
borne by the Distributor.

      The compensation  paid to (or retained by) the Distributor from the sale
of shares or on the  redemption  of shares during the Fund's three most recent
fiscal years is shown in the table below.

 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
          Aggregate    Class A       Commissions   Commissions   Commissions
 Fiscal   Front-End    Front-End     on Class A    on Class B    on Class C
 Year     Sales        Sales         Shares        Shares        Shares
 Ended    Charges on   Charges       Advanced by   Advanced by   Advanced by
 8/31     Class A      Retained by   Distributor1  Distributor1  Distributor1
          Shares       Distributor*
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   1998    $4,793,199   $1,473,182     $223,746     $5,878,634     $279,520
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   1999    $2,645,481    $842,368      $169,949     $2,627,603     $136,923
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   2000    $4,977,997   $1,530,627     $457,833     $6,360,803     $457,702
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 *Includes  amounts  retained by a  broker-dealer  that is an  affiliate or a
   parent of the Distributor.
 1. The  Distributor  advances  commission  payments  to dealers  for certain
 sales of Class A shares  and for  sales of Class B and  Class C shares  from
 its own resources at the time of sale.


 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Class A Contingent   Class B Contingent   Class C Contingent
                   Deferred Sales       Deferred Sales       Deferred Sales
  Fiscal Year     Charges Retained     Charges Retained     Charges Retained
   Ended 8/31      by Distributor       by Distributor       by Distributor
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      2000             $9,808              $949,680             $13,250
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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

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

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

      The Board of Trustees  and the  Independent  Trustees  must  approve all
material  amendments  to a plan.  An  amendment  to  increase  materially  the
amount of payments  to be made under a plan must be  approved by  shareholders
of the class  affected by the  amendment.  Because  Class B shares of the Fund
automatically  convert  into  Class A shares  after six  years,  the Fund must
obtain the  approval of both Class A and Class B  shareholders  for a proposed
material  amendment  to  the  Class  A Plan  that  would  materially  increase
payments  under the Plan.  That approval  must be by a "majority"  (as defined
in the Investment Company Act) of the shares of each Class,  voting separately
by class.

      While the Plans are in effect,  the  Treasurer of the Fund shall provide
separate  written  reports  on the  plans to the  Board of  Trustees  at least
quarterly for its review.  The Reports shall detail the amount of all payments
made  under a plan,  the  purpose  for  which the  payments  were made and the
identity of each  recipient of a payment.  The reports on the Class B Plan and
Class C Plan shall also include the Distributor's  distribution costs for that
quarter  and in the case of the  Class B plan the  amount  of those  costs for
previous  fiscal  periods that have been carried  forward.  Those  reports are
subject to the review and approval of the Independent Trustees.

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

Under the plan for a class,  no  payment  will be made to any  recipient  in any
quarter in which the  aggregate net asset value of all Fund shares of that class
held by the  recipient  for itself and its  customers  does not exceed a minimum
amount,  if  any,  that  may be set  from  time to  time  by a  majority  of the
Independent Trustees.  The Board of Trustees has set no minimum amount of assets
to qualify for payments under the plans.

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

      For the fiscal  year ended  August 31, 2000  payments  under the Class A
Plan  totaled  $5,429,482,  all  of  which  was  paid  by the  Distributor  to
recipients.  That included  $239,372 paid to an affiliate of the Distributor's
parent  company.  Any  unreimbursed   expenses  the  Distributor  incurs  with
respect  to  Class  A  shares  in any  fiscal  year  cannot  be  recovered  in
subsequent  years.  The Distributor may not use payments  received the Class A
Plan  to  pay  any  of its  interest  expenses,  carrying  charges,  or  other
financial costs, or allocation of overhead.

      |_| Class B,  Class C and Class N Service  and  Distribution  Plan Fees.
Under  each plan,  service  fees and  distribution  fees are  computed  on the
average of the net asset value of shares in the respective  class,  determined
as of the close of each regular  business  day during the period.  The Class B
plan allows the  Distributor  to be  reimbursed  for its services and costs in
distributing  Class B shares and servicing  accounts.  The Class C and Class N
plans provide for the  Distributor to be  compensated at a flat rate,  whether
the  Distributor's  distribution  expenses  are more or less than the  amounts
paid by the Fund  under the plan  during the period for which the fee is paid.
The types of services  that  recipients  provide  are similar to the  services
provided under the Class A service plan, described above.

      The Class B, Class C and Class N plans permit the  Distributor to retain
both the  asset-based  sales charges and the service fees or to pay recipients
the service fee on a quarterly  basis,  without  payment in advance.  However,
the  Distributor  currently  intends to pay the service fee to  recipients  in
advance  for the first year after the  shares are  purchased.  After the first
year shares are  outstanding,  the  Distributor  makes  service  fee  payments
quarterly  on those  shares.  The  advance  payment  is based on the net asset
value of shares  sold.  Shares  purchased  by  exchange do not qualify for the
advance  service  fee  payment.  If  Class B,  Class C or  Class N shares  are
redeemed  during the first year after their  purchase,  the  recipient  of the
service fees on those shares will be obligated to repay the  Distributor a pro
rata portion of the advance payment of the service fee made on those shares.

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

The  asset-based  sales  charges  on Class B,  Class C and Class N shares  allow
investors to buy shares  without a front-end  sales  charge  while  allowing the
Distributor  to  compensate  dealers that sell those  shares.  The Fund pays the
asset-based  sales  charges to the  Distributor  for its  services  rendered  in
distributing  Class B, Class C and Class N shares.  The payments are made to the
Distributor in recognition that the Distributor:

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

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

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Distribution Fees Paid to the Distributor in the Fiscal Year Ended 8/31/00*
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                Distributor's   Distributor's
                                                  Aggregate      Unreimbursed
                     Total         Amount       Unreimbursed    Expenses as %
                   Payments     Retained by       Expenses      of Net Assets
                  Under Plan    Distributor      Under Plan        of Class
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B Plan      $6,753,580     $5,373,578      $11,052,205        1.11%
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C Plan      $1,028,132     $ 335,453        $ 984,333         0.56%
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*Class N shares were not offered for sale during the fiscal year ended  August
31, 2000.

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

Performance of the Fund

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

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

      Use of  standardized  performance  calculations  enables an  investor to
compare the Fund's  performance to the performance of other funds for the same
periods.  However,  a number of factors should be considered  before using the
Fund's   performance   information  as  a  basis  for  comparison  with  other
investments:

      |_| Total returns measure the  performance of a hypothetical  account in
the  Fund  over  various  periods  and do not  show  the  performance  of each
shareholder's  account.  Your account's  performance  will vary from the model
performance  data if your  dividends  are received in cash, or you buy or sell
shares  during the period,  or you bought your shares at a different  time and
price than the shares used in the model.

      |_| The Fund's  performance  returns do not  reflect the effect of taxes
on dividends and capital gains distributions.
      |_| An  investment  in the Fund is not  insured by the FDIC or any other
government agency.
      |_| The  principal  value of the Fund's shares and total returns are not
guaranteed and normally will fluctuate on a daily basis.
      |_| When an investor's  shares are  redeemed,  they may be worth more or
less than their original cost.
      |_|  Total  returns  for any  given  past  period  represent  historical
performance  information  and  are  not,  and  should  not  be  considered,  a
prediction of future returns.

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

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


      In  calculating  total returns for Class A shares,  the current  maximum
sales  charge of 5.75% (as a  percentage  of the  offering  price) is deducted
from the initial  investment  ("P")  (unless the return is shown without sales
charge,  as described  below).  For Class B shares,  payment of the applicable
contingent  deferred  sales  charge is  applied,  depending  on the period for
which the return is shown:  5.0% in the first year,  4.0% in the second  year,
3.0% in the third and fourth years,  2.0% in the fifth year, 1.0% in the sixth
year and none  thereafter.  For Class C  shares,  the 1%  contingent  deferred
sales charge is deducted for returns for the 1-year period.  There is no sales
charge for Class Y shares.

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

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                               [OBJECT OMITTED]
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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

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


<PAGE>

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            The Fund's Total Returns for the Periods Ended 8/31/004
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
         Cumulative Total              Average Annual Total Returns
Class    Returns (10
of       years or Life of
Shares   Class)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                  5-Year           10-Year
                                1-Year              (or              (or
                                              life-of-class)   life-of-class)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
         After    Without  After    Without  After    Without  After   Without
         Sales    Sales    Sales    Sales    Sales    Sales    Sales   Sales
         Charge   Charge   Charge   Charge   Charge   Charge   Charge  Charge
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class A  595.69%  638.12%  57.50%   67.10%   24.94%   26.43%   21.41%  22.13%
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B  319.21%1 319.21%1 60.82%   65.82%   25.24%   25.40%   22.58%1 22.58%1
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C  198.19%2 198.19%2 64.87%   65.87%   25.36%2  25.36%2  N/A     N/A
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class Y  321.59%3 321.59%3 67.56%   67.56%   26.71%   26.71%   25.89%3 25.89%3
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Inception of Class B:      8/17/93
2. Inception of Class C:      11/1/95
3. Inception of Class Y:      6/1/94
4. Class N shares  were not  offered  for sale  during  the fiscal  year ended
August 31, 2000.

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

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

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

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

      The Fund may also compare its  performance to that of other funds in its
Morningstar  category.  In addition  to its star  rankings,  Morningstar  also
categorizes and compares a fund's 3-year  performance  based on  Morningstar's
classification  of the fund's  investments and investment  style,  rather than
how  a  fund  defines  its  investment  objective.  Morningstar's  four  broad
categories (domestic equity,  international equity, municipal bond and taxable
bond)  are  each  further   subdivided  into  categories  based  on  types  of
investments and investment styles.  Those comparisons by Morningstar are based
on the same  risk and  return  measurements  as its star  rankings  but do not
consider the effect of sales charges.

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

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

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


ABOUT YOUR ACCOUNT

            How to Buy Shares

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

AccountLink.  When shares are  purchased  through  AccountLink,  each purchase
must be at least $25.  Shares  will be  purchased  two regular  business  days
following the regular  business day you instruct the  Distributor  to initiate
the  Automated  Clearing  House  ("ACH")  transfer  to buy  the  shares.  That
instruction  must  be  received  prior  to the  close  of The New  York  Stock
Exchange that day.  Dividends  will begin to accrue on shares  purchased  with
the  proceeds  of ACH  transfers  on the  business  day after the  shares  are
purchased.  The Exchange  normally  closes at 4:00 P.M., but may close earlier
on certain days.  The proceeds of ACH  transfers are normally  received by the
Fund 3 days after the  transfers  are  initiated.  If the  proceeds of the ACH
transfer  are not received on a timely  basis,  the  Distributor  reserves the
right to cancel  the  purchase  order.  The  Distributor  and the Fund are not
responsible for any delays in purchasing  shares  resulting from delays in ACH
transmissions.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

      The  Transfer  Agent  will not hold  shares in escrow for  purchases  of
shares of the Fund and other Oppenheimer funds by  OppenheimerFunds  prototype
401(k) plans under a Letter of Intent.  If the intended  purchase amount under
a Letter of Intent entered into by an  OppenheimerFunds  prototype 401(k) plan
is not purchased by the plan by the end of the Letter of Intent period,  there
will be no adjustment of commissions  paid to the  broker-dealer  or financial
institution of record for accounts held in the name of that plan.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

      Before  you  establish  Asset  Builder  payments,  you  should  obtain a
prospectus  of the  selected  fund(s)  from  your  financial  advisor  (or the
Distributor)  and request an application  from the  Distributor.  Complete the
application  and return  it.  You may change the amount of your Asset  Builder
payment  or you can  terminate  these  automatic  investments  at any  time by
writing to the  Transfer  Agent.  The  Transfer  Agent  requires a  reasonable
period   (approximately  15  days)  after  receipt  of  your  instructions  to
implement them. The Fund reserves the right to amend,  suspend, or discontinue
offering Asset Builder plans at any time without prior notice.

Retirement  Plans.  Certain types of retirement plans are entitled to purchase
shares of the Fund without sales charge or at reduced  sales charge rates,  as
described in Appendix B to this Statement of Additional  Information.  Certain
special  sales  charge  arrangements  described  in  that  Appendix  apply  to
retirement  plans whose records are maintained on a daily  valuation  basis by
Merrill  Lynch Pierce  Fenner & Smith,  Inc. or an  independent  record keeper
that has a contract  or special  arrangement  with  Merrill  Lynch.  If on the
date  the plan  sponsor  signed  the  Merrill  Lynch  record  keeping  service
agreement  the plan has less than $3  million  in assets  (other  than  assets
invested in money market funds) invested in applicable  investments,  then the
retirement  plan may purchase  only Class B shares of the  Oppenheimer  funds.
Any retirement  plans in that category that currently invest in Class B shares
of the Fund will have their Class B shares  converted to Class A shares of the
Fund when the plan's applicable investments reach $5 million.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

      Dealers  other than  Exchange  members  may  conduct  trading in certain
securities  on days on which the  Exchange is closed  (including  weekends and
holidays) or after 4:00 P.M. on a regular  business  day. The Fund's net asset
values will not be  calculated  on those  days,  and the values of some of the
Fund's  portfolio  securities  may change  significantly  on those days,  when
shareholders  may not  purchase  or redeem  shares.  Additionally,  trading on
European and Asian stock exchanges and  over-the-counter  markets  normally is
completed before the close of The New York Stock Exchange.

      Changes  in the values of  securities  traded on  foreign  exchanges  or
markets as a result of events that occur after the prices of those  securities
are determined,  but before the close of The New York Stock Exchange, will not
be  reflected  in the  Fund's  calculation  of its net asset  values  that day
unless the Board of Trustees  determines  that the event is likely to effect a
material  change  in the  value of the  security.  The  Manager  may make that
determination, under procedures established by the Board.

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

      |_| Equity securities traded on a U.S.  securities exchange or on NASDAQ
are valued as follows:
(1)   if last sale information is regularly  reported,  they are valued at the
            last reported  sale price on the principal  exchange on which they
            are traded or on NASDAQ, as applicable, on that day, or
         (2)if sale  information  is not available on a valuation  date,  they
            are  valued  at  the  last  reported  sale  price   preceding  the
            valuation  date if it is within  the spread of the  closing  "bid"
            and  "asked"  prices  on the  valuation  date or,  if not,  at the
            closing "bid" price on the valuation date.

      |_| Equity securities traded on a foreign securities  exchange generally
are valued in one of the following ways:

         (1)at the last sale price available to the pricing  service  approved
            by the Board of Trustees, or
         (2)at the last sale price  obtained by the Manager from the report of
            the  principal  exchange  on which the  security  is traded at its
            last trading session on or immediately  before the valuation date,
            or
         (3)at the mean  between the "bid" and "asked"  prices  obtained  from
            the principal  exchange on which the security is traded or, on the
            basis  of  reasonable  inquiry,  from  two  market  makers  in the
            security.

      |_| Long-term debt securities  having a remaining  maturity in excess of
60 days are valued  based on the mean  between  the "bid" and  "asked"  prices
determined  by a portfolio  pricing  service  approved by the Fund's  Board of
Trustees  or  obtained by the  Manager  from two active  market  makers in the
security on the basis of reasonable inquiry.

      |_| The  following  securities  are valued at the mean between the "bid"
and "asked"  prices  determined  by a pricing  service  approved by the Fund's
Board of Trustees or obtained by the Manager from two active  market makers in
the security on the basis of reasonable inquiry:
         (1)debt  instruments  that have a maturity of more than 397 days when
            issued,
         (2)debt  instruments  that had a  maturity  of 397 days or less  when
            issued and have a remaining maturity of more than 60 days, and
         (3)non-money  market debt instruments that had a maturity of 397 days
            or less when  issued and which  have a  remaining  maturity  of 60
            days or less.

      |_|  The  following   securities  are  valued  at  cost,   adjusted  for
amortization of premiums and accretion of discounts:

         (1)money market debt securities held by a non-money  market fund that
            had a  maturity  of less  than 397 days  when  issued  that have a
            remaining maturity of 60 days or less, and
         (2)debt  instruments  held  by  a  money  market  fund  that  have  a
            remaining maturity of 397 days or less.

      |_|   Securities   (including   restricted    securities)   not   having
readily-available  market quotations are valued at fair value determined under
the Board's  procedures.  If the Manager is unable to locate two market makers
willing to give  quotes,  a  security  may be priced at the mean  between  the
"bid" and "asked"  prices  provided by a single  active market maker (which in
certain cases may be the "bid" price if no "asked" price is available).

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

      The  closing  prices  in  the  London  foreign   exchange  market  on  a
particular  business day that are provided to the Manager by a bank, dealer or
pricing  service  that the Manager has  determined  to be reliable are used to
value foreign currency,  including forward  contracts,  and to convert to U.S.
dollars securities that are denominated in foreign currency.

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

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

How to Sell Shares

      Information  on  how to  sell  shares  of  the  Fund  is  stated  in the
Prospectus.  The information below provides  additional  information about the
procedures and conditions for redeeming shares.

Reinvestment Privilege.  Within six months of a redemption,  a shareholder may
reinvest all or part of the redemption proceeds of:

      |_| Class A shares  purchased  subject  to an  initial  sales  charge or
Class A shares on which a contingent deferred sales charge was paid, or
      |_| Class B shares that were subject to the Class B contingent  deferred
sales charge when redeemed.

      The  reinvestment  may be made  without  sales  charge  only in  Class A
shares of the Fund or any of the other  Oppenheimer funds into which shares of
the Fund are  exchangeable  as  described in "How to Exchange  Shares"  below.
Reinvestment  will be at the net asset value next computed  after the Transfer
Agent receives the  reinvestment  order. The shareholder must ask the Transfer
Agent for that privilege at the time of reinvestment.  This privilege does not
apply to Class C or Class Y  shares.  The  Fund may  amend,  suspend  or cease
offering this  reinvestment  privilege at any time as to shares redeemed after
the date of such amendment, suspension or cessation.

      Any capital  gain that was  realized  when the shares  were  redeemed is
taxable,  and  reinvestment  will not alter any  capital  gains tax payable on
that gain. If there has been a capital loss on the redemption,  some or all of
the loss may not be tax deductible,  depending on the timing and amount of the
reinvestment.  Under the Internal Revenue Code, if the redemption  proceeds of
Fund shares on which a sales charge was paid are  reinvested  in shares of the
Fund or  another  of the  Oppenheimer  funds  within 90 days of payment of the
sales  charge,  the  shareholder's  basis in the  shares of the Fund that were
redeemed  may not  include  the amount of the sales  charge  paid.  That would
reduce  the  loss  or  increase  the  gain  recognized  from  the  redemption.
However,  in that  case the  sales  charge  would be added to the basis of the
shares acquired by the reinvestment of the redemption proceeds.

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

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

Involuntary  Redemptions.  The Fund's Board of Trustees has the right to cause
the involuntary  redemption of the shares held in any account if the aggregate
net asset  value of those  shares is less than $500 or such  lesser  amount as
the Board may fix.  The Board  will not cause the  involuntary  redemption  of
shares in an  account  if the  aggregate  net asset  value of such  shares has
fallen  below the stated  minimum  solely as a result of market  fluctuations.
If the Board  exercises this right, it may also fix the  requirements  for any
notice to be given to the  shareholders  in question  (not less than 30 days).
The Board may  alternatively  set requirements for the shareholder to increase
the  investment,  or set other terms and  conditions  so that the shares would
not be involuntarily redeemed.

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

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

Distributions   From  Retirement  Plans.   Requests  for  distributions   from
OppenheimerFunds-sponsored  IRAs,  403(b)(7)  custodial plans, 401(k) plans or
pension  or   profit-sharing   plans   should  be   addressed   to   "Trustee,
OppenheimerFunds  Retirement  Plans,"  c/o the  Transfer  Agent at its address
listed in "How To Sell Shares" in the  Prospectus or on the back cover of this
Statement of Additional Information. The request must

      (1)               state the reason for the distribution;
      (2)               state the owner's  awareness  of tax  penalties if the
         distribution is premature; and
      (3)               conform  to the  requirements  of  the  plan  and  the
         Fund's other redemption requirements.

      Participants      (other     than     self-employed      persons)     in
OppenheimerFunds-sponsored  pension or profit-sharing plans with shares of the
Fund held in the name of the plan or its  fiduciary  may not directly  request
redemption of their accounts.  The plan  administrator  or fiduciary must sign
the request.

      Distributions  from  pension  and profit  sharing  plans are  subject to
special  requirements  under the Internal  Revenue Code and certain  documents
(available  from the Transfer  Agent) must be completed  and  submitted to the
Transfer  Agent  before  the  distribution  may be  made.  Distributions  from
retirement  plans are subject to withholding  requirements  under the Internal
Revenue Code, and IRS Form W-4P  (available  from the Transfer  Agent) must be
submitted  to  the  Transfer  Agent  with  the  distribution  request,  or the
distribution may be delayed.  Unless the shareholder has provided the Transfer
Agent with a certified tax  identification  number,  the Internal Revenue Code
requires that tax be withheld from any  distribution  even if the  shareholder
elects not to have tax withheld.  The Fund, the Manager, the Distributor,  and
the  Transfer  Agent  assume  no   responsibility   to  determine   whether  a
distribution  satisfies the  conditions of applicable tax laws and will not be
responsible for any tax penalties assessed in connection with a distribution.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

            How to Exchange Shares

      As  stated  in  the  Prospectus,   shares  of  a  particular   class  of
Oppenheimer  funds having more than one class of shares may be exchanged  only
for  shares  of  the  same  class  of  other  Oppenheimer  funds.   Shares  of
Oppenheimer  funds that have a single class  without a class  designation  are
deemed  "Class A"  shares  for this  purpose.  You can  obtain a current  list
showing  which  funds  offer  which  classes by  calling  the  Distributor  at
1.800.525.7048.

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

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

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

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

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

      |_|  How  Exchanges  Affect  Contingent   Deferred  Sales  Charges.   No
contingent  deferred  sales  charge is imposed on  exchanges  of shares of any
class purchased subject to a contingent deferred sales charge.  However,  when
Class A shares  acquired by  exchange  of Class A shares of other  Oppenheimer
funds  purchased  subject to a Class A  contingent  deferred  sales charge are
redeemed  within  18 months of the end of the  calendar  month of the  initial
purchase of the  exchanged  Class A shares,  the Class A  contingent  deferred
sales  charge is  imposed  on the  redeemed  shares.  The  Class B  contingent
deferred  sales  charge is imposed on Class B shares  acquired  by exchange if
they are  redeemed  within 6 years of the initial  purchase  of the  exchanged
Class B shares.  The Class C  contingent  deferred  sales charge is imposed on
Class C shares  acquired by exchange if they are redeemed  within 12 months of
the initial purchase of the exchanged Class C shares.  With respect to Class N
shares,  a 1.0%  contingent  deferred  sales  charge  will be  imposed  if the
retirement  plan (not  including IRAs and 403(b) plans) is terminated or Class
N shares of all  Oppenheimer  funds are terminated as an investment  option of
the plan and Class N shares  are  redeemed  within 18 months  after the plan's
first  purchase of Class N shares of any  Oppenheimer  fund or with respect to
an  individual  retirement  plan or 403(b)  plan,  Class N shares are redeemed
within  18  months  of the  plan's  first  purchase  of Class N shares  of any
Oppenheimer fund.

      When Class B or Class C shares are redeemed to effect an  exchange,  the
priorities  described  in  "How  To Buy  Shares"  in the  Prospectus  for  the
imposition  of the Class B or the Class C  contingent  deferred  sales  charge
will be followed in  determining  the order in which the shares are exchanged.
Before  exchanging  shares,  shareholders  should  take into  account  how the
exchange  may  affect  any  contingent  deferred  sales  charge  that might be
imposed in the subsequent redemption of remaining shares.  Shareholders owning
shares of more than one class must specify  which class of shares they wish to
exchange.

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

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

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

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

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

Dividends, Capital Gains and Taxes

      Dividends  and  Distributions.  The Fund has no fixed  dividend rate and
there  can  be no  assurance  as to  the  payment  of  any  dividends  or  the
realization of any capital gains.  The dividends and  distributions  paid by a
class of shares will vary from time to time  depending  on market  conditions,
the  composition  of the Fund's  portfolio,  and expenses borne by the Fund or
borne separately by a class.  Dividends are calculated in the same manner,  at
the  same  time,  and on the  same day for  each  class  of  shares.  However,
dividends  on Class B,  Class C and Class N shares  are  expected  to be lower
than  dividends  on Class A and Class Y shares.  That is because of the effect
of the  asset-based  sales  charge  on Class B,  Class C and  Class N  shares.
Those  dividends will also differ in amount as a consequence of any difference
in the net asset values of the different classes of shares.

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

Tax  Status  of the  Fund's  Dividends  and  Distributions.  The  Federal  tax
treatment of the Fund's  dividends and capital gains  distributions is briefly
highlighted in the Prospectus.

          Special   provisions  of  the  Internal   Revenue  Code  govern  the
eligibility of the Fund's dividends for the  dividends-received  deduction for
corporate   shareholders.   Long-term  capital  gains  distributions  are  not
eligible  for the  deduction.  The amount of  dividends  paid by the Fund that
may  qualify  for  the  deduction  is  limited  to  the  aggregate  amount  of
qualifying  dividends  that the Fund derives from portfolio  investments  that
the  Fund has  held  for a  minimum  period,  usually  46  days.  A  corporate
shareholder  will not be eligible for the deduction on dividends  paid on Fund
shares  held for 45 days or less.  To the  extent  the  Fund's  dividends  are
derived from gross income from option premiums,  interest income or short-term
gains from the sale of  securities  or dividends  from  foreign  corporations,
those dividends will not qualify for the deduction.

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

      The Fund intends to qualify as a "regulated  investment  company"  under
the  Internal  Revenue  Code  (although it reserves the right not to qualify).
That qualification  enables the Fund to "pass through" its income and realized
capital gains to  shareholders  without having to pay tax on them. This avoids
a double tax on that income and capital  gains,  since  shareholders  normally
will be taxed on the  dividends  and capital  gains they receive from the Fund
(unless the Fund's shares are held in a retirement  account or the shareholder
is  otherwise  exempt  from  tax).  If  the  Fund  qualifies  as a  "regulated
investment  company"  under the Internal  Revenue  Code, it will not be liable
for  Federal   income  taxes  on  amounts   paid  by  it  as   dividends   and
distributions.  The Fund  qualified as a regulated  investment  company in its
last fiscal  year.  The  Internal  Revenue  Code  contains a number of complex
tests  relating  to  qualification  which  the  Fund  might  not  meet  in any
particular  year. If it did not so qualify,  the Fund would be treated for tax
purposes as an ordinary  corporation and receive no tax deduction for payments
made to shareholders.

      If prior  distributions made by the Fund must be  re-characterized  as a
non-taxable  return of capital  at the end of the  fiscal  year as a result of
the effect of the Fund's investment policies,  they will be identified as such
in notices sent to shareholders.

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

Additional Information About the Fund

The  Distributor.  The Fund's  shares are sold  through  dealers,  brokers and
other   financial    institutions   that   have   a   sales   agreement   with
OppenheimerFunds  Distributor,  Inc., a subsidiary of the Manager that acts as
the Fund's  Distributor.  The Distributor also distributes shares of the other
Oppenheimer funds and is sub-distributor  for funds managed by a subsidiary of
the Manager.

The Transfer Agent.  OppenheimerFunds  Services, the Fund's Transfer Agent, is
a division  of the  Manager.  It is  responsible  for  maintaining  the Fund's
shareholder  registry  and  shareholder  accounting  records,  and for  paying
dividends  and  distributions  to  shareholders.  It also handles  shareholder
servicing and  administrative  functions.  It acts on an "at-cost"  basis.  It
also acts as  shareholder  servicing  agent for the other  Oppenheimer  funds.
Shareholders  should  direct  inquiries  about their  accounts to the Transfer
Agent at the address and toll-free numbers shown on the back cover.

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

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



--------
1 No commission will be paid on sales of Class A shares purchased with the
redemption proceeds of shares of another mutual fund offered as an investment
option in a retirement plan in which Oppenheimer funds are also offered as
investment options under a special arrangement with the Distributor, if the
purchase occurs more than 30 days after the Oppenheimer funds are added as an
investment option under that plan.
2 Ms. Macaskill and Mr. Griffiths are  not Directors of Oppenheimer Money
Market Fund, Inc.; Mr. Griffiths is not a Trustee of Oppenheimer Discovery
Fund.
3 This provision does not apply to IRAs.
4 This provision does not apply to 403(b)(7) custodial plans if the
participant is less than age 55, nor to IRAs.
5 This provision does not apply to IRAs.
6 This provision does not apply to loans from 403(b)(7) custodial plans.
7 This provision does not apply to 403(b)(7) custodial plans if the
participant is less than age 55, nor to IRAs
<PAGE>

INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

===============================================================================
TO THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES AND SHAREHOLDERS OF
OPPENHEIMER GROWTH FUND:

We have audited the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities, including
the statement of investments, of Oppenheimer Growth Fund as of August 31, 1999,
and the related statement of operations for the year then ended, the statements
of changes in net assets for each of the years in the two-year period then
ended and the financial highlights for each of the years in the three-year
period then ended, the two-month period ended August 31, 1996 and each of the
years in the two-year period ended June 30, 1996. These financial statements
and financial highlights are the responsibility of the Fund's management. Our
responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements and
financial highlights based on our audits.

      We conducted our audits in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements and financial
highlights are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a
test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial
statements. Our procedures included confirmation of securities owned as of
August 31, 1999, by correspondence with the custodian and brokers; and where
confirmations were not received from brokers, we performed other auditing
procedures. 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 audits provide a
reasonable basis for our opinion.

      In our opinion, the financial statements and financial highlights
referred to above present fairly, in all material respects, the financial
position of Oppenheimer Growth Fund as of August 31, 1999, the results of its
operations for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of
the years in the two-year period then ended, and the financial highlights for
each of the years in the three-year period then ended, the two-month period
ended August 31, 1996 and each of the years in the two-year period ended June
30, 1996, in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.


/s/ KPMG LLP

KPMG LLP


Denver, Colorado
September 22, 1999





<PAGE>

FINANCIALS








<PAGE>


STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS  August 31, 1999
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                        MARKET VALUE
                                                                         SHARES           SEE NOTE 1
====================================================================================================
<S>                                                                   <C>            <C>
COMMON STOCKS--89.5%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CAPITAL GOODS--5.9%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INDUSTRIAL SERVICES--0.4%
United Rentals, Inc.(1)                                                 350,000      $  8,553,125
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MANUFACTURING--5.5%
Tyco International Ltd.                                               1,255,561       127,204,024
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
COMMUNICATION SERVICES--1.1%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TELECOMMUNICATIONS-LONG DISTANCE--1.1%
MCI WorldCom, Inc.(1)                                                   353,500        26,777,625
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CONSUMER CYCLICALS--17.8%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RETAIL: GENERAL--4.1%
Kohl's Corp.(1)                                                         800,000        57,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.                                                   860,000        38,108,750
                                                                                     ------------
                                                                                       95,108,750

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RETAIL: SPECIALTY--13.7%
Abercrombie & Fitch Co., Cl. A(1)                                       630,000        21,971,250
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bed Bath & Beyond, Inc.(1)                                              985,000        27,087,500
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Best Buy Co., Inc.(1)                                                 1,327,400        93,249,850
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gap, Inc.                                                               562,500        22,007,812
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Home Depot, Inc.                                                        715,000        43,704,375
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Intimate Brands, Inc., Cl. A                                            622,250        23,995,516
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Linens 'N Things, Inc.(1)                                               200,000         6,850,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tandy Corp.                                                             745,000        35,201,250
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tiffany & Co.                                                           867,900        45,890,212
                                                                                     ------------
                                                                                      319,957,765

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CONSUMER STAPLES--4.4%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
BROADCASTING--1.0%
Infinity Broadcasting Corp., Cl. A1                                     892,200        24,145,162
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ENTERTAINMENT--0.7%
Outback Steakhouse, Inc.(1)                                             525,000        15,553,125
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FOOD & DRUG RETAILERS--1.3%
CVS Corp.                                                               715,400        29,823,237
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
HOUSEHOLD GOODS--1.4%
Dial Corp. (The)                                                      1,195,500        33,175,125
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ENERGY--2.6%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OIL-INTERNATIONAL--2.6%
Exxon Corp.                                                             310,000        24,451,250
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mobil Corp.                                                             345,000        35,319,375
                                                                                     ------------
                                                                                       59,770,625
</TABLE>




<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                         MARKET VALUE
                                                                         SHARES            SEE NOTE 1
=====================================================================================================
<S>                                                                   <C>              <C>
FINANCIAL--9.5%
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
BANKS--3.2%
Fifth Third Bancorp                                                     425,000        $   28,156,250
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
First Tennessee National Corp.                                          570,000            18,240,000
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Firstar Corp.                                                         1,016,100            27,244,181
                                                                                       --------------
                                                                                           73,640,431

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DIVERSIFIED FINANCIAL--3.7%
Citigroup, Inc.                                                         517,500            22,996,406
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. (The)                                         108,800             6,507,600
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Providian Financial Corp.                                               127,200             9,873,900
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Schwab (Charles) Corp.                                                1,200,000            47,400,000
                                                                                           ----------
                                                                                           86,777,906
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INSURANCE--2.6%
AFLAC, Inc.                                                             552,000            24,805,500
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
American International Group, Inc.                                      388,468            36,006,128
                                                                                       --------------
                                                                                           60,811,628

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
HEALTHCARE--7.6%
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
HEALTHCARE/DRUGS--6.6%
Amgen, Inc.(1)                                                          800,000            66,550,000
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Biogen, Inc.(1)                                                         705,600            54,154,800
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Genentech, Inc.(1)                                                       59,700             9,805,725
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Immunex Corp.(1)                                                        350,000            23,559,375
                                                                                       --------------
                                                                                          154,069,900

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
HEALTHCARE/SUPPLIES & SERVICES--1.0%
Guidant Corp.                                                           100,000             5,868,750
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Medtronic, Inc.                                                         208,078            16,282,103
                                                                                       --------------
                                                                                           22,150,853

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TECHNOLOGY--39.0%
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
COMPUTER HARDWARE--12.0%
Dell Computer Corp.(1)                                                  730,000            35,633,125
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
EMC Corp.(1)                                                          1,360,000            81,600,000
Gateway, Inc.(1)                                                        555,000            53,800,312
International Business Machines Corp.                                   445,000            55,430,312
Lexmark International Group, Inc., Cl. A(1)                             657,500            51,778,125
                                                                                       --------------
                                                                                          278,241,874
</TABLE>




<PAGE>
STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS  Continued
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                         MARKET VALUE
                                                                         SHARES            SEE NOTE 1
=====================================================================================================
<S>                                                                   <C>              <C>
TECHNOLOGY Continued
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
COMPUTER SERVICES--1.4%
Unisys Corp.(1)                                                         750,000        $   32,250,000
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
COMPUTER SOFTWARE--6.0%
Amazon.com, Inc.(1)                                                      30,000             3,731,250
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
America Online, Inc.(1)                                                 275,000            25,110,938
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
At Home Corp.(1)                                                        242,284             9,721,646
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Citrix Systems, Inc.(1)                                                 250,000            14,250,000
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Compuware Corp.(1)                                                      710,000            21,433,125
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
eBay, Inc.(1)                                                            89,400            11,225,288
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Microsoft Corp.(1)                                                      585,000            54,149,063
                                                                                       --------------
                                                                                          139,621,310

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
COMMMUNICATIONS EQUIPMENT--7.1%
Cisco Systems, Inc.(1)                                                  620,000            42,043,750
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
General Instrument Corp.(1)                                           1,760,000            86,570,000
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nortel Networks Corp.                                                   545,800            22,411,913
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tellabs, Inc.(1)                                                        250,000            14,890,625
                                                                                       --------------
                                                                                          165,916,288

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ELECTRONICS--12.5%
E-Tek Dynamics, Inc.(1)                                                 249,300            14,132,194
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Intel Corp.                                                             423,100            34,773,531
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
JDS Uniphase Corp.(1)                                                 1,262,698           133,924,907
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Solectron Corp.(1)                                                      410,000            32,082,500
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Vitesse Semiconductor Corp.(1)                                          505,000            34,340,000
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Waters Corp.(1)                                                         650,000            42,859,375
                                                                                       --------------
                                                                                          292,112,507

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
UTILITIES--1.6%
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GAS UTILITIES--1.6%
Enron Corp.                                                             880,000            36,850,000
                                                                                       --------------
Total Common Stocks (Cost $1,433,893,149)                                               2,082,511,260

=====================================================================================================
PREFERRED STOCKS--0.9%

Microsoft Corp., $2.75 Cum. Cv., Series A, Non-Vtg.
    (Cost $21,582,363)                                                  219,800            22,076,163
</TABLE>






<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                              FACE       MARKET VALUE
                                                                            AMOUNT         SEE NOTE 1
=====================================================================================================
<S>                                                                   <C>              <C>
SHORT-TERM NOTES--1.1%

Prudential Funding Corp., 5.29%, 10/14/99(2) (Cost $24,842,035)       $ 25,000,000     $   24,842,035

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS--8.6%

Repurchase agreement with PaineWebber, Inc., 5.40%, dated
8/31/99, to be repurchased at $199,529,925 on 9/1/99,
collateralized by U.S. Treasury Bonds, 6.25%--11.875%,
11/15/03-8/15/23, with a value of $88,955,255, and U.S.
Treasury Nts., 5.625%--8.75%, 11/30/99-
7/15/06, with a value of $114,716,258 (Cost $199,500,000)              199,500,000        199,500,000
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL INVESTMENTS, AT VALUE (COST $1,679,817,547)                            100.1%     2,328,929,458
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
LIABILITIES IN EXCESS OF OTHER ASSETS                                         (0.1)        (1,308,444)
                                                                             ------------------------
NET ASSETS                                                                   100.0%    $2,327,621,014
                                                                             ========================
</TABLE>

FOOTNOTES TO STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS

1. Non-income-producing security.

2. Short-term notes are generally traded on a discount basis; the interest rate
is the discount rate received by the Fund at the time of purchase.

See accompanying Notes to Financial Statements.





<PAGE>

STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES  August 31, 1999
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<TABLE>

================================================================================================
<S>                                                                              <C>
ASSETS

Investments, at value (cost $1,679,817,547)--see accompanying statement          $ 2,328,929,458
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Receivables and other assets:
Shares of beneficial interest sold                                                     2,096,672
Interest and dividends                                                                   770,834
Other                                                                                    348,451
                                                                                 ---------------
Total assets                                                                       2,332,145,415

================================================================================================
LIABILITIES

Bank overdraft                                                                             2,489
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Payables and other liabilities:
Shares of beneficial interest redeemed                                                 1,539,022
Investments purchased                                                                  1,078,375
Distribution and service plan fees                                                       763,606
Transfer and shareholder servicing agent fees                                            444,619
Shareholder reports                                                                      299,968
Trustees' compensation--Note 1                                                           248,645
Custodian fees                                                                            10,979
Other                                                                                    136,698
                                                                                 ---------------
Total liabilities                                                                      4,524,401

================================================================================================
NET ASSETS                                                                       $ 2,327,621,014
                                                                                 ===============

================================================================================================
COMPOSITION OF NET ASSETS

Paid-in capital                                                                   $1,549,693,989
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Undistributed net investment income                                                    1,542,581
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accumulated net realized gain on investments and
foreign currency transactions                                                        127,272,533
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net unrealized appreciation on investments--Note 3                                   649,111,911
                                                                                 ---------------
Net assets                                                                        $2,327,621,014
                                                                                 ===============
</TABLE>




<PAGE>

<TABLE>
================================================================================================
<S>                                                                                       <C>
NET ASSET VALUE PER SHARE

Class A Shares:
Net asset value and redemption price per share (based on net assets of
$1,730,086,507 and 43,504,933 shares of beneficial interest outstanding)                  $39.77
Maximum offering price per share (net asset value plus sales charge of
5.75% of offering price)                                                                  $42.20
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class B Shares:
Net asset value, redemption price (excludes applicable contingent deferred
sales charge) and offering price per share (based on net assets of $445,628,939
and 11,615,369 shares of beneficial interest outstanding)                                 $38.37
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class C Shares:
Net asset value, redemption price (excludes applicable contingent deferred
sales charge) and offering price per share (based on net assets of $57,969,908
and 1,489,425 shares of beneficial interest outstanding)                                  $38.92
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class Y Shares:
Net asset value, redemption price and offering price per share (based on
net assets of $93,935,660 and 2,362,739 shares of beneficial interest outstanding)        $39.76
</TABLE>


See accompanying Notes to Financial Statements.





<PAGE>

STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS  For the Year Ended August 31, 1999

<TABLE>
=================================================================================================
<S>                                                                                 <C>
INVESTMENT INCOME

Interest                                                                            $ 19,049,118
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dividends (net of foreign withholding taxes of $26,171)                                9,403,432
                                                                                    -------------
Total income                                                                          28,452,550
=================================================================================================
EXPENSES

Management fees--Note 4                                                               13,894,842
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Distribution and service plan fees--Note 4:
Class A                                                                                3,033,217
Class B                                                                                4,093,686
Class C                                                                                  534,637
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Transfer and shareholder servicing agent fees--Note 4:
Class A                                                                                2,886,195
Class B                                                                                  741,050
Class C                                                                                  117,008
Class Y                                                                                  156,010
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shareholder reports                                                                      772,235
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Custodian fees and expenses                                                              106,396
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trustees' compensation--Note 1                                                            68,480
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Legal, auditing and other professional fees                                               60,822
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Insurance expenses                                                                        20,350
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other                                                                                    142,951
                                                                                    -------------
Total expenses                                                                        26,627,879
Less expenses paid indirectly--Note 1                                                    (18,683)
                                                                                    -------------
Net expenses                                                                          26,609,196

=================================================================================================
NET INVESTMENT INCOME                                                                  1,843,354

=================================================================================================
REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN (LOSS)

Net realized gain (loss) on:
Investments                                                                          127,564,474
Closing of futures contracts                                                             (10,098)
Foreign currency transactions                                                             (1,264)
                                                                                    -------------
Net realized gain                                                                    127,553,112

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net change in unrealized appreciation or depreciation on investments                 574,876,473
                                                                                    -------------
Net realized and unrealized gain                                                     702,429,585

=================================================================================================
NET INCREASE IN NET ASSETS RESULTING FROM OPERATIONS                                $704,272,939
                                                                                    =============
</TABLE>


See accompanying Notes to Financial Statements.






<PAGE>



STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31,                                                                    1999             1998
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                          <C>               <C>
OPERATIONS
Net investment income                                                         $     1,843,354   $   38,348,822
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net realized gain                                                                 127,553,112      204,414,736
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net change in unrealized appreciation or depreciation                             574,876,473     (491,820,086)
                                                                               --------------------------------
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations                   704,272,939     (249,056,528)

===============================================================================================================
DIVIDENDS AND/OR DISTRIBUTIONS TO SHAREHOLDERS

Dividends from net investment income:
Class A                                                                           (20,206,393)     (26,717,017)
Class B                                                                            (2,324,915)      (3,632,645)
Class C                                                                              (291,190)        (482,040)
Class Y                                                                            (2,313,720)      (2,049,626)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Distributions from net realized gain:
Class A                                                                          (130,047,494)    (156,964,533)
Class B                                                                           (33,737,866)     (32,302,581)
Class C                                                                            (4,357,587)      (3,658,326)
Class Y                                                                           (12,366,717)     (10,359,931)

===============================================================================================================
BENEFICIAL INTEREST TRANSACTIONS

Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from beneficial interest
transactions--Note 2:
Class A                                                                             5,826,017      126,304,589
Class B                                                                            24,924,295      130,972,452
Class C                                                                             1,650,848       27,083,649
Class Y                                                                           (67,277,123)      64,754,055

===============================================================================================================
NET ASSETS

Total increase (decrease)                                                         463,751,094     (136,108,482)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Beginning of period                                                             1,863,869,920    1,999,978,402
                                                                             ----------------------------------
End of period (including undistributed net investment
income of $1,542,581 and $24,861,982, respectively)                            $2,327,621,014   $1,863,869,920
                                                                             ==================================
</TABLE>


See accompanying Notes to Financial Statements.






<PAGE>



FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                  YEAR                     YEAR
                                                                                  ENDED                    ENDED
                                                                               AUG. 31,                  JUNE 30,
CLASS A                                          1999       1998        1997       1996(1)     1996          1995
=================================================================================================================
<S>                                            <C>       <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING DATA

Net asset value, beginning of period           $31.54    $40.42      $33.69      $33.43      $30.80        $26.65
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Income (loss) from investment operations:

Net investment income (loss)                      .10       .73         .62         .08         .44           .36
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)         11.69     (5.05)      10.37         .18        5.70          6.83
                                              -------------------------------------------------------------------

Total income (loss) from
investment operations                           11.79     (4.32)      10.99         .26        6.14          7.19
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dividends and distributions to shareholders:
Dividends from net investment income             (.48)     (.66)       (.49)         --        (.41)         (.24)
Distributions from net realized gain            (3.08)    (3.90)      (3.77)         --       (3.10)        (2.80)
                                              -------------------------------------------------------------------
Total dividends and distributions
to shareholders                                 (3.56)    (4.56)      (4.26)         --       (3.51)        (3.04)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Net asset value, end of period                 $39.77    $31.54      $40.42      $33.69      $33.43        $30.80
                                              ===================================================================

=================================================================================================================
TOTAL RETURN, AT NET ASSET VALUE(2)             39.39%   (11.62)%     35.03%       0.78%      21.00%        29.45%

=================================================================================================================
RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA

Net assets, end of period (in millions)        $1,730    $1,357      $1,591      $1,128      $1,120        $  861
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Average net assets (in millions)               $1,620    $1,640      $1,369      $1,101      $1,018        $  727
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ratios to average net assets:(3)
Net investment income (loss)                     0.24%     1.90%       1.74%       1.50%       1.43%         1.31%
Expenses                                         1.05%     1.00%(4)    1.01%(4)    1.03%(4)    1.06%(4)      1.05%(4)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Portfolio turnover rate(5)                        106%       34%         25%          6%         38%           35%
</TABLE>

1. For the two months ended August 31, 1996. The Fund changed its fiscal year
end from June 30 to August 31.

2. Assumes a $1,000 hypothetical initial investment on the business day before
the first day of the fiscal period (or inception of offering), with all
dividends and distributions reinvested in additional shares on the
reinvestment date, and redemption at the net asset value calculated on the
last business day of the fiscal period. Sales charges are not reflected in the
total returns. Total returns are not annualized for periods of less than one
full year.

3. Annualized for periods of less than one full year.

4. Expense ratio reflects the effect of expenses paid indirectly by the Fund.

5. The lesser of purchases or sales of portfolio securities for a period,
divided by the monthly average of the market value of portfolio securities
owned during the period. Securities with a maturity or expiration date at the
time of acquisition of one year or less are excluded from the calculation.
Purchases and sales of investment securities (excluding short-term securities)
for the period ended August 31, 1999 were $2,172,876,594 and $1,955,034,523,
respectively.

See accompanying Notes to Financial Statements.





<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                    YEAR                 YEAR
                                                                                   ENDED                ENDED
                                                                                AUG. 31,             JUNE 30,
CLASS B                                            1999       1998       1997       1996(1)   1996       1995
==================================================================================================================
<S>                                            <C>       <C>          <C>        <C>      <C>        <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING DATA
Net asset value, beginning of period            $ 30.54    $ 39.34    $ 32.94    $ 32.74    $30.36    $ 26.44
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income (loss) from investment operations:
Net investment income (loss)                       (.20)       .43        .36        .04       .23        .20
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)           11.32      (4.89)     10.08        .16      5.53       6.65
                                                ------------------------------------------------------------------
Total income (loss) from
investment operations                             11.12      (4.46)     10.44        .20      5.76       6.85
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dividends and distributions to shareholders:
Dividends from net investment income               (.21)      (.44)      (.27)        --      (.28)      (.13)
Distributions from net realized gain              (3.08)     (3.90)     (3.77)        --     (3.10)     (2.80)
                                                ------------------------------------------------------------------
Total dividends and distributions
to shareholders                                   (3.29)     (4.34)     (4.04)        --     (3.38)     (2.93)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Net asset value, end of period                   $38.37     $30.54     $39.34     $32.94    $32.74     $30.36
                                                ==================================================================

==================================================================================================================
TOTAL RETURN, AT NET ASSET VALUE(2)               38.27%    (12.32)%    33.93%      0.61%    19.95%     28.22%

==================================================================================================================
RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA

Net assets, end of period (in millions)            $446       $330       $284       $137      $129        $43
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average net assets (in millions)                   $410       $354       $204       $131       $91        $19
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ratios to average net assets:(3)
Net investment income (loss)                      (0.58)%     1.08%      0.92%      0.61%     0.60%      0.44%
Expenses                                           1.86%      1.81%(4)   1.84%(4)   1.92%(4)  1.89%(4)   2.02%(4)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Portfolio turnover rate(5)                          106%        34%         25%        6%       38%        35%

</TABLE>

1. For the two months ended August 31, 1996. The Fund changed its fiscal year
end from June 30 to August 31.

2. Assumes a $1,000 hypothetical initial investment on the business day before
the first day of the fiscal period (or inception of offering), with all
dividends and distributions reinvested in additional shares on the reinvestment
date, and redemption at the net asset value calculated on the last business day
of the fiscal period. Sales charges are not reflected in the total returns.
Total returns are not annualized for periods of less than one full year.

3. Annualized for periods of less than one full year.

4. Expense ratio reflects the effect of expenses paid indirectly by the Fund.

5. The lesser of purchases or sales of portfolio securities for a period,
divided by the monthly average of the market value of portfolio securities
owned during the period. Securities with a maturity or expiration date at the
time of acquisition of one year or less are excluded from the calculation.
Purchases and sales of investment securities (excluding short-term securities)
for the period ended August 31, 1999 were $2,172,876,594 and $1,955,034,523,
respectively.

See accompanying Notes to Financial Statements.


<PAGE>

FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS  Continued
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                YEAR       PERIOD
                                                                               ENDED        ENDED
                                                                            AUG. 31,     JUNE 30,
CLASS C                                        1999      1998        1997       1996(1)      1996(2)
=====================================================================================================
<S>                                         <C>       <C>         <C>        <C>         <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING DATA

Net asset value, beginning of period        $ 30.93   $ 39.87     $ 33.42    $ 33.22      $ 33.44
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income (loss) from investment operations:
Net investment income (loss)                   (.20)      .46         .42        .02          .40
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)       11.47     (4.99)      10.17        .18         2.88
                                            ---------------------------------------------------------
Total income (loss) from
investment operations                         11.27     (4.53)      10.59        .20         3.28
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dividends and distributions to shareholders:
Dividends from net investment income           (.21)     (.51)       (.37)        --         (.40)
Distributions from net realized gain          (3.07)    (3.90)      (3.77)        --        (3.10)
                                            ---------------------------------------------------------
Total dividends and distributions
to shareholders                               (3.28)    (4.41)      (4.14)        --        (3.50)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Net asset value, end of period               $38.92    $30.93      $39.87     $33.42       $33.22
                                            =========================================================

=====================================================================================================
TOTAL RETURN, AT NET ASSET VALUE(2)           38.28%   (12.33)%     33.93%      0.60%       10.07%

=====================================================================================================
RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA

Net assets, end of period (in millions)         $58       $44         $28         $5           $4
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average net assets (in millions)                $54       $44         $14         $4           $2
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ratios to average net assets:(3)
Net investment income (loss)                  (0.58)%    1.06%       0.95%      0.44%        0.65%
Expenses                                       1.86%     1.81%(4)    1.84%(4)   2.10%(4)     1.81%(4)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Portfolio turnover rate(5)                      106%       34%         25%         6%          38%
</TABLE>



1. For the two months ended August 31, 1996. The Fund changed its fiscal year
end from June 30 to August 31.

2. Assumes a $1,000 hypothetical initial investment on the business day before
the first day of the fiscal period (or inception of offering), with all
dividends and distributions reinvested in additional shares on the reinvestment
date, and redemption at the net asset value calculated on the last business day
of the fiscal period. Sales charges are not reflected in the total returns.
Total returns are not annualized for periods of less than one full year.

3. Annualized for periods of less than one full year.

4. Expense ratio reflects the effect of expenses paid indirectly by the Fund.

5. The lesser of purchases or sales of portfolio securities for a period,
divided by the monthly average of the market value of portfolio securities
owned during the period. Securities with a maturity or expiration date at the
time of acquisition of one year or less are excluded from the calculation.
Purchases and sales of investment securities (excluding short-term securities)
for the period ended August 31, 1999, were $2,172,876,594 and $1,955,034,523,
respectively.

6. For the period from November 1, 1995 (inception of offering) to June 30,
1996.

See accompanying Notes to Financial Statements.

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                   YEAR                        YEAR
                                                                                  ENDED                       ENDED
                                                                               AUG. 31,                    JUNE 30,
CLASS Y                                          1999        1998        1997      1996(1)        1996         1996
=======================================================================================================================
<S>                                           <C>         <C>         <C>        <C>         <C>           <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING DATA
Net asset value, beginning of period          $ 31.54     $ 40.43     $ 33.69   $ 33.42        $ 30.80      $ 26.64
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income (loss) from investment operations:
Net investment income (loss)                      .18         .87         .66         .08          .46          .30
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)         11.69       (5.09)      10.42         .19         5.70         6.92
                                              -------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total income (loss) from
investment operations                           11.87       (4.22)      11.08         .27         6.16         7.22
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dividends and distributions to shareholders:
Dividends from net investment income             (.58)       (.77)       (.57)         --         (.44)        (.26)
Distributions from net realized gain            (3.07)      (3.90)      (3.77)         --        (3.10)       (2.80)
                                              -------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total dividends and distributions
to shareholders                                 (3.65)      (4.67)      (4.34)         --        (3.54)       (3.06)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net asset value, end of period                 $39.76      $31.54      $40.43      $33.69       $33.42       $30.80
                                              =========================================================================

=======================================================================================================================
TOTAL RETURN, AT NET ASSET VALUE(2)             39.74%     (11.38)%     35.36%       0.81%       21.10%       29.59%

=======================================================================================================================
RATIOS/SUPPLEMENTAL DATA

Net assets, end of period (in millions)          $ 94        $132         $97         $18          $16           $3
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average net assets (in millions)                 $117        $135         $63         $17          $ 9           $1
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ratios to average net assets:(3)
Net investment income (loss)                     0.65%       2.16%       2.00%       1.67%        1.56%        1.54%
Expenses                                         0.80%       0.71%(4)    0.77%(4)    0.87%(4)     0.94%(4)     1.04%(4)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Portfolio turnover rate(5)                        106%         34%         25%          6%          38%          35%
</TABLE>


1. For the two months ended August 31, 1996. The Fund changed its fiscal year
end from June 30 to August 31.

2. Assumes a $1,000 hypothetical initial investment on the business day before
the first day of the fiscal period (or inception of offering), with all
dividends and distributions reinvested in additional shares on the reinvestment
date, and redemption at the net asset value calculated on the last business day
of the fiscal period. Sales charges are not reflected in the total returns.
Total returns are not annualized for periods of less than one full year.

3. Annualized for periods of less than one full year.

4. Expense ratio reflects the effect of expenses paid indirectly by the Fund.

5. The lesser of purchases or sales of portfolio securities for a period,
divided by the monthly average of the market value of portfolio securities
owned during the period. Securities with a maturity or expiration date at the
time of acquisition of one year or less are excluded from the calculation.
Purchases and sales of investment securities (excluding short-term securities)
for the period ended August 31, 1999, were $2,172,876,594 and $1,955,034,523,
respectively.

6. For the period from November 1, 1995 (inception of offering) to June 30,
1996.

See accompanying Notes to Financial Statements.




<PAGE>

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

===============================================================================
1. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

Oppenheimer Growth Fund (the Fund) is registered under the Investment Company
Act of 1940, as amended, as a diversified, open-end management investment
company. The Fund's investment objective is to seek capital appreciation. The
Fund's investment advisor is OppenheimerFunds, Inc. (the Manager). The Fund
offers Class A, Class B, Class C and Class Y shares. Class A shares are sold
with a front-end sales charge on investments up to $1 million. Class B and
Class C shares may be subject to a contingent deferred sales charge (CDSC).
Class Y shares are sold to certain institutional investors without either a
front-end sales charge or a CDSC. All classes of shares have identical rights
to earnings, assets and voting privileges, except that each class has its own
expenses directly attributable to that class and exclusive voting rights with
respect to matters affecting that class. Classes A, B and C have separate
distribution and/or service plans. No such plan has been adopted for Class Y
shares. Class B shares will automatically convert to Class A shares six years
after the date of purchase. The following is a summary of significant
accounting policies consistently followed by the Fund.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES VALUATION. Portfolio securities are valued at the close of the New
York Stock Exchange on each trading day. Listed and unlisted securities for
which such information is regularly reported are valued at the last sale price
of the day or, in the absence of sales, at values based on the closing bid or
the last sale price on the prior trading day. Long-term and short-term
"non-money market" debt securities are valued by a portfolio pricing service
approved by the Board of Trustees. Such securities which cannot be valued by an
approved portfolio pricing service are valued using dealer-supplied valuations
provided the Manager is satisfied that the firm rendering the quotes is
reliable and that the quotes reflect current market value, or are valued under
consistently applied procedures established by the Board of Trustees to
determine fair value in good faith. Short-term "money market type" debt
securities having a remaining maturity of 60 days or less are valued at cost
(or last determined market value) adjusted for amortization to maturity of any
premium or discount. Foreign currency exchange contracts are valued based on
the closing prices of the foreign currency contract rates in the London foreign
exchange markets on a daily basis as provided by a reliable bank or dealer.
Options are valued based upon the last sale price on the principal exchange on
which the option is traded or, in the absence of any transactions that day, the
value is based upon the last sale price on the prior trading date if it is
within the spread between the closing bid and asked prices. If the last sale
price is outside the spread, the closing bid is used.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSLATION. The accounting records of the Fund are maintained
in U.S. dollars. Prices of securities denominated in foreign currencies are
translated into U.S. dollars at the closing rates of exchange. Amounts related
to the purchase and sale of foreign securities and investment income are
translated at the rates of exchange prevailing on the respective dates of such
transactions.


<PAGE>



The effect of changes in foreign currency exchange rates on investments is
separately identified from the fluctuations arising from changes in market
values of securities held and reported with all other foreign currency gains
and losses in the Fund's Statement of Operations.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS. The Fund requires the custodian to take possession, to
have legally segregated in the Federal Reserve Book-Entry System or to have
segregated within the custodian's vault, all securities held as collateral for
repurchase agreements. The market value of the underlying securities is
required to be at least 102% of the resale price at the time of purchase. If
the seller of the agreement defaults and the value of the collateral declines,
or if the seller enters an insolvency proceeding, realization of the value of
the collateral by the Fund may be delayed or limited.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ALLOCATION OF INCOME, EXPENSES, GAINS AND LOSSES. Income, expenses (other than
those attributable to a specific class), gains and losses are allocated daily
to each class of shares based upon the relative proportion of net assets
represented by such class. Operating expenses directly attributable to a
specific class are charged against the operations of that class.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL TAXES. The Fund intends to continue to comply with provisions of the
Internal Revenue Code applicable to regulated investment companies and to
distribute all of its taxable income, including any net realized gain on
investments not offset by loss carryovers, to shareholders. Therefore, no
federal income or excise tax provision is required.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRUSTEES' COMPENSATION. The Fund has adopted a nonfunded retirement plan for
the Fund's independent Trustees. Benefits are based on years of service and
fees paid to each trustee during the years of service. During the year ended
August 31, 1999, a provision of $2,389 was made for the Fund's projected
benefit obligations and payments of $11,971 were made to retired Trustees,
resulting in an accumulated liability of $239,068 as of August 31, 1999.

      The Board of Trustees has adopted a deferred compensation plan for
independent Trustees that enables Trustees to elect to defer receipt of all or
a portion of annual compensation they are entitled to receive from the Fund.
Under the plan, the compensation deferred is periodically adjusted as though an
equivalent amount had been invested for the Trustees in shares of one or more
Oppenheimer funds selected by the Trustee. The amount paid to the Trustee under
the plan will be determined based upon the performance of the selected funds.
Deferral of Trustees' fees under the plan will not affect the net assets of the
Fund, and will not materially affect the Fund's assets, liabilities or net
income per share.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS TO SHAREHOLDERS. Dividends and distributions to
shareholders, which are determined in accordance with income tax regulations,
are recorded on the ex-dividend date.


<PAGE>

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  Continued
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

===============================================================================
1. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES  Continued

CLASSIFICATION OF DISTRIBUTIONS TO SHAREHOLDERS. Net investment income (loss)
and net realized gain (loss) may differ for financial statement and tax
purposes. The character of distributions made during the year from net
investment income or net realized gains may differ from its ultimate
characterization for federal income tax purposes. Also, due to timing of
dividend distributions, the fiscal year in which amounts are distributed may
differ from the fiscal year in which the income or realized gain was recorded
by the Fund.

      The Fund adjusts the classification of distributions to shareholders to
reflect the differences between financial statement amounts and distributions
determined in accordance with income tax regulations. Accordingly, during the
year ended August 31, 1999, amounts have been reclassified to reflect a
decrease in undistributed net investment income of $26,537. Accumulated net
realized gain on investments was increased by the same amount.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
EXPENSE OFFSET ARRANGEMENTS. Expenses paid indirectly represent a reduction of
custodian fees for earnings on cash balances maintained by the Fund.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OTHER. Investment transactions are accounted for as of trade date and dividend
income is recorded on the ex-dividend date. Foreign dividend income is often
recorded on the payable date. Realized gains and losses on investments and
unrealized appreciation and depreciation are determined on an identified cost
basis, which is the same basis used for federal income tax purposes.

      The preparation of financial statements in conformity with generally
accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates and
assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and
disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial
statements and the reported amounts of income and expenses during the reporting
period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.


<PAGE>

===============================================================================
2. SHARES OF BENEFICIAL INTEREST

The Fund has authorized an unlimited number of no par value shares of
beneficial interest. Transactions in shares of beneficial interest were as
follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                    YEAR ENDED  AUGUST 31, 1999     YEAR ENDED  AUGUST 31, 1998
                                       SHARES           AMOUNT        SHARES             AMOUNT
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                 <C>         <C>                 <C>         <C>
CLASS A
Sold                                5,752,317    $ 212,292,610      7,116,243     $ 273,834,013
Dividends and/or distributions
reinvested                          4,324,566      145,910,899      5,167,731       177,822,050
Redeemed                           (9,596,795)    (352,377,492)    (8,622,642)     (325,351,474)
                                  --------------------------------------------------------------
Net increase                          480,088    $   5,826,017      3,661,332     $ 126,304,589
                                  ==============================================================

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CLASS B
Sold                                3,361,784    $ 119,411,368      4,830,243     $ 179,390,806
Dividends and/or distributions
reinvested                          1,063,591       34,821,935      1,028,206        34,455,190
Redeemed                           (3,631,651)    (129,309,008)    (2,261,854)      (82,873,544)
                                  --------------------------------------------------------------
Net increase                          793,724    $  24,924,295      3,596,595     $ 130,972,452
                                  ==============================================================
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CLASS C
Sold                                  502,970    $  18,124,421        920,879     $  34,571,489
Dividends and/or distributions
reinvested                            134,465        4,465,559        118,209         4,012,030
Redeemed                             (582,721)     (20,939,132)      (310,357)      (11,499,870)
                                  --------------------------------------------------------------
Net increase                           54,714    $   1,650,848        728,731     $  27,083,649
                                  ==============================================================

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CLASS Y
Sold                                1,359,263    $  50,267,513      2,414,934      $  89,265,515
Dividends and/or distributions
reinvested                            436,009       14,680,437        361,268         12,409,557
Redeemed                           (3,621,703)    (132,225,073)      (978,523)       (36,921,017)
                                  --------------------------------------------------------------

Net increase (decrease)            (1,826,431)   $ (67,277,123)     1,797,679      $  64,754,055
                                  ==============================================================

</TABLE>

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. UNREALIZED GAINS AND LOSSES ON SECURITIES

As of August 31, 1999, net unrealized appreciation on securities of
$649,111,911 was composed of gross appreciation of $684,996,145, and gross
depreciation of $35,884,234.


<PAGE>

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  Continued
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------


===============================================================================
4. MANAGEMENT FEES AND OTHER TRANSACTIONS WITH AFFILIATES

MANAGEMENT FEES. Management fees paid to the Manager were in accordance with
the investment advisory agreement with the Fund which provides for a fee of
0.75% of the first $200 million of average annual net assets of the Fund, 0.72%
of the next $200 million, 0.69% of the next $200 million, 0.66% of the next
$200 million, 0.60% of the next $700 million, 0.58% of the next $1 billion, and
0.56% of average annual net assets in excess of $2.5 billion. The Fund's
management fee for the year ended August 31, 1999 was 0.63% of average net
assets for each class of shares.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSFER AGENT FEES. OppenheimerFunds Services (OFS), a division of the
Manager, is the transfer and shareholder servicing agent for the Fund and for
other Oppenheimer funds. OFS's total costs of providing such services are
allocated ratably to these funds.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DISTRIBUTION AND SERVICE PLAN FEES. Under its General Distributor's Agreement
with the Manager, the Distributor acts as the Fund's principal underwriter in
the continuous public offering of the different classes of shares of the Fund.

      The compensation paid to (or retained by) the Distributor from the sale
of shares or on the redemption of shares is shown in the table below for the
period indicated.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                             AGGREGATE       CLASS A    COMMISSIONS   COMMISSIONS    COMMISSIONS
                             FRONT-END     FRONT-END     ON CLASS A    ON CLASS B     ON CLASS C
                         SALES CHARGES SALES CHARGES         SHARES        SHARES         SHARES
                            ON CLASS A   RETAINED BY    ADVANCED BY   ADVANCED BY    ADVANCED BY
YEAR ENDED                      SHARES   DISTRIBUTOR   DISTRIBUTOR(1) DISTRIBUTOR(1) DISTRIBUTOR(1)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                        <C>             <C>            <C>         <C>              <C>
August 31, 1999             $2,645,481      $842,368       $169,949    $2,627,603       $136,923
</TABLE>


1. The Distributor advances commission payments to dealers for certain sales of
Class A shares and for sales of Class B and Class C shares from its own
resources at the time of sale.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                               CLASS A                   CLASS B                    CLASS C
                   CONTINGENT DEFERRED       CONTINGENT DEFERRED        CONTINGENT DEFERRED
                         SALES CHARGES             SALES CHARGES              SALES CHARGES
YEAR ENDED     RETAINED BY DISTRIBUTOR   RETAINED BY DISTRIBUTOR    RETAINED BY DISTRIBUTOR
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                           <C>                      <C>                       <C>
August 31, 1999                 $2,038                  $991,904                    $19,680
</TABLE>

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



<PAGE>


-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CLASS A SERVICE PLAN FEES. Under the Class A service plan, the Distributor
currently uses the fees it receives from the Fund to pay brokers, dealers and
other financial institutions. The Class A service plan permits reimbursements
to the Distributor at a rate of up to 0.25% of average annual net assets of
Class A shares. The Distributor makes payments to plan recipients quarterly at
an annual rate not to exceed 0.25% of the average annual net assets consisting
of Class A shares of the Fund. For the fiscal year ended August 31, 1999,
payments under the Class A Plan totaled $3,033,217, all of which was paid by
the Distributor to recipients. That included $155,852 paid to an affiliate of
the Distributor's parent company. Any unreimbursed expenses the Distributor
incurs with respect to Class A shares in any fiscal year cannot be recovered in
subsequent years.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CLASS B AND CLASS C DISTRIBUTION AND SERVICE PLAN FEES. Under each plan,
service fees and distribution fees are computed on the average of the net asset
value of shares in the respective class, determined as of the close of each
regular business day during the period. The Class B and Class C plans allow the
Distributor to be reimbursed for its services and costs in distributing Class B
and Class C and servicing accounts.

      The Distributor retains the asset-based sales charge on Class B shares.
The Distributor retains the asset-based sales charge on Class C shares during
the first year the shares are outstanding. The asset-based sales charges on
Class B and Class C shares allow investors to buy shares without a front-end
sales charge while allowing the Distributor to compensate dealers that sell
those shares.

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

Distribution fees paid to the Distributor for the year ended August 31, 1999
were as follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   DISTRIBUTOR'S    DISTRIBUTOR'S
                                                                       AGGREGATE     UNREIMBURSED
                                                                    UNREIMBURSED    EXPENSES AS %
                                TOTAL PAYMENTS  AMOUNT RETAINED         EXPENSES    OF NET ASSETS
                                    UNDER PLAN   BY DISTRIBUTOR       UNDER PLAN         OF CLASS
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                               <C>              <C>              <C>                   <C>
Class B Plan                        $4,093,686       $3,318,827       $9,757,363             2.19%
Class C Plan                           534,637          287,889          525,346             0.91

</TABLE>


<PAGE>

NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS  Continued
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------


===============================================================================
5. FOREIGN CURRENCY CONTRACTS

A foreign currency exchange contract is a commitment to purchase or sell a
foreign currency at a future date, at a negotiated rate. The Fund may enter
into foreign currency exchange contracts for operational purposes and to seek
to protect against adverse exchange rate fluctuation. Risks to the Fund include
the potential inability of the counterparty to meet the terms of the contract.

      The net U.S. dollar value of foreign currency underlying all contractual
commitments held by the Fund and the resulting unrealized appreciation or
depreciation are determined using foreign currency exchange rates as provided
by a reliable bank, dealer or pricing service. Unrealized appreciation and
depreciation on foreign currency contracts are reported in the Statement of
Assets and Liabilities.

      The Fund may realize a gain or loss upon the closing or settlement of the
forward transaction. Realized gains and losses are reported with all other
foreign currency gains and losses in the Statement of Operations.

      Securities denominated in foreign currency to cover net exposure on
outstanding foreign currency contracts are noted in the Statement of
Investments where applicable.

===============================================================================
6. FUTURES CONTRACTS

The Fund may buy and sell futures contracts in order to gain exposure to or to
seek to protect against changes in interest rates. The Fund may also buy or
write put or call options on these futures contracts.

      The Fund generally sells futures contracts to hedge against increases in
interest rates and the resulting negative effect on the value of fixed rate
portfolio securities. The Fund may also purchase futures contracts to gain
exposure to changes in interest rates as it may be more efficient or cost
effective than actually buying fixed income securities.

      Upon entering into a futures contract, the Fund is required to deposit
either cash or securities (initial margin) in an amount equal to a certain
percentage of the contract value. Subsequent payments (variation margin) are
made or received by the Fund each day. The variation margin payments are equal
to the daily changes in the contract value and are recorded as unrealized gains
and losses. The Fund may recognize a realized gain or loss when the contract is
closed or expires.

      Securities held in collateralized accounts to cover initial margin
requirements on open futures contracts are noted in the Statement of
Investments. The Statement of Assets and Liabilities reflects a receivable
and/or payable for the daily mark to market for variation margin.

      Risks of entering into futures contracts (and related options) include
the possibility that there may be an illiquid market and that a change in the
value of the contract or option may not correlate with changes in the value of
the underlying securities.


<PAGE>


===============================================================================
7. BANK BORROWINGS

The Fund may borrow from a bank for temporary or emergency purposes including,
without limitation, funding of shareholder redemptions provided asset coverage
for borrowings exceeds 300%. The Fund has entered into an agreement which
enables it to participate with other Oppenheimer funds in an unsecured line of
credit with a bank, which permits borrowings up to $400 million, collectively.
Interest is charged to each fund, based on its borrowings, at a rate equal to
the Federal Funds Rate plus 0.35%. Borrowings are payable 30 days after such
loan is executed. The Fund also pays a commitment fee equal to its pro rata
share of the average unutilized amount of the credit facility at a rate of
0.0575% per annum.

      The Fund had no borrowings outstanding during the year ended August 31,
1999.

<PAGE>


OPPENHEIMERFUNDS FAMILY
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<TABLE>
=====================================================================================================
<S>                           <C>                               <C>
GLOBAL EQUITY
                              Developing Markets Fund           Global Fund
                              International Small Company Fund  Quest Global Value Fund
                              Europe Fund                       Global Growth & Income Fund
                              International Growth Fund

=====================================================================================================
EQUITY
                              Stock                             Stock & Bond
                              Enterprise Fund(1)                Main Street(R) Growth & Income Fund
                              Discovery Fund                    Quest Opportunity Value Fund
                              Main Street(R) Small Cap Fund     Total Return Fund
                              Quest Small Cap Value Fund        Quest Balanced Value Fund
                              MidCap Fund                       Capital Income Fund(2)
                              Capital Appreciation Fund         Multiple Strategies Fund
                              Growth Fund                       Disciplined Allocation Fund
                              Disciplined Value Fund            Convertible Securities Fund
                              Quest Value Fund

                                                                Specialty
                                                                Real Asset Fund
                                                                Gold & Special Minerals Fund

=====================================================================================================
FIXED INCOME
                              Taxable                           Municipal
                              International Bond Fund           California Municipal Fund(3)
                              World Bond Fund                   Florida Municipal Fund(3)
                              High Yield Fund                   New Jersey Municipal Fund(3)
                              Champion Income Fund              New York Municipal Fund(3)
                              Strategic Income Fund             Pennsylvania Municipal Fund(3)
                              Bond Fund                         Municipal Bond Fund
                              U.S. Government Trust             Insured Municipal Fund
                              Limited-Term Government Fund      Intermediate Municipal Fund

                                                                Rochester Division
                                                                Rochester Fund Municipals
                                                                Limited Term New York Municipal Fund

=====================================================================================================
MONEY MARKET(4)

                              Money Market Fund                 Cash Reserves
</TABLE>

1. Effective July 1, 1999, this fund is closed to new investors. See prospectus
for details.

2. On 4/1/99, the Fund's name was changed from "Oppenheimer Equity Income
Fund."

3. Available to investors only in certain states.

4. An investment in money market funds is neither insured nor guaranteed by the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or any other government agency. Although
these funds may seek to preserve the value of your investment at $1.00 per
share, it is possible to lose money by investing in these funds. Oppenheimer
funds are distributed by OppenheimerFunds Distributor, Inc., Two World Trade
Center, New York, NY10048-0203.

(C) Copyright 1999 OppenheimerFunds, Inc. All rights reserved.



NOT A PART OF THE PROSPECTUS

                                     A-1
Appendix A

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                           Industry Classifications
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Aerospace/Defense                       Food and Drug Retailers
Air Transportation                      Gas Utilities
Asset-Backed                            Health Care/Drugs
Auto Parts and Equipment                Health Care/Supplies & Services
Automotive                              Homebuilders/Real Estate
Bank Holding Companies                  Hotel/Gaming
Banks                                   Industrial Services
Beverages                               Information Technology
Broadcasting                            Insurance
Broker-Dealers                          Leasing & Factoring
Building Materials                      Leisure
Cable Television                        Manufacturing
Chemicals                               Metals/Mining
Commercial Finance                      Nondurable Household Goods
Communication Equipment                 Office Equipment
Computer Hardware                       Oil - Domestic
Computer Software                       Oil - International
Conglomerates                           Paper
Consumer Finance                        Photography
Consumer Services                       Publishing
Containers                              Railroads & Truckers
Convenience Stores                      Restaurants
Department Stores                       Savings & Loans
Diversified Financial                   Shipping
Diversified Media                       Special Purpose Financial
Drug Wholesalers                        Specialty Printing
Durable Household Goods                 Specialty Retailing
Education                               Steel
Electric Utilities                      Telecommunications - Long Distance
Electrical Equipment                    Telephone - Utility
Electronics                             Textile, Apparel & Home Furnishings
Energy Services                         Tobacco
Entertainment/Film                      Trucks and Parts
Environmental                           Wireless Services
Food



<PAGE>


                                     B-14
                                Appendix B

        OppenheimerFunds Special Sales Charge Arrangements and Waivers

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

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

For the purposes of some of the waivers described below and in the Prospectus
and Statement of Additional Information of the applicable Oppenheimer funds,
the term "Retirement Plan" refers to the following types of plans:

(1)   plans qualified under Sections 401(a) or 401(k) of the Internal Revenue
           Code,
(2)   non-qualified deferred compensation plans,
(3)   employee benefit plans3
(4)   Group Retirement Plans4
(5)   403(b)(7) custodial plan accounts
(6)   Individual Retirement Accounts ("IRAs"), including traditional IRAs,
           Roth IRAs, SEP-IRAs, SARSEPs or SIMPLE plans

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


 I. Applicability of Class A Contingent Deferred Sales Charges in Certain Cases

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

      There is no initial sales charge on purchases of Class A shares of any
of the Oppenheimer funds in the cases listed below. However, these purchases
may be subject to the Class A contingent deferred sales charge if redeemed
within 18 months of the end of the calendar month of their purchase, as
described in the Prospectus (unless a waiver described elsewhere in this
Appendix applies to the redemption). Additionally, on shares purchased under
these waivers that are subject to the Class A contingent deferred sales
charge, the Distributor will pay the applicable commission described in the
Prospectus under "Class A Contingent Deferred Sales Charge."1 This waiver
provision applies to:

|_|   Purchases of Class A shares aggregating $1 million or more.
|_|   Purchases by  a Retirement Plan (other than an IRA or 403(b)(7)
         custodial plan) that:

(1)      buys shares costing $500,000 or more, or
(2)   has, at the time of purchase, 100 or more eligible employees or total
              plan assets of $500,000 or more, or
(3)   certifies to the Distributor that it projects to have annual plan
              purchases of $200,000 or more.

|_|   Purchases by an OppenheimerFunds-sponsored Rollover IRA, if the
         purchases are made:

(1)   through a broker, dealer, bank or registered investment adviser that
              has made special arrangements with the Distributor for those
              purchases, or
(2)   by a direct rollover of a distribution from a qualified Retirement Plan
              if the administrator of that Plan has made special arrangements
              with the Distributor for those purchases.

|_|   Purchases of Class A shares by Retirement Plans that have any of the
         following record-keeping arrangements:

(1)   The record keeping is performed by Merrill Lynch Pierce Fenner & Smith,
              Inc. ("Merrill Lynch") on a daily valuation basis for the
              Retirement Plan. On the date the plan sponsor signs the
              record-keeping service agreement with Merrill Lynch, the Plan
              must have $3 million or more of its assets invested in (a)
              mutual funds, other than those advised or managed by Merrill
              Lynch Asset Management, L.P. ("MLAM"), that are made available
              under a Service Agreement between Merrill Lynch and the mutual
              fund's principal underwriter or distributor, and  (b)  funds
              advised or managed by MLAM (the funds described in (a) and (b)
              are referred to as "Applicable Investments").
(2)   The record keeping for the Retirement Plan is performed on a daily
              valuation basis by a record keeper whose services are provided
              under a contract or arrangement between the Retirement Plan and
              Merrill Lynch. On the date the plan sponsor signs the record
              keeping service agreement with Merrill Lynch, the Plan must
              have $3 million or more of its assets (excluding assets
              invested in money market funds) invested in Applicable
              Investments.
(3)   The record keeping for a Retirement Plan is handled under a service
              agreement with Merrill Lynch and on the date the plan sponsor
              signs that agreement, the Plan has 500 or more eligible
              employees (as determined by the Merrill Lynch plan conversion
              manager).
|_|   Purchases by a Retirement Plan whose record keeper had a
         cost-allocation agreement with the Transfer Agent on or before May
         1, 1999.





          II. Waivers of Class A Sales Charges of Oppenheimer Funds

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

Class A shares purchased by the following investors are not subject to any
Class A sales charges (and no commissions are paid by the Distributor on such
purchases):

|_|   The Manager or its affiliates.
|_|   Present or former officers, directors, trustees and employees (and
         their "immediate families") of the Fund, the Manager and its
         affiliates, and retirement plans established by them for their
         employees. The term "immediate family" refers to one's spouse,
         children, grandchildren, grandparents, parents, parents-in-law,
         brothers and sisters, sons- and daughters-in-law, a sibling's
         spouse, a spouse's siblings, aunts, uncles, nieces and nephews;
         relatives by virtue of a remarriage (step-children, step-parents,
         etc.) are included.
|_|   Registered management investment companies, or separate accounts of
         insurance companies having an agreement with the Manager or the
         Distributor for that purpose.
|_|   Dealers or brokers that have a sales agreement with the Distributor, if
         they purchase shares for their own accounts or for retirement plans
         for their employees.
|_|   Employees and registered representatives (and their spouses) of dealers
         or brokers described above or financial institutions that have
         entered into sales arrangements with such dealers or brokers (and
         which are identified as such to the Distributor) or with the
         Distributor. The purchaser must certify to the Distributor at the
         time of purchase that the purchase is for the purchaser's own
         account (or for the benefit of such employee's spouse or minor
         children).
|_|   Dealers, brokers, banks or registered investment advisors that have
         entered into an agreement with the Distributor providing
         specifically for the use of shares of the Fund in particular
         investment products made available to their clients. Those clients
         may be charged a transaction fee by their dealer, broker, bank or
         advisor for the purchase or sale of Fund shares.
|_|   Investment advisors and financial planners who have entered into an
         agreement for this purpose with the Distributor and who charge an
         advisory, consulting or other fee for their services and buy shares
         for their own accounts or the accounts of their clients.
|_|   "Rabbi trusts" that buy shares for their own accounts, if the purchases
         are made through a broker or agent or other financial intermediary
         that has made special arrangements with the Distributor for those
         purchases.
|_|   Clients of investment advisors or financial planners (that have entered
         into an agreement for this purpose with the Distributor) who buy
         shares for their own accounts may also purchase shares without sales
         charge but only if their accounts are linked to a master account of
         their investment advisor or financial planner on the books and
         records of the broker, agent or financial intermediary with which
         the Distributor has made such special arrangements . Each of these
         investors may be charged a fee by the broker, agent or financial
         intermediary for purchasing shares.
|_|   Directors, trustees, officers or full-time employees of OpCap Advisors
         or its affiliates, their relatives or any trust, pension, profit
         sharing or other benefit plan which beneficially owns shares for
         those persons.
|_|   Accounts for which Oppenheimer Capital (or its successor) is the
         investment advisor (the Distributor must be advised of this
         arrangement) and persons who are directors or trustees of the
         company or trust which is the beneficial owner of such accounts.
|_|   A unit investment trust that has entered into an appropriate agreement
         with the Distributor.
|_|   Dealers, brokers, banks, or registered investment advisers that have
         entered into an agreement with the Distributor to sell shares to
         defined contribution employee retirement plans for which the dealer,
         broker or investment adviser provides administration services.
|_|   Retirement Plans and deferred compensation plans and trusts used to
         fund those plans (including, for example, plans qualified or created
         under sections 401(a), 401(k), 403(b) or 457 of the Internal Revenue
         Code), in each case if those purchases are made through a broker,
         agent or other financial intermediary that has made special
         arrangements with the Distributor for those purchases.
|_|   A TRAC-2000 401(k) plan (sponsored by the former Quest for Value
         Advisors) whose Class B or Class C shares of a Former Quest for
         Value Fund were exchanged for Class A shares of that Fund due to the
         termination of the Class B and Class C TRAC-2000 program on November
         24, 1995.
|_|   A qualified Retirement Plan that had agreed with the former Quest for
         Value Advisors to purchase shares of any of the Former Quest for
         Value Funds at net asset value, with such shares to be held through
         DCXchange, a sub-transfer agency mutual fund clearinghouse, if that
         arrangement was consummated and share purchases commenced by
         December 31, 1996.

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

Class A shares issued or purchased in the following transactions are not
subject to sales charges (and no commissions are paid by the Distributor on
such purchases):

|_|   Shares issued in plans of reorganization, such as mergers, asset
         acquisitions and exchange offers, to which the Fund is a party.
|_|   Shares purchased by the reinvestment of dividends or other
         distributions reinvested from the Fund or other Oppenheimer funds
         (other than Oppenheimer Cash Reserves) or unit investment trusts for
         which reinvestment arrangements have been made with the Distributor.
|_|   Shares purchased through a broker-dealer that has entered into a
         special agreement with the Distributor to allow the broker's
         customers to purchase and pay for shares of Oppenheimer funds using
         the proceeds of shares redeemed in the prior 30 days from a mutual
         fund (other than a fund managed by the Manager or any of its
         subsidiaries) on which an initial sales charge or contingent
         deferred sales charge was paid. This waiver also applies to shares
         purchased by exchange of shares of Oppenheimer Money Market Fund,
         Inc. that were purchased and paid for in this manner. This waiver
         must be requested when the purchase order is placed for shares of
         the Fund, and the Distributor may require evidence of qualification
         for this waiver.
|_|   Shares purchased with the proceeds of maturing principal units of any
         Qualified Unit Investment Liquid Trust Series.
|_|   Shares purchased by the reinvestment of loan repayments by a
         participant in a Retirement Plan for which the Manager or an
         affiliate acts as sponsor.

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

The Class A contingent deferred sales charge is also waived if shares that
would otherwise be subject to the contingent deferred sales charge are
redeemed in the following cases:

|_|   To make Automatic Withdrawal Plan payments that are limited annually to
         no more than 12% of the account value adjusted annually.
|_|   Involuntary redemptions of shares by operation of law or involuntary
         redemptions of small accounts (please refer to "Shareholder Account
         Rules and Policies," in the applicable fund Prospectus).
|_|   For distributions from Retirement Plans, deferred compensation plans or
         other employee benefit plans for any of the following purposes:
(1)   Following the death or disability (as defined in the Internal Revenue
              Code) of the participant or beneficiary. The death or
              disability must occur after the participant's account was
              established.
(2)   To return excess contributions.
(3)   To return contributions made due to a mistake of fact.
(4)   Hardship withdrawals, as defined in the plan.3
(5)   Under a Qualified Domestic Relations Order, as defined in the Internal
              Revenue Code, or, in the case of an IRA, a divorce or
              separation agreement described in Section 71(b) of the Internal
              Revenue Code.
(6)   To meet the minimum distribution requirements of the Internal Revenue
              Code.
(7)   To make "substantially equal periodic payments" as described in Section
              72(t) of the Internal Revenue Code.
(8)   For loans to participants or beneficiaries.
(9)   Separation from service.4
         (10) Participant-directed redemptions to purchase shares of a mutual
              fund (other than a fund managed by the Manager or a subsidiary
              of the Manager) if the plan has made special arrangements with
              the Distributor.
         (11) Plan termination or "in-service distributions," if the
              redemption proceeds are rolled over directly to an
              OppenheimerFunds-sponsored IRA.
|_|   For distributions from Retirement Plans having 500 or more eligible
         employees, except distributions due to termination of all of the
         Oppenheimer funds as an investment option under the Plan.
|_|   For distributions from 401(k) plans sponsored by broker-dealers that
         have entered into a special agreement with the Distributor allowing
         this waiver.


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

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

A.  Waivers for Redemptions in Certain Cases.

The Class B and Class C contingent deferred sales charges will be waived for
redemptions of shares in the following cases:

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

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

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

The contingent deferred sales charge is also waived on Class B, Class C and
Class N shares sold or issued in the following cases:

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

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

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



<PAGE>


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

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

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

      All of the funds listed above are referred to in this Appendix as the
"Former Quest for Value Funds."  The waivers of initial and contingent
deferred sales charges described in this Appendix apply to shares of an
Oppenheimer fund that are either:

|_|   acquired by such shareholder pursuant to an exchange of shares of an
         Oppenheimer fund that was one of the Former Quest for Value Funds,
         or
|_|   purchased by such shareholder by exchange of shares of another
         Oppenheimer fund that were acquired pursuant to the merger of any of
         the Former Quest for Value Funds into that other Oppenheimer fund on
         November 24, 1995.

A.  Reductions or Waivers of Class A Sales Charges.

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

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






<PAGE>



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

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

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

|X|   Waiver of Class A Sales Charges for Certain Shareholders.  Class A
         shares purchased by the following investors are not subject to any
         Class A initial or contingent deferred sales charges:

|_|   Shareholders who were shareholders of the AMA Family of Funds on
            February 28, 1991 and who acquired shares of any of the Former
            Quest for Value Funds by merger of a portfolio of the AMA Family
            of Funds.
|_|   Shareholders who acquired shares of any Former Quest for Value Fund by
            merger of any of the portfolios of the Unified Funds.

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

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

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

|X|   Waivers for Redemptions of Shares Purchased Prior to March 6, 1995.  In
         the following cases, the contingent deferred sales charge will be
         waived for redemptions of Class A, Class B or Class C shares of an
         Oppenheimer fund. The shares must have been acquired by the merger
         of a Former Quest for Value Fund into the fund or by exchange from
         an Oppenheimer fund that was a Former Quest for Value Fund or into
         which such fund merged. Those shares must have been purchased prior
         to March 6, 1995 in connection with:

|_|   withdrawals under an automatic withdrawal plan holding only either
            Class B or Class C shares if the annual withdrawal does not
            exceed 10% of the initial value of the account value, adjusted
            annually, and
|_|   liquidation of a shareholder's account if the aggregate net asset value
            of shares held in the account is less than the required minimum
            value of such accounts.




|X|   Waivers for Redemptions of Shares Purchased on or After March 6, 1995
      but Prior to November 24, 1995.  In the following cases, the contingent
      deferred sales charge will be waived for redemptions of Class A, Class
      B or Class C shares of an Oppenheimer fund. The shares must have been
      acquired by the merger of a Former Quest for Value Fund into the fund
      or by exchange from an Oppenheimer fund that was a Former Quest For
      Value Fund or into which such Former Quest for Value Fund merged. Those
      shares must have been purchased on or after March 6, 1995, but prior to
      November 24, 1995:

|_|   redemptions following the death or disability of the shareholder(s) (as
            evidenced by a determination of total disability by the U.S.
            Social Security Administration);
|_|   withdrawals under an automatic withdrawal plan (but only for Class B or
            Class C shares) where the annual withdrawals do not exceed 10% of
            the initial value of the account value; adjusted annually, and
|_|   liquidation of a shareholder's account if the aggregate net asset value
            of shares held in the account is less than the required minimum
            account value.
      A shareholder's account will be credited with the amount of any
contingent deferred sales charge paid on the redemption of any Class A, Class
B or Class C shares of the Oppenheimer fund described in this section if the
proceeds are invested in the same Class of shares in that fund or another
Oppenheimer fund within 90 days after redemption.


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

The initial and contingent deferred sale charge rates and waivers for Class A
and Class B shares described in the respective Prospectus (or this Appendix)
of the following Oppenheimer funds (each is referred to as a "Fund" in this
section):

o     Oppenheimer U. S. Government Trust,
o     Oppenheimer Bond Fund,
o     Oppenheimer Disciplined Value Fund and
o     Oppenheimer Disciplined Allocation Fund

are modified as described below for those Fund shareholders who were
shareholders of the following funds (referred to as the "Former Connecticut
Mutual Funds") on March 1, 1996, when OppenheimerFunds, Inc. became the
investment adviser to the Former Connecticut Mutual Funds:

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

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

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

      Those shareholders who are eligible for the prior Class A CDSC are:

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

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

|_|   Class A Sales Charge Waivers. Additional Class A shares of a Fund may
         be purchased without a sales charge, by a person who was in one (or
         more) of the categories below and acquired Class A shares prior to
         March 18, 1996, and still holds Class A shares:

(1)   any purchaser, provided the total initial amount invested in the Fund
              or any one or more of the Former Connecticut Mutual Funds
              totaled $500,000 or more, including investments made pursuant
              to the Combined Purchases, Statement of Intention and Rights of
              Accumulation features available at the time of the initial
              purchase and such investment is still held in one or more of
              the Former Connecticut Mutual Funds or a Fund into which such
              Fund merged;
(2)   any participant in a qualified plan, provided that the total initial
              amount invested by the plan in the Fund or any one or more of
              the Former Connecticut Mutual Funds totaled $500,000 or more;
(3)   Directors of the Fund or any one or more of the Former Connecticut
              Mutual Funds and members of their immediate families;
(4)   employee benefit plans sponsored by Connecticut Mutual Financial
              Services, L.L.C. ("CMFS"), the prior distributor of the Former
              Connecticut Mutual Funds, and its affiliated companies;
(5)   one or more members of a group of at least 1,000 persons (and persons
              who are retirees from such group) engaged in a common business,
              profession, civic or charitable endeavor or other activity, and
              the spouses and minor dependent children of such persons,
              pursuant to a marketing program between CMFS and such group;
              and
(6)   an institution acting as a fiduciary on behalf of an individual or
              individuals, if such institution was directly compensated by
              the individual(s) for recommending the purchase of the shares
              of the Fund or any one or more of the Former Connecticut Mutual
              Funds, provided the institution had an agreement with CMFS.

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

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

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

In addition to the waivers set forth in the Prospectus and in this Appendix,
above, the contingent deferred sales charge will be waived for redemptions of
Class A and Class B shares of a Fund and exchanges of Class A or Class B
shares of a Fund into Class A or Class B shares of a Former Connecticut
Mutual Fund provided that the Class A or Class B shares of the Fund to be
redeemed or exchanged were (i) acquired prior to March 18, 1996 or (ii) were
acquired by exchange from an Oppenheimer fund that was a Former Connecticut
Mutual Fund. Additionally, the shares of such Former Connecticut Mutual Fund
must have been purchased prior to March 18, 1996:

(1)   by the estate of a deceased shareholder;
(2)   upon the disability of a shareholder, as defined in Section 72(m)(7) of
           the Internal Revenue Code;
(3)   for retirement distributions (or loans) to participants or
           beneficiaries from retirement plans qualified under Sections 401(a)
           or 403(b)(7)of the Code, or from IRAs, deferred compensation plans
           created under Section 457 of the Code, or other employee benefit
           plans;
(4)   as tax-free returns of excess contributions to such retirement or
           employee benefit plans;
(5)   in whole or in part, in connection with shares sold to any state,
           county, or city, or any instrumentality, department, authority, or
           agency thereof, that is prohibited by applicable investment laws
           from paying a sales charge or commission in connection with the
           purchase of shares of any registered investment management
           company;
(6)   in connection with the redemption of shares of the Fund due to a
           combination with another investment company by virtue of a merger,
           acquisition or similar reorganization transaction;
(7)   in connection with the Fund's right to involuntarily redeem or
           liquidate the Fund;
(8)   in connection with automatic redemptions of Class A shares and Class B
           shares in certain retirement plan accounts pursuant to an
           Automatic Withdrawal Plan but limited to no more than 12% of the
           original value annually; or
(9)   as involuntary redemptions of shares by operation of law, or under
           procedures set forth in the Fund's Articles of Incorporation, or
           as adopted by the Board of Directors of the Fund.


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

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


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

Oppenheimer Convertible Securities Fund (referred to as the "Fund" in this
section) may sell Class M shares at net asset value without any initial sales
charge to the classes of investors listed below who, prior to March 11, 1996,
owned shares of the Fund's then-existing Class A and were permitted to
purchase those shares at net asset value without sales charge:

|_|   the Manager and its affiliates,
|_|   present or former officers, directors, trustees and employees (and
         their "immediate families" as defined in the Fund's Statement of
         Additional Information) of the Fund, the Manager and its affiliates,
         and retirement plans established by them or the prior investment
         advisor of the Fund for their employees,
|_|   registered management investment companies or separate accounts of
         insurance companies that had an agreement with the Fund's prior
         investment advisor or distributor for that purpose,
|_|   dealers or brokers that have a sales agreement with the Distributor, if
         they purchase shares for their own accounts or for retirement plans
         for their employees,
|_|   employees and registered representatives (and their spouses) of dealers
         or brokers described in the preceding section or financial
         institutions that have entered into sales arrangements with those
         dealers or brokers (and whose identity is made known to the
         Distributor) or with the Distributor, but only if the purchaser
         certifies to the Distributor at the time of purchase that the
         purchaser meets these qualifications,
|_|   dealers, brokers, or registered investment advisors that had entered
         into an agreement with the Distributor or the prior distributor of
         the Fund specifically providing for the use of Class M shares of the
         Fund in specific investment products made available to their
         clients, and
|_|   dealers, brokers or registered investment advisors that had entered
         into an agreement with the Distributor or prior distributor of the
         Fund's shares to sell shares to defined contribution employee
         retirement plans for which the dealer, broker, or investment advisor
         provides administrative services.


<PAGE>



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Oppenheimer Growth Fund
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Internet Web Site:
      www.oppenheimerfunds.com

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

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

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

Custodian Bank
      The Bank of New York
      One Wall Street
      New York, New York 10015

Independent Auditors
      KPMG LLP
      707 Seventeenth Street
      Denver, Colorado 80202

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



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