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                                  UNITED STATES
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                              WASHINGTON, DC 20549

                                    FORM 10-K

                                  ANNUAL REPORT
                        PURSUANT TO SECTIONS 13 OR 15(d)
                     OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

(Mark One)
[X]    ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES
       EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

       For the fiscal year ended February 25, 2007

                                     OR

[ ]    TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES
       EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

       For the transition period from ________ to _______

                          Commission file number 1-4415

                           PARK ELECTROCHEMICAL CORP.
             (Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)

                   New York                            11-1734643
        (State or Other Jurisdiction of             (I.R.S. Employer
        Incorporation of Organization)             Identification No.)

   48 South Service Road, Melville, New York              11747
   (Address of Principal Executive Offices)            (Zip Code)

        Registrant's telephone number, including area code (631) 465-3600

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:

                                                       Name of Each Exchange
       Title of Each Class                             on Which Registered
       --------------------------------------          -------------------------
       Common Stock, par value $.10 per share          New York Stock Exchange

       Preferred Stock Purchase Rights                 New York Stock Exchange

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act: None

Indicate by check mark if the  registrant is a well-known  seasoned  issuer,  as
defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act.

                                 Yes [ ] No [X]

Indicate  by  check  mark if the  registrant  is not  required  to file  reports
pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Act.

                                 Yes [ ] No [X]

[cover page 1 of 2 pages]



Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required
to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during
the  preceding 12 months (or for such  shorter  period that the  registrant  was
required  to file  such  reports),  and  (2) has  been  subject  to such  filing
requirements for the past 90 days.

                                 Yes [X] No [ ]

Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent  filers  pursuant to Item 405
of Regulation  S-K is not contained  herein,  and will not be contained,  to the
best of registrant's  knowledge,  in definitive proxy or information  statements
incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K or any amendment to this
Form 10-K. [ ]

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large  accelerated  filer, an
accelerated  filer, or a  non-accelerated  filer. See definition of "accelerated
filer and large accelerated filer" in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.

Large Accelerated Filer [ ]   Accelerated Filer [X]   Non-Accelerated File [ ]

Indicate by check mark whether the  registrant is a shell company (as defined in
Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act).

                                 Yes [ ] No [X]

State the aggregate market value of the voting and non-voting common equity held
by non-affiliates  computed by reference to the price at which the common equity
was sold, or the average bid and asked prices of such common  equity,  as of the
last  business day of the  registrant's  most recently  completed  second fiscal
quarter.

                                     Aggregate           As of Close of
        Title of Class             Market Value           Business On
   -------------------------      ---------------       ----------------
   Common Stock,
    par value $.10 per share      $   515,674,858       August 25, 2006

Indicate the number of shares outstanding of each of the registrant's classes of
common stock, as of the latest practicable date.

                                       Shares           As of Close of
        Title of Class              Outstanding          Business On
    -------------------------       ------------        --------------
    Common Stock,
     par value $.10 per share         20,197,814         May 4, 2007

DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE

Proxy  Statement  for Annual  Meeting of  Shareholders  to be held July 18, 2007
incorporated by reference into Part III of this Report.

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[cover page 2 of 2 pages]



                                                                               3

                                TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                                           Page
                                                                           ----
PART I

Item 1.       Business...................................................    4
Item 1A.      Risk Factors...............................................   16
Item 1B.      Unresolved Staff Comments..................................   18
Item 2.       Properties.................................................   19
Item 3.       Legal Proceedings..........................................   19
Item 4.       Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders........   19
              Executive Officers of the Registrant.......................   19

PART II

Item 5.       Market for the Registrant's Common Equity,
                Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of
                Equity Securities........................................   21
Item 6.       Selected Financial Data....................................   22
Item 7.       Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial
                Condition and Results of Operations......................   24
              Factors That May Affect Future Results.....................   38
Item 7A.      Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk.   39
Item 8.       Financial Statements and Supplementary Data................   40
Item 9.       Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on
                Accounting and Financial Disclosure......................   66
Item 9A.      Controls and Procedures....................................   66
Item 9B.      Other Information..........................................   68

PART III

Item 10.      Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate Governance.....   69
Item 11.      Executive Compensation.....................................   69
Item 12.      Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and
                Management and Related Stockholder Matters...............   69
Item 13.      Certain Relationships and Related Transactions,
                and Director Independence................................   69
Item 14.      Principal Accountant Fees and Services.....................   69

PART IV

Item 15.      Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules.................   70

SIGNATURES...............................................................   71

FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES

  Schedule II - Valuation and Qualifying Accounts........................   72

EXHIBIT INDEX............................................................   73



                                                                               4

                                     PART I

ITEM 1.  BUSINESS.

General

         Park Electrochemical  Corp. ("Park"),  through its subsidiaries (unless
the context otherwise requires, Park and its subsidiaries are hereinafter called
the "Company"),  is primarily  engaged in the design,  development,  production,
marketing and sale of high-technology  digital and RF/microwave  printed circuit
materials   and   advanced    composite    materials    principally    for   the
telecommunications and internet infrastructure, high-end computing and aerospace
markets.  Park's  core  capabilities  are  in the  areas  of  polymer  chemistry
formulation and coating technology.

         Park operates through fully integrated  business units in Asia,  Europe
and North  America.  The  Company's  manufacturing  facilities  are  located  in
Singapore, China, France, Connecticut, New York, Arizona and California.

         The  Company's  products  are  marketed and sold under the Nelco(R) and
Nelcote(TM) names.

         Sales of Park's  printed  circuit  materials  were 92% of the Company's
total net sales worldwide in the 2007 and 2006 fiscal years, and sales of Park's
advanced composite  materials were 8% of the Company's total net sales worldwide
in the 2007 and 2006 fiscal years.

         Park was founded in 1954 by Jerry Shore, who was the Company's Chairman
of the  Board  until  July  14,  2004  and who is one of the  Company's  largest
shareholders.

         The  sales  and  long-lived  assets  of  the  Company's  operations  by
geographic  area for the last three fiscal years are set forth in Note 17 of the
Notes to Consolidated  Financial Statements in Item 8 of Part II of this Report.
The Company's  foreign  operations  are conducted  principally  by the Company's
subsidiaries in Singapore,  China and France.  The Company's foreign  operations
are subject to the impact of foreign  currency  fluctuations.  See Note 1 of the
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements in Item 8 of Part II of this Report.

         The Company  makes  available  free of charge on its Internet  website,
www.parkelectro.com,  its annual report on Form 10-K,  quarterly reports on Form
10-Q, current reports on Form 8-K and all amendments to those reports as soon as
reasonably  practicable  after such  material  is  electronically  filed with or
furnished to the Securities and Exchange Commission.  None of the information on
the Company's website shall be deemed to be a part of this Report.

         COREFIX, EF, INNERLAM, LD, NELCO, NELTEC, PARKNELCO,  RTFOIL and SI are
registered trademarks of Park Electrochemical Corp., and ELECTROVUE,  FIBERCOTE,
NELCOTE,   PEELCOTE   and   POWERBOND   are  common  law   trademarks   of  Park
Electrochemical Corp.



                                                                               5

Printed Circuit Materials

         Printed Circuit Materials Operations

         The  Company is a leading  global  designer  and  producer  of advanced
printed circuit materials used to fabricate complex  multilayer  printed circuit
boards  and  other  electronic   interconnection  systems,  such  as  multilayer
back-planes, wireless packages, high-speed/low-loss multilayers and high density
interconnects  ("HDIs").  The Company's  multilayer  printed  circuit  materials
consist of  copper-clad  laminates  and  prepregs.  The  Company  has  long-term
relationships  with its  major  customers,  which  include  leading  independent
printed circuit board fabricators,  electronic  manufacturing service companies,
electronic  contract  manufacturers  and  major  electronic  original  equipment
manufacturers  ("OEMs").  Multilayer  printed  circuit  boards and  interconnect
systems are used in  virtually  all  advanced  electronic  equipment  to direct,
sequence and control electronic signals between  semiconductor  devices (such as
microprocessors  and  memory and logic  devices),  passive  components  (such as
resistors and capacitors) and connection  devices (such as infra-red  couplings,
fiber  optics  and  surface  mount  connectors).  Examples  of end  uses  of the
Company's  digital  printed  circuit  materials  include high speed  routers and
servers,  storage area networks,  supercomputers,  laptops,  satellite switching
equipment,  cellular  telephones and  transceivers,  wireless  personal  digital
assistants  ("PDAs") and wireless  local area networks  ("LANs").  The Company's
radio frequency ("RF") printed circuit materials are used primarily for military
avionics,  antennas for cellular  telephone base stations,  automotive  adaptive
cruise control  systems and avionic  communications  equipment.  The Company has
developed  long-term  relationships  with  major  customers  as a result  of its
leading edge products,  extensive  technical and engineering service support and
responsive manufacturing capabilities.

         Park  believes it founded the modern day  printed  circuit  industry in
1957 by inventing a composite  material  consisting of an epoxy resin  substrate
reinforced  with  fiberglass  cloth which was laminated  together with sheets of
thin copper foil. This epoxy-glass  copper-clad laminate system is still used to
construct the large majority of today's advanced printed circuit  products.  The
Company  also  believes  that in 1962 it invented the first  multilayer  printed
circuit  materials system used to construct  multilayer  printed circuit boards.
The  Company  also  pioneered  vacuum  lamination  and many other  manufacturing
technologies  used in the industry today.  The Company believes it is one of the
industry's technological leaders.

         As a result of its  leading  edge  products,  extensive  technical  and
engineering  service  support and  responsive  manufacturing  capabilities,  the
Company expects to continue to take advantage of several industry trends.  These
trends  include the  increasingly  advanced  electronic  materials  required for
interconnect performance and manufacturability,  the increasing  miniaturization
and  portability of advanced  electronic  equipment,  the  consolidation  of the
printed  circuit  board  fabrication   industry  and  the   time-to-market   and
time-to-volume   pressures   requiring  closer   collaboration   with  materials
suppliers.

         The  Company   believes   that  it  is  one  of  the  world's   largest
manufacturers of advanced multilayer printed circuit materials. It also believes
that it is one of only a few significant independent manufacturers of multilayer
printed circuit  materials in the world. The Company was the first  manufacturer
in the printed circuit materials industry to establish  manufacturing  presences
in the three  major  global  markets of North  America,  Europe  and Asia,  with
facilities established in Europe in 1969 and Asia in 1986.



                                                                               6

         Printed Circuit Materials - Industry Background

         The  printed  circuit  materials  manufactured  by the  Company and its
competitors  are used  primarily to construct and fabricate  complex  multilayer
printed circuit boards and other advanced  electronic  interconnection  systems.
Multilayer  printed  circuit  materials  consist  of  prepregs  and  copper-clad
laminates.  Prepregs are chemically and electrically engineered thermosetting or
thermoplastic  resin  systems  which are  impregnated  into and  reinforced by a
specially  manufactured  fiberglass  cloth  product or other woven or  non-woven
reinforcing fiber. This insulating  dielectric substrate generally is 0.030 inch
to 0.002 inch in  thickness  or less in some cases.  While  these resin  systems
historically  have  been  based on  epoxy  resin  chemistry,  in  recent  years,
increasingly  demanding  OEM  requirements  have driven the  industry to utilize
proprietary enhanced epoxies as well as other higher performance resins, such as
bismalimide     triazine     ("BT"),     cyanate    ester,     polyimide,     or
polytetrafluoroethylene  ("PTFE").  One or more plies of prepreg  are  laminated
together  to form an  insulating  dielectric  substrate  to  support  the copper
circuitry patterns of a multilayer printed circuit board.  Copper-clad laminates
consist of one or more plies of prepreg  laminated  together with specialty thin
copper foil laminated on the top and bottom.  Copper foil is specially formed in
thin sheets  which may vary from 0.0030  inch to 0.0002  inch in  thickness  and
normally  have a thickness of 0.0014 inch or 0.0007 inch.  The Company  supplies
both  copper-clad  laminates  and  prepregs  to its  customers,  which use these
products as a system to construct multilayer printed circuit boards.

         The printed circuit board fabricator processes copper-clad laminates to
form the inner layers of a multilayer  printed  circuit  board.  The  fabricator
photo  images  these  laminates  with a dry film or  liquid  photoresist.  After
development of the  photoresist,  the copper surfaces of the laminate are etched
to form  the  circuit  pattern.  The  fabricator  then  assembles  these  etched
laminates by inserting one or more plies of dielectric  prepreg  between each of
the inner layer etched laminates and also between an inner layer etched laminate
and the outer layer copper plane,  and then  laminating the entire assembly in a
press.  Prepreg  serves as the insulator  between the multiple  layers of copper
circuitry  patterns found in the multilayer  circuit board.  When the multilayer
configuration is laminated, these plies of prepreg form an insulating dielectric
substrate  supporting  and  separating  the  multiple  inner and outer planes of
copper circuitry.  The fabricator  drills vertical  through-holes or vias in the
multilayer  assembly and then plates the  through-holes or vias to form vertical
conductors   between  the   multiple   layers  of  circuitry   patterns.   These
through-holes  or vias  combine  with  the  conductor  paths  on the  horizontal
circuitry planes to create a three-dimensional  electronic  interconnect system.
In  specialized  applications,  an  additional  set of microvia  layers (2 or 4,
typically)  may be added  through a  secondary  lamination  process  to  provide
increased  density  and  functionality  to the  design.  The outer two layers of
copper foil are then imaged and etched to form the finished  multilayer  printed
circuit  board.   The  completed   multilayer   board  is  a   three-dimensional
interconnect  system with electronic  signals traveling in the horizontal planes
of multiple layers of copper circuitry  patterns,  as well as the vertical plane
through the plated holes or vias.



                                                                               7

         In the years  immediately  preceding the severe correction and downturn
that occurred in the global  electronics  industry in the Company's  2002 fiscal
year first quarter, the global market for advanced electronic products grew as a
result of  technological  change and  frequent new product  introductions.  This
growth  was  principally  attributable  to  increased  sales  and  more  complex
electronic  content of newer  products,  such as  cellular  telephones,  pagers,
personal  computers  and  portable  computing  devices  and  the  infrastructure
equipment  necessary  to support  the use of these  devices,  and greater use of
electronics in other  products,  such as  automobiles.  Further,  large,  almost
completely  untapped markets for advanced  electronic  equipment emerged in such
areas as India and China and other  areas of the  Pacific  Rim.  During its 2002
fiscal year, the Company  established a business  center in Wuxi,  China, in the
Shanghai  Nanjing  corridor,  which  has been  replaced  by a new  manufacturing
facility in the Zhuhai Free Trade Zone  approximately 50 miles west of Hong Kong
in Guangdong  Province in southern China.  The  construction of the facility was
completed  in the first  quarter of the  Company's  2007  fiscal  year,  and the
Company  has  installed  equipment  for the  facility  and is in the  process of
equipment  testing,  employee training and internal and external  qualifications
for the facility.  This manufacturing  facility is intended to service customers
in China.

         Semiconductor  manufacturers have introduced successive  generations of
more powerful microprocessors and memory and logic devices. Electronic equipment
manufacturers have designed these advanced  semiconductors into more compact and
often portable  products.  High performance  computing  devices in these smaller
portable  platforms  require  greater  reliability,  closer  tolerances,  higher
component and circuit density and increased overall complexity. As a result, the
interconnect   industry  has  developed  smaller,   lighter,   faster  and  more
cost-effective  interconnect  systems,  including  advanced  multilayer  printed
circuit boards.

         Advanced interconnect systems require higher technology printed circuit
materials to insure the performance of the electronic  system and to improve the
manufacturability  of  the  interconnect  platform.  In  the  years  immediately
preceding  the  severe  correction  and  downturn  that  occurred  in the global
electronics industry in the Company's 2002 fiscal year first quarter, the growth
of the market for more advanced  printed circuit  materials  outpaced the market
growth for standard printed circuit materials. Printed circuit board fabricators
and  electronic  equipment   manufacturers   require  advanced  printed  circuit
materials that have increasingly higher temperature tolerances and more advanced
and stable electrical  properties in order to support high-speed  computing in a
miniaturized and often portable environment.

         With the  very  high  density  circuit  demands  of  miniaturized  high
performance   interconnect   systems,  the  uniformity,   purity,   consistency,
performance  predictability,  dimensional stability and production tolerances of
printed circuit materials have become  successively more critical.  High density
printed circuit boards and interconnect systems often involve higher layer count
multilayer  circuit boards where the multiple planes of circuitry and dielectric
insulating substrates are very thin (dielectric  insulating substrate layers may
be  0.002  inch or  less)  and the  circuit  line and  space  geometries  in the
circuitry  plane are very narrow  (0.002 inch or less).  In  addition,  advanced
surface mount  interconnect  systems are typically  designed with very small pad
sizes and very narrow plated  through holes or vias which  electrically  connect
the multiple layers of circuitry planes. High density  interconnect systems must
utilize printed circuit materials whose dimensional  characteristics  and purity
are  consistently  manufactured  to very high tolerance  levels in order for the
printed  circuit  board  fabricator  to attain and  sustain  acceptable  product
yields.



                                                                               8

         Shorter  product  life cycles and  competitive  pressures  have induced
electronic equipment  manufacturers to bring new products to market and increase
production  volume  to  commercial  levels  more  quickly.   These  trends  have
highlighted the importance of front-end  engineering of electronic  products and
have increased the level of collaboration  among system  designers,  fabricators
and  printed  circuit  materials  suppliers.  As the  complexity  of  electronic
products  increases,  materials suppliers must provide greater technical support
to   interconnect    systems   fabricators   on   a   timely   basis   regarding
manufacturability and performance of new materials systems.

         Printed Circuit Materials - Products and Services

         The Company produces a broad line of advanced printed circuit materials
used to fabricate complex multilayer printed circuit boards and other electronic
interconnect systems,  including backplanes,  wireless packages,  high speed/low
loss multilayers and high density interconnects  ("HDIs"). The Company's diverse
advanced  printed circuit  materials  product line is designed to address a wide
array of end-use applications and performance requirements.

         The  Company's   electronic  materials  products  have  been  developed
internally  and  through  long-term  development  projects  with  its  principal
suppliers and, to a lesser extent, through licensing  arrangements.  The Company
focuses its research and  development  efforts on  developing  industry  leading
product  technology  to meet the most  demanding  product  requirements  and has
designed  its  product  line  with a focus  on the  higher  performance,  higher
technology end of the materials spectrum.

         The Company's products include high-speed,  low-loss, digital broadband
engineered formulations, high-temperature modified epoxies, bismalimide triazine
("BT")  epoxies,   non-MDA  polyimides,   enhanced  polyimides,   SI(R)  (Signal
Integrity)  products,  cyanate  esters  and   polytetrafluoroethylene   ("PTFE")
formulations for radio frequency ("RF")/microwave applications.

         The Company's high  performance  printed circuit  materials  consist of
high-speed   low-loss  materials  for  digital  and  RF/microwave   applications
requiring  lead-free   compatibility,   high  bandwidth  signal  integrity,   BT
materials,  polyimides  for  applications  that demand  extremely  high  thermal
performance,  cyanate esters,  and PTFE materials for RF/microwave  systems that
operate at frequencies up to 77 GHz.

         The Company has developed long-term relationships with select customers
through  broad-based  technical  support and service,  as well as  manufacturing
proximity and responsiveness at multiple levels of the customer's  organization.
The Company  focuses on developing a thorough  understanding  of its  customer's
business,  product lines,  processes and technological  challenges.  The Company
seeks  customers  which  are  industry  leaders  committed  to  maintaining  and
improving  their  industry  leadership  positions  and  which are  committed  to
long-term  relationships  with their suppliers.  The Company also seeks business
opportunities with the more advanced printed circuit  fabricators and electronic
equipment  manufacturers  which are interested in the full value of products and
services  provided by their  suppliers.  The Company  believes its proactive and
timely  support in assisting  its  customers  with the  integration  of advanced
materials   technology  into  new  product   designs  further   strengthens  its
relationships with its customers.



                                                                               9

         The  Company's  emphasis  on service and close  relationships  with its
customers is reflected in its short lead times.  The Company has  developed  its
manufacturing  processes  and  customer  service  organizations  to provide  its
customers with printed circuit materials  products on a just-in-time  basis. The
Company   believes   that  its  ability  to  meet  its   customers'   customized
manufacturing and  quick-turn-around  ("QTA")  requirements is one of its unique
strengths.

         The  Company  has  located  its  advanced  printed  circuit   materials
manufacturing  operations  in  strategic  locations  intended to serve  specific
regional markets. By situating its facilities in close geographical proximity to
its customers, the Company is able to rapidly adjust its manufacturing processes
to meet customers' new requirements and respond quickly to customers'  technical
needs.  The  Company has  technical  staffs  based at each of its  manufacturing
locations,  which  allows  the  rapid  dispatch  of  technical  personnel  to  a
customer's  facility to assist the customer in quickly solving design,  process,
production or manufacturing  problems.  During the 2002 fiscal year, the Company
established a business center in Wuxi near Shanghai in central China,  which has
been  replaced  by a new  manufacturing  facility  in the Zhuhai Free Trade Zone
approximately  50 miles  west of Hong  Kong in  southern  China to  support  the
growing  customer demand for advanced  multilayer  printed circuit  materials in
China.  The  construction of this facility was completed in the first quarter of
the Company's 2007 fiscal year, and the Company has installed  equipment for the
facility  and is in the process of  equipment  testing,  employee  training  and
internal and external qualifications for the facility.

         Printed Circuit Materials - Customers and End Markets

         The Company's  customers  for its advanced  printed  circuit  materials
include the leading  independent  printed circuit board fabricators,  electronic
manufacturing  service  ("EMS")  companies,  electronic  contract  manufacturers
("ECMs") and major electronic original equipment  manufacturers  ("OEMs") in the
computer,   networking,   telecommunications,   transportation,   aerospace  and
instrumentation  industries located  throughout North America,  Europe and Asia.
The Company seeks to align itself with the larger, more technologically-advanced
and better capitalized  independent  printed circuit board fabricators and major
electronic  equipment  manufacturers  which are  industry  leaders  committed to
maintaining  and improving their industry  leadership  positions and to building
long-term  relationships  with their  suppliers.  The Company's  selling  effort
typically involves several stages and relies on the talents of Company personnel
at different levels,  from management to sales personnel and quality  engineers.
In recent years, the Company has augmented its traditional  sales personnel with
an OEM marketing team and product technology specialists. The Company's strategy
emphasizes the use of multiple  facilities  established in market areas in close
proximity to its customers.

         During the  Company's  2007  fiscal  year,  approximately  16.7% of the
Company's  total  worldwide  sales were to  Sanmina-SCI  Corporation,  a leading
electronics  contract  manufacturer  and manufacturer of printed circuit boards,
and  approximately  10.7% of the  Company's  total  worldwide  sales were to TTM
Technologies, Inc., a leading manufacturer of printed circuit boards. During the
Company's 2006 fiscal year, approximately 19.4% of the Company's total worldwide
sales were to  Sanmina-SCI  Corporation,  approximately  11.7% of the  Company's
total worldwide sales were to TTM Technologies, Inc., and approximately 10.4% of
the  Company's  total  worldwide  sales were to Multilayer  Technology,  Inc., a
manufacturer of multilayer printed circuit boards. The



                                                                              10

sales to TTM  Technologies,  Inc. during the 2007 and 2006 fiscal years included
sales to Tyco  Printed  Circuit  Group L.P., a leading  manufacturer  of printed
circuit boards,  which was acquired by TTM  Technologies,  Inc. in the Company's
2007 fiscal year.  During the Company's 2007 and 2006 fiscal years,  sales to no
other  customer of the Company  equaled or exceeded 10% of the  Company's  total
worldwide sales.

         Although the printed circuit materials business is not dependent on any
single  customer,  the loss of a major customer or of a group of customers could
have a material adverse effect on the printed circuit materials business.

         The Company's printed circuit materials products are marketed primarily
by sales  personnel and, to a lesser  extent,  by  independent  distributors  in
industrial  centers in North America,  Europe and Asia.  Such personnel  include
both salaried  employees and  independent  sales  representatives  who work on a
commission basis.

         Printed Circuit Materials - Manufacturing

         The process for manufacturing  multilayer  printed circuit materials is
capital  intensive  and requires  sophisticated  equipment as well as clean-room
environments.  The key steps in the Company's manufacturing process include: the
impregnation of specially designed  fiberglass cloth with a resin system and the
partial curing of that resin system;  the assembling of laminates  consisting of
single or multiple plies of prepreg and copper foil in a clean-room environment;
the vacuum lamination of the copper-clad  assemblies under simultaneous exposure
to heat,  pressure and vacuum;  and the  finishing of the  laminates to customer
specifications.

         Prepreg  is  manufactured  in a treater.  A treater  is a  roll-to-roll
continuous machine which sequences  specially designed fiberglass cloth or other
reinforcement fabric into a resin tank and then sequences the resin-coated cloth
through a series of ovens which  partially cure the resin system into the cloth.
This partially  cured product or prepreg is then sheeted or paneled and packaged
by the Company for sale to  customers,  or used by the Company to construct  its
copper-clad laminates.

         The Company manufactures copper-clad laminates by first setting up in a
clean room an assembly of one or more plies of prepreg  stacked  together with a
sheet  of  specially  manufactured  copper  foil on the top  and  bottom  of the
assembly.  This  assembly,  together  with a large  quantity  of other  laminate
assemblies,  is then inserted into a large,  multiple opening vacuum  lamination
press. The laminate assemblies are then laminated under simultaneous exposure to
heat, pressure and vacuum. After the press cycle is complete,  the laminates are
removed  from  the  press  and   sheeted,   paneled  and  finished  to  customer
specifications.  The product is then  inspected and packaged for shipment to the
customer.

         The Company  manufactures  multilayer  printed circuit materials at six
fully integrated  facilities located in the United States,  Europe and Southeast
Asia. The Company opened its California  facility in 1965, its first Arizona and
France facilities in 1984, its Singapore  facility in 1986 and its second France
facility in 1992.  The Company  services the North  America  market  principally
through  its  United  States  manufacturing  facilities,   the  European  market
principally through its manufacturing facilities in France, and the Asian market
principally through its Singapore manufacturing facility. During its 2002 fiscal
year, the Company established a business center in central China, which has been
replaced by a new manufacturing facility in the Zhuhai



                                                                              11

Free Trade Zone  approximately  50 miles west of Hong Kong in southern  China to
supply the growing demand for advanced multilayer printed circuitry materials in
China.  The  construction of this facility was completed in the first quarter of
the Company's 2007 fiscal year,  and the Company has installed  equipment at the
facility  and is in the process of  equipment  testing,  employee  training  and
internal and external  qualifications for the facility. In addition, the Company
upgraded its printed circuit  materials  treating  operation in Singapore during
the 2007 fiscal year third quarter so that such operation is capable of treating
the  Company's  full line of advanced  printed  circuit  materials in Singapore,
except  polytetrafluoroethylene  ("PTFE") materials. The Company has located its
manufacturing  facilities in its important markets. By maintaining technical and
engineering staffs at each of its manufacturing facilities,  the Company is able
to deliver fully-integrated products and services on a timely basis.

         Printed Circuit Materials - Materials and Sources of Supply

         The  principal  materials  used  in the  manufacture  of the  Company's
printed  circuit  materials  products are  specially  manufactured  copper foil,
fiberglass cloth and synthetic  reinforcements,  and specially formulated resins
and  chemicals.  The  Company  attempts to develop and  maintain  close  working
relationships with suppliers of those materials who have dedicated themselves to
complying   with  the   Company's   stringent   specifications   and   technical
requirements. While the Company's philosophy is to work with a limited number of
suppliers,  the Company has identified  alternate  sources of supply for each of
these materials.  However,  there are a limited number of qualified suppliers of
these materials, substitutes for these materials are not readily available, and,
in the recent past,  the industry  has  experienced  shortages in the market for
certain of these  materials.  While the Company has not experienced  significant
problems in the delivery of these materials and considers its relationships with
its  suppliers  to be strong,  a  disruption  of the supply of  materials  could
materially  adversely  affect the business,  financial  condition and results of
operations  of the  Company.  Significant  increases  in the  cost of  materials
purchased  by the  Company  could  also have a  material  adverse  effect on the
Company's business, financial condition and results of operations if the Company
were unable to pass such increases  through to its  customers.  During the first
and second  quarters of the 2007 fiscal year, the Company  incurred  significant
increases  in  the  cost  of  copper  foil,  one of the  Company's  primary  raw
materials,  and the  Company  was  able to pass a  substantial  portion  of such
increases  through to its customers in the second,  third and fourth quarters of
the 2007 fiscal year.

Printed Circuit Materials - Competition

         The multilayer  printed circuit materials  industry is characterized by
intense  competition and ongoing  consolidation.  The Company's  competitors are
primarily  divisions or  subsidiaries of very large,  diversified  multinational
manufacturers  which  are  substantially   larger  and  have  greater  financial
resources than the Company and, to a lesser degree,  smaller regional producers.
Because  the  Company  focuses on the higher  technology  segment of the printed
circuit materials market, technological innovation, quality and service, as well
as price, are significant competitive factors.

         The  Company  believes  that there are several  significant  multilayer
printed  circuit  materials  manufacturers  in  the  world  and  many  of  these
competitors  have  significant  presences in the three major  global  markets of
North America, Europe and Asia. The Company believes that the multilayer



                                                                              12

printed circuit materials industry has become more global and that the remaining
smaller regional  manufacturers are finding it increasingly  difficult to remain
competitive.  The  Company  believes  that it is  currently  one of the  world's
largest advanced multilayer printed circuit materials manufacturers. The Company
further believes it is one of only a few significant  independent  manufacturers
of multilayer printed circuit materials in the world today.

         The markets in which the Company's printed circuit materials operations
compete are  characterized by rapid  technological  advances,  and the Company's
position in these markets  depends  largely on its continued  ability to develop
technologically  advanced and highly specialized products.  Although the Company
believes it is an industry technology leader and directs a significant amount of
its  time  and  resources  toward  maintaining  its  technological   competitive
advantage,  there is no  assurance  that  the  Company  will be  technologically
competitive  in the  future,  or that the Company  will  continue to develop new
products that are technologically competitive.

Advanced Composite Materials

         Advanced Composite Materials Operations

         The Company also develops and produces  engineered  composite materials
for the aerospace, rocket motor, radio frequency ("RF") and specialty industrial
markets.

         Advanced Composite Materials - Industry Background

         The advanced  composite  materials  manufactured by the Company and its
competitors  are  used  primarily  to  fabricate   light-weight,   high-strength
structures with specifically  designed  performance  characteristics.  Composite
materials are typically highly specified  combinations of resin formulations and
reinforcements.  Reinforcements  can be woven fabrics,  non-woven  goods such as
mats or felts, or in some cases unidirectional fibers.  Reinforcement  materials
are constructed of: E-glass  (fiberglass),  carbon fiber, S2 glass, aramids such
as Kevlar(R)  ("Kevlar"  is a registered  trademark of E.I. du Pont de Nemours &
Co.) and  Twaron(R)  ("Twaron" is a registered  trademark of Teijin  Twaron B.V.
LLC), quartz,  polyester, and other synthetic materials.  Resin formulations are
typically highly proprietary, and include various chemical mixtures. The Company
produces  resin  formulations  using  various  epoxies,  polyesters,  phenolics,
bismalimides,  cyanate  esters,  polyimides  and  other  complex  matrices.  The
reinforcement combined with the resin is referred to as a "prepreg", which is an
acronym  for  pre-impregnated  material.  Advanced  composite  materials  can be
broadly  categorized  as  either a  thermoset  or a  thermoplastic.  While  both
material  types  require  the  addition  of heat and  pressure  to  achieve  the
molecular  cross-linking of the matrices,  thermoplastics  can be reformed using
additional heat and pressure.  Once fully cured,  thermoset materials can not be
further  reshaped.  The Company believes that the demand for thermoset  advanced
materials  is  greater  than  that  for  thermoplastics  due  to the  fact  that
fabrication  processes for thermoplastics  require much higher  temperatures and
pressures,  and  are,  therefore,  typically  more  capital  intensive  than the
fabrication processes for thermoset materials.

         The advanced  composite  materials industry suppliers have historically
been  large  chemical  corporations.  During  the past ten  years,  considerable
consolidation has occurred in the industry,  resulting in three relatively large
composite materials suppliers and a number of smaller suppliers.



                                                                              13

         Composite  part  fabricators  typically  design and  specify a material
specifically  to meet  the  needs  of the  part's  end use and the  fabricators'
processing  methods.  Fabricators  sometimes work with a supplier to develop the
specific resin system and  reinforcement  combination to match the  application.
Fabricators'  processing  may  include  hand lay-up or more  advanced  automated
lay-up ("ATL")  techniques.  Automated lay-up processes  include  automated tape
lay-up,  fiber  placement  and filament  winding.  These  fabrication  processes
significantly  alter the material form  purchased.  After the lay-up  process is
completed,  the  material is cured by the  addition of heat and  pressure.  Cure
processes  typically  include vacuum bag oven curing,  high pressure  autoclave,
press forming and in some cases in-situ  curing.  After the part has been cured,
final finishing and trimming,  and assembly of the structure is performed by the
fabricator.

         Advanced Composite Materials - Products

         The products manufactured by the Company are primarily thermoset curing
prepregs.  By analyzing the needs of the markets in which it  participates,  and
working  with  its  customers,  the  Company  has  developed  proprietary  resin
formulations to suit the needs of its markets. The complex process of developing
resin  formulations  and  selecting  the proper  reinforcement  is  accomplished
through  a  collaborative  effort  of the  Company's  research  and  development
resources  working with the customers'  technical  staff. The Company focuses on
developing a thorough understanding of its customers' businesses, product lines,
processes  and  technical  challenges.  The  Company  believes  that it develops
innovative  solutions  which  utilize  technologically  advanced  materials  and
concepts for its customers.

         The Company's  advanced  composite  materials products include prepregs
manufactured from proprietary  formulations  using modified epoxies,  phenolics,
polyesters,  cyanate  esters,  bismalimides,  polyimides  combined  with  woven,
non-woven,  and unidirectional  reinforcements.  Reinforcement materials used to
produce the Company's products include polyacrylonitrile ("PAN") and pitch based
carbons,  aramids,  E-glass, S2 glass, polyester,  quartz and rayon. The Company
also sells certain  specialty  fabrics,  such as Raycarb C2, a carbonized  rayon
fabric produced by Snecma  Propulsion Solide and used mainly in the rocket motor
industry.

         Advanced Composite Materials - Customers and End Markets

         The Company's advanced composite materials  customers,  the majority of
which are located in the United States,  include manufacturers in the aerospace,
rocket  motor,  electronics,   radio  frequency  ("RF"),  marine  and  specialty
industrial  markets.  The Company's  materials  are marketed by sales  personnel
including both salaried employees and independent sales representatives who work
on a commission basis.

         While no single advanced composite materials customer accounted for 10%
or more of the Company's total sales during either of the last two fiscal years,
the loss of a major  customer or of a group of some of the largest  customers of
the advanced  composite  materials business could have a material adverse effect
upon the Company's advanced composite materials business.

         The Company's aerospace customers are fabricators of aircraft composite
hardware. The Company's advanced composite materials are used to produce primary
and  secondary  structures,  aircraft  interiors,  and  various  other  aircraft
components.  The majority of the Company's  customers for aerospace materials do
not produce hardware for commercial aircraft,  but for the general and corporate
aviation,  kit  aircraft and military  segments.  The majority of the  Company's
customers for aerospace products are in the United States and Europe.



                                                                              14

         Customers  for the  Company's  rocket motor  materials  include  United
States defense prime contractors and  subcontractors.  These customers fabricate
rocket  motors  for heavy  lift  space  launchers,  strategic  defense  weapons,
tactical motors and various other applications. The Company's materials are used
to produce heat shields,  exhaust gas  management  devices,  and  insulative and
ablative nozzle components.  Rocket motors are primarily used for commercial and
military space launch, and for tactical and strategic weapons.  The Company also
has customers for these materials outside of the United States.

         The Company also sells  composite  materials  for use in RF  electrical
applications.  Customers buying these materials typically fabricate antennas and
radomes  engineered  to  preserve  electrical  signal  integrity.  A radome is a
protective cover over an electrical  antenna or signal generator.  The radome is
designed to minimize  signal loss and  distortion.  Customers for these products
are primarily in the United States and Europe.

Advanced Composite Materials - Manufacturing

         The Company's  manufacturing  facility for advanced composite materials
is currently located in Waterbury,  Connecticut.  The Company also produces some
products  through the use of toll coating  services at other  locations in North
America.

         In the 2006 fiscal  year,  the Company  installed an  additional  large
treater at its advanced composite materials facility in Waterbury,  Connecticut,
which has significantly  increased  Nelcote's  treating  capacity.  In the third
quarter of the 2007 fiscal  year,  the Company  acquired a facility in Singapore
which  the  Company  is  modifying  and  expanding  for  use  as a new  advanced
composites  manufacturing plant. In addition, the Company is in the final stages
of  planning  the  construction  of a new plant in the United  States to produce
advanced composite materials principally for the aerospace industry.

         The process for manufacturing  composite materials is capital intensive
and requires  sophisticated  equipment,  significant technical know-how and very
tight process control.  The key steps used in the manufacturing  process include
chemical reactors, resin mixing,  reinforcement impregnation,  and in some cases
resin film casting, and solvent drying processes.

         Prepreg is manufactured by the Company using either solvent  (solution)
coating  methods  on a  treater  or by hot melt  impregnation.  A  treater  is a
roll-to-roll  continuous process machine which sequences  reinforcement  through
tension  controllers  and combines  solvated resin with the  reinforcement.  The
reinforcement is dipped in resin, passed through a drying oven which removes the
solvent and advances (or  partially  cures) the resin.  The prepreg  material is
interleafed  with a carrier and cut to the roll lengths desired by the customer.
The Company also manufactures  prepreg using hot melt impregnation methods which
use no solvent.  Hot melt  prepreg  manufacturing  is achieved by mixing a resin
formulation  in a heated resin vessel,  casting a thin film on a carrier  paper,
and laminating the reinforcement with the resin film. The Company also completes
additional processing services, such as slitting,  sheeting, biasing, sewing and
cutting,  if needed by the customer.  Many of the products  manufactured  by the
Company also undergo extensive testing of the chemical,  physical and mechanical
properties  of the product.  These  testing  requirements  are  completed in the
laboratories and facilities located at the Company's manufacturing facility. The
Company's  laboratories  have been  approved by several  aerospace  contractors.
After all the  processing  has been  completed,  the  product is  inspected  and
packaged for shipment to the  customer.  The Company  typically  supplies  final
product to the customer in roll or sheet form.



                                                                              15

         Advanced Composite Materials - Materials and Sources of Supply

         The Company designs and manufactures its advanced  composite  materials
to its own specifications  and to the  specifications of its customers.  Product
development  efforts are focused on developing  prepreg  materials that meet the
specifications of the customers.  The materials used in the manufacture of these
engineered materials include graphite and carbon fibers and fabrics,  Kevlar(R),
quartz,  fiberglass,  polyester,  specialty chemicals,  resins, films, plastics,
adhesives and certain other  synthetic  materials.  The Company  purchases these
materials from several  suppliers.  Substitutes  for many of these materials are
not readily available,  and demand has increased for certain materials,  such as
carbon  fiber  during  the 2006 and 2005  fiscal  years.  The  supply of certain
materials was limited during the 2006 and 2005 fiscal years, but such limitation
did not have a  material  adverse  effect on the  Company's  advanced  composite
materials  business.  The Company is working  globally to  determine  acceptable
alternatives for several raw materials with limited availability.

         Advanced Composite Materials - Competition

         The Company has many  competitors in the advanced  composite  materials
business,  ranging  in size  from  large,  international  corporations  to small
regional producers.  Several of the Company's largest competitors are vertically
integrated.  Some of the Company's  competitors  may also serve as a supplier to
the Company.  The Company competes for business on the basis of  responsiveness,
product performance,  innovative new product development,  product qualification
listing and price.

Backlog

         The  Company  records  an item as backlog  when it  receives a purchase
order  specifying  the  number of units to be  purchased,  the  purchase  price,
specifications and other customary terms and conditions.  At April 29, 2007, the
unfilled  portion of all purchase orders received by the Company and believed by
it to be firm was approximately $9,458,000,  compared to $7,401,000 at April 30,
2006.

         Various  factors  contribute  to the  size  of the  Company's  backlog.
Accordingly,  the foregoing  information  may not be indicative of the Company's
results  of  operations  for any  period  subsequent  to the  fiscal  year ended
February 25, 2007.

Patents and Trademarks

         The Company holds several  patents and trademarks or licenses  thereto.
In the Company's opinion,  some of these patents and trademarks are important to
its products. Generally, however, the Company does not believe that an inability
to obtain  new,  or to defend  existing,  patents  and  trademarks  would have a
material adverse effect on the Company.

Employees

         At February 25, 2007, the Company had approximately  950 employees.  Of
these  employees,  840 were engaged in the Company's  printed circuit  materials
operations,  70 in its advanced composite materials  operations and 40 consisted
of executive personnel and general  administrative  staff. None of the Company's
employees  are  subject  to a  collective  bargaining  agreement.  However,  the
non-executive  employees of the Company's Neltec Europe SAS subsidiary in France
are represented by the trade union which represents all non-executive  employees
in the industrial  sector to which Neltec Europe belongs.  Management  considers
its employee relations to be good.



                                                                              16

Environmental Matters

         The Company is subject to  stringent  environmental  regulation  of its
use, storage,  treatment and disposal of hazardous  materials and the release of
emissions  into the  environment.  The Company  believes that it currently is in
substantial   compliance   with  the   applicable   federal,   state  and  local
environmental  laws and  regulations to which it is subject and that  continuing
compliance   therewith   will  not  have  a  material   effect  on  its  capital
expenditures,  earnings or competitive position.  The Company does not currently
anticipate  making  material  capital  expenditures  for  environmental  control
facilities for its existing manufacturing operations during the remainder of its
current fiscal year or its succeeding fiscal year. However,  developments,  such
as the  enactment  or adoption  of even more  stringent  environmental  laws and
regulations,  could  conceivably  result in substantial  additional costs to the
Company.

         The  Company  and  certain of its  subsidiaries  have been named by the
Environmental  Protection  Agency (the "EPA") or a comparable state agency under
the Comprehensive  Environmental  Response,  Compensation and Liability Act (the
"Superfund  Act") or similar  state law as  potentially  responsible  parties in
connection  with alleged  releases of  hazardous  substances  at nine sites.  In
addition,  a subsidiary of the Company has received  cost recovery  claims under
the Superfund Act from other  private  parties  involving one other site and has
received  requests  from the EPA under the Superfund  Act for  information  with
respect to its  involvement  at three other sites.  Under the  Superfund Act and
similar  state  laws,  all  parties  who may  have  contributed  any  waste to a
hazardous  waste  disposal site or  contaminated  area  identified by the EPA or
comparable  state  agency may be jointly  and  severally  liable for the cost of
cleanup. Generally, these sites are locations at which numerous persons disposed
of hazardous  waste.  In the case of the Company's  subsidiaries,  generally the
waste was removed from their manufacturing  facilities and disposed at the waste
sites by various  companies which  contracted  with the  subsidiaries to provide
waste disposal  services.  Neither the Company nor any of its subsidiaries  have
been accused of or charged  with any  wrongdoing  or illegal acts in  connection
with any such  sites.  The  Company  believes  it  maintains  an  effective  and
comprehensive environmental compliance program. Management believes the ultimate
disposition  of known  environmental  matters  will not have a material  adverse
effect upon the Company.

         See  "Management's  Discussion and Analysis of Financial  Condition and
Results of Operations - Environmental  Matters" included in Item 7 of Part II of
this  Report  and Note 16 of the  Notes  to  Consolidated  Financial  Statements
included in Item 8 of Part II of this Report.

ITEM 1A.  RISK FACTORS.

         The business of the Company faces numerous  risks,  including those set
forth below or those  described  elsewhere in this Form 10-K Annual Report or in
the Company's  other filings with the  Securities and Exchange  Commission.  The
risks  described  below are not the only risks that the Company  faces,  nor are
they necessarily listed in order of significance.  Other risks and uncertainties
may also affect the Company's  business.  Any of these risks may have a material
adverse  effect on the  Company's  business,  financial  condition,  results  of
operations and cash flow.

The  industries  in which the  Company  operates  are  undergoing  technological
changes,  and the  Company's  business  could suffer if the Company is unable to
adjust to these changes.



                                                                              17

The Company's  operating  results could be negatively  affected by the Company's
inability  to  maintain  and  increase  its   technological   and  manufacturing
capability and expertise.  Rapid  technological  advances in semiconductors  and
electronic  equipment  have  placed  rigorous  demands  on the  printed  circuit
materials  manufactured  by the  Company  and  used  in  printed  circuit  board
production.

The industries in which the Company operates are very competitive.

Certain of the Company's principal competitors are substantially larger and have
greater  financial  resources  than the  Company,  and the  Company's  operating
results will be affected by its ability to maintain its competitive positions in
these industries. The printed circuit materials and advanced composite materials
industries are intensely  competitive and the Company competes  worldwide in the
markets for such materials.

The Company is vulnerable to an increase in the cost of gas or electricity.

Changes  in the cost or  availability  of gas or  electricity  could  materially
increase the Company's cost of operations.  The Company's  production  processes
require  the use of  substantial  amounts of gas and  electricity,  the cost and
available supply of which are beyond the control of the Company.

The Company is vulnerable to an increase in the price of certain raw materials.

There are a limited  number of qualified  suppliers of the  principal  materials
used by the Company in its manufacture of printed circuit materials and advanced
composite  materials  products.  Substitutes for these materials are not readily
available,  and in the past there have been  shortages in the market for certain
of these materials. These shortages could materially increase the Company's cost
of operations.

The Company's customer base is highly concentrated,  and the loss of one or more
customers could affect the Company's business.

A loss of one or more key customers  could affect the  Company's  profitability.
The Company's  customer  base is  concentrated,  in part,  because the Company's
business  strategy  has been to develop  long-term  relationships  with a select
group of customers.  During the Company's  fiscal year ended  February 25, 2007,
the  Company's ten largest  customers  accounted  for  approximately  73% of net
sales.  The Company expects that sales to a relatively small number of customers
will  continue  to account  for a  significant  portion of its net sales for the
foreseeable future. See "Business--Printed Circuit  Materials--Customers and End
Markets" and "Business--Advanced Composite Materials--Customers and End Markets"
in Item 1 of Part I of this Report.

The  Company's  business  is  dependent  on the  electronics  industry  which is
cyclical in nature.

The electronics  industry is cyclical and has experienced  recurring  downturns.
The downturns,  such as occurred in the  electronics  industry  during the first
quarter  of the  Company's  fiscal  year  ended  March 2,  1997 and in the first
quarter of the Company's fiscal year ended March 3, 2002, and which continues to
a lesser  extent at the present time,  can be unexpected  and have often reduced
demand for, and prices of,  printed  circuit  materials  and advanced  composite
materials.  This potential  reduction in demand and prices could have a negative
impact on the Company's business.



                                                                              18

The Company relies on short-term orders from its customers.

A variety of conditions,  both specific to the individual customer and generally
affecting  the  customer's  industry,  can cause a  customer  to reduce or delay
orders previously  anticipated by the Company, which could negatively impact the
Company's  business.  The Company  typically does not obtain long-term  purchase
orders or commitments.  Instead, it relies primarily on continual  communication
with its customers to anticipate the future volume of purchase orders.

The Company faces extensive capital expenditure costs.

The Company's  business is capital intensive and, in addition,  the introduction
of  new  technologies  could   substantially   increase  the  Company's  capital
expenditures.  In order to remain  competitive the Company must continue to make
significant investments in capital equipment and expansion of operations,  which
could affect the Company's results of operations.

The Company's  international  operations are subject to different and additional
risks than the Company's domestic operations.

The Company's  international  operations are subject to various risks, including
unexpected changes in regulatory requirements,  foreign currency exchange rates,
tariffs and other  barriers,  political  and economic  instability,  potentially
adverse tax  consequences,  and any impact on economic and financial  conditions
around the world resulting from geopolitical conflicts or acts of terrorism, all
of which could negatively impact the Company's business.  A portion of the sales
and  costs  of  the  Company's  international   operations  are  denominated  in
currencies  other than the U.S.  dollar and may be affected by  fluctuations  in
currency exchange rates.

The Company is subject to a variety of environmental regulations.

The  Company's  production  processes  require the use,  storage,  treatment and
disposal of certain  materials which are considered  hazardous under  applicable
environmental  laws,  and the  Company is  subject  to a variety  of  regulatory
requirements  relating  to the  handling  of such  materials  and the release of
emissions and effluents into the  environment,  non-compliance  with which could
have a negative impact on the Company. Other possible developments,  such as the
enactment  or  adoption  of  additional  environmental  laws,  could  result  in
substantial costs to the Company.

ITEM 1B.  UNRESOLVED STAFF COMMENTS

         None.



                                                                              19

ITEM 2.   PROPERTIES.

         Set forth below are the locations of the significant  properties  owned
and leased by the Company, the businesses which use the properties, and the size
of each such property. All of such properties, except for the Melville, New York
property, are used principally as manufacturing and warehouse facilities.

                                                                 Size
                       Owned or                                (Square
     Location           Leased                Use              Footage)
------------------   ------------   ----------------------   ------------
Melville, NY            Leased      Administrative Offices          8,000
Newburgh, NY            Leased      Electronic Materials          171,000
Fullerton, CA           Leased      Electronic Materials           95,000
Anaheim, CA             Leased      Electronic Materials           26,000
Tempe, AZ               Leased      Electronic Materials           87,000
Mirebeau, France        Owned       Electronic Materials           81,000
Lannemezan, France      Owned       Electronic Materials           29,000
Singapore               Leased      Electronic Materials          128,000
Zhuhai, China           Leased      Electronic Materials           40,000
Waterbury, CT           Leased      Advanced Composites           100,000
Singapore               Leased      Advanced Composites            24,000

         The electronic materials facility in Zhuhai, China has been constructed
and  equipped but is not yet  operating.  The  advanced  composites  facility in
Singapore  has been  recently  acquired by the Company  and is  currently  being
renovated  and  expanded  for  use  by the  Company  as an  advanced  composites
manufacturing facility.

         The  Company  believes  its  facilities  and  equipment  to be in  good
condition and reasonably  suited and adequate for its current needs.  During the
2007 and 2006 fiscal years,  certain of the Company's  printed circuit materials
manufacturing  facilities  were  utilized  at less  than 50% of  their  designed
capacity.

ITEM 3.   LEGAL PROCEEDINGS.

         None.

ITEM 4.   SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS.

         None

EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE REGISTRANT.

       Name                                 Title                         Age
-------------------       ------------------------------------------    --------
Brian E. Shore            Chief Executive Officer, President and a
                          Director                                         55

James L. Zerby            Vice President and Chief Financial Officer       64

Stephen E. Gilhuley       Executive Vice President, Secretary and
                          General Counsel                                  62

James W. Kelly            Vice President, Taxes and Planning               50

Anthony W. DiGaudio       Vice President of Marketing and Sales            37

Louis J. Stans            Vice President of Engineering and
                          Quality and Research and Development             60



                                                                              20

         Mr.  Shore has served as a Director  of the  Company  since 1983 and as
Chairman  of the Board of  Directors  since  July  2004.  He was  elected a Vice
President of the Company in January 1993,  Executive Vice President in May 1994,
President in March 1996, and Chief Executive Officer in November 1996. Mr. Shore
also served as General Counsel of the Company from April 1988 until April 1994.

         Mr. Zerby was appointed Vice President and Controller of the Company on
July 24, 2006, and he was elected Vice President and Chief Financial  Officer on
October 24, 2006.  Prior to joining Park, Mr. Zerby was Chief Financial  Officer
of Photocircuits  Corporation, a manufacturer of printed circuit boards, in Glen
Cove, New York from 1991 to March 2006.

         Mr.  Gilhuley has been General  Counsel of the Company since April 1994
and Secretary  since July 1996. He was elected a Senior Vice  President in March
2001 and Executive Vice President on October 24, 2006.

         Mr.  Kelly was elected  Vice  President,  Taxes and Planning of Park in
March 2001. He had been Director of Taxes of the Company since May 1997.

         Mr. DiGaudio joined the Company as a Product  Director in May 2002, was
promoted  to Vice  President  of  Quality in May 2004 and was  promoted  to Vice
President of Sales  effective  June 13, 2005. He was appointed Vice President of
Marketing in June 2006 in addition to the  position of Vice  President of Sales.
For several years prior to joining Park, Mr. DiGaudio was Technical  Manager for
Metro Circuits, Division of PJC Technologies, Inc. in Rochester, New York.

         Mr. Stans was appointed Vice President of Engineering of the Company in
December  2004,  and he was also  appointed to the position of Vice President of
Quality in October  2005.  He was  appointed  Vice  President  of  Research  and
Development  in January 2007 in addition to the  positions of Vice  President of
Engineering and Vice President of Quality.  Prior to joining Park, Mr. Stans had
been Director of Technology and  Engineering  at  Photocircuits  Corporation,  a
major printed circuit board manufacturer, since 1990.

         There are no family  relationships  between the  directors or executive
officers of the Company.

         Each  executive  officer of the Company  serves at the  pleasure of the
Board of Directors of the Company.



                                                                              21

                                     PART II

ITEM 5.     MARKET  FOR THE  REGISTRANT'S  COMMON  EQUITY,  RELATED  STOCKHOLDER
            MATTERS AND ISSUER PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES.

         The  Company's  Common Stock is listed and trades on the New York Stock
Exchange  (trading  symbol  PKE).  (The Common  Stock also trades on the Midwest
Stock  Exchange.)  The  following  table sets forth,  for each of the  quarterly
periods  indicated,  the high  and low  sales  prices  for the  Common  Stock as
reported on the New York Stock Exchange Composite Tape and dividends declared on
the Common Stock.

                                         Stock Price
         For the Fiscal Year       -----------------------    Dividends
         Ended February 25, 2007      High          Low       Declared
         -----------------------   ----------   ----------   ----------
         First Quarter             $    36.45   $    28.05   $      .08
         Second Quarter                 34.29        23.05   $     1.08(a)
         Third Quarter                  33.70        25.40   $      .08
         Fourth Quarter                 33.50        24.72   $      .08

                                         Stock Price
         For the Fiscal Year       -----------------------    Dividends
         Ended February 26, 2006      High          Low       Declared
         -----------------------   ----------   ----------   ----------
         First Quarter             $    23.20   $    19.07   $      .08
         Second Quarter                 27.52        22.81   $      .08
         Third Quarter                  26.98        23.75   $     1.08(b)
         Fourth Quarter                 29.75        22.63   $      .08

    (a)  During the 2007 fiscal year second  quarter,  the Company  declared its
         regular quarterly cash dividend of $0.08 per share in June 2006, and in
         July  2006 the  Company  announced  that its  Board  of  Directors  had
         declared a one-time,  special cash dividend of $1.00 per share, payable
         August 22, 2006 to stockholders of record on August 1, 2006.

    (b)  During the 2006 fiscal year third  quarter,  the Company  declared  its
         regular  quarterly cash dividend of $0.08 per share in September  2005,
         and in October 2005 the Company  announced  that its Board of Directors
         had  declared a  one-time,  special  cash  dividend of $1.00 per share,
         payable  December  15, 2005 to  stockholders  of record on November 15,
         2005.

         As of May 4, 2007,  there were  approximately  930 holders of record of
Common Stock.

         The  Company  expects,  for the  immediate  future,  to continue to pay
regular cash dividends.



                                                                              22

The following table provides information with respect to shares of the Company's
Common Stock acquired by the Company during each month included in the Company's
2007 fiscal year fourth quarter ended February 25, 2007.



                                                                            Maximum Number (or
                                                        Total Number of     Approximate Dollar
                                                          Shares (or        Value) of Shares
                             Total                      Units) Purchased     or Units) that
                           Number of       Average        As Part of           May Yet Be
                           Shares (or     Price Paid       Publicly          Purchased Under
                             Units)       Per Share     Announced Plans        The Plans or
        Period             Purchased      (or Unit)       or Programs            Programs
-----------------------    ----------    -----------    ----------------    ------------------
                                                                         
November 27 -
December 31                     0             -                 0

January 1-28                    0             -                 0

January 29 -
February 25                     0             -                 0

Total                           0             -                 0                    2,000,000(a)


         (a)      Aggregate  number of shares  available  to be purchased by the
                  Company pursuant to a share purchase  authorization  announced
                  on October  20,  2004.  Pursuant  to such  authorization,  the
                  Company is authorized to purchase its shares from time to time
                  on the open market or in privately negotiated transactions.

ITEM 6.   SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA.

         The  following  selected  consolidated  financial  data of Park and its
subsidiaries  is qualified by  reference  to, and should be read in  conjunction
with, the  Consolidated  Financial  Statements,  related Notes, and Management's
Discussion  and  Analysis  of  Financial  Condition  and  Results of  Operations
contained elsewhere herein.  Insofar as such consolidated  financial information
relates to the five fiscal years ended February 25, 2007 and is as of the end of
such periods, it is derived from the Consolidated  Financial  Statements for the
three fiscal years ended February 25, 2007 and as of such dates audited by Grant
Thornton  LLP,  independent   auditor,  and  from  the  Consolidated   Financial
Statements for the two fiscal years ended February 29, 2004 and as of such dates
audited by Ernst & Young LLP, independent  auditor.  The Consolidated  Financial
Statements as of February 25, 2007 and February 26, 2006 and for the three years
ended February 25, 2007, together with the independent  auditor's report for the
three years ended February 25, 2007, appear in Item 8 of Part II of this Report.



                                                                              23



                                                                 Fiscal Year Ended
                                      ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                      (In thousands, except per share amounts)
                                      February 25,   February 26,   February 27,   February 29,     March 2,
                                          2007           2006           2005           2004           2003
                                      ------------   ------------   ------------   ------------   ------------
                                                                                   
STATEMENTS OF EARNINGS INFORMATION:

Net sales                             $    257,377   $    222,251   $    211,187   $    194,236   $    195,578
Cost of sales                              193,270        167,650        167,937        161,536        168,921
                                      ------------   ------------   ------------   ------------   ------------
Gross profit                                64,107         54,601         43,250         32,700         26,657
Selling, general and
 administrative expenses                    26,682         25,129         26,960         27,962         27,157
Insurance arrangement
 termination charge                          1,316              -              -              -              -
Asset impairment charge                          -          2,280              -              -         49,035
Restructuring and severance
 charges (Note 11)                               -            889            625          8,469          4,794
Gain on insurance settlement
 (Note 12)                                       -              -         (4,745)             -              -
Gain on sale of DPI                              -              -              -              -         (3,170)
Gain on sale of UK real estate                   -              -              -           (429)             -
Gain on Delco lawsuit                            -              -              -        (33,088)             -
                                      ------------   ------------   ------------   ------------   ------------
Earnings (loss) from operations             36,109         26,303         20,410         29,786        (51,159)
Interest and other income, net               8,033          6,056          3,386          2,958          3,260
                                      ------------   ------------   ------------   ------------   ------------
Earnings (loss) from continuing
 operations before income taxes             44,142         32,359         23,796         32,744        (47,899)
Income tax provision (benefit)
 from continuing operations                  4,351          5,484          2,191          2,835         (4,035)
                                      ------------   ------------   ------------   ------------   ------------
Earnings (loss) from continuing
 operations                                 39,791         26,875         21,605         29,909        (43,864)
Loss from discontinued
 operations, net of taxes
 (Note 10)                                       -              -              -        (33,761)        (6,895)
                                      ------------   ------------   ------------   ------------   ------------
Net earnings (loss)                   $     39,791   $     26,875   $     21,605   $     (3,852)  $    (50,759)
                                      ============   ============   ============   ============   ============
Basic earnings (loss) per
 share:
Earnings (loss) from continuing
 operations                           $       1.97   $       1.34   $       1.09   $       1.51   $      (2.23)
Loss from discontinued
 operations, net of tax                          -              -              -          (1.71)         (0.35)
                                      ------------   ------------   ------------   ------------   ------------
Basic earnings (loss) per share       $       1.97   $       1.34   $       1.09   $      (0.20)  $      (2.58)
                                      ============   ============   ============   ============   ============
Diluted earnings (loss) per
 share:
Earnings (loss) from continuing
 operations                           $       1.96   $       1.33   $       1.08   $       1.50   $      (2.23)
Loss from discontinued
 operations, net of tax                          -              -              -          (1.69)         (0.35)
                                      ------------   ------------   ------------   ------------   ------------
Diluted earnings (loss) per
 share                                $       1.96   $       1.33   $       1.08   $      (0.19)  $      (2.58)
                                      ============   ============   ============   ============   ============
Cash dividends per common share       $       1.32   $       1.32   $       1.26   $       0.24   $       0.24
                                      ============   ============   ============   ============   ============
Weighted average number of
 common shares outstanding:
   Basic                                    20,175         20,047         19,879         19,754         19,674
   Diluted                                  20,317         20,210         20,075         19,991         19,674

BALANCE SHEET INFORMATION:
Working capital                       $    233,767   $    214,934   $    206,714   $    197,453   $    170,274
Total assets                               321,922        311,312        307,311        311,070        301,542
Long-term debt                                   -              -              -              -              -
Stockholders' equity                       264,167        245,423        242,857        243,896        245,701

See  Notes to  Consolidated  Financial  Statements  in Item 8 of Part II of this Report.




                                                                              24

ITEM 7.     MANAGEMENT'S  DISCUSSION  AND  ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL  CONDITION  AND
            RESULTS OF OPERATIONS.

General:

         Park  is  a  global   advanced   materials   company  which   develops,
manufactures  and  markets  high  technology  digital and  RF/microwave  printed
circuit  materials  and  advanced  composite   materials   principally  for  the
telecommunications and internet infrastructure, high-end computing and aerospace
markets. The Company's manufacturing facilities are located in Singapore, China,
France,  Connecticut,  New York, Arizona and California.  The Company's products
are marketed and sold under the Nelco(R) and Nelcote(TM) names.

         The  global  electronics   manufacturing  industry,  which  had  become
extremely and unsustainably overheated in the 1990s and into calendar year 2000,
collapsed in calendar year 2001, and has not recovered since that collapse.  The
Company believes that the industry has become a mature industry, and the Company
does not expect significant non-cyclical,  sustainable growth from that industry
in the future.

         The Company's net sales increased in the fiscal year ended February 25,
2007  compared  with the fiscal  year  ended  February  26,  2006 as a result of
increases in sales of the Company's  printed circuit  materials in North America
and Asia and increases in sales of the Company's advanced  composite  materials,
and the Company achieved higher operating profits and higher net earnings in the
2007 fiscal year compared with the 2006 fiscal year.

         The Company's net earnings for the fiscal year ended  February 25, 2007
were  increased by a tax benefit of $0.7 million  recorded by the Company in the
2007 fiscal  year fourth  quarter  relating  to the  recognition  of tax credits
resulting  from operating  losses  sustained in prior years in France and by tax
benefits  recognized  by the Company in the 2007  fiscal year second  quarter of
$3.5  million  relating  to the  elimination  of  certain  valuation  allowances
previously  established  relating to deferred  tax assets in the United  States,
$1.4 million  relating to the  elimination of reserves no longer required as the
result of the completion of a tax audit and $0.5 relating to the  termination of
a life insurance  arrangement with Jerry Shore, the Company's founder and former
Chairman,  President  and Chief  Executive  Officer,  and such net earnings were
reduced by a pre-tax charge of $1.3 million  recorded by the Company in the 2007
fiscal  year  second  quarter  relating  to the  termination  of such  insurance
arrangement.

         The Company's net earnings for the fiscal year ended  February 26, 2006
were reduced by a tax charge of $3.1 million  recorded in the fourth  quarter in
connection  with the  repatriation of  approximately  $70 million of accumulated
earnings and profits of the Company's  Nelco  Products  Pte. Ltd.  subsidiary in
Singapore,  a pre-tax asset  impairment  charge of $2.3 million  recorded in the
fourth  quarter  for  the  write-off  of  construction   costs  related  to  the
installation  of a treater  at the  Company's  Neltec  Europe  SAS  facility  in
Mirebeau,  France and a pre-tax employment  termination  benefits charge of $0.9
million  related to a workforce  reduction at the  Company's  Neltec  Europe SAS
facility  recorded in the 2006 fiscal year first quarter,  and such net earnings
were increased by a tax benefit of $1.5 million recognized by the Company in the
2006  fiscal  year  third  quarter  relating  to the  elimination  of  valuation
allowances  against  deferred tax assets  recorded in the United States in prior
periods.



                                                                              25

         The improvement in the Company's operating  performance during the 2007
fiscal year was  attributable  principally  to  increases  in total sales of the
Company's printed circuit materials  products and higher percentages of sales of
higher  margin,  high  performance  printed  circuit  materials  products.  This
improvement  occurred in spite of  significant  increases  in the cost of copper
foil, one of the Company's  primary raw  materials,  during the first and second
quarters of the 2007 fiscal year,  as the Company was able to pass a substantial
portion of such  increases  through to its  customers  in the second,  third and
fourth quarters of the 2007 fiscal year.

         The condition of the global markets for the Company's  printed  circuit
materials products improved in the second half of the 2006 fiscal year; and that
improvement continued in the first nine months of the 2007 fiscal year, although
such  markets  weakened in the 2007 fiscal  year fourth  quarter.  Consequently,
sales of the Company's printed circuit materials  products increased in the 2007
fiscal  year  compared to the 2006  fiscal  year.  However,  the  weakness  that
occurred in the markets for the Company's printed circuit materials  products in
the 2007  fiscal year fourth  quarter  has  continued  into the 2008 fiscal year
first  quarter.  The  markets for the  Company's  advanced  composite  materials
products  continued to be strong  during the 2007 fiscal year,  and sales of the
Company's  advanced  composite  materials  products increased in the 2007 fiscal
year compared to the prior fiscal year.

         The global markets for the Company's printed circuit materials continue
to be very  difficult to  forecast,  and it is not clear to the Company what the
condition of the global markets for the Company's printed circuit materials will
be in the 2008  fiscal  year.  The  Company  believes  that the  markets for its
advanced  composite  materials will continue to be strong during the 2008 fiscal
year.

         In the first quarter of the 2007 fiscal year, the Company completed the
construction  of a new  manufacturing  facility in the Zhuhai Free Trade Zone in
Guangdong  Province in southern China to support the demand for advanced printed
circuit  materials  in China,  and the  Company is in the  process of  equipment
testing,  employee  training and internal  and external  qualifications  for the
facility.  In  addition,  the Company  upgraded  its printed  circuit  materials
treating  operation  in Singapore  during the 2007 fiscal year third  quarter so
that such  operation is capable of treating the Company's  full line of advanced
printed circuit materials in Singapore, except polytetrafluoroethylene  ("PTFE")
materials,  and during the 2005 fiscal year,  the Company  installed  one of its
latest  generation,  high-technology  treaters in its newly expanded facility in
Singapore.

         In the third  quarter of the 2007 fiscal year,  the Company  acquired a
facility in Singapore  which the Company is modifying and expanding for use as a
new advanced  composites  manufacturing  plant. The Company is also in the final
stages of  planning  the  construction  of a new plant in the  Untied  States to
produce advanced composite materials  principally for the aerospace industry. In
addition,  during the 2006 fiscal year second quarter, the Company completed the
installation of an additional large treater at its advanced composite  materials
facility  in  Waterbury,  Connecticut,  which has  significantly  increased  the
treating capacity of that facility.

         While the Company continued to expand and invest in its business during
the 2007 and 2006 fiscal years,  it made  additional  adjustments  to one of its
operations,  which  resulted in a workforce  reduction.  In the 2006 fiscal year
first and second quarters, the Company reduced the size of the workforce at



                                                                              26

its Neltec  Europe SAS  subsidiary  in  Mirebeau,  France as a result of further
deterioration  of  the  European  market  for  high-technology  printed  circuit
materials,  and it recorded an employment  termination  benefits  charge of $1.1
million  during the 2006 fiscal year first  quarter,  $0.2  million of which was
reversed in the 2006 fiscal year fourth  quarter.  In addition,  during the 2005
fiscal  year,  the  Company  reduced  the sizes of the  workforces  at its North
American and European printed circuit materials operations, as a result of which
the Company  recorded  pre-tax  charges of $0.6  million in the 2005 fiscal year
third quarter.

         In the 2005 fiscal year third  quarter,  the  Company  also  settled an
insurance claim for property and business  interruption  losses sustained by the
Company in Singapore  as a result of an  explosion  in one of the four  treaters
located at its Nelco manufacturing  facility in Singapore and recorded a pre-tax
gain of $4.7 million as a result of the settlement.

         The Company believes that an evaluation of its ongoing operations would
be  difficult  if the  disclosure  of its  financial  results  were  limited  to
generally accepted  accounting  principles  ("GAAP") financial  measures,  which
include special items, such as the tax benefits,  the earnings  repatriation tax
charge,  the asset  impairment  charge,  the insurance  arrangement  termination
charge  and the  employment  termination  benefits  charge  in the 2007 and 2006
fiscal  years.  Accordingly,  in addition to disclosing  its  financial  results
determined in accordance  with GAAP, the Company  discloses  non-GAAP  operating
results that exclude special items in order to assist its shareholders and other
readers in assessing the Company's  operating  performance,  since the Company's
on-going,  normal  business  operations do not include such special items.  Such
non-GAAP  financial  measures are provided to supplement the results provided in
accordance with GAAP.

Fiscal Year 2007 Compared with Fiscal Year 2006:

         The  Company's  sales of both its  printed  circuit  materials  and its
advanced  composite  materials  increased in the fiscal year ended  February 25,
2007 compared to the fiscal year ended February 26, 2006, following increases in
such sales in the 2006 fiscal year compared to the 2005 fiscal year.

         The increased sales in the 2007 fiscal year and a slight improvement in
the Company's gross profit margin in the 2007 fiscal year, following substantial
improvements in the 2006 fiscal year compared to the 2005 fiscal year and in the
2005  fiscal  year  compared to the 2004  fiscal  year,  enabled  the  Company's
operations to generate a larger gross profit than in the prior fiscal year.

         The  Company's  gross profit in the 2007 fiscal year was  substantially
higher than the gross profit in the prior  fiscal year  primarily as a result of
increased  total  sales  of  printed  circuit  materials   products  and  higher
percentages  of sales by the  Company of its  higher  margin,  high  performance
printed circuit materials products.

         Sales of the  Company's  advanced  composite  materials  products  also
increased  during the 2007 fiscal year  primarily as a result of the strength of
the  aerospace  markets  for  advanced  composite  materials.  Sales of advanced
composite  materials were 8% of the Company's  total net sales  worldwide in the
2007 and 2006 fiscal years.

         The Company's  financial results of operations were enhanced by the tax
benefit of $0.7  million  recorded by the Company in the 2007 fiscal year fourth
quarter for the  recognition  of tax credits  resulting  from  operating  losses
sustained in prior years in France and by the tax benefits recorded in



                                                                              27

the 2007 fiscal year second quarter of $3.5 million  relating to the elimination
of certain valuation allowances  previously  established related to deferred tax
assets in the  United  States,  $1.4  million  relating  to the  elimination  of
reserves no longer  required as the result of the  completion of a tax audit and
$0.5 million  relating to the  termination  of a life  insurance  agreement with
Jerry Shore,  the  Company's  founder and former  Chairman,  President and Chief
Executive  Officer,  which benefits were partially offset by a pre-tax charge of
$1.3 million in the second quarter  relating to the termination of the insurance
agreement with Jerry Shore.

Results of Operations

         Net sales for the fiscal year ended  February 25, 2007 increased 16% to
$257.4  million from $222.3 million for the fiscal year ended February 26, 2006.
The  increase in net sales was the result of  increased  sales by the  Company's
operations in North America and Asia and increased  sales of the Company's  high
technology printed circuit materials and advanced composite materials.

         The Company's foreign operations accounted for $117.0 million of sales,
or 45% of the Company's total net sales worldwide,  during the 2007 fiscal year,
compared  with  $97.9  million  of sales,  or 44% of total net sales  worldwide,
during the 2006 fiscal year and 45% of total net sales worldwide during the 2005
fiscal year. Sales by the Company's  foreign  operations  during the 2007 fiscal
year  increased 20% from the 2006 fiscal year primarily as a result of increases
in sales by the Company's operations in Singapore.

         For the fiscal year ended  February 25, 2007,  the  Company's  sales in
North  America,  Asia and Europe  were 55%,  32% and 13%,  respectively,  of the
Company's  total  net sales  worldwide  compared  with 56%,  29% and 15% for the
fiscal year ended February 26, 2006. The Company's  sales in Asia increased 29%,
its sales in North America increased 13% and its sales in Europe increased 1% in
the 2007 fiscal year over the 2006 fiscal year.

         The overall gross profit as a percentage of net sales for the Company's
worldwide operations improved to 24.9% during the 2007 fiscal year compared with
24.6% during the 2006 fiscal year.  The  improvement  in the gross profit margin
was  attributable to increased  sales and higher  percentages of sales of higher
margin, high performance printed circuit materials.

         During the fiscal year ended February 25, 2007, the Company's total net
sales worldwide of high temperature  printed circuit  materials,  which included
high performance materials (non-FR4 printed circuit materials),  were 97% of the
Company's total net sales worldwide of printed circuit materials,  compared with
96% for last fiscal year.

         The Company's high temperature  printed circuit  materials  include its
high performance materials (non-FR4 printed circuit materials), which consist of
high-speed,   low-loss  materials  for  digital  and  RF/microwave  applications
requiring lead-free compatibility,  high bandwidth signal integrity, bismalimide
triazine("BT") materials, polyimides for applications that demand extremely high
thermal  performance,   cyanate  esters,  and  polytetrafluoroethylene  ("PTFE")
materials for RF/microwave systems that operate at frequencies up to 77GHz.

         During the fiscal year ended February 25, 2007, the Company's total net
sales worldwide of high performance  printed circuit materials  (non-FR4 printed
circuit  materials)  were 42% of the  Company's  total  net sales  worldwide  of
printed circuit materials, compared with 39% for last fiscal year.



                                                                              28

         The  Company's  cost of sales  increased by 15% in the 2007 fiscal year
from the 2006  fiscal  year as a result of higher  sales and  higher  production
volumes in the 2007  fiscal year than in the 2006 fiscal year and as a result of
significant increases in the cost of copper foil, although a substantial portion
of the increases in the cost of copper foil was passed on to customers. However,
the Company's cost of sales as a percentage of net sales  decreased  slightly in
the 2007 fiscal  year  compared to the prior year  resulting  in a slight  gross
profit  percentage  improvement,  which  was  attributable  to cost  containment
measures implemented by the Company, including workforce reductions.

         Selling, general and administrative expenses increased by $1.6 million,
or by 6%,  during the 2007 fiscal year  compared  with the 2006 fiscal year as a
result of higher sales in the 2007 fiscal year, but these expenses,  measured as
a  percentage  of sales,  were 10.4% during the 2007 fiscal year  compared  with
11.3% during the 2006 fiscal year. Selling,  general and administrative expenses
included $1.3 million for the 2007 fiscal year for stock option expenses,  which
the Company  recorded  pursuant to Statement of Financial  Accounting  Standards
123(R).  No such stock option expenses were recorded in the 2006 and 2005 fiscal
years,  prior to the adoption of Statement  of  Financial  Accounting  Standards
123(R).

         In the 2007  fiscal  year fourth  quarter,  the Company  recorded a tax
benefit of $0.7 million  relating to the  recognition  of tax credits  resulting
from  operating  losses  sustained in prior years in France.  In the 2007 fiscal
year second  quarter,  the Company  recorded a pre-tax charge of $1.3 million in
connection  with the  termination  of a life  insurance  arrangement  with Jerry
Shore, the Company's founder and former Chairman,  President and Chief Executive
Officer, and recognized a tax benefit of $0.5 million relating to this insurance
termination  charge.  The  termination of the insurance  arrangement  involved a
payment of $1.3  million  by the  Company to Mr.  Shore in January  2007,  which
resulted in a net cash cost to the Company of $0.7 million,  after the Company's
receipt  of a portion of the cash  surrender  value of the  insurance  policies.
During the 2007 fiscal year second  quarter,  the Company also  recognized a tax
benefit  of $3.5  million  relating  to the  elimination  of  certain  valuation
allowances previously  established relating to deferred tax assets in the United
States and a tax benefit of $1.4 million relating to the elimination of reserves
no longer required as the result of the completion of a tax audit.

         In the 2006  fiscal  year fourth  quarter,  the Company  recorded a tax
charge of $3.1 million in connection with the repatriation of approximately  $70
million of accumulated  earnings and profits of its  subsidiary in Singapore,  a
benefit of $0.2  million  resulting  from the  reversal of a portion of the $1.1
charge in the 2006 fiscal year first quarter for employment termination benefits
relating to a workforce reduction at the Company's Neltec Europe SAS facility in
France and an asset  impairment  charge of $2.3  million  for the  write-off  of
construction costs related to the installation of an advanced high-speed treater
at the Company's  Neltec Europe SAS facility in Mirebeau,  France.  The treater,
which was installed at the Neltec Europe facility when the business  environment
in Europe was more  suited for such a treater,  has been moved to the  Company's
manufacturing facility in Singapore.  In the 2006 fiscal year third quarter, the
Company  recognized a tax benefit of $1.5 million relating to the elimination of
certain  valuation  allowances  previously  established  related to deferred tax
assets in the United States in prior periods;  and in the 2006 fiscal year first
quarter,  the Company recorded a charge of $1.1 million,  for which there was no
tax benefit,  for  employment  termination  benefits  resulting from a workforce
reduction  at its Neltec  Europe SAS  facility  in France,  which was  partially
offset by a reversal of $0.2 million in the 2006 fiscal year fourth quarter.



                                                                              29

         For the reasons set forth above, the Company's earnings from operations
for the 2007 fiscal year,  including the charge  described above relating to the
termination of the life insurance  arrangement,  were $36.1 million  compared to
earnings  from  operations  for the 2006 fiscal year,  including  the net charge
described above for employment  termination  benefits resulting from a workforce
reduction  in France and the asset  impairment  charge  described  above for the
write-off of  construction  costs  related to the  installation  of a treater in
France, were $26.3 million.  The net impacts of the charges described above were
to decrease  earnings  from  operations by $1.3 million for the 2007 fiscal year
and to decrease  earnings  from  operations  by $3.2 million for the 2006 fiscal
year.

         Interest  and  other  income,  net,   principally   investment  income,
increased 33% to $8.0 million for the 2007 fiscal year from $6.1 million for the
2006 fiscal year. The increase in investment  income was  attributable to higher
prevailing  interest  rates and larger  amounts of cash available for investment
during the 2007  fiscal  year.  The  Company's  investments  were  primarily  in
short-term taxable instruments.  The Company incurred no interest expense during
the 2007,  2006 or 2005 fiscal  years.  See  "Liquidity  and Capital  Resources"
elsewhere in this Item 7.

         The  Company's  effective  income tax rate was 9.9% for the 2007 fiscal
year compared to 17.0% for the 2006 fiscal year. The Company's  effective income
tax rate for continuing  operations,  excluding the tax benefits and the charges
described  above,  for the 2007 fiscal year was 23.0%  compared to 11.0% for the
2006 fiscal year.

         The Company's net earnings for the 2007 fiscal year,  including the tax
benefits  described  above relating to the recognition of tax credits in France,
the  termination of the life insurance  arrangement,  the elimination of certain
valuation  allowances and the elimination of reserves no longer required and the
charge  described  above  relating  to the  termination  of the  life  insurance
arrangement,  were $39.8  million  compared to net  earnings for the 2006 fiscal
year,   including  the  tax  charge  described  above  in  connection  with  the
repatriation  of  foreign  earnings,  the asset  impairment  and net  employment
termination benefits charges described above and the tax benefit described above
related to the elimination of valuation allowances,  were $26.9 million. The net
impacts of the charges and tax  benefits  described  above were to increase  net
earnings by $4.8  million for the 2007 fiscal year and to decrease  net earnings
by $4.8 million for the 2006 fiscal year.

         Basic and  diluted  earnings  per share,  including  the charge and tax
benefits described above, were $1.97 and $1.96 per share, respectively,  for the
2007 fiscal year  compared to basic and diluted  earnings per share of $1.34 and
$1.33 per share,  respectively,  including the charges and tax benefit described
above, for the 2006 fiscal year. The net impacts of the charges and tax benefits
described  above were to increase  the basic and diluted  earnings  per share by
$0.24 for the 2007 fiscal year and to  decrease  the basic and diluted  earnings
per share by $0.24 for the 2006 fiscal year.

Fiscal Year 2006 Compared with Fiscal Year 2005:

         The  Company's  sales of both its  printed  circuit  materials  and its
advanced  composite  materials  increased in the fiscal year ended  February 26,
2006 compared to the fiscal year ended February 27, 2005, following increases in
such sales in the 2005 fiscal year compared to the 2004 fiscal year.



                                                                              30

         The increased  sales in the 2006 fiscal year and a further  improvement
in the  Company's  gross  profit  margin in the 2006  fiscal  year,  following a
substantial  improvement  in the 2005  fiscal  year  compared to the 2004 fiscal
year, enabled the Company's operations to generate a larger gross profit than in
the prior fiscal year.

         The  Company's  gross profit in the 2006 fiscal year was  substantially
higher than the gross  profit in the prior  fiscal year as a result of increased
sales, the Company's reductions of its costs and expenses and higher percentages
of sales by the Company of its higher margin,  high  technology  printed circuit
materials and advanced composite materials.  These improvements in gross profits
occurred despite the operating  inefficiencies  resulting from operating certain
facilities  at levels  below their  designed  manufacturing  capacities  and the
competitive  pressures that existed in the 2005 fiscal year and persisted in the
2006 year.

         The Company's  financial results of operations were adversely  affected
by the pre-tax asset impairment charge of $2.3 million that the Company recorded
in the 2006 fiscal year fourth quarter for the write-off of  construction  costs
related to the  installation  of a treater at the  Company's  Neltec  Europe SAS
facility in  Mirebeau,  France in a prior year,  the tax charge of $3.1  million
that the Company  recorded in the 2006 fiscal year fourth  quarter in connection
with the repatriation of approximately  $70 million of accumulated  earnings and
profits of its Nelco  subsidiary  in  Singapore  and the pre-tax  charge of $1.1
million  that the Company  recorded  in the 2006  fiscal year first  quarter for
employment  termination  benefits  resulting  from a workforce  reduction at its
Neltec Europe SAS printed circuit materials facility in Mirebeau,  France, which
were only  partially  offset by the  reversal  in the 2006  fiscal  year  fourth
quarter  of $0.2  million of the  previous  charge  for  employment  termination
benefits at Neltec  Europe SAS and by the tax benefit of $1.5  million  that the
Company recognized in the 2006 fiscal year third quarter related to the reversal
of valuation  allowances against deferred tax assets previously  recorded in the
United States.

         Sales of the Company's  advanced composite  materials  increased during
the 2006  fiscal year  primarily  as a result of the  strength of the  aerospace
markets for advance composite  materials.  Sales of advanced composite materials
were 8% of the Company's  total net sales  worldwide in the 2006 and 2005 fiscal
years.

Results of Operations

         Net sales for the fiscal year ended  February 26, 2006  increased 5% to
$222.3  million from $211.2 million for the fiscal year ended February 27, 2005.
The  increase in net sales was the result of  increased  sales by the  Company's
operations in all regions and increased  sales of the Company's high  technology
printed circuit materials and advanced composite materials.

         The Company's foreign operations  accounted for $97.9 million of sales,
or 44% of the Company's total net sales worldwide,  during the 2006 fiscal year,
compared  with  $94.1  million  of sales,  or 45% of total net sales  worldwide,
during the 2005  fiscal year and 45% and 40%,  respectively,  of total net sales
worldwide  from  continuing  operations  during the 2004 and 2003 fiscal  years.
Sales by the Company's foreign  operations during the 2006 fiscal year increased
4% from the 2005 fiscal year  primarily as a result of increases in sales by the
Company's operations in Singapore.



                                                                              31

         For the fiscal year ended  February 26, 2006,  the  Company's  sales in
North  America,  Asia and Europe  were 56%,  29% and 15%,  respectively,  of the
Company's  total  net sales  worldwide  compared  with 55%,  29% and 16% for the
fiscal year ended  February  27,  2005.  The  Company's  sales in North  America
increased 6%, its sales in Asia  increased 6% and its sales in Europe  increased
1% in the 2006 fiscal year over the 2005 fiscal year.

         The overall gross profit as a percentage of net sales for the Company's
worldwide operations improved to 24.6% during the 2006 fiscal year compared with
20.5% during the 2005 fiscal year.  The  improvement  in the gross profit margin
was attributable to increased sales,  reduced operating costs resulting from the
work force reduction at the Company's volume printed circuit materials operation
in France in the 2006 fiscal year and the  realignments  of the Company's  North
American volume printed circuit materials operations in the 2005 and 2004 fiscal
years and higher percentages of sales of higher margin, high temperature printed
circuit materials.

         During the fiscal year ended February 26, 2006, the Company's total net
sales worldwide of high temperature  printed circuit  materials,  which included
high performance materials (non-FR4 printed circuit materials),  were 96% of the
Company's total net sales worldwide of printed circuit materials,  compared with
94% for last fiscal year.

         The Company's high temperature  printed circuit  materials  include its
high performance materials (non-FR4 printed circuit materials), which consist of
high-speed   low-loss  materials  for  digital  and  RF/microwave   applications
requiring lead-free compatibility,  high bandwidth signal integrity, bismalimide
triazine ("BT")  materials,  polyimides for  applications  that demand extremely
high thermal performance,  cyanate esters, and polytetrafluoroethylene  ("PTFE")
materials for RF/microwave systems that operate at frequencies up to 77GHz.

         During the fiscal year ended February 26, 2006, the Company's total net
sales worldwide of high performance  printed circuit materials  (non-FR4 printed
circuit  materials)  were 39% of the  Company's  total  net sales  worldwide  of
printed circuit materials, compared with 35% for last fiscal year.

         The Company's cost of sales decreased  slightly in the 2006 fiscal year
compared to the prior fiscal year despite higher production  volumes compared to
the prior fiscal year, as a result of cost reduction measures implemented by the
Company, including workforce reductions and the reduction of overtime.

         Selling,  general and administrative expenses decreased during the 2006
fiscal year compared with the 2005 fiscal year, as these expenses, measured as a
percentage of sales,  were 11.3% during the 2006 fiscal year compared with 12.8%
during the 2005 fiscal year. The decrease in selling, general and administrative
expenses  in the  2006  fiscal  year  resulted  from  decreases  in  almost  all
categories of expenses.

         In the 2006  fiscal  year fourth  quarter,  the Company  recorded a tax
charge of $3.1 million in connection with the repatriation of approximately  $70
million of accumulated  earnings and profits of its  subsidiary in Singapore,  a
pre-tax benefit of $0.2 million  resulting from the reversal of a portion of the
$1.1  pre-tax  charge in the 2006  fiscal  year  first  quarter  for  employment
termination  benefits relating to a workforce  reduction at the Company's Neltec
Europe SAS facility in France and an asset impairment charge of $2.3 million for
the write-off of construction  costs related to the  installation of an advanced
high-speed treater at the Company's Neltec Europe



                                                                              32

SAS facility in Mirebeau, France. The treater, which was installed at the Neltec
Europe facility when the business environment in Europe was more suited for such
a treater, has been moved to the Company's  manufacturing facility in Singapore.
In the 2006 fiscal year third quarter,  the Company  recognized a tax benefit of
$1.5  million  relating  to the  elimination  of  certain  valuation  allowances
previously  established  related to deferred tax assets in the United  States in
prior periods; and in the 2006 fiscal year first quarter, the Company recorded a
charge of $1.1  million,  for which  there was no tax  benefit,  for  employment
termination  benefits resulting from a workforce  reduction at its Neltec Europe
SAS facility in France, which was partially offset by a reversal of $0.2 million
in the 2006 fiscal year fourth quarter.

         In the 2005 fiscal year third quarter,  the Company  recorded a gain of
$4.7 million  resulting from the  settlement of an insurance  claim for property
and  business  interruption  losses  sustained  by the Company in Singapore as a
result of an explosion in November 2002 in one of the four  treaters  located at
its manufacturing  facility in Singapore.  In the same quarter, the Company also
recorded a charge of $0.6 million for employment  termination benefits resulting
from workforce  reductions at the Company's  North American and European  volume
printed circuit materials operations.

         For the reasons set forth above, the Company's earnings from operations
for  the  2006  fiscal  year,  including  the net  charge  described  above  for
employment  termination  benefits resulting from a workforce reduction in France
and  the  asset   impairment   charge  described  above  for  the  write-off  of
construction  costs  related to the  installation  of a treater in France,  were
$26.3 million compared with earnings from operations for the 2005 fiscal year of
$20.4 million,  including the gain described above resulting from the settlement
of an insurance claim for property and business interruption losses sustained by
the  Company  in  Singapore  and  the  charge  described  above  for  employment
termination  benefits resulting from workforce reductions at the Company's North
America and  European  volume  printed  circuit  materials  operations.  The net
impacts of the charges and gain described  above were to decrease  earnings from
operations  by $3.2  million for the 2006  fiscal year and to increase  earnings
from operations by $4.1 million for the 2005 fiscal year.

         Interest  and  other  income,  net,   principally   investment  income,
increased 79% to $6.1 million for the 2006 fiscal year from $3.4 million for the
2005 fiscal year. The increase in investment  income was  attributable to higher
prevailing  interest  rates and larger  amounts of cash available for investment
during the 2006  fiscal  year.  The  Company's  investments  were  primarily  in
short-term taxable instruments.  The Company incurred no interest expense during
the 2006,  2005 or 2004 fiscal  years.  See  "Liquidity  and Capital  Resources"
elsewhere in this Item 7.

         The Company's  effective  income tax rate was 17.0% for the 2006 fiscal
year compared to 9.2% for the 2005 fiscal year. The Company's  effective  income
tax rate,  excluding  the gains and the charges  described  above,  for the 2006
fiscal year was 11.0% compared to 8.0% for the 2005 fiscal year.

         The  Company's  net earnings for the 2006 fiscal  year,  including  the
asset  impairment  charge and employment  termination  benefits charge described
above and the tax charge  described above in connection with the repatriation of
foreign earnings and the tax benefit described above related to the



                                                                              33

reversal of valuation allowances,  were $26.9 million compared with net earnings
for the 2005 fiscal year of $21.6 million,  including the gain  described  above
resulting  from the  insurance  settlement  and the charge  described  above for
employment  termination  benefits resulting from workforce  reductions.  The net
impacts of the charges,  tax benefit and gain  described  above were to decrease
net  earnings by $4.8  million  for the 2006  fiscal  year and to  increase  net
earnings by $3.5 million for the 2005 fiscal year.

         Basic and  diluted  earnings  per share,  including  the charge and tax
benefits described above, were $1.34 and $1.33 per share, respectively,  for the
2006 fiscal year  compared to basic and diluted  earnings per share of $1.09 and
$1.08 per share,  respectively,  including the gain and charge  described above,
for the 2005 fiscal year.  The net impacts of the charges,  tax benefit and gain
described  above were to decrease  the basic and diluted  earnings  per share by
$0.24 for the 2006 fiscal year and to  increase  the basic and diluted  earnings
per share by $0.18 for the 2005 fiscal year.

Liquidity and Capital Resources:

         At February 25, 2007,  the  Company's  cash and  temporary  investments
(consisting of marketable  securities)  were $208.8 million compared with $199.7
million at February 26, 2006,  the end of the  Company's  2006 fiscal year.  The
Company's  working capital (which includes cash and temporary  investments)  was
$233.8 million at February 25, 2007 compared with $214.9 million at February 26,
2006.  The  increase in working  capital at  February  25,  2007  compared  with
February 26, 2006 was due  principally to higher cash and temporary  investments
and higher  accounts  receivable and lower accrued  liabilities and lower income
taxes  payable.  The increase in cash and temporary  investments at February 25,
2007  compared  with  February  26,  2006 was the  result  of cash  provided  by
operating  activities and higher interest and other income.  Accounts receivable
increased 10% at February 25, 2007 compared to February 26, 2006  primarily as a
result of higher  sales  volumes.  The 11%  decrease in accrued  liabilities  at
February 27, 2007  compared to February 26, 2006 was primarily  attributable  to
lower liabilities for the restoration of a leased facility and for audit,  legal
and tax services. Income taxes payable declined 45% primarily as a result of tax
payments made during the 2007 fiscal year.

         The  Company's  current  ratio (the ratio of current  assets to current
liabilities)  was  8.2 to 1 at  February  25,  2007  compared  with  6.6 to 1 at
February 26, 2006.

         During  the  2007  fiscal  year,   net  earnings   from  the  Company's
operations,  before  depreciation and  amortization,  of $48.8 million and a net
increase in working capital items, resulted in $35.8 million of cash provided by
operating activities. This increase in cash provided by operating activities was
partially offset by $26.6 million of dividends paid during the year, including a
special cash  dividend of $20.1  million paid during the 2007 fiscal year second
quarter.  Cash  dividends  paid were $26.5  million,  including  a special  cash
dividend of $20.1  million,  during the 2006  fiscal  year,  and $25.1  million,
including a special cash dividend of $19.9 million, during the 2005 fiscal year.
Net earnings  excluding $9.6 million of depreciation and amortization were $36.5
million in the 2006 fiscal year and resulted in $36.9  million of cash  provided
by operating activities.

         Net expenditures  for property,  plant and equipment were $3.9 million,
$4.2  million,   $3.3  million  in  the  2007,   2006  and  2005  fiscal  years,
respectively.



                                                                              34

         The Company  resolved with Royal Sun & Alliance  Insurance  (Singapore)
Limited the Company's property damage and business interruption  insurance claim
resulting  from the  explosion  in a  treater  at the  Company's  subsidiary  in
Singapore on November 27, 2002,  and the Company  received  $5.8 million in cash
and recorded a $4.7 million  pre-tax gain in the 2005 fiscal year third  quarter
as a result of such resolution.  The Company has initiated a lawsuit against CNA
Insurance Co. to resolve the Company's claim for business  interruption  damages
in the United States resulting from the explosion.

         At  February  25,  2007 and  February  26,  2006,  the  Company  had no
long-term debt.

         The Company  believes its financial  resources will be sufficient,  for
the foreseeable  future, to provide for continued  investment in working capital
and  property,  plant and  equipment and for general  corporate  purposes.  Such
resources  would also be available for purchases of the Company's  common stock,
appropriate acquisitions and other expansions of the Company's business.

         The  Company  is not  aware of any  circumstances  or  events  that are
reasonably likely to occur that could materially affect its liquidity.

         The Company's contractual  obligations and other commercial commitments
to make future payments under contracts, such as lease agreements,  consist only
of the  operating  lease  commitments  described  in  Note  15 of the  Notes  to
Consolidated Financial Statements included elsewhere in this Report. The Company
has  no  long-term  debt,  capital  lease  obligations,  unconditional  purchase
obligations  or  other  long-term   obligations,   standby  letters  of  credit,
guarantees,  standby repurchase  obligations or other commercial  commitments or
contingent  commitments,  other than two standby  letters of credit in the total
amount of $1.7 million to secure the  Company's  obligations  under its workers'
compensation  insurance  program and certain limited energy  purchase  contracts
intended to protect the Company from increased utilities costs.

         As  of  February  25,  2007,  the  Company's  significant   contractual
obligations, including payments due by fiscal year, were as follows:

Contractual Obligations
 (Amounts in thousands)



                                                                            2013 and
                         Total         2008       2009-2010    2011-2012   thereafter
                       ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
                                                            
Operating lease
 obligations           $   11,183   $    2,029   $    3,836   $    2,777   $    2,541
Purchase obligations            -            -            -            -            -
                       ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------   ----------
Total                  $   11,183   $    2,029   $    3,836   $    2,777   $    2,541


Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements:

         The Company's liquidity is not dependent on the use of, and the Company
is not  engaged  in,  any  off-balance  sheet  financing  arrangements,  such as
securitization  of  receivables or obtaining  access to assets  through  special
purpose entities.



                                                                              35

Environmental Matters:

         The Company is subject to various  federal,  state and local government
requirements relating to the protection of the environment. The Company believes
that, as a general matter,  its policies,  practices and procedures are properly
designed  to  prevent  unreasonable  risk of  environmental  damage and that its
handling,  manufacture, use and disposal of hazardous or toxic substances are in
accord with environmental laws and regulations.  However, mainly because of past
operations  and  operations of  predecessor  companies,  which were generally in
compliance with  applicable laws at the time of the operations in question,  the
Company,  like other  companies  engaged in  similar  businesses,  is a party to
claims by  government  agencies  and third  parties  and has  incurred  remedial
response and voluntary  cleanup costs  associated  with  environmental  matters.
Additional claims and costs involving past environmental matters may continue to
arise  in  the  future.  It  is  the  Company's  policy  to  record  appropriate
liabilities  for such matters when  remedial  efforts are probable and the costs
can be reasonably estimated.

         In  the  2007,  2006  and  2005  fiscal  years,   the  Company  charged
approximately $0.0 million, $(0.6) million, $0.0 million, respectively,  against
pre-tax  income for remedial  response and voluntary  cleanup  costs  (including
legal fees). While annual expenditures have generally been constant from year to
year,  and may increase over time,  the Company  expects it will be able to fund
such  expenditures  from cash flow from  operations.  The timing of expenditures
depends  on a number  of  factors,  including  regulatory  approval  of  cleanup
projects,  remedial techniques to be utilized and agreements with other parties.
At February 25,  2007,  the amount  recorded in  liabilities  from  discontinued
operations for  environmental  matters related to Dielektra was $2.1 million and
the amount recorded in accrued liabilities for other  environmental  matters was
$1.8 million compared with $2.1 million of liabilities for environmental matters
for Dielektra and $1.8 million for other  environmental  matters at February 26,
2006.

         Management  does not  expect  that  environmental  matters  will have a
material  adverse  effect  on the  liquidity,  capital  resources,  business  or
consolidated  financial  position  of the  Company.  See Note 16 of the Notes to
Consolidated  Financial  Statements included in Item 8 of Part II of this Report
for a discussion  of the  Company's  contingencies,  including  those related to
environmental matters.

Critical Accounting Policies and Estimates:

         In response to financial  reporting release,  FR-60,"Cautionary  Advice
Regarding  Disclosure  About  Critical  Accounting  Policies",   issued  by  the
Securities and Exchange  Commission in December 2001, the following  information
is provided  regarding  critical  accounting  policies that are important to the
Consolidated  Financial Statements and that entail, to a significant extent, the
use of estimates, assumptions and the application of management's judgment.

         General

         The Company's  discussion  and analysis of its financial  condition and
results  of  operations  are based  upon the  Company's  Consolidated  Financial
Statements,  which have been prepared in accordance with  accounting  principles
generally  accepted in the United States.  The  preparation  of these  financial
statements  requires the Company to make  estimates,  assumptions  and judgments
that affect the reported amounts of assets, liabilities, revenues and



                                                                              36

expenses and the related  disclosure of contingent  liabilities.  On an on-going
basis,  the Company  evaluates its estimates,  including  those related to sales
allowances,   accounts  receivable,   allowances  for  bad  debts,  inventories,
valuation of long-lived assets, income taxes, restructurings,  contingencies and
litigation,  and pensions and other employee benefit programs. The Company bases
its estimates on historical experience and on various other assumptions that are
believed to be reasonable under the circumstances, the results of which form the
basis for making  judgments  about the carrying values of assets and liabilities
that are not readily apparent from other sources. Actual results may differ from
these estimates under different assumptions or conditions.

         The Company believes the following critical  accounting policies affect
its more  significant  judgments and estimates  used in the  preparation  of its
consolidated financial statements.

         Revenue Recognition

         Sales revenue is recognized at the time title to product is transferred
to a  customer.  All  material  sales  transactions  are  for  the  shipment  of
manufactured prepreg and laminate products and advanced composite materials. The
Company  ships its  products to  customers  based upon firm  orders,  with fixed
selling prices, when collection is reasonably assured.

         Sales Allowances

         The Company provides for the estimated costs of sales allowances at the
time such costs can be reasonably estimated.  The Company's products are made to
customer  specifications and tested for adherence to such specifications  before
shipment to customers.  There are no future performance  requirements other than
the  products'  meeting  the  agreed  specifications.  The  Company's  bases for
providing  sales  allowances for returns are known  situations in which products
may have failed due to  manufacturing  defects in the  products  supplied by the
Company.  The Company is focused on  manufacturing  the highest  quality printed
circuit  materials  and  advanced  composite   materials  possible  and  employs
stringent  manufacturing  process controls and works with raw material suppliers
who have dedicated themselves to complying with the Company's specifications and
technical  requirements.  The amounts of returns and  allowances  resulting from
defective or damaged products have been  approximately 1.0% of sales for each of
the Company's last three fiscal years.

         Accounts Receivable

         The  majority  of  the  Company's  accounts  receivable  are  due  from
purchasers of the Company's printed circuit materials.  Credit is extended based
on evaluation of a customer's financial condition and, generally,  collateral is
not required.  Accounts  receivable are due within established payment terms and
are  stated at amounts  due from  customers  net of an  allowance  for  doubtful
accounts.  Accounts  outstanding  longer  than  established  payment  terms  are
considered  past due. The Company  determines  its  allowance by  considering  a
number of factors,  including  the length of time accounts  receivable  are past
due, the Company's previous loss history,  the customer's current ability to pay
its obligation to the Company,  and the condition of the general economy and the
industry as a whole. The Company writes off accounts receivable when they become
uncollectible,  and  payments  subsequently  received  on such  receivables  are
credited to the allowance for doubtful accounts.



                                                                              37

         Allowances for Bad Debts

         The Company  maintains  allowances for doubtful  accounts for estimated
losses resulting from the inability of its customers to make required  payments.
If the  financial  condition of the  Company's  customers  were to  deteriorate,
resulting  in an  impairment  of  their  ability  to make  payments,  additional
allowances may be required.

         Inventories

         Inventories  are  stated  at the  lower  of cost  (first-in,  first-out
method)  or  market.  The  Company  writes  down  its  inventory  for  estimated
obsolescence  or  unmarketability  based  upon  the  age  of the  inventory  and
assumptions   about  future  demand  for  the  Company's   products  and  market
conditions.

         Valuation of Long-lived Assets

         The Company  assesses the  impairment  of  long-lived  assets  whenever
events or changes in  circumstances  indicate  that the  carrying  value of such
assets  may  not  be  recoverable.  Important  factors  that  could  trigger  an
impairment review include, but are not limited to, significant negative industry
or economic trends and significant changes in the use of the Company's assets or
strategy of the overall business.

         Income Taxes

         Carrying  value of the Company's  net deferred tax assets  assumes that
the Company will be able to generate sufficient future taxable income in certain
tax  jurisdictions,  based on estimates and assumptions.  If these estimates and
assumptions  change  in the  future,  the  Company  may be  required  to  record
additional  valuation  allowances  against its deferred tax assets  resulting in
additional  income  tax  expense  in the  Company's  consolidated  statement  of
operations,  or conversely to further  reduce the existing  valuation  allowance
resulting in less income tax expense.  Management evaluates the realizability of
the deferred tax assets quarterly and assesses the need for additional valuation
allowances quarterly.

         Restructurings

         The Company  recorded charges in connection with the realignment of its
Neltec Europe SAS business in France during the three-month period ended May 29,
2005 and the realignment of its North American volume printed circuit  materials
operations  during the fiscal  years ended  February 29, 2004 and March 2, 2003.
The Company also recorded  realignment  charges in its North American operations
during the fiscal year ended  February  27 2005.  In  addition,  during the 2003
fiscal year, the Company  recorded charges in connection with the closure of the
Company's  manufacturing  facility in England.  Prior to the Company's  treating
Dielektra  GmbH as a discontinued  operation,  the Company  recorded  charges in
connection  with the closure of the mass  lamination  operation of Dielektra and
the  realignment  of Dielektra  during the fiscal years ended February 29, 2004,
March 2, 2003 and March 3, 2002.

         Contingencies

         The Company is subject to a small number of  proceedings,  lawsuits and
other claims related to  environmental,  employment,  product and other matters.
The Company is required to assess the  likelihood  of any adverse  judgments  or
outcomes in these matters as well as potential ranges of probable losses. A



                                                                              38

determination   of  the  amount  of  reserves   required,   if  any,  for  these
contingencies  is made after  careful  analysis of each  individual  issue.  The
required  reserves  may  change in the future  due to new  developments  in each
matter or  changes  in  approach,  such as a change in  settlement  strategy  in
dealing with these matters.

         Pension and Other Employee Benefit Programs

         Dielektra GmbH has  significant  pension costs that were developed from
actuarial valuations. Inherent in these valuations are key assumptions including
discount rates and wage inflation rates. The pension  liability of Dielektra has
been  included in  liabilities  from  discontinued  operations  on the Company's
balance sheet.

         The  Company's   obligations  for  workers'   compensation  claims  are
effectively   self-insured,   although  the  Company  maintains  individual  and
aggregate stop-loss  insurance  coverage.  The Company uses an insurance company
administrator  to process all such claims and benefits.  The Company accrues its
workers' compensation liability based upon the claim reserves established by the
third-party administrator and historical experience.

         The  Company and certain of its  subsidiaries  have a  non-contributory
profit sharing  retirement plan covering their regular full-time  employees.  In
addition,   the  Company's   subsidiaries   have  various  bonus  and  incentive
compensation programs, some of which are determined at management's discretion.

         The Company's reserves  associated with these self-insured  liabilities
and benefit  programs are reviewed by management for adequacy at the end of each
reporting period.

Factors That May Affect Future Results:

The Private  Securities  Litigation  Reform Act of 1995 provides a "safe harbor"
for  forward-looking  statements to encourage  companies to provide  prospective
information  about their  companies  without fear of litigation so long as those
statements are identified as  forward-looking  and are accompanied by meaningful
cautionary  statements  identifying  important  factors  that could cause actual
results to differ  materially  from those  projected in the  statement.  Certain
portions of this Report which do not relate to historical financial  information
may be deemed to  constitute  forward-looking  statements  that are  subject  to
various  factors  which could cause  actual  results to differ  materially  from
Park's  expectations  or from  results  which  might be  projected,  forecasted,
estimated or budgeted by the Company in forward-looking  statements. The factors
described  under  "Risk  Factors"  in  Item 1A of  this  Report,  as well as the
following additional factors, could cause the Company's actual results to differ
materially from any such results which might be projected,  forecast,  estimated
or budgeted by the Company in forward-looking statements.

                  .        The  Company's  operating  results are  affected by a
                           number of factors,  including  various factors beyond
                           the Company's control.  Such factors include economic
                           conditions in the electronics industry, the timing of
                           customer orders,  product prices, process yields, the
                           mix  of   products   sold   and   maintenance-related
                           shutdowns of facilities.  Operating  results also can
                           be influenced by development and  introduction of new
                           products and the costs  associated  with the start-up
                           of new facilities.



                                                                              39

                  .        The  Company,  from time to time,  is  engaged in the
                           expansion of certain of its manufacturing facilities.
                           The anticipated  costs of such  expansions  cannot be
                           determined  with  precision  and may vary  materially
                           from those  budgeted.  In addition,  such  expansions
                           will   increase  the  Company's   fixed  costs.   The
                           Company's  future  profitability   depends  upon  its
                           ability to utilize its  manufacturing  capacity in an
                           effective manner.

                  .        The Company may acquire businesses,  product lines or
                           technologies  that expand or complement  those of the
                           Company.   The   integration  and  management  of  an
                           acquired company or business may strain the Company's
                           management  resources  and  technical,  financial and
                           operating  systems.  In addition,  implementation  of
                           acquisitions can result in large one-time charges and
                           costs.  A  given  acquisition,  if  consummated,  may
                           materially affect the Company's  business,  financial
                           condition and results of operations.

                  .        The   Company's   success  is   dependent   upon  its
                           relationship   with  key   management  and  technical
                           personnel.

                  .        The Company's future success depends in part upon its
                           intellectual  property  which  the  Company  seeks to
                           protect through a combination of contract provisions,
                           trade secret protections, copyrights and patents.

                  .        The market price of the Company's  securities  can be
                           subject to  fluctuations  in  response  to quarter to
                           quarter variations in operating  results,  changes in
                           analyst earnings estimates,  market conditions in the
                           electronic  materials  industry,  as well as  general
                           economic conditions and other factors external to the
                           Company.

                  .        The Company's results could be affected by changes in
                           the  Company's  accounting  policies and practices or
                           changes in the Company's  organization,  compensation
                           and  benefit  plans,  or  changes  in  the  Company's
                           material  agreements  or  understandings  with  third
                           parties.

ITEM 7A.    QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK.

         The Company is exposed to market risks for changes in foreign  currency
exchange  rates and interest  rates.  The  Company's  primary  foreign  currency
exchange  exposure  relates to the  translation  of the financial  statements of
foreign  subsidiaries  using  currencies  other  than the U.S.  dollar  as their
functional  currency.  The Company  does not believe that a 10%  fluctuation  in
foreign  exchange  rates  would have had a material  impact on its  consolidated
results of  operations or financial  position.  The exposure to market risks for
changes  in  interest  rates  relates  to the  Company's  short-term  investment
portfolio.  This  investment  portfolio is managed in accordance with guidelines
issued by the Company. These guidelines are designed to establish a high quality
fixed income  portfolio of government and highly rated corporate debt securities
with a maximum weighted maturity of less than one year. The Company does not use
derivative  financial  instruments  in its  investment  portfolio.  Based on the
average anticipated  maturity of the investment portfolio at the end of the 2007
fiscal year, a 10% increase in  short-term  interest  rates would not have had a
material impact on the consolidated  results of operations or financial position
of the Company.



                                                                              40

ITEM 8.     FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA.

            The Company's Financial Statements begin on the next page.



                                                                              41

REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

Stockholders and Board of Directors of
  Park Electrochemical Corp.

We  have  audited  the   accompanying   consolidated   balance  sheets  of  Park
Electrochemical  Corp. and subsidiaries as of February 25, 2007 and February 26,
2006,  and the related  consolidated  statements  of  operations,  stockholders'
equity and cash flows for each of the three years in the period  ended  February
25, 2007. These consolidated  financial statements are the responsibility of the
Company's  management.  Our  responsibility  is to  express  an opinion on these
consolidated financial statements based on our audits.

We conducted  our audit in accordance  with the standards of the Public  Company
Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan
and  perform  the  audit  to  obtain  reasonable  assurance  about  whether  the
consolidated  financial statements are free of material  misstatement.  An audit
includes  examining,  on a test  basis,  evidence  supporting  the  amounts  and
disclosures in the  consolidated  financial  statements.  An audit also includes
assessing the  accounting  principles  used and  significant  estimates  made by
management,  as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion, the consolidated  financial statements referred to above present
fairly, in all material  respects,  the consolidated  financial position of Park
Electrochemical  Corp. and subsidiaries as of February 25, 2007 and February 26,
2006 and the  consolidated  results of their  operations and their  consolidated
cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended February 25, 2007, in
conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of
America.

As discussed in Note 7 to the  consolidated  financial  statements,  the Company
changed its method of accounting for share-based compensation effective February
27, 2006 in  connection  with the adoption of Statement of Financial  Accounting
Standards No. 123 (revised 2004), "Share-Based Payment".

Our audit was  conducted  for the  purpose  of  forming  an opinion on the basic
financial  statements taken as a whole. The Schedule II Valuation and Qualifying
Accounts is presented for purposes of additional  analysis and is not a required
part of the basic financial statements.  This schedule has been subjected to the
auditing procedures applied in the audit of the basic financial  statements and,
in our opinion,  is fairly  stated in all  material  respects in relation to the
basic financial statements taken as a whole.

We also have  audited,  in accordance  with the standards of the Public  Company
Accounting   Oversight  Board  (United  States),   the   effectiveness  of  Park
Electrochemical   Corp.  and  subsidiaries'   internal  control  over  financial
reporting  as of February 25, 2007,  based on criteria  established  in Internal
Control  -  Integrated   Framework   issued  by  the   Committee  of  Sponsoring
Organizations  of the Treadway  Commission  ("COSO") and our report dated May 8,
2007 expressed an unqualified opinion thereon.


                                              /s/GRANT THORNTON LLP

New York, New York
May 8, 2007



                                                                              42

PARK ELECTROCHEMICAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(In thousands, except share and per share amounts)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



                                                                    February 25,    February 26,
                                                                        2007           2006
                                                                    ------------    ------------
                                                                              
ASSETS
Current assets:
 Cash and cash equivalents                                          $    119,051    $    108,027
 Marketable securities (Note 2)                                           89,724          91,625
 Accounts receivable, less allowance
   for doubtful accounts of $1,144 and
   $1,930, respectively                                                   39,418          35,964
 Inventories (Note 3)                                                     15,090          15,022
 Prepaid expenses and other current assets                                 3,049           3,023
                                                                    ------------    ------------
   Total current assets                                                  266,332         253,661

Property, plant and equipment, net of
 accumulated depreciation and
 amortization (Note 4)                                                    49,895          54,370
Other assets                                                               5,695           3,281
                                                                    ------------    ------------
   Total assets                                                     $    321,922    $    311,312
                                                                    ============    ============
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current liabilities:
 Accounts payable                                                   $     13,589    $     13,259
 Accrued liabilities (Note 5)                                             13,058          14,651
 Income taxes payable                                                      5,918          10,817
                                                                    ------------    ------------
   Total current liabilities                                              32,565          38,727

Deferred income taxes (Note 6)                                             4,294           5,193
Restructuring accruals - non current                                       3,715           4,718
Liabilities from discontinued operations (Note 10)                        17,181          17,251
                                                                    ------------    ------------
  Total liabilities                                                       57,755          65,889
                                                                    ------------    ------------
Commitments and contingencies (Notes 15 and 16)

Stockholders' equity (Note 8):
 Preferred stock, $1 par value per
  share--authorized, 500,000 shares;
  issued, none                                                                 -               -
 Common stock, $.10 par value per
  share--authorized, 60,000,000
  shares; issued, 20,369,986 shares                                        2,037           2,037
 Additional paid-in capital                                              140,030         137,513
 Retained earnings                                                       118,961         105,808
 Accumulated other comprehensive income                                    4,764           2,435
                                                                    ------------    ------------
                                                                         265,792         247,793
 Less treasury stock, at cost,
  175,192 and 255,428
  shares, respectively                                                    (1,625)         (2,370)
                                                                    ------------    ------------
   Total stockholders' equity                                            264,167         245,423
                                                                    ------------    ------------
   Total liabilities and stockholders' equity                       $    321,922    $    311,312
                                                                    ============    ============


See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.



                                                                              43

PARK ELECTROCHEMICAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
(In thousands, except per share amounts)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



                                                                                 Fiscal Year Ended
                                                                    --------------------------------------------
                                                                    February 25,    February 26,    February 27,
                                                                        2007            2006            2005
                                                                    ------------    ------------    ------------
                                                                                           
Net sales                                                           $    257,377    $    222,251    $    211,187
Cost of sales                                                            193,270         167,650         167,937
                                                                    ------------    ------------    ------------
Gross profit                                                              64,107          54,601          43,250
Selling, general and administrative
  expenses                                                                26,682          25,129          26,960
Insurance arrangement termination
  charge (Note 13)                                                         1,316               -               -
Realignment and severance charges
  (Note 11)                                                                    -             889             625
Asset impairment charge                                                        -           2,280               -
Gain on insurance settlement (Note 12)                                         -               -          (4,745)
                                                                    ------------    ------------    ------------
Earnings from operations                                                  36,109          26,303          20,410
Interest and other income, net                                             8,033           6,056           3,386
                                                                    ------------    ------------    ------------
Earnings before income taxes                                              44,142          32,359          23,796
Income tax provision (Note 6)                                              4,351           5,484           2,191
                                                                    ------------    ------------    ------------
Net earnings                                                        $     39,791    $     26,875    $     21,605
                                                                    ============    ============    ============
Earnings per share:

Basic earnings per share                                            $       1.97    $       1.34    $       1.09
                                                                    ============    ============    ============
Basic weighted average shares                                             20,175          20,047          19,879

Diluted earnings per share                                          $       1.96    $       1.33    $       1.08
                                                                    ============    ============    ============
Diluted weighted average shares                                           20,317          20,210          20,075


See Notes to Consolidated Financial statements.



                                                                              44

PARK ELECTROCHEMICAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
(In thousands, except share and per share amounts)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



                                                                                   Accumulated
                                                                                      Other
                                        Common Stock      Additional              Comprehensive    Treasury Stock    Comprehensive
                                     -------------------   Paid-in    Retained       Income      ------------------     Income
                                       Shares    Amount    Capital    Earnings        Loss        Shares    Amount       Loss
                                     ----------  -------  ----------  ---------   -------------  --------  --------  -------------
                                                                                             
Balance, February 29, 2004           20,369,986  $ 2,037  $  133,335  $ 108,915   $       3,734   582,061  $ (4,125)

  Net earnings                                                           21,605                                      $      21,605
  Exchange rate changes                                                                   1,529                              1,529
  Unrealized loss on marketable
    securities                                                                             (658)                              (658)
  Stock option activity                                          871                             (132,848)      684
  Cash dividends ($1.26 per share)                                      (25,070)
                                                                                                                     -------------
  Comprehensive income                                                                                               $      22,476
                                                                                                                     =============
                                     ----------  -------  ----------  ---------   -------------  --------  --------
Balance, February 27, 2005           20,369,986  $ 2,037  $  134,206  $ 105,450   $       4,605   449,213  $ (3,441)

  Net earnings                                                           26,875                                      $      26,875
  Exchange rate changes                                                                  (1,822)                            (1,822)
  Unrealized loss on marketable
    securities                                                                             (348)                              (348)
  Stock option activity                                        3,307                             (193,785)    1,071
  Cash dividends ($1.32 per share)                                      (26,517)
                                                                                                                     -------------
  Comprehensive income                                                                                               $      24,705
                                                                                                                     =============
                                     ----------  -------  ----------  ---------   -------------  --------  --------
Balance, February 26, 2006           20,369,986  $ 2,037  $  137,513  $ 105,808   $       2,435   255,428  $ (2,370)

  Net earnings                                                           39,791                                      $      39,791
  Exchange rate changes                                                                   1,684                              1,684
  Unrealized gain on
    marketable securities                                                                   645                                645
  Stock option activity                                        1,234                              (80,236)      745
  SFAS 123R compensation cost                                  1,283
  Cash dividends ($1.32 per share)                                      (26,638)
                                                                                                                     -------------
  Comprehensive income                                                                                               $      42,120
                                     ----------  -------  ----------  ---------   -------------  --------  --------  =============
Balance, February 25, 2007           20,369,986  $ 2,037  $  140,030  $ 118,961   $       4,764   175,192  $ (1,625)
                                     ==========  =======  ==========  =========   =============  ========  ========


See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.



                                                                              45

PARK ELECTROCHEMICAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
 (In thousands)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



                                                                                 Fiscal Year Ended
                                                                    --------------------------------------------
                                                                    February 25,    February 26,    February 27,
                                                                        2007            2006            2005
                                                                    ------------    ------------    ------------
                                                                                           
Cash flows from operating activities:
 Net earnings                                                       $     39,791    $     26,875    $     21,605
 Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash provided by
   operating activities:
  Depreciation and amortization                                            8,992           9,645          10,202
  Loss (gain) on sale of fixed assets                                        (18)             60              35
  Gain from insurance settlement                                               -               -          (4,745)
  Proceeds from insurance settlement                                           -               -           5,816
  SFAS 123R compensation cost                                              1,283               -               -
  Non-cash impairment charge                                                   -           2,280               -
  Provision for doubtful accounts receivable                                (954)             (1)             66
  Provision for deferred income taxes                                       (899)            151             (55)
  Tax benefit from stock option exercises                                      -           1,110               -
  Changes in operating assets and liabilities:
   Accounts receivable                                                    (2,092)           (659)            596
   Inventories                                                               210             110          (3,553)
   Prepaid expenses and other current assets                                (627)           (200)            437
   Other assets and liabilities                                            1,302          (2,884)         (2,164)
   Accounts payable                                                          158          (1,661)             91
   Accrued liabilities                                                    (6,782)           (803)         (4,051)
   Income taxes payable                                                   (4,576)          2,904           3,423
                                                                    ------------    ------------    ------------

     Net cash provided by operating activities                            35,788          36,927          27,703
                                                                    ------------    ------------    ------------
Cash flows from investing activities:
 Purchases of property, plant and equipment                               (4,793)         (4,320)         (3,328)
 Proceeds from sales of property, plant and equipment                        896             100              20
 Purchases of marketable securities                                     (123,592)        (33,672)        (66,833)
 Proceeds from sales and maturities of marketable securities             126,844          45,236          39,533
                                                                    ------------    ------------    ------------

     Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities                    (645)          7,344         (30,608)
                                                                    ------------    ------------    ------------
Cash flows from financing activities:
 Dividends paid                                                          (26,638)        (26,517)        (25,070)
 Proceeds from exercise of stock options                                   1,979           4,378           1,555
                                                                    ------------    ------------    ------------
     Net cash used in financing activities                               (24,659)        (22,139)        (23,515)
                                                                    ------------    ------------    ------------
Increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents before effect
    of exchange rate changes
                                                                          10,484          22,132         (26,420)
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents                 540            (176)            502
                                                                    ------------    ------------    ------------
Increase(decrease)in cash and cash equivalents                            11,024          21,956         (25,918)

Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of year                             108,027          86,071         111,989
                                                                    ------------    ------------    ------------
Cash and cash equivalents, end of year                              $    119,051    $    108,027    $     86,071
                                                                    ============    ============    ============


See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.



                                                                              46

PARK ELECTROCHEMICAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Three years ended February 25, 2007
(In thousands, except share, per share and option amounts)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1.       SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

         Park   Electrochemical   Corp.   ("Park"),   through  its  subsidiaries
(collectively,  the  "Company"),  is a global advanced  materials  company which
develops  and  manufactures  high-technology  digital and  RF/microwave  printed
circuit  materials  and  advanced  composite   materials   principally  for  the
telecommunications and internet infrastructure, high-end computing and aerospace
markets.

         a.       Principles  of  Consolidation  -  The  consolidated  financial
                  statements  include the accounts of Park and its subsidiaries.
                  All significant  intercompany  balances and transactions  have
                  been eliminated.

         b.       Use of Estimates - The preparation of financial  statements in
                  conformity  with  generally  accepted  accounting   principles
                  requires  management to make  estimates and  assumptions  that
                  affect the  amounts  reported  in the  consolidated  financial
                  statements and accompanying  notes.  Actual results may differ
                  from those estimates.

         c.       Accounting  Period - The Company's fiscal year is the 52 or 53
                  week  period  ending  the  Sunday  nearest  to the last day of
                  February.  The  2007,  2006 and  2005  fiscal  years  ended on
                  February  25,  2007,  February 26, 2006 and February 27, 2005,
                  respectively.  Fiscal years 2007, 2006 and 2005 each consisted
                  of 52 weeks.

         d.       Cash and Cash  Equivalents  - The Company  considers all money
                  market securities and investments with contractual  maturities
                  at the  date  of  purchase  of 90  days  or  less  to be  cash
                  equivalents.

                  Supplemental cash flow information:

                                                            Fiscal Year
                                                   ----------------------------
                                                     2007      2006     2005
                                                   --------  -------  ---------
                  Cash paid during the year for:
                    Income taxes paid (refunded)     11,712    3,108     (1,124)

         e.       Marketable   Securities  -  All   marketable   securities  are
                  classified  as  available-for-sale  and  are  carried  at fair
                  value,  with the  unrealized  gains  and  losses,  net of tax,
                  included in  comprehensive  income (loss).  Realized gains and
                  losses,  amortization of premiums and discounts,  and interest
                  and dividend income are included in other income.  The cost of
                  securities  sold  is  based  on  the  specific  identification
                  method.  The Company has  classified any investment in auction
                  rate  securities  for  which  the  underlying  security  had a
                  maturity greater than three months as marketable securities.

         f.       Inventories  -  Inventories  are  stated  at the lower of cost
                  (first- in,  first-out  method) or market.  The Company writes
                  down   its   inventory   for   estimated    obsolescence    or
                  unmarketability  based  upon  the  age  of the  inventory  and
                  assumptions about future demand for the Company's products and
                  market conditions.



                                                                              47

         g.       Revenue  Recognition - Sales revenue is recognized at the time
                  title  is  transferred  to  a  customer.  All  material  sales
                  transactions are for the shipment of manufactured  prepreg and
                  laminate  products  and  advanced  composite  materials.   The
                  Company  ships  its  products  to  customers  based  upon firm
                  orders,   with  fixed  selling  prices,   when  collection  is
                  reasonably assured.

         h.       Sales Allowances and Product Warranties - The Company provides
                  for the estimated  costs of sales  allowances at the time such
                  costs can be reasonably estimated.  The Company's products are
                  made to customer  specifications  and tested for  adherence to
                  specifications  before  shipment  to  customers.  There are no
                  future  performance  requirements  other  than  the  products'
                  meeting the agreed  specifications.  The  Company's  bases for
                  providing sales allowances for returns are known situations in
                  which products may have failed due to manufacturing defects in
                  products  supplied by the  Company.  The Company is focused on
                  manufacturing  the highest quality printed circuit and advance
                  composite    materials    possible   and   employs   stringent
                  manufacturing  process  controls  and works with raw  material
                  suppliers who have dedicated  themselves to complying with the
                  Company's  specifications  and  technical  requirements.   The
                  amounts of returns and allowances  resulting from defective or
                  damaged  products  have been  approximately  1.0% of sales for
                  each of the Company's last three fiscal years.

         i.       Accounts  Receivable - The majority of the Company's  accounts
                  receivable  are due from  purchasers of the Company's  printed
                  circuit materials. Credit is extended based on evaluation of a
                  customer's  financial condition and, generally,  collateral is
                  not required.  Accounts  receivable are due within established
                  payment terms and are stated at amounts due from customers net
                  of an allowance for doubtful  accounts.  Accounts  outstanding
                  longer than established payment terms are considered past due.
                  The Company  determines  its allowance by considering a number
                  of factors,  including the length of time accounts  receivable
                  are  past  due,  the  Company's  previous  loss  history,  the
                  customer's  current  ability  to  pay  its  obligation  to the
                  Company,  and the  condition  of the  general  economy and the
                  industry  as  a  whole.   The  Company   writes  off  accounts
                  receivable  when  they  become  uncollectible,   and  payments
                  subsequently  received on such receivables are credited to the
                  allowance for doubtful accounts.

         j.       Allowance for Bad Debts - The Company maintains allowances for
                  doubtful  accounts for  estimated  losses  resulting  from the
                  inability of its customers to make required  payments.  If the
                  financial   condition  of  the  Company's  customers  were  to
                  deteriorate,  resulting in an  impairment  of their ability to
                  make payments, additional allowances may be required.

         k.       Valuation  of  Long-lived  Assets - The Company  assesses  the
                  impairment of long-lived  assets whenever events or changes in
                  circumstances  indicate that the carrying value of such assets
                  may not be recoverable.  Important  factors that could trigger
                  an  impairment  review  include,   but  are  not  limited  to,
                  significant   negative   industry  or   economic   trends  and
                  significant  changes  in the use of the  Company's  assets  or
                  strategy of the overall business.



                                                                              48

         l.       Shipping   Costs  -  The  amounts   paid  by  the  Company  to
                  third-party  shippers for transporting  products to customers,
                  which are not  reimbursed  by  customers,  are  classified  as
                  selling  expenses.  The  shipping  costs  included in selling,
                  general and administrative expenses were approximately $4,417,
                  $4,258  and  $4,659  for  fiscal  years  2007,  2006 and 2005,
                  respectively.

         m.       Property,  Plant and Equipment - Property, plant and equipment
                  are stated at cost less accumulated depreciation.  The Company
                  capitalizes  additions,  improvements  and major  renewals and
                  expenses maintenance,  repairs and minor renewals as incurred.
                  Depreciation and amortization are computed  principally by the
                  straight-line   method  over  the   estimated   useful  lives.
                  Machinery  and equipment  are  generally  depreciated  over 10
                  years.  Building and leasehold  improvements  are  depreciated
                  over 30 years or the term of the lease, if shorter.

         n.       Income  Taxes  -  Deferred   income  taxes  are  provided  for
                  temporary  differences  in the  reporting  of  certain  items,
                  primarily  depreciation,  for income tax  purposes as compared
                  with financial accounting purposes.

                  United  States  ("U.S.")  Federal  income  taxes have not been
                  provided on the undistributed earnings  (approximately $93,700
                  at February 25, 2007) of the Company's  foreign  subsidiaries,
                  because it is  management's  practice  and intent to  reinvest
                  such earnings in the operations of such subsidiaries.

         o.       Foreign  Currency  Translation  - Assets  and  liabilities  of
                  foreign  subsidiaries  using  currencies  other  than the U.S.
                  dollar as their  functional  currency are translated into U.S.
                  dollars  at fiscal  year-end  exchange  rates,  and income and
                  expense items are translated at average exchange rates for the
                  period.  Gains  and  losses  resulting  from  translation  are
                  recorded as currency translation  adjustments in comprehensive
                  income.

         p.       Stock-based   Compensation  -  The  Company   implemented  the
                  disclosure  provisions  of Statement  of Financial  Accounting
                  Standards  ("SFAS")  No.  148,   "Accounting  for  Stock-Based
                  Compensation  -  Transition  and  Disclosure",  in the  fourth
                  quarter of fiscal year 2003.  Effective February 27, 2006, the
                  beginning of the Company's 2007 fiscal year, the Company began
                  recording  compensation expense associated with stock options,
                  the only form of equity compensation issued by the Company, in
                  accordance  with Statement of Financial  Accounting  Standards
                  No.  123(R),   "Share-Based   Payment"   ("SFAS  123R"),   and
                  Securities and Exchange  Commission Staff Accounting  Bulletin
                  No. 107. The Company recognizes such compensation expense on a
                  straight-line  basis over the four-year  service period during
                  which the options become exercisable.

                  As of February  25,  2007,  the  Company had two stock  option
                  plans  which are more fully  described  in Note 7. All options
                  under  such  plans  had an  exercise  price  equal to the fair
                  market value of the underlying common stock at the time of the
                  grant,  which  pursuant  to the  terms of such  plans,  is the
                  reported  closing  price of the  common  stock on the New York
                  Stock  Exchange on the date  preceding  the date the option is
                  granted.



                                                                              49

2.       MARKETABLE SECURITIES

         The following is a summary of available-for-sale securities:



                                               Gross          Gross
                                            Unrealized      Unrealized      Estimated
                                               Gains          Losses        Fair Value
                                           ------------    ------------    ------------
                                                                  
         February 25, 2007:
          U.S. Treasury and other
            government securities          $          2    $        467    $     61,278
          U.S. corporate debt securities             13               -          11,338
          Certificate of deposits                     -               -          17,000
                                           ------------    ------------    ------------
            Total debt securities                    15             467          89,616
          Equity securities                         102              -              108
                                           ------------    ------------    ------------
                                           $        117    $        467    $     89,724
                                           ============    ============    ============
         February 26, 2006:
          U.S. Treasury and other
            government securities          $          6    $      1,463    $     76,202
          U.S. corporate debt securities              -               -          15,333
                                           ------------    ------------    ------------
            Total debt securities                     6           1,463          91,535
          Equity securities                          86               -              90
                                           ------------    ------------    ------------
                                           $         92    $      1,463    $     91,625
                                           ============    ============    ============


         The gross realized  gains on the sales of securities  were $43, $23 and
         $4 for fiscal years 2007,  2006 and 2005,  respectively,  and the gross
         realized  losses were $114, $2 and $13 for fiscal years 2007,  2006 and
         2005, respectively.

         The amortized  cost and estimated fair value of the debt and marketable
         securities at February 25, 2007,  by  contractual  maturity,  are shown
         below:

                                                   Estimated Fair Value
                                                           and
                                                      Amortized Cost
                                                   --------------------
         Due in one year or less                   $             80,329
         Due after one year through five years                    9,287
                                                   --------------------
                                                                 89,616
         Equity securities                                          108
                                                   --------------------
                                                   $             89,724
                                                   ====================

3.       INVENTORIES

         Inventories consisted of the following:

                                                   February 25,    February 26,
                                                       2007            2006
                                                   ------------    ------------
         Raw materials                             $      6,867    $      6,092
         Work-in-process                                  3,372           3,412
         Finished goods                                   4,535           5,195
         Manufacturing supplies                             316             323
                                                   ------------    ------------
                                                   $     15,090    $     15,022
                                                   ============    ============



                                                                              50

4.       PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT

                                                   February 25,    February 26,
                                                       2007            2006
                                                   ------------    -------------
         Land, buildings and improvements          $     33,698    $      34,962
         Machinery, equipment, furniture
          and fixtures                                  137,806          131,954
                                                   ------------    -------------
                                                        171,504          166,916
         Less accumulated depreciation
          and amortization                              121,609          112,546
                                                   ------------    -------------
                                                   $     49,895    $      54,370
                                                   ============    =============

         Property,   plant  and  equipment   are   initially   valued  at  cost.
         Depreciation and amortization  expense relating to property,  plant and
         equipment  was $8,992,  $9,645 and $10,202 for fiscal years 2007,  2006
         and 2005,  respectively.  In the 2006 fiscal year fourth  quarter,  the
         Company  recorded  a  pre-tax  impairment  charge  of  $2,280  for  the
         write-off  of  construction  costs  related to the  installation  of an
         advanced high-speed treater at the Company's Neltec Europe SAS facility
         in Mirebeau, France.

5.       ACCRUED LIABILITIES

                                                   February 25,    February 26,
                                                       2007            2006
                                                   ------------    ------------
         Payroll and payroll related               $      3,832    $      3,580
         Employee benefits                                  897           1,189
         Workers compensation accrual                     1,575           1,608
         Environmental reserve (Note 16)                  1,757           1,757
         Restructuring accruals                             434             495
         Other                                            4,563           6,022
                                                   ------------    ------------
                                                   $     13,058    $     14,651
                                                   ============    ============

6.       INCOME TAXES

         The income tax (benefit) provision includes the following:

                                                   Fiscal Year
                                   --------------------------------------------
                                       2007           2006            2005
                                   ------------   ------------    -------------
         Current:
           Federal                 $      2,319   $      5,122    $        (585)
           State and local                  349            339              170
           Foreign                        3,445          2,793            2,672
                                   ------------   ------------    -------------
                                          6,113          8,254            2,257
                                   ------------   ------------    -------------
         Deferred:
           Federal                         (664)        (2,397)               -
           State and local                 (554)          (123)              (6)
           Foreign                         (544)          (250)             (60)
                                   ------------   ------------    -------------
                                         (1,762)        (2,770)             (66)
                                   ------------   ------------    -------------
                                   $      4,351   $      5,484    $       2,191
                                   ============   ============    =============



                                                                              51

         As part of its quarterly evaluation of deferred tax assets, the Company
         recognized  a tax benefit of $3,500  during the 2007 fiscal year second
         quarter  relating to the  elimination of certain  valuation  allowances
         previously  established  related to  deferred  tax assets in the United
         States.  The Company  believes that it is more likely than not that the
         tax benefits associated with these deferred tax assets will be realized
         during the next five fiscal years. In addition,  during the 2007 fiscal
         year second  quarter,  the Company  recognized  a tax benefit of $1,391
         relating  to the  elimination  of  reserves  no longer  required as the
         result of the completion of a tax audit and a $499 tax benefit relating
         to the  life  insurance  arrangement  termination  charge.  In the 2007
         fiscal year fourth quarter,  the Company recorded a tax benefit of $715
         relating to the  recognition  of tax credits  resulting  from operating
         losses sustained in prior years in France.

         During last year's third quarter,  the Company recognized a tax benefit
         of  $1,512  relating  to  the   elimination  of  valuation   allowances
         previously  established  related to  deferred  tax assets in the United
         States.

         The current  income tax  provision  for the 2006  fiscal year  included
         $3,088 in Federal,  state and local taxes relating to the  repatriation
         of foreign earnings.

         The components of income (loss) before income tax were as follows:

                                                   Fiscal Year
                                    --------------------------------------------
                                        2007           2006             2005
                                    ------------   ------------    -------------
         United States              $     18,330   $     12,823    $       1,198
         Foreign                          25,812         19,536           22,598
                                    ------------   ------------    -------------
         Earnings before income
          taxes                     $     44,142   $     32,359    $      23,796
                                    ============   ============    =============

         The Company's effective income tax rate differs from the statutory U.S.
         Federal income tax rate as a result of the following:



                                                                    Fiscal Year
                                                   ---------------------------------------------
                                                       2007            2006            2005
                                                   ------------    -------------   -------------
                                                                                  
         Statutory U.S. Federal tax rate                   35.0%            35.0%           35.0%
         State and local taxes, net of
           federal benefit                                 (0.3)             0.4             0.5
         Foreign tax rate differentials                    (9.1)            (9.1)          (20.2)
         Valuation allowance on deferred tax
           assets                                          (4.4)            (8.0)           (8.0)
         Elimination of reserves no longer
           required                                        (5.8)               -               -
         Utilization of net operating loss
          carryovers                                       (1.6)            (9.7)              -
         Foreign tax credits                               (2.1)               -               -
         Additional U.S. taxes on
           repatriated foreign earnings                       -              9.5               -
         Other, net                                        (1.8)            (1.1)            1.9
                                                   ------------    -------------   -------------
                                                            9.9%            17.0%            9.2%
                                                   ============    =============   =============




                                                                              52

         The   Company  had  total  net   operating   loss   carry-forwards   of
         approximately  $17,400  and  $15,800  in  fiscal  years  2007 and 2006,
         respectively.  All of  the  total  net  operating  loss  carry-forwards
         related to foreign operations in fiscal years 2007 and 2006.

         The foreign net operating loss carry-forwards have no expiration.

         The  Company  had New York State  investment  tax credits of $2,238 and
         $2,238 in fiscal years 2007 and 2006, respectively. No benefit has been
         recognized  for these  credits  as the  Company does not  believe  that
         realization is more likely than not.

         In the 2006 fiscal  year,  the  Company  utilized  all of its U.S.  net
         operating loss carry-forwards including $2,000 of cumulative deductions
         relating to the taxable  disposition of incentive stock options carried
         forward from fiscal years 2005 and 2004. The total tax benefit credited
         to additional paid in capital relating to the exercise of stock options
         was $1,264.

         Deferred  income  taxes  reflect  the  net  tax  effects  of  temporary
         differences  between the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities for
         financial  reporting  purposes and the amounts for income tax purposes.
         At February  25, 2007,  the Company had current  deferred tax assets of
         $3,791 compared to $2,927 at February 26, 2006.  Significant components
         of the Company's  long-term  deferred tax  liabilities and assets as of
         February 25, 2007 and February 26, 2006 were as follows:

                                                       2007             2006
                                                   ------------   -------------
         Deferred tax liabilities:
           Depreciation                            $     (1,380)  $      (1,763)
           Offshore Singapore earnings subject to
             local tax                                   (2,914)         (3,430)
                                                   ------------   -------------
              Total deferred tax liabilities       $     (4,294)  $      (5,193)
                                                   ============   =============
         Deferred tax assets:
           Impairment of fixed assets              $      4,266   $       4,379
           Net operating loss carry-forwards              5,598           5,157
           New York State investment tax credits          2,238           2,238
           Other, net                                     4,158           5,836
                                                   ------------   -------------
              Total deferred tax assets                  16,260          17,610
           Valuation allowance for deferred
             tax assets                                 (12,469)        (14,683)
                                                   ------------   -------------
              Net deferred tax assets              $      3,791   $       2,927
                                                   ============   =============

         Net deferred tax assets are included in  non-current  "Other Assets" on
         the  Consolidated  Balance Sheets.  Also included in "Other Assets" are
         French income tax refunds  totaling  $1,572  expected to be received in
         fiscal years 2009 and 2010.

7.       STOCK-BASED COMPENSATION

         As of February 25, 2007, the Company had a 1992 Stock Option Plan and a
         2002 Stock Option Plan,  and no other  stock-based  compensation  plan.
         Both  Stock   Option  Plans  have  been   approved  by  the   Company's
         stockholders  and provide for the grant of stock  options to  directors
         and key employees of the Company.  All options granted under such Plans
         have exercise prices equal to the fair market value of the underlying



                                                                              53

         common stock of the Company at the time of grant, which pursuant to the
         terms of the Plans,  is the reported  closing price of the common stock
         on the New  York  Stock  Exchange  on the date  preceding  the date the
         option is granted.  Options granted under the Plans become  exercisable
         25% one year from the date of grant, with an additional 25% exercisable
         each  succeeding  anniversary  of the date of grant and expire 10 years
         from the date of grant. The authority to grant additional options under
         the 1992 Stock Option Plan  expired on March 24,  2002,  and options to
         purchase a total of 900,000 shares of common stock were  authorized for
         grant under the 2002 Stock Option Plan. At February 25, 2007, 1,418,470
         shares of common stock of the Company were  reserved for issuance  upon
         exercise of stock options under the 1992 Stock Option Plan and the 2002
         Stock Option Plan and 351,843  shares were  available  for future grant
         under the 2002 Stock  Option  Plan.  Options to  purchase  174,700  and
         157,250 shares of common stock were granted during the 2007 fiscal year
         and 2006 fiscal year, respectively.

         Effective February 27, 2006, the beginning of the Company's 2007 fiscal
         year, the Company began recording  compensation expense associated with
         stock  options,  the only  form of  equity  compensation  issued by the
         Company, in accordance with Statement of Financial Accounting Standards
         No. 123(R),  "Share-Based  Payment"  ("SFAS 123R"),  and Securities and
         Exchange  Commission  Staff  Accounting  Bulletin  No.  107.  Prior  to
         February  27,  2006,  the  Company  accounted  for equity  compensation
         according to the  provisions  of  Accounting  Principles  Board ("APB")
         Opinion No. 25,  "Accounting for Stock Issued to Employees" ("APB 25"),
         and,  therefore,  no related  compensation  expense was recorded in the
         statements of earnings for awards granted with no intrinsic  value. The
         Company adopted the modified prospective  transition method pursuant to
         SFAS 123R, and,  consequently,  has not retroactively  adjusted results
         from prior periods.  Under this transition  method,  compensation costs
         associated with equity compensation  recognized during the 13 weeks and
         52 weeks ended  February 25, 2007 included (1)  quarterly  amortization
         related to the  remaining  unexercisable  portion of all stock  options
         granted  prior to February  27, 2006 based on the grant date fair value
         estimated in  accordance  with the original  provisions of Statement of
         Financial  Accounting  Standards No. 123,  "Accounting  for Stock-Based
         Compensation"  ("SFAS 123"), and (2) quarterly  amortization related to
         all stock options granted  subsequent to February 27, 2006 based on the
         grant date fair value  estimated in accordance  with the  provisions of
         SFAS 123R.

         The Company  determines the fair value of stock options on the dates of
         grants  using an option  pricing  model with  assumptions  regarding  a
         number of highly  complex and  subjective  variables.  These  variables
         include,  but are not limited to, the  risk-free  interest  rate of the
         options,  the expected life of the options,  the expected volatility of
         the market  price of the  Company's  common  stock over the term of the
         options,  the  expected  dividends to be paid on the  Company's  common
         stock, and an estimate of the amount of options that are expected to be
         forfeited.  The Company uses the Black-Scholes  option-pricing model to
         determine  the fair value of options  under SFAS 123R and the  original
         SFAS 123.  The  compensation  expense  for stock  options  includes  an
         estimate for  forfeitures and is recognized over the vesting term using
         the  ratable  method.  Prior to the  Company's  adoption  of SFAS 123R,
         benefits of tax deductions in excess of recognized  compensation  costs
         were  reported as operating  cash flows.  SFAS 123R  requires that such
         benefits  be  recorded  as a  financing  cash  inflow  rather than as a
         reduction of taxes paid.  For the 13 weeks and 52 weeks ended  February
         25, 2007 no excess tax benefits were generated from option exercises.



                                                                              54

         As a result of the adoption of SFAS 123R, the Company's earnings before
         income taxes for the 13 weeks and 52 weeks ended February 25, 2007 were
         $350 and $1,283, respectively, lower than under the previous accounting
         methodology  for  stock-based  compensation.  The  future  compensation
         expense affecting earnings before income taxes for options  outstanding
         at February 25, 2007 will be $2,590 as a result of the adoption of SFAS
         123R.

         If  compensation  expense for the Company's stock option plans had been
         determined  based  upon  estimated  fair  values at the grant  dates in
         accordance  with SFAS 123, the Company's pro forma net income and basic
         and  diluted  earnings  per common  share for the 2006 and 2005  fiscal
         years for stock  options  granted  prior to the  adoption  of SFAS 123R
         would have been as follows (in thousands, except for per share data):

                                                       2006            2005
                                                   ------------    ------------
         Net earnings                              $     26,875    $     21,605
         Deduct: Total stock-based employee
          compensation determined under fair
          value based method for all awards, net
          of tax effects                                 (1,627)         (1,803)
                                                   ------------    ------------
         Pro forma net earnings                    $     25,248    $     19,802
                                                   ============    ============
         Basic earnings per share:
           As reported                             $       1.34    $       1.09
           Pro forma                               $       1.26    $       1.00
         Diluted earnings per share:
           As reported                             $       1.33    $       1.08
           Pro forma                               $       1.25    $       0.97

         The weighted  average fair value for options was estimated at the dates
         of grants using the Black-Scholes option-pricing model to be $10.84 for
         fiscal year 2007,  $7.77 for fiscal year 2006 and $8.41 for fiscal year
         2005,  with the  following  assumptions:  risk  free  interest  rate of
         4.0%-5.0% for fiscal year 2007 and 5.0% for fiscal years 2006 and 2005;
         expected  volatility  factors of  34.4%-58.8%,  34%-36% and 38%-46% for
         fiscal years 2007, 2006 and 2005, respectively; expected dividend yield
         of 1.0%-1.6%  for fiscal year 2007,  1.3% for fiscal year 2006 and 1.6%
         for fiscal year 2005;  and estimated  option terms of 4.0-5.6 years for
         fiscal year 2007, and 4.0 years for fiscal years 2006 and 2005.

         The estimated term of the options is based on evaluations of historical
         and expected future employee exercise behavior.  The risk free interest
         rate is based on U.S. Treasury rates at the date of grant with maturity
         dates  approximately  equal to the estimated term of the options at the
         date of the grant.  Volatility is based on historical volatility of the
         company stock.



                                                                              55

         Information with respect to options follows:

                                                                     Weighted
                                                                     Average
                                                    Outstanding      Exercise
                                                      Options          Price
                                                   ------------    ------------
         Balance, February 29,2004                    1,396,653    $      19.91
         Granted                                        183,900           22.86
         Exercised                                     (152,327)          13.04
         Terminated or expired                         (144,407)          23.89
                                                   ------------
         Balance, February 27, 2005                   1,283,819    $      20.71
         Granted                                        157,250           24.57
         Exercised                                     (218,770)          17.89
         Terminated or expired                         (218,845)          25.89
                                                   ------------
         Balance, February 26, 2006                   1,003,454    $      20.80
         Granted                                        174,700           25.35
         Exercised                                      (80,236)          17.85
         Terminated or expired                          (31,291)          26.07
                                                   ------------
         Balance, February 25, 2007                   1,066,627           21.61
                                                   ============
         Exercisable February 25, 2007                  714,615    $      20.13
                                                   ============

         The following table summarizes  information  concerning outstanding and
         exercisable options at February 25, 2007.



                                                                Weighted
                                                                Average
                                                Weighted       Remaining
                                                 Average       Contractual    Aggregated
                                  Number of     Exercise        Term In        Intrinsic
                                   Options       Price            Years          Value
                                  ---------   ------------    ------------   ------------
                                                                 
Outstanding at February 25, 2007  1,066,627   $      20.61            5.33   $      7,446
Exercisable at February 25, 2007    714,615          20.13            3.68          6,046


         The total values realized (the market value of the underlying shares on
         the date of  exercise,  less the  exercise  price,  times the number of
         shares acquired) from the exercise of options during the 2007, 2006 and
         2005 fiscal years were $1,153, $1,424 and $1,489,  respectively.  Stock
         options  available for future grant under the 2002 Stock Option Plan at
         February  25,  2007 and  February  26, 2006 were  351,843 and  502,453,
         respectively.



                                                                              56

8.       STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY

         a.       Stockholders'  Rights  Plan - On July 20,  2005,  the Board of
                  Directors renewed the Company's  stockholders'  rights plan on
                  substantially the same terms as its previous rights plan which
                  expired  in July,  2005.  In  accordance  with  the  Company's
                  stockholders'  rights plan, a right (the  "Right") to purchase
                  from  the  Company  a unit  consisting  of one  one-thousandth
                  (1/1000)   of  a  share  (a   "Unit")   of   Series  B  Junior
                  Participating  Preferred Stock, par value $1.00 per share (the
                  "Series B Preferred Stock"),  at a purchase price of $150 (the
                  "Purchase Price") per Unit, subject to adjustment, is attached
                  to each  outstanding  share of the Company's common stock. The
                  Rights expire on July 20, 2015. Subject to certain exceptions,
                  the Rights will become  exercisable  10 business  days after a
                  person   acquires   15  percent  or  more  of  the   Company's
                  outstanding  common  stock or  commences  a tender  offer that
                  would  result in such  person's  owning 15  percent or more of
                  such stock.  If any person  acquires 15 percent or more of the
                  Company's  outstanding  common  stock,  the rights of holders,
                  other than the acquiring  person,  become rights to buy shares
                  of the Company's common stock (or of the acquiring  company if
                  the  Company  is  involved  in  a  merger  or  other  business
                  combination  and is not the  surviving  corporation)  having a
                  market  value of twice the Purchase  Price of each Right.  The
                  Company  may redeem  the  Rights  for $.01 per Right  until 10
                  business days after the first date of public  announcement  by
                  the Company  that a person  acquired 15 percent or more of the
                  Company's outstanding common stock.

         b.       Reserved  Common  Shares - At  February  25,  2007,  1,418,470
                  shares  of  common  stock  were  reserved  for  issuance  upon
                  exercise of stock options.

         c.       Accumulated Other Comprehensive  Income - Accumulated balances
                  related to each component of other  comprehensive  income were
                  as follows:

                                                    February 25,  February 26,
                                                        2007          2006
                                                    ------------  -------------
                  Currency translation adjustment   $      5,010  $       3,326
                  Unrealized losses on investments         (246)           (891)
                                                    ------------  -------------
                  Accumulated balance               $      4,764  $       2,435
                                                    ============  =============

         d.       Dividends  Declared - On July 20, 2006, the Company  announced
                  that its  Board of  Directors  had  declared  a  special  cash
                  dividend  of $1.00 per share,  which was paid  August 22, 2006
                  and was in addition to the Company's  regular  quarterly  cash
                  dividends  of $0.08 per share;  and on October 19,  2005,  the
                  Company  announced  that its Board of Directors had declared a
                  special  cash  dividend  of $1.00  per  share,  which was paid
                  December 15, 2005 and was in addition to the Company's regular
                  quarterly cash dividends of $0.08 per share.



                                                                              57

9.       EARNINGS PER SHARE

         Basic  earnings  per share are computed by dividing net earnings by the
         weighted  average number of shares of common stock  outstanding  during
         the period.  Diluted  earnings  per share are  computed by dividing net
         earnings  by the sum of (a) the  weighted  average  number of shares of
         common stock outstanding during the period and (b) the potential common
         stock equivalents  outstanding during the period. Stock options are the
         only common stock  equivalents;  and the number of dilutive  options is
         computed using the treasury stock method.

         The  following  table sets forth the  calculation  of basic and diluted
         earnings per share for the last three fiscal years:

         
           
                                                     2007            2006            2005
                                                 ------------    ------------    ------------
                                                                        
           Net earnings                          $     39,791    $     26,875    $     21,605
                                                 ============    ============    ============
           Weighted average common shares
            outstanding for basic EPS              20,175,422      20,046,900      19,879,278
           Net effect of dilutive options             141,418         163,300         195,741
                                                 ------------    ------------    ------------
           Weighted average shares outstanding
            for diluted EPS                        20,316,840      20,210,200      20,075,019
                                                 ============    ============    ============
           Basic earnings per share              $       1.97            1.34    $       1.09
                                                 ============    ============    ============
           Diluted earnings per share            $       1.96    $       1.33    $       1.08
                                                 ============    ============    ============
           

         Common stock equivalents, which were not included in the computation of
         diluted  earnings per share  because  either the effect would have been
         antidilutive  or the  options'  exercise  prices were  greater than the
         average  market  price of the common  stock,  were  3,619,  100,058 and
         99,447 for the fiscal years 2007, 2006 and 2005, respectively.

10.      DISCONTINUED OPERATIONS AND PENSION LIABILITY

         On February 4, 2004, the Company  announced  that it was  discontinuing
         its financial  support of its Dielektra GmbH  ("Dielektra")  subsidiary
         located  in  Cologne,  Germany,  due to the  continued  erosion  of the
         European  market for the Company's high  technology  products.  Without
         Park's financial support, Dielektra filed an insolvency petition, which
         the Company  believes will result in the  liquidation of Dielektra.  In
         accordance  with  SFAS  No.  144,  "Accounting  for the  Impairment  or
         Disposal of Long-Lived Assets",  Dielektra is treated as a discontinued
         operation.  As a result of the discontinuation of financial support for
         Dielektra,  the Company  recognized an impairment charge of $22,023 for
         the  write-off  of  Dielektra  assets and other costs during the fourth
         quarter of the 2004 fiscal  year.  The  liabilities  from  discontinued
         operations are reported  separately on the Consolidated  Balance Sheet.
         These  liabilities from  discontinued  operations  included $12,094 for
         Dielektra's   deferred  pension  liability.   The  Company  expects  to
         recognize a gain of  approximately  $17 million related to the reversal
         of  these  liabilities  when  the  Dielektra   insolvency   process  is
         completed, although it is unclear when the process will be completed.



                                                                              58

         Liabilities  for  discontinued  operations  as of February 25, 2007 and
         February 26, 2006 consisted of the following:

                                                   February 25,    February 26,
                                                       2007            2006
                                                   ------------    ------------
         Environmental and
           other liabilities                       $      5,087    $      5,157
         Pension liabilities                             12,094          12,094
                                                   ------------    ------------
           Total liabilities                       $     17,181    $     17,251
                                                   ============    ============

11.      REALIGNMENT AND SEVERANCE CHARGES

         During the 2006  fiscal  year first  quarter,  the  Company  recorded a
         charge of $1,059 for  employment  termination  benefits for a workforce
         reduction at its Neltec Europe SAS subsidiary in Mirebeau, France, $170
         of which was  reversed  in the 2006 fiscal  year  fourth  quarter.  The
         payment of these termination  benefits was  substantially  completed by
         the end of the 2006 fiscal year.

         During the 2005 fiscal year third quarter, the Company recorded $625 of
         charges for severance  payments for  workforce  reductions at its North
         American and European  volume  printed  circuit  materials  operations.
         These severance  payments were made to employees during the 2005 fiscal
         year  third  quarter  and there  were no  remaining  liabilities  as of
         February 27, 2005.

         The Company  recorded  pre-tax  charges of $1,934 and $6,504 during the
         first  and  second  quarters,  respectively,  of the 2004  fiscal  year
         related to the  realignment of its North America volume printed circuit
         materials operations in Newburgh,  New York and Fullerton,  California.
         During the  fourth  quarter of fiscal  year 2004 the  Company  recorded
         pretax  charges of $112 related to workforce  reductions  in Europe and
         recovered  $81 from sales of impaired  assets  related to its  European
         operations.  The components of these charges and the related  liability
         balances  and  activity  for the year ended  February  25, 2007 are set
         forth below.



                                                 Paid or
                                               Reversed in                                   Present        2/25/07
                                Original          Prior         Balance        Charges        Value        Remaining
                                 Charge           Years         2/26/06         Paid        Adjustment    Liabilities
                              ------------    ------------   ------------   ------------   ------------   ------------
                                                                                        
Neltec Europe
  Termination benefits        $      1,059    $       (853)  $        206   $        (40)  $          -   $        166
New York and California and
 other realignment charges:
  Lease payments,
    taxes, utilities
    and other                        7,292          (2,079)         5,213           (494)          (570)         4,149
  Termination benefits               1,258          (1,258)             -              -              -              -
                              ------------    ------------   ------------   ------------   ------------   ------------
                              $      9,609    $     (4,190)  $      5,419   $       (534)  $       (570)  $      4,315
                              ============    ============   ============   ============   ============   ============




                                                                              59

         The  termination  benefits  were  for the  termination  of  hourly  and
         salaries,  administrative,  manufacturing and support  employees.  Such
         employees were  terminated in France during the 2006 fiscal year second
         quarter and in North America during the 2004 fiscal year first,  second
         and third quarters.  The major portion of the termination benefits were
         paid for such  employees in France during the second,  third and fourth
         quarters of the 2006 fiscal year,  and the  termination  benefits  were
         paid for such employees in North America in installments  during fiscal
         year 2004.  The lease  charges  covered  one lease  obligation  payable
         through December 2004 and a portion of another lease obligation payable
         through  September  2013.  For the 13 and 52 weeks ended  February  25,
         2007,  the  Company  applied  $123 and $494  respectively,  of payments
         against the liability.

         As a result of the  foregoing  employee  terminations  and  other  less
         significant   employee   terminations   in  connection   with  business
         contractions  and in the ordinary  course of business  and  substantial
         numbers of employee resignations and retirements in the ordinary course
         of  business,  the total  number of  employees  employed by the Company
         declined to approximately 950 as of February 25, 2007.

12.      GAIN ON INSURANCE SETTLEMENT

         In the 2005 fiscal year third quarter, the Company settled an insurance
         claim for damages  sustained  by the Company in Singapore as the result
         of an  explosion  that  occurred  in  November  2002 in one of the four
         treaters  located at its Nelco  manufacturing  facility  in  Singapore.
         During the 2005 fiscal year third quarter,  the Company received $5,816
         related to this insurance claim. The proceeds  represent  reimbursement
         for assets  destroyed in the  accident  and for  business  interruption
         losses.  As a result,  the Company  recognized a $4,745 gain during the
         2005 fiscal year third quarter.

13.      INSURANCE ARRANGEMENT TERMINATION CHARGE

         During the 2007 fiscal year second  quarter ended August 27, 2006,  the
         Company terminated a split-dollar life insurance arrangement with Jerry
         Shore, the Company's  founder and former Chairman,  President and Chief
         Executive Officer. The insurance  arrangement,  which involved two life
         insurance  policies payable on the death of the survivor of Jerry Shore
         and his spouse  with an  aggregate  face value of $5 million and annual
         premium payments by the Company of approximately  $129, was implemented
         in 1997 but discontinued in 2004 in light of certain  provisions of the
         Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and due to changes in the income taxation of
         split-dollar life insurance arrangements. The arrangement is more fully
         described  in the  Company's  annual proxy  statements  for each of the
         years 1998 through 2006.  Pursuant to an agreement entered into between
         Jerry  Shore  and  the  Company,   the  termination  of  the  insurance
         arrangement involved a payment of $1,335 by the Company to Mr. Shore in
         January 2007. Such  termination and payment resulted in a net cash cost
         to the Company of $685, after the Company's receipt of a portion of the
         cash  surrender  value  of the life  insurance  policies.  The  Company
         recorded  a pre-tax  charge of $1,316 in the 2007  fiscal  year  second
         quarter ended August 27, 2006 in connection  with this  termination and
         recognized a $499 tax benefit  relating to this  insurance  termination
         charge.



                                                                              60

14.      EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS

         a.       Profit   Sharing  Plan  -  The  Company  and  certain  of  its
                  subsidiaries have a non-contributory profit sharing retirement
                  plan covering their regular full-time employees.  The plan may
                  be modified or terminated at any time, but in no event may any
                  portion of the contributions  revert back to the Company.  The
                  Company's  estimated  contributions  are accrued at the end of
                  each fiscal year and paid to the plan in the subsequent fiscal
                  year. The Company's actual contributions to the plan were $847
                  and $687 for  fiscal  years 2006 and 2005,  respectively.  The
                  contribution estimated for fiscal year 2007 has not been paid.
                  Contributions  are discretionary and may not exceed the amount
                  allowable as a tax deduction under the Internal Revenue Code.

         b.       Savings  Plan - The  Company  also  sponsors a 401(k)  savings
                  plan,  pursuant to which the  contributions  of  employees  of
                  certain  subsidiaries were partially matched by the Company in
                  the amounts of $247,  $218 and $236 in fiscal years 2007, 2006
                  and 2005, respectively.

15.      LEASE COMMITMENTS

         The Company  conducts  certain of its operations in leased  facilities,
         which include several manufacturing plants, warehouses and offices, and
         land leases.  The leases on facilities are for terms of up to 10 years,
         the latest of which expires in 2015. Many of the leases contain renewal
         options  for  periods  ranging  from one to ten years and  require  the
         Company to pay real estate taxes and other operating  costs. The latest
         land lease expiration is 2054.

         These  non-cancelable  operating  leases  have  the  following  payment
         schedule.

                         Fiscal Year           Amount
                         -----------         ----------
                            2008                  2,029
                            2009                  1,905
                            2010                  1,931
                            2011                  1,669
                            2012                  1,108
                         Thereafter               2,541
                                             ----------
                                             $   11,183
                                             ==========

         Rental expenses,  inclusive of real estate taxes and other cost $2,047,
         $2,257 and $2,560 for fiscal years 2007, 2006 and 2005, respectively.

16.      CONTINGENCIES

         a.       Litigation  - The  Company  is  subject  to a small  number of
                  proceedings,    lawsuits   and   other   claims   related   to
                  environmental,  employment,  product  and other  matters.  The
                  Company is  required to assess the  likelihood  of any adverse
                  judgments  or outcomes in these  matters as well as  potential
                  ranges of probable  losses.  A determination  of the amount of
                  reserves  required,  if any, for these  contingencies  is made
                  after careful analysis of each individual  issue. The required
                  reserves may change in the future due to new  developments  in
                  each  matter  or  changes  in  approach,  such as a change  in
                  settlement strategy in dealing with these matters.



                                                                              61

         b.       Environmental  Contingencies  - The Company and certain of its
                  subsidiaries have been named by the  Environmental  Protection
                  Agency (the "EPA") or a comparable state agency under the Com-
                  prehensive Environmental Response,  Compensation and Liability
                  Act (the "Superfund  Act") or similar state law as potentially
                  responsible  parties in  connection  with alleged  releases of
                  haz-  ardous   substances  at  nine  sites.  In  addition,   a
                  subsidiary of the Company has received  cost  recovery  claims
                  under the Superfund Act from other private  parties  involving
                  one other site and has  received  requests  from the EPA under
                  the  Superfund  Act  for  information   with  respect  to  its
                  involvement at three other sites.

                  Under the Superfund  Act and similar  state laws,  all parties
                  who may  have  contributed  any  waste  to a  hazardous  waste
                  disposal site or  contaminated  area  identified by the EPA or
                  comparable  state agency may be jointly and  severally  liable
                  for the cost of cleanup.  Generally, these sites are locations
                  at which numerous  persons disposed of hazardous waste. In the
                  case of the  Company's  subsidiaries,  generally the waste was
                  removed from their  manufacturing  facilities  and disposed at
                  waste sites by various  companies  which  contracted  with the
                  subsidiaries to provide waste disposal  services.  Neither the
                  Company nor any of  its subsidiaries  have  been accused of or
                  charged with any wrongdoing or illegal acts in connection with
                  any such sites. The Company believes it maintains an effective
                  and comprehensive environmental compliance program.

                  The  insurance   carriers  who  provided   general   liability
                  insurance coverage to the Company and its subsidiaries for the
                  years  during  which  the  Company's  subsidiaries'  waste was
                  disposed at these sites have agreed to pay, or  reimburse  the
                  Company and its subsidiaries  for, 100% of their legal defense
                  and remediation costs associated with three of these sites and
                  25% of such costs associated with another one of these sites.

                  The total costs  incurred by the Company and its  subsidiaries
                  in connection with these sites,  including legal fees incurred
                  by the Company and its  subsidiaries  and their assessed share
                  remediation  costs and excluding amounts paid or reimbursed by
                  insurance carriers, were approximately $1, $1 and $2 in fiscal
                  years  2007,  2006  and  2005,   respectively.   The  recorded
                  liabilities  included in accrued liabilities for environmental
                  matters were $1,757,  $1,757 and $2,387 for fiscal years 2007,
                  2006  and  2005,  respectively.   As  discussed  in  Note  10,
                  liabilities from discontinued  operations have been segregated
                  on the  Consolidated  Balance  Sheet and  include  $2,121  for
                  environmental matters related to Dielektra.

                  Such  recorded   liabilities  do  not  include   environmental
                  liabilities  and related legal  expenses for which the Company
                  has concluded  indemnification  agreements  with the insurance
                  carriers who provided general liability  insurance coverage to
                  the Company and its  subsidiaries  for the years  during which
                  the Company's  subsidiaries' waste was disposed at three sites
                  for which certain  subsidiaries of the Company have been named
                  as  potentially   responsible   parties,   pursuant  to  which
                  agreements  such  insurance  carriers have been paying 100% of
                  the legal defense and remediation  costs  associated with such
                  three sites since 1985.



                                                                              62

                  Included in cost of sales are  charges for actual  expenditure
                  accruals,   based  on  estimates,  for  certain  environmental
                  matters  described above. The Company accrues  estimated costs
                  associated with known environmental  matters,  when such costs
                  can be  reasonably  estimated  and  when the  outcome  appears
                  probable.  The Company believes that the ultimate  disposition
                  of  known  environmental  matters  will  not  have a  material
                  adverse effect on the liquidity,  capital resources,  business
                  or consolidated results of operations or financial position of
                  the  Company.  However,  one or  more  of  such  environmental
                  matters  could  have  a  significant  negative  impact  on the
                  Company's  consolidated  results of  operations  or  financial
                  position for a particular reporting period.

17.      BUSINESS SEGMENTS

         The Company considers itself to operate in one business segment because
         the Company's advanced composite  materials product line comprises less
         than 10% of the Company's  assets,  revenues and profit from operations
         on an absolute  basis.  The Company's  printed  circuit  materials (the
         Nelco(R)  product line) are marketed  primarily to leading  independent
         printed circuit board  fabricators,  electronic  manufacturing  service
         companies,  electronic  contract  manufacturers  and  major  electronic
         original  equipment  manufacturers  ("OEMs")  located  throughout North
         America,  Europe and Asia. The Company's advanced  composite  materials
         (the  Nelcote(TM)  product line)  customers,  the majority of which are
         located in the  United  States,  include  OEMs,  independent  firms and
         distributors in the electronics, aerospace, and industrial industries.

         Sales are  attributed to  geographic  region based upon the region from
         which the  materials  were  invoiced  to the  customer.  Sales  between
         geographic regions were not significant.

         Financial  information regarding the Company's operations by geographic
         region follows:



                                                     Fiscal Year
                                     --------------------------------------------
                                         2007            2006            2005
                                     ------------    ------------    ------------
                                                            
         Sales:
         United States               $    140,390    $    124,365    $    117,109
         Europe                            34,870          34,372          34,198
         Asia                              82,117          63,514          59,880
                                     ------------    ------------    ------------
           Total sales               $    257,377    $    222,251    $    211,187
                                     ============    ============    ============
         Long-lived assets:
         United States               $     25,600    $     27,769    $     32,610
         Europe                             4,659           9,077          10,856
         Asia                              25,331          20,105          20,183
                                     ------------    ------------    ------------
           Total long-lived assets   $     55,590    $     56,951    $     63,649
                                     ============    ============    ============


18.      CUSTOMER AND SUPPLIER CONCENTRATIONS

         a.       Customers - Sales to Sanmina-SCI Corporation were 16.7%, 19.4%
                  and 16.2% of the Company's  total  worldwide  sales for fiscal
                  years  2007,  2006  and  2005,  respectively.   Sales  to  TTM
                  Technologies  Inc.  "TTM") were 10.7%,  11.7% and 13.3% of the
                  Company's  total  worldwide  sales for fiscal years 2007, 2006
                  and 2005.  The  sales to TTM  during  the 2007,  2006 and 2005
                  fiscal  years  included  sales to Tyco Printed  Circuit  Group
                  L.P., which was acquired by TTM



                                                                              63

                  during  the  Company's  2007  fiscal  year;  and the  sales to
                  Sanmina-SCI  Corporation  during the 2005 fiscal year included
                  sales to Pentex  Schweitzer,  which was  acquired  by  Sanmina
                  during the  Company's  2006 fiscal year.  Sales to  Multilayer
                  Technology,  Inc.  were 8.6%,  10.4% and 9.5% of the Company's
                  total  worldwide  sales for fiscal  year 2007,  2006 and 2005,
                  respectively.

                  While  no  other  customer  accounted  for  10% or more of the
                  Company's total worldwide sales in fiscal years 2007, 2006 and
                  2005, and the Company is not dependent on any single customer,
                  the loss of a major printed circuit materials customer or of a
                  group of customers could have a material adverse effect on the
                  Company's  business or  consolidated  results of operations or
                  financial position.

         b.       Sources  of  Supply  - The  principal  materials  used  in the
                  manufacture of the Company's  high-technology  printed circuit
                  materials  and  advanced  composite   materials  products  are
                  specially  manufactured  copper  foil,  fiberglass  cloth  and
                  synthetic reinforcements,  and specially formulated resins and
                  chemicals.  Although  there are a limited  number of qualified
                  suppliers  of these  materials,  the Company has  nevertheless
                  identified  alternate  sources  of  supply  for  each  of such
                  materials.  While the Company has not experienced  significant
                  problems in the delivery of these  materials and considers its
                  relationships with its suppliers to be strong, a disruption of
                  the  supply  of  material  from  a  principal  supplier  could
                  adversely   affect  the   Company's   business.   Furthermore,
                  substitutes for these materials are not readily  available and
                  an  inability to obtain  essential  materials,  if  prolonged,
                  could materially adversely affect the Company's business.

19.      RECENTLY ISSUED ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS

         In May 2005,  the  Financial  Accounting  Standards  Board (the "FASB")
         issued Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 154, "Accounting
         Changes and Error Corrections,  a replacement of APB Opinion No. 20 and
         FASB Statement No. 3" ("SFAS 154"). SFAS No. 154 requires retrospective
         application  to prior  periods  financial  statements  for  changes  in
         accounting  principle,  unless it is  impracticable to determine either
         the  period-specific  effects or the  cumulative  effect of the change.
         SFAS No. 154 also requires that  retrospective  application of a change
         in accounting principle be limited to the direct effects of the change.
         Indirect  effects  of  a  change  in  accounting  principle  should  be
         recognized in the period of the accounting change. SFAS No. 154 further
         requires a change in depreciation, amortization or depletion method for
         long-lived,  non-financial  assets to be  accounted  for as a change in
         accounting estimate effected by a change in accounting principle.  SFAS
         No. 154 became effective for the Company's 2007 fiscal year and did not
         have  a  material  effect  on  the  Company's   Consolidated  Financial
         Statements.

         In July 2006, the FASB issued FASB  Interpretation  No. 48, "Accounting
         for Uncertainty in Income Taxes -- an  Interpretation of FASB Statement
         No. 109" ("FIN 48"). This  Interpretation  clarifies the accounting for
         uncertainty  in  income  taxes  recognized  in  an  entity's  financial
         statements  in  accordance  with SFAS No. 109,  "Accounting  for Income
         Taxes".   It  prescribes  a  recognition   threshold  and   measurement
         methodology



                                                                              64

         for financial  statement reporting purposes and promulgates a series of
         new disclosures of tax positions taken or expected to be taken on a tax
         return  for  which  less than all of the  resulting  tax  benefits  are
         expected to be realized.  This  Interpretation  is effective for fiscal
         years  beginning  after  December 15, 2006. The Company will adopt this
         Interpretation in the first quarter of its 2008 fiscal year, which will
         begin  February  26,  2007.  The Company is  currently  evaluating  the
         requirements  of FIN 48 and has not yet  determined  the impact of such
         requirements on the Company's Consolidated Financial Statements.

         In September  2006, the FASB issued  Statement of Financial  Accounting
         Standards No. 157,  "Fair Value  Measurements"  ("SFAS 157").  SFAS 157
         defines fair value, establishes a framework for measuring fair value in
         accordance with generally accepted accounting  principles in the United
         States ("GAAP"), and expands disclosures about fair value measurements.
         SFAS 157 applies whenever other standards require, or permit, assets or
         liabilities  to be measured at fair value.  SFAS 157 is  effective  for
         fiscal years  beginning  after  November  15, 2007 and interim  periods
         within those fiscal years.  Early  adoption is permitted.  SFAS 157 did
         not have a  material  effect on the  Company's  Consolidated  Financial
         Statements.

         In September 2006, the Securities and Exchange  Commission issued Staff
         Accounting   Bulletin  No.  108  ("SAB  No.   108"),   which   provides
         interpretive  guidance on how the effects of the  carryover or reversal
         of prior year  misstatements  should be  considered  in  quantifying  a
         current year misstatement. If the effect of the initial misstatement is
         determined to be material,  the cumulative effect may be reported as an
         adjustment to the beginning of year retained  earnings with  disclosure
         of the nature and amount of each  individual  error being  corrected in
         the  cumulative  adjustment.  SAB No. 108 is effective for fiscal years
         ending after November 15, 2006,  with early  application  for the first
         interim period ending after November 15, 2006. The Company  adopted SAB
         No. 108 in the fourth  quarter of fiscal year 2007. The Company has not
         discovered  material errors in prior years with material  effects as of
         the date of this Form l0-K Annual Report.

         In February  2007,  the FASB issued  Statement of Financial  Accounting
         Standard  ("SFAS") No. 159, "The Fair Value Option for Financial Assets
         and Financial Liabilities--Including an amendment of FASB Statement No.
         115" ("SFAS 159").  SFAS 159 permits  entities to elect to measure many
         financial instruments and certain other items at fair value. Unrealized
         gains and  losses on items for  which the fair  value  option  has been
         elected will be  recognized  in earnings at each  subsequent  reporting
         date.  SFAS 159 is effective for fiscal years  beginning after November
         15,  2007.  SFAS 159 did not have a  material  effect on the  Company's
         Consolidated Financial Statements.



                                                                              65

PARK ELECTROCHEMICAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES

SELECTED QUARTERLY FINANCIAL DATA (UNAUDITED)



                                                         Quarter
                                ----------------------------------------------------------
                                   First           Second         Third          Fourth
                                ------------    ------------   ------------   ------------
                                         (In thousands, except per share amounts)
                                                                  
Fiscal 2007:
Net sales                             62,838          66,518         68,195         59,826
Gross profit                          16,363          16,044         17,241         14,459

Net earnings                           8,894          12,544          9,529          8,824

Basic earnings per share:
Net earnings per share          $       0.44    $       0.62   $       0.47   $       0.44
Diluted earnings per share:
Net earnings per share          $       0.44    $       0.62   $       0.47   $       0.44

 Weighted average common
  shares outstanding:
   Basic                              20,135          20,183         20,189         20,194
   Diluted                            20,357          20,295         20,332         20,283

Fiscal 2006:
Net sales                       $     55,676    $     52,442   $     57,159   $     56,974
Gross profit                          12,030          11,595         15,292         15,684

Net earnings                           5,328           6,057          9,745          5,745

Basic earnings per share:
Net earnings per share          $       0.27    $       0.30   $       0.48   $       0.29
Diluted earnings per share:
Net earnings per share          $       0.27    $       0.30   $       0.48   $       0.28

 Weighted average common
  shares outstanding:
   Basic                              19,947          20,032         20,099         20,109
   Diluted                            20,076          20,223         20,251         20,291


     Earnings per share are computed separately for each quarter. Therefore, the
     sum of such quarterly per share amounts may differ from the total for the
     years.



                                                                              66

ITEM 9.  CHANGES IN AND  DISAGREEMENTS  WITH  ACCOUNTANTS  ON ACCOUNTING  AND
         FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE.

         Not applicable.

ITEM 9A. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES.

         (a)      Disclosure Controls and Procedures.

         The Company's management, with the participation of the Company's Chief
Executive Officer and Chief Financial  Officer,  has evaluated the effectiveness
of the Company's  disclosure controls and procedures (as such term is defined in
Rules  13a-15(e) and  15d-15(e)  under the  Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended (the  "Exchange  Act")) as of February  25, 2007,  the end of the fiscal
year covered by this annual  report.  Based on such  evaluation,  the  Company's
Chief Executive  Officer and Chief Financial  Officer have concluded that, as of
the end of such fiscal year,  the Company's  disclosure  controls and procedures
are effective in recording,  processing,  summarizing and reporting, on a timely
basis,  information  required to be disclosed by the Company in the reports that
it files or submits  under the Exchange Act and are  effective in ensuring  that
information required to be disclosed by the Company in the reports that it files
or  submits  under the  Exchange  Act is  accumulated  and  communicated  to the
Company's management,  including the Company's Chief Executive Officer and Chief
Financial Officer,  as appropriate to allow timely decisions  regarding required
disclosure.

         (b)      Management's  Annual Report on Internal Control Over Financial
Reporting.

         The  management  of the Company is  responsible  for  establishing  and
maintaining  adequate  internal  control over financial  reporting as defined in
Rules  13a-15(f)  and 15d-15(f)  under the Exchange Act. The Company's  internal
control over  financial  reporting is designed to provide  reasonable  assurance
regarding  the  reliability  of  financial  reporting  and  the  preparation  of
financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted
accounting  principles in the United States of America.  The Company's  internal
control over financial reporting includes those policies and procedures that (i)
pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, accurately and
fairly reflect the  transactions  and dispositions of the assets of the Company,
(ii) provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to
permit preparation of financial statements in accordance with generally accepted
accounting  principles,  and that receipts and  expenditures  of the Company are
being made only in accordance with authorizations of management and directors of
the Company,  and (iii) provide  reasonable  assurance  regarding  prevention or
timely  detection  of  unauthorized  acquisition,  use  or  disposition  of  the
Company's assets that could have a material effect on the financial statements.

Because of its inherent  limitations,  internal control over financial reporting
may not prevent or detect misstatements.  Also, projections of any evaluation of
effectiveness to future periods are subject to the risk that controls may become
inadequate  because of changes in  conditions,  or that the degree of compliance
with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.

Management  assessed the  effectiveness  of the Company's  internal control over
financial  reporting  as of  February  25,  2007.  In  making  this  assessment,
management   used  the  criteria  set  forth  by  the  Committee  of  Sponsoring
Organizations of the Treadway Commission ("COSO") in Internal Control-Integrated
Framework.  Based on  management's  assessment  and those  criteria,  management
concluded that the Company maintained  effective internal control over financial
reporting as of February 25, 2007.



                                                                              67

The Company's  independent  auditor has issued its audit report on  management's
assessment of the Company's  internal  control over  financial  reporting.  That
report appears in Item 9A(c) below.

         (c)      Attestation Report of the Registered Public Accounting Firm.

Stockholders and Board of Directors of
  Park Electrochemical Corp.

We  have  audited   management's   assessment,   included  in  the  accompanying
Management's  Annual Report on Internal Control Over Financial  Reporting,  that
Park  Electrochemical  Corp.  and  subsidiaries  maintained  effective  internal
control over  financial  reporting  as of February  25, 2007,  based on criteria
established in Internal  Control - Integrated  Framework issued by the Committee
of Sponsoring  Organizations of the Treadway  Commission (the "COSO  criteria").
The Company's  management is  responsible  for  maintaining  effective  internal
control over financial  reporting and for its assessment of the effectiveness of
internal control over financial  reporting.  Our responsibility is to express an
opinion on management's  assessment and an opinion on the  effectiveness  of the
Company's internal control over financial reporting based on our audit.

We conducted  our audit in accordance  with the standards of the Public  Company
Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan
and perform the audit to obtain  reasonable  assurance  about whether  effective
internal  control  over  financial  reporting  was  maintained  in all  material
respects. Our audit included obtaining an understanding of internal control over
financial reporting,  evaluating management's assessment, testing and evaluating
the design and operating  effectiveness of internal control, and performing such
other  procedures as we considered  necessary in the  circumstances.  We believe
that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.

A company's  internal control over financial  reporting is a process designed to
provide reasonable  assurance  regarding the reliability of financial  reporting
and the preparation of financial  statements for external purposes in accordance
with generally accepted accounting principles in the United States of America. A
company's internal control over financial  reporting includes those policies and
procedures  that (1) pertain to the  maintenance  of records that, in reasonable
detail,  accurately and fairly reflect the  transactions and dispositions of the
assets of the company;  (2) provide  reasonable  assurance that transactions are
recorded  as  necessary  to  permit  preparation  of  financial   statements  in
accordance with generally accepted accounting principles in the United States of
America,  and that receipts and  expenditures of the company are being made only
in accordance  with  authorizations  of management and directors of the company;
and (3) provide reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of
unauthorized acquisition, use, or disposition of the company's assets that could
have a material effect on the financial statements.

Because of its inherent  limitations,  internal control over financial reporting
may not prevent or detect misstatements.  Also, projections of any evaluation of
effectiveness to future periods are subject to the risk that controls may become
inadequate  because of changes in  conditions,  or that the degree of compliance
with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.



                                                                              68

In our opinion,  management's  assessment  that Park  Electrochemical  Corp. and
subsidiaries  maintained  effective internal control over financial reporting as
of February 25, 2007, is fairly stated, in all material  respects,  based on the
COSO criteria.  Also, in our opinion,  the Company  maintained,  in all material
respect,  effective internal control over financial reporting as of February 25,
2007, based on the COSO criteria.

We also have  audited,  in accordance  with the standards of the Public  Company
Accounting  Oversight Board (United States),  the consolidated balance sheets of
the  Company as of February  25, 2007 and  February  26,  2006,  and the related
consolidated  statements of operations,  stockholders' equity and cash flows for
each of the three years in the period ended  February  25, 2007,  and our report
dated  May  8,  2007  expressed  an  unqualified   opinion  on  those  financial
statements.


                                                       /s/GRANT THORNTON LLP

New York, New York
May 8, 2007

         (d)      Changes in Internal Control Over Financial Reporting.

         There has not been any change in the  Company's  internal  control over
financial  reporting  (as such term is defined in Rules  13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)
under the Exchange Act) during the fourth  fiscal  quarter of the fiscal year to
which this report relates that has materially affected,  or is reasonably likely
to materially affect, the Company's internal control over financial reporting.

ITEM 9B. OTHER INFORMATION.

         The Company is not disclosing under this item any information  required
to be  disclosed  on Form 8-K during the fourth  quarter of the year  covered by
this Form  10-K  Annual  Report,  but not  reported,  whether  or not  otherwise
required by this Form 10-K.



                                                                              69

                                    PART III

ITEM 10. DIRECTORS, EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE.

         The  information  called for by this item (except for information as to
the Company's  executive  officers,  which information appears elsewhere in this
Report) is incorporated by reference to the Company's definitive proxy statement
for the 2007 Annual Meeting of  Shareholders  to be filed pursuant to Regulation
14A.

ITEM 11. EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION.

         The information called for by this Item is incorporated by reference to
the  Company's  definitive  proxy  statement  for the  2007  Annual  Meeting  of
Shareholders to be filed pursuant to Regulation 14A.

ITEM 12. SECURITY  OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT AND
         RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS.

         The information called for by this Item is incorporated by reference to
the  Company's  definitive  proxy  statement  for the  2007  Annual  Meeting  of
Shareholders to be filed pursuant to Regulation 14A.

ITEM 13. CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS, AND DIRECTOR
         INDEPENDENCE.

         The information called for by this Item is incorporated by reference to
the  Company's  definitive  proxy  statement  for the  2007  Annual  Meeting  of
Shareholders to be filed pursuant to Regulation 14A.

ITEM 14. PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTANT FEES AND SERVICES.

         This  information  called for by this Item is incorporated by reference
to the  Company's  definitive  proxy  statement  for the 2007 Annual  Meeting of
Shareholders to be filed pursuant to Regulation 14A.



                                                                              70

                                     PART IV

ITEM 15. EXHIBITS AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES



                                                                                        Page
                                                                                        ----
                                                                                   
         (a)      Documents filed as a part of this Report

           (1)        Financial Statements:

                      The  following  Consolidated  Financial  Statements of the
                      Company are included in Part II, Item 8:

                      Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm            41

                      Balance Sheets                                                     42

                      Statements of Operations                                           43

                      Statements of Stockholders' Equity                                 44

                      Statements of Cash Flows                                           45

                      Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements (1-18)                  46

           (2)        Financial Statement Schedules:

                      The  following  additional  information  should be read in
                      conjunction with the Consolidated  Financial Statements of
                      the Registrant described in Item 15(a)(1) above:

                      Schedule II - Valuation and Qualifying Accounts                    72

                      All other schedules have been omitted because they are not
                      applicable or not required, or the information is included
                      elsewhere in the financial statements or notes thereto.

           (3)        Exhibits:

                      The information required by this Item relating to Exhibits
                      to this Report is included in the Exhibit Index  beginning
                      on page 73 hereof.




                                                                              71

                                   SIGNATURES

         Pursuant to the  requirements  of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on
its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

Date:  May 8, 2007                   PARK ELECTROCHEMICAL CORP.


                                     By:   /s/ Brian E. Shore
                                           -------------------------------------
                                           Brian E. Shore,
                                           President and Chief Executive Officer

         Pursuant to the  requirements  of the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934,
this  report has been  signed  below by the  following  persons on behalf of the
Registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated.



Signature               Title                                                   Date
---------------------   -----------------------------------------------------   -----------
                                                                          

/s/ Brian E. Shore      Chairman of the Board, President and Chief Executive
---------------------   Officer and Director (principal executive officer)      May 8, 2007
Brian E. Shore

/s/ James L. Zerby      Vice President and Chief Financial Officer (principal
---------------------   financial officer)                                      May 8, 2007
James L. Zerby

/s/ Dale Blanchfield    Director                                                May 8, 2007
---------------------
Dale Blanchfield

/s/ Anthony Chiesa      Director                                                May 8, 2007
---------------------
Anthony Chiesa

/s/ Lloyd Frank         Director                                                May 8, 2007
---------------------
Lloyd Frank

/s/ Steven T. Warshaw   Director                                                May 8, 2007
---------------------
Steven T. Warshaw




                                                                              72

                   PARK ELECTROCHEMICAL CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES

                 SCHEDULE II - VALUATION AND QUALIFYING ACCOUNTS



                                                                                Column C
                      Column A                           Column B               Additions              Column D        Column E
----------------------------------------------------   ------------   ----------------------------   ------------    ------------
                                                        Balance at                                                    Balance at
                                                       Beginning of     Costs and                                       End of
                     Description                          Period        Expenses         Other        Reductions        Period
----------------------------------------------------   ------------   ------------    ------------   ------------    ------------
                                                                                                      
DEFERRED INCOME TAX ASSET VALUATION ALLOWANCE:
52 weeks ended February 25, 2007                       $ 12,445,000   $  1,286,000               -   $ (3,500,000)   $ 10,231,000
                                                       ============   ============                   ============    ============
52 weeks ended February 26, 2006                       $ 18,212,000   $ (2,840,000)              -   $ (2,927,000)   $ 12,445,000
                                                       ============   ============                   ============    ============
52 weeks ended February 27, 2005                       $ 21,564,000   $ (3,352,000)              -              -    $ 18,212,000
                                                       ============   ============                                   ============




                                                                                               Column D
                      Column A                           Column B       Column C                Other                  Column E
----------------------------------------------------   ------------   ------------    ---------------------------    ------------
                                                        Balance at     Charged to       Accounts                      Balance at
                                                       Beginning of     Costs and       Written      Translation        End of
                     Description                          Period        Expenses          Off         Adjustment        Period
----------------------------------------------------   ------------   ------------    ------------   ------------    ------------
                                                                                          (A)
                                                                                                      
ALLOWANCE FOR DOUBTFUL ACCOUNTS:

52 weeks ended February 25, 2007                       $  1,930,000   $   (623,000)   $   (140,000)  $    (23,000)   $  1,144,000
                                                       ============   ============    ============   ============    ============
52 weeks ended February 26, 2006                       $  1,984,000   $     (1,000)   $    (26,000)  $    (27,000)   $  1,930,000
                                                       ============   ============    ============   ============    ============
52 weeks ended February 27, 2005                       $  1,845,000   $     90,000    $    (28,000)  $     77,000    $  1,984,000
                                                       ============   ============    ============   ============    ============


(A)      Uncollectible accounts, net of recoveries.



                                                                              73

                                  EXHIBIT INDEX
                                  -------------



Exhibit
Numbers  Description                                                               Page
-------  -----------------------------------------------------------------------   ----
                                                                               
3.1      Restated Certificate of Incorporation, dated March 28, 1989, filed with
         the  Secretary of State of the State of New York on April 10, 1989,  as
         amended  by   Certificate   of   Amendment   of  the   Certificate   of
         Incorporation,  increasing  the number of  authorized  shares of Common
         stock from 15,000,000 to 30,000,000 shares,  dated July 12, 1995, filed
         with the  Secretary of State of the State of New York on July 17, 1995,
         and by  Certificate of Amendment of the  Certificate of  Incorporation,
         amending  certain  provisions  relating to the rights,  preferences and
         limitations of the shares of a series of Preferred  Stock,  date August
         7, 1995,  filed with the Secretary of State of the State of New York on
         August 16, 1995  (Reference  is made to Exhibit  3.01 of the  Company's
         Annual  Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal  year  ended  March 3, 2002,
         Commission File No. 1-4415, which is incorporated herein by reference.)     -

3.2      Certificate  of  Amendment  of  the   Certificate   of   Incorporation,
         increasing  the  number  of  authorized  shares of  Common  Stock  from
         30,000,000 to 60,000,000 shares, dated October 10, 2000, filed with the
         Secretary  of  State  of the  State of New  York on  October  11,  2000
         (Reference  is made to Exhibit 3.02 of the  Company's  Annual Report on
         Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended March 2, 2003,  Commission File No.
         1-4415, which is incorporated herein by reference.) ...................     -

3.3      Certificate of Amendment of the Certificate of Incorporation, canceling
         Series A Preferred  Stock of the Company and authorizing a new Series B
         Junior  Participating  Preferred  Stock of the Company,  dated July 21,
         2005,  filed  with the  Secretary  of the State of New York on July 21,
         2005 (Reference is made to Exhibit 3.1 of the Company's  Current Report
         on Form 8-K filed on July 21, 2005,  Commission File No. 1-4415,  which
         is incorporated herein by reference) ..................................     -

3.4      By-Laws,  as amended May 21, 2002 (Reference is made to Exhibit 3.03 of
         the  Company's  Annual  Report on Form 10-K for the  fiscal  year ended
         March 3, 2002, Commission File No. 1-4415, which is incorporated herein
         by reference.) ........................................................     -

4.1      Rights  Agreement,  dated as of July 20, 2005,  between the Company and
         Registrar  and  Transfer  Company,  as Rights  Agent,  relating  to the
         Company's  Preferred  Stock  Purchase  Rights.  (Reference  is  made to
         Exhibit  1 to Form  8-A  filed on July 21,  2005,  Commission  File No.
         1-4415, which is incorporated herein by reference.) ...................     -

10.1     Lease dated  December 12, 1989 between Nelco  Products,  Inc. and James
         Emmi  regarding  real property  located at 1100 East  Kimberly  Avenue,
         Anaheim,  California  and letter  dated  December  29,  1994 from Nelco
         Products, Inc. to James Emmi exercising its option to extend such Lease
         (Reference is made to Exhibit  10.01 of the Company's  Annual Report on
         Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended March 3, 2002,  Commission File No.
         1-4415, which is incorporated herein by reference.) ...................     -




                                                                              74



Exhibit
Numbers  Description                                                               Page
-------  -----------------------------------------------------------------------   ----
                                                                               
10.2     Lease dated  December 12, 1989 between Nelco  Products,  Inc. and James
         Emmi  regarding  real property  located at 1107 East  Kimberly  Avenue,
         Anaheim,  California  and letter  dated  December  29,  1994 from Nelco
         Products, Inc. to James Emmi exercising its option to extend such Lease
         (Reference is made to Exhibit  10.02 of the Company's  Annual Report on
         Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended March 3, 2002,  Commission File No.
         1-4415, which is incorporated herein by reference.) ...................     -

10.3     Lease  Agreement dated August 16, 1983 and Exhibit C, First Addendum to
         Lease, between Nelco Products,  Inc. and TCLW/Fullerton  regarding real
         property located at 1411 E. Orangethorpe Avenue, Fullerton,  California
         (Reference is made to Exhibit  10.03 of the Company's  Annual Report on
         Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended March 3, 2002,  Commission File No.
         1-4415, which is incorporated herein by reference.) ...................     -

10.3(a)  Second  Addendum  to Lease dated  January  26, 1987 to Lease  Agreement
         dated  August  16,  1983  (see  Exhibit  10.03  hereto)  between  Nelco
         Products,  Inc. and  TCLW/Fullerton  regarding real property located at
         1421 E. Orangethorpe Avenue,  Fullerton,  California (Reference is made
         to Exhibit 10.03(a) of the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the
         fiscal year ended March 3, 2002,  Commission File No. 1-4415,  which is
         incorporated herein by reference.) ....................................     -

10.3(b)  Third  Addendum to Lease dated  January 7, 1991 and Fourth  Addendum to
         Lease dated  January 7, 1991 to Lease  Agreement  dated August 16, 1983
         (see  Exhibit  10.03  hereto)   between   Nelco   Products,   Inc.  and
         TCLW/Fullerton  regarding real property  located at 1411, 1421 and 1431
         E. Orangethorpe Avenue,  Fullerton,  California.  (Reference is made to
         Exhibit  10.03(b) of the  Company's  Annual Report on Form 10-K for the
         fiscal year ended March 2, 1997,  Commission File No. 1-4415,  which is
         incorporated herein by reference.) ....................................     -

10.3(c)  Fifth  Addendum to Lease  dated July 5, 1995 to Lease dated  August 16,
         1983 (see  Exhibit  10.03  hereto)  between  Nelco  Products,  Inc. and
         TCLW/Fullerton  regarding real property located at 1411 E. Orangethorpe
         Avenue, Fullerton, California (Reference is made to Exhibit 10.03(c) of
         the  Company's  Annual  Report on Form 10-K for the  fiscal  year ended
         March 3, 2002, Commission File No. 1-4415, which is incorporated herein
         by reference.) ........................................................     -

10.4     Lease  Agreement  dated May 26, 1982 between  Nelco  Products Pte. Ltd.
         (lease was originally entered into by Kiln Technique (Private) Limited,
         which subsequently assigned this lease to Nelco Products Pte. Ltd.) and
         the Jurong Town  Corporation  regarding real property  located at 4 Gul
         Crescent,  Jurong, Singapore (Reference is made to Exhibit 10.04 of the
         Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended March 3,
         2002,  Commission  File No.  1-4415,  which is  incorporated  herein by
         reference.) ...........................................................     -




                                                                              75



Exhibit
Numbers  Description                                                               Page
-------  -----------------------------------------------------------------------   ----
                                                                               
10.4(a)  Deed of  Assignment,  dated April 17, 1986 between Nelco  Products Pte.
         Ltd.,  Kiln Technique  (Private)  Limited and Paul Ma, Richard Law, and
         Michael Ng, all of Peat Marwick & Co., of the Lease Agreement dated May
         26, 1982 (see Exhibit 10.04 hereto)  between Kiln  Technique  (Private)
         Limited and the Jurong Town Corporation regarding real property located
         at 4 Gul  Crescent,  Jurong,  Singapore  (Reference  is made to Exhibit
         10.04(a)  of the  Company's  Annual  Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal
         year  ended  March  3,  2002,  Commission  File  No.  1-4415,  which is
         incorporated herein by reference.) ....................................     -

10.5     1992 Stock  Option Plan of the Company,  as amended by First  Amendment
         thereto. (Reference is made to Exhibit 10.06(b) of the Company's Annual
         Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended March 1, 1998, Commission
         File No.  1-4415,  which is  incorporated  herein  by  reference.  This
         exhibit is a management contractor compensatory plan or arrangement.) .     -

10.6     Lease dated April 15, 1988 between  FiberCote  Industries,  Inc. (lease
         was initially entered into by USP Composites,  Inc., which subsequently
         changed  its  name  to   FiberCote   Industries,   Inc.)  and  Geoffrey
         Etherington,  II  regarding  real  property  located at 172 East Aurora
         Street,  Waterbury,  Connecticut (Reference is made to Exhibit 10.07 of
         the  Company's  Annual  Report on Form 10-K for the  fiscal  year ended
         March 3, 2002, Commission File No. 1-4415, which is incorporated herein
         by reference.) ........................................................     -

10.6(a)  Amendment  to Lease  dated  December  21, 1992 to Lease dated April 15,
         1988 (see Exhibit 10.06 hereto) between FiberCote Industries,  Inc. and
         Geoffrey  Etherington  II regarding  real property  located at 172 East
         Aurora  Street,  Waterbury,  Connecticut  (Reference is made to Exhibit
         10.07(a)  of the  Company's  Annual  Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal
         year  ended  March  3,  2002,  Commission  File  No.  1-4415,  which is
         incorporated herein by reference.) ....................................     -

10.6(b)  Letter dated June 30, 1997 from FiberCote Industries,  Inc. to Geoffrey
         Etherington  II  extending  the Lease dated April 15, 1988 (see Exhibit
         10.06  hereto)  between   FiberCote   Industries,   Inc.  and  Geoffrey
         Etherington  II  regarding  real  property  located at 172 East  Aurora
         Street,  Waterbury Connecticut.  (Reference is made to Exhibit 10.08(b)
         of the  Company's  Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended
         March 1, 1998, Commission File No. 1-4415, which is incorporated herein
         by reference.) ........................................................     -

10.7     Lease dated December 12, 1990 between  Neltec,  Inc. and NZ Properties,
         Inc.  regarding  real  property  located at 1420 W. 12th Place,  Tempe,
         Arizona.  (Reference is made to Exhibit  10.13 of the Company's  Annual
         Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended March 2, 1997, Commission
         File No. 1-4415, which is incorporated herein by reference.) ..........     -




                                                                              76



Exhibit
Numbers  Description                                                               Page
-------  -----------------------------------------------------------------------   ----
                                                                               
10.7(a)  Letter dated January 8, 1996 from Neltec,  Inc. to NZ Properties,  Inc.
         exercising  its option to extend the Lease dated December 12, 1990 (see
         Exhibit 10.7 hereto)  between  Neltec,  Inc.  and NZ  Properties,  Inc.
         regarding real property located at 1420 W. 12th Place, Tempe,  Arizona.
         (Reference is made to Exhibit  10.13(a) of the Company's  Annual Report
         on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended March 2, 1997,  Commission  File
         No. 1-4415, which is incorporated herein by reference.) ...............     -

10.7(b)  Letter dated January 25, 2001 from Neltec, Inc. to NZ Properties,  Inc.
         exercising  its option to extend the Lease dated December 12, 1990 (see
         Exhibit 10.7 hereto)  between  Neltec,  Inc.  and NZ  Properties,  Inc.
         regarding real estate  property  located at 1420 W. 12th Place,  Tempe,
         Arizona  (Reference is made to Exhibit 10.7(b) of the Company's  Annual
         Report  on Form l0-K for the  fiscal  year  ended  February  26,  2006,
         Commission File No. 1-4415, which is incorporated herein by reference.)     -

10.7(c)  Letter  dated  February  14,  2006  from  Neltec,   Inc.  to  REB  Ltd.
         Properties,  Inc.  exercising  its  option  to extend  the Lease  dated
         December 12, 1990 (see Exhibit 10.7 hereto) between Neltec, Inc. and NZ
         Properties, Inc. regarding real property located at 1420 W. 12th Place,
         Tempe,  Arizona  (Reference is made to Exhibit 10.7(c) of the Company's
         Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended February 26, 2006,
         Commission File No. 1-4415, which is incorporated herein by reference.)     -

10.8     Lease  Contract  dated  February  26,  1988  between the New York State
         Department  of   Transportation   and  the  Edgewater  Stewart  Company
         regarding  real  property  located at 15 Governor  Drive in the Stewart
         International Airport Industrial Park, New Windsor, New York (Reference
         is made to Exhibit  10.13 of the  Company's  Annual Report on Form 10-K
         for the fiscal year ended March 3, 2002,  Commission  File No.  1-4415,
         which is incorporated herein by reference.) ...........................     -

10.8(a)  Assignment  and Assumption of Lease dated February 16, 1995 between New
         England Laminates Co., Inc. and the Edgewater Stewart Company regarding
         the  assignment of the Lease Contract (see Exhibit 10.8 hereto) for the
         real property located at 15 Governor Drive in the Stewart International
         Airport  Industrial  Park, New Windsor,  New York (Reference is made to
         Exhibit  10.13(a) of the  Company's  Annual Report on Form 10-K for the
         fiscal year ended March 3, 2002,  Commission File No. 1-4415,  which is
         incorporated herein by reference.) ....................................     -

10.8(b)  Lease  Amendment  No. 1 dated  February  17,  1995  between New England
         Laminates Co., Inc. and the New York State Department of Transportation
         to Lease  Contract  dated  February  26, 1988 (see Exhibit 10.8 hereto)
         regarding the real property located at 15 Governor Drive in the Stewart
         International Airport Industrial Park, New Windsor, New York (Reference
         is made to Exhibit 10.13(b) of the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K
         for the fiscal year ended March 3, 2002,  Commission  File No.  1-4415,
         which is incorporated herein by reference.) ...........................     -




                                                                              77



Exhibit
Numbers  Description                                                               Page
-------  -----------------------------------------------------------------------   ----
                                                                               
10.9     2002 Stock  Option  Plan of the Company  (Reference  is made to Exhibit
         10.01 of the  Company's  Quarterly  Report on Form 10-Q for the  fiscal
         quarter ended September 1, 2002,  Commission File No. 1-4415,  which is
         incorporated herein by reference. This exhibit is a management contract
         or compensatory plan or arrangement.) .................................     -

10.10    Forms of Incentive Stock Option  Contract for employees,  Non-Qualified
         Stock Option  Contract for  employees  and  Non-Qualified  Stock Option
         Contract for directors  under the 2002 Stock Option Plan of the Company
         (Reference is made to Exhibit  10.10 of the Company's  Annual Report on
         Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended February 27, 2005,  Commission File
         No. 1-4415, which is incorporated herein by reference. ................     -

14.1     Code of  Ethics  for  Chief  Executive  Officer  and  Senior  Financial
         Officers  adopted on May 6, 2004  (Reference is made to Exhibit 14.1 of
         the  Company's  Annual  Report on Form 10-K for the  fiscal  year ended
         February 29, 2004,  Commission  File No. 1-4415,  which is incorporated
         herein by reference.) .................................................     -

21.1     Subsidiaries of the Company ...........................................    78

23.1     Consent  of  Independent   Registered  Public  Accounting  Firm  (Grant
         Thornton LLP) .........................................................    79

31.1     Certification of principal  executive  officer pursuant to Exchange Act
         Rule 13a-14(a) or 15d-14(a) ...........................................    80

31.2     Certification of principal  financial  officer pursuant to Exchange Act
         Rule 13a-14(a) or 15d-14(a) ...........................................    82

32.1     Certification  of  principal  executive  officer  pursuant to 18 U.S.C.
         Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the  Sarbanes-Oxley
         Act of 2002 ...........................................................    84

32.2     Certification  of  principal  financial  officer  pursuant to 18 U.S.C.
         Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the  Sarbanes-Oxley
         Act of 2002 ...........................................................    85