MASSACHUSETTS LIMITED MATURITY MUNICIPALS PORTFOLIO
POS AMI, 1996-07-29
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           As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on July 29, 1996
         
                                                               File No. 811-7222




                          SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                                WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549


                                      FORM N-1A


                                REGISTRATION STATEMENT
                                        UNDER
                          THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940                 [x]
        
                                   AMENDMENT NO. 4                           [x]
         

                            MASSACHUSETTS LIMITED MATURITY
                                MUNICIPALS PORTFOLIO 
         (formerly called Massachusetts Limited Maturity Tax Free Portfolio)
          -----------------------------------------------------------------
                  (Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)


                                  24 Federal Street
                             Boston, Massachusetts 02110
                             ---------------------------
                       (Address of Principal Executive Offices)


          Registrant's Telephone Number, including Area Code: (617) 482-8260


                                 H. Day Brigham, Jr.
                    24 Federal Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02110
                    ----------------------------------------------
                       (Name and Address of Agent for Service)
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                                  EXPLANATORY NOTE

              This Registration  Statement, as  amended, has  been filed  by the
     Registrant pursuant to Section 8(b) of the  Investment Company Act of 1940,
     as amended.  However, interests in the Registrant have  not been registered
     under the  Securities Act  of 1933,  as amended  (the "1933  Act"), because
     such  interests will  be issued  solely in  private  placement transactions
     that do  not involve any  "public offering" within  the meaning  of Section
     4(2) of the 1933  Act.  Investments in the  Registrant may be made  only by
     investment  companies,  common  or  commingled  trust   funds,  or  similar
     organizations  or  entities  that are  "accredited  investors"  within  the
     meaning of Regulation D  under the 1933 Act.   This Registration Statement,
     as amended, does  not constitute an offer  to sell, or the  solicitation of
     an offer to buy, any interest in the Registrant.
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                                       PART A 

              Responses  to Items 1 through 3  and 5A have been omitted pursuant
     to Paragraph 4 of Instruction F of the General Instructions to Form N-1A.

     Item 4.  General Description of Registrant
              Massachusetts   Limited   Maturity   Municipals   Portfolio   (the
     "Portfolio") is  a non-diversified, open-end management  investment company
     which  was organized as a trust under the laws  of the State of New York on
     May  1,  1992. Interests  in the  Portfolio  are issued  solely  in private
     placement  transactions that  do not involve  any "public  offering" within
     the meaning of Section 4(2) of the Securities Act  of 1933, as amended (the
     "1933  Act"). Investments in  the Portfolio  may be  made only by  U.S. and
     foreign investment companies, common or commingled trust funds, or  similar
     organizations  or  entities  that are  "accredited  investors"  within  the
     meaning of  Regulation D under  the 1933 Act.  This Registration Statement,
     as amended, does  not constitute an offer  to sell, or the  solicitation of
     an offer to buy, any "security" within the meaning of the 1933 Act.

              The Portfolio's  investment  objective is  to provide  (1) a  high
     level of  current  income  exempt  from  regular  federal  income  tax  and
     Massachusetts  State  personal  income  taxes  and  (2)  limited  principal
     fluctuation.  The Portfolio  seeks  to achieve  its objective  by investing
     primarily in  municipal obligations (as  described below)  having a  dollar
     weighted average duration  of between three  and nine years  and which  are
     rated at least  investment grade by a  major rating agency or,  if unrated,
     are  determined  to  be  of  at  least  investment  grade  quality  by  the
     Portfolio's  investment  adviser,  Boston  Management  and  Research   (the
     "Investment Adviser" or "BMR").

              Additional  information  about  the  investment  policies  of  the
     Portfolio  appears in  Part  B.  The Portfolio  is  not  intended to  be  a
     complete  investment program, and a  prospective investor  should take into
     account its objectives and  other investments when considering the purchase
     of interests in the Portfolio.  The Portfolio cannot assure  achievement of
     its investment objective.

     Investment Policies and Risks
              The  Portfolio  seeks  to  achieve  its  investment  objective  by
     investing at least  80% of its net  assets during periods of  normal market
     conditions in  municipal obligations the  interest on which  is exempt from
     regular federal  income tax and  from Massachusetts  State personal  income
     taxes.   

              At  least 80%  of  the  Portfolio's net  assets will  normally  be
     invested in  obligations rated at  least investment  grade at  the time  of
     investment (which  are  those rated  Baa  or  higher by  Moody's  Investors
     Service, Inc.  ("Moody's") or  BBB or  higher by either  Standard &  Poor's
     ("S&P")  or  Fitch  Investors  Service, Inc.  ("Fitch"))  or,  if  unrated,
     determined  by the Investment  Adviser to  be of at  least investment grade
     quality. The  balance of  the Portfolio's  net  assets may  be invested  in
     municipal obligations  rated below investment  grade (but not  lower than B

                                        A - 1
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     by Moody's, S&P or Fitch)  and unrated municipal obligations  considered to
     be of comparable  quality by the Investment Adviser.  Municipal obligations
     rated Baa or  BBB may have  speculative characteristics.  Also, changes  in
     economic conditions  or other circumstances  are more likely  to lead to  a
     weakened capacity to make principal and interest payments than  in the case
     of higher  rated  obligations.  Securities  rated  below  Baa  or  BBB  are
     commonly known  as "junk  bonds". The  Portfolio may  retain an  obligation
     whose rating  drops below  B after  its acquisition  if  such retention  is
     considered  desirable  by  the Investment  Adviser.  See  "Additional  Risk
     Considerations." For  a description  of municipal  obligation ratings,  see
     the Appendix to Part B.

              In  pursuing  its investment  objective,  the  Portfolio  seeks to
     invest in a portfolio having  a dollar weighted average duration of between
     three and  nine  years. Duration  represents  the dollar  weighted  average
     maturity of expected  cash flows (i.e., interest and principal payments) on
     one  or more  debt  obligations, discounted  to  their present  values. The
     duration of an obligation  is usually not more than its stated maturity and
     is related  to  the  degree  of  volatility in  the  market  value  of  the
     obligation. Maturity  measures only  the time  until a bond  or other  debt
     security  provides its  final payment;  it does  not take into  account the
     pattern of  a security's payments  over time. Duration  takes both interest
     and principal payments  into account and, thus, in the Investment Adviser's
     opinion,  is a more  accurate measure of  a debt  security's sensitivity to
     changes in interest rates. In  computing the duration of its portfolio, the
     Portfolio will have to  estimate the duration of debt obligations  that are
     subject to prepayment or redemption by the issuer, based  on projected cash
     flows from such obligations.

              The Portfolio  may use various  techniques to  shorten or lengthen
     the  dollar  weighted  average duration  of  its  portfolio, including  the
     acquisition of debt  obligations at a premium or discount, and transactions
     in futures contracts  and options on  futures. Subject  to the  requirement
     that the  dollar weighted average  portfolio duration will  not exceed nine
     years,  the Portfolio  may  invest in  individual  debt obligations  of any
     maturity.

              Municipal  Obligations.    Municipal  obligations  include  bonds,
     notes and commercial paper issued by a  municipality for a wide variety  of
     both public and private purposes, the interest on which is, in the  opinion
     of bond counsel,  exempt from regular federal  income tax.   Public purpose
     municipal  bonds  include  general  obligation  bonds  and  revenue  bonds.
     General  obligation bonds  are backed  by the  taxing power of  the issuing
     municipality.   Revenue bonds are  backed by the  revenues of a project  or
     facility.     Municipal  notes   include  bond   anticipation  notes,   tax
     anticipation notes and revenue anticipation  notes.  Bond, tax  and revenue
     anticipation  notes are  short-term obligations that  will be  retired with
     the proceeds  of  an  anticipated  bond  issue,  tax  revenue  or  facility
     revenue, respectively.  Under normal market conditions,  the Portfolio will
     invest  at least  65% of  its total  assets  in obligations  issued by  the
     Commonwealth of Massachusetts or its political subdivisions.


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              Distributions  to  corporate  investors  of  interest income  from
     certain types  of  municipal obligations  may  be  subject to  the  federal
     alternative minimum tax (the "AMT").  As  at March 31, 1996, the  Portfolio
     had invested 21.1%  of its net assets  in such obligations.   The Portfolio
     may not be suitable for investors subject to the AMT.

              Concentration  in  Massachusetts Issuers     Risks.    Because the
     Portfolio  will  normally  invest  at least  65%  of  its  total  assets in
     obligations of  Massachusetts issuers,  it is  more susceptible  to factors
     adversely affecting such  issuers than mutual funds that do not concentrate
     in the  obligations  of  issuers located  in  a  single State.    Municipal
     obligations  of issuers located in a single State may be adversely effected
     by  economic  developments  and  by  legislation   and  other  governmental
     activities in that  State.  To the  extent that the Portfolio's  assets are
     concentrated  in  municipal  obligations  of   Massachusetts  issuers,  the
     Portfolio may be subject to an increased risk of loss.  

              In recent  years, the  Commonwealth has experienced  a significant
     economic slowdown  and has  experienced  shifts in  employment from  labor-
     intensive  manufacturing   industries  to   technology  and   service-based
     industries.  The  unemployment rate was 5.4%  for 1995, while the  national
     unemployment rate  was 5.6%.   In February 1996, the  unemployment rate was
     5.0%, while the national unemployment rate was 5.5%.

              Effective July 1,  1990, limitations were placed on the  amount of
     direct bonds the Commonwealth could have outstanding  in a fiscal year, and
     the  amount of  the  total appropriation  in any  fiscal  year that  may be
     expended for  debt service on  general obligation debt  of the Commonwealth
     (other  than certain  debt  incurred to  pay  the fiscal  1990 deficit  and
     certain Medicaid  reimbursement payments  for prior  years) was limited  to
     10%.  In addition, the power of Massachusetts cities and towns and  certain
     tax-supported districts and public agencies to raise revenue from  property
     taxes to support their operations,  including the payment of  debt service,
     is limited.   Property taxes are virtually the  only source of tax revenues
     available to  cities and  towns to meet  local costs.   This limitation  on
     cities and  towns to generate revenues could create  a demand for increases
     in state-funded local aid.  

              Fiscal  1995  expenditures  for   direct  Local  Aid  were  $2.976
     billion, which is an increase  of approximately 9.1% above the  fiscal 1994
     level.  It is estimated that fiscal 1996  expenditures for direct Local Aid
     will be  $3.241 billion, which is  an increase of approximately  8.9% above
     the fiscal 1995 level.

              General  obligations  of  the  Commonwealth  of Massachusetts  are
     rated  A1, A+  and A+ by  Moody's, S&P  and Fitch, respectively.   The bond
     ratings  provided are  current  as of  the  date hereof  and  are based  on
     economic conditions  that  may not  continue;  moreover,  there can  be  no
     assurance that  particular bond  issues may  not be  adversely affected  by
     changes in economic,  political or  other conditions.   The  Commonwealth's
     political subdivisions  may have different  ratings that  are unrelated  to
     the ratings assigned to Commonwealth obligations.

                                        A - 3
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              Subject to the investment policies set forth above,  the Portfolio
     may  invest in  obligations of  the governments  of  Puerto Rico,  the U.S.
     Virgin Islands  and Guam.   The Portfolio may  invest up to  5% of its  net
     assets in obligations issued by the governments of each of the U.S.  Virgin
     Islands  and  Guam,  and  may  invest  up  to  35%  of its  net  assets  in
     obligations  issued  by the  government  of Puerto  Rico.   The  economy of
     Puerto  Rico  is  dominated  by  the  manufacturing  and  service  sectors.
     Although  the economy  of Puerto  Rico expanded  significantly from  fiscal
     1984 through fiscal 1990,  the rate of this expansion slowed  during fiscal
     years 1991,  1992 and 1993.   Growth in the  future will depend  on several
     factors,  including  the  state  of  the  U.S.  economy  and  the  relative
     stability in  the price of oil,  the exchange rate  of the U.S.  dollar and
     the cost of borrowing.   In  addition, proposed changes  to Section 936,  a
     tax incentive  that has encouraged significant  industry growth, could have
     a  dampening effect  on  the  growth or  even  lead  to declines  in  gross
     domestic product.   Although the Puerto Rico unemployment rate has declined
     substantially since  1985, the  seasonally adjusted  unemployment rate  for
     March 1996  was  approximately  12.8%.    The  North  American  Free  Trade
     Agreement ("NAFTA"), which  became effective January 1, 1994, could lead to
     the  loss of  Puerto  Rico's  lower salaried  or  labor intensive  jobs  to
     Mexico.  

              S&P rates  Puerto Rico general  obligation debt  A, while  Moody's
     rates  it Baa1;  these  ratings have  been in  place  since 1956  and 1976,
     respectively.  S&P assigned a negative outlook on Puerto Rico in 1994.

              In addition, the Portfolio  may invest  25% or more  of its  total
     assets  in municipal  obligations  of  the  same type,  including,  without
     limitation, the following:   lease rental  obligations of  State and  local
     authorities; obligations  of State and  local housing finance  authorities,
     municipal utilities systems  or public housing authorities;  obligations of
     hospitals or  life care facilities; or  industrial development or pollution
     control bonds issued for  electric utility systems, steel  companies, paper
     companies  or other purposes.  This may make the Portfolio more susceptible
     to  adverse economic,  political,  or  regulatory occurrences  affecting  a
     particular category  of issuer.   For example,  health care-related issuers
     are  susceptible to medicaid reimbursement policies, and national and State
     health care  legislation.  As the  Portfolio's concentration  increases, so
     does the potential for fluctuation in the value of its interests.

              Non-Diversified  Status.     As   a  "non-diversified"  investment
     company under  the Investment  Company Act  of 1940 (the  "1940 Act"),  the
     Portfolio may invest,  with respect to 50%  of its total assets,  more than
     5% (but  not more than 25%)  of its total  assets in the  securities of any
     issuer.  The  Portfolio is  likely to invest  a greater  percentage of  its
     assets in the securities of a single issuer than would a diversified  fund.
     Therefore,  the  Portfolio  is  more  susceptible  to  any  single  adverse
     economic  or  political  occurrence or  development  affecting  issuers  of
     municipal obligations.

     Other Investment Practices
              The Portfolio  may engage  in the following  investment practices,

                                        A - 4
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     some  of  which  may  be  considered  to  involve "derivative"  instruments
     because  they  derive  their value  from  another  instrument,  security or
     index.  In addition, the  Portfolio may temporarily borrow up to  5% of the
     value of  its  total  assets  to  satisfy  redemption  requests  or  settle
     securities transactions.

              When-Issued Securities.  The  Portfolio may purchase securities on
     a "when-issued"  basis, which means  that payment and  delivery occur  on a
     future settlement  date.  The  price  and  yield  of  such  securities  are
     generally fixed on the date of commitment to  purchase. However, the market
     value of  the securities may fluctuate prior  to delivery and upon delivery
     the securities may be  worth more or less than the Portfolio  agreed to pay
     for  them.  The Portfolio  may  also  purchase  instruments  that give  the
     Portfolio  the  option to  purchase  a  municipal  obligation  when and  if
     issued.

              Futures  Transactions.    The  Portfolio  may  purchase  and  sell
     various kinds of financial futures  contracts and options thereon  to hedge
     against changes  in interest  rates.   Futures contracts  may  be based  on
     various debt securities (such as  U.S. Government securities and  municipal
     obligations)  and securities  indices  (such as  the  Municipal Bond  Index
     traded on the  Chicago Board of Trade).   Such transactions involve  a risk
     of loss or  depreciation due to unanticipated adverse changes in securities
     prices,  which  may exceed  the  Portfolio's  initial  investment in  these
     contracts.  The  Portfolio may not  purchase or sell  futures contracts  or
     related  options, except  for  closing purchase  or  sale transactions,  if
     immediately  thereafter  the sum  of  the  amount  of  margin deposits  and
     premiums paid on the Portfolio's  outstanding positions would exceed  5% of
     the  market  value of  the  Portfolio's  net  assets.   These  transactions
     involve  transaction costs.  There can be  no assurance that the Investment
     Adviser's use of futures will be advantageous to the Portfolio.

              Insured Obligations.   The Portfolio may  purchase municipal bonds
     that  are additionally  secured by  insurance, bank  credit  agreements, or
     escrow accounts. The  credit quality of companies which provide such credit
     enhancements  will  affect  the  value of  those  securities.  Although the
     insurance  feature  reduces  certain  financial  risks,  the  premiums  for
     insurance and  the higher  market price  paid for  insured obligations  may
     reduce current  yield. Insurance generally  will be obtained from  insurers
     with  a claims-paying ability rated Aaa by Moody's  or AAA by S&P or Fitch.
     The  insurance  does   not  guarantee  the  market  value  of  the  insured
     obligations or the net asset value of the Portfolio's interests.

     Additional Risk Considerations
              Many  municipal obligations  offering high  current income  are in
     the lowest investment  grade category (Baa or BBB), lower categories or may
     be unrated.   As  indicated above, the  Portfolio may  invest in  municipal
     obligations rated below investment grade (but not  lower than B by Moody's,
     S&P or  Fitch) and comparable  unrated obligations.   The lowest investment
     grade, lower rated  and comparable  unrated municipal obligations  in which
     the Portfolio may invest  will have speculative characteristics  in varying
     degrees.   While  such  obligations may  have  some quality  and protective

                                        A - 5
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     characteristics, these  characteristics can  be  expected to  be offset  or
     outweighed by uncertainties  or major risk exposures to adverse conditions.
     Lower rated  and comparable  unrated municipal  obligations are subject  to
     the risk of an  issuer's inability to meet principal and  interest payments
     on the obligations (credit  risk) and may also be subject to  greater price
     volatility  due  to  such  factors  as  interest  rate  sensitivity, market
     perception  of the  creditworthiness  of  the  issuer  and  general  market
     liquidity (market risk).   Lower rated or unrated municipal obligations are
     also  more likely  to  react to  real  or perceived  developments affecting
     market and credit risk than are more highly  rated obligations, which react
     primarily to  movements  in  the general  level  of  interest rates.    The
     Investment Adviser  seeks  to minimize  the  risks  of investing  in  below
     investment grade  securities through professional  investment analysis  and
     attention  to   current  developments  in   interest  rates  and   economic
     conditions.   When  the  Portfolio  invests  in  lower  rated  and  unrated
     municipal obligations,  the achievement  of the Portfolio's  goals is  more
     dependent  on the Investment  Adviser's ability  than would be  the case if
     the Portfolio were  investing in municipal obligations in the higher rating
     categories.

              The Portfolio  may retain  defaulted obligations in  its portfolio
     when such retention is considered desirable by the Investment Adviser.   In
     the case  of a  defaulted obligation,  the Portfolio  may incur  additional
     expense seeking recovery  of its investment.  Municipal obligations held by
     the Portfolio that are rated  below investment grade, but  that, subsequent
     to the assignment of such rating, are  backed by escrow accounts containing
     U.S. Government  obligations, may  be determined by  the Investment Adviser
     to  be  of  investment  grade  quality  for  purposes  of  the  Portfolio's
     investment policies.    The  Portfolio  may  retain  in  its  portfolio  an
     obligation whose  rating  drops below  B  after  its acquisition,  if  such
     retention  is considered  desirable by  the  Investment Adviser;  provided,
     however, that holdings of  obligations rated below Baa or BBB will  be less
     than  35% of net assets.  In the event  the rating of an obligation held by
     the  Portfolio  is  downgraded,   causing  the  Portfolio  to  exceed  this
     limitation, the Investment  Adviser will (in  an orderly  fashion within  a
     reasonable period  of  time)  dispose  of  such  obligations  as  it  deems
     necessary  in  order   to  comply  with  the   Portfolio's  credit  quality
     limitations.  

              The  net asset value  of the Portfolio's interests  will change in
     response to  fluctuations in prevailing  interest rates and  changes in the
     value  of the  securities  held  by the  Portfolio.   When  interest  rates
     decline, the value  of securities held by the  Portfolio can be expected to
     rise.   Conversely, when interest  rates rise, the value  of most portfolio
     security holdings  can  be expected  to  decline.   Because  the  Portfolio
     intends  to  limit its  average  portfolio duration  to  no more  than nine
     years, its  net asset value can be expected to be less sensitive to changes
     in interest  rates than  that of  a fund  with a  longer average  portfolio
     duration.   Changes  in the  credit quality  of  the issuers  of  municipal
     obligations held by  the Portfolio will affect the  principal value of (and
     possibly the income earned on)  such obligations.  In addition,  the values
     of such securities are affected  by changes in general  economic conditions

                                        A - 6
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     and  business  conditions  affecting  the  specific   industries  of  their
     issuers.   Changes  by recognized  rating services  in  their ratings  of a
     security  and in the  ability of the issuer  to make  payments of principal
     and interest  may also  affect the  value of  the Portfolio's  investments.
     The amount  of information  about the financial  condition of an  issuer of
     municipal  obligations may not  be as  extensive as that  made available by
     corporations whose  securities are publicly  traded.  An  investment in the
     Portfolio will not constitute a complete investment program.

              At times, a  substantial portion of the Portfolio's assets  may be
     invested in securities  as to  which the Portfolio,  by itself or  together
     with other accounts managed by  the Investment Adviser and  its affiliates,
     holds a major  portion or all of such securities.   Under adverse market or
     economic conditions or  in the event  of adverse changes  in the  financial
     condition of  the issuer,  the Portfolio  could find it  more difficult  to
     sell such securities when the  Investment Adviser believes it  advisable to
     do so or may  be able to sell such securities only  at prices lower than if
     such  securities were more widely  held.  Under  such circumstances, it may
     also be more  difficult to determine the fair  value of such securities for
     purposes of computing the Portfolio's net asset value.

              The  secondary market  for some  municipal  obligations (including
     issues that are privately  placed with the  Portfolio) is less liquid  than
     that for taxable  debt obligations or  other more  widely traded  municipal
     obligations.  The Portfolio will  not invest in illiquid securities if more
     than  15% of its  net assets would  be invested in securities  that are not
     readily marketable.   No established resale  market exists  for certain  of
     the municipal obligations  in which the  Portfolio may invest.   The market
     for  obligations rated below  investment grade  is also  likely to  be less
     liquid than the  market for  higher rated obligations.   As  a result,  the
     Portfolio may be unable to dispose of  these municipal obligations at times
     when  it would otherwise  wish to  do so  at the prices  at which  they are
     valued.

              Some of the securities in which the Portfolio invests may  include
     so-called  "zero-coupon"  bonds,  whose  values  are   subject  to  greater
     fluctuation in  response to  changes in  market interest  rates than  bonds
     that  pay  interest  currently.     Zero-coupon  bonds  are  issued   at  a
     significant discount  from face  value and  pay interest  only at  maturity
     rather than at  intervals during the life  of the security.   The Portfolio
     is required  to accrue income  from zero-coupon bonds  on a  current basis,
     even though it does not  receive that income currently in cash.   Thus, the
     Portfolio may have to sell other investments to obtain cash needed to  make
     income distributions.

              The Portfolio  may invest in municipal  leases, and participations
     in municipal leases.  The obligation of the  issuer to meet its obligations
     under such leases is often subject to  the appropriation by the appropriate
     legislative body, on an annual or other basis, of funds for the  payment of
     the obligations.   Investments in municipal leases are  thus subject to the
     risk that  the legislative body  will not make  the necessary appropriation
     and  the  issuer  will  not  otherwise  be  willing  or able  to  meet  its

                                        A - 7
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     obligation.

              The   Portfolio  has   adopted  certain   fundamental   investment
              restrictions that are enumerated in  detail in Part B and that may
              not be changed unless authorized by an  investor vote.  Except for
              such enumerated  restrictions and  as otherwise indicated  in this
              Part A,  the investment  objective and  policies of the  Portfolio
              are not  fundamental policies  and accordingly  may be  changed by
              the Trustees of the  Portfolio without obtaining  the approval  of
              the investors in the Portfolio.  If  any changes were made in  the
              Portfolio's  investment  objective,  the Portfolio  might  have an
              investment  objective  different   from  the  objective   that  an
              investor considered  appropriate at  the time the  investor became
              an interest holder in the Portfolio. 

     Item 5.  Management of the Portfolio
              The Portfolio is organized as  a trust under the laws of the State
     of  New York. The Portfolio  intends to comply  with all applicable federal
     and state securities laws.

              Investment  Adviser.   The Portfolio  engages BMR,  a wholly-owned
     subsidiary  of Eaton  Vance Management  ("Eaton Vance"),  as its investment
     adviser. Eaton Vance,  its affiliates  and its  predecessor companies  have
     been  managing  assets  of  individuals  and  institutions  since  1924 and
     managing investment companies since 1931.

              Acting under the  general supervision of the Board of  Trustees of
     the Portfolio,  BMR manages the  Portfolio's investments and  affairs.  BMR
     also furnishes for the use of the Portfolio  office space and all necessary
     office facilities,  equipment and personnel  for servicing the  investments
     of  the  Portfolio.   Under  its  investment  advisory  agreement with  the
     Portfolio, BMR receives a monthly advisory fee equal to the aggregate of:

              (a) a daily asset-based fee computed by applying the annual  asset
                    rate  applicable to  that  portion  of the  total  daily net
                    assets in each Category as indicated below, plus

              (b)  a  daily  income-based  fee computed  by  applying  the daily
                    income rate  applicable to that  portion of  the total daily
                    gross income (which portion shall bear the same relationship
                    to the  total daily gross income on such day as that portion
                    of the total daily net  assets in the same Category bears to
                    the total daily net assets on  such day) in each Category as
                    indicated below:

                                                                 Annual  Daily
                                                                 Asset   Income
     Category         Daily Net Assets                           Rate    Rate
     1                Up to $500 million                         0.300%  3.00%
     2                $500 million but less than $1 billion      0.275%  2.75%
     3                $1 billion but less than $1.5 billion      0.250%  2.50%
     4                $1.5 billion but less than $2 billion      0.225%  2.25%

                                        A - 8
<PAGE>






     5                $2 billion but less than $3 billion        0.200%  2.00%
     6                $3 billion and over                        0.175%  1.75%

              As   at  March  31,   1996,  the  Portfolio  had   net  assets  of
     $97,135,276.  For the fiscal year ended  March 31, 1996, the Portfolio paid
     BMR advisory fees equivalent to 0.46% of the Portfolio's average daily  net
     assets for such year. 

              BMR or  Eaton  Vance  acts as  investment  adviser  to  investment
     companies  and various  individual and  institutional  clients with  assets
     under  management  of over  $16  billion.  Eaton  Vance  is a  wholly-owned
     subsidiary  of Eaton  Vance Corp.,  a publicly-held  holding company  that,
     through its  subsidiaries and affiliates,  engages primarily in  investment
     management, administration and marketing activities. 

              Raymond  E. Hender  has  acted  as the  portfolio manager  of  the
     Portfolio since the  Portfolio commenced operations.  He joined Eaton Vance
     and BMR as a Vice President  in 1992.  Prior to joining Eaton Vance, he was
     a Senior Vice President of Bank of New England (1989-1992) and a  Portfolio
     Manager at Fidelity Management & Research Company (1977-1988).

              Municipal obligations are normally traded  on a net basis (without
     commission) through broker-dealers and banks acting for their own  account.
     Such firms attempt  to profit from such  transactions by buying at  the bid
     price  and selling  at  the  higher asked  price  of  the market,  and  the
     difference is customarily  referred to as  the spread.  In selecting  firms
     which will  execute portfolio transactions,  BMR judges their  professional
     ability and  quality  of  service  and  uses its  best  efforts  to  obtain
     execution at  prices  which  are  advantageous  to  the  Portfolio  and  at
     reasonably competitive spreads. Subject to the  foregoing, BMR may consider
     sales of  shares of other  investment companies sponsored  by BMR or  Eaton
     Vance  as  a  factor  in  the  selection  of  firms  to  execute  portfolio
     transactions.  

              The Portfolio  and BMR have  adopted Codes of  Ethics relating  to
     personal  securities transactions.  The  Codes permit Eaton Vance personnel
     to invest  in securities  (including securities  that may  be purchased  or
     held by  the Portfolio)  for their  own accounts,  subject to certain  pre-
     clearance, reporting  and other  restrictions and  procedures contained  in
     such Codes.

              The Portfolio is  responsible for the payment of  all of its costs
     and  expenses  not  expressly  stated  to  be  payable  by  BMR  under  the
     investment advisory agreement.

     Item 6.  Capital Stock and Other Securities
              The Portfolio is organized as  a trust under the laws of the State
     of New York  and intends  to be treated  as a partnership  for federal  tax
     purposes. Under  the Declaration of  Trust, the Trustees  are authorized to
     issue interests in  the Portfolio. Each investor  is entitled to a  vote in
     proportion to  the amount of  its investment in  the Portfolio. Investments
     in the Portfolio  may not be transferred, but  an investor may withdraw all

                                        A - 9
<PAGE>






     or any portion of its investment  at any time at net asset value. Investors
     in the Portfolio will each be liable for  all obligations of the Portfolio.
     However, the risk of an  investor in the Portfolio incurring financial loss
     on account  of such  liability is  limited to circumstances  in which  both
     inadequate insurance exists and the Portfolio itself is unable  to meet its
     obligations.

              The  Declaration  of  Trust   provides  that  the  Portfolio  will
     terminate 120  days after the  complete withdrawal of  any investor in  the
     Portfolio unless either  the remaining investors,  by unanimous  vote at  a
     meeting of such investors, or a majority of  the Trustees of the Portfolio,
     by  written instrument consented to by all investors, agree to continue the
     business of the  Portfolio. This provision is consistent with the treatment
     of the Portfolio as a partnership for federal income tax purposes.

              Investments  in the  Portfolio  have no  preemptive  or conversion
     rights  and are fully  paid and  nonassessable by the  Portfolio, except as
     set  forth  above.  The  Portfolio  is  not  required  and  has  no current
     intention to hold annual  meetings of investors, but the Portfolio may hold
     special meetings of  investors when in the  judgment of the Trustees  it is
     necessary or desirable to submit  matters for an investor vote. Changes  in
     fundamental  policies or  restrictions will  be submitted  to investors for
     approval.  The  investment  objective  and  all  nonfundamental  investment
     policies of the Portfolio may be changed  by the Trustees of the  Portfolio
     without  obtaining  the  approval   of  the  investors  in  the  Portfolio.
     Investors  have under  certain circumstances  (e.g.,  upon application  and
     submission of  certain specified documents  to the Trustees  by a specified
     number  of investors)  the  right to  communicate  with other  investors in
     connection with  requesting  a meeting  of  investors  for the  purpose  of
     removing  one  or  more  Trustees.  Any  Trustee  may  be  removed  by  the
     affirmative  vote  of  holders  of  two-thirds  of  the  interests  in  the
     Portfolio.

              Information  regarding pooled  investment  entities or  funds that
     invest  in  the  Portfolio  may  be  obtained  by  contacting  Eaton  Vance
     Distributors, Inc.,  24 Federal  Street, Boston, MA  02110, (617) 482-8260.
     Smaller  investors  in the  Portfolio  may  be  adversely  affected by  the
     actions of  a larger investor in  the Portfolio.   For example, if  a large
     investor  withdraws  from  the  Portfolio,  the   remaining  investors  may
     experience  higher pro  rata operating  expenses,  thereby producing  lower
     returns.  Additionally, the Portfolio may hold fewer securities,  resulting
     in increased  portfolio risk, and experience decreasing economies of scale.
     However, this possibility exists  as well for historically structured funds
     that have large or institutional investors.

              As  of July  1, 1996, EV  Marathon Massachusetts  Limited Maturity
     Municipals Fund, a series of  Eaton Vance Investment Trust,  controlled the
     Portfolio  by  virtue of  owning  approximately  94.5% of  the  outstanding
     voting interests in the Portfolio.

              The net  asset value  of the Portfolio is  determined each  day on
     which  the New  York Stock Exchange  (the "Exchange")  is open  for trading

                                        A - 10
<PAGE>






     ("Portfolio  Business Day").  This  determination  is made  each  Portfolio
     Business Day as of the close of regular  trading on the Exchange (currently
     4:00 p.m., New York time) (the "Portfolio Valuation Time").

              Each  investor  in  the  Portfolio  may  add  to  or  reduce   its
     investment  in  the Portfolio  on  each Portfolio  Business Day  as  of the
     Portfolio Valuation  Time. The  value of  each investor's  interest in  the
     Portfolio  will be  determined by multiplying  the net  asset value  of the
     Portfolio by  the percentage,  determined on  the prior  Portfolio Business
     Day, which  represents that investor's  share of the  aggregate interest in
     the  Portfolio on  such  prior day.  Any additions  or withdrawals  for the
     current  Portfolio Business  Day  will then  be  recorded. Each  investor's
     percentage of  the  aggregate  interest  in  the  Portfolio  will  then  be
     recomputed as a percentage  equal to a fraction (i) the numerator  of which
     is the  value of  such investor's  investment in  the Portfolio  as of  the
     Portfolio Valuation  Time  on the  prior  Portfolio  Business Day  plus  or
     minus, as the  case may be, the  amount of any additions to  or withdrawals
     from the  investor's investment in  the Portfolio on  the current Portfolio
     Business Day and  (ii) the denominator of which  is the aggregate net asset
     value of  the Portfolio  as of the  Portfolio Valuation  Time on the  prior
     Portfolio Business  Day plus or  minus, as the  case may be, the  amount of
     the net  additions to or  withdrawals from the aggregate  investment in the
     Portfolio on  the current Portfolio  Business Day  by all investors  in the
     Portfolio. The percentage so determined  will then be applied  to determine
     the  value of  the investor's  interest in  the Portfolio  for  the current
     Portfolio Business Day.

              The Portfolio will allocate at least annually among  its investors
     each investor's distributive  share of the Portfolio's net taxable (if any)
     and  tax-exempt investment  income,  net realized  capital  gains, and  any
     other items of  income, gain, loss,  deduction or  credit. The  Portfolio's
     net investment income  consists of all  income accrued  on the  Portfolio's
     assets, less all actual and  accrued expenses of the  Portfolio, determined
     in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles.

              Under the anticipated method  of operation of  the Portfolio,  the
     Portfolio will  not be subject  to any federal  income tax.   (See Part  B,
     Item 20.)  However,  each investor in the Portfolio will take  into account
     its allocable share of the Portfolio's ordinary income and capital gain  in
     determining  its federal  income tax  liability. The  determination of each
     such share  will be made  in accordance with  the governing  instruments of
     the  Portfolio,  which  instruments   are  intended  to  comply   with  the
     requirements of the Code and the regulations promulgated thereunder.

              It  is intended  that the  Portfolio's assets  and income  will be
     managed  in such  a way  that an  investor in  the Portfolio that  seeks to
     qualify as a  regulated investment company under  the Code will be  able to
     satisfy the requirements for such qualification.

     Item 7.  Purchase of Interests in the Portfolio
              Interests in the Portfolio are issued solely in private  placement
     transactions that do not involve  any "public offering" within  the meaning

                                        A - 11
<PAGE>






     of Section 4(2) of  the 1933 Act.  See "General Description of  Registrant"
     above.

              An investment in the Portfolio  will be made without a sales load.
     All investments received by  the Portfolio will be effected as of  the next
     Portfolio  Valuation  Time.  The  net  asset  value  of  the  Portfolio  is
     determined at the  Portfolio Valuation Time on each Portfolio Business Day.
     The Portfolio will be  closed for business and will not price  interests in
     the  Portfolio  on  the  following  business  holidays:  New   Year's  Day,
     Presidents' Day, Good Friday,  Memorial Day,  Independence Day, Labor  Day,
     Thanksgiving Day  and Christmas  Day. The  Portfolio's net  asset value  is
     computed  in accordance  with  procedures  established by  the  Portfolio's
     Trustees.

              The Portfolio's net asset value is determined by Investors Bank  &
     Trust  Company (as custodian  and agent for the  Portfolio) based on market
     or fair value  in the manner authorized  by the Trustees of  the Portfolio.
     The net  asset value  is computed  by  subtracting the  liabilities of  the
     Portfolio  from the value of its total  assets.  Municipal obligations will
     normally  be valued  on the  basis  of valuations  furnished  by a  pricing
     service.    For   further  information  regarding  the  valuation   of  the
     Portfolio's assets, see Part B, Item 19.

              There  is  no  minimum initial  or  subsequent  investment in  the
     Portfolio. The Portfolio reserves  the right to cease accepting investments
     at any time or to reject any investment order.

              The   placement   agent  for   the   Portfolio   is   Eaton  Vance
     Distributors, Inc. ("EVD").  The principal business  address of  EVD is  24
     Federal Street, Boston,  Massachusetts 02110. EVD receives  no compensation
     for serving as the placement agent for the Portfolio.

     Item 8.  Redemption or Decrease of Interest
              An investor  in the Portfolio may withdraw all  of (redeem) or any
     portion  of  (decrease) its  interest  in  the  Portfolio  if a  withdrawal
     request in proper form is furnished by  the investor to the Portfolio.  All
     withdrawals will be effected  as of the next Portfolio Valuation  Time. The
     proceeds of  a withdrawal  will be paid  by the  Portfolio normally on  the
     Portfolio Business Day the withdrawal is effected, but in any event  within
     seven days.  The Portfolio  reserves the  right to  pay the  proceeds of  a
     withdrawal (whether a redemption  or decrease) by a distribution in kind of
     portfolio  securities (instead  of  cash).  The securities  so  distributed
     would be valued at the same amount as that  assigned to them in calculating
     the net  asset value for  the interest (whether complete  or partial) being
     withdrawn.  If  an investor  received  a  distribution  in  kind upon  such
     withdrawal,  the  investor  could  incur  brokerage  and  other charges  in
     converting  the  securities to  cash.  The  Portfolio  has  filed with  the
     Securities and  Exchange Commission a  notification of election  on Form N-
     18F-1  committing  to  pay in  cash  all  requests for  withdrawals  by any
     investor,  limited in amount  with respect  to such investor  during any 90
     day  period to the lesser of (a) $250,000 or  (b) 1% of the net asset value
     of the Portfolio at the beginning of such period.

                                        A - 12
<PAGE>






              Investments in the Portfolio may not be transferred.

              The  right of any investor to  receive payment with respect to any
     withdrawal  may be  suspended  or the  payment  of the  withdrawal proceeds
     postponed during  any period  in which the  Exchange is closed  (other than
     weekends or holidays) or trading on the  Exchange is restricted or, to  the
     extent  otherwise permitted by  the 1940  Act, if  an emergency  exists, or
     during any  other  period permitted  by  order of  the  Commission for  the
     protection of investors.

     Item 9.  Pending Legal Proceedings
              Not applicable.









































                                        A - 13
<PAGE>






                                       PART B

     Item 10.  Cover Page.
              Not applicable.

     Item 11.  Table of Contents.
                                                                            Page
              General Information and History  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  B-1 
              Investment Objectives and Policies   . . . . . . . . . . . .  B-1 
              Management of the Portfolio  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  B-16
              Control Persons and Principal Holder of Securities   . . . .  B-20
              Investment Advisory and Other Services   . . . . . . . . . .  B-20
              Brokerage Allocation and Other Practices   . . . . . . . . .  B-23
              Capital Stock and Other Securities   . . . . . . . . . . . .  B-25
              Purchase, Redemption and Pricing of Securities   . . . . . .  B-28
              Tax Status   . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  B-28
              Underwriters   . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  B-32
              Calculation of Performance Data  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  B-32
              Financial Statements   . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  B-32
              Appendix   . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  a-1 

     Item 12.  General Information and History.
              Effective  December 15,  1995,  the Portfolio's  name  was changed
     from "Massachusetts Limited Maturity Tax Free  Portfolio" to "Massachusetts
     Limited Maturity Municipals Portfolio."

     Item 13.  Investment Objectives and Policies.
              Part  A  contains  additional  information  about  the  investment
     objective  and  policies  of  Massachusetts   Limited  Maturity  Municipals
     Portfolio (the  "Portfolio"). This  Part B  should be  read in  conjunction
     with Part  A. Capitalized  terms  used in  this Part  B and  not  otherwise
     defined have the meanings given them in Part A.

     Municipal Obligations
              Municipal  obligations  are issued  to  obtain  funds  for various
     public and private  purposes.  Such  obligations include bonds  as well  as
     tax-exempt commercial  paper, project  notes  and municipal  notes such  as
     tax, revenue and  bond anticipation notes of short maturity, generally less
     than three  years.   In general,  there are  three categories  of municipal
     obligations the interest on which is exempt from federal income tax and  is
     not  a tax preference item for purposes  of the federal alternative minimum
     tax:  (i) certain  "public purpose"  obligations  (whenever issued),  which
     include  obligations  issued directly  by  state and  local  governments or
     their agencies  to fulfill essential  governmental functions; (ii)  certain
     obligations  issued  before   August  8,  1986  for  the  benefit  of  non-
     governmental  persons or  entities;  and  (iii) certain  "private  activity
     bonds" issued  after  August  7,  1986  which  include  "qualified  Section
     501(c)(3)  bonds" or  refundings  of certain  obligations  included in  the
     second category. In  assessing the federal income tax treatment of interest
     on any such obligation, the Portfolio will generally  rely on an opinion of
     the  issuer's  counsel  (when   available)  and  will  not   undertake  any
     independent  verification of the basis for the  opinion.  The two principal

                                        B - 1
<PAGE>






     classifications  of municipal  bonds  are  "general obligation"  bonds  and
     "revenue" bonds.

              Interest on  certain "private activity bonds"  issued after August
     7, 1986  is exempt from  regular federal income  tax, but such interest  is
     treated  as a tax  preference item that could  subject the  recipient to or
     increase  the recipient's  liability for  the  federal alternative  minimum
     tax.   It  should  be noted  that,  for a  corporate holder  (other  than a
     regulated investment company)  of an interest in the Portfolio, interest on
     all  municipal  obligations  (whenever issued)  is  included  in  "adjusted
     current earnings"  for purposes of  the federal alternative  minimum tax as
     applied to corporations  (to the extent not already included in alternative
     minimum taxable income as income attributable to private activity bonds).

              Any recognized  gain or income attributable to  market discount on
     long-term tax-exempt municipal  obligations (i.e., obligations with  a term
     of  more than  one year)  purchased after  April  30, 1993  other than,  in
     general, at their original issue, is taxable  as ordinary income.  A  long-
     term debt obligation is  generally treated as acquired at a market discount
     if purchased after its original  issue at a price less than (i)  the stated
     principal  amount payable  at maturity, in  the case of  an obligation that
     does not have original issue discount or  (ii) in the case of an obligation
     that does have original issue discount, the sum of the issue price  and any
     original issue discount that  accrued before the obligation  was purchased,
     subject to a de minimis exclusion.

              Issuers of  general  obligation  bonds include  states,  counties,
     cities,  towns and regional  districts. The  proceeds of  these obligations
     are  used  to  fund  a   wide  range  of  public  projects   including  the
     construction  or improvement  of  schools, highways  and  roads, water  and
     sewer systems  and a variety of  other public purposes. The  basic security
     of  general obligation  bonds is the  issuer's pledge of  its faith, credit
     and taxing power for  the payment of principal and interest. The taxes that
     can be levied for  the payment of debt service may  be limited or unlimited
     as to rate and amount.

              The principal  security for a  revenue bond is  generally the  net
     revenues  derived from a particular facility  or group of facilities or, in
     some  cases, from  the  proceeds  of a  special  excise  or other  specific
     revenue source. Revenue  bonds have been issued  to fund a wide  variety of
     capital projects including:  electric, gas,  water, sewer  and solid  waste
     disposal systems;  highways, bridges and tunnels; port, airport and parking
     facilities;  transportation   systems;  housing  facilities,  colleges  and
     universities and  hospitals. Although the  principal security behind  these
     bonds varies widely,  many provide  additional security  in the  form of  a
     debt service reserve  fund whose monies may  be used to make  principal and
     interest payments on the issuer's obligations.  Housing finance authorities
     have a  wide range of security  including partially or fully  insured, rent
     subsidized and/or  collateralized mortgages, and/or  the net revenues  from
     housing  or other public  projects. In  addition to a  debt service reserve
     fund,  some authorities provide further  security in the  form of a state's
     ability (without  legal obligation)  to make  up deficiencies  in the  debt

                                        B - 2
<PAGE>






     service  reserve fund.  Lease rental  revenue  bonds issued  by a  state or
     local authority for capital projects  are normally secured by  annual lease
     rental payments  from the state or locality to  the authority sufficient to
     cover  debt  service  on the  authority's  obligations.  Such payments  are
     usually subject to annual appropriations by the state or locality.

              Industrial  development and  pollution control  bonds are  in most
     cases revenue bonds  and are generally not  secured by the taxing  power of
     the municipality,  but are usually secured  by the revenues derived  by the
     authority from payments of the industrial user or users.

              The Portfolio  may on occasion  acquire revenue  bonds which carry
     warrants  or similar  rights covering  equity securities.  Such warrants or
     rights  may   be  held  indefinitely,  but   if  exercised,  the  Portfolio
     anticipates that  it  would, under  normal  circumstances, dispose  of  any
     equity securities so acquired within a reasonable period of time.

              While  most municipal  bonds pay  a fixed  rate of  interest semi-
     annually in  cash, there are  exceptions. Some bonds  pay no  periodic cash
     interest, but  rather make a  single payment at  maturity representing both
     principal and  interest. Bonds may  be issued or  subsequently offered with
     interest  coupons materially  greater or  less than  those then prevailing,
     with price adjustments reflecting such deviation.

              The obligations of  any person or entity  to pay the principal  of
     and interest  on a municipal  obligation are subject  to the provisions  of
     bankruptcy, insolvency and  other laws affecting the rights and remedies of
     creditors, such as  the Federal Bankruptcy Act, and  laws, if any, that may
     be  enacted  by Congress  or  state  legislatures  extending  the time  for
     payment of  principal or interest,  or both, or  imposing other constraints
     upon enforcement  of such obligations.  There is also  the possibility that
     as a result of litigation or other  conditions the power or ability of  any
     person or entity to pay  when due principal of and interest on  a municipal
     obligation may be  materially affected. There have been recent instances of
     defaults and  bankruptcies involving  municipal obligations  that were  not
     foreseen by  the financial  and investment communities.  The Portfolio will
     take whatever action it considers  appropriate in the event  of anticipated
     financial difficulties, default or bankruptcy  of either the issuer  of any
     municipal obligation  or  of  the  underlying  source  of  funds  for  debt
     service. Such action  may include retaining the services of various persons
     or firms  (including affiliates of  the Investment Adviser)  to evaluate or
     protect  any real  estate,  facilities or  other  assets securing  any such
     obligation or acquired by the Portfolio as a result  of any such event, and
     the  Portfolio may  also  manage (or  engage other  persons  to manage)  or
     otherwise deal  with  any  real  estate,  facilities  or  other  assets  so
     acquired.  The  Portfolio  anticipates  that  real  estate  consulting  and
     management  services may  be required with  respect to  properties securing
     various municipal obligations in its portfolio  or subsequently acquired by
     the Portfolio. The Portfolio  will incur additional expenditures in  taking
     protective  action with  respect  to portfolio  obligations in  default and
     assets securing such obligations.


                                        B - 3
<PAGE>






              The  yields on  municipal  obligations  will  be  dependent  on  a
     variety  of factors, including  purposes of issue  and source  of funds for
     repayment,  general money  market  conditions,  general conditions  of  the
     municipal  bond market,  size  of a  particular  offering, maturity  of the
     obligation and rating of  the issue. The ratings of Moody's, S&P  and Fitch
     represent their opinions  as to the  quality of  the municipal  obligations
     that  they  undertake to  rate.  It  should  be  emphasized, however,  that
     ratings are based  on judgment and are  not absolute standards  of quality.
     Consequently,  municipal obligations  with the  same  maturity, coupon  and
     rating may have  different yields while  obligations of  the same  maturity
     and coupon with  different ratings  may have the  same yield. In  addition,
     the market price of such  obligations will normally fluctuate  with changes
     in interest rates, and therefore the net asset value of the Portfolio  will
     be affected by such changes.

     Risks of Concentration

              Massachusetts  Obligations.    The  following  information  as  to
     certain Massachusetts considerations is given  to investors in view  of the
     Portfolio's  policy  of  concentrating  its  investments  in  Massachusetts
     issuers.  Such  information supplements the information  in Part A.   It is
     derived  from sources  that  are generally  available  to investors  and is
     believed  to  be accurate.    Such  information  constitutes  only a  brief
     summary,  does not purport  to be a complete  description, and  is based on
     information from  official statements relating  to securities offerings  of
     Massachusetts issuers.   The Portfolio has not independently  verified this
     information.

              Beginning   in    1989,   the    Commonwealth's   economy   slowed
     significantly.   Most  of the  employment  growth  during this  period  was
     experienced in  the services and  trade sectors of  the economy, while  the
     manufacturing  sector continues  to  suffer employment  losses.   Like most
     other industrial states,  Massachusetts has seen a shift in employment from
     manufacturing to  more technology  and service-based  industries.   Between
     1992 and 1993, per capita  personal income in Massachusetts  increased 0.7%
     as compared to 0.2%  for the nation as a whole.   The unemployment rate for
     the Commonwealth  fell from 5.4%  in 1995 to  5.0% in  February 1996.   The
     national unemployment rate for February 1996 was 5.6%.

              1995 Fiscal Year.   Fiscal 1995  tax revenue  collections totalled
     $11.163 billion.   Budgeted revenues  and other sources,  including non-tax
     revenue collected  in fiscal 1995  totalled $16.387 billion,  approximately
     $837 million, or  5.4%, above 1994  budgeted revenues  of $15.550  billion.
     Budgeted  expenditures  and  other  uses  of  funds  in  fiscal  1995  were
     approximately $16.251  billion, approximately $728  million, or 4.7%  above
     fiscal  1994  budgeted expenditures  and  uses  of  $15.523  billion.   The
     Commonwealth ended  fiscal 1995 with an operating gain  of $137 million and
     an ending fund balance of $726 million.

              1996  Fiscal  Year.   Current fiscal  1996  projected  spending is
     approximately  $16.963  billion,  including  approximately  $153.2  million
     reserved for contingencies.   Projected revenues are  approximately $16.851

                                        B - 4
<PAGE>






     billion.  The fiscal 1996 forecast for federal reimbursements has decreased
     by approximately  $7 million primarily due  to lower  reimbursable spending
     in public assistance programs.

              1997  Fiscal   Year.     On   April  13,   1996,  the   House   of
     Representatives  adopted  a fiscal  1997  budget  that  provides for  total
     expenditures of  approximately $17.615 billion.   A legislative  conference
     committee will develop a compromise  budget for consideration by  the House
     and Senate, which  upon enactment by both  houses will be presented  to the
     Governor.

              Major  infrastructure  projects  are  anticipated  over  the  next
     decade.   It  is  currently anticipated  that  the federal  government will
     assume responsibility  for approximately 90% of  the estimated $7.7 billion
     cost.   The projects  include the  depression of the  central artery  which
     traverses the City of Boston and the construction of a third harbor  tunnel
     linking  downtown  Boston  to  Logan  Airport.    The  Massachusetts  Water
     Resources Authority  is undertaking capital  projects for the  construction
     and rehabilitation of  sewage collection and treatment  facilities in order
     to  bring  wastewater  discharges into  Boston  Harbor  in  compliance with
     federal  and state  pollution  control requirements.    The harbor  cleanup
     project is estimated to  cost $3.5 billion  in 1994 dollars.   Work on  the
     project began in  1988 and  is expected to  be complete  in 1999, with  the
     most  significant  expenditures  occurring  between  1990  and  1999.   The
     majority  of  the   project's  expenditures  will  be  paid  for  by  local
     communities,  in the  form of  user fees,  with federal  and state  sources
     making  up the  difference;  the assumptions  regarding  the amounts  to be
     supplied through federal aid are subject to change.

              The  fiscal  viability  of  the  Commonwealth's   authorities  and
     municipalities is inextricably  linked to that  of the  Commonwealth.   The
     Commonwealth guarantees  the debt of several  authorities, most notably the
     Massachusetts   Bay   Transportation  Authority   and  the   University  of
     Massachusetts  Building  Authority.    Their  ratings  are  based  on  this
     guarantee  and  can   be  expected  to  move  in  tandem.    Several  other
     authorities are funded  in part or in  whole by the Commonwealth  and their
     debt ratings may be  adversely affected  by a negative  change in those  of
     the Commonwealth.

              Massachusetts'  municipal  governments are  constrained  in  their
     ability  to  increase local  revenues  by  an  initiative  passed in  1980,
     "Proposition  2 1/2".   Proposition  2 1/2  limits the  amount of  property
     taxes  that can  be levied in  a fiscal year  to the lower  of 2.5% of fair
     value  or  102.5%  of  the  previous year's  levy  unless  overridden  by a
     majority  of local voters.   Proposition 2 1/2  also limits  the amount the
     municipality  can  be  charged  by  certain  government  entities  such  as
     counties.  While  Proposition 2 1/2  is not a  constitutional question  and
     can therefore  be amended or  abolished by the  legislature, no significant
     challenge  has  been raised  since  it  took  effect.   Increased  revenues
     received by the Commonwealth and passed on to local governments during  the
     1980s ameliorated the  effect of this initiative and made local governments
     in Massachusetts more  dependent on state aid  than those in  other states.

                                        B - 5
<PAGE>






     Therefore,  the  recent  fiscal  problems  encountered  by  the state  have
     amplified the economic  and fiscal problems encountered by cities and towns
     throughout the Commonwealth.   A continuation of the  Commonwealth's fiscal
     problems resulting  in further local  aid reductions could,  in the absence
     of  overrides, result in payment defaults  by local cities and towns and/or
     ratings downgrades resulting in an erosion of their market value.

              Obligations  of Puerto  Rico, the  U.S.  Virgin Islands  and Guam.
     Subject to the Portfolio's  investment policies as set forth in Part A, the
     Portfolio may invest in the obligations of the  governments of Puerto Rico,
     the U.S. Virgin  Islands and Guam  (the "Territories").   Accordingly,  the
     Portfolio  may  be  adversely affected  by  local  political  and  economic
     conditions and  developments within the  Territories affecting the  issuers
     of such obligations.

              Puerto   Rico  has   a  diversified   economy  dominated   by  the
     manufacturing and service  sectors.  Manufacturing is the largest sector in
     terms  of  gross domestic  product  and  is  more  diversified than  during
     earlier phases of  Puerto Rico's industrial development.  The three largest
     sectors of the economy (as a percentage  of employment) are services (47%),
     government (22%) and manufacturing (16.4%).   These three sectors represent
     39%, 11%  and  39%,  respectively, of  the  gross  domestic product.    The
     service  sector  is   the  fastest   growing,  while  the   government  and
     manufacturing sectors  have been stagnant  for the  past five  years.   The
     North  American  Free  Trade  Agreement  (NAFTA),  which  became  effective
     January  1, 1994, could lead to the loss of Puerto Rico's lower salaried or
     labor  intensive jobs to  Mexico.  The November  1995 unemployment rate was
     13.4%, down from 16% for 1994.

              The  Commonwealth  of Puerto  Rico  exercises  virtually  the same
     control  over its  internal affairs  as do  the fifty  states; however,  it
     differs from  the states in  its relationship with  the federal government.
     Most federal taxes,  except those  such as social  security taxes that  are
     imposed  by mutual consent,  are not  levied in  Puerto Rico.   However, in
     conjunction with  the 1993 U.S.  budget plan, Section  936 of the Code  was
     amended and provided  for two alternative  limitations to  the Section  936
     credit.  The first  option will limit the credit against such income to 40%
     of the  credit  allowable under  current law,  with  a five  year  phase-in
     period  starting at 60%  of the allowable  credit.  The second  option is a
     wage and depreciation  based credit.  The reduction  of the tax benefits to
     those  U.S. companies  with operations in  Puerto Rico  may lead  to slower
     growth in the  future.  Furthermore, federal policymakers have proposed the
     total elimination of  Section 936, phased out over  ten years, as a budget-
     balancing measure.   There  can be  no assurance  that these  modifications
     will not lead to a weakened economy,  a lower rating on Puerto Rico's  debt
     or lower prices for Puerto Rican bonds that may be held by the Portfolio.

              Puerto  Rico's   financial  reporting   was  first  conformed   to
     generally  accepted accounting  principles in  fiscal  1990.   Nonrecurring
     revenues have been  used frequently to  balance recent years' budgets.   In
     November, 1993 Puerto Ricans voted  on whether they wished to  retain their
     Commonwealth status,  become a  state or establish  an independent  nation.

                                        B - 6
<PAGE>






     The measure was defeated,  with 48.5% voting to remain  a Commonwealth, 46%
     voting  for   statehood  and  4%  voting   for  independence.     Retaining
     Commonwealth status  will leave  intact the  current relationship with  the
     federal government.   There can  be no assurance  that the statehood  issue
     will not be brought to a  vote in the future.  A  successful statehood vote
     in Puerto  Rico would  then require  ratification by  the U.S.  Congress to
     ratify the election.

              The United States Virgin  Islands (USVI) are located approximately
     1,100 miles  east-southeast of  Miami and  are made  up of  St. Croix,  St.
     Thomas and  St. John.   Population,  after reaching  a peak  of 110,800  in
     1985, declined to 101,809  in 1990.  The economy is heavily  reliant on the
     tourism  industry,  with  roughly 43%  of  non-agricultural  employment  in
     tourist-related trade and  services.   As of  December, 1994,  unemployment
     stood at  4.8%.  The tourism  industry is economically sensitive  and would
     likely be adversely affected by a recession in either the United States  or
     Europe.

              An important  component of the  USVI revenue base  is the  federal
     excise tax on rum exports.  Tax revenues  rebated by the federal government
     to the USVI  provide the primary security  of many outstanding USVI  bonds.
     Because  more than 90% of the rum distilled in the USVI is distilled at one
     plant,  any interruption  in  its operations  (as occurred  after Hurricane
     Hugo in 1989) would adversely  affect these revenues.   Consequently, there
     can be no  assurance that rum exports  to the United States and  the rebate
     of  tax revenues to  the USVI will  continue at their present  levels.  The
     preferential tariff treatment the USVI rum industry currently  enjoys could
     be reduced under NAFTA.   Increased competition from Mexican  rum producers
     could reduce  USVI rum imported to the U.S., decreasing excise tax revenues
     generated.   The USVI incurred  extensive damage from  Hurricane Marilyn in
     September,  1995.  Widespread  damage to  the airport  and hotels led  to a
     drop in tourism,  which has had a  negative impact on revenue  collections.
     There  is  currently  no   rated,  unenhanced  U.S.  Virgin   Islands  debt
     outstanding.

              Guam,  an unincorporated  U.S. territory,  is located  1,500 miles
     southeast  of Tokyo.   Population, 133,000  in 1990,  up 26% from  the 1980
     census level.   The  U.S. military is  a key  component of Guam's  economy.
     The federal government directly comprises  more than 10% of  the employment
     base, with a substantial component  of the service sector to  support these
     personnel.  Guam is expected to  benefit from the closure of the Subic  Bay
     Naval Base and the Clark Air Force Base in the Philippines.   The Naval Air
     Station, one of  several U.S. military facilities  on the island, has  been
     slated for closure by the  Defense Base Closure and  Realignment Committee;
     however, the administration  plans to use  these facilities  to expand  the
     Island's commercial airport.   Guam is  also heavily  reliant on  tourists,
     particularly the Japanese.   For 1994, the financial  position of Guam  was
     weakened as it incurred  an unaudited General Fund operating deficit.   The
     administration has taken steps to improve its  financial position; however,
     there are  no guarantees  that  an improvement  will be  realized.   Guam's
     general obligation debt is rated Baa by Moody's.


                                        B - 7
<PAGE>






              Obligations  of Particular  Types of Issuers.   The  Portfolio may
     invest 25%  or more  of its total  assets in  municipal obligations of  the
     same  type. There  could be  economic, business  or political  developments
     which might  affect  all  municipal  obligations  of  a  similar  type.  In
     particular, investments in industrial revenue bonds  might involve (without
     limitation) the following risks.

              Hospital  bond  ratings are  often  based  on  feasibility studies
     which  contain projections  of  expenses,  revenues and  occupancy  levels.
     Among the influences affecting a  hospital's gross receipts and  net income
     available  to  service its  debt  are  demand  for  hospital services,  the
     ability  of  the hospital  to  provide  the services  required,  management
     capabilities,  economic  developments  in  the  service  area,  efforts  by
     insurers and government  agencies to  limit rates and  expenses, confidence
     in  the   hospital,  service   area  economic  developments,   competition,
     availability and  expense of malpractice  insurance, Medicaid and  Medicare
     funding and possible  federal legislation limiting the rates of increase of
     hospital charges.

              Electric utilities face  problems in financing large  construction
     programs in an  inflationary period, cost increases and delay occasioned by
     safety  and  environmental considerations  (particularly  with  respect  to
     nuclear facilities), difficulty in obtaining fuel at reasonable prices  and
     in achieving timely and  adequate rate relief from  regulatory commissions,
     effects  of energy  conservation  and limitations  on  the capacity  of the
     capital market to absorb utility debt.

              Life care facilities are an alternative form of  long-term housing
     for the elderly  which offer residents  the independence  of a  condominium
     life  style  and,  if  needed,  the  comprehensive  care  of  nursing  home
     services. Bonds to  finance these facilities  have been  issued by  various
     state and  local authorities. Because  the bonds are  normally secured only
     by the revenues of each  facility and not by state or local  government tax
     payments,  they are  subject to  a  wide variety  of risks.  Primarily, the
     projects must  maintain adequate  occupancy levels  to be  able to  provide
     revenues sufficient  to  meet debt  service payments.  Moreover, because  a
     portion of housing,  medical care and other services  may be financed by an
     initial  deposit,  it  is important  that  the  facility  maintain adequate
     financial reserves to  secure estimated actuarial liabilities.  The ability
     of  management  to accurately  forecast inflationary  cost pressures  is an
     important  factor in  this  process. The  facilities  may also  be affected
     adversely by regulatory cost  restrictions applied to health  care delivery
     in  general,  particularly state  regulations  or changes  in  Medicare and
     Medicaid payments  or qualifications,  or restrictions  imposed by  medical
     insurance  companies.  They  may also  face  competition  from  alternative
     health care or  conventional housing facilities  in the  private or  public
     sector.

     Municipal Leases
              The Portfolio  may invest  in municipal leases  and participations
     therein,  which arrangements  frequently  involve special  risks. Municipal
     leases are  obligations in  the form  of a  lease  or installment  purchase

                                        B - 8
<PAGE>






     arrangement which are  issued by  a state  or local  government to  acquire
     equipment  and  facilities.  Interest  income  from   such  obligations  is
     generally  exempt from  local and  state taxes  in the  state  of issuance.
     "Participations" in such  leases are undivided  interests in  a portion  of
     the total obligation.  Participations entitle  their holders  to receive  a
     pro  rata share  of  all payments  under the  lease.  A trustee  is usually
     responsible for administering the  terms of the participation and enforcing
     the participants'  rights in the  underlying lease. Leases and  installment
     purchase or  conditional sale  contracts (which normally  provide for title
     to the leased  assets to pass eventually  to the governmental issuer)  have
     evolved  as  a means  for  governmental  issuers  to  acquire property  and
     equipment  without  meeting the  constitutional and  statutory requirements
     for the issuance  of debt. State debt-issuance limitations are deemed to be
     inapplicable to these  arrangements because of the inclusion in many leases
     or  contracts  of   "non-appropriation"  clauses  that  provide   that  the
     governmental issuer has  no obligation to  make future  payments under  the
     lease or  contract unless  money is  appropriated for  such purpose  by the
     appropriate legislative  body on  a yearly  or other  periodic basis.  Such
     arrangements are,  therefore, subject  to  the risk  that the  governmental
     issuer will not appropriate funds for lease payments. 

              Certain municipal lease obligations owned  by the Portfolio may be
     deemed  illiquid  for  purposes  of  the  Portfolio's  15%  limitation   on
     investments in  illiquid securities,  unless determined  by the  Investment
     Adviser,  pursuant to  guidelines  adopted by  the  Trustees, to  be liquid
     securities for  purposes of such  limitation. In determining the  liquidity
     of municipal  lease  obligations, the  Investment Adviser  will consider  a
     variety  of factors including:  (1) the  willingness of dealers  to bid for
     the security;  (2) the number  of dealers willing  to purchase or sell  the
     obligation  and the number of other potential  buyers; (3) the frequency of
     trades  and  quotes  for  the  obligation;  and   (4)  the  nature  of  the
     marketplace  trades. In  addition,  the  Investment Adviser  will  consider
     factors unique to particular lease obligations  affecting the marketability
     thereof. These  include the general  creditworthiness of the  municipality,
     the importance  of the property covered  by the lease  to the municipality,
     and  the  likelihood that  the  marketability  of  the  obligation will  be
     maintained throughout the time the obligation is  held by the Portfolio. In
     the  event the  Portfolio acquires an  unrated municipal  lease obligation,
     the  Investment Adviser  will  be responsible  for  determining the  credit
     quality of  such obligation on an ongoing basis, including an assessment of
     the likelihood that the lease may or may not be canceled.

     Zero Coupon Bonds
              Zero  coupon bonds are  debt obligations which do  not require the
     periodic  payment of interest and are issued at a significant discount from
     face value.  The discount  approximates the  total amount  of interest  the
     bonds will  accrue and compound over the period until maturity at a rate of
     interest  reflecting  the market  rate  of  the  security at  the  time  of
     issuance.  Zero coupon bonds benefit the  issuer by mitigating its need for
     cash to  meet debt service,  but also require  a higher  rate of return  to
     attract investors who are willing to defer receipt of such cash.


                                        B - 9
<PAGE>






     Insurance
              Insured  municipal obligations held by the Portfolio (if any) will
     be insured as to  their scheduled payment of  principal and interest  under
     either (i)  an insurance policy  obtained by the  issuer or underwriter  of
     the obligation at  the time of its  original issuance or (ii)  an insurance
     policy  obtained by  the  Portfolio  or a  third  party  subsequent to  the
     obligation's  original  issuance  (which   may  not  be  reflected  in  the
     obligation's  market value).  In either  event such  insurance may  provide
     that in the  event of  nonpayment of interest  or principal  when due  with
     respect to an insured obligation, the insurer is not required to make  such
     payment  until a specified  time has lapsed  (which may be  30 days or more
     after notice).

     Credit Quality
              The Portfolio  is dependent on the  Investment Adviser's judgment,
     analysis   and  experience   in  evaluating   the   quality  of   municipal
     obligations. In evaluating the credit  quality of a particular  issue, when
     rated   or  unrated,  the  Investment   Adviser  will  normally  take  into
     consideration, among other things,  the financial  resources of the  issuer
     (or, as appropriate, of  the underlying source of funds for  debt service),
     its sensitivity  to economic conditions  and trends, any operating  history
     of and the  community support for the facility  financed by the issuer, the
     ability of  the issuer's management and  regulatory matters. The Investment
     Adviser  will attempt  to  reduce the  risks  of  investing in  the  lowest
     investment   grade,  below   investment   grade   and  comparable   unrated
     obligations   through  active  portfolio  management, credit  analysis  and
     attention  to  current developments  and  trends  in  the  economy and  the
     financial markets.

              See  "Portfolio of  Investments"  in  the  "Financial  Statements"
     incorporated by  reference into this Part  B with respect to  any defaulted
     obligations held by the Portfolio.

     Short-Term Trading
              The  Portfolio  may  sell   (and  later  purchase)  securities  in
     anticipation of a  market decline (a  rise in interest  rates) or  purchase
     (and later sell) securities in anticipation of a market rise (a decline  in
     interest rates). In addition, a security may be sold  and another purchased
     at approximately  the same  time to  take advantage  of what  the Portfolio
     believes  to be  a  temporary disparity  in  the normal  yield relationship
     between the two  securities. Yield disparities  may occur  for reasons  not
     directly related  to the  investment quality  of particular  issues or  the
     general movement of interest rates,  such as changes in the overall  demand
     for or supply of  various types of municipal obligations or changes  in the
     investment  objectives  of  investors.  Such  trading may  be  expected  to
     increase the portfolio  turnover rate, which may increase capital gains and
     the  expenses  incurred  in connection  with  such  trading.  The Portfolio
     anticipates  that its  annual portfolio  turnover rate  will generally  not
     exceed 100% (excluding turnover of  securities having maturity of  one year
     or  less).  A  100% annual turnover  rate would occur,  for example, if all
     the securities held by the Portfolio were replaced once  in a period of one
     year.   A high turnover  rate (100% or  more) necessarily  involves greater

                                        B - 10
<PAGE>






     expenses to  the Portfolio.   The  Portfolio engages  in portfolio  trading
     (including short-term trading)  if it believes that a transaction including
     all  costs  will  help  in   achieving  its  investment  objective.     The
     Portfolio's portfolio turnover rates for  the fiscal years ended  March 31,
     1996 and 1995, were 27% and 46%, respectively.

     When-Issued Securities
              New issues  of municipal  obligations are  sometimes offered  on a
     "when-issued" basis,  that  is, delivery  and  payment for  the  securities
     normally take place within  a specified  number of days  after the date  of
     the Portfolio's  commitment and are  subject to certain  conditions such as
     the  issuance  of  satisfactory legal  opinions.  The  Portfolio  may  also
     purchase securities on a when-issued basis pursuant  to refunding contracts
     in   connection  with   the   refinancing   of  an   issuer's   outstanding
     indebtedness. Refunding  contracts generally require the issuer to sell and
     the Portfolio to buy  such securities  on a settlement  date that could  be
     several months or several years in the future.

              The  Portfolio  will  make  commitments  to  purchase  when-issued
     securities only  with the intention of  actually acquiring  the securities,
     but  may sell such  securities before the settlement  date if  it is deemed
     advisable as  a matter of  investment strategy. The  payment obligation and
     the interest rate that will be received on the securities are fixed  at the
     time the  Portfolio enters into  the purchase  commitment. The  Portfolio's
     custodian will segregate  cash or high  grade liquid debt  securities in  a
     separate  account of the Portfolio in an amount at least equal to the when-
     issued  commitments. If the value of  the securities placed in the separate
     account declines,  additional cash  or  high grade  liquid debt  securities
     will  be placed in the  account on a  daily basis so that  the value of the
     account  will at  least  equal the  amount  of the  Portfolio's when-issued
     commitments. When the Portfolio  commits to purchase a security on  a when-
     issued  basis, it  records the  transaction and  reflects the value  of the
     security in  determining its  net asset  value. Securities  purchased on  a
     when-issued basis and the  securities held by the Portfolio  are subject to
     changes in value based upon the  perception of the creditworthiness of  the
     issuer and changes in the  level of interest rates (i.e., appreciation when
     interest  rates  decline  and  depreciation  when   interest  rates  rise).
     Therefore,  to the  extent that the  Portfolio remains  substantially fully
     invested at  the same  time that  it has  purchased securities  on a  when-
     issued basis, there  will be greater  fluctuations in  the Portfolio's  net
     asset  value than  if  it solely  set  aside cash  to  pay for  when-issued
     securities.

     Floating or Variable Rate Obligations
              The Portfolio may purchase  floating or variable rate obligations.
     Floating  or variable  rate  instruments  provide  for adjustments  in  the
     interest  rate  at  specified intervals  (weekly,  monthly,  semi-annually,
     etc.). The  revised rates are  usually set at  the issuer's discretion,  in
     which case  the investor  normally enjoys the  right to "put"  the security
     back to the issuer or the issuer's agent. Rate revisions may  alternatively
     be determined  by formula or in some other contractual fashion. Floating or
     variable  rate  obligations normally  provide  that the  holder  can demand

                                        B - 11
<PAGE>






     payment of the obligation on short notice at par with accrued interest  and
     are  frequently  secured by  letters  of  credit  or  other credit  support
     arrangements provided  by banks. To the extent that  such letters of credit
     or  other  arrangements  constitute  an  unconditional   guarantee  of  the
     issuer's obligations,  a bank may  be treated as  the issuer of a  security
     for  the purpose  of complying  with  the diversification  requirements set
     forth  in Section 5(b)  of the  Investment Company  Act of 1940  (the "1940
     Act") and Rule  5b-2 thereunder. The Portfolio would anticipate using these
     obligations as  cash  equivalents pending  longer  term investment  of  its
     funds.

     Redemption, Demand and Put Features
              Most municipal bonds  have a fixed  final maturity  date. However,
     it is  commonplace for  the issuer to  reserve the right  to call  the bond
     earlier. Also,  some bonds may have  "put" or "demand" features  that allow
     early redemption by the bondholder.  Longer term fixed-rate  bonds may give
     the holder a  right to request redemption at  certain times (often annually
     after  the lapse of an  intermediate term). These  bonds are more defensive
     than conventional  long term  bonds (protecting  to some  degree against  a
     rise  in   interest  rates)  while   providing  greater  opportunity   than
     comparable intermediate  term bonds, because  the Portfolio may retain  the
     bond if interest  rates decline. By  acquiring these  kinds of  obligations
     the Portfolio obtains the  contractual right to  require the issuer of  the
     security or some other person (other than  a broker or dealer) to  purchase
     the security  at an  agreed upon  price, which  right is  contained in  the
     obligation itself  rather than in a  separate agreement with the  seller or
     some other  person. Because  this right  is assignable  with the  security,
     which  is  readily marketable  and  valued  in  the  customary manner,  the
     Portfolio will not assign any separate value to such right.

     Liquidity and Protective Put Options
              The  Portfolio may also  enter into a separate  agreement with the
     seller  of the  security or  some other  person granting  the Portfolio the
     right to  put the security to the seller thereof or  the other person at an
     agreed upon price.  The Portfolio intends to limit this type of transaction
     to institutions (such  as banks or securities dealers) which the Investment
     Adviser believes  present minimal  credit risks  and would  engage in  this
     type of transaction to facilitate portfolio liquidity or (if  the seller so
     agrees) to hedge against rising interest rates. There is no assurance  that
     this kind of put option will  be available to the Portfolio or that selling
     institutions will be willing  to permit the Portfolio to exercise a  put to
     hedge  against rising  interest rates.  A separate  put option  may not  be
     marketable  or otherwise  assignable, and sale  of the security  to a third
     party or lapse of time with the put unexercised may terminate the right  to
     exercise the put. The Portfolio  does not expect to assign any value to any
     separate   put  option  which  may  be  acquired  to  facilitate  portfolio
     liquidity, inasmuch as the  value (if any) of the put  will be reflected in
     the  value  assigned to  the  associated  security;  any  put acquired  for
     hedging purposes would be valued in good faith under  methods or procedures
     established by the  Trustees after  consideration of all  relevant factors,
     including its  expiration  date, the  price  volatility of  the  associated
     security,  the difference  between  the  market  price  of  the  associated

                                        B - 12
<PAGE>






     security and  the exercise price  of the  put, the creditworthiness  of the
     issuer  of  the  put and  the  market  prices  of  comparable put  options.
     Interest income  generated by certain  bonds having put  or demand features
     may not qualify as tax-exempt interest.

     Securities Lending
              The  Portfolio   may  seek  to  increase  its  income  by  lending
     portfolio securities  to broker-dealers  or other institutional  borrowers.
     Under  present  regulatory  policies  of  the Commission,  such  loans  are
     required  to  be  secured   continuously  by   collateral  in  cash,   cash
     equivalents  or  U.S.   Government  securities  held  by   the  Portfolio's
     custodian and maintained on a current basis at an  amount at least equal to
     the market value  of the securities loaned, which  will be marked to market
     daily. Cash  equivalents include short-term  municipal obligations as  well
     as taxable certificates of  deposit, commercial paper and  other short-term
     money market  instruments. The  Portfolio would  have the  right to call  a
     loan and obtain  the securities loaned at  any time on up to  five business
     days' notice. During the existence  of a loan, the Portfolio  will continue
     to  receive  the equivalent  of  the interest  paid  by the  issuer  on the
     securities loaned  and will also receive a fee, or all  or a portion of the
     interest on  investment of the  collateral, if any.  However, the Portfolio
     may pay lending  fees to such borrowers.  The Portfolio would not  have the
     right to vote any  securities having voting rights during  the existence of
     the loan, but would call the  loan in anticipation of an important  vote to
     be taken among  holders of the securities  or the giving or  withholding of
     their consent on a material matter affecting  the investment. As with other
     extensions  of credit there are risks of delay  in recovery or even loss of
     rights  in the securities  loaned if  the borrower of  the securities fails
     financially. However, the loans will  be made only to  organizations deemed
     by the  Portfolio's management  to be  of good  standing and  when, in  the
     judgment  of  the Portfolio's  management,  the consideration  that  can be
     earned  from securities  loans  justifies the  attendant risk.   Securities
     lending  involves   administration  expenses,   including  finders'   fees.
     Distributions  of  any income  realized  by the  Portfolio  from securities
     loans will be taxable.  If the  management of the Portfolio decides to make
     securities loans, it is  intended that the value  of the securities  loaned
     would not exceed 30% of the Portfolio's total assets. The Portfolio has  no
     present intention of engaging in securities lending.

     Futures Contracts and Options on Futures Contracts
              A change  in the level of  interest rates may affect  the value of
     the securities held by  the Portfolio (or of securities that  the Portfolio
     expects  to purchase).   To hedge  against changes in  rates, the Portfolio
     may enter  into (i)  futures contracts  for the  purchase or  sale of  debt
     securities and (ii) futures contracts  on securities indices.   All futures
     contracts entered into by the Portfolio  are traded on exchanges or  boards
     of trade  that are licensed and regulated by  the Commodity Futures Trading
     Commission  ("CFTC") and  must  be executed  through  a futures  commission
     merchant or brokerage firm that is a member of the relevant exchange.   The
     Portfolio may purchase and write call and put options on futures  contracts
     that are traded on  a United States or foreign exchange or  board of trade.
     The Portfolio will  be required, in connection with transactions in futures

                                        B - 13
<PAGE>






     contracts and the writing  of options on futures, to  make margin deposits,
     which will  be held  by the Portfolio's  custodian for  the benefit of  the
     futures  commission merchant  through whom  the Portfolio  engages in  such
     futures and options transactions.

              Some  futures contracts  and options  thereon may  become illiquid
     under adverse market  conditions.  In  addition, during  periods of  market
     volatility, a  commodity exchange may  suspend or limit  transactions in an
     exchange-traded  instrument,  which  may  make  the instrument  temporarily
     illiquid and  difficult to price.   Commodity exchanges  may also establish
     daily limits on the  amount that the price of a futures contract or futures
     option can vary from the previous day's  settlement price.  Once the  daily
     limit is reached,  no trades may  be made that  day at a  price beyond  the
     limit.   This  may prevent  the Portfolio  from closing  out  positions and
     limiting its losses.

              The  Portfolio   will  engage  in  futures   and  related  options
     transactions  only  for  bona  fide  hedging  purposes  as  defined  in  or
     permitted  by CFTC  regulations.   The  Portfolio  will determine  that the
     price fluctuations  in the  futures contracts  and options  on futures  are
     substantially  related to  price  fluctuations in  securities  held by  the
     Portfolio or  that  it  expects  to  purchase.    The  Portfolio's  futures
     transactions will be entered into  for traditional hedging purposes  - that
     is, futures contracts  will be  sold to protect  against a  decline in  the
     price of  securities that the Portfolio owns, or  futures contracts will be
     purchased to  protect the  Portfolio against  an increase in  the price  of
     securities it  intends to  purchase.  As  evidence of this  hedging intent,
     the Portfolio  expects that  on 75% or  more of  the occasions on  which it
     takes a  "long" futures  (or option)  position (involving  the purchase  of
     futures contracts), the  Portfolio will have purchased,  or will be  in the
     process  of  purchasing, equivalent  amounts of  related securities  in the
     cash market  at the time  when the futures  (or option) position is  closed
     out.   However, in particular  cases, when it  is economically advantageous
     for the Portfolio to  do so, a long futures position  may be terminated (or
     an option  may expire)  without the  corresponding purchase of  securities.
     The Portfolio  will engage in  transactions in futures  and related options
     contracts only  to the  extent such  transactions are  consistent with  the
     requirements  of the Code for maintaining  the qualification of each of the
     Portfolio's investment company investors as a  regulated investment company
     for federal income tax purposes (see "Tax Status").

              Transactions using  futures  contracts  and  options  (other  than
     options that  the  Portfolio has  purchased)  expose  the Portfolio  to  an
     obligation to another  party.  The Portfolio  will not enter into  any such
     transactions  unless it owns either  (1) an offsetting ("covered") position
     in  securities  or  other  options  or  futures  contracts,  or  (2)  cash,
     receivables and short-term debt securities  with a value sufficient  at all
     times to  cover its potential  obligations not covered  as provided in  (1)
     above.    The Portfolio  will comply  with Commission  guidelines regarding
     cover for these  instruments and, if  the guidelines so require,  set aside
     cash,  U.S.  Government   securities  or  other  liquid,   high-grade  debt
     securities in a  segregated account with  its custodian  in the  prescribed

                                        B - 14
<PAGE>






     amount.

              Assets used  as cover or  held in  a segregated account cannot  be
     sold while the position in the corresponding  futures contract or option is
     open,  unless  they  are replaced  with  other  appropriate assets.    As a
     result, the  commitment of  a large  portion of  the Portfolio's  assets to
     cover  or  segregated accounts  could  impede portfolio  management  or the
     Portfolio's  ability   to  meet  redemption   requests  or  other   current
     obligations.

     Short-Term Obligations
              Although  the   Portfolio   will  normally   attempt   to   invest
     substantially  all of  its assets  in municipal  obligations, the Portfolio
     may, under  normal circumstances,  invest up to  20% of  its net assets  in
     short-term obligations the  interest on which is subject to regular federal
     income  tax,  is  a  tax  preference  item  for  purposes  of  the  federal
     alternative minimum tax, and/or is subject  to Massachusetts State personal
     income taxes.   Such short-term taxable  obligations may  include, but  are
     not  limited to,  certificates  of  deposit, commercial  paper,  short-term
     notes and  obligations issued or guaranteed  by the U.S. Government  or any
     of  its agencies  or instrumentalities.  During periods  of adverse  market
     conditions,  the Portfolio  may  temporarily invest  more  than 20%  of its
     assets in such short-term  taxable obligations, all  of which will be  high
     quality.

     Investment Restrictions
              The Portfolio  has adopted  the following investment  restrictions
     which may  not  be  changed  without  the approval  of  the  holders  of  a
     "majority of the  outstanding voting securities" of the Portfolio, which as
     used in this Part B means  the lesser of (a) 67% or more of the outstanding
     voting securities  of the Portfolio  present or represented  by proxy at  a
     meeting  if  the  holders  of  more than  50%  of  the  outstanding  voting
     securities of  the Portfolio are  present or represented at  the meeting or
     (b) more than 50%  of the outstanding  voting securities of the  Portfolio.
     The  term "voting  securities"  as used  in  this  paragraph has  the  same
     meaning  as in  the  1940 Act.   As  a  matter of  fundamental policy,  the
     Portfolio may not:

              (1) Borrow  money or issue  senior securities  except as permitted
              by the Investment Company Act of 1940;
      
              (2)  Purchase securities  on margin (but the  Portfolio may obtain
              such short-term credits  as may be necessary for the  clearance of
              purchases and sales of securities). The deposit or payment by  the
              Portfolio  of initial  or  maintenance margin  in  connection with
              futures   contracts  or   related  options  transactions   is  not
              considered the purchase of a security on margin;

              (3) Underwrite or  participate in the  marketing of  securities of
              others, except  insofar as it may  technically be deemed  to be an
              underwriter in  selling a portfolio  security under  circumstances
              which  may   require  the  registration  of  the  same  under  the

                                        B - 15
<PAGE>






              Securities Act of 1933;
         
              (4) Purchase  or sell  real estate (including  limited partnership
              interests  in  real  estate,  but  excluding  readily   marketable
              interests in  real estate investment trusts  or readily marketable
              securities of  companies which invest  or deal in  real estate  or
              securities which are secured by real estate);
          
              (5)  Purchase or sell  physical commodities  or contracts  for the
              purchase or sale of physical commodities; or

              (6) Make  loans to  any person except  by (a)  the acquisition  of
              debt instruments  and making  portfolio investments, (b)  entering
              into repurchase agreements and (c) lending portfolio securities.

          The Portfolio has adopted  the following investment policies which may
     be changed by the Portfolio without approval of  its investors. As a matter
     of nonfundamental  policy, the Portfolio  will not: (a)  engage in options,
     futures or  forward transactions  if more  than 5%  of its  net assets,  as
     measured by the aggregate  of the premiums paid by the Portfolio,  would be
     so  invested;  (b) make  short  sales  of securities  or  maintain a  short
     position, unless at  all times  when a short  position is open  it owns  an
     equal  amount  of  such  securities  or  securities  convertible  into   or
     exchangeable, without payment of any further  consideration, for securities
     of the same  issue as, and equal  in amount to, the securities  sold short,
     and  unless not  more than  25% of  the  Portfolio's net  assets (taken  at
     current value) is held  as collateral for such sales  at any one time  (The
     Portfolio  will  make   such  sales  only  for  the  purpose  of  deferring
     realization  of gain or loss  for federal income  tax purposes); (c) invest
     more  than 15%  of  its net  assets in  investments  which are  not readily
     marketable,  including  restricted  securities  and  repurchase  agreements
     maturing in  more than seven  days. Restricted securities  for the purposes
     of this limitation do not  include securities eligible for  resale pursuant
     to Rule 144A  under the Securities Act of  1933 and commercial paper issued
     pursuant to Section  4(2) of  said Act that  the Board of  Trustees of  the
     Portfolio, or  its  delegate, determines  to  be  liquid; (d)  purchase  or
     retain in its portfolio  any securities  issued by an  issuer any of  whose
     officers, directors, trustees  or security holders is an officer or Trustee
     of  the Portfolio  or  is a  member, officer,  director  or trustee  of any
     investment  adviser  of  the  Portfolio,  if  after  the  purchase  of  the
     securities of  such issuer  by the Portfolio  one or  more of such  persons
     owns beneficially more than 1/2  of 1% of the shares or  securities or both
     (all taken at market  value) of  such issuer and  such persons owning  more
     than 1/2 of 1% of such shares or  securities together own beneficially more
     than 5% of such shares or securities  or both (all taken at market  value);
     or (e)  purchase oil, gas or  other mineral leases  or purchase partnership
     interests  in  oil,   gas  or  other  mineral  exploration  or  development
     programs.

              For  purposes of  the  investment restrictions  listed  above, the
     determination  of the "issuer"  of a  municipal obligation  which is  not a
     general obligation  bond will  be made  by the  Investment  Adviser on  the

                                        B - 16
<PAGE>






     basis of the  characteristics of the obligation and other relevant factors,
     the most significant of  which is the source of funds committed  to meeting
     interest and principal payments of such obligation.  

              Whenever an investment policy  or investment restriction set forth
     in Part A or this Part  B states a maximum percentage of assets that may be
     invested in any  security or other  asset or  describes a policy  regarding
     quality  standards,  such  percentage  limitation  or   standard  shall  be
     determined  immediately   after  and   as  a  result   of  the  Portfolio's
     acquisition  of  such  security  or  other  asset.  Accordingly, any  later
     increase or decrease  resulting from  a change in  values, assets or  other
     circumstances,  other than  a  subsequent  rating change  below  investment
     grade made by  a rating service, will  not compel the Portfolio  to dispose
     of such  security or  other asset.   Notwithstanding  the foregoing,  under
     normal market  conditions  the Portfolio  must  take actions  necessary  to
     comply with the  policy of investing  at least 65%  of its total assets  in
     obligations of Massachusetts issuers.  Moreover,  the Portfolio must always
     be in compliance with the borrowing policy set forth above.

              In  order  to permit  the  sale  in certain  states  of  shares of
     certain open-end investment companies that are  investors in the Portfolio,
     the  Portfolio  may make  commitments  more restrictive  than  the policies
     described above. Should  the Portfolio  determine that any  such commitment
     is no longer in the best  interests of the Portfolio and its  investors, it
     will revoke such commitment.

     Item 14.  Management of the Portfolio
              The Trustees  and  officers of  the Portfolio  are  listed  below.
     Except as indicated,  each individual has  held the  office shown or  other
     offices in  the same  company for  the last  five  years. Unless  otherwise
     noted,  the business  address of  each Trustee  and officer  is 24  Federal
     Street,  Boston, Massachusetts  02110,  which is  also  the address  of the
     Portfolio's investment  adviser, Boston Management  and Research ("BMR"  or
     the  "Investment  Adviser"),  a  wholly-owned  subsidiary  of  Eaton  Vance
     Management  ("Eaton Vance");  of Eaton  Vance's parent,  Eaton Vance  Corp.
     ("EVC"); and of BMR's and  Eaton Vance's trustee, Eaton Vance, Inc. ("EV").
     Eaton  Vance  and EV  are  both  wholly-owned  subsidiaries  of EVC.  Those
     Trustees who are "interested persons"  of the Portfolio, BMR,  Eaton Vance,
     EVC or  EV, as defined in the 1940  Act by virtue of their affiliation with
     any  one or  more  of the  Portfolio,  BMR, Eaton  Vance,  EVC  or EV,  are
     indicated by an asterisk(*).

                              TRUSTEES OF THE PORTFOLIO

     DONALD R. DWIGHT (65), Trustee
     President   of  Dwight   Partners,   Inc.   (a  corporate   relations   and
     communications  company)  founded   in  1988;  Chairman  of  the  Board  of
     Newspapers  of New  England,  Inc.  since 1983.    Director or  Trustee  of
     various investment companies managed by Eaton Vance or BMR. 
     Address: Clover Mill Lane, Lyme, New Hampshire 03768

     JAMES B. HAWKES (54), Vice President and Trustee*

                                        B - 17
<PAGE>






     Executive Vice President  of BMR, Eaton Vance,  EVC and EV, and  a Director
     of EVC  and EV.   Director  or Trustee  and officer  of various  investment
     companies managed by Eaton Vance or BMR.

     SAMUEL L. HAYES, III (61), Trustee
     Jacob H.  Schiff  Professor of  Investment  Banking at  Harvard  University
     Graduate  School of  Business  Administration.    Director  or  Trustee  of
     various investment companies managed by Eaton Vance or BMR.
     Address:  Harvard University  Graduate  School of  Business Administration,
     Soldiers Field Road, Boston, Massachusetts 02134

     NORTON H. REAMER (60), Trustee
     President  and Director,  United Asset  Management  Corporation, a  holding
     company  owning   institutional  investment  management  firms.   Chairman,
     President and Director, UAM  Funds (mutual funds).  Director or  Trustee of
     various investment companies managed by Eaton Vance or BMR.
     Address: One International Place, Boston, Massachusetts 02110

     JOHN L. THORNDIKE (69), Trustee
     Director, Fiduciary Company Incorporated.   Director or Trustee of  various
     investment companies managed by Eaton Vance or BMR.
     Address: 175 Federal Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02110

     JACK L. TREYNOR (66), Trustee
     Investment  Adviser  and  Consultant.    Director  or  Trustee  of  various
     investment companies managed by Eaton Vance or BMR.
     Address: 504 Via Almar, Palos Verdes Estates, California 90274

                              OFFICERS OF THE PORTFOLIO

     THOMAS J. FETTER (52), President
     Vice President of BMR,  Eaton Vance and EV.  Officer of  various investment
     companies managed by Eaton  Vance or BMR.  Mr. Fetter was elected President
     of the Portfolio on December 13, 1993.  

     RAYMOND E. HENDER (52), Vice President 
     Vice President  of BMR, Eaton Vance and  EV and an employee  of Eaton Vance
     since September  8,  1992.   Senior Vice  President,  Bank of  New  England
     (1989-1992).   Officer  of various  investment companies  managed by  Eaton
     Vance or BMR.   Mr. Hender was elected Vice  President of the Portfolio  on
     June 19, 1995.

     ROBERT B. MACINTOSH (39), Vice President
     Vice President of BMR since  August 11, 1992, and of Eaton Vance and EV and
     an  employee of Eaton  Vance since March 8,  1991.   Fidelity Investments -
     Portfolio Manager  (1986-1991).   Officer of  various investment  companies
     managed by Eaton Vance or BMR.  

     JAMES L. O'CONNOR (51), Treasurer
     Vice President of BMR,  Eaton Vance and EV.  Officer of  various investment
     companies managed by Eaton Vance or BMR.


                                        B - 18
<PAGE>






     THOMAS OTIS (64), Secretary
     Vice President and Secretary of BMR,  Eaton Vance, EVC and EV.  Officer  of
     various investment companies managed by Eaton Vance or BMR.

     JANET E. SANDERS (60), Assistant Secretary
     Vice President of BMR, Eaton Vance and  EV.  Officer of various  investment
     companies managed by Eaton Vance or BMR.

     A. JOHN MURPHY (33), Assistant Secretary
     Assistant Vice President  of BMR, Eaton Vance  and EV since March  1, 1994;
     employee of  Eaton Vance since  March 1993.   State Regulations Supervisor,
     The  Boston  Company  (1991-1993)  and  Registration  Specialist,  Fidelity
     Management  &  Research Co.  (1986-1991).   Officer  of  various investment
     companies managed by Eaton Vance or BMR.   Mr. Murphy was elected Assistant
     Secretary of the Portfolio on March 27, 1995.

     ERIC G. WOODBURY (39), Assistant Secretary
     Vice  President of BMR, Eaton  Vance and EV  since February 1993; formerly,
     associate attorney at  Dechert Price & Rhoads  and Gaston & Snow.   Officer
     of  various investment  companies  managed  by Eaton  Vance  or BMR.    Mr.
     Woodbury  was elected  Assistant  Secretary of  the  Portfolio on  June 19,
     1995.

              Messrs. Thorndike (Chairman), Hayes and Reamer are members of  the
     Special Committee of  the Board of Trustees of  the Portfolio.  The purpose
     of the Special  Committee is to consider, evaluate and make recommendations
     to the full Board of  Trustees concerning (i) all  contractual arrangements
     with service  providers to  the Portfolio,  including investment  advisory,
     custodial  and fund  accounting  services, and  (ii)  all other  matters in
     which Eaton Vance  or its affiliates has  any actual or  potential conflict
     of interest with the Portfolio or its interestholders. 
      
              The Nominating  Committee is compromised of four  Trustees who are
     not  "interested  persons" as  that  term  is defined  under  the  1940 Act
     ("noninterested Trustees").   The Committee has four-year  staggered terms,
     with  one member  rotating  off the  Committee  to be  replaced  by another
     noninterested  Trustee of the Portfolio.  Messrs. Hayes (Chairman), Reamer,
     Thorndike and Treynor are currently serving on the Committee.   The purpose
     of  the Committee is to recommend to the Board nominees for the position of
     noninterested Trustee and  to assure that at least  a majority of the Board
     of Trustees is independent of Eaton Vance and its affiliates.

              Messrs. Treynor  (Chairman) and  Dwight are  members of the  Audit
     Committee of  the  Board of  Trustees.    The Audit  Committee's  functions
     include  making recommendations to the  Trustees regarding the selection of
     the  independent certified  public  accountants,  and reviewing  with  such
     accountants and the  Treasurer of the Portfolio matters relative to trading
     and brokerage  policies and  practices, accounting  and auditing  practices
     and procedures, accounting  records, internal accounting controls,  and the
     functions performed by the custodian and transfer agent of the Portfolio.

              The fees and expenses of  those Trustees of the Portfolio who  are

                                        B - 19
<PAGE>






     not members of the  Eaton Vance  organization (the noninterested  Trustees)
     are paid by the Portfolio.  (The Trustees of the Portfolio  who are members
     of  the  Eaton   Vance  organization  receive  no  compensation   from  the
     Portfolio).    During   the  fiscal  year   ended  March   31,  1996,   the
     noninterested Trustees of  the Portfolio earned the  following compensation
     in their capacities  as Trustees of  the Portfolio and in  their capacities
     as trustees of the funds in the Eaton Vance fund complex(1):

                               Aggregate                Total Compensation
                               Compensation             from Portfolio
     Name                      from Portfolio           and Fund Complex
     ----                      --------------           ------------------

     Donald R.
     Dwight                    $1,526(2)                $137,500(4)

     Samuel L.
     Hayes, III                 1,636(3)                153,750(5)

     Norton H.
     Reamer                     1,613                   137,500

     John L.
     Thorndike                  1,699                   142,500

     Jack L.
     Treynor                    1,647                   142,500

     (1)      The  Eaton   Vance  fund   complex  consists  of   217  registered
              investment companies or series thereof.
     (2)      Includes $512 of deferred compensation.
     (3)      Includes $570 of deferred compensation.
     (4)      Includes $35,312 of deferred compensation.
     (5)      Includes $37,500 of deferred compensation.

              Trustees  of the  Portfolio who  are not  affiliated with  BMR may
     elect  to defer  receipt of all  or a  percentage of  their annual  fees in
     accordance with the  terms of a  Trustees Deferred  Compensation Plan  (the
     "Plan").   Under  the Plan,  an  eligible Trustee  may  elect to  have  his
     deferred fees invested by the Portfolio  in the shares of one or more funds
     in  the Eaton Vance  Family of Funds, and  the amount paid  to the Trustees
     under  the Plan  will be  determined  based upon  the  performance of  such
     investments.  Deferral of Trustees'  fees in accordance with the Plan  will
     have a  negligible effect on  the Portfolio's assets,  liabilities, and net
     income  per  share, and  will  not  obligate the  Portfolio  to  retain the
     services  of any Trustee  or obligate the  Portfolio to  pay any particular
     level  of compensation  to the  Trustee.   The  Portfolio does  not have  a
     retirement plan for its Trustees.  

              The  Portfolio's  Declaration  of  Trust  provides  that  it  will
     indemnify  its  Trustees  and officers  against  liabilities  and  expenses
     incurred in  connection  with litigation  in  which  they may  be  involved

                                        B - 20
<PAGE>






     because of  their offices with  the Portfolio,  unless, as to  liability to
     the  Portfolio  or its  investors,  it  is  finally  adjudicated that  they
     engaged in  willful misfeasance,  bad faith,  gross negligence or  reckless
     disregard of the duties  involved in their offices, or unless  with respect
     to  any other matter  it is  finally adjudicated that  they did  not act in
     good  faith in the  reasonable belief that their  actions were  in the best
     interests  of   the   Portfolio.   In  the   case   of   settlement,   such
     indemnification will  not be provided  unless it has  been determined  by a
     court or other body  approving the settlement or other disposition, or by a
     reasonable determination, based  upon a review of  readily available facts,
     by vote of a  majority of noninterested Trustees or in a written opinion of
     independent counsel, that  such officers or  Trustees have  not engaged  in
     wilful  misfeasance, bad  faith, gross negligence  or reckless disregard of
     their duties.

     Item 15.  Control Persons and Principal Holder of Securities
              As of  July 1,  1996, EV  Marathon Massachusetts  Limited Maturity
     Municipals Fund (the "Marathon Fund") and EV Classic  Massachusetts Limited
     Maturity Municipals Fund (the "Classic  Fund"), both series of  Eaton Vance
     Investment Trust, owned  approximately 94.5% and 5.5%, respectively, of the
     value of the outstanding interests  in the Portfolio. Because  the Marathon
     Fund controls  the Portfolio, it  may take actions without  the approval of
     any other  investor.  The Marathon  Fund  and the  Classic Fund  have  each
     informed  the Portfolio that  whenever it is  requested to  vote on matters
     pertaining to the  fundamental policies of  the Portfolio, it  will hold  a
     meeting  of shareholders  and  will  cast its  vote  as instructed  by  its
     shareholders. It  is anticipated that  any other investor  in the Portfolio
     which is an  investment company registered under the  1940 Act would follow
     the same or a similar  practice.  Eaton Vance Investment Trust  is an open-
     end management investment company organized  as a business trust  under the
     laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

     Item 16.  Investment Advisory and Other Services
              Investment Adviser.  The  Portfolio engages BMR as its  investment
     adviser  pursuant to  an Investment  Advisory Agreement  dated October  13,
     1992.  BMR  or  Eaton  Vance  acts  as  investment  adviser  to  investment
     companies and  various individual and  institutional clients with  combined
     assets under management of over $16 billion.

              BMR manages the  investments and affairs of  the Portfolio subject
     to  the supervision of the Portfolio's Board  of Trustees. BMR furnishes to
     the Portfolio  investment research,  advice and  supervision, furnishes  an
     investment program, and determines  what securities will be purchased, held
     or sold  by the  Portfolio and  what portion,  if any,  of the  Portfolio's
     assets will be held uninvested. The Investment Advisory  Agreement requires
     BMR  to  pay the  salaries and  fees of  all officers  and Trustees  of the
     Portfolio who are members of the BMR organization  and all personnel of BMR
     performing services  relating to  research and  investment activities.  The
     Portfolio is  responsible  for all  expenses  not  expressly stated  to  be
     payable by BMR under the Investment Advisory Agreement, including,  without
     implied  limitation,  (i)   expenses  of  maintaining  the   Portfolio  and
     continuing  its existence,  (ii) registration  of the  Portfolio  under the

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     1940 Act, (iii)  commissions, fees and  other expenses  connected with  the
     acquisition, holding and  disposition of securities and  other investments,
     (iv) auditing, accounting  and legal expenses, (v) taxes and interest, (vi)
     governmental  fees,  (vii)  expenses  of  issue,  sale  and  redemption  of
     interests in  the Portfolio, (viii) expenses  of registering and qualifying
     the Portfolio  and  interests in  the  Portfolio  under federal  and  state
     securities laws and  of preparing and printing  registration statements  or
     other  offering  statements   or  memoranda  for  such  purposes   and  for
     distributing the  same to investors,  and fees and  expenses of registering
     and  maintaining  registrations of  the  Portfolio and  of  the Portfolio's
     placement agent  as broker-dealer  or agent  under  state securities  laws,
     (ix) expenses  of  reports and  notices  to investors  and of  meetings  of
     investors  and  proxy solicitations  therefor, (x)  expenses of  reports to
     governmental  officers  and  commissions,  (xi) insurance  expenses,  (xii)
     association membership  dues, (xiii)  fees, expenses  and disbursements  of
     custodians  and subcustodians for all services  to the Portfolio (including
     without   limitation   safekeeping  for   funds,   securities   and   other
     investments,  keeping of books, accounts  and records, and determination of
     net asset values,  book capital account  balances and  tax capital  account
     balances),  (xiv) fees,  expenses  and  disbursements of  transfer  agents,
     dividend disbursing  agents, investor servicing  agents and registrars  for
     all services to the Portfolio, (xv) expenses for servicing the  accounts of
     investors, (xvi) any direct charges  to investors approved by  the Trustees
     of  the Portfolio,  (xvii)  compensation and  expenses  of Trustees  of the
     Portfolio who are  not members of  the BMR organization,  and (xviii)  such
     nonrecurring items as may arise, including  expenses incurred in connection
     with  litigation,  proceedings  and  claims  and  the  obligation   of  the
     Portfolio to indemnify its  Trustees, officers  and investors with  respect
     thereto.

              For a description of the compensation that the Portfolio pays  BMR
     under the Investment Advisory Agreement, see "Management of the  Portfolio"
     in  Part  A.   As  of  March 31,  1996, the  Portfolio  had  net assets  of
     $97,135,276.  For the fiscal year ended March 31, 1996, the Portfolio  paid
     BMR  advisory fees  of  $506,126 (equivalent  to  0.46% of  the Portfolio's
     average  daily net assets for such year).   For the fiscal year ended March
     31, 1995, the Portfolio  paid BMR advisory fees of $559,365  (equivalent to
     0.46% of the Portfolio's  average daily net assets for such year).  For the
     period from  the start of  business, May  3, 1993, to  March 31,  1994, the
     Portfolio  paid  BMR  advisory  fees  of  $400,279   (equivalent  to  0.45%
     (annualized) of the  Portfolio's average daily net assets for such period).
      

              The  Investment  Advisory Agreement  with  BMR  remains  in effect
     until February 28, 1997.   It may  be continued indefinitely thereafter  so
     long as such continuance is  approved at least annually (i) by the  vote of
     a majority of the Trustees of the Portfolio  who are not interested persons
     of the Portfolio or of BMR cast  in person at a meeting specifically called
     for  the purpose  of  voting on  such approval  and  (ii) by  the Board  of
     Trustees of  the Portfolio  or by  vote of  a majority  of the  outstanding
     voting securities of  the Portfolio.   The Agreement  may be terminated  at
     any time without  penalty on sixty (60)  days' written notice by  the Board

                                        B - 22
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     of Trustees of either party, or  by vote of the majority of the outstanding
     voting  securities  of  the Portfolio,  and  the  Agreement  will terminate
     automatically in the event of  its assignment.  The Agreement provides that
     BMR may render  services to others.   The Agreement also provides  that BMR
     shall  not  be  liable  for  any  loss  incurred  in  connection  with  the
     performance  of  its   duties,  or  action  taken  or  omitted  under  that
     Agreement,  in  the  absence  of  willful  misfeasance,  bad  faith,  gross
     negligence in the  performance of its duties  or by reason of  its reckless
     disregard  of its  obligations  and duties  thereunder,  or for  any losses
     sustained in the  acquisition, holding or  disposition of  any security  or
     other investment.

              BMR  is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Eaton Vance.  Eaton Vance and
     EV are  both wholly-owned  subsidiaries of EVC.   BMR  and Eaton Vance  are
     both Massachusetts business trusts,  and EV is the trustee of BMR and Eaton
     Vance.   The Directors of EV  are Landon T.  Clay, H. Day  Brigham, Jr., M.
     Dozier Gardner,  James  B.  Hawkes,  and  Benjamin A.  Rowland,  Jr.    The
     Directors of EVC consist of the same persons and John G.L. Cabot and  Ralph
     Z. Sorenson.  Mr. Clay is chairman  and Mr. Gardner is president and  chief
     executive officer  of EVC, BMR, Eaton Vance and EV.   All of the issued and
     outstanding shares  of Eaton  Vance and EV  are owned by  EVC.  All  of the
     issued and outstanding shares of BMR are  owned by Eaton Vance.  All shares
     of the  outstanding Voting Common  Stock of EVC  are deposited in a  Voting
     Trust,  which expires on  December 31, 1996,  the Voting  Trustees of which
     are  Messrs.  Clay, Brigham,  Gardner,  Hawkes  and  Rowland.   The  Voting
     Trustees have unrestricted voting rights  for the election of  Directors of
     EVC.   All  of the  outstanding voting  trust  receipts issued  under  said
     Voting  Trust are owned by  certain of the officers  of BMR and Eaton Vance
     who are also officers and  Directors of EVC and  EV.  As of June 30,  1996,
     Messrs. Clay,  Gardner  and Hawkes  each  owned 24%  of  such voting  trust
     receipts, and Messrs.  Rowland and Brigham owned 15% and 13%, respectively,
     of such  voting trust receipts.   Messrs. Hawkes  and Otis are officers  or
     Trustees of the Portfolio and are members of the EVC,  BMR, Eaton Vance and
     EV organizations.  Messrs.  Fetter, Hender, MacIntosh, Murphy, O'Connor and
     Woodbury  and Ms.  Sanders  are officers  of  the  Portfolio and  are  also
     members  of the BMR,  Eaton Vance and EV  organizations.   BMR will receive
     the fees paid under the Investment Advisory Agreement.

              EVC owns all of the stock of Energex Energy  Corporation, which is
     engaged in oil  and gas exploration  and development.   In addition,  Eaton
     Vance  owns  all of  the  stock of  Northeast  Properties,  Inc., which  is
     engaged  in real  estate investment.   EVC  also  owns 24%  of the  Class A
     shares  of   Lloyd  George  Management   (B.V.I.)  Limited,  a   registered
     investment adviser.  EVC owns all of the  stock of Fulcrum Management, Inc.
     and  MinVen  Inc., which  are  engaged  in  precious  metal mining  venture
     investment and management.   EVC, BMR,  Eaton Vance and  EV may also  enter
     into other businesses.

              EVC and its affiliates and their officers and employees from  time
     to time  have transactions with  various banks, including  the custodian of
     the Portfolio,  Investors  Bank &  Trust  Company.   It  is  Eaton  Vance's
     opinion that  the terms and  conditions of such  transactions were  not and

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     will not  be  influenced  by  existing  or  potential  custodial  or  other
     relationships between the Portfolio and such banks.

              Custodian.   Investors Bank  &  Trust  Company ("IBT"),  89  South
     Street, Boston,  Massachusetts, acts as  custodian for the  Portfolio.  IBT
     has  the custody of  all of  the Portfolio's assets,  maintains the general
     ledger  of  the Portfolio,  and  computes  the  daily  net asset  value  of
     interests in  the Portfolio.   In such  capacity it  attends to details  in
     connection with the sale, exchange,  substitution or transfer of,  or other
     dealings  with, the  Portfolio's investments,  receives  and disburses  all
     funds,  and  performs  various other  ministerial  duties  upon  receipt of
     proper  instructions  from the  Portfolio.    IBT  charges  fees which  are
     competitive within the industry.  A portion of the fee relates to  custody,
     bookkeeping and  valuation  services and  is  based  upon a  percentage  of
     Portfolio net assets and  a portion of the fee relates to activity charges,
     primarily the  number  of portfolio  transactions.    These fees  are  then
     reduced by  a credit for  cash balances of  the Portfolio at the  custodian
     equal to 75% of the 91-day, U.S. Treasury Bill auction rate applied to  the
     Portfolio's  average daily  collected  balances for  the  week.   Landon T.
     Clay,  a Director  of EVC  and an  officer,  Trustee or  Director of  other
     entities in the  Eaton Vance organization,  owns approximately  13% of  the
     voting  stock of  Investors Financial  Services Corp.,  the holding company
     parent of IBT.  Management believes that such  ownership does not create an
     affiliated  person relationship  between the  Portfolio  and IBT  under the
     1940 Act. 

              Independent Certified Public Accountants.   Deloitte & Touche LLP,
     125 Summer  Street, Boston,  Massachusetts, are  the independent  certified
     public accountants of the Portfolio,  providing audit services, tax  return
     preparation,  and   assistance  and  consultation   with  respect  to   the
     preparation of filings with the Commission.

     Item 17.  Brokerage Allocation and Other Practices
              Decisions   concerning   the   execution  of   portfolio  security
     transactions,  including the  selection  of the  market  and the  executing
     firm,  are made  by  BMR.   BMR is  also responsible  for the  execution of
     transactions for all other accounts managed by it.

              BMR places  the portfolio  security transactions of  the Portfolio
     and  of all other  accounts managed  by it  for execution with  many firms.
     BMR  uses  its best  efforts  to  obtain  execution  of portfolio  security
     transactions at  prices  that are  advantageous  to  the Portfolio  and  at
     reasonably competitive  spreads or  (when a disclosed  commission is  being
     charged)  at reasonably  competitive  commission rates.    In seeking  such
     execution, BMR will  use its  best judgment in  evaluating the  terms of  a
     transaction  and  will  give  consideration  to  various  relevant  factors
     including, without  limitation, the size  and type of  the transaction, the
     nature and character of the  market for the security,  the confidentiality,
     speed  and certainty  of effective execution  required for the transaction,
     the general  execution and operational capabilities  of the executing firm,
     the  reputation, reliability,  experience and  financial  condition of  the
     firm, the value and  quality of the services  rendered by the firm  in this

                                        B - 24
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     and  other  transactions,  and   the  reasonableness   of  the  spread   or
     commission, if  any.   Municipal  obligations  purchased  and sold  by  the
     Portfolio are  generally traded  in the  over-the-counter market  on a  net
     basis (i.e.,  without commission) through  broker-dealers and banks  acting
     for their  own  account  rather  than  as  brokers,  or  otherwise  involve
     transactions directly  with the  issuer of  such obligations.   Such  firms
     attempt to profit from  such transactions  by buying at  the bid price  and
     selling at the higher  asked price of the market for such  obligations, and
     the difference between the bid and asked  prices is customarily referred to
     as the spread.  The Portfolio may also  purchase municipal obligations from
     underwriters,  the  cost  of  which   may  include  undisclosed  fees   and
     concessions to  the  underwriters.    While  it  is  anticipated  that  the
     Portfolio  will not  pay significant  brokerage  commissions in  connection
     with such portfolio  security transactions, on occasion it may be necessary
     or  appropriate to  purchase  or sell  a security  through  a broker  on an
     agency  basis,  in   which  case  the  Portfolio  will  incur  a  brokerage
     commission.    Although  spreads  or  commissions   on  portfolio  security
     transactions will, in  the judgment of  BMR, be  reasonable in relation  to
     the value of  the services provided, spreads or commissions exceeding those
     that another firm might  charge may be paid  to firms who were selected  to
     execute transactions on  behalf of the  Portfolio and  BMR's other  clients
     for providing brokerage and research services to BMR.

              As authorized in  Section 28(e) of the Securities Exchange  Act of
     1934, a broker or dealer who executes a portfolio transaction on behalf  of
     the Portfolio may  receive a commission that is in  excess of the amount of
     commission another broker or dealer  would have charged for  effecting that
     transaction if  BMR  determines in  good  faith  that such  commission  was
     reasonable in  relation to the value of the brokerage and research services
     provided.   This determination  may be  made either  on the  basis of  that
     particular  transaction or  on the  basis of  overall responsibilities that
     BMR  and  its  affiliates  have  for  accounts  over  which  they  exercise
     investment discretion.   In  making any  such determination,  BMR will  not
     attempt to place  a specific  dollar value  on the  brokerage and  research
     services provided or  to determine what portion of the commission should be
     related to  such services.   Brokerage  and research  services may  include
     advice as  to the value  of securities, the  advisability of investing  in,
     purchasing  or selling  securities, and the  availability of  securities or
     purchasers  or  sellers  of securities;  furnishing  analyses  and  reports
     concerning  issuers, industries,  securities, economic  factors and trends,
     portfolio strategy  and the performance  of accounts; effecting  securities
     transactions  and   performing  functions   incidental  thereto   (such  as
     clearance and settlement); and the  "Research Services" referred to  in the
     next paragraph.

              It  is a common  practice of the investment  advisory industry and
     of the advisers of investment  companies, institutions and other  investors
     to receive research, statistical and quotation  services, data, information
     and other services,  products and materials  that assist  such advisers  in
     the performance of their investment  responsibilities ("Research Services")
     from  broker-dealer  firms  that execute  portfolio  transactions  for  the
     clients  of  such  advisers  and   from  third  parties  with   which  such

                                        B - 25
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     broker-dealers  have arrangements.    Consistent  with this  practice,  BMR
     receives  Research Services  from many broker-dealer  firms with  which BMR
     places  the Portfolio's  transactions  and from  third  parties with  which
     these broker-dealers  have arrangements.   These Research Services  include
     such matters as general economic  and market reviews, industry  and company
     reviews,   evaluations   of  securities   and   portfolio   strategies  and
     transactions and recommendations  as to the purchase and sale of securities
     and   other  portfolio   transactions,   financial,  industry   and   trade
     publications,  news   and  information  services,   pricing  and  quotation
     equipment and services, and research oriented  computer hardware, software,
     data bases and  services.  Any particular Research Service obtained through
     a  broker-dealer may  be used  by  BMR in  connection with  client accounts
     other than those  accounts that pay commissions to such broker-dealer.  Any
     such  Research Service  may  be  broadly useful  and  of  value to  BMR  in
     rendering investment advisory services to  all or a significant  portion of
     its clients, or may be  relevant and useful for the management  of only one
     client's account or of  only a few clients' accounts, or may  be useful for
     the   management  of  merely  a   segment  of  certain  clients'  accounts,
     regardless of whether any  such account or accounts paid commissions to the
     broker-dealer  through  which  such Research  Service  was  obtained.   The
     advisory  fee paid  by the  Portfolio is  not reduced because  BMR receives
     such  Research Services.    BMR evaluates  the nature  and  quality of  the
     various  Research   Services  obtained  through   broker-dealer  firms  and
     attempts to allocate  sufficient commissions to  such firms  to ensure  the
     continued receipt  of Research Services that BMR believes  are useful or of
     value to it in rendering investment advisory services to its clients.

              Subject to the requirement that BMR shall use its  best efforts to
     seek and  execute portfolio  security transactions  at advantageous  prices
     and  at  reasonably  competitive  spreads  or   commission  rates,  BMR  is
     authorized to  consider as a factor  in the selection of  any broker-dealer
     firm with whom portfolio orders may be  placed the fact that such firm  has
     sold  or is selling  shares of any investment  company sponsored  by BMR or
     Eaton Vance.  This  policy is not inconsistent with a  rule of the National
     Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. ("NASD"),  which rule provides that
     no  firm  that  is  a  member of  the  NASD  shall  favor  or disfavor  the
     distribution of shares  of any particular  investment company  or group  of
     investment companies  on the  basis of  brokerage  commissions received  or
     expected by such firm from any source.

              Municipal  obligations considered as investments for the Portfolio
     may also  be appropriate for  other investment accounts  managed by BMR  or
     its affiliates.   BMR will attempt to allocate equitably portfolio security
     transactions  among  the   Portfolio  and  the  portfolios  of   its  other
     investment accounts  purchasing  municipal obligations  whenever  decisions
     are made to purchase  or sell securities by  the Portfolio and one or  more
     of such other  accounts simultaneously.   In making  such allocations,  the
     main factors to be considered  are the respective investment  objectives of
     the  Portfolio and  such  other accounts,  the  relative size  of portfolio
     holdings of the  same or comparable  securities, the  availability of  cash
     for investment by the Portfolio  and such accounts, the size  of investment
     commitments  generally held  by  the Portfolio  and  such accounts  and the

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     opinions  of the persons  responsible for  recommending investments  to the
     Portfolio  and  such  accounts.     While  this  procedure  could   have  a
     detrimental effect on the  price or amount of  the securities available  to
     the Portfolio  from time to time, it is  the opinion of the Trustees of the
     Portfolio that the  benefits available  from the BMR  organization outweigh
     any   disadvantage  that   may   arise   from  exposure   to   simultaneous
     transactions.   For the  fiscal year  ended March  31, 1996,  the Portfolio
     paid brokerage  commissions of  $7,995 on  portfolio security  transactions
     aggregating  $71,608,464 to firms which  provided some research services to
     BMR or its  affiliates (although many of such  firms may have been selected
     in  any  particular  transaction  primarily  because   of  their  execution
     capabilities).   For the  fiscal year  ended March  31, 1995,  and for  the
     period  from the start  of business,  May 3, 1993,  to March 31,  1994, the
     Portfolio paid no brokerage commissions on portfolio transactions.

     Item 18.  Capital Stock and Other Securities
              Under  the  Portfolio's Declaration  of  Trust,  the  Trustees are
     authorized to  issue interests in the Portfolio.  Investors are entitled to
     participate pro rata  in distributions of  taxable income,  loss, gain  and
     credit of the Portfolio.   Upon dissolution of the Portfolio,  the Trustees
     shall liquidate the  assets of the Portfolio  and apply and distribute  the
     proceeds thereof as follows:  (a) first,  to the payment  of all debts  and
     obligations  of   the  Portfolio  to   third  parties  including,   without
     limitation, the retirement  of outstanding debt, including any debt owed to
     holders of  record  of interests  in  the  Portfolio ("Holders")  or  their
     affiliates, and the expenses  of liquidation, and to the setting up  of any
     reserves  for contingencies  which  may be  necessary;  and (b)  second, in
     accordance with the  Holders' positive Book Capital  Account balances after
     adjusting  Book Capital  Accounts for certain  allocations provided  in the
     Declaration of Trust and in  accordance with the requirements  described in
     Treasury Regulations  Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(ii)(b)(2).  Notwithstanding the
     foregoing, if the Trustees shall  determine that an immediate sale of  part
     or  all  of the  assets of  the  Portfolio would  cause undue  loss  to the
     Holders,  the Trustees,  in order  to  avoid such  loss, may,  after having
     given notification  to all the Holders,  to the extent  not then prohibited
     by the  law of any  jurisdiction in which the  Portfolio is then  formed or
     qualified  and applicable in the circumstances, either defer liquidation of
     and withhold  from distribution  for a  reasonable time  any assets of  the
     Portfolio  except those  necessary  to satisfy  the  Portfolio's debts  and
     obligations  or  distribute  the  Portfolio's  assets  to  the  Holders  in
     liquidation.  Interests  in the  Portfolio have no  preference, preemptive,
     conversion or similar rights and  are fully paid and  nonassessable, except
     as set forth below.   Interests  in the Portfolio  may not be  transferred.
     Certificates  representing an  investor's  interest  in the  Portfolio  are
     issued only upon the written request of a Holder.

              Each Holder  is entitled to  vote in  proportion to the amount  of
     its  interest in  the Portfolio.   Holders  do not  have cumulative  voting
     rights.   The Portfolio  is not  required and  has no current  intention to
     hold annual meetings  of Holders, but  the Portfolio will hold  meetings of
     Holders  when in the judgment  of the Portfolio's  Trustees it is necessary
     or desirable  to submit matters  to a vote  of Holders at  a meeting.   Any

                                        B - 27
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     action which  may be  taken by Holders  may be taken  without a  meeting if
     Holders holding more  than 50% of all  interests entitled to vote  (or such
     larger proportion thereof as shall  be required by any express provision of
     the  Declaration of  Trust  of  the Portfolio)  consent  to the  action  in
     writing  and  the  consents  are filed  with  the  records  of meetings  of
     Holders.

              The Portfolio's  Declaration of Trust  may be amended  by vote  of
     Holders of  more than 50% of all interests in  the Portfolio at any meeting
     of Holders or by an instrument in writing without a meeting, executed  by a
     majority of the Trustees and consented  to by the Holders of more  than 50%
     of  all interests.   The Trustees may also  amend the  Declaration of Trust
     (without the vote or consent of Holders) to change the Portfolio's name  or
     the state or  other jurisdiction whose law  shall be the governing  law, to
     supply  any   omission  or  cure,  correct  or  supplement  any  ambiguous,
     defective or inconsistent  provision, to conform the  Declaration of  Trust
     to applicable  federal law  or regulations  or to  the requirements  of the
     Code, or to  change, modify or  rescind any  provision, provided that  such
     change, modification  or rescission  is determined  by the  Trustees to  be
     necessary or  appropriate and not  to have a  materially adverse effect  on
     the financial interests  of the Holders.   No amendment of the  Declaration
     of Trust  which  would  change any  rights  with  respect to  any  Holder's
     interest  in the  Portfolio  by reducing  the  amount payable  thereon upon
     liquidation of the Portfolio may be made,  except with the vote or  consent
     of  the  Holders of  two-thirds  of  all  interests.    References  in  the
     Declaration of  Trust  and  in  Part  A  or this  Part  B  to  a  specified
     percentage of,  or fraction of,  interests in the  Portfolio, means Holders
     whose  combined Book  Capital  Account  balances represent  such  specified
     percentage or  fraction of  the combined  Book Capital  Account balance  of
     all, or a specified group of, Holders.

              The   Portfolio  may   merge   or  consolidate   with   any  other
     corporation,  association,  trust or  other  organization  or  may sell  or
     exchange  all  or substantially  all  of  its assets  upon  such  terms and
     conditions  and  for such  consideration  when  and  as  authorized by  the
     Holders of  (a) 67% or  more of the interests  in the Portfolio  present or
     represented at the meeting of Holders,  if Holders of more than 50%  of all
     interests are present or represented by proxy, or (b)  more than 50% of all
     interests, whichever is less.  The Portfolio  may be terminated (i) by  the
     affirmative  vote of Holders of  not less than  two-thirds of all interests
     at  any meeting  of  Holders  or by  an  instrument  in writing  without  a
     meeting,  executed by  a  majority  of the  Trustees  and consented  to  by
     Holders of  not less  than  two-thirds of  all interests,  or (ii)  by  the
     Trustees by written notice to the Holders.

              In  accordance with the Declaration of  Trust, there normally will
     be  no meetings  of  the investors  for  the purpose  of  electing Trustees
     unless and until such time as less  than a majority of the Trustees holding
     office  have been elected by investors.   In such an event, the Trustees of
     the  Portfolio  then in  office  will call  an investors'  meeting  for the
     election of Trustees.  Except  for the foregoing circumstances,  and unless
     removed  by action  of  the investors  in  accordance with  the Portfolio's

                                        B - 28
<PAGE>






     Declaration of Trust, the  Trustees shall continue  to hold office and  may
     appoint successor Trustees.

              The Declaration of Trust provides  that no person shall serve as a
     Trustee if  investors holding two-thirds of  the outstanding interests have
     removed  him from that  office either  by a written  declaration filed with
     the Portfolio's custodian or  by votes  cast at a  meeting called for  that
     purpose.   The Declaration  of Trust  further provides  that under  certain
     circumstances, the  investors may call  a meeting to  remove a Trustee  and
     that the Portfolio  is required to provide assistance in communicating with
     investors about such a meeting.

              The Portfolio is organized as a trust under the  laws of the State
     of New  York.  Investors  in the Portfolio  will be held personally  liable
     for its obligations  and liabilities, subject, however,  to indemnification
     by  the Portfolio in  the event that  there is  imposed upon an  investor a
     greater portion  of the liabilities  and obligations of  the Portfolio than
     its proportionate  interest in  the Portfolio.   The  Portfolio intends  to
     maintain fidelity  and errors and  omissions  insurance  deemed adequate by
     the Trustees.  Therefore, the risk of  an investor incurring financial loss
     on account of investor liability is limited to  circumstances in which both
     inadequate insurance exists and the Portfolio itself is unable to  meet its
     obligations.

              The Declaration  of Trust further provides that obligations of the
     Portfolio are not binding upon the Trustees  individually but only upon the
     property of the Portfolio and that  the Trustees will not be liable for any
     action or failure to act, but nothing in the Declaration of Trust  protects
     a Trustee against any  liability to which he would otherwise be  subject by
     reason of  willful misfeasance,  bad faith,  gross negligence, or  reckless
     disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of his office.

     Item 19.  Purchase, Redemption and Pricing of Securities
              Interests in  the Portfolio are issued solely in private placement
     transactions that do not involve  any "public offering" within  the meaning
     of Section 4(2) of the Securities Act  of 1933. See "Purchase of  Interests
     in the Portfolio" and "Redemption or Decrease of Interest" in Part A.

              The Portfolio's net asset value is determined by Investors Bank  &
     Trust  Company (as custodian  and agent  for the  Portfolio) in  the manner
     described  in Part A.   The net asset value  is computed by subtracting the
     liabilities of the Portfolio  from the value of its total assets.  Inasmuch
     as the market for municipal obligations is a dealer market with no  central
     trading location  or continuous  quotation system,  it is  not feasible  to
     obtain last transaction prices for  most municipal obligations held  by the
     Portfolio,  and   such  obligations,   including  those   purchased  on   a
     when-issued  basis, will  normally  be valued  on  the basis  of valuations
     furnished by a pricing service.  The  pricing service uses information with
     respect  to  transactions in  bonds, quotations  from bond  dealers, market
     transactions  in  comparable  securities,   various  relationships  between
     securities,  and  yield  to   maturity  in  determining  value.     Taxable
     obligations for which price  quotations are readily available normally will

                                        B - 29
<PAGE>






     be valued at  the mean between the  latest available bid and  asked prices.
     Open  futures positions on  debt securities are  valued at  the most recent
     settlement prices unless such  price does not reflect the fair value of the
     contract, in  which  case  the  positions  will be  valued  by  or  at  the
     direction of  the Trustees of  the Portfolio.   Other assets are valued  at
     fair value using  methods determined in good  faith by or at  the direction
     of the Trustees.  

     Item 20.  Tax Status
              The Portfolio has  been advised by tax counsel that,  provided the
     Portfolio is operated at all times during its existence in  accordance with
     certain organizational and  operational documents, the Portfolio  should be
     classified  as a partnership  under the Internal  Revenue Code  of 1986, as
     amended (the "Code"), and it  should not be a "publicly traded partnership"
     within  the  meaning of  Section  7704  of  the Code.    Consequently,  the
     Portfolio does  not expect  that it  will be  required to  pay any  federal
     income  tax,  and a  Holder  will  be  required  to take  into  account  in
     determining its federal income tax  liability its share of  the Portfolio's
     income, gains, losses, deductions and tax preference items.

              Under Subchapter K of the Code,  a partnership is considered to be
     either an aggregate of its members or a separate entity depending upon  the
     factual  and  legal  context  in  which  the  question  arises.  Under  the
     aggregate  approach, each partner  is treated as  an owner  of an undivided
     interest  in partnership assets and operations.  Under the entity approach,
     the partnership is treated  as a separate entity in which partners  have no
     direct interest  in partnership  assets and  operations. The  Portfolio has
     been  advised by tax  counsel that, in the  case of a Holder  that seeks to
     qualify as a  regulated investment company (a"RIC"), the aggregate approach
     should apply, and  each such Holder should  accordingly be deemed to  own a
     proportionate share  of each  of  the assets  of the  Portfolio and  to  be
     entitled to the  gross income of the  Portfolio attributable to that  share
     for purposes  of all requirements  of Sections 851(b) and  852(b)(5) of the
     Code. Further, the  Portfolio has  been advised  by tax  counsel that  each
     Holder  that  seeks to  qualify  as a  RIC  should be  deemed  to  hold its
     proportionate share of  the Portfolio's assets for the period the Portfolio
     has held the assets  or for the period the  Holder has been an  investor in
     the  Portfolio, whichever  is shorter. Investors  should consult  their tax
     advisers regarding whether  the entity or the aggregate approach applies to
     their investment in the Portfolio  in light of their particular  tax status
     and any special tax rules applicable to them.

              In order to  enable a  Holder in the  Portfolio that  is otherwise
     eligible  to  qualify  as  a  RIC, the  Portfolio  intends  to  satisfy the
     requirements of Subchapter M  of the Code relating to sources of income and
     diversification of assets as if they  were applicable to the Portfolio  and
     to allocate and  permit withdrawals in a  manner that will enable  a Holder
     which is  a RIC  to comply  with those  requirements.   The Portfolio  will
     allocate at  least annually  to each Holder  its distributive share  of the
     Portfolio's  net taxable  (if  any) and  tax-exempt investment  income, net
     realized capital  gains,  and  any  other  items  of  income,  gain,  loss,
     deduction or  credit in  a  manner intended  to comply  with the  Code  and

                                        B - 30
<PAGE>






     applicable  Treasury regulations.   Tax counsel  has advised  the Portfolio
     that the Portfolio's  allocations of taxable  income and  loss should  have
     "economic effect" under applicable Treasury regulations.

              To the  extent the  cash  proceeds of  any withdrawal  (or,  under
     certain circumstances,  such  proceeds plus  the  value of  any  marketable
     securities  distributed  to  an  investor)  ("liquid  proceeds")  exceed  a
     Holder's  adjusted basis of his interest in  the Portfolio, the Holder will
     generally  realize a  gain for  federal  income tax  purposes.  If, upon  a
     complete  withdrawal (redemption  of  the  entire interest),  the  Holder's
     adjusted basis  of  his  interest  exceeds  the  liquid  proceeds  of  such
     withdrawal, the Holder  will generally realize  a loss  for federal  income
     tax purposes.   The tax consequences  of a withdrawal  of property (instead
     of or in addition to liquid  proceeds) will be different and will depend on
     the specific  factual  circumstances.   A  Holder's  adjusted basis  of  an
     interest  in the  Portfolio  will generally  be  the aggregate  prices paid
     therefor  (including the  adjusted basis  of contributed  property and  any
     gain recognized  on such  contribution), increased  by the  amounts of  the
     Holder's distributive share  of items of income  (including interest income
     exempt from  federal income tax)  and realized net  gain of the  Portfolio,
     and reduced,  but  not below  zero,  by (i)  the  amounts of  the  Holder's
     distributive share of  items of Portfolio loss, and  (ii) the amount of any
     cash distributions (including distributions of interest  income exempt from
     federal  income   tax  and  cash  distributions  on  withdrawals  from  the
     Portfolio) and the basis  to the  Holder of any  property received by  such
     Holder  other than  in  liquidation, and  (iii)  the Holder's  distributive
     share   of  the   Portfolio's  nondeductible   expenditures   not  properly
     chargeable to capital account.  Increases or decreases in a Holder's  share
     of the Portfolio's liabilities may  also result in corresponding  increases
     or  decreases in such adjusted basis.   Distributions of liquid proceeds in
     excess  of a  Holder's adjusted  basis  in its  interest  in the  Portfolio
     immediately prior thereto  generally will result in the recognition of gain
     to the Holder in the amount of such excess.

              The Portfolio  may acquire zero coupon  or other securities issued
     with  original issue  discount.   As the  holder of  those  securities, the
     Portfolio must account for the  original issue discount (even  on municipal
     securities) that  accrues on the  securities during the  taxable year, even
     if it receives no corresponding payment on the securities during the  year.
     Because each  Holder that is  a RIC annually  must distribute substantially
     all of its  investment company taxable  income and  net tax-exempt  income,
     including any original issue  discount, to qualify for treatment as  a RIC,
     any such Holder  may be required in  a particular year to distribute  as an
     "exempt-interest  dividend"  an  amount  that  is  greater  than  its  pro-
     portionate  share  of the  total  amount  of  cash  the Portfolio  actually
     receives.  Those  distributions will be made from the Holder's cash assets,
     if any, or from  its proportionate share of the Portfolio's cash  assets or
     the proceeds  of sales of  the Portfolio's securities,  if necessary.   The
     Portfolio  may realize  capital  gains or  losses  from those  sales, which
     would increase or  decrease the  investment company  taxable income  and/or
     net capital gain (the  excess of net long-term capital gain over net short-
     term capital loss) of a Holder that is a RIC.   In addition, any such gains

                                        B - 31
<PAGE>






     may be realized  on the disposition of securities  held for less than three
     months.   Because of the  Short-Short Limitation (defined  below), any such
     gains would reduce  the Portfolio's ability  to sell  other securities,  or
     options  or futures  contracts, held  for less  than three  months that  it
     might wish to sell in the ordinary course of its portfolio management.

              Investments  in  lower rated  or  unrated  securities  may present
     special  tax issues  for the  Portfolio and  hence  to an  investor in  the
     Portfolio to the extent  actual or anticipated defaults may be  more likely
     with respect to  such securities.  Tax  rules are not entirely  clear about
     issues such  as when the  Portfolio may cease to  accrue interest, original
     issue  discount, or market discount; when and to what extent deductions may
     be taken  for bad debts or  worthless securities; how  payments received on
     obligations in default  should be  allocated between principal  and income;
     and whether  exchanges  of  debt  obligations  in  a  workout  context  are
     taxable.

              In order  for a Holder that  is a  RIC to be  entitled to pay  the
     tax-exempt   interest   income   the   Portfolio   allocates   to   it   as
     exempt-interest  dividends to  its shareholders,  the  Holder must  satisfy
     certain requirements, including  the requirement that, at the close of each
     quarter  of its taxable year, at least 50% of the value of its total assets
     consists of  obligations the  interest on  which is  excludable from  gross
     income  under  Section  103(a) of  the  Code.    The  Portfolio intends  to
     concentrate its  investments in  such tax-exempt obligations  to an  extent
     that will enable a RIC that invests its  investable assets in the Portfolio
     to satisfy this 50% requirement.  

              Interest on  certain  municipal obligations  is treated  as a  tax
     preference  item  for purposes  of  the  federal alternative  minimum  tax.
     Holders that are required  to file federal income tax returns  are required
     to report tax-exempt  interest allocated to them  by the Portfolio on  such
     returns.

              From time  to time proposals have  been introduced before Congress
     for the  purpose  of restricting  or  eliminating  the federal  income  tax
     exemption for  interest on certain  types of municipal  obligations, and it
     can be  expected that  similar proposals may  be introduced in  the future.
     Under  federal tax  legislation  enacted in  1986,  the federal  income tax
     exemption for interest on  certain municipal obligations was eliminated  or
     restricted.    As  a  result  of  such  legislation,  the  availability  of
     municipal obligations for investment by the Portfolio  and the value of the
     Portfolio may be affected.

              In  the course  of managing  its  investments,  the Portfolio  may
     realize some  short-term and long-term  capital gains (and/or  losses) as a
     result of market  transactions, including sales of portfolio securities and
     rights  to when-issued  securities and  options  and futures  transactions.
     The  Portfolio  may also  realize  taxable income  from  certain short-term
     taxable  obligations,  securities  loans,  a  portion   of  original  issue
     discount  with respect to certain  stripped municipal  obligations or their
     stripped  coupons and  certain  realized  accrued  market  discount.    Any

                                        B - 32
<PAGE>






     allocations  of such capital gains or other taxable income to Holders would
     be  taxable to Holders  that are subject to  tax.  However,  it is expected
     that such  amounts, if any, would normally be  insubstantial in relation to
     the tax-exempt interest earned by the Portfolio.

              The Portfolio's  transactions  in  options and  futures  contracts
     will be subject to  special tax  rules that may  affect the amount,  timing
     and  character  of  its  items of  income,  gain  or  loss  and  hence  the
     allocations of such  items to investors.   For  example, certain  positions
     held by  the Portfolio on the  last business day of  each taxable year will
     be marked  to market (i.e., treated as if  closed out on such day), and any
     resulting gain or loss will generally be  treated as 60% long-term and  40%
     short-term capital gain or loss.   Certain positions held by the  Portfolio
     that substantially  diminish the Portfolio's  risk of loss  with respect to
     other  positions in  its portfolio  may  constitute "straddles,"  which are
     subject  to  tax  rules  that  may  cause  deferral  of  Portfolio  losses,
     adjustments in the  holding periods of Portfolio securities  and conversion
     of short-term into long-term capital losses.  

              Income from transactions in  options and futures contracts derived
     by the Portfolio  with respect to its  business of investing in  securities
     will qualify as permissible income for its Holders that are RICs under  the
     requirement that  at least 90%  of a RIC's  gross income each taxable  year
     consist of  specified types of  income.   However, income  from the  dispo-
     sition by  the Portfolio  of options and  futures contracts  held for  less
     than three  months will be subject  to the requirement applicable  to those
     Holders  that less  than  30% of  a RIC's  gross  income each  taxable year
     consist of certain short-term gains ("Short-Short Limitation").

              If the  Portfolio satisfies certain requirements,  any increase in
     value of a position that is part of a  "designated hedge" will be offset by
     any decrease in value (whether  realized or not) of the offsetting  hedging
     position  during  the period  of  the  hedge  for  purposes of  determining
     whether  the  Holders that  are  RICs satisfy  the  Short-Short Limitation.
     Thus,  only the  net  gain  (if any)  from  the  designated hedge  will  be
     included in gross income  for purposes of that  limitation.  The  Portfolio
     will consider whether it should seek to qualify for this treatment for  its
     hedging transactions.  To the extent the Portfolio  does not so qualify, it
     may  be forced to  defer the closing out  of options  and futures contracts
     beyond the time when it otherwise  would be advantageous to do so, in order
     for Holders that are RICs to continue to qualify as such.

              Interest on indebtedness incurred  or continued by an investor  to
     purchase or carry an  investment in the Portfolio is not deductible  to the
     extent it is  deemed attributable to the investor's investment, through the
     Portfolio,  in   tax-exempt  obligations.     Further,   persons  who   are
     "substantial  users"  (or  persons  related  to   "substantial  users")  of
     facilities financed  by industrial  development or  private activity  bonds
     should  consult  their  tax advisers  before  investing  in the  Portfolio.
     "Substantial  user"  is  defined  in  applicable  Treasury  regulations  to
     include a "non-exempt  person" who regularly  uses in  trade or business  a
     part of a  facility financed from  the proceeds  of industrial  development

                                        B - 33
<PAGE>






     bonds and would  likely be interpreted  to include  private activity  bonds
     issued to finance similar facilities.

              An entity  that is treated  as a partnership under  the Code, such
     as the  Portfolio, is  generally treated as  a partnership under  state and
     local  tax   laws,   but  certain   states   may  have   different   entity
     classification criteria  and may  therefore reach  a different  conclusion.
     Entities that  are classified as  partnerships are not  treated as separate
     taxable entities  under most state and local tax laws,  and the income of a
     partnership is considered  to be income of  partners both in timing  and in
     character.    The exemption  of  interest  income  for  federal income  tax
     purposes does not necessarily  result in exemption under the  income or tax
     laws of any  state or  local taxing  authority.   The laws  of the  various
     states and local taxing  authorities vary with respect  to the taxation  of
     such interest income,  as well as to  the status of a  partnership interest
     under state  and local tax  laws, and  each holder  of an  interest in  the
     Portfolio is advised to consult his own tax adviser.

              The foregoing  discussion does not address  the special tax  rules
     applicable to  certain classes of investors,  such as  tax-exempt entities,
     insurance companies and  financial institutions.  Investors  should consult
     their own tax advisers with respect to  special tax rules that may apply in
     their particular  situations, as well  as the  state, local or  foreign tax
     consequences of investing in the Portfolio.

     Item 21.  Underwriters
              The   placement   agent  for   the   Portfolio   is   Eaton  Vance
     Distributors, Inc.,  which receives  no  compensation for  serving in  this
     capacity.  Investment companies,  common  and  commingled trust  funds  and
     similar  organizations  and   entities  may  continuously  invest   in  the
     Portfolio.

     Item 22.  Calculation of Performance Data
              Not applicable.

     Item 23.  Financial Statements
              The following  audited financial  statements of the  Portfolio are
     incorporated  by reference into  this Part B and  have been so incorporated
     in  reliance  upon the  report  of  Deloitte  and  Touche LLP,  independent
     certified public accountants, as experts in accounting and auditing.

              Portfolio of Investments as of March 31, 1996
              Statement of Assets and Liabilities as of March 31, 1996
              Statement of Operations for the fiscal year ended March 31, 1996
              Statement  of Changes  in Net  Assets for  the fiscal  years ended
              March 31, 1996 and 1995 
              Supplementary Data for  the fiscal years ended March 31,  1996 and
              1995,  and for the period from the start of business, May 3, 1993,
              to March 31, 1994
              Notes to Financial Statements
              Independent Auditors' Report


                                        B - 34
<PAGE>






              For  purposes  of  the EDGAR  filing  of  this  amendment  to  the
     Portfolio's   registration  statement,   the   Portfolio  incorporates   by
     reference  the above  audited  financial  statements, as  previously  filed
     electronically  with  the  Commission   (Accession  Number   0000928816-96-
     000149).
















































                                        B - 35
<PAGE>






                                       APPENDIX

                          Description of Securities Ratings+

                           Moody's Investors Service, Inc.
     Municipal Bonds

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

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

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

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

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


     ---------------
     + The ratings  indicated herein are believed to  be the most recent ratings
        available  at the date  of this Statement of  Additional Information for
        the  securities listed. Ratings are generally given to securities at the
        time  of issuance.  While the  rating  agencies may  from  time to  time
        revise  such ratings,  they undertake no  obligation to  do so,  and the
        ratings  indicated do  not necessarily represent ratings  which would be
        given  to these securities  on the date  of the Portfolio's  fiscal year

                                        a - 1
<PAGE>






        end.


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

     Caa:  Bonds which are rated Caa are of poor standing. Such issues may be in
     default  or  there may  be  present  elements  of danger  with  respect  to
     principal or interest.

     Ca: Bonds  which are rated  Ca represent obligations  which are speculative
     in  a high degree.  Such issues are  often in default or  have other marked
     shortcomings.

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

     Absence of Rating: Where no rating has been assigned or  where a rating has
     been  suspended  or withdrawn,  it  may  be for  reasons  unrelated to  the
     quality of the issue.

     Should no rating be assigned, the reason may be one of the following:

              1. An application for rating was not received or accepted.

              2. The issue or issuer belongs to a group of securities or
                  companies that are not rated as a matter of policy.

              3. There is a lack of essential data pertaining to the issue or
                  issuer.

              4. The issue was privately placed, in which case the rating is
                  not published in Moody's publications.

     Suspension  or withdrawal  may  occur  if  new and  material  circumstances
     arise, the effects of which preclude satisfactory analysis; if  there is no
     longer available  reasonable up-to-date  data to  permit a  judgment to  be
     formed; if a bond is called for redemption; or for other reasons.

     Note: Moody's  applies numerical  modifiers, 1,  2, and 3  in each  generic
     rating classification  from  Aa through  B  in  its corporate  bond  rating
     system. The modifier 1 indicates that the security  ranks in the higher end
     of its  generic  rating category;  the  modifier  2 indicates  a  mid-range
     ranking; and the modifier  3 indicates  that the issue  ranks in the  lower
     end of its generic rating category.

     Municipal Short-Term Obligations

     Ratings: Moody's  ratings for  state and  municipal short-term  obligations
     will  be  designated  Moody's   Investment  Grade  or  (MIG).  Such  rating

                                        a - 2
<PAGE>






     recognizes the differences  between short term  credit risk  and long  term
     risk. Factors  effecting  the liquidity  of  the  borrower and  short  term
     cyclical elements are critical in  short term ratings, while  other factors
     of major  importance in bond  risk, long term  secular trends for  example,
     may be less important over the short run.

     A  short  term rating  may also  be assigned  on an  issue having  a demand
     feature,  variable rate  demand  obligation (VRDO).  Such  ratings will  be
     designated as VMIG1, SG or  if the demand feature is not rated, NR. A short
     term rating on  issues with demand features  are differentiated by the  use
     of  the  VMIG1 symbol  to  reflect  such  characteristics  as payment  upon
     periodic demand rather  than fixed maturity  dates and  payment relying  on
     external  liquidity. Additionally,  investors should  be alert  to the fact
     that the source  of payment may be  limited to the external  liquidity with
     no or limited legal  recourse to the issuer in the  event the demand is not
     met.

                                  Standard & Poor's 

     Investment Grade

     AAA: Debt rated AAA  has the  highest rating assigned  by S&P. Capacity  to
     pay interest and repay principal is extremely strong.

     AA: Debt  rated AA has  a very  strong capacity to  pay interest and  repay
     principal and differs from the highest rated issues only in small degree.

     A: Debt rated A has a  strong capacity to pay interest and repay  principal
     although it  is somewhat more susceptible to the adverse effects of changes
     in  circumstances  and  economic  conditions  than  debt  in  higher  rated
     categories.

     BBB: Debt  rated BBB  is regarded  as having  an adequate  capacity to  pay
     interest  and  repay  principal.  Whereas  it   normally  exhibit  adequate
     protection   parameters,   adverse   economic    conditions   or   changing
     circumstances  are  more  likely to  lead  to a  weakened  capacity  to pay
     interest  and repay  principal for  debt in  this category  than in  higher
     rated categories.

     Speculative Grade

     Debt  rated BB,  B,  CCC, CC,  and C  is  regarded as  having predominantly
     speculative characteristics with  respect to capacity to  pay interest  and
     repay principal. BB  indicates the  least degree of  speculation and C  the
     highest.  While such  debt  will likely  have  some quality  and protective
     characteristics,  these are  outweighed  by  large uncertainties  or  major
     exposures to adverse conditions.

     BB:  Debt rated BB  has less near-term vulnerability  to default than other
     speculative  issues.  However,  it faces  major  ongoing  uncertainties  or
     exposure  to adverse  business,  financial,  or economic  conditions  which
     could lead to  inadequate capacity to  meet timely  interest and  principal

                                        a - 3
<PAGE>






     payments. The BB  rating category  is also  used for  debt subordinated  to
     senior debt that is assigned an actual or implied BBB- rating.

     B: Debt rated  B has a greater  vulnerability to default but  currently has
     the capacity to  meet interest  payments and principal  repayments. Adverse
     business, financial,  or economic conditions will likely impair capacity or
     willingness to pay interest and  repay principal. The B rating  category is
     also used for debt  subordinated to senior debt that is assigned  an actual
     or implied BB or BB- rating.

     CCC: Debt rated  CCC has a currently identifiable vulnerability to default,
     and  is  dependent   upon  favorable  business,  financial,   and  economic
     conditions to meet timely payment  of interest and repayment  of principal.
     In the event of adverse  business, financial, or economic conditions, it is
     not likely to  have the capacity to  pay interest and repay  principal. The
     CCC rating category is also used for debt subordinated to senior debt  that
     is assigned an actual or implied B or B- rating.

     CC: The rating CC is typically applied to debt subordinated to senior  debt
     which is assigned an actual or implied CCC debt rating.

     C: The rating  C is typically applied  to debt subordinated to  senior debt
     which  is assigned an actual or implied  CCC- debt rating. The C rating may
     be used to  cover a situation where  a bankruptcy petition has  been filed,
     but debt service payments are continued.

     C1: The  Rating C1  is reserved for  income bonds on  which no  interest is
     being paid.

     D: Debt rated D is in payment default.  The D rating category is used  when
     interest payments or  principal payments are not made  on the date due even
     if the applicable  grace period has not  expired, unless S&P believes  that
     such payments will  be made  during such grace  period. The  D rating  also
     will be  used upon  the filing  of a  bankruptcy petition  if debt  service
     payments are jeopardized.

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

     p:  The letter "p" indicates that the  rating is provisional. A provisional
     rating assumes the successful completion  of the project being  financed by
     the  debt  being  rated  and   indicates  that  payment  of   debt  service
     requirements  is largely  or  entirely dependent  upon  the successful  and
     timely completion  of the  project. This rating,  however, while addressing
     credit quality  subsequent to completion  of the project,  makes no comment
     on  the  likelihood of,  or  the  risk  of  default upon  failure  of  such
     completion. The investor should exercise  his own judgment with  respect to
     such likelihood and risk.

     L: The  letter "L"  indicates that  the  rating pertains  to the  principal
     amount of those bonds  to the extent that the underlying deposit collateral

                                        a - 4
<PAGE>






     is  insured  by  the  Federal  Deposit  Insurance  Corp.  and  interest  is
     adequately collateralized.  In the  case of  certificates  of deposit,  the
     letter "L" indicates that the  deposit, combined with other  deposits being
     held  in the same  right and  capacity, will  be honored for  principal and
     accrued pre-default interest up to  the federal insurance limits  within 30
     days  after closing of  the insured institution or,  in the  event that the
     deposit is assumed by a successor insured institution, upon maturity.

     NR: NR indicates no  rating has been requested, that there  is insufficient
     information on  which  to  base a  rating,  or that  S&P  does not  rate  a
     particular type of obligation as a matter of policy.

     Municipal Notes

     S&P note ratings  reflect the liquidity  concerns and  market access  risks
     unique to notes. Notes  due in 3 years or  less will likely receive  a note
     rating. Notes maturing beyond 3 years will most likely receive a  long-term
     debt  rating.  The  following  criteria   will  be  used  in   making  that
     assessment:

              --  Amortization schedule (the larger the final maturity relative
                    to other maturities the more likely it will be treated as a
                    note).

              --  Sources of payment (the more dependent the issue is on the
                    market for its refinancing, the more likely it will be
                    treated as a note).

     Note rating symbols are as follows:

     SP-1:  Strong  capacity  to  pay  principal  and   interest.  Those  issues
     determined to possess very strong  characteristics will be given  a plus(+)
     designation.

     SP-2:  Satisfactory  capacity to  pay  principal  and interest,  with  some
     vulnerability to  adverse financial and  economic changes over  the term of
     the notes.

     SP-3: Speculative capacity to pay principal and interest.


                            Fitch Investors Service, Inc.

     Investment Grade Bond Ratings

     AAA: Bonds  considered to be  investment grade  and of  the highest  credit
     quality. The  obligor has an  exceptionally strong ability  to pay interest
     and  repay  principal, which  is  unlikely  to  be  affected by  reasonably
     foreseeable events.

     AA: Bonds  considered  to be  investment  grade  and of  very  high  credit
     quality. The obligor's ability  to pay interest and repay principal is very

                                        a - 5
<PAGE>






     strong, although not quite  as strong as  bonds rated `AAA'. Because  bonds
     rated in the  `AAA' and `AA' categories are not significantly vulnerable to
     foreseeable  future  developments,  short-term debt  of  these  issuers  is
     generally rated `F-1+'.

     A: Bonds considered to  be investment grade and of high credit quality. The
     obligors  ability to pay interest  and repay principal  is considered to be
     strong,  but  may  be  more  vulnerable  to  adverse  changes  in  economic
     conditions and circumstances than bonds with higher ratings.

     BBB: Bonds considered  to be investment  grade and  of satisfactory  credit
     quality.  The obligor's  ability  to pay  interest  and repay  principal is
     considered  to  be adequate.  Adverse  changes in  economic  conditions and
     circumstances, however, are  more likely to  have adverse  impact on  these
     bonds,  and  therefore, impair  timely  payment.  The  likelihood that  the
     ratings of these bonds will fall below investment grade is higher than  for
     bonds with higher ratings.

     High Yield Bond Ratings

     BB:  Bonds  are  considered  speculative.  The  obligor's  ability  to  pay
     interest and repay principal may be affected over time by  adverse economic
     changes. However,  business and  financial alternatives  can be  identified
     that could assist the obligor in satisfying its debt service requirements.

     B: Bonds are considered  highly speculative. While bonds in this  class are
     currently meeting debt  service requirements, the probability  of continued
     timely  payment of principal  and interest  reflects the  obligor's limited
     margin of  safety  and  the  need  for  reasonable  business  and  economic
     activity throughout the life of the issue.

     CCC:  Bonds  have  certain  identifiable  characteristics   which,  if  not
     remedied, may lead to default. The ability to meet obligations  requires an
     advantageous business and economic environment.

     CC: Bonds  are minimally protected.  Default in payment  of interest and/or
     principal seems probable over time.

     C: Bonds are in imminent default in payment of interest or principal.

     DDD,  DD, and  D:  Bonds  are  in  default  on  interest  and/or  principal
     payments. Such bonds are extremely speculative and  should be valued on the
     basis of their  ultimate recovery value in liquidation or reorganization of
     the obligor. `DDD' represents the  highest potential for recovery  on these
     bonds, and `D' represents the lowest potential for recovery.

     Plus (+)  or Minus (-): The  ratings from  AA to C  may be modified  by the
     addition of a plus  or minus sign  to indicate the  relative position of  a
     credit within the rating category.

     NR: Indicates that Fitch does not rate the specific issue.


                                        a - 6
<PAGE>






     Conditional:  A conditional rating is premised on the successful completion
     of a project or the occurrence of a specific event.

     Investment Grade Short-Term Ratings

     Fitch's short-term  ratings apply to  debt obligations that  are payable on
     demand or  have  original  maturities  of  generally  up  to  three  years,
     including  commercial paper,  certificates of  deposit, medium-term  notes,
     and municipal and investment notes.

     F-1+: Exceptionally Strong  Credit Quality. Issues assigned this rating are
     regarded as having the strongest degree of assurance for timely payment.

     F-1: Very Strong  Credit Quality. Issues  assigned this  rating reflect  an
     assurance of timely payment only slightly less  in degree than issues rated
     `F-1+'.

     F-2: Good Credit Quality. Issues  carrying this rating have  a satisfactory
     degree of assurance for timely  payment, but the margin of safety is not as
     great as the `F-1+' and `F-1' categories.

     F-3: Fair Credit Quality. Issues carrying this  rating have characteristics
     suggesting that the  degree of assurance  for timely  payment is  adequate,
     however, near-term adverse  change could cause these securities to be rated
     below investment grade.

     * * * * * * * *

     Notes:  Bonds which are unrated  expose the investor  to risks with respect
     to  capacity to pay  interest or repay principal  which are  similar to the
     risks of lower-rated speculative bonds.  The Portfolio is dependent  on the
     Investment Adviser's  judgment, analysis and  experience in the  evaluation
     of such bonds.

              Investors  should note that the  assignment of a rating  to a bond
     by a rating  service may not reflect  the effect of recent  developments on
     the issuer's ability to make interest and principal payments.
















                                        a - 7
<PAGE>






                                       PART C

     Item 24.  Financial Statements and Exhibits.

     (a)  Financial Statements

              The financial  statements called for by this Item are incorporated
     by reference into Part B and listed in Item 23 hereof.
       
     (b)  Exhibits
       
     1.     (a)  Declaration of Trust dated May 1, 1992 filed as Exhibit No.
            1(a) to Amendment No. 2 (filed electronically with the Commission
            on July 27, 1995) (Accession No. 0000898432-95-000287) and
            incorporated herein by reference.

            (b)  Amendment to Declaration of Trust dated February 22, 1993
            filed as Exhibit No. 1(b) to Amendment No. 2 and incorporated
            herein by reference.
        
            (c)  Amendment to Declaration of Trust dated December 8, 1995 filed
            as Exhibit No. 1(c) to Amendment No. 3 (filed electronically with
            the Commission on July 25, 1996) (Accession No. 0001003291-96-
            000053) and incorporated herein by reference.
         
     2.     By-Laws of the Registrant adopted May 1, 1992 filed as Exhibit No.
            2 to Amendment No. 2 and incorporated herein by reference.

     5.     Investment Advisory Agreement between the Registrant and Boston
            Management and Research dated October 13, 1992 filed as Exhibit No.
            5 to Amendment No. 2 and incorporated herein by reference.

     6.     Placement Agent Agreement with Eaton Vance Distributors, Inc. dated
            May 3, 1993 filed as Exhibit No. 6 to Amendment No. 2 and
            incorporated herein by reference.

     7.     The Securities and Exchange Commission has granted the Registrant
            an exemptive order that permits the Registrant to enter into
            deferred compensation arrangements with its independent Trustees. 
            See In the Matter of Capital Exchange Fund, Inc., Release No. IC-
            20671 (November 1, 1994).

     8.     (a)  Custodian Agreement with Investors Bank & Trust Company dated
            May 3, 1993 filed as Exhibit No. 8 to Amendment No. 2 and
            incorporated herein by reference.
        
            (b)  Amendment to Custodian Agreement dated October 23, 1995 filed
            as Exhibit No. 8(b) to Amendment No. 3 and incorporated herein by
            reference.
         
     13.    Investment representation letter of Eaton Vance Investment Trust,
            on behalf of Eaton Vance Massachusetts Limited Maturity Tax Free

                                        C - 1
<PAGE>






            Fund, dated April 12, 1993 filed as Exhibit No. 13 to Amendment No.
            2 and incorporated herein by reference.

     Item 25.  Persons Controlled by or under Common Control with Registrant.
            Not applicable.

     Item 26.  Number of Holders of Securities.

                      (1)                            (2)
                 Title of Class                   Number of
                                                Record Holders
                                             as of July 1, 1996
                   Interests                          4

     Item 27.  Indemnification.
            Reference is hereby made to Article V of the Registrant's
     Declaration of Trust, filed as Exhibit 1(a) to Amendment No. 2 and
     incorporated herein by reference. 

            The Trustees and officers of the Registrant and the personnel of
     the Registrant's investment adviser are insured under an errors and
     omissions liability insurance policy. The Registrant and its officers are
     also insured under the fidelity bond required by Rule 17g-1 under the
     Investment Company Act of 1940.

     Item 28.  Business and Other Connections.
            To the knowledge of the Portfolio, none of the trustees or officers
     of the Portfolio's investment adviser, except as set forth on its Form ADV
     as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, is engaged in any
     other business, profession, vocation or employment of a substantial
     nature, except that certain trustees and officers also hold various
     positions with and engage in business for affiliates of the investment
     adviser.

     Item 29.  Principal Underwriters.
            Not applicable.

     Item 30.  Location of Accounts and Records.
            All applicable accounts, books and documents required to be
     maintained by the Registrant by Section 31(a) of the Investment Company
     Act of 1940 and the Rules promulgated thereunder are in the possession and
     custody of the Registrant's custodian, Investors Bank & Trust Company, 89
     South Street, Boston, MA  02111, with the exception of certain corporate
     documents and portfolio trading documents which are in the possession and
     custody of the Registrant's investment adviser at 24 Federal Street,
     Boston, MA  02110.  The Registrant is informed that all applicable
     accounts, books and documents required to be maintained by registered
     investment advisers are in the custody and possession of the Registrant's
     investment adviser.

     Item 31.  Management Services.
            Not applicable.

                                        C - 2
<PAGE>






     Item 32.  Undertakings.
            Not applicable.



















































                                        C - 3
<PAGE>






                                     SIGNATURES
        
            Pursuant to the requirements of the Investment Company Act of 1940,
     the Registrant has duly caused this Amendment No. 4 to the Registration
     Statement on Form N-1A to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned,
     thereunto duly authorized, in the City of Boston and Commonwealth of
     Massachusetts, on this 26th day of July, 1996.
         
                                       MASSACHUSETTS LIMITED MATURITY
                                        MUNICIPALS PORTFOLIO
        
                                       By /s/ Thomas J. Fetter     
                                          ---------------------------
                                           Thomas J. Fetter
                                           President
         
        
         
<PAGE>

<TABLE> <S> <C>





     <ARTICLE>       6 
     <CIK> 0000892300  
     <NAME> MASSACHUSETTS LIMITED MATURITY MUNICIPALS PORTFOLIO  
     <MULTIPLIER> 1000 
              
     <S>                             <C> 
     <PERIOD-TYPE>                    12-MOS      
     <FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          MAR-31-1996
     <PERIOD-END>                               MAR-31-1996   
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     <INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>               100,177 
     <RECEIVABLES>                          1,545 
     <ASSETS-OTHER>                             0 
     <OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                     219 
     <TOTAL-ASSETS>                       101,941 
     <PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                   0 
     <SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                    0 
     <OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>              4,806 
     <TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                    4,806 
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     <PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>              95,505 
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     <EXPENSES-NET>                           607 
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     <DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                   0 
     <DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                      0 
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     <NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>               (21,984) 
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<PAGE>






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     <AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                       0 
              
<PAGE>

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