Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the Securities
            Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No.     )

Filed by the Registrant   [X]

Filed by a Party other than the Registrant   [ ]

Check the appropriate box:

[ ] Preliminary Proxy Statement

[ ] Confidential, For Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by
    Rule14a-6(e)(2))

[X] Definitive Proxy Statement

[ ] Definitive Additional Materials

[ ] Soliciting Material Under Rule 14a-12

                   Park Electrochemical Corp.
        (Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)


    (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, If Other than
                           Registrant)

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     6(i)(1) and 0-11.

(1) Title  of  each  class  of securities to  which  transactions
     applies:
________________________________________________________________

(2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
________________________________________________________________

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

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________________________________________________________________

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

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   (4) Date Filed:

APPENDIX  to electronically filed Proxy Statement dated June  16,
2004   of   Park  Electrochemical  Corp.  listing   all   graphic
information included in such Proxy Statement:

1. Stock   Performance  Graph  appearing  on  page  11  of  Proxy
   Statement  dated June 16, 2004 comparing the yearly percentage
   change  in  the  cumulative total shareholder  return  on  the
   Registrant's Common Stock with the cumulative total return  of
   the  New  York Stock Exchange Market Index and a Media General
   Financial   Services  Index  for  electronic  components   and
   accessories  manufacturers comprised of the  Company  and  254
   other  companies for the period of the Company's  five  fiscal
   years  commencing March 1, 1999 and ending February 29,  2004,
   assuming  that $100 had been invested in the Company's  Common
   Stock  and each index on February 26, 1999 and that  all  divi
   dends  on  the  Company's  Common  Stock  and  on  each  stock
   included in each index were reinvested.

   Such  graph  shows  that such $100 invested in  the  Company's
   Common Stock would have had a value of $84.43 on February  27,
   2000,  $188.96 on February 25, 2001, $147.25 on March 3, 2002,
   $88.09  on  March  2, 2003 and $155.27 on February  29,  2004,
   that  such  $100  invested  in  the  Media  General  Financial
   Services  Index  would  have had values of  $295.25,  $129.24,
   $111.95,  $62.30 and $114.67, respectively, on such dates  and
   that  such $100 invested in the New York Stock Exchange Market
   Index  would  have  had values of $101.26,  $108.67,  $102.04,
   $80.55 and $114.87, respectively, on such dates.


                   PARK ELECTROCHEMICAL CORP.
                         5 Dakota Drive
                  Lake Success, New York  11042



            Notice of Annual Meeting of Shareholders
                          July 14, 2004
                               ___



      The  Annual Meeting of Shareholders of PARK ELECTROCHEMICAL
CORP.  (the "Company") will be held at The Bank of New York,  One
Wall Street - 47th Floor, New York, New York (attendees must  use
the 80 Broadway entrance) on July 14, 2004 at 10:00 o'clock A.M.,
New York time, for the purpose of considering and acting upon the
following:

        1.   The election of six (6) directors to serve
        until  the  next annual meeting of shareholders
        and  until  their  successors are  elected  and
        qualified.

     2.   The approval of the matching contribution feature of the
        Company's Employee Stock Purchase Plan.

     3.   The transaction of such other business as may properly come
        before the meeting.

     Only  holders  of  record of Common Stock at  the  close  of
business  on May 19, 2004 will be entitled to notice of,  and  to
vote at, the meeting or any adjournment or postponement thereof.


                              By Order of the Board of Directors,





                                    Stephen E. Gilhuley
                                   Senior Vice President,
                               Secretary and General Counsel







Dated:  June 16, 2004














ALL SHAREHOLDERS ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND THE MEETING.  IF
YOU  DO  NOT  EXPECT  TO BE PRESENT, PLEASE  DATE  AND  SIGN  THE
ENCLOSED  FORM OF PROXY AND RETURN IT PROMPTLY TO THE COMPANY  IN
THE  ENCLOSED ENVELOPE WHICH REQUIRES NO POSTAGE IF MAILED IN THE
UNITED STATES.

                   PARK ELECTROCHEMICAL CORP.
                         5 Dakota Drive
                  Lake Success, New York  11042

                  P R O X Y  S T A T E M E N T
                 Annual Meeting of Shareholders
                          July 14, 2004


      This  Proxy Statement is furnished in connection  with  the
solicitation  by  the Board of Directors (the  "Board")  of  Park
Electrochemical Corp. (the "Company") of proxies with respect  to
the  Annual Meeting of Shareholders of the Company to be held  on
July  14, 2004, and any adjournment or postponement thereof  (the
"Meeting").  Any shareholder giving such a proxy  (the  form  for
which  is  enclosed with this Proxy Statement) has the  power  to
revoke  the same at any time before it is voted by (i) delivering
written  notice of such revocation bearing a later date than  the
proxy  to the Secretary of the Company, (ii) submitting a  later-
dated proxy, or (iii) attending the Meeting and voting in person.

      This Proxy Statement and the accompanying form of proxy are
first  being mailed on or about June 16, 2004 to all shareholders
of record as of the close of business on May 19, 2004.

                        VOTING SECURITIES

     As of May 19, 2004, the outstanding voting securities of the
Company consisted of 19,872,550 shares of Common Stock, par value
$.10  per share, of the Company (the "Common Stock"), each  share
of  which,  held of record at the close of business  on  May  19,
2004, is entitled to one vote. Presence in person or by proxy  of
holders  of a majority of the outstanding shares of Common  Stock
will  constitute a quorum for the transaction of business at  the
Meeting.  Abstentions  and  broker non-votes,  if  any,  will  be
included  for purposes of determining a quorum. With  respect  to
the  election  of  directors and the  proposed  approval  of  the
matching  contribution  feature of the Company's  Employee  Stock
Purchase Plan, abstentions and broker non-votes, if any, will not
be  counted as having been voted and will have no effect  on  the
outcome  of  the  votes,  except in  the  case  of  the  matching
contribution  feature  of the Company's Employee  Stock  Purchase
Plan,  as  described  below under the caption  "Approval  of  the
Matching Feature of the Company's Employee Stock Purchase Plan  -
Vote Required".

     As  of May 19, 2004, all executive officers and directors of
the  Company  and  nominees as a group (13 persons)  beneficially
owned an aggregate of 2,637,277 shares of Common Stock (including
options to purchase an aggregate of 628,342 shares), constituting
approximately  12.9% of the outstanding shares  of  Common  Stock
(giving effect to the exercise of such options).

                         STOCK OWNERSHIP

Principal Shareholders

      The  following table sets forth information as of  May  19,
2004  with  respect  to  each person (including  any  "group"  of
persons  as  that  term  is  used  in  Section  13(d)(3)  of  the
Securities  Exchange  Act  of 1934,  as  amended  (the  "Exchange
Act")),  who  is known to the Company to be the beneficial  owner
(for  purposes  of  the  rules  of the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission) of more than 5% of the outstanding shares  of  Common
Stock as of that date.



                                  
                           Amount and
                            Nature of   Percent
Name and Address           Beneficial      of
of Beneficial Owner         Ownership    Class

DePrince, Race  &  Zollo, 1,979,850(a)  10.0%
Inc.
201 S. Orange Avenue
Suite 850
Orlando, FL 32801

Jerry Shore               1,719,343(b)  8.7%
5 Dakota Drive
Lake Success, NY 11042

Wachovia Corporation      1,157,745(c)  5.8%
One Wachovia Center
Charlotte, NC 28288


(a)   Deprince,  Race  &  Zollo, Inc.,  a  registered  investment
   adviser, holds sole investment power and sole voting power over
   all  of such shares, based on an amendment, dated January  28,
   2004, to its Schedule 13G, filed under the Exchange Act, which
   represented approximately 10.0% of the outstanding shares of the
   Company's Common Stock as of May 19, 2004.

(b)   Includes 168,615 shares owned by a member of Jerry  Shore's
   family, of which he disclaims beneficial ownership, and 45,129
   shares owned by a foundation, of which he disclaims beneficial
   ownership.

(c)   Wachovia Corporation, a parent holding company, holds  sole
   investment power over 1,143,312 of such shares and sole voting
   power over 939,030 of such shares, based on an amendment, dated
   January 28, 2004, to its Schedule 13G, filed under the Exchange
   Act,  which  represented approximately 5.8% of the outstanding
   shares of the Company's Common Stock as of May 19, 2004.


Ownership of Directors and Executive Officers

      The  following table sets forth information as of  May  19,
2004  with  respect to shares of Common Stock beneficially  owned
(for  purposes  of  the  rules  of the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission)  by  each  director and nominee,  by  each  executive
officer   of  the  Company  who  is  identified  in  the  Summary
Compensation table elsewhere in this Proxy Statement and  by  all
directors,  nominees and executive officers of the Company  as  a
group.


                                          
                                  Amount and
                                  Nature of     Percent
                                  Beneficial      of
Name of Beneficial Owner          Ownership      Class
Mark S. Ain                     24,000(a)           *
Dale Blanchfield                0                   *
Anthony Chiesa                  121,500(b)          *
Lloyd Frank                     28,125(c)           *
Brian E. Shore                  545,972(d)        2.7%
Jerry Shore                     1,719,343(e)      8.7%
Steven T. Warshaw               0                   *
Emily J. Groehl                 39,205(f)           *
John Jongebloed                 32,825(g)           *
Steven P. Schaefer              3,500(h)            *
Gary M. Watson                  35,750(i)           *
All directors, nominees and
executive                       2,637,277(j)      12.9%
officers as a group (13
persons)


*    Less than 1%
(a)  Consists of shares which Mark S. Ain may acquire pursuant to
  options.
(b)  Includes  9,000  shares  which Anthony  Chiesa  may  acquire
     pursuant to options.
(c)  Includes  22,125  shares  which  Lloyd  Frank  may   acquire
     pursuant to options and 3,000 shares owned by a member of Lloyd
     Frank's family, of which he disclaims beneficial ownership.
(d)  Includes  407,500  shares which Brian E. Shore  may  acquire
     pursuant to options.
(e)  See note (b) to the table under "Stock Ownership - Principal
     Shareholders" for information with respect to these shares.
(f)  Includes  39,196  shares which Emily J. Groehl  may  acquire
     pursuant to options.
(g)  Includes  31,025  shares which John Jongebloed  may  acquire
     pursuant to options.
(h)  Consists  of  shares  which Steven P. Schaefer  may  acquire
     pursuant to options.
(i)  Includes  35,000  shares which Gary M.  Watson  may  acquire
     pursuant to options.
(j)  Consists   of  2,008,935  shares  owned  by  directors   and
     executive officers and 628,342 shares issuable to directors and
     executive officers upon exercise of options that are exercisable
     as  of  May  19, 2004 or become exercisable within  60  days
     thereafter.


                      ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

      The  Board  to  be elected at the Meeting consists  of  six
members.  Proxies  will be voted in accordance with  their  terms
and, in the absence of contrary instructions, for the election as
directors  of  the nominees whose names appear in  the  following
table,  to  serve for the ensuing year and until their successors
are elected and qualified. One current director, Jerry Shore, who
has  been a member of the Board since the founding of the Company
in  1954, is retiring as a director and will not be standing  for
re-election at the Meeting. Should any of the nominees not remain
a  candidate at the time of the Meeting (a situation which is not
now  anticipated), proxies solicited hereunder will be  voted  in
favor  of those nominees who do remain as candidates and  may  be
voted  for  substituted nominees. The six nominees who receive  a
plurality of the votes cast at the Meeting in person or by  proxy
shall  be  elected.  Each  of the nominees,  other  than  Messrs.
Blanchfield and Warshaw, is presently a member of the Board.



                                              
                Principal Occupation; Positions
                 and Offices with the Company;         Directo
Name                  Other Directorships         Age     r
                                                        Since

Mark S. Ain    Chief   Executive   Officer    and 61    1998
               Chairman  of the Board  of  Kronos
               Incorporated,  a  manufacturer  of
               computerized systems for time  and
               labor    management,   Chelmsford,
               Massachusetts; and a  director  of
               KVH   Industries,  Inc.  and   LTX
               Corporation

Dale           Former  President  of  Electronics 66      -
Blanchfield    Division   of   The   Bureau    of
               Engraving Inc., a manufacturer  of
               specialized,   high-volume,   high
               layer    count   printed   circuit
               boards,   Minneapolis,  Minnesota,
               from  1990  to June  2003;  and  a
               director   of   The   Bureau    of
               Engraving Inc.

Anthony Chiesa Former Vice President of the       83    1954
               Company

Lloyd Frank    Of  Counsel since January 2004 and 78    1985
               a  Partner  for many  years  prior
               thereto,   Jenkins   &   Gilchrist
               Parker  Chapin LLP,  a  law  firm,
               New  York City; and a director  of
               DryClean,   USA  Inc.   and   Volt
               Information Sciences, Inc.

Brian E. Shore President and Chief Executive      52    1983
               Officer of the Company

Steven      T. President,     Chief     Executive 55      -
Warshaw        Officer   and  Chairman   of   the
               Board,   M   Cubed   Technologies,
               Inc.,  a  manufacturer of advanced
               ceramic   materials   for    semi-
               conductor   equipment  and   armor
               applications,              Monroe,
               Connecticut,  since   July   2002;
               President,     Hexcel     Schwebel
               Division,  Hexcel  Corporation,  a
               supplier  of  specialized  fabrics
               for   reinforcement  of  laminates
               used  in  printed  circuit  boards
               and   in   commercial   aerospace,
               recreation  and  other  industrial
               applications,   Anderson,    South
               Carolina,  April 2000 to  November
               2001;   Senior   Vice   President,
               World  Wide  Sales and  Marketing,
               Photronics,  Inc., a  manufacturer
               of  photomasks  used  to  transfer
               circuit   patterns   onto    semi-
               conductor    wafers,   Brookfield,
               Connecticut,  February   1999   to
               April  2000;  and President,  Olin
               Microelectronic    Materials,    a
               supplier   of  advanced  chemicals
               and   related  products,  Norwalk,
               Connecticut,   January   1996   to
               January  1999; and a  director  of
               NN, Inc.



      Messrs.  Ain,  Chiesa  and Shore  have  had  the  principal
occupation set forth opposite their respective names for at least
the past five years.

      There  are no family relationships among any of the persons
named in the above table or among any of such persons and any  of
the other executive officers of the Company. Jerry Shore, who  is
not  standing  for re-election as a director, is  the  father  of
Brian E. Shore.

     The  Board  has determined that the following  nominees  and
directors have no material relationships with the Company and are
"independent"  as  required by and as  defined  in  the  director
independence  standards of the New York Stock Exchange:  Mark  S.
Ain, Dale Blanchfield, Anthony Chiesa, Lloyd Frank and Steven  T.
Warshaw. In making this determination, the Board considered  that
Jenkins & Gilchrist Parker Chapin LLP, a law firm of which  Lloyd
Frank  is  of counsel and was a partner for many years  prior  to
2004,  was retained to provide counsel to the Company during  its
fiscal  year  ended March 2, 2003 but not during its fiscal  year
ended  February  29, 2004. Brian E. Shore does not  satisfy  such
independence standards because he is an employee of the  Company,
and Jerry Shore does not satisfy such standards because he is the
father of Brian Shore.

      The Company's Audit Committee currently consists of Mark S.
Ain, Anthony Chiesa and Lloyd Frank. Following the Meeting, it is
the  intention of the Board of Directors to appoint Mark S.  Ain,
Anthony  Chiesa, Lloyd Frank and Steven T. Warshaw as members  of
the  Audit Committee. The Board of Directors has determined  that
Mr.  Warshaw is an "audit committee financial expert" as required
by  and  as  defined  in  rules of the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission  and  that  each of Messrs.  Ain,  Chiesa,  Frank  and
Warshaw  is  "independent" as required by and as defined  in  the
audit  committee  independence standards of  the  Securities  and
Exchange  Commission  and  of the New York  Stock  Exchange.  The
duties and responsibilities of the Audit Committee are set  forth
in  a  written  charter of such Committee, first adopted  by  the
Board  in July 2000 and subsequently amended and restated in  May
2004,  a  copy of which is attached as Appendix A to  this  Proxy
Statement  as  required by rules of the Securities  and  Exchange
Commission,  and are described elsewhere in this Proxy  Statement
under  the caption "Other Matters - Audit Committee Report".  The
Audit  Committee also issues the Audit Committee Report  required
to  be included in the Company's Proxy Statement by rules of  the
Securities  and  Exchange Commission. The Audit Committee  Report
for the Company's 2004 fiscal year is set forth under the caption
"Other Matters - Audit Committee Report" elsewhere in this  Proxy
Statement.

     The  Company has a Compensation Committee and a Stock Option
Committee,  each  consisting of Anthony Chiesa, Lloyd  Frank  and
Jerry  Shore. Following the Meeting, it is the intention  of  the
Board  of  Directors to appoint Dale Blanchfield, Anthony  Chiesa
and  Steven  T. Warshaw as members of the Compensation  Committee
and  Anthony Chiesa, Lloyd Frank and Steven T. Warshaw as members
of  the Stock Option Committee. The functions of the Compensation
and Stock Option Committees are set forth in written charters  of
such  Committees  adopted by the Board, and  such  functions  are
described  elsewhere in this Proxy Statement  under  the  caption
"Executive Compensation - Board and Compensation Committee Report
on Executive Compensation".

     The Company has a Nominating Committee consisting of Anthony
Chiesa, Lloyd Frank and Jerry Shore. Following the Meeting, it is
the   intention  of  the  Board  of  Directors  to  appoint  Dale
Blanchfield,  Anthony Chiesa and Lloyd Frank as  members  of  the
Nominating  Committee. The functions of the Nominating Committee,
which  are  to  identify and recommend to the Board of  Directors
individuals qualified to serve as directors of the Company and on
committees  of  the  Board and to oversee the evaluation  of  the
Board  and  the Company's management, are set forth in a  written
charter  of  such Committee adopted by the Board. The  Nominating
Committee  recommended to the Board of Directors, and  the  Board
nominated,  Mark S. Ain, Dale Blanchfield, Anthony Chiesa,  Lloyd
Frank, Brian Shore and Steven T. Warshaw as nominees for election
as directors at the Meeting.

     The  Company has a Corporate Governance Committee consisting
of  Anthony  Chiesa, Lloyd Frank and Jerry Shore.  Following  the
Meeting, it is the intention of the Board of Directors to appoint
Anthony  Chiesa, Lloyd Frank and Steven T. Warshaw as members  of
the   Corporate  Governance  Committee.  The  functions  of   the
Corporate Governance Committee, which are to advise the Board  of
Directors  with  respect  to  Board composition,  procedures  and
committees  and to develop and recommend to the Board  a  set  of
corporate  governance principles applicable to the  Company,  are
set  forth in a written charter of such Committee adopted by  the
Board.

     Copies  of  the  charters of the Audit, Compensation,  Stock
Option,  Nominating  and  Corporate  Governance  Committees   are
available on the Company's web site at www.parkelectro.com  under
the  caption "Charters and Codes" as required by rules of the New
York Stock Exchange.

      During  the  Company's  last  fiscal  year,  the  Board  of
Directors  met  six  times  and authorized  action  by  unanimous
written consent on five occasions, the Audit Committee met  twice
and  authorized  action  by  unanimous  written  consent  on  one
occasion,  the  Compensation Committee met once,  and  the  Stock
Option Committee met twice. Each of the directors attended all of
the  meetings  held  by the Board and each committee  thereof  of
which he was a member during the Company's last fiscal year.  The
Company  did  not  have  a Corporate Governance  Committee  or  a
Nominating Committee during the last fiscal year.

     It is the Company's policy that all directors are invited to
and encouraged to attend Annual Meetings of Shareholders, and all
members of the Board of Directors attended the Annual Meeting  of
Shareholders held on July 17, 2003.

      Each director who is not an employee of the Company or  any
of  its subsidiaries receives a fee of $12,000 per annum for  his
services as a director, each member of the Audit Committee, other
than the Chairman of the Committee, receives a fee of $2,000  per
annum  for  his services as a member of such Committee,  and  the
Chairman  of  the Audit Committee receives a fee  of  $4,000  per
annum for his services as Chairman of such Committee, each member
of  the Compensation Committee of the Board of Directors receives
a  fee  of $2,000 per annum for his services as a member of  such
Committee,  and  each  Director  and  each  Committee  member  is
reimbursed for travel expenses incurred in attending meetings  of
the  Board of Directors of the Company and of Committees  of  the
Board of Directors of the Company.

     On July 24, 2003, Messrs. Ain, Chiesa, Frank and Jerry Shore
each  received a non-qualified stock option for 3,000  shares  of
Common  Stock at an exercise price of $19.95 per share under  the
Company's  2002 Stock Option Plan. Each of these options  expires
on  July  24, 2013, and each is exercisable 25 percent after  one
year from date of grant, 50 percent after two years from date  of
grant,  75 percent after three years from date of grant  and  100
percent after four years from date of grant.


                     EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

Summary Compensation

      The following table shows the compensation for each of  the
three  most recent fiscal years for the Company's Chief Executive
Officer  and  the  four  other most highly compensated  executive
officers  who were serving in such capacities at the end  of  the
Company's most recent fiscal year.



                                                        Long-Term
                                                       Compensation
                               Annual Compensation        Awards
                              -----------------------   ------------
                                                 Other   Securities  All Other
                                                 Annual  Underlying   Compen-
Name and                Year                     Compen-  Options     sation
Principal Position      (a)    Salary    Bonus   sation   SARs(#)      (b)

                                                     
Brian E. Shore(c)       2004  $357,760  $  -0-  $  -0-    20,000     $7,000
 President and Chief    2003   357,760     -0-     -0-    25,000      4,000
 Executive Officer      2002   364,640     -0-     -0-    40,000      8,500

Emily J. Groehl         2004   210,912     -0-     -0-     7,500      7,000
 Senior Vice President, 2003   210,912     -0-     -0-    15,000      4,000
 Sales and Marketing    2002   214,968     -0-     -0-    15,000      8,500



John Jongebloed(d)      2004   165,000  15,000     -0-     5,000      5,775
 Senior Vice President, 2003   165,000     -0-     -0-    10,000      3,300
 Global Logistics       2002   168.173     -0-     -0-    15,000      8,409

Steven P. Schaefer(e)   2004   155,577  25,000     -0-    15,000      5,445
 Senior Vice President,
 Technology

Gary M. Watson(f)       2004   240,000  25,000   74,576   10,000      7,000
 Senior Vice President, 2003   223,047     -0-   71,964   15,000      4,000
 Engineering and Senior 2002   203,846     -0-      -0-   10,000      8,500
 Vice President, Asian
 Business Unit
---------

The  salary  amounts  for Messrs. Shore and  Jongebloed  and  Ms.
Groehl  for the 2002 fiscal year are more than the salary amounts
for the 2003 fiscal year not because of any salary decreases, but
because the 2002 fiscal year consisted of 53 weeks while the 2003
fiscal  year  consisted of 52 weeks. None of the named  executive
officers  has  received any salary increase during the  Company's
last  four  fiscal years, other than Mr. Schaefer and other  than
Mr. Watson (see note (f) below):

(a)  Information is provided for the Company's fiscal years ended
   February 29, 2004, March 2, 2003 and March 3, 2002, respectively.

(b)   Includes the amounts of the Company's annual profit sharing
   contributions to the Company's Employees' Profit  Sharing  and
   401(k) Retirement Savings Plan ("the Plan") which were accrued
   for the accounts of the named executive officers for the fiscal
   years shown. These amounts vest in accordance with a graduated
   scale based on years of service of the employee with the Company.
   Substantially all full-time employees of the Company  and  its
   subsidiaries  in the United States participate in  the  profit
   sharing  portion  of  the Plan, which is intended  to  provide
   retirement benefits to such employees and which is subject to the
   provisions of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974
   ("ERISA"). The amounts of profit sharing contributions, if any,
   by  the  Company  and  its subsidiaries  to  the  accounts  of
   participating  employees  are  percentages  of  the   eligible
   compensation  of the participating employees up to  a  maximum
   amount of compensation for each employee established under the
   Internal Revenue Code of 1986, which was $200,000 for each of the
   Company's  two most recent fiscal years and $170,000  for  the
   Company's fiscal year ended March 3, 2002. The percentages  of
   compensation contributed to the Plan, which are determined each
   year by the Board of Directors of the Company, may vary between
   the Company and each subsidiary, but the percentage must be the
   same  for  each participating employee of the Company  or  the
   subsidiary, as the case may be.

   Substantially   all  full-time  employees  of  the   Company's
   subsidiaries  in  the  United States are eligible  to  receive
   contributions  by the subsidiaries to match the  contributions
   of  the employees to the 401(k) retirement savings portion  of
   the  Plan, with the maximum matching contribution being 3%  of
   the  compensation of the employees. However, employees of  the
   Company   are   not   eligible  to   receive   such   matching
   contributions,  but  it  has been the  Company's  practice  to
   determine   a  gross  annual  profit  sharing  percentage   of
   eligible compensation to be contributed by each subsidiary  to
   the  profit  sharing portion of the Plan and  to  reduce  such
   percentage  by  the average percentage of the compensation  of
   such  subsidiary's  employees that  was  contributed  by  such
   subsidiary    as    401(k)   retirement    savings    matching
   contributions.  Consistent with this practice,  to  compensate
   employees of the Company for their ineligibility for  matching
   contributions to the 401(k) retirement savings portion of  the
   Plan,  the  Company approved profit sharing contributions  for
   the  named  executive officers and for the other employees  of
   the   Company   in  amounts  equal  to  2%  of  the   eligible
   compensation   of   such  employees,   since   the   Company's
   subsidiaries'   matching  contributions   under   the   401(k)
   retirement  savings portion of the Plan for  the  2003  fiscal
   year  approximated 2% of the eligible compensation of the such
   subsidiaries'  employees. Accordingly, the amounts  shown  for
   2003  are contributions that were made by the Company for  the
   named executive officers to compensate them for the fact  that
   they  were  not eligible for matching contributions under  the
   401(k) retirement savings portion of the Plan.

(c)   As  he has in the past, Mr. Shore rejected the Compensation
   Committee's offer of a bonus for the fiscal year ended February
   29,  2004  and  a salary increase for the fiscal  year  ending
   February 27, 2005.

(d)  Mr. Jongebloed became an executive officer on July 18, 2001,
   but  the salary shown for him is the salary paid to him by the
   Company for the entire 2002 fiscal year.

(e)   Mr.  Schaefer became an executive officer on July 17, 2003,
   but  the salary shown for him is the salary paid to him by the
   Company for the entire 2003 fiscal year. Under the Securities and
   Exchange Commission's rules regarding the disclosure of executive
   compensation, no information is required to be provided for Mr.
   Schaefer  for prior years during which he was not an executive
   officer.

(f)   Mr.  Watson's title was Senior Vice President,  Engineering
   until May 2001, when he became Senior Vice President, Engineering
   and Technology, and he also became Senior Vice President, Asian
   Business Unit in August 2002. Mr. Watson's title was changed to
   Senior  Vice President, Engineering in July 2003.  The  salary
   amount for Mr. Watson for the 2003 fiscal year is more than the
   salary  amount for the 2002 fiscal year because  of  a  salary
   increase granted to Mr. Watson in connection with his becoming
   Senior Vice President, Asian Business Unit and his relocation to
   Singapore in August 2002 to manage the Company's Asian Business
   Unit; and the amounts shown for Mr. Watson under "Other Annual
   Compensation" consist of certain expenses paid on his behalf by
   the Company in connection with his relocation to Singapore and
   certain living expenses incurred by him in Singapore but paid by
   the Company pursuant to an agreement between Mr. Watson and the
   Company relating to his relocation to Singapore.


Stock Options

      The Company's 2002 Stock Option Plan provides for the grant
to  key employees of the Company of both options which qualify as
incentive stock options under the Internal Revenue Code  of  1986
and  non-qualified stock options. The 2002 Stock Option  Plan  is
administered by the Stock Option Committee.

     The  following  table provides information with  respect  to
options  to  purchase shares of Common Stock granted pursuant  to
the 2002 Stock Option Plan to the named executive officers during
the Company's last fiscal year.

 Part 1 of 2

Option/SAR Grants in Last Fiscal Year
-------------------------------------
                      Number of
                     Securities     % of Total
                     Underlying    Options/SARs    Exercise
                     Options/SARs    Granted to    or Base
                     Granted(#)    Employees in     Price
Name                    (a)         Fiscal Year    ($/sh.)    Expiration Date

                                                 
Brian E. Shore         20,000       11.0%         $19.95      July 24, 2013
Emily J. Groehl         7,500        4.1%          19.95      July 24, 2013
John Jongebloed         5,000        2.7%          19.95      July 24, 2013
Steven P. Schaefer     15,000        8.2%          19.95      July 24, 2013
Gary M. Watson         10,000        5.5%          19.95      July 24, 2013




Part 2 of 2
Option/SAR Grants in Last Fiscal Year
-------------------------------------
                      Potential Realizable Value
                     at Assumed Annual Rates of
                      Stock Price Appreciation
                          for Option Term (b)
Name                  0%($)    5%($)     10%($)

                               
Brian E. Shore        $-0-   $250,929   $635,903
Emily J. Groehl        -0-     94,098    238,464
John Jongebloed        -0-     62,732    158,976
Steven P. Schaefer     -0-    188,197    476,927
Gary M. Watson         -0-    125,464    317,952

(a)  Options  become exercisable 25% one year from  the  date  of
   grant  with  an  additional  25% exercisable  each  succeeding
   anniversary of the date of grant. The Company has not  granted
   stock appreciation rights.

(b) The potential realizable value portion of the foregoing table
   illustrates value that might be realized upon exercise of  the
   options  at  the  expiration  of  their  term,  assuming   the
   specified  compounded rates of appreciation on  the  Company's
   Common Stock over the life of the options. This schedule  does
   not  take into account provisions of the options providing for
   termination   of   the   option   following   termination   of
   employment,  nontransferability or  vesting  over  periods  of
   four  years.  The dollar amounts under these columns  are  the
   result  of  calculations at the 5% and 10% rates  set  by  the
   Securities  and  Exchange Commission  and  therefore  are  not
   intended to forecast possible future appreciation, if any,  of
   the   Company's   stock  price.  The  column   indicating   0%
   appreciation  is  included to reflect the  fact  that  a  zero
   percent  gain in stock price will result in zero  dollars  for
   the optionee. No gain to the optionees is possible without  an
   increase  in  stock price, which will benefit all shareholders
   commensurately.


Aggregated  Option Exercises in the Last Fiscal Year  and  Fiscal
Year-End Option Values

      The following table provides information regarding the pre-
tax  value  realized from the exercise of stock  options  by  the
named  executive officers during the Company's last  fiscal  year
and  the  value  of  unexercised options held by  such  executive
officers as of the end of such fiscal year.
 part 1 of 2

                                             Number of Securities
                     Shares                 Underlying Unexercised
                    Acquired      Value     Options/SARs at FY-End(#)
Name               On Exercise   Realized
                     (#)(a)       $(b)     Exercisable Unexercisable
                                            
Brian E. Shore       10,500    $124,880      412,500       77,500
Emily J. Groehl        -0-        -0-         35,446       29,063
John Jongebloed        -0-        -0-         24,775       23,750
Steven P. Schaefer     -0-        -0-          2,250       19,750
Gary M. Watson         -0-        -0-         25,625       31,875


 part 2 of 2

                       Value of Unexercised
                           In-the-Money
                           Options/SARs
                         at FY-End ($)(c)
Name                   Exercisable  Unexercisable
                                
Brian E. Shore         $4,531,752     $402,124
Emily J. Groehl          185,560        74,625
John Jongebloed          182,387        98,250
Steven P. Schaefer         4,130       106,130
Gary M. Watson            21,375        85,625

(a) The Company has not granted stock appreciation rights.

(b)  Value  realized equals market value of the underlying shares
   on  the  date of exercise, less the exercise price, times  the
   number  of  shares acquired, without deducting any taxes  paid
   by the employee.

(c)  Value  of  unexercised options equals market  value  of  the
   shares underlying "in-the-money" options at February 29,  2004
   ($26.75  per share), less exercise price, times the number  of
   options outstanding


Equity Compensation Plan Information

      The  following table provides information as of the end  of
the   Company's   most  recent  fiscal  year  with   respect   to
compensation    plans    (including    individual    compensation
arrangements)  under which equity securities of the  Company  are
authorized for issuance.




                                                            Number of securites
                        Number of                           remaining available
                        securities     Weighted-average     for future issuance
                    to be issued upon   exercise price        under equity
                       exercise of      of outstanding      compensation plans
                       outstanding         options,         (excluding securites
                     options,warrants   warrants and            reflected in
  Plan category        and rights          rights                column (A))
                          (A)                (B)                     (C)
                                                        
Equity compensation
 plans approved by
 security holders(a)    1,396,653          $19.91                 705,725

Equity compensation
 plans not approved
 by security holders(a)       -0-             -0-                     -0-

     Total              1,396,653          $19.91                 705,725
---------------

(a)The  Company's only equity compensation plans are its 2002  Stock
Option  Plan,  which was approved by the Company's  shareholders  in
July 2002, and its 1992 Stock Option Plan, which was approved by the
Company's  shareholders in July 1992. Authority to grant  additional
options  under  the  1992 Plan expired on March 24,  2002,  and  all
options  granted under the 1992 Plan will expire in  March  2012  or
earlier;  and authority to grant additional options under  the  2002
Plan  will expire on May 21, 2012, and all options granted  to  date
under the 2002 Plan will expire in January 2014 or earlier.


Employment and Consulting Agreements

     Jerry  Shore,  Chairman of the Board, was President  of  the
Company  until March 4, 1996 and Chief Executive Officer  of  the
Company   until  November  19,  1996.  In  accordance  with   the
provisions  of  an  amended  and  restated  employment  agreement
between  Jerry Shore and the Company, as amended, Jerry Shore  is
serving  as Chairman of the Board, and effective as of  March  3,
1997, the first day of the Company's 1998 fiscal year, he retired
from  full-time employment with the Company and commenced serving
as  a consultant for a term of five years. In accordance with the
employment agreement, he was being paid an annual consulting  fee
equal to 60% of his base salary in effect under the agreement  at
the  time of his retirement, subject to an indexed cost of living
increase.  In  October  1997, in connection  with  the  Company's
agreement  to  participate  in  a  split  dollar  life  insurance
agreement  for  Jerry Shore's benefit as discussed  below,  Jerry
Shore agreed to extend his consulting term for an additional year
and  agreed not to compete with the Company during the consulting
term. Jerry Shore's consulting term expired on March 2, 2003.

     In  October  1997, the Company entered into  a  split-dollar
life  insurance agreement with a trust established by Jerry Shore
for  the  benefit  of  his descendants, of  which  Jerry  Shore's
children, including Brian E. Shore, are the trustees. Pursuant to
this  agreement, the Company pays to Jerry Shore an amount  equal
to  the  portion  of  the annual premiums on two  life  insurance
policies held in the trust that represents the "economic benefit"
to  Jerry  Shore  calculated  in accordance  with  United  States
Treasury  Department  rules then in effect ($6,703  in  the  2004
fiscal  year),  and the Company pays the balance  of  the  annual
premiums  on  the policies to the insurers. In light  of  certain
provisions of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, the Company made no
payment for the balance of the annual premiums in the 2004 fiscal
year.  Both policies are joint life policies payable on the death
of  the survivor of Jerry Shore and his spouse, with an aggregate
face value of $5 million. The aggregate amount of the premiums on
the  policies  paid by the Company constitutes indebtedness  from
the trust to the Company and is secured by collateral assignments
of  the  policies. Upon the termination of the split-dollar  life
insurance agreement, whether by the death of the survivor of  the
insureds or the earlier termination of the agreement, the Company
is entitled to be repaid by the trust the amount of such indebted
ness.

Board and Compensation Committee Report on Executive Compensation

     Compensation of the Company's executive officers is composed
of  salary, annual cash bonuses, stock options and the  Company's
Profit Sharing Plan. The Board has a Compensation Committee which
considers   and   takes  any  necessary  action   regarding   the
compensation of the Company's Chief Executive Officer, other than
the  grant  of  stock options or compensation pursuant  to  plans
administered  by the Board. Brian E. Shore, President  and  Chief
Executive  Officer of the Company, determines the  annual  salary
and cash bonus for each executive officer other than himself. The
Board  also  has  a Stock Option Committee which administers  the
Company's  Stock  Option Plans, including  decisions  as  to  the
number  of options to grant to each executive officer. The amount
of  discretionary  contributions to the Profit Sharing  Plan  for
each fiscal year is determined by the Board of Directors.

      Salaries of executive officers are determined based on  the
significance   of   the  position  to  the  Company,   individual
experience  and expertise, individual performance and information
gathered  informally  as  to compensation  levels  of  comparable
companies  in the same geographic location as the Company.  Brian
E.  Shore  reviews  the  salary of each key  employee,  including
executive   officers,   annually   and   makes   adjustments   as
appropriate.

      Decisions  as  to  the  award of  annual  cash  bonuses  to
executive  officers  with respect to each fiscal  year  are  made
after  the close of the fiscal year. The amount awarded  to  each
executive  officer is based on the Company's overall performance,
individual performance, base salary level, bonuses paid in  prior
years and overall equity and fairness.

      The  Company  typically  grants  stock  options  under  the
Company's  Stock  Option Plan once each year.  The  Stock  Option
Committee  bases  its decisions on individual  performance,  base
salary  and  bonus levels, recommendations from senior management
and overall equity and fairness.

      The  Board  decides annually the amount  of  the  Company's
contribution  to  the Profit Sharing Plan.  The  amount  of  such
contribution  is  discretionary, but may not exceed  15%  of  the
total  remuneration  paid  to eligible employees  or  such  other
amount as is allowed under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986,  as
amended (the "Code"). Subject to this limit, the Board determines
the amount to be contributed for each year based on the Company's
overall  performance, the amount contributed in prior  years  and
the amounts of prior contributions recently forfeited by eligible
employees due to termination of employment prior to vesting.  The
Profit  Sharing  Plan  is a broad-based plan  in  which  numerous
employees  as  well  as executive officers are  eligible  to  par
ticipate.  Once  the Company contribution is  made,  amounts  are
allocated  to  eligible employees in accordance  with  a  formula
based on their remuneration.

      The  Board,  the Compensation Committee, the  Stock  Option
Committee and Brian E. Shore use no set formulas in making  their
determinations  and  may  afford different  weight  to  different
factors for each executive officer. Such weighting may vary  from
year to year.

      The Board and the Compensation Committee have reviewed  the
impact   of   Section  162(m)  of  the  Code  which  limits   the
deductibility  of  certain otherwise deductible  compensation  in
excess of $1 million paid to the Chief Executive Officer and  the
other  executive officers named in the table set forth under  the
caption "Executive Compensation - Summary Compensation" elsewhere
in this Proxy Statement. It is the Company's policy to attempt to
design  its executive compensation plans and arrangements  to  be
treated  as tax deductible compensation wherever, in the judgment
of  the Board or the Compensation Committee, as the case may  be,
to  do  so  would  be  consistent with  the  objectives  of  that
compensation plan or arrangement. Accordingly, the Board and  the
Compensation  Committee from time to time  may  consider  whether
changes in the Company's compensation plans and arrangements  may
be  appropriate  to  continue  to fulfill  the  requirements  for
treatment as tax deductible compensation under the Code.

  The Board of Directors    Compensation Committee and
                            Stock Option Committee

  Mark S. Ain               Jerry Shore, Chairman
  Anthony Chiesa            Anthony Chiesa
  Lloyd Frank               Lloyd Frank
  Brian E. Shore
  Jerry Shore

Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation

      Anthony  Chiesa,  a  member of the Compensation  and  Stock
Option Committees, is a former Vice President of the Company  who
retired  in  1977. Lloyd Frank, also a member of such Committees,
is  of  counsel to the law firm Jenkins & Gilchrist Parker Chapin
LLP,  which  firm was retained to provide counsel to the  Company
during  its  fiscal year ended March 2, 2003 but not  during  its
last   fiscal  year.  Jerry  Shore,  the  third  member  of  such
Committees, was President of the Company until March 4, 1996  and
Chief  Executive Officer of the Company until November 19,  1996.
Brian  E.  Shore, a director of the Company who is also President
and  Chief  Executive  Officer of the  Company,  participated  in
deliberations  of  the  Board  relating  to  the  amount  of  the
Company's  contribution  to the Profit Sharing  Plan  during  the
Company's  last  fiscal year, and Brian E. Shore  determines  the
annual  salary and cash bonus for each executive officer  of  the
Company, other than himself.

                     STOCK PERFORMANCE GRAPH

      The  graph  set forth below compares the annual  cumulative
total  return for the Company's five fiscal years ended  February
29,  2004  among the Company, the New York Stock Exchange  Market
Index  (the "NYSE Index") and a Media General Financial  Services
index  for  electronic  components and accessories  manufacturers
(the  "Group Index") comprised of the Company and 254  other  com
panies.  The companies in the Group Index are classified  in  the
same  three-digit  industry  group  in  the  Standard  Industrial
Classification  Code  system  and  are  described  as   companies
primarily engaged in the manufacture of electronic components and
accessories. The returns of each company in the Group Index  have
been  weighted according to the company's stock market capitaliza
tion.  The graph has been prepared based on an assumed investment
of  $100  on February 26, 1999 and the reinvestment of  dividends
(where applicable).

[Graph]




                       1999    2000    2001     2002    2003    2004
                                              
Park Electrochemical  $l00.00 $ 84.43  $188.96  $147.25 $88.09  $155.27

Group Indes            100.00  295.25   129.24   111.95  62.30   114.67

NYSE Index             100.00  101.26   108.67   102.04  80.55   114.87


             APPROVAL OF THE MATCHING FEATURE OF THE
             COMPANY'S EMPLOYEE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN

      The  Company maintains an Employee Stock Purchase Plan (the
"Plan")  pursuant  to  which employee contributions  and  Company
matching  contributions are used to acquire the Company's  Common
Stock  for  the  account  of  the contributing  employee.   Under
Section  303A.08  of the New York Stock Exchange  Listed  Company
Manual,  the  matching contribution feature of  the  Plan  is  an
"equity   compensation  plan"  requiring  shareholder   approval.
Accordingly,  at  the Meeting, shareholders are  being  asked  to
approve the matching contribution feature of the Plan.

Summary of the Plan

General Information

     The  Plan  was established pursuant to a resolution  of  the
Board  adopted on July 24, 1985.  The Plan is not subject to  the
provisions  of  the Employee Retirement Income  Security  Act  of
1974,  as amended, nor qualified under Section 401(a) or  Section
423 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.

     The  purpose  of the Plan is to make available  to  eligible
employees  of  the Company a means of purchasing  shares  of  the
Company's Common Stock through regular payroll deductions.   Such
purchases  generally are made on the New York Stock Exchange,  or
any  other market on which the Common Stock may trade, at  market
prices  current at the time of purchase.  As an added  incentive,
the  Company contributes for each payroll period an amount  equal
to  40% of each participating employee's actual payroll deduction
for employees with less than five years service with the Company,
45% of each participating employee's actual payroll deduction for
employees  with more than five years service but  less  than  ten
years  service with the Company, and an amount equal  to  50%  of
each  participating  employee's  actual  payroll  deduction   for
employees with more than ten years service with the Company.

     Pursuant  to  a  transition rule established  under  Section
303A.08  of  the  New York Stock Exchange Listed Company  Manual,
shareholder approval of the matching contribution feature of  the
Plan   is   required   with  respect  to  any  Company   matching
contribution  after  June  30,  2004.   Accordingly,  no  Company
matching  contribution will be made after June  30,  2004  unless
this proposal is approved.

     The   total  employee  and  Company  contributions  for  all
participating employees are forwarded monthly by the Company to a
broker  designated  by the Company (currently Computershare  Plan
Managers,   the  "Broker")  and  applied  to  the   purchase   of
outstanding shares and/or fractional interests in shares  of  the
Company's  Common Stock, except during any period that  operation
of  the  Plan  is  suspended.   The Company  pays  the  brokerage
commissions  with respect to such purchases for  the  account  of
each participating employee.

     Participation  in  the Plan is entirely voluntary,  and  the
Company makes no recommendations to employees as to whether  they
should or should not participate. There is no guarantee under the
Plan against loss resulting from fluctuations in the market price
of the Common Stock of the Company.

     As  of  May 19, 2004, approximately 135,000 shares of Common
Stock of the Company were held in the Plan for approximately  960
participants in the Plan, including current and former  employees
of the Company and its designated subsidiaries.

Eligibility

     All permanent employees of the Company (other than executive
officers)  and  of such of its subsidiaries as are designated  by
the  Company  (other  than  employees whose  annual  base  salary
exceeds $100,000) who have attained the age of majority in  their
jurisdictions  of  residence and who have been  employed  by  the
Company  or one of its designated subsidiaries for at  least  one
year are eligible to participate in the Plan, at their election.

     Notwithstanding  the  foregoing, if any  employee  otherwise
eligible  to  participate  in  the  Plan  is  employed   in   any
jurisdiction  where  it  is not legal for  the  Company  to  make
deductions  from such employee's pay as hereinafter provided,  or
where compliance with securities laws may be necessary but is not
(in  the  opinion of the Company) desirable, such employee  shall
not be eligible to participate.

     Approximately   700  employees  of  the  Company   and   its
designated subsidiaries are currently eligible to participate  in
the  Plan,  and  approximately 310 such employees  are  currently
participating.

Participation

     An  eligible employee at such employee's election may enroll
as  a  participant by executing a payroll deduction authorization
and purchase order form, each in a form and manner acceptable  to
the Company.  Enrollment becomes effective as soon as practicable
after  the  payroll  deduction authorization and  purchase  order
forms are received by the Company.

Method of Operation

     The  Company has instructed the Broker to open and  maintain
accounts  in  the names of participants and to make purchases  of
shares of the Company's Common Stock pursuant to the Plan for the
account of the participants.

     The  Company pays the Broker's commissions on purchases made
from  amounts  deducted from the pay of the  employees  who  have
accounts  and  from  amounts contributed  by  the  Company.   The
Broker's  commission  and any other charges  in  connection  with
sales,  reinvested dividends, or purchases not  made  by  payroll
deductions  or by Company contributions are payable  directly  to
the  Broker by the employee who orders the transactions for  such
employee's  account.  Commissions under the Plan are computed  at
such  rates as are posted by the Broker and in effect at the time
of the transaction.

     The  Company  deducts funds from each participant's  pay  as
authorized  and each month, as promptly as practicable,  forwards
the  total of the amounts deducted for all participants, together
with  the  Company's contributions, to the Broker, along  with  a
list  of participants and the amount allocable to the account  of
each participant, except during any period that operation of  the
Plan is suspended.

     Upon  receipt  of  funds from the Company,  the  Broker,  as
promptly   as   practicable,  purchases,   as   agent   for   the
participants,  as many shares of Common Stock of the  Company  as
such  funds will permit.  Such purchases usually are made on  the
New  York Stock Exchange (but may be made on any other market  on
which the Common Stock may trade). The Broker uses such funds and
the  Company  contributions  received  for  the  account  of  any
participant,  together with such funds and Company  contributions
received for the account of other participants, to make purchases
for  participants  pursuant to the Plan.   The  amount  of  stock
purchased  will depend upon the price paid by the Broker  in  any
particular  transaction.  Such purchases, on  the  basis  of  the
average  cost,  are  made  for  the respective  accounts  of  the
participants  in  proportion  to  the  amounts  withheld  by  the
Company,  and  augmented  by  Company  contributions,  for   such
participants.

Payroll Deductions

     Payroll deduction authorization is for an indefinite  period
of  time.   The  employee  specifies therein  the  amount  to  be
withheld from such employee's pay, which amount must be  in  even
multiples  of $5.00 per week, with a maximum of $30.00  per  week
for  employees who work at least 35 hours per week and a  maximum
of  $10.00 per week for employees who work at least 25 hours  per
week but less than 35 hours per week.

     The  payroll deduction may be revised or terminated  at  any
time  by the employee's written request submitted to the Company.
Commencement,  revision  or  termination  of  deductions  becomes
effective as soon as practicable after the employee's request  is
received by the Company.


Amendment and Termination

     The  Company reserves the right to discontinue  use  of  its
payroll  deduction facilities at any time such action  is  deemed
advisable in its sole judgment, and it also reserves the right at
any time to designate a new Broker, amend or discontinue the Plan
or  add or eliminate subsidiaries whose employees may participate
in  the Plan if, in its sole judgment, it deems such action to be
advisable.  The Broker may also terminate its services as  broker
under  the  Plan  at any time.  Such termination  by  either  the
Company  or the Broker is to be on thirty days written notice  to
the other.  Any such amendment or termination will not result  in
the  forfeiture  of  any funds deducted from the  salary  of  any
participant  or  contributed by the  Company  on  behalf  of  any
participant, or of any shares or fractional interest in  a  share
purchased  for  the  participant, or of any  dividends  or  other
distribution  in  respect of such shares,  effective  before  the
effective  date  of  amendment or  termination  of  the  Plan  or
elimination of participating subsidiaries.

     The matching contribution feature of the Plan will expire on
May 6, 2014.

Participant's Account With the Broker

     At the time of purchase of Common Stock under the Plan, each
participant  for  whose account funds were  received  immediately
acquires  full  ownership of all shares  and  of  any  fractional
interest  in  a  share purchased for such participant's  account.
All shares are registered in the name of the Broker.  Although  a
participant  may  not  assign or hypothecate  such  participant's
interest in the Plan as such, shares purchased under the Plan may
be sold or assigned at any time.

     An  employee who has an account may add other shares of  the
Company's  Common Stock to such employee's account, at any  time,
by  separate purchases arranged with the Broker or by  delivering
other shares owned by such employee to the Broker.  When any such
purchases  are  made,  the  employee will  be  charged  with  the
commissions.

     The  employee's account will be credited with all  dividends
paid in respect of the full shares and any fractional interest in
a  share  held  in  his or her account.  Cash dividends  will  be
reinvested   in  the  Company's  Common  Stock  as  promptly   as
practicable  following receipt thereof by the Broker.   Brokerage
commissions  on  dividend  reinvestments  in  respect  of  shares
purchased pursuant to the Plan will be paid by the Company.

     Stock dividends and/or any stock splits in respect of shares
of  Common  Stock purchased pursuant to the Plan and  held  in  a
participant's  account  will be credited  to  such  participant's
account  without charge.  Distributions of other  securities  and
rights to subscribe will be sold and the proceeds will be handled
in the same manner as a cash dividend.

     As noted above, a participant may instruct the Broker at any
time  to  sell  any or all of the full shares and the  fractional
interest  in  a  share held in such participant's account.   Upon
such  sale, the Broker will mail the participant a check for  the
proceeds,  less the brokerage commission and any transfer  taxes,
registration  fees or other normal charges which are  payable  by
the  participant in connection with such sale.  Such instructions
to  the  Broker, or a request for delivery of certificates,  will
disqualify  the employee from making further contributions  under
the Plan for a period of one year thereafter.

     Each  participant  receives  quarterly  confirmations  or  a
statement  from the Broker reflecting changes in  the  amount  of
stock  held  in  such  participant's account.   The  relationship
between the Broker and the participant is the normal relationship
of  a broker and the broker's client, and the Company assumes  no
responsibility  in this respect.  The brokerage  relationship  is
subject   to,  among  other  things,  the  Broker's   terms   and
conditions, rules and regulations of the Securities and  Exchange
Commission  and  rules  of the New York Stock  Exchange  and  the
National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.

     The  Broker  is  required to forward to each participant  as
promptly  as  practicable, by mail or otherwise, all  notices  of
meetings, proxy statements, and other material distributed by the
Company  to its shareholders.  The full shares of stock  in  each
participant's   account  are  voted  in   accordance   with   the
participant's  signed proxy instructions duly  delivered  to  the
Broker  or otherwise in accordance with the applicable  rules  of
the  New York Stock Exchange.  There is no charge to participants
for the Broker's retention of stock certificates or in connection
with forwarding notices, proxies or other such material.

Closing a Participant's Account

     An employee who terminates such employee's payroll deduction
authorization may request the Broker to maintain or to close such
employee's account.  The employee may direct that all full shares
and  any fractional interest in shares in such employee's account
be  sold and the net proceeds remitted to such employee,  or  the
employee  may  request that the full shares  in  the  account  be
delivered  to such employee, along with a check representing  the
net  proceeds of the sale of the fractional interest in a  share.
The  employee may thereafter re-enter the Plan after a period  of
one  year  by  following  the procedure set  forth  herein  under
"Participation."

Plan Benefits

     Employee  contributions under the Plan will be made  at  the
discretion  of  employees  and the  amount  of  Company  matching
contributions   will   depend   on   the   amount   of   employee
contributions.  In addition, the ultimate value of an  employee's
account  under  the Plan depends on the value  of  the  Company's
Common  Stock.  Accordingly, it is not possible to determine  the
future benefits that might be received by participants under  the
Plan.

Vote Required

      The affirmative vote of a majority of the votes cast at the
Meeting  is required to approve this proposal, provided that  the
total  votes cast represent a majority of the outstanding  shares
of  Common  Stock.   Abstentions and  broker  non-votes  are  not
considered  to  be  votes cast and will therefore  make  it  more
difficult to meet this requirement.

     The Board of Directors recommends that shareholders vote FOR
the  approval  of  this  proposal.   Proxies  will  be  voted  in
accordance  with  their  terms and, in the  absence  of  contrary
instructions, for the approval of this proposal.


     SECTION 16(a) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE

      Section  16(a) of the Exchange Act requires  the  Company's
officers and directors, and persons who own more than 10  percent
of a registered class of the Company's equity securities, to file
reports of ownership and changes in ownership with the Securities
and   Exchange  Commission  and  the  New  York  Stock  Exchange.
Officers, directors and greater than 10 percent shareholders  are
required by regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission
to  furnish the Company with copies of all Section 16(a)  reports
they file. Based solely on a review of the copies of such reports
furnished to the Company, or written representations that no Form
5  reports  were required, the Company believes that all  Section
16(a)  filing requirements applicable to its officers,  directors
and  greater than 10 percent beneficial owners were complied with
during the 2004 fiscal year.

                      SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS

      Shareholder proposals intended to be presented at the  2005
Annual  Meeting of Shareholders pursuant to Rule 14a-8 under  the
Exchange  Act  must be received by the Company at  the  Company's
principal  executive offices for inclusion in the Proxy Statement
and  form of Proxy relating to that meeting by February 16, 2005.
In  order  for shareholder proposals made outside of  Rule  14a-8
under  the  Exchange  Act to be considered  "timely"  within  the
meaning  of Rule 14a-4(c) under the Exchange Act, such  proposals
must  be  received  by  the  Company at the  Company's  principal
executive  offices  by  April  15, 2005.  The  Company's  By-Laws
require that proposals of shareholders made outside of Rule 14a-8
under the Exchange Act must be submitted, in accordance with  the
requirements  of the By-Laws, not later than April 15,  2005  and
not earlier than March 16, 2005.

                          OTHER MATTERS

Audit Committee Report

     The  Audit  Committee assists the Board  in  fulfilling  its
oversight   responsibilities  with  respect  to  the  accounting,
auditing,   financial  reporting,  internal  control  and   legal
compliance  functions  of the Company and its  subsidiaries.  The
Board  of Directors has determined that all members of the  Audit
Committee are "independent", as required by the current rules  of
the New York Stock Exchange. The Committee functions pursuant  to
a  Charter  that  has been adopted by the Board, as  required  by
rules of the New York Stock Exchange, a copy of which is attached
as  Appendix A to this Proxy Statement, as required by  rules  of
the Securities and Exchange Commission.

     As  set  forth in the Charter, management of the Company  is
responsible  for the preparation, presentation and  integrity  of
the   Company's   financial  statements,  and   for   maintaining
appropriate  accounting  and financial reporting  principles  and
policies and internal controls and procedures designed to provide
reasonable assurance of compliance with accounting standards  and
applicable laws and regulations. The independent accountants  are
responsible for planning and carrying out an audit in  accordance
with  generally  accepted auditing standards  and  expressing  an
opinion  as  to  the conformity of the financial statements  with
generally accepted accounting principles.

     In  the  performance  of its oversight function,  the  Audit
Committee  has  reviewed  and  discussed  the  audited  financial
statements  for  the  fiscal year ended February  29,  2004  with
management  and with Ernst & Young LLP, the Company's independent
public  accountants for the 2004 fiscal year. The Audit Committee
has  also  received  from the independent  accountants  a  letter
pursuant  to Statement on Auditing Standards No. 61, Codification
of  Statements  on Auditing Standards, AU 380,  as  currently  in
effect, and has discussed the matters referred to in such  letter
with  the  independent accountants. The Audit Committee has  also
received  the  written  disclosures  and  the  letter  from   the
independent accountants required by Independence Standards  Board
Standard  No. 1, Independence Discussions with Audit  Committees,
as  currently  in  effect.  The Audit  Committee  has  considered
whether  the  provision of non-audit services by the  independent
accountants  to  the Company is compatible with  maintaining  the
accountants'  independence and has discussed with Ernst  &  Young
LLP their independence.

     The  members  of  the Audit Committee are not professionally
engaged  in  the  practice of auditing or accounting.  The  Audit
Committee's considerations and discussions referred to  above  do
not  assure  that the audit of the Company's financial statements
for  the fiscal year ended February 29, 2004 has been carried out
in  accordance with generally accepted auditing standards or that
the   financial  statements  are  presented  in  accordance  with
generally accepted accounting principles.

     Based  upon  the  review and discussions described  in  this
Report,   and  subject  to  the  limitations  on  the  role   and
responsibilities of the Audit Committee referred to above and  in
the  Charter,  the Audit Committee has recommended to  the  Board
that  the  audited  financial  statements  be  included  in   the
Company's  Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal  year  ended
February  29,  2004 for filing with the Securities  and  Exchange
Commission.


                             Audit Committee

                             Lloyd Frank, Chairman
                             Mark S. Ain
                             Anthony Chiesa


Auditors and Fees

      The  Audit  Committee appointed Ernst & Young  LLP  as  the
Company's  independent  auditor  for  the  past  fiscal  year.  A
representative of Ernst & Young LLP is expected to be present  at
the  Annual Meeting and will have an opportunity to make a  state
ment  if such representative so desires and will be available  to
respond to appropriate questions.

     The  Audit Committee has not selected an independent auditor
of  the  Company  for  the  current fiscal  year.  As  previously
reported  by  the Company, the Company was notified  by  Ernst  &
Young  LLP  on  May  26, 2004 that Ernst &  Young  would  decline
reappointment  as  the  Company's  independent  auditor  for  the
current fiscal year, although Ernst & Young and the Company  have
agreed  that  Ernst  & Young will review the Company's  financial
statements for its 2005 fiscal year first quarter ended  May  30,
2004.  Prior  to receiving such notice from Ernst  &  Young,  the
Company, with the approval of the Audit Committee of the Board of
Directors,  had  begun  the process of interviewing  other  major
independent  accounting  firms to be  the  Company's  independent
auditor for the current fiscal year.

     The reports of E&Y on the Company's financial statements for
the last two fiscal years did not contain any adverse opinion  or
disclaimer  of opinion and were not qualified or modified  as  to
uncertainty, audit scope or accounting principles.

     As E&Y's decision did not involve any disagreements with the
Company,  the  Audit Committee of the Board of Directors  of  the
Company  did  not participate in the termination of  the  client-
auditor  relationship with E&Y, although, as  stated  above,  the
Audit  Committee had previously authorized the Company  to  begin
the  process  of interviewing other accounting firms  to  be  the
Company's independent auditor for the current fiscal year.

     During  the last two fiscal years and through May 26,  2004,
there  have  been  no disagreements with E&Y  on  any  matter  of
accounting   principles   or   practices,   financial   statement
disclosure  or  auditing scope or procedure, which disagreements,
if  not resolved to E&Y's satisfaction, would have caused E&Y  to
make   reference  thereto  in  E&Y's  report  on  the   financial
statements for such years or interim period.

     During  the last two fiscal years and through May 26,  2004,
there  have been no "reportable events," as such term is  defined
in  Item  304(a)(1)(v) of Regulation S-K of  the  Securities  and
Exchange Commission.

     The following table shows the fees paid or accrued for audit
services and fees paid or accrued for audit-related, tax and  all
other services rendered by Ernst & Young for each of the last two
fiscal years ended February 29, 2004 and March 2, 2003:

                               2004         2003
     Audit Fees (a)          $354,421     $386,167
     Audit-Related Fees (b)    18,000       28,100
     Tax Fees (c)              44,883       96,333
     All Other Fees (d)         4,531        8,450
                             $421,835     $519,050

(a) Audit  fees  include  fees for the  audit  of  the  Company's
    consolidated  financial statements, interim  reviews  of  the
    Company's  quarterly financial statements and audit  services
    provided  in  connection with required  statutory  audits  of
    many of the Company's subsidiaries.

(b) Audit-related fees include primarily fees for certain  audits
    of  subsidiaries not required for purposes of Ernst & Young's
    audit of the Company's consolidated financial statements  but
    for  other  statutory  or  regulatory  requirements  and  the
    annual  audit of the Company's Employees' Profit Sharing  and
    401(k) Retirement Savings Plan.

(c) Tax   fees  include  fees  for  services  relating   to   tax
    compliance,  tax  planning  and tax  advice.  These  services
    include    assistance    regarding   federal,    state    and
    international tax compliance, tax return preparation and  tax
    audits.

(d) All  other fees include primarily fees for certain employment
    law  and  employee benefit plan services which are no  longer
    permitted  to  be  performed  by  Ernst  &  Young  under  the
    Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, but were permitted  at  the  time
    they were arranged for prior to May 6, 2003.

      The  services performed by Ernst & Young in connection with
engagements  subsequent  to  May 6,  2003  were  pre-approved  in
accordance  with  the pre-approval policy adopted  by  the  Audit
Committee.

Audit Committee Pre-Approval Policy

     The  policy  of the Audit Committee is to require  that  all
services  to be provided to the Company by the Company's auditors
must be approved by the Audit Committee before such services  are
provided by the auditors.


Directors' and Officers' Liability Insurance

     The  Company  has for many years maintained  directors'  and
officers'  liability insurance and fiduciary liability  insurance
covering  the  directors  and officers of  the  Company  and  its
subsidiaries against certain claims arising out of their  service
to  the  Company  and  its subsidiaries and to  certain  employee
benefit  plans of the Company and its subsidiaries.  The  current
directors'  and officers' liability insurance policy runs  for  a
period  of  one  year expiring May 17, 2005 at a  total  cost  of
$300,000;  and  the current fiduciary liability insurance  policy
runs  for a period of one year expiring June 17, 2004 at  a  one-
year cost of $29,040.

Proxy Solicitation

      The  Company  will bear the expense of proxy  solicitation.
Directors,  officers  and  employees  of  the  Company  and   its
subsidiaries  may solicit proxies by mail, telephone,  telegraph,
facsimile   or   in  person  (but  will  receive  no   additional
compensation  for  such  solicitation).  The  Company  also   has
retained D. F. King & Co., Inc., New York, New York, to assist in
the  solicitation of proxies in the same manner at an anticipated
fee of approximately $6,000, plus reimbursement of certain out-of-
pocket   expenses.  In  addition,  brokerage  houses  and   other
custodians, nominees and fiduciaries will be requested to forward
the  soliciting  material  to beneficial  owners  and  to  obtain
authorizations for the execution of proxies, and if they in  turn
so  request, the Company will reimburse such brokerage houses and
other custodians, nominees and fiduciaries for their expenses  in
forwarding such material.

Director Candidates

The   Nominating  Committee  will  consider  director  candidates
recommended by shareholders. In considering candidates  submitted
by   shareholders,  the  Nominating  Committee  will  take   into
consideration  the  needs of the Board and the qualifications  of
the  candidate.  The Committee may also consider  the  number  of
shares  held  by the recommending shareholder and the  length  of
time  that  such  shares  have been held.  To  have  a  candidate
considered by the Nominating Committee, a shareholder must submit
the  recommendation in writing and must include the name  of  the
shareholder  and  evidence of the person's ownership  of  Company
stock,  including the number of shares owned and  the  length  of
time of ownership, and the name of the candidate, the candidate's
resume or a listing of his or her qualifications to be a director
of the Company and the person's consent to be named as a director
if  selected  by  the Nominating Committee and nominated  by  the
Board.

     The  shareholder  recommendation and  information  described
above  must  be sent to the Corporate Secretary at the  Company's
office  at 5 Dakota Drive, Lake Success, New York 10042 and  must
be  received  by the Corporate Secretary not less than  120  days
prior to the anniversary date of the Company's most recent annual
meeting of shareholders.

       The   Nominating  Committee  believes  that  the   minimum
qualifications for serving as a director of the Company are  that
a  nominee demonstrate, by significant accomplishment in  his  or
her  field, an ability to make a meaningful contribution  to  the
Board's oversight of the business and affairs of the Company  and
have  an  impeccable record and reputation for honest and ethical
conduct  in both his or her professional and personal activities.
In  addition,  the  Nominating Committee examines  a  candidate's
specific  experiences and skills, time availability in  light  of
other commitments and potential conflicts of interest.

     The  Nominating Committee identifies potential  nominees  by
asking  current directors and executive officers  to  notify  the
Committee  if they become aware of persons, meeting the  criteria
described  above,  who  have had a change in  circumstances  that
might  make  them available to serve on the Board - for  example,
retirement  as  a  CEO or CFO of a public company.  As  described
above,  the  Nominating Committee will also  consider  candidates
recommended by shareholders.

     Once   a  person  has  been  identified  by  the  Nominating
Committee as a potential candidate, the Committee may collect and
review  publicly available information regarding  the  person  to
assess  whether the person should be considered further.  If  the
Nominating  Committee  determines  that  the  candidate  warrants
further  consideration, the Chairman or  another  member  of  the
Committee contacts the person. Generally, if the person expresses
a  willingness  to be considered and to serve on the  Board,  the
Nominating  Committee requests information  from  the  candidate,
reviews   the  candidate's  accomplishments  and  qualifications,
including  in  light of any other candidates that  the  Committee
might  be  considering, and conducts one or more interviews  with
the   candidate.   In  certain  instances,  Nominating  Committee
members  may  contact  one  or more references  provided  by  the
candidate  or may contact other members of the business community
or  other  persons that may have greater first-hand knowledge  of
the   candidate's  accomplishments.  The  Nominating  Committee's
evaluation  process  does not vary based  on  whether  or  not  a
candidate  is recommended by a shareholder, although,  as  stated
above,  the Committee may take into consideration the  number  of
shares  held  by the recommending shareholder and the  length  of
time that such shares have been held.

      Dale Blanchfield and Steven T. Warshaw were recommended for
consideration by the Nominating Committee by the chief  executive
officer of the Company.

Communications with Directors

       The   Board   has   established  a  process   to   receive
communications  from  shareholders and other interested  parties.
Shareholders and other interested parties may contact any  member
(or  all  members)  of  the Board, including  the  non-management
directors as a group, by mail. To communicate with the  Board  of
Directors,   any   individual  director  or  the   non-management
directors,  correspondence should be addressed to  the  Board  of
Directors  or  any such individual director or the non-management
directors by either name or title. All such correspondence should
be  sent "c/o Corporate Secretary" at the Company's office  at  5
Dakota Drive, Lake Success, New York 11042.

      All  communications received as set forth in the  preceding
paragraph  will be opened by the office of the Company's  General
Counsel  for the sole purpose of determining whether the contents
represent  a  message  to  the directors  of  the  Company.   Any
contents that are not in the nature of advertising, promotions of
a  product  or  service, or patently offensive material  will  be
forwarded   promptly  to  the  addressee.    In   the   case   of
communications to the Board or the non-management directors,  the
General  Counsel's  office  will make sufficient  copies  of  the
contents to send to each director who is a member of the group to
which the communication is addressed.

Code of Ethics and Business Conduct

     For  more than thirty-five years, the Company has maintained
basic corporate rules and guidelines agreed to in writing by  its
chief  executive  officer and its business  unit  presidents  and
controllers.  Such  rules and guidelines cover  such  matters  as
personnel  guidelines, transactions with suppliers, conflicts  of
interest  and  business ethics, transactions with  relatives  and
friends,  cash  control and consolidations, capital expenditures,
disposal  of property, plant, equipment and inventory,  insurance
programs,  legal  matters and contracts, credit and  collections,
unusual  business transactions and special charges  and  transfer
charges,  inventory levels, weekly and monthly financial  reports
and  annual  business  plans, employee safety  and  environmental
matters.

     The  Board  has  adopted a Code of Ethics for the  Company's
chief  executive officer, chief financial officer and controller,
and  as  required  by rules of the New York Stock  Exchange,  the
Board  has adopted a Code of Business Conduct and Ethics for  the
Company's directors, officers and employees. Substantially all of
the  matters required to be addressed in these recently  required
Code  of Ethics and Code of Business Conduct and Ethics have been
addressed in the corporate rules and guidelines which the Company
has  maintained  since 1967, although the new  Code  of  Business
Conduct  and  Ethics  applies  to  all  directors,  officers  and
employees of the Company and its subsidiaries.

     The Company has filed its Code of Ethics as Exhibit 14.1  to
its  Form  10-K Annual Report for the fiscal year ended  February
29,  2004,  as  provided by rules of the Securities and  Exchange
Commission, and the Company's Code of Business Conduct and Ethics
will    be    available   on   the   Company's   web   site    at
www.parkelectro.com under the caption "Charters and Codes" as  of
the  date  of  the Meeting as required by rules of the  New  York
Stock  Exchange.  The Company intends to satisfy  any  disclosure
requirements regarding an amendment to, or waiver from, the  Code
of  Ethics by posting such information on the Company's web  site
at the above internet address.

Other Matters to be Presented to the Meeting

      The  Board does not know of any other matters to be brought
before  the Meeting. If any other matters not mentioned  in  this
Proxy   Statement  are  properly  brought  before  the   Meeting,
including  matters  incident to the conduct  of  the  Meeting  or
relating  to  the adjournment thereof, the persons named  in  the
enclosed proxy intend to vote such proxy in accordance with their
best judgment on such matters.


Annual Report

      The  Annual Report, including financial statements, of  the
Company  for the fiscal year ended February 29, 2004 is  enclosed
herewith but is not a part of the proxy soliciting material.


                              By Order of the Board of Directors,


                                     Stephen E. Gilhuley
                                    Senior Vice President,
                                Secretary and General Counsel

Dated:  June 16, 2004

                                                       Appendix A

              CHARTER OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE OF THE
                      BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF
                   PARK ELECTROCHEMICAL CORP.
            AS ADOPTED BY THE BOARD AS OF MAY 6, 2004



I.   PURPOSE OF THE COMMITTEE

     The  purpose of the Audit Committee (the "Committee") of the
Board  of  Directors (the "Board") of Park Electrochemical  Corp.
(the  "Corporation") is to provide assistance  to  the  Board  in
fulfilling  its legal and fiduciary obligations with  respect  to
matters  involving the accounting, auditing, financial reporting,
internal   control   and  legal  compliance  functions   of   the
Corporation  and its subsidiaries, including, without limitation,
(a)  assisting the Board's oversight of (i) the integrity of  the
Corporation's   financial  statements,  (ii)  the   Corporation's
compliance  with  legal  and regulatory requirements,  (iii)  the
Corporation's    independent   auditors'    qualifications    and
independence, and (iv) the performance of the Corporation's  inde
pendent  auditors and the Corporation's internal audit  function,
and  (b)  preparing  the report required to be  prepared  by  the
Committee  pursuant to the rules of the Securities  and  Exchange
Commission (the "SEC") for inclusion in the Corporation's  annual
proxy statement.

II.  COMPOSITION OF THE COMMITTEE

     The  Committee shall be comprised of three or more directors
as determined from time to time by resolution of the Board.  Each
member  of  the  Committee shall be qualified  to  serve  on  the
Committee  pursuant  to the requirements of the  New  York  Stock
Exchange  (the "NYSE"), and any additional requirements that  the
Board deems appropriate.

     No  director may serve as a member of the Committee if  such
director  serves on the audit committee of more  than  two  other
public   companies,  unless  the  Board  determines   that   such
simultaneous  service  would  not  impair  the  ability  of  such
director  to  effectively  serve  on  the  Committee.  Any   such
determination must be disclosed in the Corporation's annual proxy
statement.

     The  chairperson of the Committee shall be designated by the
Board,  provided  that  if  the Board does  not  so  designate  a
chairperson,  the members of the Committee, by a  majority  vote,
may designate a chairperson.

     Any  vacancy  on the Committee shall be filled  by  majority
vote  of  the Board.  No member of the Committee shall be removed
except by majority vote of the Board.

     Each  member of the Committee must be financially  literate,
as such qualification is interpreted by the Board in its business
judgment, or must become financially literate within a reasonable
period of time after his or her appointment to the Committee.  In
addition,  at  least  one  member  of  the  Committee  must  have
accounting  or  related financial management expertise,  as  such
qualification  is  interpreted  by  the  Board  in  its  business
judgement.

III. MEETINGS OF THE COMMITTEE

     The  Committee shall meet once every fiscal quarter or  more
frequently  as it shall determine is necessary to carry  out  its
duties  and  responsibilities. The Committee, in its  discretion,
may  ask  members of management or others to attend its  meetings
(or  portions  thereof) and to provide pertinent  information  as
necessary.   The Committee should meet separately on  a  periodic
basis with (i) management, (ii) the director of the Corporation's
internal auditing department or other person responsible for  the
internal  audit function (such person referred to herein  as  the
"Internal  Auditor")  and  (iii)  the  Corporation's  independent
auditors.   The Committee shall maintain minutes of its  meetings
and records relating to those meetings.

IV.  DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE COMMITTEE

     In   carrying  out  its  duties  and  responsibilities,  the
Committee's  policies and procedures should remain  flexible,  so
that it may be in a position to best react or respond to changing
circumstances  or  conditions.   The  following  are  within  the
authority of the Committee:

Selection, Evaluation and Oversight of the Auditors

     a.    Be   directly   responsible   for   the   appointment,
compensation,  retention  and  oversight  of  the  work  of   any
registered  public  accounting firm engaged for  the  purpose  of
preparing  or issuing an audit report or performing other  audit,
review  or  attest services for the Corporation,  and  each  such
registered  public accounting firm must report  directly  to  the
Committee (the registered public accounting firm engaged for  the
purpose of preparing or issuing an audit report for inclusion  in
the  Corporation's  Annual Report on Form  10-K  is  referred  to
herein as the "independent auditors");

      b.  Review and, in its sole discretion, approve in  advance
the Corporation's independent auditors' annual engagement letter,
including  the proposed fees contained therein, as  well  as  (i)
reviewing all audit and, as provided in Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-
X promulgated by the SEC, all permitted non-audit engagements and
relationships  between the Corporation and such  auditors  (which
approval may be made after receiving input from the Corporation's
management) and/or (ii) adopting policies and procedures  of  the
Committee that provide for the pre-approval of specified services
to  be provided by the Corporation's auditors.  Approval of audit
and  permitted non-audit services may also be made by one or more
members  of the Committee as shall be designated by the Committee
or  the  chairperson of the Committee and the person  or  persons
granting  such  approval  shall  report  such  approval  to   the
Committee at the next scheduled meeting;

      c.  Review the performance of the Corporation's independent
auditors, including the lead partner and reviewing partner of the
independent auditors, and, in its sole discretion, make decisions
regarding  the  replacement  or termination  of  the  independent
auditors when circumstances warrant;

     d.   Obtain   at   least  annually  from  the  Corporation's
independent auditors and review a report describing:

        (i)the   independent  auditors'  internal   quality-
     control procedures;

        (ii)any  material issues raised by the  most  recent
     internal quality-control review, or peer review, of the
     independent   auditors,   or   by   any   inquiry    or
     investigation  by  any  governmental  or   professional
     authority,  within the preceding five years, respecting
     one  or  more  independent audits carried  out  by  the
     independent auditors, and any steps taken to deal  with
     any such issues; and

        (iii)  all  relationships  between  the  independent
     auditors  and the Corporation (including a  description
     of   each   category  of  services  provided   by   the
     independent auditors to the Corporation and a  list  of
     the fees billed for each such category);

     The Committee should present its conclusions with respect to
the  above matters, as well as its review of the lead partner and
the  reviewing partner of the independent auditors, and its views
on  whether there should be a regular rotation of the independent
auditors, to the Board.

     e.Evaluate    the   independence   of   the    Corporation's
independent auditors by, among other things:

        (i)   monitoring  compliance  by  the  Corporation's
     independent  auditors with the audit  partner  rotation
     requirements  contained in the  Sarbanes-Oxley  Act  of
     2002  (the  "Act") and the SEC's rules and  regulations
     thereunder;

        (ii)    monitoring  compliance  by  the  Corporation
     with  the  employee  conflict of interest  requirements
     contained   in  the  Act  and  the  SEC's   rules   and
     regulations thereunder; and

        (iii)  engaging  in a dialogue with the  independent
     auditors to confirm that audit partner compensation  is
     consistent with applicable SEC rules;

Oversight of Annual Audit and Quarterly Reviews

     f.Review   the   annual  audit  plan  of  the  Corporation's
independent auditors, including the scope of audit activities and
all  critical accounting policies and practices to be  used,  and
monitor such plan's progress and results during the year;

     g.Review  with  management,  the  Corporation's  independent
auditors   and,  if  appropriate,  the  Internal   Auditor,   the
following:

        (i)   the  Corporation's  annual  audited  financial
     statements    and   quarterly   financial   statements,
     including  the  Corporation's  disclosures  under  "Man
     agement's   Discussion   and  Analysis   of   Financial
     Condition  and  Results of Operations", and  any  major
     issues related thereto;

        (ii)critical  accounting  policies  and  such  other
     accounting  policies of the Corporation as  are  deemed
     appropriate  for review by the Committee prior  to  any
     interim  or  year-end filings with  the  SEC  or  other
     regulatory  body,  including  any  financial  reporting
     issues  which  could  have a  material  impact  on  the
     Corporation's financial statements;

        (iii)        major   issues   regarding   accounting
     principles   and  financial  statements  presentations,
     including   (A)   any  significant   changes   in   the
     Corporation's  selection or application  of  accounting
     principles  and (B) any analyses prepared by management
     and/or   the   independent   auditors   setting   forth
     significant  financial reporting issues  and  judgments
     made   in  connection  with  the  preparation  of   the
     financial   statements,  including  analyses   of   the
     ramifications  and  effects  of  alternative  generally
     accepted   accounting   principles   methods   on   the
     Corporation's financial statements;

        (iv)all    alternative   treatments   of   financial
     information that have been discussed by the independent
     auditors  and management, ramifications of the  use  of
     such  alternative disclosures and treatments,  and  the
     treatment preferred by the auditors;

        (v)   all   other  material  written  communications
     between  the independent auditors and management,  such
     as  any  management  letter or schedule  of  unadjusted
     differences; and

        (vi)the   effect   of  regulatory   and   accounting
     initiatives,  as well as off-balance sheet  structures,
     on the financial statements of the Corporation;

     h.Resolve   all   disagreements  between  the  Corporation's
independent   auditors   and   management   regarding   financial
reporting;

     i.Review   on   a   regular  basis  with  the  Corporation's
independent auditors any problems or difficulties encountered  by
the  independent  auditors  in the  course  of  any  audit  work,
including   management's  response  with  respect  thereto,   any
restrictions on the scope of the independent auditor's activities
or  on  access  to  requested information,  and  any  significant
disagreements  with  management.  In  connection  therewith,  the
Committee  should  review  with  the  independent  auditors   the
following:

        (i)  any  accounting adjustments that were noted  or
     proposed  by the independent auditors but were rejected
     by management (as immaterial or otherwise);

        (ii)any  communications between the audit  team  and
     the  independent  auditor's national office  respecting
     auditing   or  accounting  issues  presented   by   the
     engagement; and

        (iii)  any "management" or "internal control" letter
     issued,  or  proposed to be issued, by the  independent
     auditors to the Corporation;

Oversight  of  the  Financial  Reporting  Process  and   Internal
Controls.

     j.Review:

        (i)   the   adequacy   and  effectiveness   of   the
     Corporation's accounting and internal control  policies
     and  procedures  on  a  regular  basis,  including  the
     responsibilities, budget, compensation and staffing  of
     the  Corporation's  internal  audit  function,  through
     inquiry   and   discussions  with   the   Corporation's
     independent auditors and management;

        (ii)the  yearly  report prepared by management,  and
     attested  to by the Corporation's independent auditors,
     assessing   the   effectiveness  of  the  Corporation's
     internal  control over financial reporting and  stating
     management's   responsibility  for   establishing   and
     maintaining  adequate internal control  over  financial
     reporting  prior to its inclusion in the  Corporation's
     annual report on Form 10-K; and

        (iii)  the  Committee's  level  of  involvement  and
     interaction  with  the  Corporation's  internal   audit
     function,  including the Committee's line of  authority
     and  role  in appointing and compensating employees  in
     the internal audit function;

     k.Review  with  management the Corporation's administrative,
operational  and  accounting  internal  controls,  including  any
special audit steps adopted in light of the discovery of material
control deficiencies;

     l.Review  the  type  and presentation of information  to  be
included in the Corporation's earnings press releases (especially
the use of "pro forma" or "adjusted" information not prepared  in
compliance  with  generally accepted accounting  principles),  as
well  as financial information and earnings guidance provided  by
the Corporation to analysts and rating agencies (which review may
be  done  generally (i.e., discussion of the types of information
to  be  disclosed and type of presentations to be made), and  the
Committee  need not discuss in advance each earnings  release  or
each  instance  in  which the Corporation  may  provide  earnings
guidance);

Miscellaneous

     m.Establish  clear  hiring policies by the  Corporation  for
employees  or  former employees of the Corporation's  independent
auditors;

     n.Discuss  guidelines and policies governing the process  by
which  senior  management  of the Corporation  and  the  relevant
departments   of   the   Corporation  assess   and   manage   the
Corporation's  exposure  to risk, as well  as  the  Corporation's
major financial risk exposures and the steps management has taken
to monitor and control such exposures;

     o.Prepare the report required by the rules of the SEC to  be
included in the Corporation's annual proxy statement;

     p.Establish  procedures for (i) the receipt,  retention  and
treatment  of  complaints received by the  Corporation  regarding
accounting, internal accounting controls or auditing matters, and
(ii)  the confidential, anonymous submission by employees of  the
Corporation  of  concerns  regarding questionable  accounting  or
auditing matters;

     q.Secure  independent  expert  advice  to  the  extent   the
Committee  determines it to be appropriate, including  retaining,
with or without Board approval, independent counsel, accountants,
consultants or others, to assist the Committee in fulfilling  its
duties  and responsibilities, the cost of such independent expert
advisors to be borne by the Corporation;

     r.Report  regularly  to  the Board  on  its  activities,  as
appropriate.   In  connection  therewith,  the  Committee  should
review  with the Board any issues that arise with respect to  the
quality  or  integrity of the Corporation's financial statements,
the   Corporation's   compliance   with   legal   or   regulatory
requirements,   the   performance   and   independence   of   the
Corporation's  independent auditors, or the  performance  of  the
internal audit function;

     s.Conduct   an   annual  performance   evaluation   of   the
Committee,  which  shall address all matters that  the  Committee
considers  relevant to its performance, including  a  review  and
assessment  of  the  adequacy of the  Committee's  charter.   The
performance  evaluation by the Committee shall  be  conducted  in
such  manner  as the Committee deems appropriate.  The  Committee
shall  deliver to the Board a report, which may be oral,  setting
forth  the  results of its evaluation, including any  recommended
amendments to this charter; and

     t.Perform  such  additional activities,  and  consider  such
other  matters, within the scope of its responsibilities, as  the
Committee or the Board deems necessary or appropriate.

                               ***

     While the Committee has the duties and responsibilities  set
forth  in  this  charter, the Committee is  not  responsible  for
planning  or conducting the audit or for determining whether  the
Corporation's financial statements are complete and accurate  and
are in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles.

     In   fulfilling  their  responsibilities  hereunder,  it  is
recognized  that  members  of  the Committee  are  not  full-time
employees   of   the  Corporation,  it  is  not   the   duty   or
responsibility of the Committee or its members to conduct  "field
work"  or  other  types  of  auditing or  accounting  reviews  or
procedures  or  to set auditor independence standards,  and  each
member  of  the Committee shall be entitled to rely  on  (i)  the
integrity  of those persons and organizations within and  outside
the  Corporation from which it receives information and (ii)  the
accuracy of the financial and other information provided  to  the
Committee,  in  either instance absent actual  knowledge  to  the
contrary.

     Nothing contained in this charter is intended to create,  or
should  be construed as creating, any responsibility or liability
of  the  members of the Committee, except to the extent otherwise
provided under applicable federal or state law.

                        ****************





 [PROXY CARD]
                   PARK ELECTROCHEMICAL CORP.
     PROXY FOR ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS July 14, 2004
   THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

      The  undersigned  hereby constitutes and  appoints  ANTHONY
CHIESA,  LLOYD FRANK and BRIAN E. SHORE, and each  of  them,  the
attorneys  and  proxies of the undersigned, with  full  power  of
substitution,  to  attend the Annual Meeting of  Shareholders  of
PARK ELECTROCHEMICAL CORP. (the "Company") to be held at The Bank
of New York, One Wall Street, New York, New York on July 14, 2004
at  10:00  o'clock A.M., New York time, and any  adjournments  or
postponements thereof, to vote all the shares of Common Stock  of
the  Company which the undersigned would be entitled to  vote  if
personally present upon the following matters:

   The  Board  of Directors recommends a vote "FOR"  proposals  1
and 2.

1. ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

   [  ] FOR all nominees listed below (except as marked to the
          contrary below).

   [  ] WITHHOLD AUTHORITY to vote for all nominees listed
          below.

        MARK S. AIN, DALE BLANCHFIELD, ANTHONY CHIESA, LLOYD
        FRANK,
            BRIAN E. SHORE and STEVEN T. WARSHAW

    (INSTRUCTION:  To  withhold authority  to  vote  for  any
    individual nominee, check the "FOR" box above  and  write
    the nominee's name in the space provided below.)

     ____________________________________________________________
______

2.  APPROVAL  OF MATCHING CONTRIBUTION FEATURE OF EMPLOYEE  STOCK
PURCHASE PLAN

   [  ] FOR          [  ] AGAINST          [  ] ABSTAIN

3. The  transaction of such other business as may  properly  come
   before the meeting.

    Each properly executed proxy will be voted in accordance with
specifications  made  hereon. If no specification  is  made,  the
shares  represented  by  this  Proxy  will  be  voted  "FOR"  the
nominees, "FOR" the matching contribution feature of the Employee
Stock Purchase Plan, and in the discretion of the Proxies on  any
other business as may properly come before the meeting.

    The  undersigned hereby acknowledges receipt of the Company's
2004  Annual  Report and the accompanying Notice of  Meeting  and
Proxy   Statement  and  hereby  revokes  any  proxy  or   proxies
heretofore given.

                              Dated: _______________________, 2004


                              ___________________________________


                              ___________________________________

                              (Signature(s) of Shareholder(s))

                              Please  date  and sign  exactly  as
                              name   appears  hereon.  Executors,
                              administrators,   trustees,    etc.
                              should so indicate when signing. If
                              shares   are  held  jointly,   both
                              owners should sign.