HEALTH & RETIREMENT PROPERTIES TRUST
PRE 14A, 1996-03-22
REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT TRUSTS
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                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

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

   Filed by the Registrant /X/ Filed by a Party other than the Registrant / /

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

Check the appropriate box:
/X/ Preliminary Proxy Statement
/ / Confidential,  for  Use  of the  Commission  Only  
    (as  permitted  by  Rule 14a-6(e(2))
/ / Definitive Proxy Statement 
/ / Definitive Additional Materials
/ / Soliciting Material Pursuant to sec.240.14a-11(c) or sec.240.14a-12

                     Health and Retirement Properties Trust
                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)

                     Health and Retirement Properties Trust
                   (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement)

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):
/X/    $125 per Exchange Act Rules 0-11(c)(1)(ii),  14a-6(i)(1),  or 14a-6(j)(2)
       or Item 22 (a)(2) of Schedule 14A.
/ / $500 per  each  party  to the  controversy  pursuant  to  Exchange  Act Rule
    14a-6(i)(3). 
 / / Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(4)
and 0-11.

         1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:

         2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:

         3)  Per unit price or other  underlying  value of transaction  computed
             pursuant to  Exchange  Act Rule 0-11 (Set forth the amount on which
             the filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined.):

         4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

         5) Total fee paid:

/ / Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.

/ / Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange  Act Rule
0-11(a)(2)  and  identify  the  filing  for  which the  offsetting  fee was paid
previously.  Identify the previous filing by registration  statement  number, or
the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.

         1) Amount Previously Paid:

         2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:

         3) Filing Party:

         4) Date Filed:

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<PAGE>



                     HEALTH AND RETIREMENT PROPERTIES TRUST
                                400 Centre Street
                           Newton, Massachusetts 02158


                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

                             to be held May 14, 1996

To the Shareholders of
Health and Retirement Properties Trust

     Notice is hereby given that the Annual  Meeting of  Shareholders  of Health
and Retirement  Properties  Trust (the  "Company") will be held at 10:00 A.M. on
Tuesday,  May 14,  1996,  at State Street Bank and Trust  Company,  225 Franklin
Street, 33rd Floor, Boston, Massachusetts, for the following purposes:

     1.  To elect two Trustees in Group I of the Company's Board of Trustees.

     2.  To consider and act upon a proposal to amend the  Declaration  of Trust
         to allow the Board of Trustees to increase or decrease  the  authorized
         capital stock of the Company.

     3.  To consider and act upon such other matters as may properly come before
         the meeting.

     The Board of Trustees  has fixed the close of business on March 21, 1996 as
the record date for determination of the shareholders  entitled to notice of and
to vote at the meeting.

By Order of the Board of Trustees,

DAVID J. HEGARTY, Secretary

March __, 1996

     WHETHER  OR NOT YOU  EXPECT TO BE AT THE  MEETING,  PLEASE  SIGN,  DATE AND
RETURN YOUR PROXY IN THE ENVELOPE ENCLOSED HEREWITH.



<PAGE>




                     HEALTH AND RETIREMENT PROPERTIES TRUST
                                400 Centre Street
                           Newton, Massachusetts 02158

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

                                 PROXY STATEMENT

                         ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                       To Be Held on Tuesday, May 14, 1996

                                  INTRODUCTION

     A  Notice  of the  Annual  Meeting  of  Shareholders  of the  Company  (the
"Meeting") is set forth on the preceding  page and there is enclosed  herewith a
form of proxy  solicited  by the Board of Trustees of the  Company.  The cost of
this solicitation  will be borne by the Company.  In addition to solicitation by
mail, the Trustees and officers of the Company may solicit proxies personally or
by  telephone  or  telegram.  This  proxy  statement  is  being  first  sent  to
shareholders  on or  about  March  __,  1996.  A copy of the  Annual  Report  to
Shareholders for the year ended December 31, 1995 (including  audited  financial
statements of the Company) was mailed March __, 1996.

     Only  shareholders  of record as of the close of business on March 21, 1996
(the "Record  Date") are entitled to notice of and to vote at the Meeting and/or
any adjournment thereof. The outstanding stock of the Company on the Record Date
entitled to vote consisted of 66,165,166  Common Shares of Beneficial  Interest,
$.01 par value per share (the "Common  Shares").  The holders of the outstanding
Common Shares are entitled to one vote per Common Share.

     All Common  Shares  represented  by valid  proxies  received by the Company
prior to the Meeting will be counted for purposes of determining the presence of
a quorum and will be voted as specified  in the proxy.  If no  specification  is
made by the  shareholder,  the Common  Shares will be voted FOR the proposal set
forth below.  The proposal set forth below  requires the  affirmative  vote of a
majority of the Common Shares issued and outstanding. If a broker indicates on a
proxy that it does not have discretionary  authority as to certain Common Shares
to vote on the  proposal,  those Common  Shares will not be counted as voting in
favor of the proposal.  A Shareholder  giving a proxy has the power to revoke it
any time prior to its exercise by  delivering  to the Secretary of the Company a
written  revocation  or a duly  executed  proxy  bearing  a  later  date,  or by
attending the Meeting and voting his or her Common Shares in person. Adoption of
the proposals  presented in this Proxy Statement does not give rise to appraisal
rights or other dissenter's rights under Maryland law.

Item 1.  Election of Trustees in Group I of the Board of Trustees

     The number of Trustees of the  Company  currently  is fixed at five and the
Board of Trustees  currently  is divided  into three groups with two Trustees in
Group I, two Trustees in Group II and one Trustee in Group III. Trustees in each
Group are elected to three-year terms.

     The business of the Company is conducted under the general direction of the
Board of Trustees as provided by the Amended and Restated  Declaration  of Trust
(the "Declaration of Trust") and the Amended and Restated By-Laws of the Company
and the laws of the State of Maryland,  the state of the Company's  organization
on October 9, 1986.


                                       -1-

<PAGE>



     Three of the Trustees,  Bruce M. Gans,  M.D., the Rev.  Justinian  Manning,
C.P.  and Ralph J.  Watts are the  Company's  "Independent  Trustees";  that is,
Trustees who are not otherwise affiliated with the Company, HRPT Advisors, Inc.,
a Delaware corporation ("Advisors"), or any other person or entity that holds in
excess of 8.5% of the issued and outstanding  Common Shares of the Company.  The
Independent  Trustees also comprise the Company's Audit  Committee.  The Company
does not have a Compensation Committee or a Nominating Committee.

     During 1995,  the Board of Trustees  held six meetings.  During 1995,  each
Trustee  attended  75% or more of the total  number of meetings of the Board and
any  Committee of which he was a member except that Dr. Bruce Gans missed one of
the two  meetings  held between his election in October and the end of the year.
The standing Audit  Committee meets with the Company's  independent  auditors to
discuss  the  procedures  for  conducting,  and the  results  of,  audits of the
Company's financial records,  and recommends to the Board of Trustees the hiring
or retention of independent auditors. It held three meetings during 1995.

     Each Independent  Trustee receives an annual fee of $20,000 for services as
a Trustee,  plus $500 for each meeting of the Board or Board committee  attended
by such Trustee.  The Chairperson of the Audit Committee  receives an additional
$2,000 annually;  such position rotates annually among the Independent Trustees.
Each  Independent  Trustee  also  receives  annual  500 Share  grants  under the
Company's 1992 Incentive  Share Award Plan. The Company  reimburses all Trustees
for travel expenses  incurred in connection with their duties as Trustees of the
Company. The Company has also agreed to pay any Independent Trustee who brings a
property  to the  attention  of the  Company a fee equal to one  percent  of any
investment made by the Company in the property. No fees have been earned to date
by any Independent Trustee with respect to any investments by the Company.

     In  connection  with the  initial  public  offering of the  Company's  then
wholly-owned  subsidiary,  Hospitality Properties Trust ("HPT"), in August 1995,
Trustees  John L.  Harrington  and Arthur G.  Koumantzelis  resigned  from their
positions  with the Company and were elected as Trustees of HPT.  John G. Murray
resigned his positions as Executive Vice President and Chief  Financial  Officer
with the Company and was elected  Treasurer  and  Secretary of and performed the
duties of Chief Financial Officer for HPT. Mr. Murray is currently  President of
and performs the duties of Chief Operating Officer for HPT.

     The  present  Trustees  in Group I are  Bruce M.  Gans,  M.D.  and Barry M.
Portnoy.  If  re-elected,  Messrs.  Gans and Portnoy  will hold office until the
Company's 1999 Annual Meeting of Shareholders.  To be elected,  each nominee for
Trustee of the Company must receive the vote of a majority of the Shares  issued
and outstanding.  It is the intention of the persons  authorized by the enclosed
proxy to nominate  and elect  Messrs.  Gans and Portnoy as the Group I Trustees.
Advisors, which has voting control over 3,791,416 Shares (approximately 5.73% of
Shares  outstanding  and  entitled  to  vote)  intends  to vote in  favor of the
election of Messrs. Gans and Portnoy as the Group I Trustees.  Dr. Gans' and Mr.
Portnoy's  principal  occupations  for the past five  years and their ages as of
March 22, 1996 are as follows:

BRUCE M. GANS, M.D.  Age: 49

     Dr. Gans is  President  of the  Rehabilitation  Institute  of  Michigan,  a
specialty hospital affiliated with Wayne State University School of Medicine,  a
position he has held since 1989.  Dr. Gans is also a Professor  and  Chairman of
the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at Wayne State University
and a Senior Vice President of the Detroit Medical  Center.  Dr. Gans has been a
Group I Trustee  since his  election in October  1995 to the seat left vacant by
the resignation of John L. Harrington.

BARRY M. PORTNOY Age: 50

     Barry M. Portnoy has been a partner in the law firm of Sullivan & Worcester
LLP, counsel to the Company,  since 1978, and a Trustee of the Company since its
organization in 1986. Mr. Portnoy is a Director and 50% shareholder of Advisors,


                                       -2-

<PAGE>


Connecticut Subacute Corporation ("CSC") and Connecticut Subacute Corporation II
("CSCII"),  a  Director  and 33 1/3%  Shareholder  of each of  Vermont  Subacute
Corporation  ("VSC")  and New  Hampshire  Subacute  Corporation  ("NHSC")  and a
Managing  Trustee  of  HPT.  Mr.  Portnoy  is  also a  Director  of  Horizon/CMS
Healthcare Corp ("Horizon").  Mr. Portnoy was re-elected as a Group I Trustee at
the 1993 Annual Meeting of Shareholders  and has served as a member of the Board
since the Company's organization in 1986.

     In addition to Messrs.  Gans and Portnoy,  the following  persons currently
serve on the Board of Trustees or serve as  executive  officers of the  Company.
Their  principal  occupations for the last five years and their ages as of March
22, 1996, are as follows:

REV. JUSTINIAN MANNING, C.P. Age: 70

     The Reverend Justinian  Manning,  C.P., has been, since September 1990, the
pastor of St.  Gabriel's  parish in  Brighton,  Massachusetts.  From 1984  until
September 1990, he was the Treasurer of the Provincial Council of the Passionist
Provincialate.  He is also on the Board of Directors of  Charlesview,  a low and
moderate income housing program, and St. Elizabeth's Hospital Foundation.  He is
past Treasurer and a former Director of St. Paul's  Benevolent,  Educational and
Missionary  Institute,  a New Jersey corporation,  which oversees foundations in
Massachusetts,  Connecticut,  New York, Pennsylvania,  Maryland, Florida and the
Institute's Overseas Missions.  He was formerly on the Board of Directors of St.
Paul's  Monastery  Manor,  in  Pittsburgh,  Pennsylvania,  a congregate  housing
facility.  He belongs to the Provincial Council of the Passionist  Provincialate
and is the former Director of Consolidation for the Community.  Reverend Manning
has  been a  Trustee  of the  Company  since  its  organization  in 1986 and was
re-elected as a Group II Trustee at the 1994 Annual Meeting of Shareholders. His
term will expire at the 1997 Annual Meeting of Shareholders.

GERARD M. MARTIN Age: 61

     Gerard M. Martin is a private investor in real estate.  Until the merger of
Greenery  Rehabilitation Group, Inc. ("Greenery") into Horizon in February 1994,
Mr.  Martin  was the  Chief  Executive  Officer  and  Chairman  of the  Board of
Directors and a 51.4%  shareholder  of Greenery and was the principal  owner and
Chief  Executive  Officer  of  the  predecessors  of  Greenery  since  1975.  In
connection with the merger,  Mr. Martin was elected to the Board of Directors of
Horizon.  Mr.  Martin  has been  active  in the  health  care  and  real  estate
industries  for more than 25 years as a  manager,  developer  and  builder.  Mr.
Martin and his wife are the sole  shareholders  of Regional  Home Care,  Inc., a
corporation  providing  respiratory  therapy services and supplies to clients in
New  England.  Mr.  Martin is also a  Director  and 50%  shareholder  of each of
Advisors,  CSC and CSCII,  a Director and 331/3 % shareholder of each of VSC and
NHSC and a Managing Trustee of HPT. Mr. Martin has been a Trustee of the Company
since its  organization  in 1986 and was re-elected as a Group II Trustee at the
1994  Annual  Meeting of  Shareholders.  His term will expire at the 1997 Annual
Meeting of Shareholders.

RALPH J. WATTS Age: 49

     Mr.  Watts  is  President  and  CEO of  Cardiovascular  Ventures,  Inc.,  a
privately  held company which  develops,  owns and operates  outpatient  cardiac
catheterization  laboratories and is engaged in physician  practice  management.
Prior to assuming  this  position in 1992,  Mr. Watts was  President  and CEO of
Ramsay Health Care,  Inc., a publicly  owned company which owned and operated 18
hospitals  in 13 states and had  approximately  2,000  employees.  Mr. Watts has
served  on the  Board as a Group  III  Trustee  since  October  1995 when he was
elected to fill the vacancy left by the resignation of Arthur G. Koumantzelis.
His term will expire at the 1998 Annual Meeting of Shareholders.


                                       -3-

<PAGE>



DAVID J. HEGARTY Age: 39

     David J. Hegarty, a certified public accountant, joined the Company in July
1987 as Treasurer,  became  Executive Vice President in July 1993 and became the
President and Chief Operating  Officer of the Company in April 1995. Mr. Hegarty
has also been the  Secretary of the Company  since 1987.  In April 1995, he also
became the President and Chief Operating Officer of Advisors.  From January 1984
to July 1987,  Mr.  Hegarty  was an audit  manager  with Ernst & Young LLP,  the
Company's independent auditors.

AJAY SAINI Age: 36

     In April  1995,  Ajay  Saini,  a certified  public  accountant,  became the
Treasurer  of the  Company.  He has been Vice  President  and  Chief  Accounting
Officer of Advisors  since July 1993,  and prior to that he served as Controller
of Advisors  since June 1990.  Following  the  resignation  of John G. Murray in
August 1995, Mr. Saini became Chief Financial  Officer of the Company.  In April
1995, he became Treasurer of Advisors.  Prior to joining Advisors, Mr. Saini was
a senior accountant at Ernst & Young LLP, the Company's independent auditors.

     There are no family relationships among any Trustees and executive officers
of the Company. Executive officers serve at the will of the Board of Trustees.

Item 2.  Proposal  to Amend  the  Declaration  of Trust  to Allow  the  Board of
         Trustees  to  Increase  or Decrease  the  Authorized  Capital  Stock 
         of the Company.

     On March 9, 1996, in response to a recent change in Maryland law, the Board
of Trustees approved and recommended for shareholder  approval, a proposal which
would  allow  the  Board of  Trustees  to amend the  Declaration  of Trust  (the
"Declaration")  to increase  or decrease  the  authorized  capital  stock of the
Company without the requirement of shareholder  approval.  The Board of Trustees
recommends a vote "for" the proposed amendment to the Declaration (the "Proposed
Amendment").  The full text of the  Proposed  Amendment  to  Section  6.1 of the
Declaration  is included as Appendix A to this Proxy  Statement.  If approved by
the stockholders,  the Proposed  Amendment will become effective upon the filing
of an amendment to the Declaration  with the State Department of Assessments and
Taxation of Maryland, which will occur as soon as reasonably practicable.

Purpose and Effect of the Amendment

     The  Proposed  Amendment  is in  response  to a  change  in  Maryland  law,
effective  October 1, 1995,  which allows a  declaration  of trust of a Maryland
real estate  investment  trust to provide  that "the board of trustees may amend
the declaration of trust to increase or decrease the aggregate  number of shares
or the number of shares of any class that the trust has authority to issue." The
Board of  Trustees  believes  that the  Company's  ability to finance its growth
through  acquisitions  of  properties,  merger or otherwise is dependent in part
upon ready access to the public equity markets.  In order to respond quickly and
on an ongoing basis to opportunities for favorable access to the public markets,
the Company must be able to issue  quickly such Shares,  defined  below,  as the
Board of Trustees deems advisable. In addition, the Company has in the past, and
may in the future,  acquire properties for a purchase price payable, in whole or
in part, in Shares. The proposed Amendment will facilitate the Company's ability
to enter into such transactions.  The time and expense of repeated  solicitation
of  proxies to  increase  the  number of  authorized  Shares may have a material
negative impact on the Company's ability to do so in the future. The Company has
currently issued 66.17% of its authorized Common Shares.  Although the remaining
authorized  Common Shares,  33,834,834,  may be adequate in the near term, it is
the Board of  Trustees'  belief that the  flexibility  provided by the  Proposed
Amendment is in the best interests of the Company and its shareholders.


                                       -4-

<PAGE>



     The  Company  has no  present  intention,  agreement  or  understanding  to
authorize or issue Shares in excess of those  currently  authorized  nor does it
have any present intention, agreement or understanding to decrease the number of
Shares  authorized.  Assuming passage of the Proposed  Amendment,  Shares of the
Company  may be  authorized  and  issued  or the  number  of  Shares  authorized
decreased without further action by the shareholders.

     As with any issuance of equity, the issuance of additional Shares now or in
the future  could have some  dilutive  effect upon the earnings per share of the
Company and voting  rights of the existing  Shareholders.  Such  dilution may be
greater or lesser  depending upon whether such  additional  Shares are Common or
Preferred Shares,  defined below,  and, if Preferred  Shares,  the terms of such
Preferred  Shares  which  may be  set  by the  Board  of  Trustees  in its  sole
discretion.

     The Proposed Amendment is not intended to have an anti-takeover effect. The
Proposed  Amendment is not being  recommended in response to any specific effort
of which the Company is aware to obtain  control of the Company.  The Company is
not  aware of any  existing  or  planned  effort  on the part of any  person  to
accumulate  significant  amounts of its  Shares,  or to  acquire  control of the
Company by means of a merger,  tender offer, proxy solicitation in opposition to
management or otherwise.

     For the Company to qualify as a real estate investment trust ("REIT") under
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code"), in any taxable year,
not more than 50% in value of its outstanding  Shares may be owned,  directly or
indirectly by five or fewer individuals during the last six months of such year,
and the shares must be owned by 100 or more persons  during at least 335 days of
a taxable year or a proportionate part of a taxable year less than 12 months. In
connection  with the foregoing,  if the Trustees  shall, at any time and in good
faith,  be  of  the  opinion  that  direct  or  indirect   ownership  of  Shares
representing more than 8.5% in value of the total Shares  outstanding has or may
become  concentrated in the hands of one beneficial  owner,  other than Excepted
Persons, the Trustees shall have the power to redeem or prohibit the transfer of
all or a part of the affected  Shares.  Further the  Declaration  provides  that
transfers or purported acquisitions,  directly, indirectly or by attribution, of
Shares,   or  securities   convertible   into  Shares,   that  could  result  in
disqualification  of the  Company  as a REIT are null and void and  permits  the
Trustees to repurchase  Shares or other  securities  to the extent  necessary to
maintain the Company's status as a REIT.

     The Declaration also requires that Business Combinations, as defined in the
Declaration,  between the Company and a beneficial  holder of 10% or more of the
outstanding  Shares (a "Related  Person") be approved by the affirmative vote of
the holders of at least 75% of the Shares  unless (1) the  Trustees by unanimous
vote or written consent shall have expressly approved in advance the acquisition
of the  outstanding  Shares that  caused the Related  Person to become a Related
Person or shall have  approved  the  Business  Combination  prior to the Related
Person involved in the Business  Combination  having become a Related Person; or
(2) the  Business  Combination  is solely  between  the Company and a 100% owned
affiliate  of the  Company.  As  permitted by law, the Company has elected to be
governed by such provisions  rather than the provisions of Subtitle 6 of Title 3
of the Corporations  and Associations  Article of the Annotated Code of Maryland
regarding business combinations.

     In October  1994 the Board of Trustees  adopted a  shareholder  rights plan
(the "Rights  Plan") under which one Preferred  Share purchase right (a "Right")
was  distributed  for each Common Share.  Each Right  entitles the holder to buy
1/100th of a Junior Participating Preferred Share, defined below, at an exercise
price  of $50.  Rights  will be  exercisable  ten days  after a person  or group
acquires  beneficial  ownership of 10% or more of the Common  Shares or begins a
tender or exchange  offer for 10% or more of the Common Shares or if the Company
is involved in certain mergers or business combinations,  in either case subject
to various exceptions  (certain of which require the making of determinations by
the Company's  Independent Trustees with respect to the proposed  transactions).
As a general  matter,  each Right entitles its holder,  other than the acquiring
person or group or certain  related  parties,  to purchase Common Shares (or, in
some cases, cash,  property or other securities of the Company) having twice the
value of the exercise price.

                                       -5-

<PAGE>



Under  certain  circumstances,  the Company may redeem Rights at a price of $.01
each. Subject to certain  limitations,  the Rights Plan may be amended from time
to time by the Board of Trustees.  The Rights are  nonvoting  and will expire on
the tenth  anniversary of the adoption of the Rights Plan,  unless  exercised or
previously redeemed by the Company.

     The provisions of the  Declaration  and the Rights Plan and the grouping of
the Company's Board of Trustees into three groups with staggered terms of office
may have the effect of discouraging  unilateral  tender offers or other takeover
proposals  or proxy  contests  which  certain  shareholders  might deem in their
interests  or pursuant  to which they might  receive a  substantial  premium for
their Shares.  While not proposed for that purpose,  the Proposed Amendment will
grant to the Board of Trustees  greater  authority to authorize and issue Shares
of any series or class. Such authority could be used in order to discourage, and
the  existence of such  authority  could also  discourage,  such tender  offers,
proposals or contests.  The Company's current provisions discussed above and the
Proposed  Amendment could also have the effect of insulating  current management
against the  possibility of removal and could,  by possibly  reducing  temporary
fluctuations  in  market  price  caused  by  accumulations  of  Shares,  deprive
shareholders of opportunities to sell at a temporarily higher market price.

Capital Stock of the Company

     The Declaration authorizes the Company to issue an aggregate of 150,000,000
("Shares") in the Company,  including (i) 100,000,000  Common Shares,  par value
$.01 per share, and (ii) 50,000,000  Preferred Shares,  par value $.01 per share
(the "Preferred  Shares").  As of March 22, 1996,  there were 66,165,166  Shares
outstanding,   all  of  which  are  Common  Shares.  The  Declaration  currently
authorizes  the Board of Trustees  to cause the  issuance,  without  shareholder
approval,  of classes or series of Preferred Shares from time to time and to set
(or  change,  if the  class or  series  has  been  previously  established)  the
preferences,   conversion  or  other  rights,   voting   powers,   restrictions,
limitations  as  to  dividends,   qualifications  or  terms  and  conditions  of
redemption of such Preferred  Shares that are not prohibited by the  Declaration
or applicable law.

     Except as otherwise determined by the Board of Trustees with respect to any
class or series of Preferred Shares, all Shares: (i) will participate equally in
dividends  payable to shareholders  when, as and if declared by the Trustees and
ratably in net assets  available for distribution to shareholders on liquidation
or dissolution;  (ii) will have one vote per share on all matters submitted to a
vote of the  shareholders,  (iii) will not have cumulative  voting rights in the
election of Trustees;  and (iv) will have no preference,  conversion,  exchange,
sinking fund, redemption rights or preemptive or similar rights.

     After the  approval of the Board of  Trustees,  on  November  4, 1994,  the
Declaration  was amended to create an authorized but unissued class of 1,000,000
Preferred Shares (the "Junior  Participating  Preferred Shares").  The rights of
the Junior  Participating  Preferred Shares, when and if issued, are as follows.
The holder of each Junior Participating Preferred Share is entitled to quarterly
dividends in the greater  amount of $5.00 or 100 times the  quarterly  per share
dividend, whether cash or otherwise,  declared upon the Common Shares. Dividends
on the Junior Participating Preferred Shares are cumulative, and upon failure of
the Company to pay such  dividends for six  quarters,  the holders of the Junior
Participating  Preferred  Shares  shall be entitled to elect two  Trustees.  The
holder of each Junior Participating  Preferred Share is entitled to 100 votes on
all matters  submitted to a vote of the Shareholders.  The Junior  Participating
Preferred Shares have a preference upon  liquidation,  dissolution or winding up
of the  Company of $100.00  per  share.  The rights of the Junior  Participating
Preferred  Shares are  subject to the  superior  rights of any senior  series or
class of Preferred Shares which the Board of Trustees shall,  from time to time,
authorize and issue.

     Upon issuance in accordance  with the  Declaration  and  applicable law the
Company's Shares are fully paid and nonassessable.  The holders of Shares do not
have  preemptive  rights with  respect to the issuance of  additional  Shares or
other  securities  of the  Company.  The  authorized  but  unissued  Shares  are


                                       -6-

<PAGE>


available for issuance  from time to time by the Company at the sole  discretion
of its Board of Trustees  without further action by the Company's  shareholders,
except as may be required by  applicable  law or the rules of the New York Stock
Exchange or any other stock exchange or national securities  association trading
system on which the  securities  may be listed or traded,  for any proper  trust
purpose, which could include raising capital, providing compensation or benefits
to  employees  and  others,  paying  stock  dividends  or  acquiring  companies,
businesses or properties.

Vote Required for Approval

     The  affirmative  vote of the  holders of one half of the Common  Shares is
required to adopt the Proposed Amendment.

The Board of Trustees  Recommends  That the  Shareholders  Vote For the Proposed
Amendment to the Declaration of Trust.


                                       -7-

<PAGE>




                                OTHER INFORMATION

Compensation of Executive Officers

     The Company does not have any employees;  services which otherwise would be
provided by employees  are  performed  by  Advisors.  Payments by the Company to
Advisors are described in "Certain Relationships and Related Transactions".

     The following  table provides  summary  compensation  information  for both
David J. Hegarty,  an employee of Advisors who performed the duties of president
and chief  operating  officer of the Company on and after April 1, 1995, and for
Ajay Saini, an employee of Advisors who performed the duties of treasurer during
1995 and of chief financial officer from August 1995:

                           SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                     Long-Term Compensation
                                    Annual Compensation(1)                -----------------------------------------------------
                               -----------------------------------------  Restricted    Securities
          Name and                                          Other Annual    Stock       Underlying        LTIP       All Other
     Principal Position           Year    Salary    Bonus   Compensation   Awards (2)   Option SARs      Payouts   Compensation
     ------------------                                                                                                             
<S>                              <C>      <C>      <C>       <C>           <C>              <C>          <C>           <C>

David J. Hegarty, President
 & Chief Executive Officer..      1995     None     None      None          $46,125          None         None           None
                                  1994     None     None      None          $44,250          None         None           None
                                  1993     None     None      None          $25,250          None         None           None
Ajay Saini, Treasurer
 & Chief Financial Officer..      1995     None     None      None          $30,750          None         None           None
                                  1994     None     None      None          $22,125          None         None           None
                                  1993     None     None      None          $ 6,313          None         None           None
Mark J. Finkelstein, President
 &  Chief Executive Officer(3)    1995     None     None      None            -0-            None         None           None
                                  1994     None     None      None          $44,250          None         None           None
                                  1993     None     None      None          $37,875          None         None           None
John G. Murray, Executive
 Vice President & Chief Financial
 Officer(4)...................    1995     None     None      None          $30,750          None         None           None
                                  1994     None     None      None          $29,500          None         None           None
                                  1993     None     None      None            -0-            None         None           None
</TABLE>

- ----------

(1)      Except with respect to incentive share awards, the Company has not paid
         and has no current plans to pay compensation to its executive officers.
         Advisors,  which  conducts the  day-to-day  operations  of the Company,
         compensates Messrs. Hegarty and Saini in connection with their services
         to Advisors and to the Company.

(2)      All incentive share awards have been granted  pursuant to the Company's
         1992  Incentive  Share  Award Plan and  provide  that one third of each
         annual incentive share award vests immediately upon grant and one third
         vests on each of the first and second  anniversaries  of the grant.  In
         the event any executive officer who has been granted an incentive share
         award  ceases to  perform  the  duties of an  executive  officer of the
         Company during the vesting period of such award, that executive officer
         will only be entitled to receive the number of Shares which have vested
         up to the date of his departure.  At December 31, 1995, Messrs. Hegarty
         and Saini held 10,000 and 4,000 of Common  Shares  granted under annual
         incentive  share awards,  respectively,  having a value of $162,500 and
         $65,000  respectively,  based upon a $16.25 per share closing price for
         

                                       -8-

<PAGE>



          the  Common  Shares as  reported  on the New York  Stock  Exchange  on
          December 31, 1995. Shares are entitled to dividends as declared by the
          Company.  The dollar amounts shown  represent the number of restricted
          Shares  which  have  vested  or  continue  to be  subject  to  vesting
          multiplied  by the closing price for the Common Shares on the New York
          Stock Exchange on the date of grant. 

(3)       Mr.  Finkelstein  resigned  his  position  April 1, 1995.  Because Mr.
          Finkelstein  has  provided  and  provides  consulting  services to the
          Company, his Shares continue to vest as scheduled during the period of
          his consulting arrangements.

(4)       Mr.  Murray  resigned in August 1995 in order to take a position  with
          HPT. Because Mr. Murray has provided and provides  consulting services
          to the Company,  his Shares  continue to vest as scheduled  during the
          period of his consulting arrangements.

Performance Graph -- Comparison of Cumulative Total Return

     The graph below shows,  for the years indicated,  the Company's  cumulative
total  shareholder  return on its Common Shares  (assuming a $100  investment on
December 31, 1990) as compared  with (a) the Standard & Poor's 500 Index and (b)
the National  Association of Real Estate Investment  Trust,  Inc.'s index of all
tax-qualified  real  estate  investment  trusts  listed  on the New  York  Stock
Exchange,  the American  Stock  Exchange and the  NASDAQ/National  Market System
(NAREIT). The comparison assumes all dividends are reinvested.

[A graph appears in this location providing the comparative information below.]

  Measurement Period
 (Fiscal Year Covered)    HRP Index    NAREIT       S&P
          1990               100         100        100
          1991               191         136        131
          1992               182         152        141
          1993               238         180        154
          1994               235         182        157
          1995               313         215        215

Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation

     The Company  does not have a standing  Compensation  Committee;  rather,  a
committee comprised of the Company's Independent Trustees (Messrs. Gans, Manning
and Watts) makes  recommendations  for grants of Shares under the Company's 1992
Incentive Share Award Plan (the "Plan"), and such recommendations are acted upon
by the full  Board  of  Trustees  (Messrs.  Gans,  Manning,  Watts,  Martin  and
Portnoy).  Barry M. Portnoy, a member of the Board of Trustees,  is a partner in
the firm of Sullivan & Worcester LLP, counsel to the Company.

Executive Compensation Report

     The Company  developed and  implemented the Plan in May 1992 in recognition
of the following circumstances. First, the Company's Common Shares are primarily
a yield  vehicle for  Shareholders  and do not  appreciate  in value in the same
manner as other equity securities.  Therefore,  a conventional stock option plan
would not provide appropriate  incentives for the Company's management.  Second,
because the executive  officers of the Company are employees of Advisors and not
of the  Company,  and receive  their  salary  compensation  from  Advisors,  the
Trustees  wished to establish a vehicle  which would,  among other  things,  (a)
foster a continuing  identity of interest between  management of the Company and
its  Shareholders,  and (b)  recognize  that the  Company's  executive  officers
perform  certain  duties on  behalf of the  Company,  primarily  with  regard to
shareholder  relations  and investor  communications,  which fall outside of the
services  covered by the investment  advisory  contract  between the Company and
Advisors (the "Advisory  Agreement").  In granting  incentive share awards,  the
Trustees  consider  factors  such as the amount and terms of  restricted  Common
Shares previously granted to executive officers and the amount of time spent and
complexity  of the  duties  performed  by  executive  officers  on behalf of the
Company  speaking  at Company  conferences,  road  shows and  making  additional
presentations,   interfacing   with  analysts  and  preparing  and  distributing
shareholder reports, materials,  statements and other information.  The Trustees


                                       -9-

<PAGE>


may impose vesting  restrictions  or other  conditions on the granted Common
Shares, which may further promote continuity of management.

     In 1995,  David J. Hegarty,  President and Chief  Operating  Officer of the
Company, received a grant of 3,000 Common Shares under the Plan, 1,000 Shares of
which vested  immediately upon grant and 1,000 of which will vest on each of the
first and second  anniversaries  of the date of grant. In 1995, Mr. Saini,  then
Treasurer  of the  Company,  received a grant of 2,000  Common  Shares under the
Plan, 667 of which vested  immediately upon grant; 667 of which will vest on the
first  anniversary  of the  grant  and 666 of  which  will  vest  on the  second
anniversary thereof. The determination of the number of Common Shares granted to
Messrs.  Hegarty  and Saini was not  specifically  based on an  estimate  of the
Company's  performance,  but instead was based on the  relationship  of the fair
market  value of the Common  Shares so granted,  on the number of Common  Shares
previously granted to each such individual, and on the Board's opinion as to the
value of the "outside" services to the Company, as discussed above, performed by
each of Messrs. Hegarty and Saini during the year preceding the grant.

BRUCE M. GANS, M.D.
REV. JUSTINIAN MANNING, P.C.
GERARD M. MARTIN
BARRY M. PORTNOY
RALPH J. WATTS


                                      -10-

<PAGE>


Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management

     The  following  table sets forth  certain  information  with respect to the
beneficial ownership of the Shares by each beneficial owner known to the Company
to hold more than 5% of the Shares, each Trustee,  and all officers and Trustees
of the  Company as a group,  as of March 22,  1996.  The  address of each of the
Trustees  and  officers of the Company is c/o Health and  Retirement  Properties
Trust, 400 Centre Street, Newton, Massachusetts 02158.



                                                         Common
                                                         Shares
                                                      Beneficially
                           Name                           Owned    Percentage

Bruce M. Gans....................................            0            *
Mark J. Finkelstein(1)...........................       19,141            *
David J. Hegarty(2)..............................       11,000            *
Rev. Justinian Manning, C.P......................        2,000            *
Gerard M. Martin(3)..............................    3,791,416         5.7%
John G. Murray...................................        4,000            *
Barry M. Portnoy(4)..............................    3,791,416         5.7%
Ajay Saini(5)....................................        4,514            *
Ralph J. Watts...................................            0            *
All executive officers and Trustees 
  as a group (8 persons)(1)(2)(3)(4)                 3,832,071         5.8%
- ----------

    * Less than 1% of the Company's outstanding Shares.

(1)       Includes 3,000 Common Shares held by Mr. Finkelstein's mother's estate
          and 2,778 Common Shares held by Mr. Finkelstein's children.

(2)       Includes 3,000 Common Shares  awarded under the 1992  Incentive  Share
          Awarded Plan which have not yet vested.

(3)       Neither Mr. Martin nor Mr.  Portnoy owns any Common  Shares  directly.
          Advisors,  which is wholly owned by Messrs.  Martin and Portnoy,  owns
          1,013,650 Common Shares directly and, solely in its capacity as voting
          trustee of a voting trust  agreement,  exercises  voting  control over
          1,000,000  Common Shares owned by AMS  Properties,  Inc.  ("AMSP") and
          pledged to the Company to secure the  obligations  of GranCare,  Inc.,
          AMSP and GCI Healthcare  Centers,  Inc. to the Company.  Advisors also
          exercises  voting control as proxy over 1,777,766  Common Shares owned
          by Berlin C.C., Inc., St. Johnsbury C.C., Inc.,  Rochester C.C., Inc.,
          Springfield C.C., Inc., Bennington C.C., Inc., Burlington, C.C., Inc.,
          The L.P. Corporation and American Health Care, Inc. Messrs. Martin and
          Portnoy  may be deemed to have  beneficial  ownership  of all of these
          Shares.

(4)       Includes 4,833 Common Shares  awarded under the 1992  Incentive  Share
          Award Plan which have not yet vested.

(5)       Includes 1,833 Common Shares  awarded under the 1992  Incentive  Share
          Award Plan which have not yet vested; 500 Common Shares in Mr. Saini's
          IRA account and  approximately  14 Common  Shares held by Mr.  Saini's
          minor daughter.




                                      -11-

<PAGE>


Certain Relationships and Related Transactions

     On March 24, 1995, the Company's then wholly owned subsidiary,  Hospitality
Properties  Trust  ("HPT"),  acquired 21  Courtyard  by  Marriott(R)  hotels for
approximately  $179.4 million.  HPT's acquisition of these properties was funded
by the  Company  under a demand loan (the "HRP  Loan") of  approximately  $163.3
million.  The Company funded this  transaction with working capital reserves and
by drawing $140.0 million on its revolving credit facility.  In August 1995, HPT
completed its initial public offering (the "HPT IPO") of 8,350,000  shares.  HPT
used proceeds from the HPT IPO, in part, to repay amounts outstanding on the HRP
Loan.  Prior to the HPT IPO,  the  Company's  investment  in HPT was $1 million,
representing  40,000 shares.  Concurrent with the completion of the HPT IPO at a
price to the  public  of $25 per  share,  the  Company  acquired  an  additional
3,960,000  shares of HPT at a per share price of $25.00 by canceling $99 million
of the HRP Loan. The remaining balance of the HRP Loan was repaid to the Company
during the fourth  quarter of 1995.  At December  31,  1995,  the Company  owned
4,000,000 shares of HPT, representing an equity interest in HPT of approximately
32% and a market value of $107 million.

     Messrs.  Martin  and  Portnoy  are  directors  of  Horizon/CMS   Healthcare
Corporation   ("Horizon");   principal   shareholders  of  Connecticut  Subacute
Corporation  ("CSC"),   Connecticut  Subacute  Corporation  II  ("CSCII"),   New
Hampshire Subacute Corporation ("NHSC") and Vermont Subacute Corporation ("VSC")
(collectively the "Subacute  Entities") and were formerly  directors of Greenery
Rehabilitation  Group,  Inc.  ("Greenery"),  which  merged with Horizon in 1994.
Horizon and the Subacute  Entities  are lessees of the Company.  The Company has
extended a $4 million line of credit to CSC until June 30, 1996. At December 31,
1995,  there was $1.6 million  outstanding  under this agreement.  The lease and
mortgage transactions with the Subacute Entities and Horizon are based on market
terms and are generally  similar to the Company's lease and mortgage  agreements
with  unaffiliated  companies.  The  former  president  of  the  Company  is the
president of the Subacute  Entities.  In January 1995, the Company acquired nine
facilities  located  in New  Hampshire  and  Vermont.  In  connection  with this
acquisition,  the Company leased eight facilities  located in Vermont to VSC and
one facility  located in New  Hampshire to NHSC.  Rent and interest  paid to the
Company by the Subacute Entities was $12.0 million in 1995.

     The  Company has an  agreement  with  Advisors  whereby  Advisors  provides
investment,  management and administrative services to the Company.  Advisors is
owned by Messrs.  Martin and  Portnoy.  The Advisory  Agreement  provides for an
annual advisory fee equal to 0.70% of the Company's Average Invested Capital, as
defined in the  Advisory  Agreement,  up to $250  million,  and 0.50% of Average
Invested  Capital equal to or exceeding  $250 million;  and an annual  incentive
fee,  calculated on the basis of increases in the Company's  operating cash flow
above  threshold  amounts  (15% of cash  flow  above  the  threshold  amount  of
$1.37/Share  in  1994,   which  threshold   increases  by  $.05/Share   annually
thereafter), but no more than $.01/Share. All incentive fees which may be earned
by the  Advisor  will be paid in  Shares.  Advisors'  fee will be  waived to the
extent necessary to limit the Company's total annual  operating  expenses to the
greater of (i) 2% of Average  Invested  Capital or (ii) 25% of the Company's Net
Income determined as set forth in the Advisory Agreement. The aggregate advisory
fee  paid  to  Advisors  for  fiscal  year  1995  was $ 5.2  million,  of  which
approximately  $371,000 was attributable to investments in HPT and approximately
$545,000 was attributable to investments in the Subacute Entities. The incentive
fee award for fiscal year 1995 was $580,000,  representing 35,560 Shares, having
a market value at December 31, 1995 of $577,850.  During 1995, Advisors received
$1.4 million in dividends on its owned Shares.

     Mr.  Portnoy is a partner in the law firm which  provides legal services to
the Company. Advisors is the general partner of M&P Partners Limited Partnership
("M&P"),  which provides management services for the Company's recently acquired
medical  office  buildings  and clinics.  The Company paid $17,000 in management
fees to M&P in 1995.  Messrs.  Martin and Portnoy each has material interests in
the  transactions  between  Advisors and the  Company,  and between the Subacute
Entities and the Company.

     To the  extent  that the terms of the  Company's  investments  in HPT or in
properties  owned or leased by the Subacute  Entities have been negotiated among
related  parties,  they  have  not been  determined  on an  arm's-length  basis.
Investment terms,  however,  have been based upon independent  appraisals of the
properties,  where available,  but the Company has historically placed a greater
emphasis on what it believes to be more determinative  factors such as cash flow
available  for  rent  and  debt  service.  In  addition,  in  some  cases  these
negotiations  have  been with the  representatives  of the  underwriters  of the
Company's public offerings. All existing business relationships between

                                      -12-

<PAGE>



the Company, on the one hand, and HPT, Horizon,  Advisors, the Subacute Entities
and/or their  affiliates,  on the other hand, have been approved by, and, unless
and until any such company no longer has  relationships  with the Company or its
affiliates  which are the same or similar  to those  described  above,  all such
future  relationships  will be submitted  for approval by,  majority vote of the
Independent  Trustees.  Mr.  Portnoy  is a  partner  in the firm of  Sullivan  &
Worcester  LLP,  counsel  to the  Company  and to HPT,  Advisors,  the  Subacute
Entities and affiliates of each of the foregoing.

     Certain  Litigation.  Early in 1995,  the Company  commenced a  foreclosure
action to enforce  indemnities given in connection with the surrender of certain
leaseholds  to, and the purchase of certain  properties by, the Company in 1992.
In May 1995, the defendants in the foreclosure action and parties related to the
Company's former tenants and sellers  asserted claims against the Company,  HRPT
Advisors, Inc. ("Advisors"),  Messrs. Martin and Portnoy and others. In November
1995, the Florida court dismissed the foreclosure defendants'  counterclaims and
third party  complaints  against all parties,  except the  Company,  for lack of
jurisdiction. At this time, the only matter pending in the Florida court appears
to be the original foreclosure action by the Company.

     The Company and certain  parties  brought a declaratory  judgment action in
the Massachusetts Superior Court to have all matters raised in the counterclaims
and third party  complaints  referred to  arbitration.  On December 4, 1995,  an
order was entered by the  Massachusetts  Superior  Court  granting the Company's
motion for summary judgment and directing arbitration.  On December 19, 1995 the
foreclosure  defendants and related  parties filed a new complaint in the United
States District Court for the District of  Massachusetts  realleging many of the
same allegations made in the counterclaims and third-party complaints previously
brought by them in response to the Company's  original  foreclosure  action, and
adding  allegations  of violations of Sections 10(b) and 20(a) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 and Rule 10b-5  promulgated  thereunder  and  violations of
RICO. Although the outcomes of the new litigation and the arbitration proceeding
are currently indeterminable,  the Company and each other defendant named in the
new action  believes the claims which have been asserted  against it are without
merit and intends to defend and deny the  allegations  therein,  and the Company
intends to pursue the original foreclosure action.

     The Declaration provides that Trustees,  officers,  employees and agents of
the Company shall be indemnified by the Company  against any losses,  judgments,
liabilities,  expenses and amounts  paid in  settlement  of any claims  asserted
against them by reason of their  status,  provided that such claims were not the
result of willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard
of duty. Were Messrs.  Martin and Portnoy to be held liable in the federal court
action, they may therefore have a claim for indemnification from the Company.

                  COMPLIANCE WITH SECTION 16(A) OF EXCHANGE ACT

     Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 requires the Company's
Trustees  and  executive  officers,  and  persons  who own  more  than  10% of a
registered  class  of the  Company's  equity  securities,  to  file  reports  of
ownership  and  changes in  ownership  of  securities  with the  Securities  and
Exchange  Commission  and the  New  York  Stock  Exchange.  Executive  officers,
Trustees and greater than 10%  shareholders  are required to furnish the Company
with copies of all forms they file  pursuant to Section  16(a).  Based solely on
review  of the  copies of such  reports  furnished  to the  Company  or  written
representations that no other reports were required,  the Company believes that,
during the 1995 fiscal year, all filing requirements applicable to its executive
officers, Trustees and greater than 10% shareholders were complied with.


                                      -13-

<PAGE>



                                    AUDITORS

     The  Company is not  required to submit the  selection  of its auditor to a
vote of shareholders.  The Company's  independent auditor since its organization
in 1986 has been Ernst & Young LLP and one of its  predecessors,  Arthur Young &
Company.

     A  representative  of Ernst & Young LLP is  expected  to be  present at the
Meeting, with the opportunity to make a statement if desired, and is expected to
be available  to respond to  appropriate  questions  from  shareholders  who are
present at the Meeting.

                              SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS

     The Company's  1997 Annual  Meeting is presently  expected to be held on or
about May 13, 1997.  Proposals of  shareholders  intended to be presented at the
1997 Annual  Meeting  must be received not later than  November  30,  1996,  for
inclusion in the Company's proxy statement and proxy for that meeting.

                                  OTHER MATTERS

     As of this  time,  the Board of  Trustees  knows of no other  matters to be
brought before the Meeting.  However,  if other matters properly come before the
Meeting or any adjournment thereof, and if discretionary  authority to vote with
respect thereto has been conferred by the enclosed  proxy,  the persons named in
the proxy will vote the proxy in accordance  with their best judgment as to such
matters.

By Order of the Board of Trustees

DAVID J. HEGARTY, Secretary

Newton, Massachusetts
March __, 1996


                                      -14-

<PAGE>


                                                                  Exhibit A

                     HEALTH AND RETIREMENT PROPERTIES TRUST

                        Proposed Amendment to Section 6.1
       of the Third Amendment and Restatement of the Declaration of Trust

     The Trustees are hereby expressly  authorized at any time, and from time to
time,  without  Shareholder  approval,  to amend this Declaration to increase or
decrease  the  aggregate  number of Shares or the  number of Shares of any class
that the Trust has the authority to issue.

                                      -15-

<PAGE>


                     HEALTH AND RETIREMENT PROPERTIES TRUST
                    400 Centre Street, Newton, Massachusetts

           THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES


         The undersigned hereby appoints GERALD M. MARTIN, BARRY M, PORTNOY, and
DAVID J. HEGARTY, and each of them, as Proxies of the undersigned, each with the
power to appoint his  substitute,  and hereby  authorizes a majority of them, or
any one if only one be present,  to represent and to vote, as designated  below,
all the Common Shares of Beneficial Interest of Health and Retirement Properties
Trust held of record by the undersigned or with respect to which the undersigned
is entitled to vote or act, at the Annual Meeting of  Shareholders to be held on
May 14, 1996 or any adjournment thereof.

This proxy when properly  executed will be voted in the manner  directed here by
the undersigned shareholders.  If no direction is made, this proxy will be voted
FOR Proposals 1 and 2.

Address Change/Comments:

- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<PAGE>
|X|      PLEASE MARK VOTES AS IN
         THIS EXAMPLE

1.)      Election of Trustees in Group I:


        For         Withhold            For All
                                         Except
        /  /          /  /                /  /

 Bruce M. Gans  Barry M. Portnoy

If you do not wish your shares voted "For" a particular  nominee,  mark the "For
All Except" box and strike a line through the nominee(s)  name. Your shares will
be voted for the remaining nominee(s).

         RECORD DATE SHARES:



(Signature) X: ________________ Date:____

(Signature) X: ________________ Date:____


NOTE:    Please sign exactly as name appears
         hereon.  Joint owners should each
         sign.  When signing as attorney,
         executor, administrator, trustee or
         guardian, please give full title as
         such.

2.)      Amendment to the Declaration to
         allow the Trustees to increase or
         decrease the authorized capital
         stock of the Company.



        For                Against                Abstain
       /  /                 /  /                    /  /



3.)      In their discretion, the Proxies
         are authorized to vote upon such
         other business as may properly come
         before the meeting.



Mark box at right if                             /  /
comments or address changes
are noted above.




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