LINCOLN NATIONAL AGGRESSIVE GROWTH FUND INC
485APOS, 1999-04-16
Previous: EMERGING MARKETS INFRASTRUCTURE FUND INC, DEFA14A, 1999-04-16
Next: UFP TECHNOLOGIES INC, PRE 14A, 1999-04-16



<PAGE>

   
   As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on April 16, 1999
    
                                ---------------
   
                                                 File No. 33-70742
                                                          811-8090
    
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                      SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, DC  20549
                             ---------------------
                                   FORM N-1A

           REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933 ____
   
                        Post-Effective Amendment No. 8     X
                                                         -----
    
                                      and

       REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940 ____
   
                                Amendment No. 10    X
                                                  -----
    
                       (Check appropriate box or boxes)

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

                 LINCOLN NATIONAL AGGRESSIVE GROWTH FUND, INC.
              (Exact name of registrant as specified in charter)

                           1300 South Clinton Street
                           Fort Wayne, Indiana  46802
             (Address of Principal Executive Offices)  (Zip Code)

       Registrant's Telephone Number, including Area Code (219)455-2000

                              Jack D. Hunter, Esq.
                              200 E. Berry Street
                           Fort Wayne, Indiana 46802
                    (Name and Address of Agent for Service)

                       Copies of all communications to
                        Freedman, Levy, Kroll & Simonds
                         1050 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.,
                                   Suite 825
                            Washington, D.C.  20036
                        Attention:  Gary O. Cohen, Esq.
                                    Bruce Rosenblum, Esq.

                         Fiscal year-end:  December 31


       It is proposed that this filing will become effective:
   
           immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b)
       ---
           on _________ pursuant to paragraph (b)
       ---
           60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)
       ---
        X   on May 1, 1999 pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)
       ---
           75 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(2)
       ---
           on __________ pursuant to paragraph (a)(2) of Rule 485.
       ---
    
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
       If appropriate, check the following box:
       [X] This post effective amendment designates a new effective date
           for a previously filed post-effective amendment.
    
<PAGE>
PREFACE TO THE LINCOLN NATIONAL FUNDS PROSPECTUSES
 
THE PREFACE AND DIRECTORY ARE PART OF THE PROSPECTUS FOR EACH OF THE FOLLOWING
FUNDS:
 
Lincoln National Aggressive Growth Fund, Inc. (Aggressive Growth)
 
Lincoln National Bond Fund, Inc. (Bond)
 
Lincoln National Capital Appreciation Fund, Inc. (Capital Appreciation)
 
Lincoln National Equity-Income Fund, Inc. (Equity Income)
 
Lincoln National Global Asset Allocation Fund, Inc. (Global Asset Allocation)
 
Lincoln National Growth and Income Fund, Inc. (Growth and Income)
 
Lincoln National International Fund, Inc. (International)
 
Lincoln National Managed Fund, Inc. (Managed)
 
Lincoln National Money Market Fund, Inc. (Money Market)
 
Lincoln National Social Awareness Fund, Inc. (Social Awareness)
 
Lincoln National Special Opportunities Fund, Inc. (Special Opportunities)
 
Each fund has its own Prospectus that describes the fund and its investment
objective. We refer to each of the funds as a fund and to all of the funds
together as the funds.
 
Each fund sells its shares only to Lincoln National Life Insurance Co. and its
affiliates (Lincoln Life). Lincoln Life holds the shares in its separate
accounts to support variable annuity contracts and variable life insurance
contracts (contracts). We refer to a separate account as a variable account.
Each variable account has its own prospectus that describes the account and the
contracts it supports. You choose the fund or funds in which a variable account
invests your contract assets. In effect, you invest indirectly in the fund(s)
that you choose under your contract.
 
Each fund Prospectus discusses the information about the fund that you ought to
know before choosing to invest your contract assets in one or more of the funds.
You can find information unique to each fund in that fund's Prospectus. You can
find information common to all funds in the General Prospectus Disclosure
following the individual fund Prospectuses.
 
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has not approved or disapproved
these securities or determined if these prospectuses are truthful or complete.
Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.
 
We have not authorized any dealer, salesperson, or any other person to give any
information, or to make any representation, other than what these Prospectuses
state. These Prospectuses do not offer to sell fund shares, or seek offers to
buy fund shares, where it would be unlawful.
 
Prospectuses dated May 1, 1999
<PAGE>
DIRECTORY FOR THE FUND PROSPECTUS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
SUBJECT                                          PAGE
<S>                                            <C>
- --------------------------------------------------------
PREFACE
SUMMARY DESCRIPTION OF THE FUND
Aggressive Growth
Bond
Capital Appreciation
Equity-Income
Global Asset Allocation
Growth and Income
International
Managed
Money Market
Social Awareness
Special Opportunities
- --------------------------------------------------------
FEE TABLE
Aggressive Growth
Bond
Capital Appreciation
Equity-Income
Global Asset Allocation
Growth and Income
International
Managed
Money Market
Social Awareness
Special Opportunities
- --------------------------------------------------------
INVESTMENT STRATEGIES
Aggressive Growth
Bond
Capital Appreciation
Equity-Income
Global Asset Allocation
Growth and Income
International
Managed
Money Market
Social Awareness
Special Opportunities
 
<CAPTION>
SUBJECT                                          PAGE
- --------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                            <C>
RISKS OF INVESTMENT STRATEGIES
Aggressive Growth
Bond
Capital Appreciation
Equity-Income
Global Asset Allocation
Growth and Income
International
Managed
Money Market
Social Awareness
Special Opportunities
- --------------------------------------------------------
INVESTMENT ADVISER AND PORTFOLIO MANAGER
Aggressive Growth
Bond
Capital Appreciation
Equity-Income
Global Asset Allocation
Growth and Income
International
Managed
Money Market
Social Awareness
Special Opportunities
- --------------------------------------------------------
GENERAL PROSPECTUS DISCLOSURE -- IMPORTANT
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
Net asset value
Management of the funds
Purchase and redemption of fund shares
Distributions and federal income tax
considerations
Management discussion of fund performance
Financial highlights
General Information
Preparing for year 2000
 
</TABLE>
<PAGE>
LINCOLN NATIONAL
AGGRESSIVE GROWTH FUND, INC.
 
SUMMARY DESCRIPTION OF THE FUND
 
   
The investment objective of the Aggressive Growth Fund (fund) is to maximize the
value of your shares (capital appreciation). The fund pursues this objective by
buying and holding (investing in) a diversified group of domestic equity
securities (stocks) of small and medium-sized companies: companies traded on
U.S. securities markets with market capitalizations, at the time of purchase,
equivalent to those of companies included in the Russell Midcap Growth Index. As
of December 31, 1998, this index included companies with market capitalizations
between $100 million and $28 billion. However, the fund primarily will purchase
companies with market capitalizations between $1 billion and $10 billion.
    
 
The fund's main investment strategy is to invest in stocks of companies believed
either:
 
- - to have earnings expected to grow faster than similar-sized companies or
 
- - to be undervalued in the market relative to other companies in an industry.
 
This investment strategy places little importance on dividend income.
 
The main investment risks of choosing to invest your contract assets in the fund
are as follows:
 
- - the value of the fund's shares will fluctuate, and you could lose money;
 
- - the value of the fund's stock investments -- and, therefore, the value of the
  fund's shares -- will fluctuate independently of large company stock prices
  and the broad stock market indices, such as the Standard & Poor's 500
  Composite Stock Index (S&P 500); and
- - investing in the stocks of small and medium-sized, less mature, lesser-known
  companies involves greater risks than those normally associated with investing
  in the stocks of larger, more mature, well-known companies, including greater
  and more rapid fluctuations in the value of these stocks, and, therefore, the
  fund's shares.
 
The following information provides some indication of the risks of choosing to
invest your contract assets in the fund. The information shows:
 
- - changes in the fund's performance from year to year and
 
- - how the fund's average annual returns for one year and the fund's lifetime
  compare with those of a broad measure of market performance.
 
   
Please note that the past performance of the fund is not necessarily an
indication of how the fund will perform in the future. Further, the returns
shown do not reflect variable contract expenses. If reflected the returns shown
would be lower.
    
 
EDGAR REPRESENTATION OF DATA POINTS USED IN PRINTED GRAPHIC
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS
<S>                      <C>
Year                        Annual Total Return
1994                                     -9.37%
1995                                     34.15%
1996                                     17.02%
1997                                     23.09%
1998                                     -6.20%
</TABLE>
 
   
During the periods shown in the above chart, the fund's highest return for a
quarter occurred in the third quarter of 1997 at: 19.49%
    
 
   
The fund's lowest return for a quarter occurred in the third quarter of 1998 at:
(-25.90)%
    
 
AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURN
(FOR PERIODS ENDED 12/31/98)
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
PERIOD BACK                              AGG. GROWTH   S&P 400*
<S>                                      <C>           <C>
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
1 year                                        (-6.2)%        19.1%
5 year                                          N/A           N/A
10 year                                         N/A           N/A
Lifetime**                                    10.44%        18.84%
</TABLE>
    
 
   
 *  The S&P Midcap 400 is the Standard & Poor's Composite Index of 400 stocks, a
    widely recognized unmanaged index of common stock prices of medium-sized
    companies.
    
 
   
**  The fund's lifetime began January 3, 1994. Lifetime index performance,
    however, began January 1, 1994.
    
 
                                                                               1
<PAGE>
INVESTMENT STRATEGIES
 
The investment objective of the fund is to maximize capital appreciation (as
measured by the change in the value of the fund's shares over time).
 
   
The fund pursues its objective by investing in a diversified group of domestic
stocks primarily of small and medium-sized companies: companies traded on U.S.
securities markets with market capitalizations, at the time of purchase,
equivalent to those of companies included in the Russell Midcap Growth Index.
(This index is an unmanaged index of common stock prices of companies with
greater-than-average growth orientation. Of the 1,000 largest U.S. companies,
this index includes only the 800 smallest companies.) As of December 31, 1998,
this index included companies with market capitalizations between $100 million
and $28 billion. However, the fund will primarily purchase companies with market
capitalizations between $1 billion and $10 billion. (A company's market
capitalization is calculated by multiplying the total number of shares of its
common stock outstanding by the market price of the stock. As a point of
reference, as of December 31, 1998, the average market capitalization of the S&P
500, a broad based market index representative of larger, typically more
financially stable companies, was $87 billion.)
    
 
The fund seeks to invest in companies believed either:
 
- - to have earnings expected to grow faster than similar-sized companies, or
 
- - to be undervalued in the market relative to the companies' industry peers.
 
The companies sought typically have:
 
- - high quality management,
 
- - a leading or dominant position in a product, and/or
 
   
- - a relatively high rate of return on invested capital.
    
 
When selecting investments, the fund places little importance on the expected
dividend income. The fund will consider stock investments to be possible sell
candidates when the fundamental reason for a company's expected acceleration of
earnings fails to materialize.
 
   
The fund expects its annual portfolio turnover rate to be between 85% and 135%
in any year. (For example, the fund would have a rate of portfolio turnover of
100%, if the fund replaced all of its investments in one year.) Market
conditions could result in a greater degree of market activity and a portfolio
turnover rate as high as 160%. High turnover could result in additional
brokerage commissions to be paid by the fund. This would increase fund expenses.
The fund's portfolio turnover was 102.33% in 1998 and 105.07% in 1997.
    
 
   
Effective May 1, 1999, Putnam Investment Management, Inc. became the new
sub-advisor to the fund. Putnam expects to restructure the fund's portfolio by
replacing approximately 77% of the securities held by the fund. As a result, the
fund's portfolio turnover rate for 1999 is expected to be higher than the normal
range. Accordingly, this restructuring could negatively impact the fund's
performance as a result of increased fund brokerage commissions as well as other
transaction costs and losses associated with liquidating certain securities.
    
 
OTHER STRATEGIES
 
   
The fund may invest 100% of its assets in money market instruments and hold a
portion of its assets in cash for liquidity purposes, as a temporary defensive
strategy. The fund may use this temporary defensive strategy when market
conditions limit the fund's ability to use its other investment strategies to
identify and obtain suitable investors. The fund, in doing so, would not be
pursuing its investment objective. The fund also may hold cash or money market
instruments while seeking appropriate investments.
    
 
The fund also uses other investment strategies, to a lesser degree, to pursue
its investment objective. These other strategies include investing in foreign
stocks that are publicly traded in the U.S. markets. The fund's SAI describes
these other investment strategies and the risks they involve.
 
RISKS OF INVESTMENT STRATEGIES
 
Investing in stocks involves the risk that the value of the stocks purchased
will fluctuate. These fluctuations could occur for a single company, an
industry, a sector of the economy, or the stock market as a whole. These
fluctuations could cause the value of the fund's stock investments -- and,
therefore, the value of the fund's shares held under your contract -- to
fluctuate in value, and you could lose money.
 
Investing in stocks of smaller and medium-sized, less mature, lesser-known
companies involves greater risks than those normally associated with larger,
more mature, well-known companies. The fund runs a risk of increased and more
rapid fluctuations in the value of its stock investments. This is due to the
greater business risks of small size and limited product lines, markets,
distribution channels, and financial and managerial resources. Historically, the
price of small and medium capitalization stocks and stocks of recently organized
companies have fluctuated more than the larger capitalization stocks included in
the S&P 500. One reason is
 
2
<PAGE>
that smaller and medium-sized companies have less certain prospects for growth,
a lower degree of liquidity in the markets for their stocks, and greater
sensitivity to changing economic conditions.
 
Additionally, the prices of small and medium-sized company stocks may fluctuate
independently of larger company stock prices. Small and medium-sized company
stocks may decline in price as large company stock prices rise, or rise in price
as large company stock prices decline. Many independent factors lead to this
result, such as the current and anticipated global economic environment and
current and anticipated direction of interest rates in the United States, for
example. Slower economic conditions or increasing interest rates may have been
reasons historically for declining values in small and medium capitalization
companies. The stock of companies with small and medium stock market
capitalizations may trade less frequently and in limited volume. Therefore, you
should expect that the net asset value of the fund's shares may fluctuate more
than broad stock market indices such as the S&P 500, and may fluctuate
independently from those indices.
 
You may consider choosing the fund for investing some portion of your overall
contract assets (1) if you are seeking the possibility of maximum capital
appreciation without regard for dividend income and (2) as long as you are
comfortable with the additional risks of investing in securities of smaller and
medium-sized, less mature, lesser-known companies.
 
INVESTMENT ADVISER AND PORTFOLIO MANAGER
 
   
The fund's investment adviser is Lincoln Investment Management, Inc. (Lincoln
Investment). You can find information about Lincoln Investment in the General
Prospectus Disclosure under "Management of the funds -- Investment adviser."
Lincoln Investment is responsible for overall management of the fund's
securities investments. This includes monitoring the fund's sub-advisor, Putnam
Investment Management, Inc. (Putnam). Putnam's address is One Post Office
Square, Boston, MA 02109.
    
 
   
Putnam is responsible for the day-to-day management of the fund's securities
investments. Putnam, founded in 1937, manages in excess of $300 billion on
behalf of institutions and individuals through separately-managed accounts,
pooled funds, and mutual funds. Putnam manages the fund on a team basis. This
mid-cap management team is headed by Eric M. Wetlaufer, CFA, Managing Director
and Chief Investment Officer of Putnam's MidCap Growth Equity Group. Mr.
Wetlaufer has been with Putnam since 1997 and has 14 years of investment
experience. He is a graduate of Wesleyan University.
    
 
   
Putnam assumed portfolio management responsibility for the fund on May 1, 1999
by replacing the fund's previous sub-advisor. The switch to Putnam will not
result in any material change to the fund's investment policies and techniques.
    
 
                                                                               3
<PAGE>
THIS PAGE WAS INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK.
 
4
<PAGE>
GENERAL PROSPECTUS DISCLOSURE -- IMPORTANT ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
 
This General Prospectus Disclosure is part of the Prospectus of:
 
Lincoln National Aggressive Growth Fund, Inc.
(Aggressive Growth)
 
Lincoln National Bond Fund, Inc. (Bond)
 
Lincoln National Capital Appreciation Fund, Inc.
(Capital Appreciation)
 
Lincoln National Equity-Income Fund, Inc.
(Equity-Income)
 
Lincoln National Global Asset Allocation Fund, Inc. (Global Asset Allocation)
 
Lincoln National Growth and Income Fund, Inc. (Growth and Income)
 
Lincoln National International Fund, Inc. (International)
 
Lincoln National Managed Fund, Inc. (Managed)
 
Lincoln National Money Market Fund, Inc.
(Money Market)
 
Lincoln National Social Awareness Fund, Inc.
(Social Awareness)
 
Lincoln National Special Opportunities Fund, Inc.
(Special Opportunities)
 
The following information applies to each fund, unless otherwise indicated.
 
NET ASSET VALUE
 
Each fund determines its net asset value per share (NAV) as of close of business
(currently 4:00 p.m., New York time) on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on
each day the NYSE is open for trading. Each fund, except the Money Market Fund,
determines its nav by:
 
- - adding the values of all securities investments and other assets,
 
- - subtracting liabilities (including dividends payable), and
 
- - dividing by the number of shares outstanding.
 
NYSE's most recent announcement states that, as of the date of this prospectus,
the NYSE will be closed on New Year's Day, Martin Luther King Day, President's
Day, Good Friday, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day,
and Christmas Day. NYSE may also be closed on other days. The NYSE may modify
its holiday schedule at any time.
 
A fund's securities may be traded in other markets on days when the NYSE is
closed. Therefore, the fund's NAV may fluctuate on days when you do not have
access to the fund to purchase or redeem shares.
 
Each fund (other than for the Money Market Fund) values its securities
investments as follows:
 
- - equity securities, at their last sale prices on national securities exchanges
  or over-the-counter, or, in the absence of recorded sales, at the average of
  readily available closing bid and asked prices on exchanges or
  over-the-counter;
 
- - debt securities, at the price established by an independent pricing service,
  which is believed to reflect the fair value of these securities; and
 
- - equity securities, debt securities and other assets for which market
  quotations are not readily available, fair value as determined in good faith
  under the authority of each fund's Board of Directors.
 
MONEY MARKET FUND. The Money Market Fund determines its NAV by the amortized
cost method of valuation provided by SEC Rule 2a-7 under the Investment Company
Act of 1940. Under the Rule, the fund's nav must fairly reflect market value.
 
See the General SAI Disclosure for the methodology that a fund (other than for
the Money Market Fund) uses to value short-term investments, options, futures
and options on futures, and foreign securities.
 
MANAGEMENT OF THE FUNDS
 
Each fund's business and affairs are managed under the direction of its Board of
Directors. The Board has the power to amend the bylaws of each fund, to declare
and pay dividends, and to exercise all the powers of the fund except those
granted to the shareholders.
 
INVESTMENT ADVISOR. Lincoln Investment Management, Inc. (Lincoln Investment or
advisor) is the investment advisor to each fund. Its headquarters are at 200
East Berry Street, Fort Wayne, Indiana 46802.
 
The advisor has registered with the SEC as an investment advisor and acted as an
investment advisor to mutual Funds for over 40 years. The advisor also acts as
(1) investment advisor to Lincoln National Convertible Securities Fund, Inc. and
Lincoln National Income Fund, Inc., closed-end investment companies, and (2)
sub-adviser to two of the series of Delaware Group Adviser Funds, Inc., an
open-end series investment company.
 
The advisor is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Lincoln National Corp. (LNC), a
publicly-held insurance holding company organized under Indiana law. LNC,
through its subsidiaries, provides life insurance and annuities,
property-casualty insurance, reinsurance and financial services.
<PAGE>
Directors, officers and employees of the advisor and each fund may engage in
personal securities transactions, subject to restrictions and procedures of the
Code of Ethics adopted by the advisor and each fund. The restrictions and
procedures include substantially all of the recommendations of the Advisory
Group of the Investment Company Institute and comply with SEC rules and
regulations.
 
The advisor, either directly or through a sub-advisor, provides portfolio
management and investment advice to each fund and administers each fund's other
affairs, subject to the supervision of each fund's Board of Directors.
 
Some of the funds using sub-advisors have names, investment objectives and
investment policies that are very similar to certain publicly available mutual
funds that are managed by these same sub-advisors. These funds will not have the
same performance as those publicly available mutual funds. Different performance
will result from many factors, including, but not limited to, different cash
flows into and out of the funds, different fees, and different sizes.
 
Each fund pays the advisor a monthly fee for the advisor's services. The annual
rate of the fee is based on the average daily net asset value of each fund, as
shown in the following chart:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
FUND                                                  ...OF AVERAGE DAILY NET ASSET VALUE
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                  <C>
Aggressive Growth                    .75 of 1% of the first $200 million; .70 of 1% of the next $200
                                     million; .65 of 1% of the excess over $400 million
Capital Appreciation                 .75 of 1% of the first $500 million; .70 of 1% of the excess over
                                     $500 million
Equity-Income                        .75 of 1% of the first $500 million; .70 of 1% of the excess over
                                     $500 million
Global Asset Allocation              .75 of 1% of the first $200 million; .70 of 1% of the next $200
                                     million; and .68 of 1% of the excess over $400 million
International                        .90 of 1% of the first $200 million; .75 of 1% of the next $200
                                     million; and .60 of 1% in excess over $400 million
All other funds                      .48 of 1% of the first $200 million; .40 of 1% of the next $200
                                     million; and .30 of 1% in excess over $400 million
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
 
1998 ADVISORY FEES
FUND                                    1998 RATIO OF THE ADVISOR'S COMPENSATION TO AVERAGE NET ASSETS
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                  <C>
Aggressive Growth                                                    .73%
Bond                                                                  .44
Capital Appreciation                                                  .75
Equity-Income                                                         .72
Global Asset Allocation                                               .72
Growth & Income                                                       .31
International                                                         .79
Managed                                                               .36
Money Market                                                          .48
Social Awareness                                                      .34
Special Opportunities                                                 .36
</TABLE>
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
PURCHASE AND REDEMPTION OF FUND SHARES
 
Each fund sells its shares of common stock only to Lincoln Life. Lincoln Life
holds the fund shares in separate accounts (variable accounts) that support
various Lincoln Life variable annuity contracts and variable life insurance
contracts.
 
Each fund sells and redeems its shares, without charge, at their nav next
determined after Lincoln Life receives a purchase or redemption request.
However, each fund redeems its shares held by Lincoln Life for its own account
at the nav next determined after the fund receives the redemption request. The
value of shares redeemed may be more or less than original cost, depending on
the market value of a fund's securities investments at the time of redemption.
 
The fund normally pays for shares redeemed within seven days after Lincoln Life
receives the redemption request. However, a fund may suspend redemption or
postpone payment for any period when:
 
- - the NYSE closes for other than weekends and holidays;
 
- - the SEC restricts trading on the NYSE;
 
- - the SEC determines that an emergency exists, so that a fund's (1) disposal of
  investment securities, or (2) determination of net asset value, is not
  reasonably practicable; or
 
- - The SEC permits, by order, for the protection of fund shareholders.
<PAGE>
DISTRIBUTIONS AND FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSIDERATIONS
 
Each fund's policy is to distribute substantially all of its net investment
income and net realized capital gains each year. A fund may distribute net
realized capital gains only once a year. Each fund pays these distributions to
Lincoln Life for the variable accounts. The variable accounts automatically
reinvest the distributions in additional fund shares at no charge.
 
Each fund has elected to be taxed as a regulated investment company under
Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code). The
Code relieves a regulated investment company from certain Federal income tax and
excise tax, if the company distributes substantially all of its net investment
income and net realized capital gains. See the SAI for a more complete
discussion.
 
Each fund must meet asset diversification requirements under Section 817(h) of
the Code and the related regulation of the United States Treasury Department.
Each fund intends to comply with these diversification requirements.
 
The sole shareholder of the funds is Lincoln Life. Consequently, this Appendix
does not discuss the federal income tax consequences at the shareholder level.
For information concerning the federal income tax consequences to owners of
variable annuity contracts or variable life insurance contracts (contract
owners), including the failure of a fund to meet the diversification
requirements discussed above, see the Prospectus for the variable account.
 
MANAGEMENT DISCUSSION OF FUND PERFORMANCE
 
Each fund's Annual Report includes the portfolio manager's discussion of the
fund's performance for the previous fiscal year and the factors affecting the
performance. Each fund will send you a free copy of its Annual Report on
request.
<PAGE>
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
 
The financial highlights table is intended to help you understand the financial
performance of the funds for the past 5 years, or, if shorter, the period of the
fund's operations. Certain information reflects financial results for a single
fund share. The total returns in the table represent the rate that an investor
would have earned or lost on an investment in the fund (assuming reinvestment of
all dividends and distributions). This information has been audited by Ernst &
Young LLP, independent auditors, whose report, along with each fund's financial
statements, are included in the annual report, which is available upon request.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                          INCOME (LOSS) FROM       LESS DIVIDENDS
                        INVESTMENT OPERATIONS          FROM:
                                                                                                        RATIO
                                  NET                                                                    OF
                                REALIZED                                                        RATIO    NET
              NET                 AND                                                            OF     INVESTMENT         NET
             ASSET              UNREALIZED                                     NET             EXPENSES INCOME           ASSETS
             VALUE      NET      GAIN     TOTAL              NET              ASSET              TO      TO              AT END
            BEGINNING INVESTMENT (LOSS)   FROM      NET    REALIZED           VALUE            AVERAGE  AVERAGE PORTFOLIO   OF
  PERIOD      OF      INCOME      ON     INVESTMENT INVESTMENT GAIN ON  TOTAL END OF   TOTAL     NET     NET    TURNOVER PERIOD
  ENDED     PERIOD    (LOSS)(2) INVESTMENTS OPERATIONS INCOME INVESTMENTS DIVIDENDS PERIOD RETURN(3) ASSETS ASSETS  RATE (000'S)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>         <C>       <C>       <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>     <C>      <C>
Lincoln National Aggressive Growth Fund, Inc.
12/31/98    $16.385    0.001    (0.810)  (0.809)  (0.023)  (2.186)   (2.209) $13.367   (6.20%)   0.81%  0.01%   102.33%  $335,366
12/31/97    $13.980    0.023     3.055    3.078     --     (0.673)   (0.673) $16.385   23.09%    0.81%  0.16%   105.07%  $342,763
12/31/96    $12.183    0.004     1.989    1.993   (0.004)  (0.192)   (0.196) $13.980   17.02%    0.82%  0.03%    77.51%  $242,609
12/31/95    $ 9.048    0.007     3.135    3.142   (0.007)    --      (0.007) $12.183   34.15%    0.94%  0.06%    85.82%  $138,471
12/31/94(1) $10.000    0.019    (0.952)  (0.933)  (0.019)    --      (0.019) $ 9.048   (9.37%)   1.11%  0.21%   100.31%  $60,697
Lincoln National Bond Fund, Inc.
12/31/98    $12.861    0.662     0.494    1.156   (1.328)    --      (1.328) $12.689    9.56%    0.52%  5.90%    51.33%  $363,808
12/31/97    $11.766    0.785     0.310    1.095     --       --       --     $12.861    9.30%    0.53%  6.45%    56.16%  $280,383
12/31/96    $12.247    0.767    (0.481)   0.286   (0.767)    --      (0.767) $11.766    2.31%    0.51%  6.56%   142.19%  $253,328
12/31/95    $10.941    0.803     1.306    2.109   (0.803)    --      (0.803) $12.247   18.95%    0.49%  6.90%   139.61%  $250,816
12/31/94    $12.693    0.741    (1.233)  (0.492)  (0.741)  (0.519)   (1.260) $10.941   (4.18%)   0.50%  6.40%   213.26%  $195,010
Lincoln National Capital Appreciation Fund, Inc.
12/31/98    $17.530   (0.003)    6.127    6.124   (0.050)  (1.832)   (1.882) $21.772   37.96%    0.83%  (0.01%)  77.99%  $770,736
12/31/97    $14.504    0.050     3.510    3.560     --     (0.534)   (0.534) $17.530   25.29%    0.89%  0.35%   137.07%  $451,036
12/31/96    $12.916    0.135     2.051    2.186   (0.135)  (0.463)   (0.598) $14.504   18.02%    0.93%  0.99%    92.73%  $267,242
12/31/95    $10.152    0.116     2.764    2.880   (0.116)    --      (0.116) $12.916   28.69%    1.07%  1.00%   195.63%  $127,936
12/31/94(1) $10.000    0.134     0.152    0.286   (0.134)    --      (0.134) $10.152    2.71%    1.18%  1.33%   185.28%  $52,904
Lincoln National Equity-Income Fund, Inc.
12/31/98    $20.118    0.282     2.204    2.486   (0.460)  (0.429)   (0.889) $21.715   12.73%    0.79%  1.40%    29.04%  $991,977
12/31/97    $15.780    0.229     4.511    4.740     --     (0.402)   (0.402) $20.118   30.67%    1.02%  1.46%    17.81%  $811,070
12/31/96    $13.507    0.288     2.451    2.739   (0.288)  (0.178)   (0.466) $15.780   19.81%    1.08%  1.99%    22.17%  $457,153
12/31/95    $10.335    0.275     3.218    3.493   (0.275)  (0.046)   (0.321) $13.507   34.74%    1.15%  2.27%    27.81%  $238,771
12/31/94(1) $10.000    0.258     0.335    0.593   (0.258)    --      (0.258) $10.335    5.65%    1.26%  2.48%    33.40%  $78,861
Lincoln National Global Asset Allocation Fund, Inc.
12/31/98    $15.628    0.357     1.585    1.942   (0.589)  (1.222)   (1.811) $15.759   13.50%    0.91%  2.36%   133.84%  $490,154
12/31/97    $14.226    0.383     2.205    2.588     --     (1.186)   (1.186) $15.628   19.47%    0.89%  2.77%   178.40%  $438,090
12/31/96    $13.391    0.392     1.522    1.914   (0.392)  (0.687)   (1.079) $14.226   15.04%    1.00%  2.93%   167.33%  $316,051
12/31/95    $11.144    0.412     2.247    2.659   (0.412)    --      (0.412) $13.391   23.95%    0.92%  3.36%   146.49%  $248,772
12/31/94    $12.502    0.349    (0.702)  (0.353)  (0.349)  (0.656)   (1.005) $11.144   (1.82%)   1.06%  3.07%   134.33%  $195,697
Lincoln National Growth and Income Fund, Inc.
12/31/98    $41.949    0.607     7.371    7.978   (1.164)  (2.475)   (3.639) $46.288   20.33%    0.35%  1.44%    33.55%  $4,263,557
12/31/97    $33.110    0.649     9.331    9.980     --     (1.141)   (1.141) $41.949   30.93%    0.35%  1.79%    32.09%  $3,540,862
12/31/96    $29.756    0.683     4.943    5.626   (0.683)  (1.589)   (2.272) $33.110   18.76%    0.36%  2.23%    46.70%  $2,465,224
12/31/95    $23.297    0.701     7.680    8.381   (0.701)  (1.221)   (1.922) $29.756   38.81%    0.35%  2.64%    51.76%  $1,833,450
12/31/94    $24.693    0.668    (0.428)   0.240   (0.668)  (0.968)   (1.636) $23.297    1.32%    0.37%  2.85%    76.34%  $1,161,324
Lincoln National International Fund, Inc.
12/31/98    $14.673    0.253     1.838    2.091   (0.189)  (0.593)   (0.782) $15.982   14.65%    0.93%  1.63%   123.11%  $501,654
12/31/97    $14.556    0.066     0.771    0.837     --     (0.720)   (0.720) $14.673    6.00%    0.93%  0.44%    77.58%  $466,229
12/31/96    $13.398    0.071     1.244    1.315   (0.071)  (0.086)   (0.157) $14.556    9.52%    1.19%  0.51%    68.67%  $440,375
12/31/95    $13.027    0.069     0.892    0.961   (0.069)  (0.521)   (0.590) $13.398    8.89%    1.27%  0.59%    63.15%  $358,391
12/31/94    $12.642    0.033     0.385    0.418   (0.033)    --      (0.033) $13.027    3.28%    1.24%  0.25%    52.78%  $316,350
Lincoln National Managed Fund, Inc.
12/31/98    $19.304    0.599     1.632    2.231   (1.162)  (1.402)   (2.564) $18.971   12.72%    0.42%  3.31%    57.36%  $965,486
12/31/97    $16.266    0.661     2.811    3.472     --     (0.434)   (0.434) $19.304   21.82%    0.42%  3.77%    53.40%  $850,646
12/31/96    $15.895    0.628     1.291    1.919   (0.628)  (0.920)   (1.548) $16.266   12.05%    0.43%  4.05%   108.86%  $675,740
12/31/95    $12.783    0.623     3.132    3.755   (0.623)  (0.020)   (0.643) $15.895   29.29%    0.43%  4.37%   112.52%  $589,165
12/31/94    $14.152    0.628    (0.814)  (0.186)  (0.628)  (0.555)   (1.183) $12.783   (1.84%)   0.44%  4.45%   160.79%  $442,140
</TABLE>
 
<PAGE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                          INCOME (LOSS) FROM                                                            RATIO
                                  NET                                                                    OF
                                REALIZED                                                        RATIO    NET
              NET                 AND                                                            OF     INVESTMENT         NET
             ASSET      INVESTMENT OPERATIONS UNREALIZED  LESS DIVIDENDS       NET             EXPENSES INCOME           ASSETS
             VALUE      NET      GAIN     TOTAL        FROM:   NET            ASSET              TO      TO              AT END
            BEGINNING INVESTMENT (LOSS)   FROM      NET    REALIZED           VALUE            AVERAGE  AVERAGE PORTFOLIO   OF
  PERIOD      OF      INCOME      ON     INVESTMENT INVESTMENT GAIN ON  TOTAL END OF   TOTAL     NET     NET    TURNOVER PERIOD
  ENDED     PERIOD    (LOSS)(2) INVESTMENTS OPERATIONS INCOME INVESTMENTS DIVIDENDS PERIOD RETURN(3) ASSETS ASSETS  RATE (000'S)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lincoln National Money Market Fund, Inc.
<S>         <C>       <C>       <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>     <C>      <C>
12/31/98    $10.000    0.497       N/A    0.497   (0.497 )    N/A    (0.497) $10.000    5.10 %   0.58 % 4.97 %     N/A   $137,062
12/31/97    $10.000    0.501       N/A    0.501   (0.501)     N/A    (0.501) $10.000    5.13%    0.59%  5.01%      N/A   $89,227
12/31/96    $10.000    0.505       N/A    0.505   (0.505)     N/A    (0.505) $10.000    5.07%    0.57%  5.07%      N/A   $90,358
12/31/95    $10.000    0.570       N/A    0.570   (0.570)     N/A    (0.570) $10.000    5.67%    0.52%  5.67%      N/A   $75,319
12/31/94    $10.000    0.381       N/A    0.381   (0.381)     N/A    (0.381) $10.000    3.82%    0.52%  3.82%      N/A   $77,177
Lincoln National Social Awareness Fund, Inc.
12/31/98    $35.657    0.367     6.414    6.781   (0.672)  (1.483)   (2.155) $40.283   19.89%    0.38%  1.10%    37.55%  $1,868,231
12/31/97    $27.316    0.364     9.447    9.811     --     (1.470)   (1.470) $35.657   37.53%    0.41%  1.37%    34.84%  $1,255,494
12/31/96    $22.590    0.389     5.748    6.137   (0.389)  (1.022)   (1.411) $27.316   28.94%    0.46%  1.58%    45.90%  $636,595
12/31/95    $16.642    0.432     6.491    6.923   (0.432)  (0.543)   (0.975) $22.590   42.83%    0.50%  2.21%    54.02%  $297,983
12/31/94    $17.915    0.377    (0.461)  (0.084)  (0.377)  (0.812)   (1.189) $16.642    0.19%    0.53%  2.22%    64.97%  $163,514
Lincoln National Special Opportunities Fund, Inc.
12/31/98    $35.056    0.470     1.795    2.265   (0.862)  (3.043)   (3.905) $33.416    6.79%    0.42%  1.44%    76.27%  $917,796
12/31/97    $29.423    0.477     7.293    7.770     --     (2.137)   (2.137) $35.056   28.15%    0.42%  1.57%    73.74%  $872,822
12/31/96    $27.383    0.548     3.867    4.415   (0.548)  (1.827)   (2.375) $29.423   16.51%    0.44%  2.00%    88.17%  $648,592
12/31/95    $22.164    0.616     6.131    6.747   (0.616)  (0.912)   (1.528) $27.383   31.86%    0.45%  2.39%    90.12%  $505,755
12/31/94    $24.478    0.565    (0.942)  (0.377)  (0.565)  (1.372)   (1.937) $22.164   (1.00%)   0.48%  2.49%    74.63%  $318,417
</TABLE>
 
(1)  The per share data, total return, ratios and portfolio turnover are
     calculated for the period from commencement of investment activity on
     January 3, 1994 through December 31, 1994. Accordingly, the total return,
     ratios, and portfolio turnover have NOT been calculated on an annualized
     basis.
 
(2)  Per share information for the Capital Appreciation, Equity-Income, Global
     Asset Allocation, and International funds for the year ended December 31,
     1998 was based on the average shares outstanding method.
 
(3)  Total return percentages in this table are calculated on the basis
     prescribed by the Securities and Exchange Commission. These percentages are
     based on the underlying mutual fund shares.
 
GENERAL INFORMATION
 
You should direct any inquiry to Lincoln National Life Insurance Co., at P.O.
Box 2340, Fort Wayne, Indiana 46801, or, call 1-800-4LINCOLN (454-6265).
 
Each fund will issue:
 
- - unaudited semiannual reports showing current investments and other
  information; and
 
- - annual financial statements audited by the fund's independent auditors.
 
These Prospectuses do not contain all the information included in the
Registration Statements that the funds have filed with the SEC. You may examine
the Registration Statements, including exhibits, at the SEC in Washington, D.C.
Statements made in the Prospectuses about any variable annuity contract,
variable life insurance contract, or other document referred to in a contract,
are not necessarily complete. In each instance, we refer you to the copy of that
CONTRACT or other document filed as an exhibit to the related Registration
Statement. We qualify each statement in all respects by that reference.
 
The use of a fund by both annuity and life insurance variable accounts is called
mixed funding. Due to differences in redemption rates, tax treatment, or other
considerations, the interests of contract owners under the variable life
accounts may conflict with those of contract owners under the variable annuity
accounts. Violation of the federal tax laws by one variable account investing in
a fund could cause the contracts funded through another variable account to lose
their tax-deferred status, unless remedial action were taken. The Board of
Directors of each fund will monitor for any material conflicts and determine
what action, if any, the fund or a variable account should take.
 
A conflict could arise that requires a variable account to redeem a substantial
amount of assets from any of the funds. The redemption could disrupt orderly
portfolio management to the detriment of those contract owners still investing
in that fund. Also, that fund could determine that it has become so large that
its size materially impairs investment performance. The fund would then examine
its options.
 
Lincoln Life performs the dividend and transfer functions for each fund.
 
PREPARING FOR YEAR 2000
 
Many existing computer programs use only two digits in the date field to
identify the year. If left uncorrected these programs, which were designed and
developed without considering the impact of the upcoming change in the century,
could fail to operate or could produce erroneous results when processing dates
after December 31, 1999. For example, for a bond with a stated
<PAGE>
maturity date of July 1, 2000, a computer program could read and store the
maturity date as July 1, 1900. This problem is known by many names, such as the
"Year 2000 Problem", "Y2K", and the "Millenium Bug".
 
The Year 2000 Problem affects virtually all computer programs worldwide. It can
cause a computer system to suddenly stop operating. It can also result in a
computer corrupting vital company records, and the problem could go undetected
for a long time. The updating of fund-related computer systems is the
responsibility of Lincoln Life as part of its own year 2000 updating process.
Delaware Service Company Inc. (Delaware), which provides substantially all of
the accounting and valuation services for the funds, is responsible for updating
all its computer systems (including those which serve the funds) to accommodate
the year 2000. If Y2K problems with computer programs affecting the funds are
left unchecked they can cause such problems as share transfer errors; accounting
errors; improper instructions to the securities custodian of a fund; and
erroneous net asset values. In a worst-case scenario, this could result in a
material disruption of the operations of the funds, Lincoln Life and/or
Delaware.
 
However, these companies are wholly owned by Lincoln National Corporation (LNC),
which has had Year 2000 processes in place since 1996. LNC projects aggregate
expenditures in excess of $92 million for its Y2K efforts through the year 2000.
Both Lincoln Life and Delaware have dedicated Year 2000 teams and steering
committees that are answerable to their counterparts in LNC.
 
In light of the potential problems discussed above, Lincoln Life, as part of its
Year 2000 updating process, has assumed responsibility for correcting all
high-priority Information Technology (IT) systems which service the funds.
Delaware for its part is responsible for updating all its high-priority IT
systems to support these vital services. The Year 2000 effort, for both IT and
non-IT systems, is organized into four phases:
 
- - awareness-raising and inventory of all assets (including third-party agent and
  vendor relationships)
 
- - assessment and high-level planning and strategy
 
- - remediation of affected systems and equipment; and
 
- - testing to verify Year 2000 readiness.
 
Both companies are currently on schedule to have their high-priority IT systems
(including those which support the funds) remediated and tested to demonstrate
readiness by June 30, 1999. During the third and fourth quarters of 1999,
additional testing of the environment will continue. Both companies are
currently on schedule to have their high-priority non-IT systems (elevators,
heating and ventilation, security systems, etc.) remediated and tested by
October 31, 1999.
 
The work on Year 2000 issues has not suffered significant delays; however, some
uncertainty remains. Specific factors that give rise to this uncertainty include
(but are certainly not limited to) a possible loss of technical resources to
perform the work; failure to identify all susceptible systems; and
non-compliance by third parties whose systems and operations impact Lincoln
Life. In a report dated February 26, 1999, entitled, INVESTIGATING THE IMPACT OF
THE YEAR 2000 TECHNOLOGY PROBLEM, S. Prt 106-10, the U.S. Senate Special
Committee on the Year 2000 Technology Problem expressed its concern that
"Financial services firms...are particularly vulnerable to...the risk that a
material customer or business partner will fail, as a result of the computer
problems, to meet its obligations".
 
One important source of uncertainty is the extent to which the key trading
partners of Lincoln Life and of Delaware will be successful in their own
remediation and testing efforts. Lincoln Life and Delaware have been monitoring
the progress of their trading partners; however, the efforts of these partners
are beyond our control.
 
Lincoln Life and Delaware expect to have completed their necessary remediation
and testing efforts prior to December 31, 1999. However, given the nature and
complexity of the problem, there can be no guarantee by either company that
there will not be significant computer problems after December 31, 1999.
<PAGE>
THIS PAGE WAS INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK.
<PAGE>
You can find additional information in each fund's Statement of Additional
Information (SAI), which is on file with the SEC. Each fund incorporates its
SAI, dated May 1, 1999, into its Prospectus. Each fund will provide a free copy
of its SAI on request.
 
You can find still further information about each fund's investments in the
fund's annual and semi-annual reports to shareholders. The Annual Report
discusses the market conditions and investment strategies that significantly
affected that fund's performance (except the Money Market Fund) during its last
fiscal year. Each fund will provide a free copy of its Annual and Semi-Annual
Report on request.
 
For an SAI or Report, either write Lincoln National Life Insurance Co., P.O. Box
2340, Fort Wayne, Indiana 46801, or call 1-800-4LINCOLN (454-6265). Also call
this number to request other information about a fund, or to make inquiries.
 
You can review and copy information about the funds (including the SAIs) at the
SEC's Public Reference Room in Washington, D.C. You can get information on the
operation of the Public Reference Room by calling the SEC at 1-800-SEC-0330. You
can also get reports and other information about the funds on the SEC's Internet
site at http:// www.sec.gov. You can get copies of this information by writing
the SEC Public Reference Section, Washington, D.C. 20549-6009, and paying a
duplicating fee.
 
Fund Investment Company Act File Numbers:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                   <C>        <C>
LINCOLN NATIONAL AGGRESSIVE GROWTH FUND, INC.:        33-70742;   811-8090
LINCOLN NATIONAL BOND FUND, INC.:                      2-80746;   811-3210
LINCOLN NATIONAL CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND, INC.:     33-70272;   811-8074
LINCOLN NATIONAL EQUITY-INCOME FUND, INC.:            33-71158;   811-8126
LINCOLN NATIONAL GLOBAL ASSET ALLOCATION FUND, INC.:  33-13530;   811-5115
LINCOLN NATIONAL GROWTH AND INCOME FUND, INC.:         2-80741;   811-3211
LINCOLN NATIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUND, INC.:            33-38335;   811-6233
LINCOLN NATIONAL MANAGED FUND, INC.:                   2-82276;   811-3683
LINCOLN NATIONAL MONEY MARKET FUND, INC.:              2-80743;   811-3212
LINCOLN NATIONAL SOCIAL AWARENESS FUND, INC.:         33-19896;   811-5464
LINCOLN NATIONAL SPECIAL OPPORTUNITIES FUND, INC.:     2-80731;   811-3291
</TABLE>
 
<PAGE>
THIS PAGE WAS INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK.
<PAGE>
PREFACE TO THE MULTI FUND-REGISTERED TRADEMARK- STATEMENTS OF ADDITIONAL
INFORMATION
 
THE PREFACE AND TABLE OF CONTENTS ARE PART OF THE STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL
INFORMATION (SAI) FOR EACH OF THE FOLLOWING FUNDS:
 
Lincoln National Aggressive Growth Fund, Inc. (Aggressive Growth)
 
Lincoln National Bond Fund, Inc. (Bond)
 
Lincoln National Capital Appreciation Fund, Inc. (Capital Appreciation)
 
   
Lincoln National Equity-Income Fund, Inc. (Equity-Income)
    
 
Lincoln National Global Asset Allocation Fund, Inc. (Global Asset Allocation)
 
Lincoln National Growth and Income Fund, Inc. (Growth and Income)
 
Lincoln National International Fund, Inc. (International)
 
Lincoln National Managed Fund, Inc. (Managed)
 
Lincoln National Money Market Fund, Inc. (Money Market)
 
Lincoln National Social Awareness Fund, Inc. (Social Awareness)
 
Lincoln National Special Opportunities Fund, Inc. (Special Opportunities)
 
   
Each fund has its own SAI that provides more information about that fund. For
each fund's SAI, the fund's audited financial statements and the report of Ernst
& Young LLP, Independent Auditors, are incorporated by reference to each fund's
1998 Annual Report. A fund's SAI should be read in conjunction with the
Prospectus of that fund dated May 1, 1999. You may obtain a copy of any fund's
Annual Report or Prospectus on request and without charge. Please write Lincoln
National Life Insurance Co., P.O. Box 2340, Fort Wayne, Indiana 46801 or call
1-800-4LINCOLN (454-6265).
    
 
A fund's SAI is not a Prospectus.
 
The date of each fund's SAI is May 1, 1999.
<PAGE>
TABLE OF CONTENTS FOR THE FUND SAIS
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
SUBJECT                                          PAGE
<S>                                            <C>
- --------------------------------------------------------
PREFACE
DESCRIPTION OF THE FUND
Aggressive Growth
Bond
Capital Appreciation
Equity-Income
Global Asset Allocation
Growth and Income
International
Managed
Money Market
Social Awareness
Special Opportunities
- --------------------------------------------------------
ADDITIONAL INVESTMENT STRATEGIES AND RISKS
Aggressive Growth
Bond
Capital Appreciation
Equity-Income
Global Asset Allocation
Growth and Income
International
Managed
Money Market
Social Awareness
Special Opportunities
- --------------------------------------------------------
STRATEGIC PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS
Aggressive Growth
Bond
Capital Appreciation
Equity-Income
Global Asset Allocation
Growth and Income
International
Managed
Money Market
Social Awareness
Special Opportunities
 
<CAPTION>
SUBJECT                                          PAGE
- --------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                            <C>
INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS
Aggressive Growth
Bond
Capital Appreciation
Equity-Income
Global Asset Allocation
Growth and Income
International
Managed
Money Market
Social Awareness
Special Opportunities
- --------------------------------------------------------
PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS AND BROKERAGE
Aggressive Growth
Bond
Capital Appreciation
Equity-Income
Global Asset Allocation
Growth and Income
International
Managed
Money Market
Social Awareness
Special Opportunities
- --------------------------------------------------------
GENERAL SAI DISCLOSURE -- IMPORTANT
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
Investment advisor and sub-advisor
Directors and officers
Fund expenses
Description of shares
Strategic portfolio transactions --
additional information
Foreign investments
Valuation of portfolio securities
Custodian
Independent auditors
Financial statements
Bond and commercial paper ratings
Taxes
Derivative transactions -- definitions
</TABLE>
    
<PAGE>
LINCOLN NATIONAL
AGGRESSIVE GROWTH FUND, INC.
 
DESCRIPTION OF THE FUND
 
   
Lincoln National Aggressive Growth Fund, Inc. (the fund) was incorporated in
Maryland in 1993 as an open-end diversified management investment company whose
investment objective is to maximize capital appreciation. The fund's investment
objective and certain investment restrictions are fundamental and cannot be
changed without the affirmative vote of a majority of the outstanding voting
securities of the fund. The fund may change its non-fundamental investment
policies without prior shareholder approval. See "Investment restrictions."
There can be no assurance that the objective of the fund will be achieved.
References to advisor in this SAI include both Lincoln Investment Management,
Inc. (Lincoln Investment) and until May 1, 1999 Lynch & Mayer, Inc., and Putnam
Investment Management, Inc. thereafter unless the context otherwise indicates.
    
 
ADDITIONAL INVESTMENT STRATEGIES AND RISKS
 
The Prospectus discusses the fund's principal investment strategies used to
pursue the fund's investment objective and the risks of those strategies. The
following discussion describes other investment strategies that the fund may use
as market conditions warrant, and notes the risks associated with these other
investment strategies. (Italicized terms that are not defined herein are defined
in the fund's Prospectus.)
 
   
As general matter, the fund will invest mainly in common stocks of small and
medium-sized companies. The fund also may invest up to 35% of the value of its
assets in convertible bonds; convertible preferred stock and warrants to
purchase common stock; futures contracts; and options contracts.
    
 
The fund also may invest in the following types of instruments or use the
following investment strategies:
 
CONVERTIBLE SECURITIES
 
The fund may invest in securities that either have warrants or rights attached,
or are otherwise convertible. A convertible security is typically a fixed-income
security (a bond or preferred stock) that may be converted at a stated price
within a specified period of time into a specified number of shares of common
stock of the same or a different issuer. Convertible securities are generally
senior to common stocks in a corporation's capital structure but are usually
subordinate to similar non-convertible securities. Convertible securities
provide a fixed-income stream which is generally higher in yield than the income
that can be derived from a common stock, but lower than that afforded by a
similar non-convertible security. Because it can be converted into common stock,
frequently a convertible security will allow its holder to take advantage of
increases in the market price of that common stock. In general, the market value
of a convertible security is at least the higher of its investment value (that
is, its value as a fixed-income security) or its conversion value (that is, its
value upon conversion into its underlying common stock). While no securities
investment is without some risk, investments in convertible securities generally
entail less risk than investments in the common stock of the same issuer.
 
U.S. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES
 
The fund may also invest in securities of the U.S. Government. Securities
guaranteed by the U.S. Government include: (1) direct obligations of the U.S.
Treasury (such as Treasury bills, notes and bonds) and (2) federal agency
obligations guaranteed as to principal and interest by the U.S. Treasury [such
as Government National Mortgage Association (GNMA) certificates and Federal
Housing Administration (FHA) debentures]. These securities are of the highest
possible credit quality, because the payment of principal and interest is
unconditionally guaranteed by the U.S. Government. They are subject to
variations in market value due to fluctuations in interest rates, but, if held
to maturity are deemed to be free of credit risk for the life of the investment.
 
Securities issued by U.S. Government instrumentalities and certain federal
agencies are neither direct obligations of, nor are they guaranteed by, the U.S.
Treasury. However, they do generally involve federal sponsorship in one way or
another. Some are backed by specific types of collateral. Some are supported by
the issuer's right to borrow from the U.S. Treasury. Some are supported by the
discretionary authority of the U.S. Treasury to purchase certain obligations of
the issuer. Others are supported only by the credit of the issuing government
agency or instrumentality. These agencies and instrumentalities include, but are
not limited to, Federal Land Banks, Farmers Home Administration, Central
 
                                                                            AG-1
<PAGE>
Bank for Cooperatives, Federal Intermediate Credit Banks and Federal Home Loan
Banks. There is no guarantee that the government will support these types of
securities, and therefore they may involve more risk than other government
obligations.
 
U.S. Government securities may be acquired by the fund in the form of
separately-traded principal and interest segments of selected securities issued
or guaranteed by the U.S. Treasury. These segments are traded independently
under the Separate Trading of Registered Interest and Principal Securities
(STRIPS) program. Under the STRIPS program, the principal and interest parts are
individually numbered and separately issued by the U.S. Treasury at the request
of depository financial institutions, which then trade the parts independently.
Obligations of the Resolution Funding Corp. are similarly divided into principal
and interest parts and maintained on the book entry records of the Federal
Reserve Banks.
 
The fund may also invest in custodial receipts that evidence ownership of future
interest payments, principal payments, or both, on certain U.S. Treasury notes
or bonds in connection with programs sponsored by banks and brokerage firms.
Such notes and bonds are held in custody by a bank on behalf of the owners of
the receipts. These custodial receipts are known by various names, including
Treasury Receipts (TRs), Treasury Interest Guarantee Receipts (TIGRs), and
Certificates of Accrual on Treasury Securities (CATS) and may not be deemed U.S.
Government securities.
 
The fund may invest occasionally in collective investment vehicles, the assets
of which consist principally of U.S. Government securities or other assets
substantially collateralized or supported by such securities, such as government
trust certificates.
 
In general, the U.S. Government securities in which the fund invests do not have
as high a yield as do more speculative securities not supported by the U.S.
Government or its agencies or instrumentalities.
 
MONEY MARKET INSTRUMENTS
 
The fund may invest in money market instruments without limit for temporary or
defensive purposes. These are shorter-term debt securities generally maturing in
one year or less. They include:
 
1.  Commercial paper (short-term notes up to nine months duration issued by
    corporations or government bodies);
 
2.  Commercial bank obligations (certificates of deposit, interest-bearing time
    deposits), bankers' acceptances (time drafts on a commercial bank where the
    bank accepts an irrevocable obligation to pay at maturity), and documented
    discount notes (corporate promissory discount notes accompanied by a
    commercial bank guarantee to pay at maturity);
 
3.  Corporate bonds and notes (corporate obligations that mature, or that may be
    redeemed, in one year or less); and/or
 
4.  Savings association obligations (certificates of deposit issued by mutual
    savings banks or savings and loan associations).
 
Even though certain floating or variable rate obligations (securities which have
a coupon rate that changes at least annually and generally more frequently) have
maturities in excess of one year, they are also considered to be short-term debt
securities.
 
SPECIAL SITUATIONS
 
At times, the fund may invest in certain securities under special situations. A
special situation arises when, in the advisor's or sub-advisor's opinion, the
securities of a particular company will be recognized and will appreciate in
value due to a specific development at that company. Developments creating a
special situation might include a new product or process, a management change, a
technological breakthrough or another event considered significant. Investment
in special situations may carry an additional risk of loss in the event that the
anticipated development does not occur or does not attract the expected
attention.
 
The fund may invest in the securities of companies issuers which have been in
continuous operation for less than three years, or have capitalizations of less
than $250 million at the time of purchase. Securities of these companies may
have limited liquidity which can result in their being priced lower than they
may be otherwise. Investments in unseasoned or smaller companies are more
speculative and involve greater risk than do investments in companies with
established operating records or that are larger.
 
FOREIGN INVESTMENTS
 
   
The fund may invest up to 15% of its assets in securities of foreign issuers.
For these purposes, foreign corporate securities are stocks of companies
organized, or having a majority of their assets, or earning a majority of their
operating income, in a country outside of the U.S. Securities of foreign issuers
made trade on U.S. or foreign markets.
    
 
Foreign investing involves risks that differ from investing in U.S. markets. One
important risk is that of fluctuation in currency exchange rates. When the
advisor or
 
AG-2
<PAGE>
sub-advisor believes that a currency in which a portfolio security or securities
is denominated may suffer a decline against the U.S. dollar, it may hedge that
risk. It does so by entering into a forward contract to sell an amount of
foreign currency approximating the value of some or all of the portfolio
securities denominated in that foreign currency.
 
   
For a discussion of other risks inherent in foreign investing, and how the funds
intend to handle them, see "Foreign investments" in the General SAI Disclosure
for the 11 funds.
    
 
WHEN-ISSUED SECURITIES AND FIRM COMMITMENT AGREEMENTS
 
The fund may purchase securities on a delayed delivery or when-issued basis and
enter into firm commitment agreements (transactions where the payment obligation
and interest rate are fixed at the time of the transaction but the settlement is
delayed). The transactions may involve either corporate or government
securities. The fund, as purchaser, assumes the risk of any decline in value of
the security beginning on the date of the agreement or purchase. The fund may
invest in when-issued securities in order to take advantage of securities that
may be especially under or over valued when trading on a when-issued basis. When
the fund engages in when-issued transactions, it relies on the seller to
consummate the trade. Failure of the seller to do so may result in the fund's
incurring a loss or missing the opportunity to obtain a price considered to be
advantageous.
 
The fund will segregate liquid assets such as cash, U.S. Government securities,
or other appropriate high grade debt obligations in an amount sufficient to meet
its payment obligations in these transactions. Although these transactions will
not be entered into for leveraging purposes, to the extent the fund's aggregate
commitments under these transactions exceed its holdings of cash and securities
that do not fluctuate in value (such as money market instruments), the fund
temporarily will be in a leveraged position (i.e., it will have an amount
greater than its net assets subject to market risk). It may be expected that the
fund's net assets will fluctuate to a greater degree when it sets aside
portfolio securities to cover such purchase commitments than when it sets aside
cash.
 
Because it will set aside cash or liquid portfolio securities to satisfy its
purchase commitments in the manner described, the fund's liquidity and the
ability of the advisor and sub-advisor to manage it might be affected in the
event its commitments to purchase when-issued securities ever exceeded 25% of
the value of its total assets. When the fund engages in when-issued
transactions, it relies on the seller to consummate the trade. Failure of the
seller to do so may result in the fund's incurring a loss or missing the
opportunity to obtain a price considered to be advantageous.
 
Should market values of the fund's portfolio securities decline while the fund
is in a leveraged position, greater depreciation of its net assets would likely
occur than if it were not in such a position. The fund will not borrow money to
settle these transactions. Instead, it will liquidate other portfolio securities
in advance of settlement, if necessary, to generate additional cash to meet its
obligations.
 
SECTOR INVESTING
 
The fund may concentrate its investments in specific sectors of the economy. The
fund, however, will never invest more than 25% of its total assets in any single
industry within a sector of the economy. Sectors investments also will be
limited to the greater of twice the percentage weighting in any one sector when
compared to its representation in the fund's stock market index benchmark or 25%
of the fund's total assets. The risk of sector investing is that adverse
conditions affecting one sector in which the fund has concentrated its
investments could cause the value of the fund's shares and investments to
fluctuate or decline independently of the performance of the economy or the
stock markets in general.
 
BORROWING
 
The fund may borrow money for temporary or emergency purposes in amounts not
exceeding 25% of its total assets. If the fund borrows money, its share price
may be subject to greater fluctuation until the amount borrowed is paid off.
Purchasing securities when the fund has borrowed money may involve an element of
leverage. It will not purchase additional securities when the amount borrowed
exceeds 5% of its total assets.
 
ILLIQUID INVESTMENTS
 
Up to 15% of the fund's assets may be invested in securities or other
investments that are not readily marketable, including these:
 
1.  Repurchase agreements with maturities greater than seven calendar days;
 
2.  Time deposits maturing in more than seven calendar days;
 
                                                                            AG-3
<PAGE>
3.  To the extent a liquid secondary market does not exist for such instruments,
    futures contracts and options on futures;
 
4.  Certain over-the-counter options; loans and other direct debt instruments;
    certain restricted securities and government-stripped fixed-rate mortgage
    backed securities; and/or
 
5.  Certain Rule 144A restricted securities (Rule 144A securities for which a
    dealer or institutional market exists will not generally be considered
    illiquid).
 
Illiquid securities may be difficult to sell under certain market conditions,
which could expose the fund to losses if these securities must be sold quickly
in adverse markets. In the absence of market quotations, illiquid investments
are priced at fair value as determined in good faith by the Pricing Committee of
the Board of Directors.
 
DEBT SECURITIES, INCLUDING JUNK BONDS
 
   
The fund may invest up to 15% of its assets in debt securities, including junk
bonds. The fund has no pre-established minimum quality standards and may invest
in debt securities of any quality, including lower-rated bonds and junk bonds
that may offer higher yields because of the greater risk involved in those
investments. Debt securities rated at the time of purchase below investment
grade by the primary rating agencies (bonds rated Ba or lower by Moody's
Investors Service and BB or lower by Standard & Poor's Corp., or their
equivalents from other nationally recognized rating agencies, or if unrated, are
judged by the fund to be of comparable quality) constitute lower-rated
securities. See the General SAI Disclosure for a description of these ratings.
    
 
Lower-rated debt securities are often considered speculative and involve
significantly higher risk of default on the payment of principal and interest or
are more likely to experience significant price fluctuation due to changes in
the issuer's creditworthiness. Market prices of these securities may fluctuate
more than higher-rated debt securities and may decline significantly in periods
of general economic difficulty which may follow periods of rising interest
rates. Accordingly, past experience may not provide an accurate indication of
future performance of the high yield bond market, especially during periods of
economic recession.
 
The market for lower-rated debt securities may be less active than that for
higher-rated debt securities, which can adversely affect the prices at which
these securities can be sold. If market quotations are not available, these
securities will be valued in accordance with procedures established by the Board
of Directors, including the use of outside pricing services. Judgment plays a
greater role in valuing lower-rated corporate debt securities than is the case
for securities for which more external sources for quotations and last-sale
information are available. Adverse publicity, legislative and regulatory
developments, and changing investor perceptions may affect the ability of
outside pricing services used by the fund to value its portfolio securities and
the fund's ability to dispose of these lower-rated debt securities.
 
Since the risk of default is higher for lower-rated debt securities, the
advisor's and/or sub-advisor's research and credit analysis is an integral part
of managing any securities of this type held by the fund. In considering
investments for the fund, the advisor and/or sub-advisor, if any, will attempt
to identify those issuers of high-yielding debt securities whose financial
condition is adequate to meet future obligations, has improved, or is expected
to improve in the future. The advisor's and/or sub-advisor's analysis focuses on
relative values based on such factors as interest or dividend coverage, asset
coverage, earnings prospects, and the experience and managerial strength of the
issuer. There can be no assurance that such analysis will prove accurate.
 
The market value of debt securities typically varies inversely to changes in
prevailing interest rates. You should recognize that, in periods of declining
interest rates, the value of debt securities will tend to be somewhat higher
than prevailing market rates. In periods of rising interest rates, the value of
those securities may be somewhat lower. These fluctuations in the value of debt
securities may cause the value of the fund's shares to fluctuate in value.
 
STRATEGIC PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS
 
   
The fund may invest in one or more strategic portfolio transactions which we
define as derivative transactions and cash enhancement transactions. For your
convenience, in the General SAI Disclosure for the 11 funds we have included a
basic discussion of these special financial arrangement transactions and some of
the risks associated with them. The General SAI Disclosure for the 11 funds
contains definitions of the more commonly used derivative transactions,
technical explanations of how these transactions will be used and the limits on
their use. You should consult your financial counselor if you have specific
questions.
    
 
THE AGGRESSIVE GROWTH FUND IS AUTHORIZED:
 
a)  for derivative transactions, to: buy and sell exchange-traded and
    over-the-counter put and call
 
AG-4
<PAGE>
   
    options on stock and stock indices, on fixed-income (interest rate)
    securities; on equity and fixed-income indices and on other financial
    transactions; buy and sell futures contracts and options on futures
    contracts; engage in swaps, caps, floors, collars and similar interest-rate
    transactions; enter into currency forward contracts, currency futures,
    currency swaps, options on currencies and options on currency futures.
    
 
b)  for cash enhancement transactions, to: lend portfolio securities and engage
    in repurchase transactions. Collateral will be continually maintained at no
    less than 102% of the value of the loaned securities or of the repurchase
    price, as applicable.
 
The fund may use strategic portfolio transactions to hedge various market risks
(such as interest rates, currency exchange rates, and broad or specific equity
or fixed-income market movements); to attempt to protect against possible
changes in the market value of securities held in or to be purchased for the
fund resulting from securities markets or currency exchange rate fluctuations;
to protect the fund's unrealized gains in the value of its portfolio securities;
to facilitate the sale of such securities for investment purposes; to manage the
effective maturity or duration of fixed-income securities; to enhance potential
gain; or to establish a position in the derivatives markets as a temporary
substitute for purchasing or selling particular securities. Any or all of these
investment techniques may be used at any time and there is no particular
strategy that dictates the use of one technique rather than another, as use of
any strategic transaction is a function of numerous variables including market
conditions.
 
The ability of the fund to utilize these strategic transactions successfully
will depend on the advisor's or sub-advisor's ability to predict pertinent
market movements, which cannot be assured. Additional information relating to
the risks of certain financial instruments or strategies is set forth below.
 
RISK OF OPTIONS ON CURRENCIES AND SECURITIES
 
The fund may purchase and sell (write) put and call options on securities,
although the present intent is to write only covered call options. If the writer
of an option wishes to terminate the obligation, it may effect a closing
purchase transaction. Similarly, an investor who is the holder of an option may
liquidate its position by effecting a closing sale transaction. There is no
guarantee that either a closing purchase or a closing sale transaction can be
effected. Although the fund will generally purchase or write only those options
for which there appears to be an active secondary market, there is no assurance
that a liquid secondary market on an exchange or other trading facility will
exist for any particular option, or at any particular time, and for some options
no secondary market on an exchange or otherwise may exist. In such event, it
might not be possible to effect closing transactions in particular options, with
the result that the fund would have to exercise its options in order to realize
any profit and would incur brokerage commissions upon the exercise of call
options and upon the subsequent disposition of underlying securities acquired
through the exercise of call options or upon the purchase of underlying
securities for the exercise of put options.
 
Reasons for the absence of a liquid secondary market on an exchange include the
following: (1) there may be insufficient trading interest in certain options;
(2) restrictions may be imposed by an exchange on opening transactions or
closing transactions, or both; (3) trading halts, suspensions or other
restrictions may be imposed with respect to particular classes or series of
options or underlying securities; (4) unusual or unforeseen circumstances may
interrupt normal operations on an exchange, (e.g., the facilities of an exchange
or a clearing corporation may not at all times be adequate to handle current
trading volume); or (5) one or more exchanges could, for economic or other
reasons, decide or be compelled at some future date to discontinue the trading
of options (or a particular class or series of options), in which event the
secondary market on that exchange (or in the class or series of options) would
cease to exist, although outstanding options on that exchange that had been
issued by a clearing corporation as a result of trades in that exchange would
continue to be exercisable in accordance with their terms. There is no assurance
that higher than anticipated trading activity or other unforeseen events might
not, at times, render certain of the facilities of any of the clearing
corporations inadequate, and thereby result in the institution by an exchange of
special procedures which may interfere with the timely execution of customers'
orders. However, the OCC, based on forecasts provided by the U.S. exchanges,
believes that its facilities are adequate to handle the volume of reasonably
anticipated options transactions, and such exchanges have advised such clearing
corporation that they believe their facilities will also be adequate to handle
reasonably anticipated volume.
 
See "Risks of foreign currency options" for a discussion of the additional risks
of foreign currency option contracts.
 
                                                                            AG-5
<PAGE>
RISKS OF OPTIONS ON STOCK INDICES
 
Index prices may be distorted if trading of certain securities included in the
index is interrupted. Trading in the index options also may be interrupted in
certain circumstances, such as if trading were halted in a substantial number of
securities included in the index. If this occurred, the fund would not be able
to close out options which it had purchased or written and, if restrictions on
exercise were imposed, may be unable to exercise an option it holds, which could
result in substantial losses to the fund. It is the fund's policy to purchase or
write options only on indices which include a number of securities sufficient to
minimize the likelihood of a trading halt in the index.
 
If the fund has written an option on an industry or market segment index, it
will segregate or put into escrow with its custodian or pledge to a broker as
collateral for the option, at least ten qualified securities, which are stocks
of an issuer in such industry or market segment, with a market value at the time
the option is written of not less than 100% of the current index value times the
multiplier times the number of contracts. Such stocks will include stocks which
represent at least 50% of the fund holdings in that industry or market segment.
No individual security will represent more than 15% of the amount so segregated,
pledged or escrowed in the case of broadly-based stock market index options or
25% of such amount in the case of industry or market segment index options.
 
SPECIAL RISKS OF WRITING CALLS ON STOCK INDICES
 
Unless the fund has other liquid assets which are sufficient to satisfy the
exercise of a call, it would be required to liquidate portfolio securities in
order to satisfy the exercise. Because an exercise must be settled within hours
after receiving the notice of exercise, if the fund fails to anticipate an
exercise it may have to borrow from a bank (in amounts not exceeding 20% of the
value of its total assets) pending settlement of the sale of securities in its
portfolio and would incur interest charges thereon.
 
When the fund has written a call, there is also a risk that the market may
decline between the time it has a call exercised against it, at a price which is
fixed as of the closing level of the index on the date of exercise, and the time
it is able to sell securities in its portfolio. As with stock options, the fund
will not learn that an index option has been exercised until the day following
the exercise date. Unlike a call on stock where the fund would be able to
deliver the underlying securities in settlement, the fund may have to sell part
of its portfolio in order to make settlement in cash and the price of such
securities might decline before they can be sold. This timing risk makes certain
strategies involving more than one option substantially more risky with index
options than with stock options. For example, even if an index call which the
fund has written is covered by an index call held by the portfolio with the same
strike price, the fund will bear the risk that the level of the index may
decline between the close of trading on the date the exercise notice is filed
with the cleaning corporation and the close of trading on the date the fund
exercises the call it holds or the time the fund sells the call, which in either
case would occur no earlier than the day following the day the exercise notice
was filed.
 
OVER-THE-COUNTER (OTC) OPTIONS AND LIQUID SECURITIES
 
The fund will engage in OTC options transactions only with primary dealers that
have been specifically approved by the Board of Directors. The fund will not
engage in OTC options transactions if the amount invested by it in OTC options
plus, with respect to OTC options written by it, the amounts required to be
treated as illiquid pursuant to the terms of certain no-action letters published
by the Securities and Exchange Commission staff (and the value of the assets
used as cover with respect to OTC option sales which are not within the scope of
such letters), plus the amount invested by fund in illiquid securities, would
exceed 15% of its total assets. OTC options on securities other than U.S.
Government securities may not be within the scope of such letters and,
accordingly, the amount invested by the fund in OTC options on such other
securities and the value of the assets used as cover with respect to OTC option
sales regarding such non-U.S. Government securities will be treated as illiquid
and subject to the 15% limitation on assets that may be invested in illiquid
securities.
 
   
RISKS OF TRANSACTIONS IN FUTURES CONTRACTS AND RELATED OPTIONS
    
 
   
Normally the fund expects to use futures contracts and related options solely
for bona fide hedging purposes, as that term is defined in Commodity Futures
Trading Commission (CFTC) regulations. However, in addition, the fund may take
positions in futures contracts and
    
 
AG-6
<PAGE>
   
related options which do not come within the CFTC definition, as long as the
aggregate initial margin and premiums required to establish those positions does
not exceed 5% of the net assets of the fund (after taking into account
unrealized profits and unrealized losses on any such contracts into which it has
entered).
    
 
   
The fund will not (1) sell futures contracts, purchase put options, or write
call options if, as a result, more than 25% of its total assets would be hedged
with futures and options under normal conditions; (2) purchase futures contracts
or write put options if, as a result, its total obligations upon settlement or
exercise of purchased futures contracts and written put options would exceed 25%
of its total assets; or (3) purchase call options if, as a result, the current
value of option premiums for call options purchased by it would exceed 5% of its
total assets. These limitations do not apply to options attached to or acquired
or traded together with their underlying securities, and do not apply to
securities that incorporate features similar to options.
    
 
   
In addition, the value of all futures contracts sold will not exceed the total
market value of the fund.
    
 
There are several risks in connection with the use of futures contracts as a
hedging device. Successful use of futures contracts is subject to the ability of
the advisor or sub-advisor to correctly predict movements in the direction of
interest rates or changes in market conditions. These predictions involve skills
and techniques that may be different from those involved in the management of
the portfolio being hedged. In addition, there can be no assurance that there
will be a correlation between movements in the price of the underlying index or
securities and movements in the price of the securities which are the subject of
the hedge. A decision of whether, when and how to hedge involves the exercise of
skill and judgment, and even a well-conceived hedge may be unsuccessful to some
degree because of market behavior or unexpected trends in interest rates.
 
RISKS OF FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSACTIONS
 
The fund may hold foreign currency deposits from time to time and may convert
dollars and foreign currencies in the foreign exchange markets. Currency
conversion involves dealer spreads and other costs, although commissions usually
are not charged. The fund also may enter into forward foreign currency exchange
contracts to protect the value of its portfolio against future changes in the
level of currency exchange rates. The fund's dealings in forward contracts will
be limited to hedging involving either specific transactions or portfolio
positions. Additionally, when the advisor and/or sub-advisor believe that the
currency of a particular foreign country may suffer a substantial decline
against the U.S. dollar, the fund may enter into a forward contract for a fixed
amount of dollars, to sell the amount of foreign currency approximating the
value of some or all of the securities it holds denominated in such foreign
currency. The fund also may use currency forward contracts to manage currency
risks and to facilitate transactions in foreign securities. The fund will not
segregate assets to cover forward contracts.
 
Successful use of forward currency contracts will depend on the advisor's and/or
sub-advisor's skill in analyzing and predicting currency values. Forward
contracts may substantially change the fund's investment exposure to changes in
currency exchange rates, and could result in losses to the fund if currencies do
not perform as the advisor and/or sub-advisor anticipate. For example, if a
currency's value rose at a time when the advisor and/or sub-advisor had hedged
by selling that currency in exchange for dollars, the fund would be unable to
participate in the currency's appreciation. If the advisor and/or sub-advisor
hedge currency exposure through proxy hedges, the fund could realize currency
losses from the hedge and the security position at the same time if the two
currencies do not move in tandem. Similarly, if the advisor and/or sub-advisor
increases the fund's exposure to a foreign currency, and that currency's value
declines, the fund will realize a loss.
 
There is no assurance that the use of forward currency contracts will be
advantageous to the fund or that it will hedge at an appropriate time.
 
RISKS OF FOREIGN CURRENCY OPTIONS
 
The fund may purchase U.S. exchange-listed call and put options on foreign
currencies. The value of a foreign currency option is dependent upon the value
of the foreign currency and the U.S. dollar, and may have no relationship to the
investment merits of a foreign security. Because foreign currency transactions
occurring in the interbank market involve substantially larger amounts than
those that may be involved in the use of foreign currency options, investors may
be disadvantaged by having to deal in an odd lot market (generally consisting of
transactions of less than $1 million) for the underlying foreign currencies at
prices that are less favorable than for round lots.
 
There is no systematic reporting of last sale information for foreign currencies
and there is no regulatory requirement that quotations available through dealer
or other market sources be firm or revised on a timely basis. Available
quotation information is generally representative of very large transactions in
the interbank market
 
                                                                            AG-7
<PAGE>
and thus may not reflect relatively smaller transactions (less than $1 million)
where rates may be less favorable. The interbank market in foreign currencies is
a global, around-the-clock market. To the extent that the U.S. options markets
are closed while the markets for the underlying currencies remain open,
significant price and rate movements may take place in the underlying markets
that cannot be reflected in the options market.
 
LENDING OF PORTFOLIO SECURITIES
 
The fund may lend securities from its portfolio to brokers, dealers and other
financial organizations. The fund may not lend its portfolio securities to
Lincoln Life or its affiliates unless it has applied for and received specific
authority from the Commission. Such loans, if and when made, may not exceed
one-third of its total assets. The risks in lending portfolio securities, as
with other extensions of secured credit, consist of possible delay in receiving
additional collateral or in the recovery of the securities or possible loss of
rights in the collateral should the borrower fail financially.
 
REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS
 
   
The fund may engage in repurchase agreement transactions. See the General SAI
Disclosure for the 11 funds for a description of repurchase agreements and the
risks they involve.
    
 
INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS
 
The fund has adopted policies and investment restrictions. The investment
restrictions may not be changed without a majority vote of its outstanding
shares, and are considered fundamental. Such majority is defined in the 1940 Act
as the vote of the lesser of (1) 67% or more of the outstanding voting
securities present at a meeting, if the holders of more than 50% of the
outstanding voting securities are present in person or by proxy, or (2) more
than 50% of the outstanding voting securities. All percentage limitations
expressed in the following investment restrictions are measured immediately
after and giving effect to the relevant transaction.
 
The fund may not:
 
1.  Purchase any security (other than securities issued or guaranteed by the
    U.S. Government or its agencies or instrumentalities) if, immediately after
    and as a result of such investment (a) more than 5% of the value of its
    total assets would be invested in securities of the issuer, except that, as
    to 25% of its total assets, up to 10% of its total assets may be invested in
    securities issued or guaranteed as to payment of interest and principal by a
    foreign government or its agencies or instrumentalities or by a
    multinational agency, or (b) it would hold more than 10% of the voting
    securities of the issuer, or (c) more than 25% of the value of its assets
    would be invested in a single industry. Each of the electric utility,
    natural gas distribution, natural gas pipeline, combined electric and
    natural gas utility, and telephone industries shall be considered as a
    separate industry for this purpose;
 
2.  Buy or sell real estate or commodities or commodity contracts; however, it
    may invest in debt securities secured by real estate or interests therein,
    or issued by companies which invest in real estate or interests therein,
    including real estate investment trusts, and may purchase or sell currencies
    (including forward currency contracts) and financial futures contracts and
    options thereon;
 
3.  Acquire securities subject to restrictions on disposition or securities for
    which there is no readily available market, or enter into repurchase
    agreements or purchase time deposits maturing in more than seven days, if,
    immediately after and as a result, the value of such securities would
    exceed, in the aggregate, 15% of its total assets;
 
4.  Engage in the business of underwriting securities of other issuers, except
    to the extent that the disposal of an investment position may technically
    cause the fund to be considered an underwriter as that term is defined under
    the Securities Act of 1933, as amended;
 
5.  Make loans in an aggregate amount in excess of one-third of its total
    assets, taken at the time any loan is made, provided that entering into
    certain repurchase agreements and purchasing debt securities shall not be
    deemed loans for the purposes of this restriction;
 
6.  Make short sales of securities or maintain a short position if, when added
    together more than 25% of the value of its net assets would be (a) deposited
    as collateral for the obligation to replace securities borrowed to effect
    short sales and (b) allocated to segregated accounts in connection with
    short sales;
 
   
7.  Borrow money, except from banks for temporary or emergency purposes not in
    excess of one-third of the value of its total assets;
    
 
8.  Invest in securities of other investment companies except as may be acquired
    as part of a merger, consolidation, reorganization or acquisition of assets
    and except that it may invest up to 5% of its total
 
AG-8
<PAGE>
   
    assets in the securities of any one investment company, but may not own more
    than 3% of the securities of any investment company or invest more than 10%
    of its total assets in the securities of other investment companies; or
    
 
   
9.  Issue senior securities, except as permitted under the Investment Company
    Act of 1940, as amended (1940 Act).
    
 
The following restrictions are non-fundamental and may be changed by a vote of
the fund's Board of Directors. The fund does not presently intend to:
 
   
10. Enter into repurchase agreements with maturities in excess of seven days if
    such investment, together with other investments which are not readily
    marketable, exceed 15% of its total assets. This restriction shall not apply
    to securities eligible for resale to institutional buyers under Rule 144A of
    the Securities Act of 1933;
    
 
   
11. Make investments for the purpose of exercising control or management.
    
 
PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS AND BROKERAGE
 
The advisor and sub-advisor are responsible for decisions to buy and sell
securities and other investments for the fund, the selection of brokers, dealers
and futures commission merchants to effect the transactions, and the negotiation
of brokerage commissions, if any. In this section, the term advisor includes the
sub-advisor. Purchases and sales of securities on a stock exchange are effected
through brokers who charge a commission for their services. Broker-dealers may
also receive commissions in connection with options and futures transactions
including the purchase and sale of underlying securities upon the exercise of
options. Orders may be directed to any broker or futures commission merchant.
 
In the over-the-counter market, securities are generally traded on a net basis
with dealers acting as principal for their own accounts without a stated
commission, although the price of the security usually includes a profit to the
dealer. In underwritten offerings, securities are purchased at a fixed price
which includes an amount of compensation to the underwriter, generally referred
to as the underwriter's concession or discount. On occasion, certain money
market instruments may be purchased directly from an issuer, in which case no
commissions or discounts are paid.
 
   
The advisor currently provides investment advice to a number of other clients.
See "Management of the fund" in the General Prospectus Disclosure to the
Prospectus. It will be the practice of the advisor to allocate purchase and sale
transactions among the fund and others whose assets it manages in such manner as
it deems equitable. In making such allocations, major factors to be considered
are investment objectives, the relative size of portfolio holdings of the same
or comparable securities, the availability of cash for investment, the size of
investment commitments generally held and the opinions of the persons
responsible for managing the portfolios of the fund and other client accounts.
Securities of the same issuer may be purchased, held, or sold at the same time
by the fund or other accounts or companies for which the advisor provides
investment advice (including affiliates of the advisor). On occasions when the
advisor deems the purchase or sale of a security to be in the best interest of
the fund, as well as the other clients of the advisor, the advisor, to the
extent permitted by applicable laws and regulations, may aggregate such
securities to be sold or purchased for the fund with those to be sold or
purchased for other clients in order to obtain best execution and lower
brokerage commissions, if any. In such event, allocation of the securities so
purchased or sold, as well as the expenses incurred in the transaction, will be
made by the advisor in the manner it considers to be equitable and consistent
with its fiduciary obligations to all such clients, including the fund. In some
instances, the procedures may impact the price and size of the position
obtainable for the fund. Fund securities are not purchased from or sold to the
advisor or any affiliated person (as defined in the 1940 Act) of the advisor.
    
 
   
In connection with effecting portfolio transactions, primary consideration will
be given to securing most favorable price and efficient execution. Within the
framework of this policy, the reasonableness of commission or other transaction
costs is a major factor in the selection of brokers and is considered together
with other relevant factors, including financial responsibility, research and
investment information and other services provided by such brokers. It is
expected that, as a result of such factors, commission rates charged by some
brokers may be greater than the amounts other brokers might charge. The advisor
may determine in good faith that the amount of such higher transaction costs is
reasonable in relation to the value of the brokerage and research services
provided. The Board of Directors of the fund will review regularly the
reasonableness of commission and other transaction costs incurred by the fund in
the light of facts and circumstances deemed relevant from time to time, and, in
that connection, will receive reports from the advisor and published data
concerning transaction costs incurred by institutional investors generally. The
nature of the research services provided to the advisor by brokerage firms
varies from time to time but generally includes current and historical financial
data concerning particular companies and their securities; information and
analysis concerning
    
 
                                                                            AG-9
<PAGE>
   
securities markets and economic and industry matters; and technical and
statistical studies and data dealing with various investment opportunities,
risks and trends, all of which the advisor regards as a useful supplement to its
own internal research capabilities. The advisor may from time to time direct
trades to brokers which have provided specific brokerage or research services
for the benefit of the advisor's clients; in addition the advisor may allocate
trades among brokers that generally provide superior brokerage and research
services. Due to changes in personnel, the prior subadvisor to the fund was
unable to provide the total dollar value of transactions directed to these
brokers or the commissions paid in connection with these transactions for 1998
without unreasonable effort or expense. Research services furnished by brokers
are used for the benefit of some or all of the advisor's clients and not solely
or necessarily for the benefit of the fund. The advisor believes that the value
of research services received is not determinable and does not significantly
reduce its expenses. The fund does not reduce its fee to the advisor by any
amount that might be attributable to the value of such services. The aggregate
amount of brokerage commissions paid by the fund during 1998 was $955,852, for
1997 it was $677,335, and for 1996 it was $332,924.
    
 
If the fund effects a closing purchase transaction with respect to an option
written by it, normally such transaction will be executed by the same
broker-dealer who executed the sale of the option. If a call written by the fund
is exercised, normally the sale of the underlying securities will be executed by
the same broker-dealer who executed the sale of the call.
 
The writing of options by the fund will be subject to limitations established by
each of the exchanges governing the maximum number of options in each class
which may be written by a single investor or group of investors acting in
concert, regardless of whether the options are written on the same or different
exchanges or are held or written in one or more accounts or through one or more
brokers. Thus, the number of options which the fund may write may be affected by
options written by other investment advisory clients of the advisor. An exchange
may order the liquidations of positions found to be in excess of these limits,
and it may impose certain other sanctions. As of the date of this SAI, these
limits (which are subject to change) are 2,000 options (200,000 shares) in each
class of puts or calls.
 
Under the sub-advisory agreement between the advisor and the sub-advisor, the
sub-advisor may perform some, or substantially all, of the investment advisory
services required by the fund, even though the advisor remains primarily
responsible for investment decisions affecting the fund. The sub-advisor will
follow the same procedures and policies which are followed by the advisor as
described previously. The sub-advisor currently provides investment advice to a
number of other clients.
 
AG-10
<PAGE>
THIS PAGE WAS INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK.
 
                                                                           AG-11
<PAGE>
   
GENERAL SAI DISCLOSURE
    
 
(Note: this is uniform information for the 11 Funds. See each Fund's SAI for
information specific to that Fund.)
 
   
THIS GENERAL SAI DISCLOSURE CONSTITUTES PART OF THE SAIS OF LINCOLN NATIONAL
AGGRESSIVE GROWTH FUND, INC. (AGGRESSIVE GROWTH), LINCOLN NATIONAL BOND FUND,
INC. (BOND), LINCOLN NATIONAL CAPITAL APPRECIATION FUND, INC. (CAPITAL
APPRECIATION), LINCOLN NATIONAL EQUITY-INCOME FUND, INC. (EQUITY-INCOME),
LINCOLN NATIONAL GLOBAL ASSET ALLOCATION FUND, INC. (GLOBAL ASSET ALLOCATION),
LINCOLN NATIONAL GROWTH AND INCOME FUND, INC. (GROWTH AND INCOME), LINCOLN
NATIONAL INTERNATIONAL FUND, INC. (INTERNATIONAL), LINCOLN NATIONAL MANAGED
FUND, INC. (MANAGED), LINCOLN NATIONAL MONEY MARKET FUND, INC. (MONEY MARKET),
LINCOLN NATIONAL SOCIAL AWARENESS FUND, INC. (SOCIAL AWARENESS), AND LINCOLN
NATIONAL SPECIAL OPPORTUNITIES FUND, INC. (SPECIAL OPPORTUNITIES). UNLESS
OTHERWISE INDICATED, THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION APPLIES TO EACH FUND.
    
 
INVESTMENT ADVISOR AND SUB-ADVISOR
 
   
Lincoln Investment Management, Inc. (Lincoln Investment or advisor) is the
investment advisor to the funds and is headquartered at 200 E. Berry Street,
Fort Wayne, Indiana 46802. Lincoln Investment is a subsidiary of Lincoln
National Investments, Inc., which is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Lincoln
National Corp. (LNC), a publicly-held insurance holding company organized under
Indiana law. Through its subsidiaries, LNC provides, on a national basis,
insurance and financial services. Lincoln Investment is registered with the
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) as an investment advisor and has acted
as an investment advisor to mutual funds for over 40 years. The advisor also
acts as investment advisor to Lincoln National Income Fund, Inc. (a closed-end
investment company whose investment objective is to provide a high level of
current income from interest on fixed-income securities) and Lincoln National
Convertible Securities Fund, Inc. (a closed-end investment company whose
investment objective is a high level of total return on its assets through a
combination of capital appreciation and current income) and to other clients,
and also acts as sub-adviser to two of the series of Delaware Group Adviser
Funds, Inc. (the Corporate Income Fund and the Federal Bond Fund of that retail
mutual fund complex).
    
 
   
Under an Advisory Agreement with each fund, the advisor provides portfolio
management and investment advice to the funds and administers its other affairs,
subject to the supervision of the fund's Board of Directors. The advisor, at its
expense, will provide office space to the funds and all necessary office
facilities, equipment and personnel and will make its officers and employees
available to the funds as appropriate. In addition, the advisor will pay all
expenses incurred by it or by the funds in connection with the management of
each fund's assets or the administration of its affairs, other than those
assumed by the funds, as described in the General Prospectus Disclosure. Lincoln
Life has paid the organizational expenses of all the funds. The rates of
compensation to the advisor is set forth in the General Prospectus Disclosure to
the Prospectus.
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         1998         1997        1996
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                      <C>          <C>         <C>
Aggressive Growth Fund                                   $ 2,476,022  $2,109,952  $1,428,803
 
Bond Fund                                                  1,421,361   1,221,295   1,188,030
 
Capital Appreciation Fund                                  4,265,160   2,940,632   1,549,656
 
Equity-Income Fund                                         6,639,317   6,053,404   3,303,336
 
Global Asset Allocation Fund                               3,320,142   2,808,358   2,072,722
 
Growth and Income Fund                                    12,112,568   9,714,765   7,063,276
 
International Fund                                         3,837,594   3,741,563   3,319,701
 
Managed Fund                                               3,283,079   2,873,786   2,480,524
 
Money Market Fund                                            517,294     451,243     417,468
 
Social Awareness Fund                                      5,287,914   3,355,544   1,877,030
 
Special Opportunities Fund                                 3,248,791   2,824,015   2,274,229
</TABLE>
    
 
                                                                             A-1
<PAGE>
During the last three years, the advisor received the amounts, as mentioned
above, for investment advisory services. If total expenses of the
funds(excluding taxes, interest, portfolio brokerage commissions and fees, and
expenses of an extraordinary and non-recurring nature, but including the
investment advisory fee) exceed 1 1/2% per annum of the average daily net assets
of each fund (2% for the International Fund), the advisor will pay such excess
by offsetting it against the advisory fee. If such offset is insufficient to
cover the excess, any balance remaining will be paid directly by the advisor to
each fund.
 
SUB-ADVISORS. As advisor, Lincoln Investment is primarily responsible for
investment decisions affecting each of the funds. However, Lincoln Investment
has entered into sub-advisory agreements with several professional investment
management firms. These firms provide some or substantially all of the
investment advisory services required by a number of the funds, including
day-to-day investment management of those funds' portfolios. Each sub-advisor
makes investment decisions for its respective fund in accordance with that
fund's investment objectives and places orders on behalf of that fund to effect
those decisions. See the following tables for more information about the
sub-advisors and their fees:
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                    ANNUAL FEE RATE BASED ON
FUND                      SUB-ADVISOR               AVERAGE DAILY NET ASSET VALUE
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                       <C>                       <C>
 
Aggressive Growth         Putnam                    Currently .50 of 1% of the first $150 million
                          One Post Office Square    .35 of 1% of the excess over $150 million; upon
                          Boston, MA 02109          shareholder approval fees will be .50 of 1% of
                                                    the first $250 million, .45 of 1% of the excess
                                                    over $250 million
 
Capital Appreciation      Janus                     .55 of 1% of the first $100 million .50 of 1% of
                          100 Fillmore Street       the next $400 million; and .45 of 1% of the
                          Denver, CO 80206          excess over $500 million
 
Equity-Income             Fidelity Trust            .48 of 1%
                          82 Devonshire Street
                          Boston, MA 02108
 
Global Asset Allocation   Putnam                    The greater of (a) $40,000; or (b) .47 of 1% of
                          One Post Office Square    the first $200 million; .42 of 1% of the next
                          Boston, MA 02109          $200 million; and .40 of 1% of any excess over
                                                    $400 million
 
International             Delaware International    .50 of 1% of the first $200 million; .40 of 1%
                          Advisers Ltd.             of the next $200 million; and .35 of 1% of any
                          80 Cheapside,             excess over $400 million
                          London, England
                          EC2V 6EE
</TABLE>
    
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                    ANNUAL FEE RATE BASED ON MARKET
                                                    VALUE OF SECURITIES HELD IN THE
                                                    PORTFOLIO OF EACH RESPECTIVE CLIENT
                                                    FUND AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS ON THE
FUND                      SUB-ADVISOR               LAST TRADING DAY OF EACH CALENDAR QUARTER
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                       <C>                       <C>
 
Growth and Income         Vantage                   .20 of 1%
                          630 5th Avenue
                          New York, NY 10111
 
Managed                   Vantage                   .20 of 1%
                          (stock portfolio only)
 
Social Awareness          Vantage                   .20 of 1%
 
Special Opportunities     Vantage                   .20 of 1%
</TABLE>
 
A-2
<PAGE>
   
Kansas City Southern Industries, Inc. ("KCSI") owns approximately 83% of the
outstanding voting stock of Janus, most of which it acquired in 1984. KCSI is a
publicly traded holding company whose primary subsidiaries are engaged in
transportation, information processing and financial services. Thomas H. Bailey,
President and Chairman of the Board of Janus, owns approximately 12% of its
voting stock and, by agreement with KCSI, selects a majority of Janus' Board.
    
 
   
FMR Corp., organized in 1972, is the ultimate parent company of Fidelity Trust.
The voting common stock of FMR Corp. is divided into two classes. Class B is
held predominantly by members of the Edward C. Johnson 3d family and is entitled
to 49% of the vote on any matter acted upon by the voting common stock. Class A
is held predominately by non-Johnson family member employees of FMR Corp. and
its affiliates and is entitled to 51% of the vote on any such matter. The
Johnson family group and all other Class B shareholders have entered into a
shareholders' voting agreement under which all Class B shares will be voted in
accordance with the majority vote of Class B shares. Under the 1940 Act, control
of a company is presumed where one individual or group of individuals owns more
than 25% of the voting stock of that company. Therefore, through their ownership
of voting common stock and the execution of the shareholders' voting agreement,
members of the Johnson family may be deemed, under the 1940 Act, to form a
controlling group with respect to FMR Corp.
    
 
   
Putnam is a majority-owned subsidiary of Marsh & McLennan Companies, a
diversified firm offering insurance and reinsurance broking, consulting, and
investment management services. Putnam, however, operates independently of its
parent.
    
 
During the last three years each sub-advisor received the following amounts for
investment sub-advisory services. Lincoln Investment, not the fund, pays all
sub-advisory fees owed.
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                          1998        1997        1996
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                       <C>         <C>         <C>
Aggressive Growth Fund                                    $1,450,345  $1,229,800  $  893,059
 
Bond Fund                                                        N/A         N/A         N/A
 
Capital Appreciation Fund                                  2,840,385   2,072,388   1,117,383
 
Equity-Income Fund                                         5,248,803   4,781,931   2,612,405
 
Global Asset Allocation Fund                               2,000,284   1,724,369   1,284,185
 
Growth and Income Fund                                     7,502,197   6,155,225   4,440,325
 
International Fund                                         1,233,752   1,503,294   1,326,484
 
Managed Fund                                               1,116,901     974,080     820,633
 
Money Market Fund                                                N/A         N/A         N/A
 
Social Awareness Fund                                      2,992,902   1,901,560     923,516
 
Special Opportunities Fund                                 1,775,700   1,519,961   1,168,134
</TABLE>
    
 
SERVICE MARKS. The service mark for the funds and the name Lincoln National have
been adopted by the funds with the permission of LNC, and their continued use is
subject to the right of LNC to withdraw this permission in the event the advisor
should not be the investment advisor of the funds.
 
   
In the Prospectus and sales literature, the name Fidelity Investments will be
used with the Equity-Income Fund, Janus with the Capital Appreciation Fund and
Putnam with the Aggressive Growth and Global Asset Allocation Funds. The
continued use of these names is subject to the right of the respective
sub-advisor to withdraw its permission in the event it ceases to be the
sub-advisor to the particular fund it advises.
    
 
                                                                             A-3
<PAGE>
DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS
 
The directors and executive officers of each fund, their business addresses,
positions with fund, age and their principal occupations during the past five
years are as follows:
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<S>        <C>                            <C>
*          KELLY D. CLEVENGER             Vice President, Lincoln National Life Insurance Co.
           Chairman of the Board,
           President and Director, age
           46
           1300 S. Clinton Street
           Fort Wayne, IN 46802
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
           JOHN B. BORSCH, JR.            Retired, formerly Associate Vice President--Investments, Northwestern
           Director, age 65               University
           1776 Sherwood Road
           Des Plaines, IL 60016
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
           NANCY L. FRISBY, CPA           Formerly: Regional Vice President/Chief Financial Officer (formerly
           Director, age 57               Vice President--Finance; Regional Controller of Finance), St. Joseph
           900 N.W. 17th Street,          Medical Center, Fort Wayne, Indiana
           Miami, FL 33136                Now: Chief Financial Officer, Bascom Palmer Eye Institute, University
                                          of Miami School of Medicine, (eff. 1998)
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
*          BARBARA S. KOWALCZYK           Senior Vice President and Director, Corporate Planning and Development,
           Director, age 47               Lincoln National Management Corporation; Director, Lincoln Life and
           200 East Berry Street          Annuity Company of New York (formerly Executive Vice President, Lincoln
           Fort Wayne, IN 46802           Investment Management, Inc.)
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
           KENNETH G. STELLA              President, Indiana Hospital and Health Association
           Director, age 55
           One America Square
           Indianapolis, IN 46282
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
           JANET C. CHRZAN                Vice President and Treasurer, Lincoln National Corp. (formerly Vice
           Treasurer, age 50              President and General Auditor)
           200 East Berry Street
           Fort Wayne, IN 46802
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
           CYNTHIA A. ROSE                Secretary, Lincoln National Life Insurance Co.
           Secretary, age 44              Secretary and Assistant Vice President (eff. 1/1/99)
           200 East Berry Street
           Fort Wayne, IN 46802
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
    
 
* Interested persons of the funds, as defined in the 1940 Act.
 
A-4
<PAGE>
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                       <C>                                   <C>
                                         COMPENSATION TABLE
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                 AGGREGATE COMPENSATION             TOTAL COMPENSATION FROM FUND
NAME OF PERSON, POSITION            FROM EACH FUND*                       AND FUND COMPLEX
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
JOHN B. BORSCH, JR.                                                           $16,394
Director                                 $1,488
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NANCY L. FRISBY                                                                15,851
Director                                 1,439
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
KENNETH G. STELLA                                                              16,800
Director                                 1,400
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
    
 
   
* Directors fees of $350 per meeting, plus expenses to attend the meetings, are
paid by each fund to each director who is not an interested person of the funds.
    
 
FUND EXPENSES
 
Expenses other than investment advisory fees specifically assumed by each fund
include: compensation and expenses of Directors of the fund who are not
interested persons of the fund as defined in the 1940 Act; registration, filing,
printing, and other fees in connection with filings with regulatory authorities,
including the costs of printing and mailing updated Prospectuses and SAIs
provided to current contract owners; fees and expenses of independent auditors;
the expenses of printing and mailing proxy statements and shareholder reports;
custodian and transfer agent charges; brokerage commissions and securities and
options transaction costs incurred by the fund; taxes and corporate fees; fees
for accounting, valuation and related services; legal fees incurred in
connection with the affairs of the fund (other than legal services provided by
personnel of the advisor or its affiliated companies); the fees of any trade
association of which the fund is a member; and expenses of shareholder and
Director meetings.
 
DESCRIPTION OF SHARES
 
The authorized capital stock of each fund consists of shares of common stock,
$0.01 par value. Fund shares will be owned by Lincoln Life and will be held by
it in the variable accounts. As sole shareholder of each fund, Lincoln Life may
be deemed to be a control person as that term is defined under the 1940 Act.
However, as stated in the Prospectuses for the variable accounts, Lincoln Life
provides to contract owners of the variable accounts the right to direct the
voting of fund shares at shareholder meetings, to the extent provided by law.
Lincoln Life will vote for or against any proposition, or will abstain from
voting, any fund shares attributable to a contract for which no timely voting
instructions are received, and any fund shares held by Lincoln Life for its own
account, in proportion to the voting instructions that it received with respect
to all contracts participating in that fund. However, if the 1940 Act or any
regulation under it should change, and as a result Lincoln Life determines it is
permitted to vote fund shares in its own right, it may elect to do so.
 
All the shares of each fund are of the same class with equal rights and
privileges. Each full share is entitled to one vote and each fractional share is
entitled to a proportionate fractional vote, on all matters subjected to a vote
of the shareholder. All shares, full and fractional, participate proportionately
in any dividends and capital gains distributions and, in the event of
liquidation, in that fund's net assets remaining after satisfaction of
outstanding liabilities.
 
When issued, each share is fully-paid and non-assessable and the shareholder has
no preemptive or conversion rights. Fund shares have non-cumulative voting
rights, which means that holders of more than 50% of the shares voting for the
election of directors can elect 100% of the directors if they choose to do so.
In that event the holders of the remaining shares so voting will not be able to
elect any directors. Shares may be redeemed as set forth under Sale and
redemption of shares.
 
The Bylaws of the funds allow them, in proper cases, to dispense with their
annual meetings of the shareholder. Generally, this may be done as long as: (1)
a majority of the Directors then in office have at some point been elected by
the shareholder and, if any vacancy is filled by vote of the Board of Directors,
then immediately after filling the vacancy at least two thirds of the Directors
shall have been elected by the shareholder; (2) there is no change in the
independent auditor of the funds; (3) there is no material change to the
investment advisory and/or sub-advisory agreements and/or fundamental policies;
and (4) a shareholder vote is not required with respect to a distribution
agreement. In
 
                                                                             A-5
<PAGE>
adopting this procedure for dispensing with annual meetings that are a
formality, the Directors of the funds have undertaken to comply with the
requirements of Section 16(c) of the 1940 Act. That Section protects contract
owners by providing a procedure by which they may require management to convene
a meeting of the shareholder to vote on removal of one or more Directors. The
Directors also have agreed to facilitate communication among contract owners for
the purpose of calling those meetings. Further information about these
procedures is available from fund management.
 
STRATEGIC PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS-ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
 
Because of their different investment objectives and portfolio management
philosophies many of the funds engage to varying degrees in strategic portfolio
transactions, in order to preserve or enhance the value of their assets. These
can be generally identified as either derivative transactions or cash
enhancement transactions. Derivative transactions are recognized by the
investment community as an acceptable way to seek to increase the fund's overall
value (or, depending on the condition of the securities markets, at least to
slow its decrease). Cash enhancement transactions are designed to make some
extra money for the fund when it has excess cash, or to help the fund obtain
some cash for temporary purposes when needed. See the Prospectus for each fund
for a listing of the kinds of transactions in which each fund may engage.
 
1. DERIVATIVE TRANSACTIONS
 
    A.  Introduction
 
       A derivative transaction is a financial agreement the value of which is
       dependent upon the values of one or more underlying assets or upon the
       values of one or more indices of asset values. The following types are
       currently in fairly common use in the investment community, although not
       every fund will use all of them:
 
        1.  Equity contracts: stock options and indexed options; equity swaps;
            stock index futures and options on futures; swaptions;
 
        2.  Interest rate contracts: interest rate futures and options on them;
            forward rate agreements (FRAs); interest rate swaps and their
            related transactions (e.g., caps, floors, collars and corridors);
            and/or
 
        3.  Currency derivative contracts: currency forward contracts; currency
            options; currency futures; currency swaps; cross-currency interest
            rate swaps.
 
   
SIMPLIFIED DEFINITIONS FOR THESE TRANSACTIONS ARE PROVIDED AT THE END OF THIS
GENERAL SAI DISCLOSURE.
    
 
Although they may be structured in complex combinations, derivative transactions
in which the funds engage generally fall into two broad categories: options
contracts or forward contracts. The combined forms are constantly evolving. In
fact, variations on the types listed previously may come into use after the date
of these SAIs. Therefore, where a particular fund discloses the intent of that
fund to engage in any of the types listed, that fund hereby reserves the right
to engage in related variations on those transactions.
 
   
The funds intend to engage in derivative transactions only defensively, unless a
fund's Prospectus or SAI states otherwise. Examples of this defensive use might
be: to hedge against a perceived decrease in a fund's asset value; to control
transaction costs associated with market timing (e.g., by using futures on an
unleveraged basis); and to lock in returns, spreads, or currency exchange rates
in anticipation of future cash market transactions.
    
 
There is no discussion here of asset-backed or mortgage-backed securities, or
securities such as collateralized mortgage obligations, structured notes,
inverse floaters, principal-only or interest-only securities, etc. For a
description of these securities see the Prospectus or SAI for the funds that are
authorized to engage in this kind of trading.
 
    B.  Risk factors commonly associated with derivative transactions.
 
       There are certain risks associated with derivatives, and some derivatives
       involve more of these risks than others. We briefly describe the most
       common ones here; however, this is not an exhaustive list. Consult your
       financial counselor if you have additional questions.
 
       CREDIT RISK is the possibility that a counterparty to a transaction will
       fail to perform according to the terms and conditions of the transaction,
       causing the holder of the claim to suffer a loss.
 
       CROSS-CURRENCY SETTLEMENT RISK (or Herstatt risk) is related to the
       settlement of foreign exchange contracts. It arises when one of the
       counterparties to a contract pays out one currency prior to receiving
       payment of the other. Herstatt risk arises because the hours of operation
       of domestic interbank fund transfer systems often do not overlap due to
       time zone differences. In the interval between the time one counterparty
       has received payment in one
 
A-6
<PAGE>
       indicated currency and the time the other counterparty(ies) receive
       payment in the others, those awaiting payment are exposed to credit risk
       and market risk.
 
       LEGAL RISK is the chance that a derivative transaction, which involves
       highly complex financial arrangements, will be unenforceable in
       particular jurisdictions or against a financially troubled entity; or
       will be subject to regulation from unanticipated sources.
 
       MARKET LIQUIDITY RISK is the risk that a fund will be unable to control
       its losses if a liquid secondary market for a financial instrument does
       not exist. It is often considered as the risk that a (negotiable or
       assignable) financial instrument cannot be sold quickly and at a price
       close to its fundamental value.
 
       MARKET RISK is the risk of a change in the price of a financial
       instrument, which may depend on the price of an underlying asset.
 
       OPERATING RISK is the potential of unexpected loss from inadequate
       internal controls or procedures; human error; system (including data
       processing system) failure; or employee dishonesty.
 
       SETTLEMENT RISK between two counterparties is the possibility that a
       counterparty to whom a firm has made a delivery of assets or money
       defaults before the amounts due or assets have been received; or the risk
       that technical difficulties interrupt delivery or settlement even if the
       counterparties are able to perform. In the latter case, payment is likely
       to be delayed but recoverable.
 
       SYSTEMIC RISK is the uncertainty that a disruption (at a firm, in a
       market segment, to a settlement system, etc.) might cause widespread
       difficulties at other firms, in other market segments, or in the
       financial system as a whole.
 
       SPECIAL NOTE FOR OPTIONS AND FUTURES TRANSACTIONS: Gains and losses on
       options and futures transactions depend on the portfolio manager's
       ability to correctly predict the direction of stock prices and interest
       rates, and other economic factors. Options and futures trading may fail
       as hedging techniques in cases where the price movements of the
       securities underlying the options and futures do not follow the price
       movements of the portfolio securities subject to the hedge. The loss from
       investing in futures transactions is potentially unlimited.
 
       SOME OF THESE RISKS MAY BE PRESENT IN EACH TYPE OF TRANSACTION, WHILE
       OTHERS MAY PERTAIN ONLY TO CERTAIN ONES. These risks are discussed here
       only briefly. Before you invest in a particular fund, please consult your
       financial counselor if you have questions about the risks associated with
       that fund's use of derivatives.
 
    C.  Varying usage of derivative transactions
 
       Subject to the terms of the Prospectus and SAI for each fund, that fund's
       portfolio manager decides which types of derivative transactions to
       employ, at which times and under what circumstances. For a description of
       the limits, risk factors and circumstances under which derivative
       transactions will be used by each fund, refer to the SAI booklet.
 
    D.  Increased government scrutiny
 
       Derivative transactions are coming under increased scrutiny by Congress
       and industry regulators (such as the SEC and the Office of the
       Comptroller of the Currency), and by self-regulatory agencies (such as
       the NASD). Should legislation or regulatory initiatives be enacted
       resulting in additional restrictive requirements for derivative
       transactions, Lincoln Life and the funds reserve the right to make all
       necessary changes in the contracts and the Registration Statements for
       the funds, respectively, to comply with those requirements.
 
2. CASH ENHANCEMENT TRANSACTIONS
 
Cash enhancement transactions also involve certain risks to the fund. They are
discussed more fully in the SAI.
 
    A.  Lending of portfolio securities
 
       Any fund authorized to do so may make secured loans of its portfolio
       securities in order to realize additional income. The loans are limited
       to a maximum of a stipulated amount of the fund's total assets. As a
       matter of policy, securities loans are made to broker/dealers under
       agreements requiring that the loans be continuously secured by collateral
       in cash or short-term debt obligations at least equal at all times to
       102% of the value of the securities lent.
 
       The borrower pays the fund an amount equal to any dividends or interest
       received on securities lent. The fund retains all or a portion of the
       interest received on securities lent. The fund also retains all or a
       portion of the interest received on investment of the cash collateral, or
       receives a fee from the borrower.
 
       With respect to the loaned securities, voting rights or rights to consent
       pass to the borrower.
 
                                                                             A-7
<PAGE>
       However, the fund retains the right to call in the loans and have the
       loaned securities returned at any time with reasonable notice. This is
       important when issuers of the securities ask holders of those
       securities--including the fund--to vote or consent on matters which could
       materially affect the holders' investment. The fund may also call in the
       loaned securities in order to sell them. None of the fund's portfolio
       securities will be loaned to Lincoln Investment, to any sub-advisor, or
       to any of their respective affiliates. The fund may pay reasonable
       finder's fees to persons unaffiliated with it in connection with the
       arrangement of the loans.
 
    B.  Repurchase (Repo) and reverse repurchase (Reverse Repo) transactions
 
        1.  REPOS. From time to time, the funds may enter into Repo
            transactions. In a typical Repo transaction, the fund involved buys
            U.S. Government or other money market securities from a financial
            institution (such as a bank, broker, or savings and loan
            association). At the same time, as part of the arrangement, the fund
            obtains an agreement from the seller to repurchase those same
            securities from the fund at a specified price on a fixed future
            date.
 
           The repurchase date is normally not more than seven days from the
           date of purchase. Repurchase agreements maturing in more than seven
           days will be considered illiquid and subject to the fund's
           restriction on illiquid securities.
 
        2.  REVERSE REPOS. A fund may also be authorized to enter into Reverse
            Repo transactions. This simply means the fund is on the reverse side
            of a Repo transaction. That is, the fund is the Seller of some of
            its portfolio securities, subject to buying them back at a set price
            and date.
 
           Authorized funds will engage in Reverse Repos for temporary purposes,
           such as for obtaining cash to fund redemptions; or for the purpose of
           increasing the income of the fund by investing the cash proceeds at a
           higher rate than the cost of the agreement. Entering into a reverse
           repo transaction is considered to be the borrowing of money by the
           fund. Funds authorized to engage in Repos as buyers are not
           necessarily authorized to do Reverse Repos.
 
RISKS OF OPTIONS AND FINANCIAL FUTURES TRADING
 
   
This discussion relates to all funds except the International Fund and the Money
Market Fund. (Note: The SAIs for Aggressive Growth, Capital Appreciation,
Equity-Income and Global Asset Allocation Funds provide additional disclosures
concerning the types and risks of the strategic portfolio transactions in which
they may engage.)
    
 
OPTIONS TRADING
 
The fund may purchase or write (sell) options on financial instruments as a
means of achieving additional return or hedging the value of the fund's
portfolio. The fund may not purchase or write put or covered call options in an
aggregate cost exceeding 30% of the value of its total assets. The fund would
invest in options in standard contracts which may be quoted on NASDAQ, or on
national securities exchanges. Currently options are traded on numerous
securities and indices including, without limitation, the Standard and Poor's
100 Index (S&P 100), the Standard and Poor's 500 Index (S&P 500), and the NYSE
Beta Index.
 
Put and call options are generally short-term contracts with durations of nine
months or less. The investment advisor will generally write covered call options
when it anticipates declines in the market value of the portfolio securities and
the premiums received may offset to some extent the decline in the fund's net
asset value. On the other hand, writing put options may be a useful portfolio
investment strategy when the fund has cash or other reserves and it intends to
purchase securities but expects prices to increase.
 
Generally, the risk to the fund in writing options is that the investment
advisor's assumption about the price trend of the underlying security may prove
inaccurate. If the fund wrote a put, expecting the price of a security to
increase, and it decreases, or if the fund wrote a call, expecting the price to
decrease but it increased, the fund could suffer a loss if the premium received
in each case did not equal the difference between the exercise price and the
market price.
 
As with the writer of a call, a put writer generally hopes to realize premium
income. The risk position of the fund as a put writer is similar to that of a
covered call writer which owns the underlying securities. Like the covered call
writer (who must bear the risk of the position in the underlying security), the
fund as a put writer stands to incur a loss if and to the extent the price of
the underlying security falls below the exercise price plus premium.
 
A-8
<PAGE>
Principal factors affecting the market value of a put or call option include
supply and demand, interest rates, the current market price and price volatility
of the underlying security and the time remaining until the expiration date. In
addition, there is no assurance that the fund will be able to effect a closing
transaction at a favorable price. If the fund cannot enter into such a
transaction, it may be required to hold a security that it might otherwise have
sold, in which case it would continue to be at market risk on the security. If a
substantial number of covered options written by the fund are exercised, the
fund's rate of portfolio turnover could exceed historic levels. This could
result in higher transaction costs, including brokerage commissions. The fund
will pay brokerage commissions in connection with the writing and purchasing of
options to close out previously written options. Such brokerage commissions are
normally higher than those applicable to purchases and sales of portfolio
securities.
 
FUTURES CONTRACTS AND OPTIONS THEREON
 
   
The fund may buy and sell financial futures contracts (futures contracts) and
related options thereon solely for hedging purposes. The fund may sell a futures
contract or purchase a put option on that futures contract to protect the value
of the fund's portfolio in the event the investment advisor anticipates
declining security prices. Similarly, if security prices are expected to rise,
the fund may purchase a futures contract or a call option thereon.
    
 
   
The fund may purchase and sell financial futures contracts (futures contracts)
as a hedge against fluctuations in the value of securities which are held in the
fund's portfolio or which the fund intends to purchase. The fund will engage in
such transactions consistent with the fund's investment objective. For certain
limited purposes, the fund may also be authorized to buy futures contracts on an
unleveraged basis and not as an anticipatory hedge. Currently, futures contracts
are available on Treasury bills, notes, and bonds as well as interest-rate and
stock market indexes.
    
 
   
The Bond, Growth and Income, Managed, Social Awareness, and Special
Opportunities funds may only purchase futures and related options thereon for
hedging purposes. The Aggressive Growth, Capital Appreciation, Equity-Income,
and Global Asset Allocation funds may purchase futures and related options for
both hedging and non-hedging purposes, but subject to the limits described in
each fund's SAI. The funds will not purchase or sell futures contracts or
related options if immediately thereafter more than 1/3 of its net assets would
be hedged.
    
 
There are a number of risks associated with futures hedging. Changes in the
price of a futures contract generally parallel but do not necessarily equal
changes in the prices of the securities being hedged. The risk of imperfect
correlation increases as the composition of the fund's securities portfolio
diverges from the securities that are the subject of the futures contract.
Because the change in the price of the futures contract may be more or less than
the change in the prices of the underlying securities, even a correct forecast
of price changes may not result in a successful hedging transaction. Another
risk is that the investment advisor could be incorrect in its expectation as to
the direction or extent of various market trends or the time period within which
the trends are to take place.
 
   
The fund intends to purchase and sell futures contracts only on exchanges where
there appears to be a market in such futures sufficiently active to accommodate
the volume of its trading activity. This investment policy does not apply to the
Capital Appreciation, Global Asset Allocation, and Equity-Income funds. There
can be no assurance that a liquid market will always exist for any particular
contract at any particular time. Accordingly, there can be no assurance that it
will always be possible to close a futures position when such closing is desired
and, in the event of adverse price movements, the fund would continue to be
required to make daily cash payments of variation margin. However, in the event
futures contracts have been sold to hedge portfolio securities, such securities
will not be sold until the offsetting futures contracts can be executed.
Similarly, in the event futures have been bought to hedge anticipated securities
purchases, such purchases will not be executed until the offsetting futures
contracts can be sold.
    
 
Successful use of futures contracts by the fund is also subject to the ability
of the investment advisor to predict correctly movements in the direction of
interest rates and other factors affecting markets for securities. For example,
if the fund has hedged against the possibility of an increase in interest rates
that would adversely affect the price of securities in its portfolio and prices
of such securities increase instead, the fund will lose part or all of the
benefit of the increased value of its securities because it will have offsetting
losses in its futures positions. In addition, in such situations, if the fund
has insufficient cash to meet daily variation margin requirements, it may have
to sell securities to meet such requirements. Such sale of securities may be,
but will not necessarily be, at increased prices that reflect the rising market.
The fund may have to sell securities at a time when it is disadvantageous to do
so. Where futures are purchased to hedge against a possible increase in the
price of securities before the fund is able to invest its cash in an orderly
fashion, it is possible that the market may decline instead; if the fund then
concludes not to invest in securities at that time
 
                                                                             A-9
<PAGE>
because of concern as to possible further market decline or for other reasons,
the fund will realize a loss on the futures contract that is not offset by a
reduction in the price of the securities purchased.
 
The selling of futures contracts by the fund and use of related transactions in
options on futures contracts are subject to position limits, which are affected
by the activities of the investment advisor.
 
The hours of trading of futures contracts may not conform to the hours during
which the fund may trade securities. To the extent that the futures markets
close before the securities markets, significant price and rate movements can
take place in the securities markets that cannot be reflected in the futures
markets.
 
The fund's successful use of futures contracts and options thereon depends upon
the ability of its investment advisor to predict movements in the securities
markets and other factors affecting markets for securities and upon the degree
of correlation between the prices of the futures contracts and the prices of the
securities being hedged. As a result, even a correct forecast of price changes
may not result in a successful hedging transaction. Although futures contracts
and options thereon may limit the fund's exposure to loss, they may also limit
the fund's potential for capital gains. For example, if the fund has hedged
against the possibility of decrease in prices which would adversely affect the
price of securities in its portfolio and prices of such securities increase
instead, the fund will lose part or all of the benefit of the increased value of
its securities because it will have offsetting losses in its futures positions.
Although the fund will enter into futures contracts only where there appears to
be a liquid market, there can be no assurance that such liquidity will always
exist.
 
LENDING OF PORTFOLIO SECURITIES
 
The funds may from time to time lend securities from their portfolios to
brokers, dealers and financial institutions and receive collateral from the
borrower, in the form of cash (which may be invested in short-term securities),
U.S. Government obligations or certificates of deposit. Such collateral will be
maintained at all times in an amount equal to at least 102% of the current
market value of the loaned securities, and will be in the actual or constructive
possession of the particular fund during the term of the loan. The fund will
maintain the incidents of ownership of the loaned securities and will continue
to be entitled to the interest or dividends payable on the loaned securities. In
addition, the fund will receive interest on the amount of the loan. The loans
will be terminable by the fund at any time and will not be made to any
affiliates of the fund or the advisor. The fund may pay reasonable finder's fees
to persons unaffiliated with it in connection with the arrangement of the loans.
 
As with any extensions of credit, there are risks of delay in recovery and, in
some cases, even loss of rights in the collateral or the loaned securities
should the borrower of securities fail financially. However, loans of portfolio
securities will be made to firms deemed by the advisor to be creditworthy.
 
RISKS OF REPURCHASE AND REVERSE REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS
 
The funds may make short-term investments in repurchase agreements. The
difference between the purchase price to the fund and the resale price to the
seller represents the interest earned by the fund which is unrelated to the
coupon rate or maturity of the purchased security. If the seller defaults, the
fund may incur a loss if the value of the collateral securing the repurchase
agreement declines, or the fund may incur disposition costs in connection with
liquidating the collateral. If bankruptcy proceedings are commenced with respect
to the seller, realization upon the collateral by the fund may be delayed or
limited and a loss may be incurred if the collateral securing the repurchase
agreement declines in value during the bankruptcy proceedings. The Board of
Directors of the funds or its delegate will evaluate the creditworthiness of all
entities, including banks and broker-dealers, with which they propose to enter
into repurchase agreements. These transactions will be fully collateralized; and
the collateral for each transaction will be in the actual or constructive
possession of the particular fund during the terms of the transaction, as
provided in the agreement.
 
Similarly, the fund will enter into reverse repurchase agreements only with
parties that the advisor or sub-advisor deems creditworthy. While a reverse
repurchase agreement is outstanding, the funds will maintain cash and
appropriate liquid assets in a segregated custodial account to cover its
obligation under the agreement.
 
FOREIGN INVESTMENTS
 
There are certain risks involved in investing in foreign securities, including
those resulting from fluctuations in currency exchange rates; devaluation of
currencies; political or economic developments including the possible imposition
of currency exchange blockages, bars preventing the removal of assets, or other
foreign governmental laws or restrictions; reduced availability of public
information concerning issuers; and the fact that
 
A-10
<PAGE>
foreign companies are not generally subject to uniform accounting, auditing, and
financial reporting standards or to other regulatory practices and requirements
comparable to those applicable to domestic companies. With respect to certain
foreign countries, there is also the possibility of expropriation,
nationalization, confiscatory taxation, and limitations on the use or removal of
cash or other assets of a fund, including the withholding of interest payments
or dividends. These risks may be particularly great in so-called developing or
undeveloped countries, sometimes referred to as Emerging Markets.
 
   
In addition, while the volume of transactions effected on foreign stock
exchanges has increased in recent years, in most cases it remains appreciably
below that of the NYSE. Accordingly, a fund's foreign investments may be less
liquid and their prices may be more volatile than comparable investments in
securities of U.S. companies. Moreover, the settlement periods for foreign
securities, which are often longer than those for securities of U.S. issuers,
may affect portfolio liquidity. The funds will incur costs in converting foreign
currencies into U.S. dollars. Custody charges are generally higher for foreign
securities. In buying and selling securities on foreign exchanges, a fund
normally pays fixed commissions that are generally higher than the negotiated
commissions charged in the U.S. In addition, there is generally less
governmental supervision and regulation of securities exchanges, brokers and
issuers in foreign countries than in the U.S. There may be difficulty in
enforcing legal rights outside the U.S. For example, in the event of default on
any foreign debt obligations, it may be more difficult or impossible for the
fund to obtain or to enforce a judgment against the issuers of these securities.
The advisor or sub-advisor will take all these factors into consideration in
managing a fund's foreign investments.
    
 
The share price of a fund that invests in foreign securities will reflect the
movements of both the prices of the portfolio securities and the currencies in
which those securities are denominated. Depending on the extent of a fund's
investments abroad, changes in a fund's share price may have a low correlation
with movements in the U.S. markets. Because most of the foreign securities in
which the fund invests will be denominated in foreign currencies, or otherwise
will have values that depend on the performance of foreign currencies relative
to the U.S. dollar, the relative strength of the U.S. dollar may be an important
factor in the performance of the fund.
 
FOREIGN CURRENCIES
 
When an advisor or sub-advisor believes that a currency in which a portfolio
security or securities is denominated or exposed may suffer a decline against
the U.S. dollar, it may hedge that risk by entering into a forward contract to
sell an amount of foreign currency approximating the value of some or all of the
portfolio securities denominated in or exposed to that foreign currency.
 
Because foreign securities generally are denominated and pay dividends or
interest in foreign currencies, and a fund may hold various foreign currencies,
the value of the net assets of that fund as measured in U.S. dollars will be
affected favorably or unfavorably by changes in exchange rates. Generally,
currency exchange transactions will be conducted on a spot (i.e., cash) basis at
the spot rate prevailing in the currency exchange market. The cost of currency
exchange transactions will generally be the difference between the bid and offer
spot rate of the currency being purchased or sold. Some foreign currency values
may be volatile, and there is the possibility of government controls on currency
exchange or governmental intervention in currency markets which could adversely
affect the fund.
 
Investors should be aware that exchange rate movements can be significant and
can endure for long periods of time. In order to protect against uncertainty in
the level of future foreign currency exchange rates, a fund's advisor or
sub-advisor may attempt to manage exchange rate risk through active currency
management, including the use of certain foreign currency hedging transactions.
 
For example, it may hedge some or all of its investments denominated in a
foreign currency against a decline in the value of that currency relative to the
U.S. dollar by entering into contracts to exchange that currency for U.S.
dollars (not exceeding the value of the fund's assets denominated in or exposed
to that currency), or by participating in options or futures contracts with
respect to that currency. If the advisor or sub-advisor believes that a
particular currency may decline relative to the U.S. dollar, the fund may also
enter into contracts to sell that currency (up to the value of the fund's assets
denominated in or exposed to that currency) in exchange for another currency
that the advisor or sub-advisor expects to remain stable or to appreciate
relative to the U.S. dollar. This technique is known as currency cross-hedging.
Refer to the Prospectus for each fund to determine which funds may engage in
these transactions.
 
These strategies are intended to minimize the effect of currency appreciation as
well as depreciation, but do not protect against a decline in the underlying
value of the hedged security. In addition, these strategies may reduce or
eliminate the opportunity to profit from increases in the value of the original
currency and may adversely impact the fund's performance if the advisor or
sub-advisor's projection of future exchange rates is inaccurate. See Strategic
portfolio transactions.
 
   
Additionally, as of January 1, 1999, several European countries began
participating in the European Economic and Monetary Union, which established a
common
    
 
                                                                            A-11
<PAGE>
   
European currency for participating countries. This currency is commonly known
as the "Euro." Each participating country is currently phasing in use of the
Euro for major financial transactions. In addition, each participating country
will begin using the Euro for currency transactions beginning July 1, 2002.
Additional European countries may elect to participate. Funds investing in
securities of participating countries could be adversely affected if the
computer systems used by their major service providers are not properly prepared
to handle both the implementation of this single currency and the prospect of
the adoption of the Euro by additional countries in the future.
    
 
VALUATION OF PORTFOLIO SECURITIES
 
SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS. For funds (other than the Money Market Fund) that own
short-term investments which mature in less than 60 days, these instruments are
valued at amortized cost. Such securities acquired with a remaining maturity of
61 days or more are valued at their fair value until the sixty-first day prior
to maturity; thereafter, their cost for valuation purposes is deemed to be their
fair value on such sixty-first day.
 
OPTIONS TRADING. For those funds engaging in options trading, fund investments
underlying call options will be valued as described previously. Options are
valued at the last sale price or, if there has been no sale that day, at the
mean of the last bid and asked price on the principal exchange where the option
is traded, as of the close of trading on the NYSE. The fund's net asset value
will be increased or decreased by the difference between the premiums received
on writing options and the cost of liquidating those positions measured by the
closing price of those options on the exchange where traded.
 
FUTURES CONTRACTS AND OPTIONS THEREON. For those funds buying and selling
futures contracts and related options thereon, the futures contracts and options
are valued at their daily settlement price.
 
FOREIGN SECURITIES. For funds investing in foreign securities, the value of a
foreign portfolio security held by a fund is determined based upon its closing
price or upon the mean of the closing bid and asked prices on the foreign
exchange or market on which it is traded and in the currency of that market, as
of the close of the appropriate exchange. As of the close of business on the
NYSE, that fund's portfolio securities which are quoted in foreign currencies
are converted into their U.S. dollar equivalents at the prevailing market rates,
as computed by the custodian of the fund's assets.
 
However, trading on foreign exchanges may take place on dates or at times of day
when the NYSE is not open; conversely, overseas trading may not take place on
dates or at times of day when the NYSE is open. Any of these circumstances could
affect the net asset value of fund shares on days when the investor has no
access to the fund. There are more detailed explanations of these circumstances
in the SAI for the various funds. See the Preface to this Prospectus booklet for
information about how to obtain a copy of the SAI booklet for the 11 funds.
 
CUSTODIAN
 
All securities, cash and other similar assets of the Bond, Growth and Income,
Managed, Money Market, Social Awareness and Special Opportunities funds are
currently held in custody by The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A., 4 Chase MetroTech
Center, Brooklyn, NY 11245. Chase Manhattan agreed to act as custodian for each
fund pursuant to a Custodian Agreement dated March 30, 1998.
 
All securities, cash and other similar assets of the Aggressive Growth, Capital
Appreciation, Equity-Income, Global Asset Allocation and International Funds are
held in custody by State Street Bank and Trust Co., 225 Franklin Street, Boston,
Massachusetts 02110. State Street agreed to act as custodian for these funds
pursuant to Custodian Contracts effective July 21, 1987 for the Global Asset
Allocation fund, April 29, 1991 for the International fund, and December 6, 1993
for the other three funds.
 
Under these Agreements, the respective custodians shall (1) receive and disburse
money; (2) receive and hold securities; (3) transfer, exchange, or deliver
securities; (4) present for payment coupons and other income items, collect
interest and cash dividends received, hold stock dividends, etc.; (5) cause
escrow and deposit receipts to be executed; (6) register securities; and (7)
deliver to the funds proxies, proxy statements, etc.
 
INDEPENDENT AUDITORS
 
Each fund's Board of Directors has engaged Ernst & Young LLP, Two Commerce
Square, Suite 4000, 2001 Market Street, Philadelphia, PA 19103, to be the
independent auditors for the fund. In addition to the audit of the 1998
financial statements of the funds, other services provided include review and
consultation connected with filings of annual reports and registration
statements with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC); consultation on
financial accounting and reporting matters; and meetings with the Audit
Committee.
 
A-12
<PAGE>
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
   
The audited financial statements and the reports of Ernst & Young LLP,
Independent Auditors, for the funds are incorporated by reference to each fund's
1998 Annual Report. We will provide a copy of each fund's Annual Report on
request and without charge. Either write Lincoln National Life Insurance Co.,
P.O. Box 2340, Fort Wayne, Indiana 46801 or call: 1-800-4LINCOLN (452-6265).
    
 
BOND AND COMMERCIAL PAPER RATINGS
 
Certain of the funds' investment policies and restrictions include references to
bond and commercial paper ratings. The following is a discussion of the rating
categories of Moody's Investors Service, Inc. and Standard & Poor's Corp.
 
MOODY'S INVESTORS SERVICE, INC.
 
Aaa -- Bonds which are rated Aaa are judged to be of the best quality and carry
the smallest degree of investment risk. 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 risks appear somewhat larger than in Aaa securities.
 
A -- Bonds which are rated A possess many favorable investment attributes and
are to be considered as upper medium grade obligations. Factors giving security
to principal and interest are considered adequate but elements may be present
which suggest a susceptibility to impairment some time in the future.
 
Baa -- Bonds which are rated Baa are considered as medium grade obligations,
i.e., they are neither highly protected nor poorly secured. Interest payments
and principal security appear adequate for the present but certain protective
elements may be lacking or may be characteristically unreliable over any great
length of time. Such bonds lack outstanding investment characteristics and in
fact have speculative characteristics as well.
 
Ba -- Bonds which are rated Ba are judged to have speculative elements; their
future cannot be considered as well assured. Often the protection of interest
and principal payments may be very moderate and thereby not well safeguarded
during both good and bad times over the future. Uncertainty of position
characterizes bonds in this class.
 
B -- Bonds which are rated B generally lack characteristics of the desirable
investment. Assurance of interest and principal payments or of maintenance of
other terms of the contract over any long period of time may be small.
 
Caa -- Bonds which are rated Caa are of poor standing. Such issues may be in
default or there may be present elements of danger with respect to principal or
interest.
 
Ca -- Bonds which are rated Ca represent obligations which are speculative in a
high degree. Such issues are often in default or have other marked shortcomings.
 
STANDARD & POOR'S CORP.
 
AAA -- This is the highest rating assigned by Standard & Poor's Corp. to a debt
obligation and indicates an extremely strong capacity to pay principal and
interest.
 
AA -- Bonds rated AA also qualify as high-quality debt obligations. Capacity to
pay principal and interest is very strong, and in the majority of instances they
differ from AAA issues only in small degree.
 
A -- Bonds rated A have a strong capacity to pay principal and interest,
although they are somewhat more susceptible to the adverse effects of changes in
circumstances and economic conditions.
 
BBB -- Bonds rated BBB are regarded as having an adequate capacity to pay
principal and interest. Whereas these bonds normally exhibit adequate protection
parameters, adverse economic conditions or changing circumstances are more
likely to lead to a weakened capacity to pay principal and interest than for
bonds in the A category and higher.
 
BB-B-CCC-CC -- Bonds rated BB, B, CCC and CC are regarded, on balance, as
predominantly speculative with respect to the issuer's capacity to pay interest
and repay principal in accordance with the terms of the obligation. BB indicates
the lowest degree of speculation and C the highest degree of speculation. While
such bonds will likely have some quality and protective characteristics, these
are outweighed by large uncertainties or major risk exposures to adverse
conditions.
 
MOODY'S INVESTORS SERVICE, INC.
 
Moody's Commercial Paper ratings are opinions of the ability of issuers to repay
punctually promissory obligations not having an original maturity in excess of
nine
 
                                                                            A-13
<PAGE>
months. Moody's employs the following three designations, all judged to be
investment grade, to indicate the relative repayment capacity of rated issuers:
 
Prime 1 -- Highest Quality;
Prime 2 -- Higher Quality;
Prime 3 -- High Quality.
 
   
(The funds will not invest in commercial paper rated Prime 3).
    
 
STANDARD & POOR'S CORP.
 
A Standard & Poor's Corp. commercial paper rating is a current assessment of the
likelihood of timely payment of debt having an original maturity of no more than
365 days. The fund will invest in commercial paper rated in the A Categories, as
follows:
 
   
A -- Issues assigned this highest rating are regarded as having the greatest
capacity for timely payment. Issues in this category are further refined with
the designation 1, 2, and 3 to indicate the relative degree of safety. (The
funds will not invest in commercial paper rated A-3).
    
 
A -- 1 this designation indicates that the degree of safety regarding timely
payment is very strong.
 
A -- 2 Capacity for timely payment on issues with this designation is strong.
However, the relative degree of safety is not overwhelming as for issues
designated A-1.
 
U.S. GOVERNMENT OBLIGATIONS
 
Securities issued or guaranteed as to principal and interest by the U.S.
Government include a variety of Treasury securities, which differ only in their
interest rates, maturities and times of issuance. Treasury bills have a maturity
of one year or less. Treasury notes have maturities of two to ten years and
Treasury bonds generally have a maturity of greater than ten years.
 
Various agencies of the U.S. Government issue obligations. Some of these
securities are supported by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Treasury (for
example those issued by Export-Import Bank of the United States, Farmers Home
Administration, Federal Housing Administration, Government National Mortgage
Association, Maritime Administration, Small Business Administration and The
Tennessee Valley Authority).
 
Obligations of instrumentalities of the U.S. Government are supported by the
right of the issuer to borrow from the Treasury (for example, those issued by
Federal Farm Credit Banks, Federal Home Loan Bank, Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corp., Federal Intermediate Credit Banks, Federal Land Bank and the U.S. Postal
Service). Obligations supported by the credit of the instrumentality include
securities issued by government-sponsored corporations whose stock is publicly
held (for example, the Federal National Mortgage Association, and the Student
Loan Marketing Association). There is no guarantee that the government will
support these types of securities, and therefore they may involve more risk than
other government obligations.
 
TAXES
 
Each fund intends to qualify and has elected to be taxed as a regulated
investment company under certain provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of
1986, as amended (the Code). If a fund qualifies as a regulated investment
company and complies with the provisions of the Code relieving regulated
investment companies which distribute substantially all of their net income
(both net ordinary income and net capital gain) from federal income tax, it will
be relieved from such tax on the part of its net ordinary income and net
realized capital gain which it distributes to its shareholders. To qualify for
treatment as a regulated investment company, each fund must, among other things,
derive in each taxable year at least 90% of its gross income from dividends,
interest, payments with respect to securities loans and gains from the sale or
other disposition of stock or securities or foreign currencies (subject to the
authority of the Secretary of the Treasury to exclude foreign currency gains
which are not directly related to the fund's principal business of investing in
stock or securities or options and futures with respect to such stock or
securities), or other income (including but not limited to gains from options,
futures, or forward contracts) derived with respect to its investing in such
stocks, securities, or currencies.
 
The federal tax laws impose a 4% nondeductible excise tax on each regulated
investment company with respect to an amount, if any, by which such company does
not meet distribution requirements specified in such tax laws, unless certain
exceptions apply. Each fund intends to comply with such distribution
requirements or qualify under one or more exceptions, and thus does not expect
to incur the 4% nondeductible excise tax.
 
Since the sole shareholder of each fund will be Lincoln Life, no discussion is
stated herein as to the federal income tax consequences at the shareholder
level.
 
The discussion of federal income tax considerations in the Prospectus, in
conjunction with the foregoing, is a general and abbreviated summary of the
applicable provisions of the Code and Treasury Regulations currently in effect
as interpreted by the Courts and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). These
interpretations can be changed at any time. The above discussion covers only
federal tax considerations with respect to the fund. State and local taxes vary.
 
A-14
<PAGE>
DERIVATIVE TRANSACTIONS-DEFINITIONS
 
The SAI for each fund and this uniform Appendix discuss the type of derivative
transactions in which the funds may engage and the risks typically associated
with many derivative transactions. Here are some definitions for the derivatives
listed in the Appendix:
 
OPTION. A contract which gives the fund the right, but not the obligation, to
buy or sell specified securities at a fixed price before or at a designated
future date. If the contract allows the fund to buy securities, it is a call
option; if to sell, it is a put option. It is common practice in options trading
to terminate an outstanding option contract by entering into an offsetting
transaction known as a closing transaction; as a result of which the fund would
either pay out or receive a cash settlement. This is discussed below.
 
CURRENCY OPTION. Discussed later.
 
FIXED INCOME OPTION. One based on a fixed-income security, such as a corporate
or government bond.
 
INDEX OPTION. One based on the value of an index which measures the fluctuating
value of a basket of pre-selected securities.
 
STOCK (EQUITY) OPTION. One based on the shares of stock of a particular company.
 
OPTION ON A FUTURES CONTRACT. Discussed later.
 
SWAP. A financial transaction in which the fund and another party agree to
exchange streams of payments at periodic intervals under a predetermined set of
occurrences related to the price level, performance or value of one or more
underlying securities, and pegged to a reference amount known as the notional
amount. A swap is normally used to change the market risk associated with a loan
or bond borrowing from one interest rate base (fixed term or floating rate) or
currency of one denomination to another.
 
EQUITY SWAP. One which allows the fund to exchange the rate of return (or some
portion of the rate) on its portfolio stocks (an individual share, a basket or
index) for the rate of return on another equity or non-equity investment.
 
INTEREST RATE SWAP. One in which the fund and another party exchange different
types of interest payment streams, pegged to an underlying notional principal
amount. The three main types of interest rate swaps are coupon swaps (fixed rate
to floating rate in the same currency); basis swaps (one floating rate index to
another floating rate index in the same currency); and cross-currency interest
rate swaps (fixed rate in one currency to floating rate in another).
 
RELATED TRANSACTIONS TO INTEREST RATE SWAPS:
 
a.  Cap. A contract for which the buyer pays a fee, or premium, to obtain
    protection against a rise in a particular interest rate above a certain
    level. For example, an interest rate cap may cover a specified principal
    amount of a loan over a designated time period, such as a calendar quarter.
    If the covered interest rate rises above the rate ceiling, the seller of the
    rate cap pays the purchaser an amount of money equal to the average rate
    differential times the principal amount times one-quarter.
 
b.  Floor. A contract in which the seller agrees to pay to the purchaser, in
    return for the payment of a premium, the difference between current interest
    rates and an agreed (strike) rate times the notional amount, should interest
    rates fall below the agreed level (the floor). A floor contract has the
    effect of a string of interest rate guarantees.
 
c.  Collar. An arrangement to simultaneously purchase a cap and sell a floor, in
    order to maintain interest rates within a defined range. The premium income
    from the sale of the floor reduces or offsets the cost of buying the cap.
 
d.  Corridor. An agreement to buy a cap at one interest rate and sell a cap at a
    higher rate.
 
SWAPTION. An option to enter into, extend, or cancel a swap.
 
FUTURES CONTRACT. A contract which commits the fund to buy or sell a specified
amount of a financial instrument at a fixed price on a fixed date in the future.
Futures contracts are normally traded on an exchange and their terms are
standardized, which makes it easier to buy and sell them.
 
INTEREST RATE FUTURES (AND OPTIONS ON THEM). Futures contracts pegged to U.S.
and foreign fixed-income securities, debt indices and reference rates.
 
STOCK INDEX FUTURES. Futures contracts based on an index of pre-selected stocks,
with prices based on a composite of the changes to the prices of the individual
securities in the index (e.g., S&P 500).
 
OPTION ON A FUTURES CONTRACT. An option taken on a futures position.
 
FORWARD CONTRACT. An over-the-counter, individually-tailored futures contract.
 
FORWARD RATE AGREEMENT (FRA). A contract in which the fund and another party
agree on the interest rate to be paid on a notional deposit of specified
maturity at a specific future time. Normally, no exchange of principal is
involved; the difference between the contracted rate and the prevailing rate is
settled in cash.
 
                                                                            A-15
<PAGE>
CURRENCY CONTRACT. A contract entered into for the purpose of reducing or
eliminating an anticipated rise or drop in currency exchange rates over time.
 
CURRENCY FUTURES. Futures contracts on foreign currencies. Used to hedge the
purchase or sale of foreign securities.
 
CURRENCY OPTION. An option taken on foreign currency.
 
CURRENCY SWAP. A swap involving the exchange of cash flows and principal in one
currency for those in another, with an agreement to reverse the principal swap
at a future date.
 
CROSS-CURRENCY INTEREST RATE SWAP. A swap involving the exchange of streams of
interest rate payments (but not necessarily principal payments) in different
currencies and often on different interest bases (e.g., fixed Deutsche Mark
against floating dollar, but also fixed Deutsche Mark against fixed dollar).
 
FORWARD CURRENCY CONTRACT. A contract to lock in a currency exchange rate at a
future date, to eliminate risk of currency fluctuation when the time comes to
convert from one currency to another.
 
A-16
<PAGE>
THIS PAGE WAS INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK.
 
                                                                            A-17
<PAGE>

                          PART C - OTHER INFORMATION

   
    

   
Item 23 Exhibits:
    
   
         (a)   - Articles of Incorporation*
    
   
         (b)   - By-Laws*
    
   
         (c)   - Certificate*
    
   
         (d)1. - Advisory Agreement between Lincoln Investment Management, Inc. 
                 and Lincoln National Aggressive Growth Fund, Inc. dated
                 September 23, 1993.*
    
   
         (d)2. - Sub-Advisory Agreement between Lincoln National Investment
                 Management Company and Lynch & Mayer, Inc. dated 
                 December 20, 1993.*
    
   
         (d)3. - Form of Sub-Advisory Agreement between Lincoln National 
                 Investment Management Company and Putnam Investment Management 
                 Inc.
    
   
         (e)1. - NA
    
   
         (e)2. - Specimen Agent's Contract (Filed with Post-Effective
                 Amendment No. 5 to this Registration Statement)
    
   
         (f)   - NA
    
   
         (g)1. - Custody Agreement*
    
   
         (g)2. - Custody Fee Schedule (Filed with Post-Effective 
                 Amendment No. 5 to this Registration Statement)
    
   
         (h)1. - Fund Participation Agreement
    
   
         (h)2. - Trade Name Agreement*
    
   
         (h)3. - Services Agreement between Delaware Management Holdings, Inc.,
                 Delaware Service Company, Inc. and Lincoln National Life
                 Insurance Company is incorporated herein by reference to the
                 Registration Statement on Form S-6 (333-40745) filed on
                 November 21, 1997.                            
    
   
         (i)   - Opinion of Counsel*
    
   
         (j)   - Consent of Ernst & Young LLP, Independent Auditors
    
   
         (k)   - NA
    
   
         (l)   - INVESTMENT LETTER*
    
   
         (m)   - NA
    
   
         (n)   - Financial Data Schedule 
    
   
         (o)   - NA
    
   
         (p)1. - Power of Attorney - Kenneth G. Stella
    
   
         (p)2. - Power of Attorney, John B. Borsch, Jr.
    
   
         (p)3. - Power of Attorney, Barbara S. Kowalczyk
         (p)4. - Power of Attorney, Nancy L. Frisby
         (p)5. - Power of Attorney, Eric C. Jones
         (p)6. - Power of Attorney, Janet C. Chrzan
         (p)7. - Power of Attorney, Kelly D. Clevenger
    
   
         (q)   - ORG chart 
    
   
         (r)   - Memorandum Concerning Books and Records 
    
   
         * Filed with Post-Effective Amendment No. 6 to this Registration 
           Statement.
    
   
Item 24.  Persons Controlled by or Under Common Control with Registrant
    
      See "Management of the Fund," "Purchase of Securities Being Offered," and
      "Description of Shares" in the Prospectus forming Part A of this
      Registration Statement and "Investment Adviser and Sub-Adviser" in the
      Statement of Additional Information forming Part B of this Registration
      Statement. As of the date of this Post-Effective Amendment to the
      Registration Statement, The Lincoln National Life Insurance Company
      (Lincoln Life), for its Variable Annuity Account C and Variable Life
      Account K, is the sole shareholder in the Fund.

      No persons are controlled by the Registrant. A diagram of all persons
      under common control with the Registrant is filed as Exhibit 15(a) to the
      Form N-4 Registrant Statement filed by Lincoln National Variable Annuity
      Account C (File No. 33-25990), and is incorporated by reference into this
      Registration Statement.
   
    
<PAGE>
   
Item 25.  Indemnification
    
   
      As permitted by Section 17(h) and (i) of the Investment Company Act of 
      1940 (the "1940 Act") and pursuant to Article VII of the Fund's By-Laws 
      (Exhibit (b) to the Registration Statement), officers, directors, 
      employees and agents of the Registrant will not be liable to the 
      Registrant, any stockholder, officer, director, employee, agent or other
      person for any action or failure to act, except for bad faith, willful 
      misfeasance, gross negligence or reckless disregard of duties, and those 
      individuals may be indemnified against liabilities in connection with the
      Registrant, subject to the same exceptions.  Section 2-418 of Maryland 
      General Corporation Law permits indemnification of directors who acted in
      good faith and reasonably believed that the conduct was in the best 
      interests of the Registrant.
    
      Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities 
      Act of 1933 (the "Securities Act") may be permitted to directors, 
      officers and controlling persons of the Registrant pursuant to the 
      foregoing provisions or otherwise, the Registrant has been advised that 
      in the opinion of the Securities and Exchange Commission such 
      indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the 1940 Act 
      and is, therefore, unenforceable.  In the event that a claim for 
      indemnification against such liabilities (other than the payment by the 
      Registrant of expenses incurred or paid by a director, officer, or 
      controlling person of the Registrant in connection with the successful 
      defense of any action, suit or proceeding) is asserted against the 
      Registrant by such director, officer or controlling person in 
      connection with the shares being registered, the Registrant will, unless
      in the opinion of its counsel the matter has been settled by controlling
      precedent, submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction the question 
      whether such indemnification by it is against public policy as 
      expressed in the 1940 Act and will be governed by the final 
      adjudication of such issue.
      
      The Registrant will purchase an insurance policy insuring its officers 
      and directors against liabilities, and certain costs of defending 
      claims against such officers and directors, to the extent such officers 
      and directors are not found to have committed conduct constituting 
      willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard 
      in the performance of their duties.  The insurance policy will also 
      insure the Registrant against the cost of indemnification payments to 
      officers and directors under certain circumstances.
   
      Section 9 of the Investment Advisory Agreement (Exhibit (d)1 to the 
      Registration Statement) limits the liability of Lincoln National
      Investment Management Company to liabilities arising from willful
      misfeasance, bad faith or gross negligence in the performance of its
      respective duties or from reckless disregard by them of its respective
      obligations and duties under the agreements.
    
      The Registrant hereby undertakes that it will apply the indemnification 
      provisions of its By-Laws in a manner consistent with Release No. 11330 
      of the Securities and Exchange Commission under the 1940 Act so long as 
      the interpretations of Section 17(h) and 17(i) of such Act remain in 
      effect and are consistently applied.
   
Item 26.  Business and Other Connections of Investment Adviser
    
   
      Information pertaining to any business and other connections of
      Registrant's investment adviser, Lincoln Investment, is hereby
      incorporated by reference from the section captioned "Management of the
      Fund" in the Prospectus forming Part A of this Registration Statement, the
      section captioned "Investment Adviser and Sub-Adviser" in the Statement of
      Additional Information forming Part B of this Registration Statement, and
      Item 7 of Part II of Lincoln Investment's Form ADV filed separately with
      the Commission (File No. 801-5098). Information pertaining to any 
      business and other connections of Registrant's sub-investment adviser, 
      Putnam Investment Management, Inc. ("Putnam") is incorporated by reference
      from the section of the Prospectus captioned "Management of the Fund," the
      section of the Statement of Additional Information captioned "Investment 
      Adviser and Sub-Adviser," and Item 7 of Part II of Putnam's Form ADV filed
      separately with the Commission (File No. 801-7974).
    
   
      The other businesses, profession, vocations, and employment of a
      substantial nature, during the past two years, of the directors and
      officers of Lincoln Investment and Putnam are hereby incorporated by
      reference, respectively, from Schedules A and D of Lincoln Investment's
      Form ADV and from Schedules A and D of Putnam's Form ADV.
    
   
     (a) As of March 23, 1999, the officers and/or directors of the investment
         adviser held the following positions:
    
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                          POSITION               OTHER SUBSTANTIAL BUSINESS
                          INVESTMENT             PROFESSION, VOCATION OR
NAME                      ADVISER                EMPLOYMENT; ADDRESS
- ------------------------  ---------------------  ------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                       <C>                    <C>
David A. Berry            Vice President         Vice President, Lincoln National Income Fund, Inc. and
                                                 Lincoln National Convertible Securities Fund, Inc.,
                                                 Second Vice President, Lincoln Life & Annuity Company of
                                                 New York, 200 East Berry Street, Fort Wayne, Indiana
                                                 46802

Dennis A. Blume           Vice President         Director Lynch & Mayer, Inc., and Vantage Global Advisors, 
                                                 Inc., 200 East Berry Street, Fort Wayne, Indiana 46802

Steven R. Brody           Vice President         President and Director, Lincoln National Realty
                          and Director           Corporation; Vice President, The Lincoln National Life
                                                 Insurance Company, 200 East Berry Street, Fort Wayne, 
                                                 Indiana 46802

Philip C. Byrde           Vice President         200 East Berry Street, Fort Wayne, Indiana 46802

David C. Fischer          Vice President         Vice President, Lincoln National Income Fund, Inc. 200
                                                 East Berry Street
                                                 Fort Wayne, Indiana 46802

J. Michael Keefer         Vice President,        200 East Berry Street
                          General Counsel and    Fort Wayne, Indiana  46802
                          Assistant Secretary,
                          and Director

Mark Laurent              Second Vice President  200 East Berry Street, Fort Wayne, Indiana 46802

H. Thomas McMeekin        President and          President and Director, Lincoln National Convertible
                          Director               Securities Fund, Inc., Lincoln National Income Fund,
                                                 Inc., Executive Vice President and Chief Investment 
                                                 Officer, Lincoln National Corporation; Director, 
                                                 Delaware Management Holdings, Inc., Lincoln National 
                                                 Realty Corporation, Lynch & Mayer, Inc., Vantage Global 
                                                 Advisors, Executive Vice President and Chief Investment 
                                                 Officer, Fixed-Income Delaware Management Company, and 
                                                 Director of Lincoln National Investments, Inc. (Formerly 
                                                 Lincoln National Investment Companies, Inc.) Lincoln 
                                                 National Life Insurance Company, 200 East Berry Street, 
                                                 Fort Wayne, Indiana 46802 Other Substantial Business

Jil Schoeff-Lindholm      Portfolio Manager      200 East Berry Street, Fort Wayne, Indiana 46802

David C. Patch            Vice President         200 East Berry Street, Fort Wayne, Indiana 46802

Dennis E. Westrick        Second Vice President  200 East Berry Street, Fort Wayne, Indiana 46802
                          and Assistant 
                          Treasurer
</TABLE>
    

   

     (b) The Sub-Advisor.

    
   
     As of March 24, 1999 the officers and/or directors of the Sub-Adviser
     are as follows:
    
   
           Putnam Investment Management, Inc.
           One Post Office Square
           Boston, MA 02109
    
   
        Name                               Officer Title
        ------                             -------------
        Putnam, George                     Chairman
        Lasser, Lawrence J.                President & Director
        Silver, Gordon H.                  Director & SMD
        Burke, Robert W.                   Sr Managing Director
        Coburn, Gary N.                    Sr Managing Director
        Collman, Kathleen M.               Sr Managing Director
        Ferguson, Tim                      Sr Managing Director
        Regan, Anthony W.                  Sr Managing Director
        Spiegel, Steven                    Sr Managing Director
        Anderson, Blake E.                 Managing Director
        Antill, Jennifer                   Managing Director
        Beck, Robert R.                    Managing Director
        Browchuck, Brett C.                Managing Director
        Cassaro, Joseph A.                 Managing Director
        Cotner, C. Beth                    Managing Director
        Cronin, Kevin M.                   Managing Director
        D'Alolio, Edward H.                Managing Director
        Daly, Kenneth L.                   Managing Director
        DeTore, John A.                    Managing Director
        Durgarian, Kernig H.               Managing Director
        Esterves, Irene M.                 Managing Director
        Gillis, Roland                     Managing Director
        Haslett, Thomas R.                 Managing Director
        Hurley, William J.                 Managing Director
        Jacobs, Jerome J.                  Managing Director
        Joseph, Joseph P.                  Managing Director
        Kamshad, Omid                      Managing Director
        King, David L.                     Managing Director
        Kohli, D. William                  Managing Director
        Kreiani, Anthony I.                Managing Director
        Kuenstner, Deborah F.              Managing Director
        Landes, William J.                 Managing Director
        Leibovitch, Richard G.             Managing Director
        Leichter, Jennifer E.              Managing Director
        Maloney, Kevin J.                  Managing Director
        Martino, Michael                   Managing Director
        Maxwell, Scott M.                  Managing Director
        McGue, William F.                  Managing Director
        McMullan, Carol C.                 Managing Director
        Merneni, Krishna K.                Managing Director
        Miller, Daniel L.                  Managing Director
        Morgan Jr., John J.                Managing Director
        Oristaglio, Stephen M.             Managing Director
        Peacher, Stephen C.                Managing Director
        Porter, Charles E.                 Managing Director
        Price, Quintin                     Managing Director
        Reilly, Thomas V.                  Managing Director
    

<PAGE>

   
        Schultz, Mitchell D.               Managing Director
        Scott, Justin M.                   Managing Director
        Shadek Jr. Edward T.               Managing Director
        Starr, Loren M.                    Managing Director
        Swift, Robert                      Managing Director
        Telanian, John C.                  Managing Director
        Tibbits, Richard B.                Managing Director
        Wetlaufer, Eric                    Managing Director
        Woolverton, William H.             Managing Director
        Waldman, David L.                  Managing Director & CEO
        Arends, Michael K.                 Senior Vice President
        Asher, Steven E.                   Senior Vice President
        Atkin, Michael J.                  Senior Vice President
        Augustine, Jeffery B.              Senior Vice President
        Bakshi, Manjit S.                  Senior Vice President
        Bamford, Dolores Snyder            Senior Vice President
        Baumbach, Robert K.                Senior Vice President
        Berka, Sharon A.                   Senior Vice President
        Blook, Richard L.                  Senior Vice President
        Boaelli, John A.                   Senior Vice President
        Bousa, Edward P.                   Senior Vice President
        Bresnahan, Leslee R.               Senior Vice President
        Burke, Andrea                      Senior Vice President
        Burns, Cheryl A.                   Senior Vice President
        Byme, Joshua L.                    Senior Vice President
        Callahan, Ellen S.                 Senior Vice President
        Carlson, David G.                  Senior Vice President
        Chrostowski, Louis F.              Senior Vice President
        Curran, Peter J.                   Senior Vice President
        Dalferro, John R.                  Senior Vice President
        Derbyshire, Ralph C.               Senior Vice President
        England, Richard B.                Senior Vice President
        Farrell, Deborah S.                Senior Vice President
        Finch, Edward R.                   Senior Vice President
        Flaherty, Patricia C.              Senior Vice President
        Fontana, Forrest N.                Senior Vice President
        Francis, Jonathan M.               Senior Vice President
        Frost, Karen T.                    Senior Vice President
        Frucci, Richard M.                 Senior Vice President
        Fullerton, Brian J.                Senior Vice President
        Grant, J. Peter                    Senior Vice President
        Graviere, Patrice                  Senior Vice President
        Grim, Daniel J.                    Senior Vice President
        Haagensen, Paul E.                Senior Vice President
        Hadden, Peter J.                   Senior Vice President
        Halperin, Matthew C.               Senior Vice President
        Healey, Deborah R.                 Senior Vice President
        Holding, Pamela                    Senior Vice President
        Hotchkiss, Michael F.              Senior Vice President
    

<PAGE>

   
        Kaufman, Jeffery                   Senior Vice President
        Kay, Karen R.                      Senior Vice President
        Kirson, Steven L.                  Senior Vice President
        Knight, Jeffrey                    Senior Vice President
        Koontz, Jill A.                    Senior Vice President
        Lannum III, Coleman N.             Senior Vice President
        Lindsey, Jeffrey R.                Senior Vice President
        Lomba, Rufino R.                   Senior Vice President
        MacElwee Jones, Elizabeth M.       Senior Vice President
        Madane, Robert, A.                 Senior Vice President
        Malloy, Julie M.                   Senior Vice President
        Marrkand, Paul E.                  Senior Vice President
        Mattois, Andrew S.                 Senior Vice President
        McDonald, Richard E.               Senior Vice President
        Meehan, Thalia                     Senior Vice President
        Mehta, Sandeep                     Senior Vice President
        Miller, William H.                 Senior Vice President
        Mockard, Jeanne L.                 Senior Vice President
        Morgan, Kelly A.                   Senior Vice President
        Mufson, Michael J.                 Senior Vice President
        Mullen, Donald E.                  Senior Vice President
        Mullin, Hugh H.                    Senior Vice President
        Netois, Jeffrey W.                 Senior Vice President
        Oler, Stephen S.                   Senior Vice President
        Paine, Robert M.                   Senior Vice President
        Parker, Margery C.                 Senior Vice President
        Perry, William                     Senior Vice President
        Peters, Carmel                     Senior Vice President
        Petralia, Randolph S.              Senior Vice President
        Plapinger, Keith                   Senior Vice President
        Pohl, Charles G.                   Senior Vice President
        Pollard, Mark D.                   Senior Vice President
        Prusko, James M.                   Senior Vice President
        Quistberg, Paul T.                 Senior Vice President
        Ray, Christopher A.                Senior Vice President
        Rogers, Kevin J.                   Senior Vice President
        Ruys de Perez, Charles A.          Senior Vice President
        Santos, David J.                   Senior Vice President
        Santosus, Anthony C.               Senior Vice President
        Schwister, Jay E.                  Senior Vice President
        Scordato, Christine A.             Senior Vice President
        Sievert, Jean I.                   Senior Vice President
        Simon, Sheldon N.                  Senior Vice President
        Simozar, Saled                     Senior Vice President
        Smith Jr. Leo J.                   Senior Vice President
        Smith, Margaret D.                 Senior Vice President
        Spetz, Erin J.                     Senior Vice President
        Stack, Michael F.                  Senior Vice President
    

<PAGE>

   
        Stairs, George W.                  Senior Vice President
        Strumpf, Casey                     Senior Vice President
        Sugimoto, Toshitumi                Senior Vice President
        Sullivan, Roger R.                 Senior Vice President
        Svensson, Lisa H.                  Senior Vice President
        Swanberg, Charles H.               Senior Vice President
        Thomsen, Rosemary H.               Senior Vice President
        Troped, Bonnie L.                  Senior Vice President
        Verani, John R.                    Senior Vice President
        Walsh, Francis P.                  Senior Vice President
        Warren, Paul C.                    Senior Vice President
        Weinstein, Michael R.              Senior Vice President
        Welsa, Manuel                      Senior Vice President
        Whalen, Edward F.                  Senior Vice President
        Wheeler, Diane D. F.               Senior Vice President
        Wyke, Richard P.                   Senior Vice President
        Yogg, Michael R.                   Senior Vice President
        Zukowski, Gerald S.                Senior Vice President
    

<PAGE>

   
Item 27.  Principal Underwriters
    
              Not applicable.
   
Item 28.  Location of Accounts and Records

              See Exhibit (r).
    
   
Item 29.  Management Services
    
              Not applicable.
   
Item 30.  Undertakings
    

   
              Not applicable.
    

<PAGE>

                                  SIGNATURES
   
     Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933 and the
Investment Company Act of 1940, the Registrant has duly caused this Amendment
to the Registration Statement to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned,
thereunto duly authorized, in the City of Fort Wayne, and State of Indiana,
on the 19th day of April 1999. 
    

                                          LINCOLN NATIONAL
                                          AGGRESSIVE GROWTH FUND, INC.


                                          By /s/ Kelly D. Clevenger
                                             ----------------------------
                                             Kelly D. Clevenger
                                             President
   
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this Amendment to 
the Registration Statement has been signed below on April 19, 1999, by the 
following persons in the capacities indicated.
    
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Signature                   Title                                      Date
- -----------                 -----                                      ----
<S>                         <C>                                   <C>
   
/s/ Kelly D. Clevenger      Chairman of the Board,                April 19, 1999
- -----------------------     President and Director
Kelly D. Clevenger          (Principal Executive Officer)
    
   
*                           Director                              April 19, 1999
- -----------------------
John B. Borsch, Jr.
    
   
*                            Director                             April 19, 1999
- -----------------------
Kenneth G. Stella
    
   
*                          Director                               April 19, 1999
- -----------------------
Barbara S. Kowalczyk
    
   
*                           Director                              April 19, 1999
- -----------------------
Nancy L. Frisby
    
   
*                           Chief Accounting Officer              April 19, 1999
- -----------------------     (Principal Accounting Officer)
Eric C. Jones
    
   
*                           Vice President and Treasurer          April 19, 1999
- -----------------------     (Principal Financial Officer)
Janet C. Chrzan
    
</TABLE>

   
* By /s/ Steven M. Kluever  Pursuant to a Power of Attorney filed with this
    ----------------------  Registration Statement.
     Steven M. Kluever
    


<PAGE>

                                       FORM OF 

                         SUB-ADVISORY AGREEMENT (LNIMC/TPMC)


     Sub-Advisory Agreement executed as of  May ___, 1999, between LINCOLN
INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT, INC., an Illinois corporation (the "Adviser"), and PUTNAM
INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT COMPANY, INC., a Massachusetts corporation (the
"Sub-Adviser").

Witnesseth:

That in consideration of the mutual covenants herein contained, it is agreed as
follows:

1.   SERVICES TO BE RENDERED BY SUB-ADVISER TO THE FUND.

          (a)  Subject always to the control of the Directors of Lincoln
     National Aggressive Growth Fund, Inc. (the "Fund"), a Maryland corporation,
     which is an eligible investment fund for certain variable annuity and
     variable life insurance contracts issued by Lincoln National Life Insurance
     Company (the "Variable Contracts"), the Sub-Adviser, at its expense, will
     furnish continuously an investment program for the Fund which shall at all
     times meet the diversification requirements of Section 817(h) of the
     Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the "Code").  The Sub-Adviser will make
     investment decisions on behalf of the Fund and place all orders for the
     purchase and sale of portfolio securities.  In the performance of its
     duties, the Sub-Adviser will comply with the provisions of the
     organizational documents and Bylaws of the Fund and the stated investment
     objective, policies and restrictions of the Fund, and will use its best
     efforts to safeguard and promote the welfare of the Fund, and to comply
     with other policies which the Directors or the Adviser, as the case may be,
     may from time to time determine.  The Sub-Adviser shall make its officers
     and employees available to the Adviser from time to time at such reasonable
     times as the parties may agree to review investment policies of the Fund
     and to consult with the Adviser regarding the investment affairs of the
     Fund.

          (b)  The Sub-Adviser, at its expense, will furnish (i) all necessary
     investment and management facilities, including salaries of personnel,
     required for it to execute its duties faithfully and (ii) administrative
     facilities, including bookkeeping, clerical personnel and equipment
     necessary for the efficient conduct of the investment affairs of the Fund
     (excluding determination of net asset value per share, portfolio account
     and shareholder accounting services).  As a particular service to be
     rendered by Sub-Adviser, but not by way of limitation, Sub-Adviser shall
     vote proxies relating to the Fund's portfolio securities.

          (c)  In the selection of brokers, dealers or futures commission
     merchants and the placing of orders for the purchase and sale of portfolio
     investments for the Fund, the Sub-Adviser shall use its best efforts to
     obtain for the Fund the most favorable price and execution available,
     except to the extent it may be permitted to pay higher brokerage
     commissions for brokerage and research services as described below.  In
     using its best efforts to obtain for the Fund the most favorable price and
     execution available, the Sub-Adviser, bearing in mind the Fund's best
     interests at all times, shall consider all factors it deems relevant,
     including by way of illustration: price; the size of the transaction; the
     nature of the market for the security; the amount of the commission; the
     timing of the

<PAGE>

     transaction taking into account market prices and trends; the reputation,
     experience and financial stability of the broker, dealer, or futures
     commission merchant involved; and the quality of service rendered by the
     broker, dealer of futures commission merchant in other transactions. 
     Subject to such policies as the Directors of the Fund may determine, the
     Sub-Adviser shall not be deemed to have acted unlawfully or to have
     breached any duty created by this Agreement or otherwise solely by reason
     of its having caused the Fund to pay a broker, dealer or futures commission
     merchant that provides brokerage and research services to the Sub-Adviser
     an amount of commission for effecting a portfolio investment transaction in
     excess of the amount of commission another broker, dealer or futures
     commission merchant would have charged for effecting that transaction, if
     the Sub-Adviser determines in good faith that such amount of commission was
     reasonable in relation to the value of the brokerage and research services
     provided by such broker, dealer or futures commission merchant, viewed in
     terms of either that particular transaction or the Sub-Adviser's over-all
     responsibilities with respect to the Fund and to other clients of the
     Sub-Adviser as to which the Sub-Adviser exercises investment discretion.

          (d)  The Sub-Adviser shall not be obligated to pay any expenses of or
     for the Fund not expressly assumed by the Sub-Adviser pursuant to this
     Section 1 other than as provided in Section 3.

2.   OTHER AGREEMENTS, ETC.

          (a)  It is understood that any of the shareholders, Directors,
     officers and employees of the Fund may be a shareholder, director, officer
     or employee of, or be otherwise interested in, the Sub-Adviser, and in any
     person controlled by or under common control with the Sub-Adviser; and that
     the Sub-Adviser and any person controlled by or under common control with
     the Sub-Adviser may have an interest in the Fund or the Variable Contracts,
     or any other investment vehicle for which the Fund is an eligible
     investment fund.

          (b)  The Adviser agrees that if any additional funds are created by
     the Variable Contracts for which the Adviser undertakes to act as
     investment adviser, it will discuss with the Sub-Adviser obtaining
     investment advisory services from the Sub-Adviser for any such additional
     fund before seeking such services from any other investment adviser not
     affiliated with the Adviser.

3.   COMPENSATION TO BE PAID BY THE ADVISER TO THE SUB-ADVISER.

     Until shareholder approval of this Agreement, the Adviser will pay to the
Sub-Adviser as compensation for the Sub-Adviser's services rendered and for the
expenses borne by the Sub-Adviser pursuant to Section 1, a fee, computed and
paid at the annual rate of 0.50 of 1% of the first $150 milion of average daily
net assets of the Fund, and 0.35 of 1% of any excess over $150 million.  

     Upon shareholder approval of this Agreement, the Adviser will pay to the
Sub-Adviser as compensation for the Sub-Adviser's services rendered and for the
expenses borne by the Sub-Adviser pursuant to Section 1, a fee, computed and
paid at the annual rate of 0.50 of 1% of the first $250 million of average daily
net assets of the Fund, and 0.45 of 1% of any excess over $250 million.

<PAGE>

     Such fee shall be paid by the Adviser, and not by the Fund, and without
regard to any reduction in the fees paid by the Fund to the Adviser under its
management contract as a result of any statutory or regulatory limitation on
investment company expenses or voluntary fee reduction assumed by the Adviser. 
Such fee to the Sub-Adviser shall be payable for each month within 10 business
days after the end of such month.

     If the Sub-Adviser shall serve for less than the whole of a month, the
foregoing compensation shall be prorated.

4.   ASSIGNMENT TERMINATES THIS AGREEMENT; AMENDMENTS OF THIS AGREEMENT.

     This Agreement shall automatically terminate, without the payment of any
penalty, in the event of its assignment or in the event that the investment
advisory contract between the Adviser and the Fund shall have terminated for any
reason; and this Agreement shall not be amended unless such amendment be
approved at a meeting by the affirmative vote of a majority of the outstanding
shares of the Fund and by the vote, cast in person at a meeting called for the
purpose of voting on such approval, of a majority of the Directors of the Fund
who are not interested persons of the Fund or of the Adviser or of the
Sub-Adviser.

5.   EFFECTIVE PERIOD AND TERMINATION OF THIS AGREEMENT.

     This Agreement shall become effective upon its execution, and shall remain
in full force and effect continuously thereafter (unless terminated
automatically as set forth in Section 4) until terminated as follows:

          (a)  The Fund may at any time terminate this Agreement by not more
     than sixty days' written notice delivered or mailed by registered mail,
     postage prepaid, to the Adviser and the Sub-Adviser; or

          (b)  If (i) the Directors of the Fund or the shareholders by the
     affirmative vote of a majority of the outstanding shares of the Fund and
     (ii) a majority of the Directors who are not interested persons of the Fund
     or of the Adviser or of the Sub-Adviser, by vote cast in person at a
     meeting called for the purpose of voting on such approval, do not
     specifically approve at least annually the continuance of this Agreement,
     then this Agreement shall automatically terminate at the close of business
     on the second anniversary of its execution, or upon the expiration of one
     year from the effective date of the last such continuance, whichever is
     later; provided, however, that if the continuance of this Agreement is
     submitted to the shareholders of the Fund for their approval and such
     shareholders fail to approve such continuance of this Agreement as provided
     herein, the Sub-Adviser may continue to serve hereunder in a manner
     consistent with the Investment Company Act of 1940 and the Rules and
     Regulations thereunder; or

          (c)  The Adviser may at any time terminate this Agreement by not less
     than ninety days' written notice delivered or mailed by registered mail,
     postage prepaid, to the Sub-Adviser, and the Sub-Adviser may at any time
     terminate this Agreement by not less than 90 days' written notice delivered
     or mailed by registered mail, postage prepaid, to the Adviser.

     Action by the Fund under (a) above may be taken either (i) by vote of a
majority of its Directors, or (ii) by the affirmative vote of a majority of the
outstanding shares of the Fund.

<PAGE>

     Termination of this Agreement pursuant to this Section 5 shall be without
the payment of any penalty.

6.   CERTAIN INFORMATION.

     The Sub-Adviser shall promptly notify the Adviser in writing of the
occurrence of any of the following events: (a) the Sub-Adviser shall fail to be
registered as an investment adviser under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940,
as amended from time to time, and under the laws of any jurisdiction in which
the Sub-Adviser is required to be registered as an investment adviser in order
to perform its obligations under this Agreement, (b) the Sub-Adviser shall have
been served or otherwise have notice of any action, suit, proceeding, inquiry or
investigation, at law or in equity, before or by any court, public board or
body, involving the affairs of the Fund, (c) the Sub-Adviser shall cease to be a
direct or indirect subsidiary of Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc. and (d) the
President of the Sub-Adviser or any portfolio manager of the Fund shall have
changed.

7.   CERTAIN DEFINITIONS.

     For the purposes of this Agreement, the "affirmative vote of a majority of
the outstanding shares" means the affirmative vote, at a duly called and held
meeting of shareholders, (a) of the holders of 67% or more of the shares of the
Fund present (in person or by proxy) and entitled to vote at such meeting, if
the holders of more than 50% of the outstanding shares of the Fund entitled to
vote at such meeting are present in person or by proxy, or (b) of the holders of
more than 50% of the outstanding shares of the Fund entitled to vote at such
meeting, whichever is less.

     For the purposes of this Agreement, the terms "affiliated person,"
"control," "interested person" and "assignment" shall have their respective
meanings defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940 and the Rules and
Regulations thereunder, subject, however, to such exemptions as may be granted
by the Securities and Exchange Commission under said Act; the term "specifically
approve at least annually" shall be construed in a manner consistent with the
Investment Company Act of 1940 and the Rules and Regulations thereunder; and the
term "brokerage and research services" shall have the meaning given in the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Rules and Regulations thereunder.

8.   NONLIABILITY OF SUB-ADVISER.

          (a)  In the absence of willful misfeasance, bad faith or gross
     negligence on the part of the Sub-Adviser, or reckless disregard of its
     obligations and duties hereunder, the Sub-Adviser shall not be subject to
     any liability to the Fund or to any shareholder of the Fund, for any act or
     omission in the course of, or connected with, rendering services hereunder.

          (b)  Failure by the Sub-Adviser to assure that the investment program
     for the Fund meets the diversification requirements of Section 817(h) of
     the Code, as required by Article 1(a) of this Agreement, shall constitute
     gross negligence per se under sub-paragraph 8(a) just above.

9.   Sub-Adviser agrees to indemnify the Adviser, the Variable Contracts and the
Depositor of the Variable Contracts for, and hold them harmless against, any and
all losses, claims, damages, liabilities (including amounts paid in settlement
with the written consent of the Sub-

<PAGE>

Adviser) or litigation (including legal and other expenses) to which the
Adviser, the Variable Contracts or the Depositor of the Variable Contracts may
become subject under any statute, at common law or otherwise, insofar as such
losses, claims, damages, liabilities or expenses (or actions in respect thereof)
or settlements arise as a result of any failure by the Sub-Adviser, whether
unintentional or in good faith or otherwise, to adequately diversify the
investment program of the Fund pursuant to the requirements of Section 817(h) of
the Code, and the regulations issued thereunder (including, but not by way of
limitation, Reg. Sec. 1.817-5, March 2, 1989, 54 F.R. 8730, 51 F.R. 32633),
relating to the diversification requirements for variable annuity, endowment,
and life insurance contracts, provided that the Sub-Adviser shall have been
given prompt written notice concerning any matter for which indemnification is
otherwise afforded hereunder.

10.  RIGHT TO AUDIT.

     The Sub-Adviser shall permit employees or legal representatives of the
Lincoln Entities (including independent auditors), or any of them, at their
discretion, to audit the books and records (including, but not by way of
limitation, electronic data processing E-mail, on-line data and any data on
storage) of Sub-Adviser which relate to transactions which are the subject of
this Agreement.  Any audit will be conducted during normal business hours of the
Sub-Adviser and on the Sub-Adviser's premises, with reasonable prior notice to
Sub-Adviser.  Sub-Adviser agrees to provide to the Lincoln Entities, without
charge, reasonable access to its facilities and personnel during the conduct of
an audit.  Sub-Adviser may charge a reasonable fee for photocopying and other
out-of-pocket costs associated with an audit conducted under this Paragraph.

11.  MARKETING MATERIALS.

          [Text to follow]

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, LINCOLN INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT, INC. and THE PUTNAM
MANAGEMENT COMPANY, INC. have each caused this instrument to be signed in
duplicate [sic] on its behalf by its duly authorized representative, all as of
the day and year first above written.

                                        LINCOLN INVESTMENT
                                        MANAGEMENT, INC.

                                        _________________________________

                                        PUTNAM INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT 
                                        COMPANY, INC.

                                        _________________________________
Accepted and agreed to
as of the day and year 
first above written:

LINCOLN NATIONAL AGGRESSIVE
GROWTH FUND, INC.

_______________________________


<PAGE>

                                AMENDED AND RESTATED 
                             FUND PARTICIPATION AGREEMENT
                    (FORMER TITLE: "AGREEMENT TO PURCHASE SHARES")
                                       BETWEEN
                       THE LINCOLN NATIONAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
                                         AND
                    LINCOLN NATIONAL AGGRESSIVE GROWTH FUND, INC. 


               THIS AGREEMENT, made and entered into this 1st day of July, 1998,
by and between Lincoln National Aggressive Growth Fund, Inc. a corporation
organized under the laws of Maryland (the "Fund"), and THE LINCOLN NATIONAL LIFE
INSURANCE CO., an Indiana insurance corporation (the "Company"), on its own 
behalf and on behalf of each separate account of the Company named in Schedule 1
to this Agreement as in effect at the time this Agreement is executed and such
other separate accounts that may be added to Schedule 1 from time to time in
accordance with the provisions of Article XI of this Agreement (each such
account referred to as the "Account"; collectively, the "Accounts").

          WHEREAS, the Fund is engaged in business as an open-end management
investment company and was established for the purpose of serving as the
investment vehicle for separate accounts established for variable life insurance
policies and variable annuity contracts (collectively referred to as "Variable
Insurance Products," the owners of such products being referred to as "Product
owners") to be offered by insurance companies which have entered into
participation agreements with the Fund ("Participating Insurance Companies");
and

          WHEREAS, the Fund filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(the "SEC") and the SEC has declared effective a registration statement
(referred to herein as the "Fund Registration Statement" and the prospectus
contained therein, or filed pursuant to Rule 497 under the 1933 Act, referred to
herein as the "Fund Prospectus") on Form N-lA to register itself as an open-end
management investment company (File No. 811-3212) under the Investment Company
Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940 Act"), and the Fund shares (File No. 2-80743)
under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "1933 Act"); and

          WHEREAS, the Company has filed a registration statement with the SEC
to register under the 1933 Act (unless exempt therefrom) certain variable
annuity contracts and/or variable life insurance policies described in Schedule
2 to this Agreement as in effect at the time this Agreement is executed and such
other variable annuity contracts and variable life insurance policies which may
be added to Schedule 2 from time to time in accordance with Article XI of this
Agreement (such policies and contracts shall be referred to herein collectively
as the "Contracts," each such registration statement for a class or classes of
contracts listed on Schedule 2 being referred to as the "Contracts Registration
Statement" and the prospectus for each such class or classes being referred to
herein as the "Contracts Prospectus," and the owners of the such contracts, as
distinguished from all Product Owners, being referred to as "Contract Owners");
and


<PAGE>

          WHEREAS, each Account, a validly existing separate account, duly
authorized by the Company on the date set forth on Schedule 1, sets aside and
invests assets attributable to the Contracts; and

          WHEREAS, the Company has registered or will have registered each
Account with the SEC as a unit investment trust under the 1940 Act before any
Contracts are issued by that Account; and

          WHEREAS, to the extent permitted by applicable insurance laws and
regulations, the Company intends to purchase shares on behalf of each Account to
fund its Contracts and the Fund is authorized to sell such shares to unit
investment trusts such as the Accounts at net asset value;

          NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of their mutual promises, the Company
and the Fund agree as follows:


ARTICLE I. SALE OF FUND SHARES

          1.1. The Fund agrees to sell to the Company those shares which the
Company orders on behalf of the Account, executing such orders on a daily basis
in accordance with Section 1.4 of this Agreement.

          1.2. The Fund agrees to make shares  available for purchase by the
Company on behalf of the Account at the then applicable net asset value per
share on Business Days as defined in Section 1.4 of this Agreement, and the Fund
shall use its best efforts to calculate AND DELIVER such net asset value by 7:00
p.m., E.S.T., on each such Business Day.  Notwithstanding any other provision in
this Agreement to the contrary, the Board of Directors of the Fund (the "Fund
Board") may suspend or terminate the offering of  shares, if such action is
required by law or by regulatory authorities having jurisdiction or if, in the
sole discretion of the Fund Board acting in good faith and in light of its
fiduciary duties under Federal and any applicable state laws, suspension or
termination is necessary and in the best interests of the shareholders  (it
being understood that "shareholders" for this purpose shall mean Product
owners).

          1.3. The Fund agrees to redeem, at the Company's request, any full or
fractional shares of the Fund held by the Account or the Company, executing such
requests at the net asset value on a daily basis (LL will expect same day
redemption wires unless unusual circumstances evolve which cause the Fund to
have to redeem securities) in accordance with Section 1.4 of this Agreement, the
applicable provisions of the 1940 Act and the then currently effective Fund
Prospectus.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Fund may delay redemption of
Fund shares to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act, any rules, regulations or
orders thereunder, or the then currently effective Fund Prospectus.


<PAGE>

          1.4       (a)  For purposes of Sections 1.1, 1.2 and 1.3, the Company
               shall be the agent of the Fund for the limited purpose of
               receiving redemption and purchase requests from the Account (but
               not from the general account of the Company), and receipt on any
               Business Day by the Company as such limited agent of the Fund
               prior to the time prescribed in the current Fund Prospectus
               (which as of the date of execution of this Agreement is 4 p.m.,
               E.S.T.) shall constitute receipt by the Fund on that same
               Business Day, provided that the Fund receives notice of such
               redemption or purchase request by 9:00 a.m., E.S.T. on the next
               following Business Day.  For purposes of this Agreement,
               "Business Day" shall mean any day on which the New York Stock
               exchange is open for trading.

                    (b)  The Company shall pay for the shares on the same day
               that it places an order with the Fund to purchase those Fund
               shares for an Account.  Payment for Fund shares will be made by
               the Account or the Company in Federal Funds transmitted to the
               Fund by wire to be received by 11:00 a.m., E.S.T. on the day the
               Fund is properly notified of the purchase order for shares.  The
               Fund will confirm receipt of each trade and these confirmations
               will be received by the Company via Fax or Email by 3:00 p.m.
               E.S.T.  If Federal Funds are not received on time, such funds
               will be invested, and shares purchased thereby will be issued, as
               soon as practicable.

                    (c)  Payment for shares redeemed by the Account or the
               Company will be made in Federal Funds transmitted to the Company
               by wire on the same day the Fund is notified of the redemption
               order of  shares, except that the Fund reserves the right to
               delay payment of redemption proceeds, but in no event may such
               payment be delayed longer than the period permitted under Section
               22(e) of the 1940 Act.  The Fund shall not bear any
               responsibility whatsoever for the proper disbursement or
               crediting of redemption proceeds if securities must be redeemed;
               the Company alone shall be responsible for such action.

          1.5. Issuance and transfer of Fund shares will be by book entry only. 
Stock certificates will not be issued to the Company or the Account.  Purchase
and redemption orders for Fund shares will be recorded in an appropriate ledger
for the Account or the appropriate subaccount of the Account.

          1.6. The Fund shall furnish notice as soon as reasonably practicable
to the Company of any income dividends or capital gain distributions payable on
any shares.  The Company, on its behalf and on behalf of the Account, hereby
elects to receive all such dividends and distributions as are payable on any
shares in the form of additional shares of that Fund.  The Company reserves the
right, on its behalf and on behalf of the Account, to revoke this election and
to receive all such dividends in cash.  The Fund shall notify the Company of the
number of shares so issued as payment of such dividends and distributions.


<PAGE>

          1.7. The Fund shall use its best efforts to make the net asset value
per share available to the Company by 7:00 p.m., E.S.T. each Business Day, and
in any event, as soon as reasonably practicable after the net asset value per
share is calculated, and shall calculate such net asset value in accordance with
the then currently effective Fund Prospectus.  The Fund shall not be liable for
any information provided to the Company pursuant to this Agreement which
information is based on incorrect information supplied by the Company to the
Fund.

          1.8.      (a) The Company may withdraw the Account's investment in the
               Fund only: (i) as necessary to facilitate Contract owner
               requests; (ii) upon a determination by a majority of the Fund
               Board, or a majority of disinterested Fund Board members, that an
               irreconcilable material conflict exists among the interests of
               (x) any Product Owners or (y) the interests of the Participating
               Insurance Companies investing in the Fund; (iii) upon requisite
               vote of the Contractowners having an interest in the Fund to
               substitute the shares of another investment company for shares in
               accordance with the terms of the Contracts; (iv) as required by
               state and/or federal laws or regulations or judicial or other
               legal precedent of general application; or (v) at the Company's
               sole discretion, pursuant to an order of the SEC under Section
               26(b) of the 1940 Act.

                    (b) The parties hereto acknowledge that the arrangement
               contemplated by this Agreement is not exclusive and that the Fund
               shares may be sold to other insurance companies (subject to
               Section 1.9 hereof) and the cash value of the Contracts may be
               invested in other investment companies.

                    (c) The Company shall not, without prior notice to the Fund
               (unless otherwise required by applicable law), take any action to
               operate the Accounts as  management investment companies under
               the 1940 Act.

          1.9. The Fund agrees that Fund shares will be sold only to
Participating Insurance Companies and their separate accounts.  The Fund will
not sell Fund shares to any insurance company or separate account unless an
agreement complying with Article VII of this Agreement is in effect to govern
such sales.  No Fund shares will be sold to the general public.


ARTICLE II. REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES

          2.1. The Company represents and warrants (a) that the Contracts are
               registered under the 1933 Act or will be so registered before the
               issuance thereof, (b) that the Contracts will be issued in
               compliance in all material respects with all applicable Federal
               and state laws and (c) that the Company will require of every
               person distributing the Contracts that the Contracts be offered
               and sold in compliance in all material respects with all
               applicable Federal and state laws.  The Company further
               represents and warrants that it is an insurance company duly
               organized and validly


<PAGE>

               existing under applicable law and that it has legally and validly
               authorized each Account as a separate account under Section
               27-1-5-1 of the Indiana Insurance Code, and has registered or,
               prior to the issuance of any Contracts, will register each
               Account (unless exempt therefrom) as a unit investment trust in
               accordance with the provisions of the 1940 Act to serve as a
               separate account for its Contracts, and that it will maintain
               such registrations for so long as any Contracts issued under them
               are outstanding.

          2.2. The Fund represents and warrants that Fund shares sold pursuant
to this Agreement shall be registered under the 1933 Act and duly authorized for
issuance in accordance with applicable law and that the Fund is and shall remain
registered under the 1940 Act for so long as the Fund shares are sold.  The Fund
further represents and warrants that it is a corporation duly organized and in
good standing under the laws of Maryland.

          2.3. The Fund represents and warrants that it currently qualifies as a
Regulated Investment Company under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code of
1986, as amended (the "Code").  The Fund further represents and warrants that it
will make every effort to continue to qualify and to maintain such qualification
(under Subchapter M or any successor or similar provision), and that it will
notify the Company immediately upon having a reasonable basis for believing that
it has ceased to so qualify or that it might not so qualify in the future.

          2.4. The Fund represents and warrants that it will comply with Section
817(h) of the Code, and all regulations issued thereunder.

          2.5. The Company represents that the Contracts are currently and at
the time of issuance will be treated as annuity contracts or life insurance
policies, whichever is appropriate, under applicable provisions of the Code. 
The Company shall make every effort to maintain such treatment and shall notify
the Fund immediately upon having a reasonable basis for believing that the
Contracts have ceased to be so treated or that they might not be so treated in
the future.

          2.6. The Fund represents that the Fund's investment policies, fees and
expenses, and operations are and shall at all times remain in material
compliance with the laws of the state of Maryland, to the extent required to
perform this Agreement; and with any state-mandated investment restrictions set
forth on Schedule 3, as amended from time to time by the Company in accordance
with Section 6.6. The Fund, however, makes no representation as to whether any
aspect of its operations (including, but not limited to, fees and expenses and
investment policies) otherwise complies with the insurance laws or regulations
of any state.  The Company alone shall be responsible for informing the Fund of
any investment restrictions imposed by state insurance law and applicable to the
Fund.

          2.7. The Fund represents and warrants that it has and maintains a
fidelity bond in accordance with Rule 17g-1 under the 1940 Act. The Fund will
immediately notify the Company in the event the fidelity bond coverage should
lapse at any time.


<PAGE>

ARTICLE III. PROSPECTUSES AND PROXY STATEMENTS; SALES MATERIAL AND OTHER
             INFORMATION

          3.1. The Fund shall provide the Company with as many copies of the 
current Fund Prospectus as the Company may reasonably request. If requested 
by the Company in lieu thereof, the Fund at its expense shall provide to the 
Company a camera-ready copy, and electronic version, of the current Fund 
Prospectus suitable for printing and other assistance as is reasonably 
necessary in order for the Company to have a new Contracts Prospectus printed 
together with the Fund Prospectus in one document. See Article V for a 
detailed explanation of the responsibility for the cost of printing and 
distributing Fund prospectuses.

          3.2. The Fund Prospectus shall state that the Statement of 
Additional Information for the Fund is available from the Fund and the Fund 
shall provide such Statement free of charge to the Company and to any 
outstanding or prospective Contract owner who requests such Statement.

          3.3. (a)  The Fund at its expense shall provide to the Company a
               camera-ready copy of the Fund's shareholder reports and other
               communications to shareholders (except proxy material), in each
               case in a form suitable for printing, as determined by the
               Company.  The Fund shall be responsible for the costs of printing
               and distributing these materials to Contract owners. 

               (b)  The Fund at its expense shall be responsible for preparing,
               printing and distributing its proxy material.  The Company will
               provide the appropriate Contractowner names and addresses to the
               Fund for this purpose.

          3.4. The Company shall furnish to the Fund, prior to its use, each 
piece of sales literature or other promotional material in which the Fund is 
named.  No such material shall be used, except with the prior written 
permission of the Fund.  The Fund agrees to respond to any request for 
approval on a prompt and timely basis.  Failure of the Fund to respond within 
10 days of the request by the Company shall relieve the Company of the 
obligation to obtain the prior written permission of the Fund.

          3.5. The Company shall not give any information or make any 
representations or statements on behalf of the Fund or concerning the Fund 
other than the information or representations contained in the Fund 
Registration Statement or Fund Prospectus, as such Registration Statement and 
Prospectus may be amended or supplemented from time to time, or in reports or 
proxy statements for the Fund, or in sales literature or other promotional 
material approved by the Fund, except with the prior written permission of 
the Fund. The Fund agrees to respond to any request for permission on a 
prompt and timely basis.  If the Fund does not respond within 10 days of a 
request by the Company, then the Company shall be relieved of the obligation 
to obtain the prior written permission of the Fund.


<PAGE>

          3.6. The Fund shall not give any information or make any
representations on behalf of the Company or concerning the Company, the Account
or the Contracts other than the information or representations contained in the
Contracts Registration Statement or Contracts Prospectus, as such Registration
Statement and Prospectus may be amended or supplemented from time to time, or in
published reports of the Account which are in the public domain or approved in
writing by the Company for distribution to Contract owners, or in sales
literature or other promotional material approved in writing by the Company,
except with the prior written permission of the Company.  The Company agrees to
respond to any request for permission on a prompt and timely basis.  If the
Company fails to respond within 10 days of a request by the Fund, then the Fund
is relieved of the obligation to obtain the prior written permission of the
Company.

          3.7. The Fund will provide to the Company at least one complete copy
of all Fund Registration Statements, Fund Prospectuses, Statements of Additional
Information, annual and semi-annual reports and other reports, proxy statements,
sales literature and other promotional materials, applications for exemptions,
requests for no-action letters, and all amendments or supplements to any of the
above, that relate to the Fund or Fund shares, within 20 days after the filing
of such document with the SEC or other regulatory authorities.

          3.8. The Company will provide to the Fund at least one complete copy
of all Contracts Registration Statements, Contracts Prospectuses, Statements of
Additional Information, Annual and Semi-annual Reports, sales literature and
other promotional materials, and all amendments or supplements to any of the
above, that relate to the Contracts, within 20 days after the filing of such
document with the SEC or other regulatory authorities.

          3.9. Each party will provide to the other party copies of draft 
versions of any registration statements, prospectuses, statements of additional
information, reports, proxy statements, solicitations for voting instructions,
sales literature and other promotional materials, applications for exemptions,
requests for no-action letters, and all amendments or supplements to any of the
above, to the extent that the other party reasonably needs such information for
purposes of preparing a report or other filing to be filed with or submitted to
a regulatory agency.  If a party requests any such information before it has
been filed, the other party will provide the requested information if then
available and in the version then available at the time of such request.

          3.10. For purposes of this Article III, the phrase "sales 
literature or other promotional material" includes, but is not limited to, 
advertisements (such as material published, or designed for use, in a 
newspaper, magazine or other periodical, radio, television, telephone or tape 
recording, videotape display, computer net site, signs or billboards, motion 
pictures or other public media), sales literature (I.E., any written 
communication distributed or made generally available to customers or the 
public, in print or electronically, including brochures, circulars, research 
reports, market letters, form letters, seminar texts, or reprints or excerpts 
of any other advertisement, sales literature, or published article), 
educational or training materials or other communications distributed or made 
generally available to some or all agents or employees, registration 
statements,


<PAGE>

prospectuses, Statements of Additional Information, shareholder reports and
proxy materials, and any other material constituting sales literature or
advertising under NASD rules, the 1940 Act or the 1933 Act.

ARTICLE IV. VOTING

          4.1  Subject to applicable law and the requirements of Article VII,
the Fund shall solicit voting instructions from Contract owners;

          4.2  Subject to applicable law and the requirements of Article VII,
the Company shall:

                    (a)  vote Fund shares attributable to Contract owners in
               accordance with instructions or proxies received in timely
               fashion from such Contract owners;

                    (b)  vote Fund shares attributable to Contract owners for
               which no instructions have been received in the same proportion
               as Fund shares of such Series for which instructions have been
               received in timely fashion; and

                    (c)  vote Fund shares held by the Company on its own behalf
               or on behalf of the Account that are not attributable to Contract
               owners in the same proportion as Fund shares of such Series for
               which instructions have been received in timely fashion.

The Company shall be responsible for assuring that voting privileges for the
Accounts are calculated in a manner consistent with the provisions set forth
above.

ARTICLE V. FEES AND EXPENSES

          All expenses incident to performance by the Fund under this Agreement
(including expenses expressly assumed by the Fund pursuant to this Agreement)
shall be paid by the Fund to the extent permitted by law.  Except as may
otherwise be provided in Section 1.4 and Article VII of this Agreement, the
Company shall not bear any of the expenses for the cost of registration and
qualification of the Fund shares under Federal and any state securities law,
preparation and filing of the Fund Prospectus and Fund Registration Statement,
the preparation of all statements and notices required by any Federal or state
securities law, all taxes on the issuance or transfer of Fund shares, and any
expenses permitted to be paid or assumed by the Fund pursuant to a plan, if any,
under Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act.

          The Fund is responsible for the cost of printing and distributing Fund
Prospectuses and SAIs to existing Contractowners. (If for this purpose the
Company decided to print the Fund Prospectuses and SAIs in a booklet or separate
booklets containing disclosure for the Contracts and for underlying funds other
than those of the Fund, then the Fund shall pay only its proportionate share of
the total cost to distribute the booklet to existing Contractowners.) 


<PAGE>

          The Company is responsible for the cost of printing and distributing
Fund prospectuses and SAIs for new sales; and Account Prospectuses and SAIs for
existing Contractowners.  The Company shall have the final decision on choice of
printer for all Prospectuses and SAIs.


ARTICLE VI. COMPLIANCE UNDERTAKINGS

          6.1. The Fund undertakes to comply with Subchapter M and Section
817(h) of the Code, and all regulations issued thereunder. 

          6.2. The Company shall amend the Contracts Registration Statements
under the 1933 Act and the Account's Registration Statement under the 1940 Act
from time to time as required in order to effect the continuous offering of the
Contracts or as may otherwise be required by applicable law.  The Company shall
register and qualify the Contracts for sale to the extent required by applicable
securities laws of the various states.

          6.3. The Fund shall amend the Fund Registration Statement under the
1933 Act and the 1940 Act from time to time as required in order to effect for
so long as Fund shares are sold the continuous offering of Fund shares as
described in the then currently effective Fund Prospectus.  The Fund shall
register and qualify Fund shares for sale to the extent required by applicable
securities laws of the various states.

          6.4. The Company shall be responsible for assuring that any prospectus
offering a Contract that is a life insurance contract where it is reasonably
possible that such Contract would be deemed a "modified endowment contract," as
that term is defined in Section 7702A of the Code, will describe the
circumstances under which a Contract could be treated as a modified endowment
contract (or policy).

          6.5. To the extent that it decides to finance distribution expenses
pursuant to Rule 12b-1, the Fund undertakes to have a Fund Board of Directors, a
majority of whom are not interested persons of the Fund, formulate and approve
any plan under Rule 12b-1 to finance distribution expenses.

          6.6.      (a)  When appropriate in order to inform the Fund of any
               applicable state-mandated investment restrictions with which the
               Fund must comply, the Company shall arrange with the Fund to
               amend Schedule 3, pursuant to the requirements of Article XI.

                    (b)  Should the Fund become aware of any restrictions which
               may be appropriate for inclusion in Schedule 3, the Company shall
               be informed immediately of the substance of those restrictions. 


<PAGE>

ARTICLE VII. POTENTIAL CONFLICTS

          7.1. The Company agrees to report to the Board of Directors of the
Fund (the "Board") any potential or existing conflicts between the interests of
Product Owners of all separate accounts investing in the Fund, and to assist the
Board in carrying out its responsibilities under Section 6e-3(T) of the 1940
Act, by providing all information reasonably necessary for the Board to consider
any issues raised, including information as to a decision to disregard voting
instructions of variable contract owners.

          7.2. If a majority of the Board, or a majority of disinterested Board
Members, determines that a material irreconcilable conflict exists, the Board
shall give prompt notice to all Participating Insurance Companies.

                    (a)  If a majority of the whole Board, after notice to the
               Company and a reasonable opportunity for the Company to appear
               before it and present its case, determines that the Company is
               responsible for said conflict, and if the Company agrees with
               that determination, the Company shall, at its sole cost and
               expense, take whatever steps are necessary to remedy the material
               irreconcilable conflict. These steps could include:
               (i) withdrawing the assets allocable to some or all of the
               affected Accounts from the Fund and reinvesting such assets in
               a different investment vehicle, or submitting the question of
               whether such segregation should be implemented to a vote of all
               affected Contractowners and, as appropriate, segregating the
               assets of any particular group (i.e., variable annuity
               Contractowners, variable life insurance policyowners, or
               variable Contractowners of one or more Participating Insurance
               Companies) that votes in favor of such segregation, or offering
               to the affected Contractowners the option of making such a
               change; and (ii) establishing a new registered mutual fund or
               management separate account; or (iii) taking such other action
               as is necessary to remedy or eliminate the material
               irreconcilable conflict.

                    (b)  If the Company disagrees with the Board's
               determination, the Company shall file a written protest with the
               Board, reserving its right to dispute the determination as
               between just the Company and the Fund and to seek reimbursement
               from the Fund for the reasonable costs and expenses of resolving
               the conflict. After reserving that right the Company, although
               disagreeing with the Board that it (the Company) was responsible
               for the conflict, shall take the necessary steps, under protest,
               to remedy the conflict, substantially in accordance with
               paragraph (a) just above, for the protection of Contractowners.

                    (c)  As between the Company and the Fund, if within 45 days
               after the Board's determination the Company elects to press the
               dispute, it shall so notify the Board in writing.  The parties
               shall then attempt to resolve the matter amicably through
               negotiation by individuals from each party who are authorized to
               settle the


<PAGE>

               matter.  If the matter has not been amicably resolved within 60
               days from the date of the Company's notice of its intent to press
               the dispute, then before either party shall undertake to litigate
               the dispute it shall be submitted to non-binding arbitration
               conducted expeditiously in accordance with the CPR Rules for
               Non-Administered Arbitration of Business Disputes, by a sole
               arbitrator; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, that if one party has requested
               the other party to seek an amicable resolution and the other
               party has failed to participate, the requesting party may
               initiate arbitration before expiration of the 60-day period set
               out just above.

               If within 45 days of the commencement of the process to select an
               arbitrator the parties cannot agree upon the arbitrator, then he
               or she will be selected from the CPR Panels of Neutrals.  The
               arbitration shall be governed by the United States Arbitration
               Act, 9 U.S.C. Sec. 1-16.  The place of arbitration shall be Fort
               Wayne, Indiana.  The Arbitrator is not empowered to award damages
               in excess of compensatory damages.

                         (d)  If the Board shall determine that the Fund or
               another was responsible for the conflict, then the Board shall
               notify the Company immediately of that determination.  The Fund
               shall assure the Company that it (the Fund) or that other
               Participating Insurance Company as applicable, shall, at its sole
               cost and expense, take whatever steps are necessary to eliminate
               the conflict.

                         (e)  Nothing in Sections 7.2(b) or 7.2(c) shall
               constitute a waiver of any right of action which the Company may
               have against other Participating Insurance Companies for
               reimbursement of all or part of the costs and expenses of
               resolving the conflict.

          7.3. If a material irreconcilable conflict arises because of the
Company's decision to disregard Contractowner voting instructions and that
decision represents a minority position or would preclude a majority vote, the
Company shall withdraw (without charge or penalty) the Account's investment in
the Fund, if the Fund so elects.

          7.4. For purposes of this Article, a majority of the disinterested
members of the Board shall determine whether or not any proposed action
adequately remedies any irreconcilable conflict.  However, in no event will the
Fund be required to establish a new funding medium for any variable contract,
nor will the Company be required to establish a new funding medium for any
Contract, if in either case an offer to do so has been declined by a vote of a
majority of affected Contractowners.


<PAGE>

ARTICLE VIII. INDEMNIFICATION

          8.1. INDEMNIFICATION BY THE COMPANY.  The Company agrees to indemnify
and hold harmless the Fund and each person who controls or is associated with
the Fund (other than another Participating Insurance Company) within the meaning
of such terms under the federal securities laws and any officer, trustee,
director, employee or agent of the foregoing, against any and all losses,
claims, damages or liabilities, joint or several (including any investigative,
legal and other expenses reasonably incurred in connection with, and any amounts
paid with the prior written consent of the Company in settlement of, any action,
suit or proceeding or any claim asserted), to which they or any of them may
become subject under any statute or regulation, at common law or otherwise,
insofar as such losses, claims, damages or liabilities:

                    (a)  arise out of or are based upon any untrue statement or
               alleged untrue statement of any material fact contained in the
               Contracts Registration Statement, Contracts Prospectus, sales
               literature or other promotional material for the Contracts or the
               Contracts themselves (or any amendment or supplement to any of
               the foregoing), or arise out of or are based upon the omission or
               the alleged omission to state therein a material fact required to
               be stated therein or necessary to make the statements therein not
               misleading in light of the circumstances in which they were made;
               provided that this obligation to indemnify shall not apply if
               such statement or omission or such alleged statement or alleged
               omission was made in reliance upon and in conformity with
               information furnished in writing to the Company by the Fund (or a
               person authorized in writing to do so on behalf of the Fund) for
               use in the Contracts Registration Statement, Contracts Prospectus
               or in the Contracts or sales literature (or any amendment or
               supplement) or otherwise for use in connection with the sale of
               the Contracts or Fund shares; or

                    (b)  arise out of or are based upon any untrue statement or
               alleged untrue statement of a material fact by or on behalf of
               the Company (other than statements or representations contained
               in the Fund Registration Statement, Fund Prospectus or sales
               literature or other promotional material of the Fund not supplied
               by the Company or persons under its control) or wrongful conduct
               of the Company or persons under its control with respect to the 
               sale or distribution of the Contracts or Fund shares; or

                    (c)  arise out of any untrue statement or alleged untrue
               statement of a material fact contained in the Fund Registration
               Statement, Fund Prospectus or sales literature or other 
               promotional material of the Fund or any amendment thereof or
               supplement thereto, or the omission or alleged omission to state
               therein a material fact required to be stated therein or
               necessary to make the statements therein not misleading in light
               of the circumstances in which they were made, if such statement
               or omission was made in reliance upon and in conformity with 
               information furnished to the Fund by or on behalf of the
               Company; or


<PAGE>

                    (d)  arise as a result of any failure by the Company to 
               provide the services and furnish the materials or to make any
               payments under the terms of this Agreement; or

                    (e)  arise out of any material breach by the Company of
               this Agreement, including but not limited to any failure to
               transmit a request for redemption or purchase of Fund shares
               on a timely basis in accordance with the procedures set forth
               in Article I; or

                    (f)  arise as a result of the Company's providing the Fund 
               with inaccurate information, which causes the Fund to calculate
               its Net Asset Values incorrectly.

This indemnification will be in addition to any liability which the Company may
otherwise have; provided, however, that no party shall be entitled to
indemnification if such loss, claim, damage or liability is due to the willful
misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of duty by the
party seeking indemnification.

          8.2. INDEMNIFICATION BY THE FUND.  The Fund agrees to indemnify and
hold harmless the Company and each person who controls or is associated with the
Company within the meaning of such terms under the federal securities laws and
any officer, director, employee or agent of the foregoing, against any and all
losses, claims, damages or liabilities, joint or several (including any
investigative, legal and other expenses reasonably incurred in connection with,
and any amounts paid with the prior written consent of the Fund in settlement
of, any action, suit or proceeding or any claim asserted), to which they or any
of them may become subject under any statute or regulation, at common law or
otherwise, insofar as such losses, claims, damages or liabilities:

                    (a)  arise out of or are based upon any untrue statement or
               alleged untrue statement of any material fact contained in the
               Fund Registration Statement, Fund Prospectus (or any amendment or
               supplement thereto) or sales literature or other promotional
               material of the Fund, or arise out of or are based upon the
               omission or the alleged omission to state therein a material fact
               required to be stated therein or necessary to make the statements
               therein not misleading in light of the circumstances in which
               they were made; provided that this obligation to indemnify shall
               not apply if such statement or omission or alleged statement or
               alleged omission was made in reliance upon and in conformity with
               information furnished in writing by the Company to the Fund for
               use in the Fund Registration Statement, Fund Prospectus (or any
               amendment or supplement thereto) or sales literature for the Fund
               or otherwise for use in connection with the sale of the Contracts
               or Fund shares; or


<PAGE>

                    (b)  arise out of or are based upon any untrue statement or
               alleged untrue statement of a material fact made by the Fund
               (other than statements or representations contained in the Fund
               Registration Statement, Fund Prospectus or sales literature or
               other promotional material of the Fund not supplied by the
               Distributor or the Fund or persons under their control) or
               wrongful conduct of the Fund or persons under its control with
               respect to the sale or distribution of the Contracts or Fund
               shares; or

                    (c)  arise out of any untrue statement or alleged untrue
               statement of a material fact contained in the Contract's
               Registration Statement, Contracts Prospectus or sales literature
               or other promotional material for the Contracts (or any amendment
               or supplement thereto), or the omission or alleged omission to
               state therein a material fact required to be stated therein or
               necessary to make the statements therein not misleading in light
               of the circumstances in which they were made, if such statement
               or omission was made in reliance upon information furnished in
               writing by the Fund to the Company (or a person authorized in
               writing to do so on behalf of the Fund); or

                    (d)  arise as a result of any failure by the Fund to provide
               the services and furnish the materials under the terms of this
               Agreement (including, but not by way of limitation, a failure,
               whether unintentional or in good faith or otherwise: (i) to
               comply with the diversification requirements specified in
               Sections 2.4 and 6.1 in Article VI of this Agreement; and (ii) to
               provide the Company with accurate information sufficient for it
               to calculate its accumulation and/or annuity unit values in
               timely fashion as required by law and by the Contracts
               Prospectuses); or

                    (e)  arise out of any material breach by the Fund of this
               Agreement.

This indemnification will be in addition to any liability which the Fund may
otherwise have; provided, however, that no party shall be entitled to
indemnification if such loss, claim, damage or liability is due to the willful
misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of duty by the
party seeking indemnification.

          8.3. INDEMNIFICATION PROCEDURES.  After receipt by a party entitled to
indemnification ("indemnified party") under this Article VIII of notice of the
commencement of any action, if a claim in respect thereof is to be made by the
indemnified party against any person obligated to provide indemnification under
this Article VIII ("indemnifying party"), such indemnified party will notify the
indemnifying party in writing of the commencement thereof as soon as practicable
thereafter, provided that the omission to so notify the indemnifying party will
not relieve it from any liability under this Article VIII, except to the extent
that the omission results in a failure of actual notice to the indemnifying
party and such indemnifying party is damaged solely as a result of the failure
to give such notice.  The indemnifying party, upon the request of the
indemnified party, shall retain counsel reasonably satisfactory to the
indemnified party to represent the


<PAGE>

indemnified party and any others the indemnifying party may designate in such
proceeding and shall pay the fees and disbursements of such counsel related to
such proceeding.  In any such proceeding, any indemnified party shall have the
right to retain its own counsel, but the fees and expenses of such counsel shall
be at the expense of such indemnified party unless (i) the indemnifying party
and the indemnified party shall have mutually agreed to the retention of such
counsel or (ii) the named parties to any such proceeding (including any
impleaded parties) include both the indemnifying party and the indemnified party
and representation of both parties by the same counsel would be inappropriate
due to actual or potential differing interests between them.  The indemnifying
party shall not be liable for any settlement of any proceeding effected without
its written consent but if settled with such consent or if there be a final
judgment for the plaintiff, the indemnifying party agrees to indemnify the
indemnified party from and against any loss or liability by reason of such
settlement or judgment.

          A successor by law of the parties to this Agreement shall be entitled
to the benefits of the indemnification contained in this Article VIII.  The
indemnification provisions contained in this Article VIII shall survive any
termination of this Agreement.


ARTICLE IX. APPLICABLE LAW

          9.1. This Agreement shall be construed and the provisions hereof
interpreted under and in accordance with the laws of the state of Indiana,
without giving effect to the principles of conflicts of law.

          9.2. This Agreement shall be subject to the provisions of the 1933,
1934 and 1940 Acts, and the rules and regulations and rulings thereunder,
including such exemptions from those statutes, rules and regulations as the SEC
may grant, and the terms hereof shall be limited, interpreted and construed in
accordance therewith.


ARTICLE X. TERMINATION

          10.1.     This Agreement shall terminate:

                         (a)  at the option of any party upon 120 days advance
                    written notice to the other parties; or 

                         (b)  at the option of the Company if shares of the Fund
                    are not available to meet the requirements of the Contracts
                    as determined by the Company.  Prompt notice of the election
                    to terminate for such cause shall be furnished by the
                    Company.  Termination shall be effective ten days after the
                    giving of notice by the Company; or 


<PAGE>

                    (c)  at the option of the Fund upon institution of formal
               proceedings against the Company by the NASD, the SEC, the
               insurance commission of any state or any other regulatory body
               regarding the Company's duties under this Agreement or related
               to the sale of the Contracts, the operation of the Account, the
               administration of the Contracts or the purchase of Fund shares;

                    (d)  at the option of the Company upon institution of formal
               proceedings against the Fund, the investment advisor or any sub-
               investment advisor, by the NASD, the SEC, or any state securities
               or insurance commission or any other regulatory body; or

                    (e)  upon requisite vote of the Contract owners having an
               interest in the Fund (unless otherwise required by applicable
               law) and written approval of the Company, to substitute the
               shares of another investment company for the corresponding shares
               of the Fund in accordance with the terms of the Contracts; or

                    (f)  at the option of the Fund in the event any of the
               Contracts are not registered, issued or sold in accordance with
               applicable Federal and/or state law; or

                    (g)  at the option of the Company or the Fund upon a
               determination by a majority of the Fund Board, or a majority of
               disinterested Fund Board members, that an irreconcilable material
               conflict exists among the interests of (i) any Product owners or
               (ii) the interests of the Participating Insurance Companies
               investing in the Fund; or

                    (h)  at the option of the Company if the Fund ceases to
               qualify as a Regulated Investment Company under Subchapter M of
               the Code, or under any successor or similar provision, or if the
               Company reasonably believes, based on an opinion of its counsel,
               that the Fund may fail to so qualify; or

                    (i)  at the option of the Company if the Fund fails to meet
               the diversification requirements specified in Section 817(h) of
               the Code and any regulations thereunder; or

                    (j)  at the option of the Fund if the Contracts cease to
               qualify as annuity contracts or life insurance policies, as
               applicable, under the Code, or if the Fund reasonably believes
               that the Contracts may fail to so qualify; or

                    (k)  at the option of the Fund if the Fund shall determine,
               in its sole judgment exercised in good faith, that either (1) the
               Company shall have suffered a material adverse change in its
               business or financial condition; or (2) the Company shall have
               been the subject of material adverse publicity which is likely to
               have a material adverse impact upon the business and operations
               of the Fund; or


<PAGE>

                    (l)  at the option of the Company, if the Company shall
               determine, in its sole judgment exercised in good faith, that:
               (1) the Fund shall have suffered a material adverse change in its
               business or financial condition; or (2) the Fund shall have been
               the subject of material adverse publicity which is likely to have
               a material adverse impact upon the business and operations of the
               Company; or

                    (m)  automatically upon the assignment of this Agreement
               (including, without limitation, any transfer of the Contracts or
               the Accounts to another insurance company pursuant to an
               assumption reinsurance agreement) unless the non-assigning party
               consents thereto or unless this Agreement is assigned to an
               affiliate of the Company or the Fund, as the case may be.

     10.2.     NOTICE REQUIREMENT.  Except as otherwise provided in Section
10.1, no termination of this Agreement shall be effective unless and until the
party terminating this Agreement gives prior written notice to the other party
of its intent to terminate, which notice shall set forth the basis for such
termination.  Furthermore: 

                    (a)  In the event that any termination is based upon the
               provisions of Article VII or the provisions of Section 10.1(a) of
               this Agreement, such prior written notice shall be given in
               advance of the effective date of termination as required by such
               provisions; and

                    (b)  in the event that any termination is based upon the
               provisions of Section 10.1(c) or 10.1(d) of this Agreement, such
               prior written notice shall be given at least ninety (90) days
               before the effective date of termination, or sooner if required
               by law or regulation.

     10.3.     EFFECT OF TERMINATION

                    (a)  Notwithstanding any termination of this Agreement
               pursuant to Section 10.1 of this Agreement, the Fund will, at the
               option of the Company, continue to make available additional
               Fund shares for so long after the termination of this Agreement
               as the Company desires, pursuant to the terms and conditions of
               this Agreement as provided in paragraph (b) below, for all
               Contracts in effect on the effective date of termination of this
               Agreement (hereinafter referred to as "Existing Contracts"). 
               Specifically, without limitation, if the Company so elects to
               make additional Fund shares available, the owners of the Existing
               Contracts or the Company, whichever shall have legal authority to
               do so, shall be permitted to reallocate investments in the Fund,
               redeem investments in the Fund and/or invest in the Fund upon the
               making of additional purchase payments under the Existing
               Contracts.


<PAGE>

                    (b)  If Fund shares continue to be made available after such
               termination, the provisions of this Agreement shall remain in
               effect except for Section 10.1(a) and thereafter either the Fund
               or the Company may terminate the Agreement, as so continued
               pursuant to this Section 10.3, upon prior written notice to the
               other party, such notice to be for a period that is reasonable
               under the circumstances but, if given by the Fund, need not be
               for more than six months.

                    (c)  The parties agree that this Section 10.3 shall not
               apply to any termination made pursuant to Article VII, and the
               effect of such Article VII termination shall be governed by the
               provisions set forth or incorporated by reference therein.

ARTICLE XI. APPLICABILITY TO NEW ACCOUNTS AND NEW CONTACTS

          The parties to this Agreement may amend the schedules to this
Agreement from time to time to reflect changes in or relating to the Contracts
and to add new classes of variable annuity contracts and variable life insurance
policies to be issued by the Company through new or existing Separate Accounts
investing in the Fund.  The provisions of this Agreement shall be equally
applicable to each such separate account and each such class of contracts or
policies, unless the context otherwise requires.  Any such amendment must be
signed by the parties and must bear an effective date for that amendment.


ARTICLE XII. NOTICES

          Any notice shall be sufficiently given when sent by registered or
certified mail to the other party(ies) at the address of such party(ies) set
forth below or at such other address as such party(ies) may from time to time
specify in writing to the other party.

                    If to the Fund:

                              Lincoln National Aggressive Growth Fund, Inc.
                              1300 South Clinton Street
                              Fort Wayne, Indiana 46802
                              Attn: Kelly D. Clevenger

                    If to the Company:

                              Lincoln National Life Insurance Co.
                              1300 South Clinton Street
                              Fort Wayne, Indiana 46802
                              Attn: Steven M. Kluever


<PAGE>

ARTICLE XIII. MISCELLANEOUS

          13.1.     The captions in this Agreement are included for convenience
of reference only and in no way define or delineate any of the provisions hereof
or otherwise affect their construction or effect.

          13.2.     This Agreement may be executed simultaneously in two or more
counterparts, each of which together shall constitute one and the same
instrument.

          13.3.     If any provision of this Agreement shall be held or made
invalid by a court decision, statute, rule or otherwise, the remainder of the
Agreement shall not be affected thereby.

          13.4.     Each party hereto shall cooperate with each other party and
all appropriate governmental authorities (including without limitation the SEC,
the NASD and state insurance regulators) and shall permit such authorities
reasonable access to its books and records in connection with any investigation
or inquiry relating to this Agreement or the transactions contemplated hereby.

          13.5.     Each party represents that the execution and delivery of
this Agreement and the consummation of the transactions contemplated herein have
been duly authorized by all necessary corporate or trust action, as applicable,
by such party, and when so executed and delivered this Agreement will be the
valid and binding obligation of such party enforceable in accordance with its
terms.


ARTICLE XIV. PRIOR AGREEMENTS

          This Amended and Restated Fund Participation Agreement, as of its
effective date, hereby supersedes any and all prior agreements to purchase
shares between Lincoln Life and the Fund.


<PAGE>

          IN WITNESS WHEREOF, each of the parties hereto has caused this
Agreement to be executed in its name and behalf by its duly authorized officer
on the date specified below.


                         LINCOLN NATIONAL AGGRESSIVE GROWTH FUND, INC.


               Signature:
                         -------------------------------------------------------

               Name: Kelly D. Clevenger
                    ------------------------------------------------------------

               Title: President
                     -----------------------------------------------------------


               LINCOLN NATIONAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. (Company)

               Signature:
                         -------------------------------------------------------

               Name: Stephen H. Lewis
                    ------------------------------------------------------------

               Title: Senior Vice President, Lincoln National Life Insurance
                      Company
                     -----------------------------------------------------------


<PAGE>

                                      SCHEDULE 1

                    Lincoln National Aggressive Growth Fund, Inc.
             Separate Accounts of Lincoln National Life Insurance Company
                                Investing in the Fund
                                  As of July 1, 1998


LINCOLN NATIONAL VARIABLE ANNUITY ACCOUNT C

LINCOLN LIFE FLEXIBLE PREMIUM VARIABLE LIFE ACCOUNT K

LINCOLN NATIONAL VARIABLE ANNUITY ACCOUNT L

LINCOLN LIFE VARIABLE ANNUITY ACCOUNT Q

LINCOLN NATIONAL VARIABLE ANNUITY ACCOUNT 53


<PAGE>

                                      SCHEDULE 2


                    Lincoln National Aggressive Growth Fund, Inc.
                              Variable Annuity Contracts
                         and Variable Life Insurance Policies
                            Supported by Separate Accounts
                                 Listed on Schedule 1
                                  As of July 1, 1998


MULTI FUND VARIABLE ANNUITY

eANNUITY

MULTI FUND VARIABLE LIFE

GVA I, II, III

GROUP MULTI FUND

MULTI FUND - NON-REGISTERED


<PAGE>

                                      SCHEDULE 3


                    Lincoln National Aggressive Growth Fund, Inc.
                        State-mandated Investment Restrictions
                                Applicable to the Fund
                                  As of July 1, 1998


The California Department of Insurance has established the following Guidelines
for an underlying portfolio of a Separate Account:

BORROWING. The borrowing limit for any FUND is 33 1/3 percent of total assets. 
Entering into a reverse repurchase agreement shall be considered "borrowing" as
that term is used herein.

FOREIGN INVESTMENTS - DIVERSIFICATION

The diversification guidelines to be followed by international and global FUNDS
are as follows:

a.   An international FUND or a global FUND is sufficiently diversified if it is
     invested in a minimum of three different countries at all times, and has
     invested no more than 50 percent of total assets in any one second-tier
     country and no more than 25 percent of total assets in any one third-tier
     country.  First-tier countries are: Germany, the United Kingdom, Japan, the
     United States, France, Canada, and Australia. Second-tier countries are all
     countries not in the first or third tier.  Third-tier countries are
     countries identified as "emerging" or "developing" by the International
     Bank for Reconstruction and Development ("World Bank") or International
     Finance Corporation.

b.   A regional FUND is sufficiently diversified if it is invested in a minimum
     of three countries.  The name of the fund must accurately describe the
     FUND.

c.   The name of the single country FUND must accurately describe the FUND.

d.   An index FUND must substantially mirror the index.



<PAGE>






                 Consent of Ernst & Young LLP, Independent Auditors



We consent to the reference to our firm under the captions "Financial
Highlights" in the Prospectus and "Financial Statements" in the Statement of
Additional Information and to the incorporation by reference in this
Post-Effective Amendment No. 8 to the Registration Statement (Form N-1A) (No.
33-70742) of Lincoln National Aggressive Growth Fund, Inc. of our report dated
February 5, 1999, included in the 1998 Annual Report to shareholders.

                                                               ERNST & YOUNG LLP

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
April 15, 1999


<PAGE>

                                  POWER OF ATTORNEY

We, the undersigned directors and officers of The Lincoln National Life 
Insurance Company, hereby revoke all powers of attorney authorizing any 
person to act as attorney-in-fact relative to Lincoln National  Aggressive 
Growth Fund, Inc., which were previously executed by us and do hereby 
severally constitute and appoint Steven M. Kluever, Thomas R. Kaehr, and 
Cynthia A. Rose our true and lawful attorneys-in-fact, with full power in 
each of them to sign for us, in our names and in the capacities indicated 
below, any and all amendments to Registration Statement No. 33-70742 filed 
with the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Securities Act of 1933, 
on behalf of the Company in its own name or in the name of one of its 
Separate Accounts, hereby ratifying and confirming our signatures as they may 
be signed by any of our attorneys-in-fact to any such amendment to that 
Registration Statement.  The power of attorney was signed by us on February 
9, 1999.

Signature                                Title
- ---------                                -----



- -------------------------------------    Chairman of the Board, President and
Kelly D. Clevenger                       Director
                                         (Principal  Executive Officer)


- -------------------------------------    Director
John B. Borsch, Jr.                  


/s/Kenneth G. Stella
- -------------------------------------    Director
Kenneth G. Stella                   



- -------------------------------------    Director
Barbara S. Kowalczyk                 



- -------------------------------------    Director
Nancy L. Frisby                     



- -------------------------------------    Chief Accounting Officer
Eric C. Jones                            (Principal Accounting Officer)



- -------------------------------------    Vice President and Treasurer
Janet C. Chrzan                          (Principal Financial Officer)



STATE OF INDIANA)
                )SS:
COUNTY OF ALLEN )

                                        Subscribed and sworn to before me this
                                        9th day of February, 1999.

                                        /s/Janet L. Lindenberg
                                        -------------------------------------

                                        Notary public

                                        Commission Expires: 7-10-2001
                                                            ---------

<PAGE>

                                  POWER OF ATTORNEY

We, the undersigned directors and officers of The Lincoln National Life 
Insurance Company, hereby revoke all powers of attorney authorizing any 
person to act as attorney-in-fact relative to Lincoln National  Aggressive 
Growth Fund, Inc., which were previously executed by us and do hereby 
severally constitute and appoint Steven M. Kluever, Thomas R. Kaehr, and 
Cynthia A. Rose our true and lawful attorneys-in-fact, with full power in 
each of them to sign for us, in our names and in the capacities indicated 
below, any and all amendments to Registration Statement No. 33-70742 filed 
with the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Securities Act of 1933, 
on behalf of the Company in its own name or in the name of one of its 
Separate Accounts, hereby ratifying and confirming our signatures as they may 
be signed by any of our attorneys-in-fact to any such amendment to that 
Registration Statement.  The power of attorney was signed by us on February 
9, 1999.

Signature                                Title
- ---------                                -----



- -------------------------------------    Chairman of the Board, President and
Kelly D. Clevenger                       Director
                                         (Principal  Executive Officer)

/s/ John B. Borsch, Jr.
- -------------------------------------    Director
John B. Borsch, Jr.                  



- -------------------------------------    Director
Kenneth G. Stella                   



- -------------------------------------    Director
Barbara S. Kowalczyk                 



- -------------------------------------    Director
Nancy L. Frisby                     



- -------------------------------------    Chief Accounting Officer
Eric C. Jones                            (Principal Accounting Officer)



- -------------------------------------    Vice President and Treasurer
Janet C. Chrzan                          (Principal Financial Officer)



STATE OF INDIANA)
                )SS:
COUNTY OF ALLEN )

                                        Subscribed and sworn to before me this
                                        9th day of February, 1999.

                                        /s/Janet L. Lindenberg
                                        -------------------------------------

                                        Notary public

                                        Commission Expires: 7-10-2001
                                                            ---------

<PAGE>

                                  POWER OF ATTORNEY

We, the undersigned directors and officers of The Lincoln National Life 
Insurance Company, hereby revoke all powers of attorney authorizing any 
person to act as attorney-in-fact relative to Lincoln National  Aggressive 
Growth Fund, Inc., which were previously executed by us and do hereby 
severally constitute and appoint Steven M. Kluever, Thomas R. Kaehr, and 
Cynthia A. Rose our true and lawful attorneys-in-fact, with full power in 
each of them to sign for us, in our names and in the capacities indicated 
below, any and all amendments to Registration Statement No. 33-70742 filed 
with the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Securities Act of 1933, 
on behalf of the Company in its own name or in the name of one of its 
Separate Accounts, hereby ratifying and confirming our signatures as they may 
be signed by any of our attorneys-in-fact to any such amendment to that 
Registration Statement.  The power of attorney was signed by us on February 
9, 1999.

Signature                                Title
- ---------                                -----



- -------------------------------------    Chairman of the Board, President and
Kelly D. Clevenger                       Director
                                         (Principal  Executive Officer)


- -------------------------------------    Director
John B. Borsch, Jr.                  



- -------------------------------------    Director
Kenneth G. Stella                   


/s/ Barbara S. Kowalczyk
- -------------------------------------    Director
Barbara S. Kowalczyk                 



- -------------------------------------    Director
Nancy L. Frisby                     



- -------------------------------------    Chief Accounting Officer
Eric C. Jones                            (Principal Accounting Officer)



- -------------------------------------    Vice President and Treasurer
Janet C. Chrzan                          (Principal Financial Officer)



STATE OF INDIANA)
                )SS:
COUNTY OF ALLEN )

                                        Subscribed and sworn to before me this
                                        9th day of February, 1999.

                                        /s/Janet L. Lindenberg
                                        -------------------------------------

                                        Notary public

                                        Commission Expires: 7-10-2001
                                                            ---------

<PAGE>

                                  POWER OF ATTORNEY

We, the undersigned directors and officers of The Lincoln National Life 
Insurance Company, hereby revoke all powers of attorney authorizing any 
person to act as attorney-in-fact relative to Lincoln National  Aggressive 
Growth Fund, Inc., which were previously executed by us and do hereby 
severally constitute and appoint Steven M. Kluever, Thomas R. Kaehr, and 
Cynthia A. Rose our true and lawful attorneys-in-fact, with full power in 
each of them to sign for us, in our names and in the capacities indicated 
below, any and all amendments to Registration Statement No. 33-70742 filed 
with the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Securities Act of 1933, 
on behalf of the Company in its own name or in the name of one of its 
Separate Accounts, hereby ratifying and confirming our signatures as they may 
be signed by any of our attorneys-in-fact to any such amendment to that 
Registration Statement.  The power of attorney was signed by us on February 
9, 1999.

Signature                                Title
- ---------                                -----



- -------------------------------------    Chairman of the Board, President and
Kelly D. Clevenger                       Director
                                         (Principal  Executive Officer)


- -------------------------------------    Director
John B. Borsch, Jr.                  



- -------------------------------------    Director
Kenneth G. Stella                   



- -------------------------------------    Director
Barbara S. Kowalczyk                 


/s/ Nancy L. Frisby
- -------------------------------------    Director
Nancy L. Frisby                     



- -------------------------------------    Chief Accounting Officer
Eric C. Jones                            (Principal Accounting Officer)



- -------------------------------------    Vice President and Treasurer
Janet C. Chrzan                          (Principal Financial Officer)



STATE OF INDIANA)
                )SS:
COUNTY OF ALLEN )

                                        Subscribed and sworn to before me this
                                        9th day of February, 1999.

                                        /s/Janet L. Lindenberg
                                        -------------------------------------

                                        Notary public

                                        Commission Expires: 7-10-2001
                                                            ---------

<PAGE>

                                  POWER OF ATTORNEY

We, the undersigned directors and officers of The Lincoln National Life 
Insurance Company, hereby revoke all powers of attorney authorizing any 
person to act as attorney-in-fact relative to Lincoln National  Aggressive 
Growth Fund, Inc., which were previously executed by us and do hereby 
severally constitute and appoint Steven M. Kluever, Thomas R. Kaehr, and 
Cynthia A. Rose our true and lawful attorneys-in-fact, with full power in 
each of them to sign for us, in our names and in the capacities indicated 
below, any and all amendments to Registration Statement No. 33-70742 filed 
with the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Securities Act of 1933, 
on behalf of the Company in its own name or in the name of one of its 
Separate Accounts, hereby ratifying and confirming our signatures as they may 
be signed by any of our attorneys-in-fact to any such amendment to that 
Registration Statement.  The power of attorney was signed by us on February 
9, 1999.

Signature                                Title
- ---------                                -----



- -------------------------------------    Chairman of the Board, President and
Kelly D. Clevenger                       Director
                                         (Principal  Executive Officer)


- -------------------------------------    Director
John B. Borsch, Jr.                  



- -------------------------------------    Director
Kenneth G. Stella                   



- -------------------------------------    Director
Barbara S. Kowalczyk                 



- -------------------------------------    Director
Nancy L. Frisby                     


/s/ Eric C. Jones
- -------------------------------------    Chief Accounting Officer
Eric C. Jones                            (Principal Accounting Officer)



- -------------------------------------    Vice President and Treasurer
Janet C. Chrzan                          (Principal Financial Officer)



STATE OF INDIANA)
                )SS:
COUNTY OF ALLEN )

                                        Subscribed and sworn to before me this
                                        9th day of February, 1999.

                                        /s/Janet L. Lindenberg
                                        -------------------------------------

                                        Notary public

                                        Commission Expires: 7-10-2001
                                                            ---------


<PAGE>

                                  POWER OF ATTORNEY

We, the undersigned directors and officers of The Lincoln National Life 
Insurance Company, hereby revoke all powers of attorney authorizing any 
person to act as attorney-in-fact relative to Lincoln National  Aggressive 
Growth Fund, Inc., which were previously executed by us and do hereby 
severally constitute and appoint Steven M. Kluever, Thomas R. Kaehr, and 
Cynthia A. Rose our true and lawful attorneys-in-fact, with full power in 
each of them to sign for us, in our names and in the capacities indicated 
below, any and all amendments to Registration Statement No. 33-70742 filed 
with the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Securities Act of 1933, 
on behalf of the Company in its own name or in the name of one of its 
Separate Accounts, hereby ratifying and confirming our signatures as they may 
be signed by any of our attorneys-in-fact to any such amendment to that 
Registration Statement.  The power of attorney was signed by us on February 
9, 1999.

Signature                                Title
- ---------                                -----



- -------------------------------------    Chairman of the Board, President and
Kelly D. Clevenger                       Director
                                         (Principal  Executive Officer)


- -------------------------------------    Director
John B. Borsch, Jr.                  



- -------------------------------------    Director
Kenneth G. Stella                   



- -------------------------------------    Director
Barbara S. Kowalczyk                 



- -------------------------------------    Director
Nancy L. Frisby                     



- -------------------------------------    Chief Accounting Officer
Eric C. Jones                            (Principal Accounting Officer)


/s/ Janet C. Chrzan
- -------------------------------------    Vice President and Treasurer
Janet C. Chrzan                          (Principal Financial Officer)



STATE OF INDIANA)
                )SS:
COUNTY OF ALLEN )

                                        Subscribed and sworn to before me this
                                        9th day of February, 1999.

                                        /s/Janet L. Lindenberg
                                        -------------------------------------

                                        Notary public

                                        Commission Expires: 7-10-2001
                                                            ---------


<PAGE>

                                  POWER OF ATTORNEY

We, the undersigned directors and officers of The Lincoln National Life 
Insurance Company, hereby revoke all powers of attorney authorizing any 
person to act as attorney-in-fact relative to Lincoln National  Aggressive 
Growth Fund, Inc., which were previously executed by us and do hereby 
severally constitute and appoint Steven M. Kluever, Thomas R. Kaehr, and 
Cynthia A. Rose our true and lawful attorneys-in-fact, with full power in 
each of them to sign for us, in our names and in the capacities indicated 
below, any and all amendments to Registration Statement No. 33-70742 filed 
with the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Securities Act of 1933, 
on behalf of the Company in its own name or in the name of one of its 
Separate Accounts, hereby ratifying and confirming our signatures as they may 
be signed by any of our attorneys-in-fact to any such amendment to that 
Registration Statement.  The power of attorney was signed by us on February 
9, 1999.

Signature                                Title
- ---------                                -----


/s/ Kelly D. Clevenger
- -------------------------------------    Chairman of the Board, President and
Kelly D. Clevenger                       Director
                                         (Principal  Executive Officer)


- -------------------------------------    Director
John B. Borsch, Jr.                  


/s/Kenneth G. Stella
- -------------------------------------    Director
Kenneth G. Stella                   



- -------------------------------------    Director
Barbara S. Kowalczyk                 



- -------------------------------------    Director
Nancy L. Frisby                     



- -------------------------------------    Chief Accounting Officer
Eric C. Jones                            (Principal Accounting Officer)



- -------------------------------------    Vice President and Treasurer
Janet C. Chrzan                          (Principal Financial Officer)



STATE OF INDIANA)
                )SS:
COUNTY OF ALLEN )

                                        Subscribed and sworn to before me this
                                        9th day of February, 1999.

                                        /s/Janet L. Lindenberg
                                        -------------------------------------

                                        Notary public

                                        Commission Expires: 7-10-2001
                                                            ---------


<PAGE>


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

                          ORGANIZATIONAL CHART OF THE 
                 LINCOLN NATIONAL INSURANCE HOLDING COMPANY SYSTEM 
                                                                     
All the members of the holding company system are corporations, with  
the exception of, Delaware Distributors, L.P and Founders CBO, L.P.

 --------------------------------
|                                |
| Lincoln National Corporation   |
| Indiana - Holding Company      |
 --------------------------------
  |   ---------------------------------------------
  |--| Lincoln National Management Corporation     |
  |  | 100% - Pennsylvania - Management Company    |
  |   ---------------------------------------------
  |   ---------------------------------------------
  |--| City Financial Partners Ltd.                |
  |  | 100% - England/Wales - Distribution of life |
  |  | assurance & pension products                |
  |   ---------------------------------------------
  |   ------------------------------------------------
  |--| LNC Administrative Services Corporation        |
  |  | 100% - Indiana - Third Party Administrator     |
  |   ------------------------------------------------
  |   ---------------------------------------------------
  |--|Lincoln National Financial Institutions Group, Inc.|
  |  |(fka The Richard Leahy Corporation)                |
  |  |100% - Indiana - Insurance Agency                  |
  |   ---------------------------------------------------
  |       |   ---------------------------------
  |       |--| The Financial Alternative, Inc. |
  |       |  | 100% - Utah- Insurance Agency   |
  |       |   ---------------------------------
  |       |   ---------------------------------------
  |       |--| Financial Alternative Resources, Inc. |
  |       |  | 100% - Kansas - Insurance Agency      |
  |       |   ---------------------------------------
  |       |   -----------------------------------------
  |       |--| Financial Choices, Inc.                 |
  |       |  | 100% - Pennsylvania - Insurance Agency  |
  |       |   -----------------------------------------
  |       |   -----------------------------------------------
  |       |  | Financial Investment Services, Inc.           |
  |       |--| (formerly Financial Services Department, Inc.)|
  |       |  | 100% - Indiana - Insurance Agency             |
  |       |   -----------------------------------------------
  |       |   -----------------------------------------
  |       |  | Financial Investments, Inc.             |
  |       |--| (formerly Insurance Alternatives, Inc.) |
  |       |  | 100% - Indiana - Insurance Agency       |
  |       |   -----------------------------------------
  |       |   -------------------------------------------
  |       |--| The Financial Resources Department, Inc.  |
  |       |  | 100% - Michigan - Insurance Agency        |
  |       |   -------------------------------------------
  |       |   -----------------------------------------
  |       |--| Investment Alternatives, Inc.           |
  |       |  | 100% - Pennsylvania - Insurance Agency  |
  |       |   -----------------------------------------
  |       |   --------------------------------------
  |       |--| The Investment Center, Inc.          |
  |       |  | 100% - Tennessee - Insurance Agency  |
  |       |   --------------------------------------
  |       |   --------------------------------------
  |       |--| The Investment Group, Inc.           |
  |       |  | 100% - New Jersey - Insurance Agency |
           --------------------------------------


<PAGE>

 -------------------------------
|                               |
| Lincoln National Corporation  |
| Indiana - Holding Company     |
 -------------------------------
  |   ---------------------------------------------------
  |--|Lincoln National Financial Institutions Group, Inc.|
  |  |(fka The Richard Leahy Corporation)                |
  |  |100% - Indiana - Insurance Agency                  |
  |   ---------------------------------------------------
  |       |   ------------------------------------
  |       |--| Personal Financial Resources, Inc. |
  |       |  | 100% - Arizona - Insurance Agency  |
  |       |   ------------------------------------
  |       |   ----------------------------------------
  |       |--| Personal Investment Services, Inc.     |
  |          | 100% - Pennsylvania - Insurance Agency |
  |           ----------------------------------------
  |   -------------------------------------------
  |--| LincAm Properties, Inc.                   |
  |  | 50% - Delaware - Real Estate Investment   |
  |   -------------------------------------------
  |   ----------------------------------------------
  |  | Lincoln Life and Annuity Distributors, Inc.  |
  |--| (formerly Lincoln Financial Group, Inc.)     |
  |  | 100% - Indiana - Insurance Agency            |
  |   ----------------------------------------------
  |       |   ----------------------------------------
  |       |--| Lincoln Financial Advisors Corporation |
  |       |  | (formerly LNC Equity Sales Corporation)|
  |       |  | 100% - Indiana - Broker-Dealer         |
  |       |   ----------------------------------------
  |       |   -------------------------------------------------------------
  |       |  |Corporate agencies:  Lincoln Life and Annuity Distributors,  |
  |       |  |Inc. ("LLAD")has subsidiaries of which LLAD owns from        |
  |       |  |80%-100% of the common stock (see Attachment #1).  These     |
  |       |  |subsidiaries serve as the corporate agency offices for the   |
  |       |  |marketing and servicing of products of The Lincoln National  |
  |       |  |Life Insurance Company.  Each subsidiary's assets are less   |
  |       |  |than 1% of the total assets of the ultimate controlling      |
  |       |  |person.                                                      |
  |       |   -------------------------------------------------------------
  |       |   ------------------------------------------------
  |       |--| Professional Financial Planning, Inc.          |
  |          | 100% - Indiana - Financial Planning Services   |
  |           ------------------------------------------------
  |   ---------------------------------------
  |--| Lincoln Life Improved Housing, Inc.   |
  |  | 100% - Indiana                        |
  |   ---------------------------------------
  |
  |   -----------------------------------------------
  |--| Lincoln National (China) Inc.                 |
  |  | 100% - Indiana - China Representative Office  |
  |   -----------------------------------------------
  |
  |   ---------------------------------------------
  |--| Lincoln National Intermediaries, Inc.       |
  |  | 100% - Indiana - Reinsurance Intermediary   |
  |   ---------------------------------------------
  |
  |   --------------------------------------------------
  |__| Lincoln National Investments, Inc.               |
  |  | (fka Lincoln National Investment Companies, Inc.)|
  |  | 100% - Indiana - Holding Company                 |
  |   --------------------------------------------------
  |   |                                               
  |   |   --------------------------------------------
  |   |--| Lincoln National Investment Companies, Inc.|
  |   |  |(fka Lincoln National Investments, Inc.)    |
  |   |  | 100% - Indiana - Holding Company           |
          --------------------------------------------


<PAGE>

 -------------------------------
|                               |
| Lincoln National Corporation  |
| Indiana - Holding Company     |
 -------------------------------  
  |   --------------------------------------------------
  |__| Lincoln National Investments, Inc.               |
  |  | (fka Lincoln National Investment Companies, Inc.)|
  |  | 100% - Indiana - Holding Company                 |
  |   --------------------------------------------------
  |   |   --------------------------------------------
  |   |--| Lincoln National Investment Companies, Inc.|
  |   |  |(fka Lincoln National Investments, Inc.)    |
  |   |  | 100% - Indiana - Holding Company           |
  |   |   --------------------------------------------
  |   |        |   ----------------------------------
  |   |        |--|Delaware Management Holdings, Inc.| 
  |   |        |  |100% - Delaware - Holding Company |
  |   |        |   ----------------------------------
  |   |        |    |   ------------------------------------
  |   |        |    |--| DMH Corp.                         |
  |   |        |       | 100% - Delaware - Holding Company |
  |   |        |        ------------------------------------
  |   |        |         |   ----------------------------------------
  |   |        |         ---| Delaware International Advisers Ltd.   |
  |   |        |            | 81.1% - England - Investment Advisor   |
  |   |        |             ----------------------------------------
  |   |        |   --------------------------------------
  |   |        |--| Delaware Management Trust Company    |
  |   |        |  | 100% - Pennsylvania - Trust Service  |
  |   |        |   --------------------------------------
  |   |        |     |   -------------------------------------------------
  |   |        |     |__| Delaware International Holdings, Ltd.           |
  |   |        |     |  | 100% - Bermuda - Investment Advisor             |
  |   |        |     |   -------------------------------------------------
  |   |        |     |     |   --------------------------------------
  |   |        |     |     |--| Delaware International Advisers, Ltd.|
  |   |        |     |        | 18.9% - England - Investment Advisor |
  |   |        |     |         --------------------------------------
  |   |        |     |   -------------------------------------------------
  |   |        |     |__| Delvoy, Inc.                                    |
  |   |        |     |  | 100% - Minnesota - Holding Company              |
  |   |        |     |   -------------------------------------------------
  |   |        |     |    |   ---------------------------------------
  |   |        |     |    |--| Delaware Management Company, Inc.     |
  |   |        |     |    |  | 100% - Delaware - Investment Advisor  |
  |   |        |     |    |   ---------------------------------------
  |   |        |     |    |      |   ------------------------------------------------------
  |   |        |     |    |      |--| Delaware Distributors, L.P.                          |
  |   |        |     |    |      |  | 98%-Delaware-Mutual Fund Distributor & Broker/Dealer |
  |   |        |     |    |      |  | 1% Equity-Delaware Capital Management, Inc.          |
  |   |        |     |    |      |  | 1% Equity-Delaware Distributors, Inc.                |
  |   |        |     |    |      |   ------------------------------------------------------
  |   |        |     |    |      |   ------------------------------------
  |   |        |     |    |      |--| Founders Holdings, Inc.            |
  |   |        |     |    |      |  | 100% - Delaware - General Partner  |
  |   |        |     |    |      |   ------------------------------------
  |   |        |     |    |      |     |   -----------------------------------------
  |   |        |     |    |      |     |--| Founders CBO, L.P.                      |
  |   |        |     |    |      |        | 1% - Delaware - Investment Partnership  |
  |   |        |     |    |      |        | 99% held by outside investors           |
  |   |        |     |    |      |         -----------------------------------------
  |   |        |     |    |      |          |   ------------------------------------------
  |   |        |     |    |      |          |--|Founders CBO Corporation                  |
  |   |        |     |    |      |          |  |100%-Delaware-Co-Issuer with Founders CBO |
  |   |        |     |    |      |          |   ------------------------------------------


<PAGE>

 --------------------------------
|                                |
| Lincoln National Corporation   |
| Indiana - Holding Company      |
 --------------------------------
  |   --------------------------------------------------
  |__| Lincoln National Investments, Inc.               |
  |  | (fka Lincoln National Investment Companies, Inc.)|
  |  | 100% - Indiana - Holding Company                 |
  |   --------------------------------------------------
  |   |   --------------------------------------------
  |   |--| Lincoln National Investment Companies, Inc.|
  |   |  |(fka Lincoln National Investments, Inc.)    |
  |   |  | 100% - Indiana - Holding Company           |
  |   |   --------------------------------------------
  |   |        |   ----------------------------------
  |   |        |--|Delaware Management Holdings, Inc.|
  |   |        |  |100% - Delaware - Holding Company |
  |   |        |   ----------------------------------
  |   |        |    |   -----------------------------------
  |   |        |    |--| DMH Corp.                         |
  |   |        |    |  | 100% - Delaware - Holding Company |
  |   |        |    |   -----------------------------------
  |   |        |           |   -------------------------------------------------
  |   |        |           |__| Delvoy, Inc.                                    |
  |   |        |           |  | 100% - Minnesota - Holding Company              |
  |   |        |           |   -------------------------------------------------
  |   |        |           |    |   ------------------------------------
  |   |        |           |    |--| Delaware Distributors, Inc.        |
  |   |        |           |    |  | 100% - Delaware - General Partner  |
  |   |        |           |    |   ------------------------------------
  |   |        |           |    |    |   -------------------------------------------------------
  |   |        |           |    |    |--| Delaware Distributors, L.P.                           |
  |   |        |           |    |    |  | 98%-Delaware-Mutual Fund Distributor & Broker/Dealer  |
  |   |        |           |    |       | 1% Equity-Delaware Capital Management, Inc.           |
  |   |        |           |    |       | 1% Equity-Delaware Distributors, Inc.                 |
  |   |        |           |    |        -------------------------------------------------------
  |   |        |           |    |   -----------------------------------------------
  |   |        |           |    |--| Delaware Capital Management, Inc.             |
  |   |        |           |    |  |(formerly Delaware Investment Counselors, Inc.)|
  |   |        |           |    |  | 100% - Delaware - Investment Advisor          |
  |   |        |           |    |   -----------------------------------------------
  |   |        |           |    |   |   -----------------------------------------------------------
  |   |        |           |    |   |--| Delaware Distributors, L.P.                               |
  |   |        |           |    |   |  | 98%-Delaware-Mutual Fund Distributor & Broker/Dealer      |
  |   |        |           |    |   |  | 1% Equity-Delaware Capital Management, Inc.               |
  |   |        |           |    |   |  | 1% Equity-Delaware Distributors, Inc.                     |
  |   |        |           |    |        -----------------------------------------------------------
  |   |        |           |    |   -----------------------------------------------------
  |   |        |           |    |--| Delaware Service Company, Inc.                      |
  |   |        |           |    |  | 100%-Delaware-Shareholder Services & Transfer Agent |
  |   |        |           |    |   -----------------------------------------------------
  |   |        |           |    |   -------------------------------------------------
  |   |        |           |    |__| Delaware Investment & Retirement Services, Inc. |
  |   |        |           |    |  | 100% - Delaware - Registered Transfer Agent     |
  |   |        |           |    |   -------------------------------------------------
  |   |        |   -----------------------------------------
  |   |        |--| Lynch & Mayer, Inc.                     |
  |   |        |  | 100% - Indiana - Investment Adviser     |
  |   |        |   -----------------------------------------
  |   |        |      |   --------------------------------------- 
  |   |        |      |--| Lynch & Mayer Securities Corp.        |
  |   |        |         | 100% - Delaware - Securities Broker   |
  |   |        |          ---------------------------------------
  |   |        |   ----------------------------------------------------
  |   |        |  | Vantage Global Advisors, Inc.                      |
  |   |        |--| (formerly Modern Portfolio Theory Associates, Inc.)|
  |   |        |  | 100% - Delaware - Investment Adviser               |
                   ----------------------------------------------------


<PAGE>

 --------------------------------
|                                |
| Lincoln National Corporation   |
| Indiana - Holding Company      |
 --------------------------------
  |   --------------------------------------------------
  |__| Lincoln National Investments, Inc.               |
  |  | (fka Lincoln National Investment Companies, Inc.)|
  |  | 100% - Indiana - Holding Company                 |
  |   --------------------------------------------------
  |   |   -----------------------------------------------------------
  |   |  | Lincoln Investment Management, Inc.                       |
  |   |--| (formerly Lincoln National Investment Management Company) |
  |   |  | 100% - Illinois - Mutual Fund Manager and                 |
  |   |  | Registered Investment Adviser                             |
  |   |   -----------------------------------------------------------
  |   -----------------------------------------------
  |--| The Lincoln National Life Insurance Company   |
  |  | 100% - Indiana                                |
  |   -----------------------------------------------
  |       |   --------------------------------------------------
  |       |--|AnnuityNet, Inc.                                  |
  |       |  |100% - Indiana - Distribution of annuity products |
  |       |   --------------------------------------------------
  |       |    |   -------------------------------------
  |       |    |--| AnnuityNet Insurance Agency, Inc.   |
  |       |    |  | 100% - Indiana - Insurance Agency   |
  |       |        -------------------------------------
  |       |   -------------------------------------------
  |       |--|Lincoln National Insurance Associates, Inc.|
  |       |  |(fka Cigna Associates, Inc.)               |
  |       |  |100% - Connecticut - Insurance Agency      |
  |       |   -------------------------------------------
  |       |    |   --------------------------------------------------------
  |       |    |--|Lincoln National Insurance Associates of Alabama, Inc.  |
  |       |    |  |100% - Alabama - Insurance Agency                       |
  |       |    |   --------------------------------------------------------
  |       |    |   -------------------------------------------------------------
  |       |    |  | Lincoln National Insurance Associates of Massachusetts, Inc.|
  |       |    |  | (formerly Cigna Associates of Massachusetts, Inc.)          |
  |       |    |--| 100% - Massachusetts - Insurance Agency                     |
  |       |        -------------------------------------------------------------
  |       |   -------------------------------------------
  |       |--| Sagemark Consulting, Inc.                 |
  |       |  | (fka Cigna Financial Advisors, Inc.)      |
  |       |  | 100% - Connecticut - Broker Dealer        |
  |       |   -------------------------------------------
  |       |   -------------------------------------------
  |       |--| First Penn-Pacific Life Insurance Company |
  |       |  | 100% - Indiana                            |
  |       |   -------------------------------------------
  |       |   -----------------------------------------------
  |       |--| Lincoln Life & Annuity Company of New York    |
  |       |  | 100% - New York                               |
  |       |   -----------------------------------------------
  |       |   ------------------------------------------------
  |       |--| Lincoln National Aggressive Growth Fund, Inc.  |
  |       |  | 100% - Maryland - Mutual Fund                  |
  |       |   ------------------------------------------------
  |       |   -----------------------------------
  |       |--| Lincoln National Bond Fund, Inc.  |
  |       |  | 100% - Maryland - Mutual Fund     |
  |       |   -----------------------------------
  |       |   --------------------------------------------------
  |       |--| Lincoln National Capital Appreciation Fund, Inc. |
  |       |  | 100% - Maryland - Mutual Fund                    |
  |       |   --------------------------------------------------
  |       |   --------------------------------------------
  |       |--| Lincoln National Equity-Income Fund, Inc.  |
  |       |  | 100% - Maryland - Mutual Fund              |
  |       |   --------------------------------------------
  |       |   ------------------------------------------------------
  |       |  | Lincoln National Global Asset Allocation Fund, Inc.  |
  |       |--| (formerly Lincoln National Putnam Master Fund, Inc.) |
  |       |  | 100% - Maryland - Mutual Fund                        |
  |       |   ------------------------------------------------------


<PAGE>

 --------------------------------
| Lincoln National Corporation   |
| Indiana - Holding Company      |
 --------------------------------
  |   -----------------------------------------------
  |--| The Lincoln National Life Insurance Company   |
  |  | 100% - Indiana                                |
  |   -----------------------------------------------
  |       |   ------------------------------------------------
  |       |  | Lincoln National Growth and Income Fund, Inc.  |
  |       |--| (formerly Lincoln National Growth Fund, Inc.)  |
  |       |  | 100% - Maryland - Mutual Fund                  |
  |       |   ------------------------------------------------
  |       |   --------------------------------------------------------
  |       |--| Lincoln National Health & Casualty Insurance Company   |
  |       |  | 100% - Indiana                                         |
  |       |    --------------------------------------------------------
  |             |   -----------------------------------------------
  |             |--| Lincoln Re, S.A.                              |
  |             |  | 1% Argentina - General Business Corp          |
  |             |  | (Remaining 99% owned by Lincoln National      |
  |             |  | Reassurance Company)                          |
  |             |   -----------------------------------------------
  |       |   -------------------------------------------
  |       |--| Lincoln National International Fund, Inc. |
  |       |  | 100% - Maryland - Mutual Fund             |
  |       |   -------------------------------------------
  |       |   ---------------------------------------
  |       |--| Lincoln National Managed Fund, Inc.   |
  |       |  | 100% - Maryland - Mutual Fund         |
  |       |   ---------------------------------------
  |       |   --------------------------------------------
  |       |--| Lincoln National Money Market Fund, Inc.   |
  |       |  | 100% - Maryland - Mutual Fund              |
  |       |   --------------------------------------------
  |       |   -----------------------------------------------
  |       |--|  Lincoln National Social Awareness Fund, Inc. |
  |       |  |  100% - Maryland - Mutual Fund                |
  |       |   -----------------------------------------------
  |       |   -----------------------------------------------------
  |       |--| Lincoln National Special Opportunities Fund, Inc.   |
  |       |  | 100% - Maryland - Mutual Fund                       |
  |       |   -----------------------------------------------------
  |       |   ------------------------------------------------------
  |       |--| Lincoln National Reassurance Company                 |
  |          | 100% - Indiana - Life Insurance                      |
  |           ------------------------------------------------------
  |             |   -----------------------------------------------
  |             |--| Lincoln Re, S.A.                              |
  |             |  | 99% Argentina - General Business Corp         |
  |             |  | (Remaining 1% owned by Lincoln National Health|
  |             |  | & Casualty Insurance Company)                 |
  |             |   -----------------------------------------------
  |             |   -----------------------------------------------
  |             |--| Special Pooled Risk Administrators, Inc.      |
  |                | 100% - New Jersey - Catastrophe Reinsurance   |
  |                | Pool Administrator                            |
  |                 -----------------------------------------------
  |   ---------------------------------------------------------
  |--| Lincoln National Management Services, Inc.              |
  |  | 100% - Indiana - Underwriting and Management Services   |
  |   ---------------------------------------------------------
  |   ---------------------------------------
  |--| Lincoln National Realty Corporation   |
  |  | 100% - Indiana - Real Estate          |
  |   ---------------------------------------
  |   -----------------------------------------------------------
  |--| Lincoln National Reinsurance Company (Barbados) Limited   |
  |  | 100% - Barbados                                           |
  |   -----------------------------------------------------------
  |   ----------------------------------------------
  |--| Lincoln National Reinsurance Company Limited |
  |  | (formerly Heritage Reinsurance, Ltd.)        |
  |  | 100% ** - Bermuda                            |
      ----------------------------------------------


<PAGE>

 --------------------------------
| Lincoln National Corporation   |
|  Indiana - Holding Company     |
 --------------------------------
  |   ----------------------------------------------
  |--| Lincoln National Reinsurance Company Limited |
  |  | (formerly Heritage Reinsurance, Ltd.)        |
  |  | 100% ** - Bermuda                            |
  |   ----------------------------------------------
  |        |   ---------------------------------------------------------
  |        |  | Lincoln National Underwriting Services, Ltd.            |
  |        |--| 90% - England/Wales - Life/Accident/Health Underwriter  |
  |        |  | (Remaining 10% owned by Old Fort Ins. Co. Ltd.)         |
  |        |   ---------------------------------------------------------
  |        |   --------------------------------------------------------
  |        |  | Servicios de Evaluacion de Riesgos, S. de R.L. de C.V. |
  |        |--| 51% - Mexico - Reinsurance Underwriter                 |
  |           | (Remaining 49% owned by Lincoln National Corp.)        |
  |            --------------------------------------------------------
  |   ---------------------------------------------
  |--| Lincoln National Risk Management, Inc.      |
  |  | 100% - Indiana - Risk Management Services   |
  |   ---------------------------------------------
  |   ------------------------------------------------
  |--| Lincoln National Structured Settlement, Inc.   |
  |  | 100% - New Jersey                              |
  |   ------------------------------------------------
  |   -----------------------------------------
  |--| Lincoln National (UK) PLC               |
  |  | 100% - England/Wales - Holding Company  |
  |   -----------------------------------------
  |        |   -------------------------------------------------------
  |        |--| Allied Westminster & Company Limited                  |
  |        |  | (formerly One Olympic Way Financial Services Limited) |
  |        |  | 100% - England/Wales - Sales Services                 |
  |        |   -------------------------------------------------------
  |        |   --------------------------------------------------------
  |        |--| Culverin Property Services Limited                     |
  |        |  | 100% - England/Wales - Property Development Services   |
  |        |   --------------------------------------------------------
  |        |   ---------------------------------------------------------
  |        |--| HUTM Limited                                            |
  |        |  | 100% - England/Wales - Unit Trust Management (Inactive) |
  |        |   ---------------------------------------------------------
  |        |   --------------------------------------------
  |        |--| ILI Supplies Limited                       |
  |        |  | 100% - England/Wales - Computer Leasing    |
  |        |   --------------------------------------------
  |        |   ------------------------------------------------
  |        |--| Lincoln Financial Advisers Limited             |
  |        |  | (formerly: Laurentian Financial Advisers Ltd.) |
  |        |  | 100% - England/Wales - Sales Company           |
  |        |   ------------------------------------------------
  |        |   --------------------------------------------------
  |        |--| Lincoln Financial Group PLC                      |
  |        |  | (formerly: Laurentian Financial Group PLC)       |
  |        |  | 100% - England/Wales - Holding Company           |
  |        |   --------------------------------------------------
  |        |     |   ----------------------------------------------------
  |        |     |--| Lincoln ISA Management Limited                     |
  |        |     |  | (formerly Lincoln Unit Trust Management Limited;   |
  |        |     |  | Laurentian Unit Trust Management Limited)          |
  |        |     |  | 100% - England/Wales - Unit Trust Management       |
                     ----------------------------------------------------


<PAGE>

 --------------------------------
| Lincoln National Corporation   |
| Indiana - Holding Company      |
 --------------------------------
  |   -----------------------------------------
  |--| Lincoln National (UK) PLC               |
  |  | 100% - England/Wales - Holding Company  |
  |   -----------------------------------------
  |      |   --------------------------------------------------
  |      |--| Lincoln Financial Group PLC                      |
  |      |  | (formerly: Laurentian Financial Group PLC)       |
  |      |  | 100% - England/Wales - Holding Company           |
  |      |   --------------------------------------------------
  |      |     |   ---------------------------------------
  |      |     |--| Lincoln Milldon Limited               |
  |      |     |  | (formerly: Laurentian Milldon Limited)|
  |      |     |  | 100% - England/Wales - Sales Company  |
  |      |     |   ---------------------------------------
  |      |     |   -----------------------------------------------------------
  |      |     |--| Laurtrust Limited                                         |
  |      |     |  | 100% - England/Wales - Pension Scheme Trustee (Inactive)  |
  |      |     |   -----------------------------------------------------------
  |      |     |   --------------------------------------------------
  |      |     |--|Lincoln Management Services Limited               |
  |      |     |  |(formerly: Laurentian Management Services Limited)|
  |      |     |  |100% - England/Wales - Management Services        |
  |      |     |   --------------------------------------------------
  |      |     |     |   ------------------------------------------------
  |      |     |     |--|Laurit Limited                                  |
  |      |     |     |  |100% - England/Wales - Data Processing Systems  |
  |      |     |     |   ------------------------------------------------
  |      |   --------------------------------------------------------
  |      |--| Liberty Life Pension Trustee Company Limited           |
  |      |  | 100% - England/Wales - Corporate Pension Fund (Dormat) |
  |      |   --------------------------------------------------------
  |      |   ----------------------------------------------------------
  |      |--| LN Management Limited                                    |
  |      |  | 100% - England/Wales - Administrative Services (Dormat)  |
  |      |   ----------------------------------------------------------
  |      |     |   -----------------------------------
  |      |     |--| UK Mortgage Securities Limited    |
  |      |        | 100% - England/Wales - Inactive   |
  |      |         -----------------------------------
  |      |   ------------------------------------------
  |      |--| Liberty Press Limited                    |
  |      |  | 100% - England/Wales - Printing Services |
             ------------------------------------------


<PAGE>

 --------------------------------
| Lincoln National Corporation   |
| Indiana - Holding Company      |
 --------------------------------
  |   -----------------------------------------
  |--| Lincoln National (UK) PLC               |
  |  | 100% - England/Wales - Holding Company  |
  |   -----------------------------------------
  |       |   ----------------------------------------------
  |       |--| Lincoln General Insurance Co. Ltd.           |
  |       |  | 100% - Accident & Health Insurance           |
  |       |   ----------------------------------------------
  |       |   --------------------------------------------
  |       |--|Lincoln Assurance Limited                   |
  |       |  |100% ** - England/Wales - Life Assurance    |
  |       |   --------------------------------------------
  |       |     |     |   ---------------------------------------------
  |       |     |     |--|Barnwood Property Group Limited              |
  |       |     |     |  |100% - England/Wales - Property Management Co|
  |       |     |     |   ---------------------------------------------
  |       |     |     |     |   ------------------------------------------
  |       |     |     |     |--| Barnwood Developments Limited            |
  |       |     |     |     |  | 100% England/Wales - Property Development|
  |       |     |     |     |   ------------------------------------------
  |       |     |     |     |   --------------------------------------------
  |       |     |     |     |--| Barnwood Properties Limited                |
  |       |     |     |     |  | 100% - England/Wales - Property Investment |
  |       |     |     |     |   --------------------------------------------
  |       |     |     |   -----------------------------------------------------
  |       |     |     |--|IMPCO Properties G.B. Ltd.                           |
  |       |     |     |  |100% - England/Wales - Property Investment (Inactive)|
  |       |     |         -----------------------------------------------------
  |       |     |   ----------------------------------------------------
  |       |     |--| Lincoln Insurance Services Limited                 |
  |       |     |  | 100% - Holding Company                             |
  |       |     |   ----------------------------------------------------
  |       |     |     |   ---------------------------------
  |       |     |     |--| British National Life Sales Ltd.|
  |       |     |     |  | 100% - Inactive                 |
  |       |     |     |   ---------------------------------
  |       |     |     |   ----------------------------------------------------------
  |       |     |     |--| BNL Trustees Limited                                     |
  |       |     |     |  | 100% - England/Wales - Corporate Pension Fund (Inactive) |
  |       |     |     |   ----------------------------------------------------------
  |       |     |     |   -------------------------------------
  |       |     |     |--| Chapel Ash Financial Services Ltd.  |
  |       |     |     |  | 100% - Direct Insurance Sales       |
                          -------------------------------------


<PAGE>

 --------------------------------
|                                |
| Lincoln National Corporation   |
| Indiana - Holding Company      |
 --------------------------------
  |   -----------------------------------------
  |--| Lincoln National (UK) PLC               |
  |  | 100% - England/Wales - Holding Company  |
  |   -----------------------------------------
  |      |  |----------------------------------------------
  |      |--| Lincoln Unit Trust Managers Limited          |
  |      |  | 100% - England/Wales - Investment Management |
  |      |   ----------------------------------------------
  |      |   ----------------------------------------------------------
  |      |--| LIV Limited (formerly Lincoln Investment Management Ltd.)|
  |      |  | 100% - England/Wales - Investment Management Services    |
  |      |   ----------------------------------------------------------
  |      |    |   -----------------------------------------------
  |      |    |--| CL CR Management Ltd.                         |
  |      |       | 50% - England/Wales - Administrative Services |
  |      |        -----------------------------------------------
  |      |   -----------------------------------------------------------
  |      |--| Lincoln Independent Limited                               |
  |      |  | (formerly: Laurentian Independent Financial Planning Ltd.)|
  |      |  | 100% - England/Wales - Independent Financial Adviser      |
  |      |   -----------------------------------------------------------
  |      |   ----------------------------------------------
  |      |--| Lincoln Investment Management Limited        |
  |      |  | (formerly: Laurentian Fund Management Ltd.)  |
  |      |  | 100% - England/Wales - Investment Management |
  |      |   ----------------------------------------------
  |      |   ------------------------------------------
  |      |--| LN Securities Limited                    |
  |      |  | 100% - England/Wales - Nominee Company   |
  |      |   ------------------------------------------
  |      |   --------------------------------------------
  |      |--| Niloda Limited                             |
  |      |  | 100% - England/Wales - Investment Company  |
  |      |   --------------------------------------------
  |      |   ------------------------------------------------
  |      |--| Lincoln National Training Services Limited     |
  |      |  | 100% - England/Wales - Training Company        |
  |      |   ------------------------------------------------
  |      |   ------------------------------------------------
  |      |--| Lincoln Pension Trustees Limited               |
  |      |  | 100% - England/Wales - Corporate Pension Fund  |
  |      |   ------------------------------------------------
  |      |   ------------------------------------------------
  |      |--| Lincoln Independent (Jersey) Limited           |
  |      |  | (formerly Lincoln National (Jersey) Limited)   |
  |      |  | 100% - England/Wales - Dormat                  |
  |      |   ------------------------------------------------
  |      |   ------------------------------------------------
  |      |--| Lincoln National(Guernsey) Limited             |
  |      |  | 100% - England/Wales - Dormat                  |
  |      |   ------------------------------------------------
  |      |   ------------------------------------------------
  |      |--| Lincoln SBP Trustee Limited                    |
  |      |  | 100% - England/Wales                           |
             ------------------------------------------------


<PAGE>

 --------------------------------
|                                |
| Lincoln National Corporation   |
| Indiana - Holding Company      |
 --------------------------------
  |   -------------------------------------------------
  |  | Linsco Reinsurance Company                      |
  |--| (formerly Lincoln National Reinsurance Company) |
  |  | 100% - Indiana - Property/Casualty              |
  |   -------------------------------------------------
  |   ------------------------------------
  |--| Old Fort Insurance Company, Ltd.   |
  |  | 100% ** - Bermuda                  |
  |   ------------------------------------
  |       |   --------------------------------------------------------
  |       |  | Lincoln National Underwriting Services, Ltd.           |
  |       |--| 10% - England/Wales - Life/Accident/Health Underwriter |
  |       |  | (Remaining 90% owned by Lincoln Natl. Reinsurance Co.) |
  |       |   --------------------------------------------------------
  |       |   ---------------------------------------------------
  |       |  | Solutions Holdings, Inc.                          |
  |       |--| 100% - Delaware - General Business Corporation    |
  |       |   ---------------------------------------------------
  |       |      |   -----------------------------------------
  |       |      |--|Solutions Reinsurance Limited            |
  |       |      |  |100% - Bermuda - Class III Insurance Co  |
  |                  -----------------------------------------
  |   ----------------------------------------------------------
  |  | Seguros Serfin Lincoln, S.A.                             |
  |--| 49% - Mexico - Insurance                                 |
  |   ----------------------------------------------------------
  |   ----------------------------------------------------------
  |  | Servicios de Evaluacion de Riesgos, S. de R.L. de C.V.   |
  |--| 49% - Mexico - Reinsurance Underwriter                   |
  |  | (Remaining 51% owned by Lincoln Natl. Reinsurance Co.)   |
  |   ----------------------------------------------------------
  |   --------------------------------------------
  |--| Underwriters & Management Services, Inc.   |
     | 100% - Indiana - Underwriting Services     |
      --------------------------------------------
</TABLE>


FOOTNOTES: 

* The funds contributed by the Underwriters were, and continue to be subject 
to trust agreements between American States Insurance Company, the  grantor, 
and each Underwriter, as trustee.

**   Except for director-qualifying shares 

# Lincoln National Corporation has subscribed for and paid for 100 shares of  
Common Stock (with a par value of $1.00 per share) at a price of $10 per  
share, as part of the organizing of the fund.  As such stock is further  
sold, the ownership of voting securities by Lincoln National Corporation  
will decline and fluctuate.


<PAGE>

                                                                  ATTACHMENT #1
                     LINCOLN LIFE AND ANNUITY DISTRIBUTORS, INC.
                            CORPORATE AGENCY SUBSIDIARIES

1)    Lincoln Financial Group, Inc. (AL)
2)    Lincoln Financial and Insurance Services Corporation (Walnut Creek, CA)
3)    California Fringe Benefit and Insurance Marketing Corporation 
      DBA/California Fringe Benefit Company (Walnut Creek, CA)
4)    Colorado-Lincoln Financial Group, Inc. (Denver, CO)
5)    Lincoln National Financial Services, Inc. (Lake Worth, FL)
6)    CMP Financial Services, Inc. (Chicago, IL)
7)    Lincoln Financial Group of Northern Indiana, Inc. (Fort Wayne, IN)
8)    Financial Planning Partners, Ltd. (Mission, KS)
9)    The Lincoln National Financial Group of Louisiana, Inc. (Shreveport,
      LA)
10)   Benefits Marketing Group, Inc. (D.C. & Chevy Chase, MD)
11)   Lincoln Financial Services and Insurance Brokerage of New England, Inc.
      (formerly: Lincoln National of New England Insurance Agency, Inc.) 
      (Worcester, MA)
12)   Financial Consultants of Michigan, Inc. (Troy, MI)
13)   Lincoln Financial Group of Missouri, Inc. (formerly: John J. Moore &
      Associates, Inc.) (St. Louis, MO)
14)   Beardslee & Associates, Inc. (Clifton, NJ)
15)   Lincoln Financial Group, Inc. (formerly: Resources/Financial, Inc. 
      (Albuquerque, NM)
16)   Lincoln Cascades, Inc. (Portland, OR)
17)   Lincoln Financial Group, Inc. (Salt Lake City, (UT)


<PAGE>

Summary of Changes to Organizational Chart:

JANUARY 1, 1995-DECEMBER 31, 1995

SEPTEMBER 1995

a.   Lincoln National (Jersey) Limited was incorporated on September 18, 1995. 
     Company is dormat and was formed for tax reasons per Barbara Benoit,
     Assistant Corporate Secretary at Lincoln UK.

JANUARY 1, 1996-DECEMBER 1, 1996

MARCH 1996

a.   Delaware Investment Counselors, Inc. changed its name to Delaware Capital
     Management, Inc. effective March 29, 1996.

AUGUST 1996

a.   Lincoln National (Gernsey) Limited was incorporated on August 9, 1996;
     company is dormat and was formed for tax reasons.

SEPTEMBER 1996

a.   Morgan Financial Group, Inc. changed its name to Lincoln National Sales
     Corporation of Maryland effective September 23, 1996.

OCTOBER 1996

a.   Addition of Lincoln National (India) Inc., incorporated as an Indiana
     corporation on October 17, 1996. 

NOVEMBER 1996

a.   Lincoln National SBP Trustee Limited was bought "off the shelf" and was
     incorporated on November 26, 1996; it was formed to act as Trustee for
     Lincoln Staff Benefits Plan. 

DECEMBER 1996

a.   Addition of Lincoln National Investments, Inc., incorporated as an Indiana
     corporation on December 12, 1996. 


JANUARY 1, 1997-DECEMBER 31, 1997

JANUARY 1997

a.   Delaware Management Holdings, Inc., Lynch & Mayer, Inc. and Vantage Global
     Advisors, Inc. were transferred via capital contribution to Lincoln
     National Investments, Inc. effective January 2, 1997. 

b.   Lincoln National Investments, Inc. changed its name to Lincoln National
     Investment Companies, Inc. effective January 24, 1997. 

c.   Lincoln National Investment Companies, Inc. changed its named to Lincoln
     National Investments, Inc. effective January 24, 1997. 




JANUARY 1997 CON'T


<PAGE>

d.   The following Lincoln National (UK) subsidiaries changed their name
     effective January 1, 1997: Lincoln Financial Group PLC (formerly Laurentian
     Financial Group PLC); Lincoln Milldon Limited (formerly Laurentian Milldon
     Limited); Lincoln Management Services Limited (formerly Laurentian
     Management Services Limited). 

FEBRUARY 1997

a.   Removal of Lincoln National Financial Group of Philadelphia, Inc. which was
     dissolved effective February 25, 1997. 

MARCH 1997

a.   Removal of Lincoln Financial Services, Inc. which was dissolved effective
     March 4, 1997. 

APRIL 1997

a.   Acquisition of Dougherty Financial Group, Inc. on April 30, 1997.  Company
     then changed its name to Delvoy, Inc.  The acquisition included the mutual
     fund group of companies as part of the Voyager acquisition.  The following
     companies all then were moved under the newly formed holding company,
     Delvoy, Inc. effective April 30, 1997: Delaware Management Company, Inc.,
     Delaware Distributors, Inc., Delaware Capital Management, Inc., Delaware
     Service Company, Inc. and Delaware Investment & Retirement Services, Inc.  

b.   Acquisition of Voyager Fund Managers, Inc. and Voyager Fund Distributors,
     Inc. on April 30, 1997; merger is scheduled for May 31, 1997 for Voyager
     Fund Managers, Inc. into Delaware Management Company, Inc. and Voyager Fund
     Distributors, Inc. is to merge into Delaware Distributors, L.P. 

c.   Removal of Aseguradora InverLincoln, S.A. Compania de Seguros y Reaseguros,
     Grupo Financiero InverMexico.  Stock was sold to Grupo Financiero
     InverMexico effective April 18, 1997. 

MAY 1997

a.   Name change of The Richard Leahy Corporation to Lincoln National Financial
     Institutions Group, Inc. effective May 6, 1997. 

b.   Voyager Fund Managers, Inc. merged into Delaware Management Company, Inc.
     effective May 30, 1997 at 10:00 p.m. with Delaware Management Company, Inc.
     surviving. 

c.   On May 31, 1997 at 2:00 a.m., Voyager Fund Distributors, Inc. merged into a
     newly formed company Voyager Fund Distributors (Delaware), Inc.,
     incorporated as a Delaware corporation on May 23, 1997.  Voyager Fund
     Distributors (Delaware), Inc. then merged into Delaware Distributors, L.P.
     effective May 31, 1997 at 2:01 a.m.  Delaware Distributors, L.P. survived. 

JUNE 1997

a.   Removal of Lincoln National Sales Corporation of Maryland -- company
     dissolved June 13, 1997. 

b.   Addition of Lincoln Funds Corporation, incorporated as a Delaware
     corporation on June 10, 1997 at 2:00 p.m.

c.   Addition of Lincoln Re, S.A., incorporated as an Argentina company on June
     30, 1997. 


<PAGE>

JULY 1997

a.   LNC Equity Sales Corporation changed its name to Lincoln Financial Advisors
     Corporation effective July 1, 1997. 

b.   Addition of Solutions Holdings, Inc., incorporated as a Delaware
     corporation on July 27, 1997. 

SEPTEMBER 1997

a.   Addition of Solutions Reinsurance Limited, incorporated as a Bermuda
     corporation on September 29, 1997. 

OCTOBER 1997

a.   Removal of the following companies: American States Financial Corporation,
     American States Insurance Company, American Economy Insurance Company,
     American States Insurance Company of Texas, American States Life Insurance
     Company, American States Lloyds Insurance Company, American States
     Preferred Insurance Company, City Insurance Agency, Inc. and Insurance
     Company of Illinois -- all were sold 10-1-97 to SAFECO Corporation. 

b.   Liberty Life Assurance Limited was sold to Liberty International Holdings
     PLC effective 10-6-97.  

c.   Addition of Seguros Serfin Lincoln, S.A., acquired by LNC on 10-15-97. 


DECEMBER 1997

a.   Addition of City Financial Partners Ltd. as a result of its acquisition by
     Lincoln National Corporation on December 22, 1997.  This company will
     distribute life assurance and pension products of Lincoln Assurance
     Limited.

b.   Removal of Lynch & Mayer Asia, Inc. which was dissolved December 24, 1997. 

JANUARY 1998

a.   Addition of Cigna Associates, Inc., Cigna Financial Advisors, Inc. and
     Cigna Associates of Massachusetts, Inc., acquired by The Lincoln National
     Life Insurance Company on January 1, 1998.  Cigna Associates of
     Massachusetts is 100% owned by Cigna Associates, Inc. 

b.   Removal of Lincoln National Mezzanine Corporation and Lincoln National
     Mezzanine Fund, L.P.  Lincoln National Mezzanine Corporation was dissolved
     on January 12, 1998 and Lincoln National Mezzanine Fund, L.P. was cancelled
     January 12, 1998. 

c.   Corporate organizational changes took place in the UK group of companies on
     January 21, 1998: Lincoln Insurance Services Limited and its subsidiaries
     were  moved from Lincoln National (UK) PLC to Lincoln Assurance Limited;
     Lincoln General Insurance Co. Ltd. was moved from Lincoln Insurance
     Services Limited to Lincoln National (UK) PLC.  

d.   Addition of AnnuityNet, Inc., incorporated as an Indiana corporation on
     January 16, 1998 and a wholly-owned subsidiary of The Lincoln National Life
     Insurance Company. 


JUNE 1998


<PAGE>

a.   Name Change of CIGNA Financial Advisors, Inc. to Sagemark Consulting, Inc.
     effective June 1, 1998. 

b.   Name Change of CIGNA Associates, Inc. to Lincoln National Insurance
     Associates, Inc. effective June 1, 1998. 

c.   Addition of Lincoln National Insurance Associates of Alabama, Inc.,
     incorporated as a wholly-owned subsidiary of Lincoln National Insurance
     Associates, Inc. as an Alabama domiciled corporation. 

d.   Dissolution of LUTM Nominees Limited effective June 10, 1998. 

e.   Dissolution of Cannon Fund Managers Limited June 16, 1998. 

f.   Dissolution of P.N. Kemp Gee & Co. Ltd. June 2, 1998. 


JULY 1998

a.   Name change of CIGNA Associates of Massachusetts, Inc. to Lincoln National
     Insurance Associates of Massachusetts, Inc. effective July 22, 1998.


SEPTEMBER 1998

a.   Removal of Lincoln Financial Group of Michigan, Inc., voluntarily dissolved
     September 15, 1998. 

b.   Name change of Lincoln Financial Group, Inc. to Lincoln Life and Annuity
     Distributors, Inc. on September 29, 1998. 

c.   Removal of Lincoln European Reinsurance S.A. -- company dissolved September
     30, 1998. 

d.   Removal of Lincoln Funds Corporation -- company voluntarily dissolved
     September 30, 1998. 

OCTOBER 1998

a.   Addition of AnnuityNet Insurance Agency, Inc., incorporated as an Indiana
     corporation October 2, 1998., a wholly-owned subsidiary of AnnuityNet, Inc.

b.   Removal of Lincoln National (India) Inc., voluntarily dissolved October 26,
     1998. 

DECEMBER 1998

a.   Removal of The Insurers' Fund, Inc., voluntarily dissolved December 10,
     1998.

b.   Addition of Lincoln National Management Corporation, a Pennsylvania
     corporation and a wholly-owned subsidiary of Lincoln National Corporation,
     incorporated on December 17, 1998.  

JANUARY 1999

Lincoln Unit Trust Management changed its name on January 5, 1999 to Lincoln ISA
Management Limited. 


FEBRUARY 1999

Removal of Lincoln Soutwest Financial Group, Inc. -- company's term of existence
expired July 18, 1998.




<PAGE>

                                BOOKS AND RECORDS

                  LINCOLN NATIONAL AGGRESSIVE GROWTH FUND, INC.

          RULES UNDER SECTION 31 OF THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940

      Records to Be Maintained by Registered Investment Companies, Certain
         Majority-Owned Subsidiaries Thereof, and Other Persons Having
               Transactions with Registered Investment Companies.

Reg. 270.31a-1. (a) Every registered investment company, and every underwriter,
broker, dealer, or investment advisor which is a majority-owned subsidiary of
such a company, shall maintain and keep current the accounts, books, and other
documents relating to its business which constitute the record forming the basis
for financial statements required to be filed pursuant to Section 30 of the
Investment Company Act of 1940 and of the auditor's certificates relating
thereto.

LN-Record        Location    Person to Contact   Retention
- ---------        --------    -----------------   ---------
Annual Reports   Finance     Eric Jones          Permanently, the first two
To Shareholders                                  years in an easily accessible
                                                 place

Semi-Annual      Finance     Eric Jones          Permanently, the first two
Reports                                          years in an easily accessible
                                                 place

Form N-SAR       Finance     Eric Jones          Permanently, the first two
                                                 years in an easily accessible
                                                 place

(b) Every registered investment company shall maintain and keep current the
following books, accounts, and other documents:

TYPE OF RECORD

(1) Journals (or other records of original entry) containing an itemized daily
record in detail of all purchases and sales of securities (including sales and
redemptions of its own securities), all receipts and deliveries of securities
(including certificate numbers if such detail is not recorded by custodian or
transfer agent), all receipts and disbursements of cash and all other debits and
credits. Such records shall show for each such transaction the name and quantity
of securities, the unit and aggregate purchase or sale price, commission paid,
the market on which effected, the trade date, the settlement date, and the name
of the person through or from whom purchased or received or to whom sold or
delivered.

PURCHASES AND SALES JOURNALS

Daily reports     Delaware   Fund Accounting    Permanently, the first two
of securities                                   years in an easily accessible
transactions                                    place




<PAGE>


LN-Record         Location   Person to Contact  Retention
- ---------         --------   -----------------  ---------
PORTFOLIO SECURITIES

Equity            Delaware   Fund Accounting    Permanently, the first two
Notifications                                   years in an easily accessible
                                                place


RECEIPTS AND DELIVERIES OF SECURITIES (SHARES)

Not Applicable.

PORTFOLIO SECURITIES

Debit and          Delaware  Fund Accounting    Permanently, the first two
Credit Advices                                  years in an easily accessible
from Bankers                                    place
(Bank Statements)

RECEIPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS OF CASH AND OTHER DEBITS AND CREDITS

Investment         Delaware  Fund Accounting    Permanently, the first two
Journal                                         years in an easily accessible
                                                place

Daily Journals     Delaware  Fund Accounting    Permanently, the first two
Journals                                        years in an easily accessible
                                                place


(2) General and auxiliary ledgers (or other record) reflecting all asset,
liability, reserve, capital, income and expense accounts, including:

       (i)       Separate ledger accounts (or other records) reflecting the
                 following:

       (a)       Securities in transfer;
       (b)       Securities in physical possession;
       (c)       Securities borrowed and securities loaned;
       (d)       Monies borrowed and monies loaned (together with a record of 
                 the collateral therefore and substitutions in such collateral);
       (e)       Dividends and interest received;
       (f)       Dividends receivable and interest accrued.

Instructions. (a) and (b) shall be stated in terms of securities quantities
only; (c) and (d) shall be stated in dollar amounts and securities quantities as
appropriate; (e) and (f) shall be stated in dollar amounts only.

GENERAL LEDGER

General             Delaware   Fund Accounting   Permanently, the first two
Ledger                                           years in an easily accessible
                                                 place

<PAGE>

LN-Record          Location     Person to Contact Retention
- ---------          --------     ----------------- ---------
SECURITIES IN TRANSFER

File consisting    State        Mutual Funds      Permanently, the first two
of bank advices,   Street Bank  Division          years in an easily accessible
confirmations,     and Trust                      place
and Notification   Company                        
of Securities                                     
Transaction                                       
                                                  
SECURITIES IN PHYSICAL POSSESSION                 
                                                  
Securities         State        Mutual Funds      Permanently, the first two
Ledger             Street Bank  Division          years in an easily accessible
                   and Trust                      place
                   Company                        
                                                  
Portfolio          State        Mutual Funds      Permanently, the first two
Listings           Street Bank  Division          years in an easily accessible
                   and Trust                      place
                   Company                        
                                                  
SECURITIES BORROWED AND LOANED                    
                                                  
Their files        State        Mutual Funds      Permanently, the first two
                   Street Bank  Division          years in an easily accessible
                   and Trust                      place
                   Company                        
                                                  
MONIES BORROWED AND LOANED                        
                                                  
Not Applicable.                                   
                                                  
DIVIDENDS AND INTEREST RECEIVED                   
                                                  
Interest File      Delaware     Fund Accounting   Permanently, the first two
Accrual                                           years in an easily accessible
Activity                                          place
Journal                                           
                                                  
Dividend Master    Delaware     Fund Accounting   Permanently, the first two
File Display                                      years in an easily accessible
                                                  place
DIVIDENDS RECEIVABLE AND INTEREST ACCRUED         
                                                  
Investment        Delaware      Fund Accounting   Permanently, the first two
Journal                                           years in an easily accessible
                                                  place
                                                  
Dividend Master   Delaware      Fund Accounting   Permanently, the first two
File Display                                      years in an easily accessible
                                                  place
                                                  
Interest File     Delaware      Fund Accounting   Permanently, the first two
Accrual                                           years in an easily accessible
Activity                                          place
Journal                                           


<PAGE>

(ii) Separate ledger accounts (or other records) for each portfolio security,
showing (as of trade dates), (a) the quantity and unit and aggregate price for
each purchase, sale, receipt, and delivery of securities and commodities for
such accounts, and (b) all other debits and credits for such accounts.

Securities positions and money balances in such ledger accounts (or other
records) shall be brought forward periodically but not less frequently than at
the end of fiscal quarters. Any portfolio security, the salability of which is
conditioned, shall be so noted. A memorandum record shall be available setting
forth, with respect to each portfolio security accounts, the amount and
declaration, ex-dividend, and payment dates of each dividend declared thereon.


LEDGER ACCOUNT FOR EACH PORTFOLIO SECURITY

Inventory        Delaware       Fund Accounting   Permanently, the first two
(on line)                                         years in an easily accessible
                                                  place


(iii) Separate ledger accounts (or other records) for each broker-dealer, bank
or other person with or through which transactions in portfolio securities are
affected, showing each purchase or sale of securities with or through such
persons, including details as to the date of the purchase or sale, the quantity
and unit and aggregate prices of such securities, and the commissions or other
compensation paid to such persons. Purchases or sales effected during the same
day at the same price may be aggregated.

Broker-Dealer    Delaware       Fund Accounting   Permanently, the first two
Ledger                                            years in an easily accessible
                                                  place


(iv) Separate ledger accounts (or other records), which may be maintained by a
transfer agent or registrar, showing for each shareholder of record of the
investment company the number of shares of capital stock of the company held. in
respect of share accumulation accounts (arising from periodic investment plans,
dividend reinvestment plans, deposit of issued shares by the owner thereof,
etc.), details shall be available as to the dates and number of shares of each
accumulation, and except with respect to already issued shares deposited by the
owner thereof, prices of each such accumulation.

SHAREHOLDER ACCOUNTS

LNL - only       Finance         Eric Jones       Permanently, the first two
shareholder                                       years in an easily accessible
                                                  place

(3) A securities record or ledger reflecting separately for each portfolio
security as of trade date all "long" and "short" positions carried by the
investment company for its own account and showing the location of all
securities long and the off-setting position to all securities short. The record
called for by this paragraph shall not be required in circumstances under which
all portfolio securities are maintained by a bank or banks or a member or
members of a national securities exchange as custodian under a custody agreement
or as agent for such custodian.

<PAGE>

LN-Record        Location      Person to Contact   Retention
- ---------        --------      -----------------   ---------
SECURITIES POSITION RECORD

Maintained by    State          Mutual Funds       Permanently, the fist two
Custodian of     Street Bank    Division           years in an easily accessible
Securities       and Trust                         place
                 Company

(4) Corporate charters, certificates of incorporation or trust agreements, and
bylaws, and minute books of stockholders' and directors' or trustees' meetings;
and minute books of directors' or trustees' committee and advisory board or
advisory committee meetings.

CORPORATE DOCUMENTS

Corporate         Secretary     Cindy Rose         Permanently, the first two
charter, cer-                                      years in an easily accessible
tificate of                                        place
incorporation.

Bylaws and        Secretary     Cindy Rose         Permanently, the first two
minute books.                                      years in an easily accessible
                                                   place.

(5) A record of each brokerage order given by or in behalf of the investment
company for, or in connection with, the purchase or sale of securities, whether
executed or unexecuted. Such record shall include the name of the broker, the
terms and conditions of the order and of any modification or cancellation
thereof, the time of entry or cancellation, the price at which executed, and the
time of receipt of report of execution. The record shall indicate the name of
the person who placed the order in behalf of the investment company.

ORDER TICKETS

Sales Order or    Lynch & Mayer Mutual Funds       Six years, the first two
Purchase Order                  Division           years in an easily accessible
                                                   place

Notification      State         Mutual Funds       Six years, the first two
Form (From        Street Bank   Division           years in an easily accessible
AOS Trading       and Trust                        place
System)           Company

(6) A record of all other portfolio purchase or sales showing details comparable
to those prescribed in paragraph 5 above.

SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS

Notification      State          Mutual Funds      Six years, the first two
Form (From        Street Bank    Division          years in an easily accessible
AOS S-T           and Trust                        place
System)           Company

Bank Advice       Delaware       Fund Accounting   Six years, the first two
and Issuer                                         years in an easily accessible
Confirmation                                       place

(7) A record of all puts, calls, spreads, straddles, and other options in which
the investment company has any direct or indirect interest or which the
investment company has granted or guaranteed; and a record of any contractual
commitments to purchase, sell, receive or deliver securities or other property
(but not including open orders placed with broker-dealers for the purchase or
sale of securities, which may be cancelled by the company on notices without
penalty or cost of any kind); containing at least an identification of the
security, the number of units involved, the option price, the date of maturity,
the date of issuance, and the person to whom issued.

<PAGE>

LN-Record            Location  Person to Contact  Retention
- ---------            --------  -----------------  ---------
RECORD OF PUTS, CALLS, SPREADS, ETC.

Trade Notification   Delaware  Fund Accounting    Six Years
(Puts & Calls).

(8) A record of the proof of money balances in all ledger accounts (except
shareholder accounts), in the form of trial balances. Such trial balances shall
be prepared currently at least once a month.

TRIAL BALANCE

General Ledger       Delaware   Fund Accounting    Permanently, the first two
                                                   years in an easily accessible
                                                   place


(9) A record for each fiscal quarter, which shall be completed within 10 days
after the end of such quarter, showing specifically the basis or bases upon
which the allocation of orders for the purchase and sale of portfolio securities
to named brokers or dealers and the division of brokerage commissions or other
compensation on such purchase and sale orders among named persons were made
during such quarter. The record shall indicate the consideration given to (a)
sales of shares of the investment company by brokers or dealers, (b) the
supplying of services or benefits by brokers or dealers to the investment
company, its investment advisor or principal underwriter or any persons
affiliated therewith, and (c) any other considerations other than the technical
qualifications of the brokers and the dealers as such. The record shall show the
nature of their services or benefits made available, and shall describe in
detail the application of any general or specific formula or other determinant
used in arriving at such allocation of purchase and sales orders and such
division of brokerage commissions or other compensation. The record shall also
include the identifies of the person responsible for the determination of such
allocation and such division of brokerage commissions or other compensation.

Brokerage           Lynch & Mayer Mutual Funds     Six Years, the first two
Allocation                        Division         years in an easily accessible
Report                                             place


(10) A record in the form of an appropriate memorandum identifying the person or
persons, committees, or groups authorizing the purchase or sale of portfolio
securities. Where an authorization is made by a committee or group, a record
shall be kept in the names of its members who participated in the authorization.
There shall be retained a part of the record required by this paragraph any
memorandum, recommendation, or instruction supporting or authorizing the
purchase or sale of portfolio securities. The requirements of this paragraph are
applicable to the extent they are not met by compliance with the requirements of
paragraph 4 of this Rule 31a1(b).

<PAGE>


LN-Record       Location       Person to Contact  Retention
- ---------       --------       -----------------  ---------
Trading         Lynch & Mayer  Mutual Funds       Six years, the first two
Authorization                  Division           years in an easily accessible
                                                  place


Advisory        Law            Janet Lindenburg   Six years, the first two
Agreements      Division       Jeremy Sachs       years in an easily accessible
                                                  place

(11) Files of all advisory material received from the investment advisor, any
advisory board or advisory committee, or any other persons from whom the
investment company accepts investment advice publications distributed generally.

Not Applicable.

(12) The term "other records" as used in the expressions "journals (or other
records of original entry)" and "ledger accounts (or other records)" shall be
construed to include, where appropriate, copies of voucher checks,
confirmations, or similar documents which reflect the information required by
the applicable rule or rules in appropriate sequence and in permanent form,
including similar records developed by the use of automatic data processing
systems.

Correspondence   Product         Nancy Alford      Six years, the first two
                 Admin.                            years in an easily accessible
                 Product                           place
                 Management

Pricing Sheets   Delaware        Fund Accounting   Permanently, the first two
                                                   years in an easily accessible
                                                   place

Bank State-      Delaware        Fund Accounting   Six years, the first two
ments,                                             years in an easily accessible
and Cash                                           place
Reconciliations



                                  March 24, 1999

<TABLE> <S> <C>

<PAGE>
<ARTICLE> 6
<CIK> 0000914036
<NAME> AGGRESIVE GROWTH FUND
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   12-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          DEC-31-1998
<PERIOD-END>                               DEC-31-1998
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>                      285,569,473
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>                     337,795,402
<RECEIVABLES>                                2,321,035
<ASSETS-OTHER>                                       0
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>                         (320,052)
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                             339,796,385
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>                     4,165,905
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>                              0
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>                      264,042
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>                          4,429,947
<SENIOR-EQUITY>                                      0
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>                   303,798,315
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>                       25,088,320
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>                       20,918,781
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>                       29,870
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>                               0
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>                   (20,687,676)
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>                             0
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>                    52,225,929
<NET-ASSETS>                               335,366,438
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>                            1,134,096
<INTEREST-INCOME>                            1,626,886
<OTHER-INCOME>                                       0
<EXPENSES-NET>                               2,731,112
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>                         29,870
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>                  (20,687,677)
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>                  (2,668,620)
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>                     (23,326,427)
<EQUALIZATION>                                       0
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>                      473,358
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>                    45,635,441
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>                                0
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>                      2,713,833
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>                  1,669,529
<SHARES-REINVESTED>                          3,125,235
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>                     (7,396,262)
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>                            0
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>                              0
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>                           0
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>                        2,476,022
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                   0
<GROSS-EXPENSE>                              2,731,112
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>                       339,247,576
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>                           16.385
<PER-SHARE-NII>                                  0.001
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>                        (0.810)
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>                        2.209
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>                                 0
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>                             13.367
<EXPENSE-RATIO>                                   0.81
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>                               0
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>                                 0
        

</TABLE>


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