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

Filed by the registrant [X]
Filed by a party other than the registrant [  ]

Check the appropriate box:

[ ]  Preliminary proxy statement     [ ] Confidential. For Use of the Commission
[X]  Definitive proxy statement          Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
[ ]  Definitive additional materials
[ ]  Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-11(c) or Rule 14a-12

                     PERFORMANCE TECHNOLOGIES, INCORPORATED
                (Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)

                                       N/A
     (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement if other than the Registrant)

Payment of filing fee (check the appropriate box):

[X] No fee required.

[ ] Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(4) and 0-11.

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

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

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

         (4)      Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

         (5)      Total fee paid:

[ ]     Fee previously paid with preliminary materials.

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

         (1) Amount previously paid:

         (2) Form, schedule or registration no.:

         (3) Filing party:

         (4) Dated filed:

         Notes:



May 1, 2003



To Our Stockholders:

     You are  cordially  invited  to  attend  the  2003  Annual  Meeting  of the
Stockholders  of  Performance  Technologies,  Incorporated  at  the  Performance
Technologies headquarters located at 205 Indigo Creek Drive, Rochester, New York
14626 on Tuesday, June 3 at 10 a.m. local time.

     The  matters  expected to be acted upon at the  meeting  are  described  in
detail in the  attached  Notice  of Annual  Meeting  of  Stockholders  and Proxy
Statement. The Company's 2002 Annual Report, which is contained in this package,
sets forth important financial information concerning the Company.

     A brief report will be made at the meeting of the  highlights  for the year
2002, and there will be an opportunity for questions of general  interest to the
stockholders.

     We sincerely hope you will be able to attend the Annual Meeting, but if you
cannot do so, it is important that your shares be represented. Please sign, date
and return the proxy card in the enclosed  return  envelope,  which  requires no
postage  if mailed in the  United  States.  For some  stockholders,  information
regarding   telephone  and  Internet  voting  is  included  in  the  proxy  card
instructions.

     On  behalf  of the  officers  and  directors,  I wish to thank you for your
interest in the Company and your confidence in its future.



                                                       Very truly yours,


                                                       /s/ John M. Slusser
                                                       ------------------------
                                                       John M. Slusser
                                                       Chairman of the Board















                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                                  June 3, 2003


     The  Annual  Meeting  of   Stockholders   (the  "Meeting")  of  PERFORMANCE
TECHNOLOGIES,   INCORPORATED   (the  "Company")  will  be  held  at  Performance
Technologies, 205 Indigo Creek Drive, Rochester, New York 14626 on Tuesday, June
3, 2003 at 10 a.m., local time, for the following purposes, which are more fully
described in the accompanying Proxy Statement:

1.    To  elect  two  nominees  to the Board  of  Directors of the Company for a
      three-year term.

2.    To consider and act upon a proposal to adopt the Performance Technologies,
      Incorporated 2003 Omnibus Incentive Plan.

3.    To  consider  and  act  upon  a  proposal  to  ratify  the  appointment of
      PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as the Company's independent public accountants
      for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2003.

4.    To transact such other business as may properly come before the Meeting or
      any adjournments thereof.

     The Board of Directors  has fixed the close of business on April 4, 2003 as
the record date for the determination of stockholders  entitled to notice of and
to vote at the Meeting.

     A Proxy Statement and Proxy are enclosed.



                                            By Order of the Board of Directors,


                                            /s/ Reginald T. Cable
                                            -----------------------------------
                                            Reginald T. Cable
                                            Secretary to the Board

Dated at Rochester, New York
May 1, 2003


YOUR VOTE IS VERY  IMPORTANT.  WHETHER OR NOT YOU EXPECT TO ATTEND THE  MEETING,
PLEASE PROMPTLY SIGN AND RETURN THE ENCLOSED PROXY CARD. FOR SOME  STOCKHOLDERS,
INFORMATION  REGARDING  TELEPHONE  AND INTERNET  VOTING IS INCLUDED IN THE PROXY
CARD INSTRUCTIONS.






                     PERFORMANCE TECHNOLOGIES, INCORPORATED
                             205 Indigo Creek Drive
                            Rochester, New York 14626

                                                                    May 1, 2003

                                 PROXY STATEMENT
                       FOR ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                             TO BE HELD JUNE 3, 2003

                               GENERAL INFORMATION

     This proxy  statement is furnished to  stockholders  in connection with the
solicitation  of proxies by the Board of Directors of PERFORMANCE  TECHNOLOGIES,
INCORPORATED (the "Company") to be used at the Annual Meeting of Stockholders of
the Company, which will be held on Tuesday, June 3, 2003 (the "Meeting"), and at
any adjournments  thereof.  This proxy statement and accompanying  form of proxy
are first being mailed to stockholders on or about May 1, 2003. The proxy,  when
properly  executed  and received by the  Secretary  of the Company  prior to the
Meeting,  will be voted as therein  specified unless revoked by filing a written
revocation  or a duly  executed  proxy  bearing a later date with the  Secretary
prior to the Meeting.  A stockholder  may also revoke his or her proxy in person
at the  Meeting.  Unless  authority  to vote  for  one or  more of the  director
nominees is specifically withheld, a signed proxy will be voted FOR the election
of the director nominees named herein and, unless otherwise  indicated,  FOR the
adoption of the Performance  Technologies,  Incorporated  2003 Omnibus Incentive
Plan  and FOR  the  selection  of  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP as the  Company's
independent public accountants for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2003.

     The cost of soliciting proxies will be borne by the Company. In addition to
the solicitation by use of the mails,  directors,  officers or regular employees
of the Company, without extra compensation,  may solicit proxies personally,  by
telephone,  e-mail,  telegraph  or  facsimile  transmission.   The  Company  has
requested  persons  holding  stock for others in their  names or in the names of
nominees to forward soliciting  material to the beneficial owners of such shares
and will, if requested,  reimburse such persons for their reasonable expenses in
so doing.

                                 VOTES REQUIRED

     Stockholders  may  vote  by  mail,  telephone  or the  Internet.  For  some
stockholders, information regarding telephone and Internet voting is included in
the proxy card  instructions.  The total outstanding  shares of capital stock of
the Company as of April 4, 2003,  the record date for the Meeting  (the  "Record
Date"), consisted of 12,189,992 shares of Common Stock, par value $.01 per share
(the "Common Stock"). Only holders of Common Stock of record on the books of the
Company at the close of business  on the Record  Date are  entitled to notice of
and to vote at the  Meeting  and at any  adjournments  thereof.  Each  holder of
Common Stock is entitled to one vote for each share of Common  Stock  registered
in his or her name.  A  majority  of the  outstanding  shares  of Common  Stock,
represented in person or by proxy at the Meeting,  will  constitute a quorum for
the transaction of all business.

     Pursuant  to  the  provisions  of the  Delaware  General  Corporation  Law,
directors  shall be elected by a  plurality  of the votes cast by the holders of
shares of Common Stock present in person or  represented by proxy at the Meeting
and  entitled  to  vote at the  Meeting.  Because  directors  are  elected  by a
plurality of the votes cast,  withholding  authority to vote with respect to one
or more nominees  will have no effect on the outcome of the  election,  although
such  shares  would be  counted as  present  for  purposes  of  determining  the
existence of a quorum.  Similarly, any broker non-votes (which occur when shares
held by brokers or nominees for beneficial  owners are voted on some matters but
not on others in the absence of instructions  from the beneficial owner) are not
considered to be votes cast and therefore would have no effect on the outcome of
the election of directors, although they would be counted for quorum purposes.

     The  affirmative  vote of holders of a majority  of shares of Common  Stock
represented  at the  Meeting and  entitled to vote on the  proposal to adopt the
Performance  Technologies,  Incorporated 2003 Omnibus Incentive Plan is required
for  approval  of  that  proposal.  Accordingly,   abstentions  and  any  broker
non-votes,  since they are considered to be  represented  at the Meeting,  would
have the same effect as votes cast against the proposal.

     The affirmative  vote of a majority of the votes cast is required to ratify
the selection of  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP as independent  public accountants
for the Company for the fiscal year ending  December 31, 2003.  Abstentions  and
any broker  non-votes are not  considered  to be votes cast and therefore  would
have no effect on the outcome of this proposal.

         SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT

     The following  table,  with notes  thereto,  sets forth as of April 4, 2003
certain information  regarding the Common Stock held by (i) the persons known to
the Company to own beneficially more than 5% of the Company's Common Stock, (ii)
each director of the Company,  (iii) each executive officer of the Company,  and
(iv) all  directors  and  executive  officers of the Company as a group.  Unless
otherwise indicated immediately beneath the beneficial owner's name, the address
of  each  beneficial  owner  listed  in  the  table  below  is  c/o  Performance
Technologies, Inc., 205 Indigo Creek Drive, Rochester, New York 14626.


                                                                                                   

                                                                                  Shares Beneficially Owned
                    Name of Beneficial                                Amount and Nature
                          Owner                                     of Beneficial Ownership              Percent of Class (1)

FMR Corp.                                                                  1,596,500(2)                         13.1%
  82 Devonshire Street, Boston, MA  02109

FleetBoston Financial Corporation                                          1,101,696(3)                          9.0%
  100 Federal Street, Boston, MA  02110

Putnam, LLC d/b/a Putnam Investments                                       1,046,908(4)                          8.6%
  One Post Office Square, Boston, MA  02109

Reginald T. Cable                                                            788,199(5)                          6.4%
  150 Metcalfe Street, Ottawa, ON  K2P 1P1  Canada

Royce & Associates, LLC                                                      786,250(6)                          6.4%
  1414 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY  10019

Charles E. Maginness                                                         695,360(7)                          5.7%
John M. Slusser                                                              471,511(8)                          3.9%
Bernard Kozel                                                                437,923(9)                          3.6%
Donald L. Turrell                                                            316,496(10)                         2.5%
William E. Mahuson                                                           239,500(11)                         2.0%
Dorrance W. Lamb                                                             150,529(12)                         1.2%
John J. Grana                                                                119,894(13)                           *
John J. Peters                                                                99,446(14)                           *
John E. Mooney                                                                50,295(15)                           *
Paul L. Smith                                                                 15,000(16)                           *
Stuart B. Meisenzahl                                                          13,250(17)                           *
Robert L. Tillman                                                             10,000(18)                           *

All Directors and Officers as a Group (12 persons)                         2,619,204(19)                        20.3%


* Less than 1%.

(1)     Percentage based upon 12,189,992  shares of Common  Stock outstanding as
        of April 4, 2003.

(2)     The following information is derived from  Amendment No. 6  to  Schedule
        13G  dated February 14, 2003  filed by  FMR Corp. Fidelity  Management &
        Research Company ("FMRC"), a wholly-owned subsidiary of FMR Corp, is the
        beneficial owner of 1,596,500 shares as a result of acting as investment
        advisor to various investment companies. The ownership of one investment
        company, FA Value Strategies Fund, amounted to 1,223,100 shares.  Edward
        C. Johnson 3d, FMR Corp.,  through its control of FMRC,  and the various
        Fidelity  Funds each has sole power to dispose of the  1,596,500  shares
        owned by the Fidelity Funds. Neither FMR Corp. nor Edward C. Johnson 3d,
        Chairman of  FMR Corp.,  has the sole power to vote or direct the voting
        of the shares owned directly by the Fidelity  Funds, which power resides
        with the Funds' Boards of Trustees.  FMRC carries out the voting  of the
        shares  under  written  guidelines established by the  Funds'  Boards of
        Trustees.

(3)     The following information is derived from  Amendment  No. 1 to  Schedule
        13G dated February 14, 2003 filed by FleetBoston Financial  Corporation.
        Fleet National Bank and Fleet Investment  Advisors, Inc.  are the listed
        subsidiaries  which acquired  the security  being reported by the parent
        holding company.  FleetBoston Financial Corporation has sole dispositive
        power over  1,101,696  shares  and  sole power  to vote or to direct the
        voting of 726,396 shares.

(4)     The following information is derived from a Schedule 13G dated  February
        6, 2003 filed  by  Putnam, LLC d/b/a  Putnam  Investments  on  behalf of
        itself, Marsh & McLennan  Companies, Inc.  (its parent holding company),
        Putnam Investment Management,  LLC (a wholly-owned subsidiary of  Putnam
        Investments and investment adviser to the Putnam family of mutual funds)
        and  The  Putnam  Advisory  Company,  LLC  (a wholly-owned subsidiary of
        Putnam  Investments and  investment adviser  to  Putnam's  institutional
        clients). Both Putnam Investment Management, LLC and The Putnam Advisory
        Company,  LLC  have dispositive power  over  the  shares  as  investment
        managers.  However, each of  the mutual fund's trustees has voting power
        over the shares held by each fund,  and  The  Putnam  Advisory,  LLC has
        shared voting power  over  the  shares  held  by  institutional clients.
        Putnam  Investments and The Putnam  Advisory  Company,   LLC have shared
        voting power with respect to 440,460 of such shares. Putnam  Investments
        and The Putnam Advisory Company, LLC  have shared dispositive power with
        respect to 718,308 shares.  Putnam  Investments  and  Putnam  Investment
        Management, LLC  have  shared dispositive power with respect to  328,600
        shares.

(5)     Includes (a) 67,084 shares of Common  Stock issuable  upon  exercise  of
        options  currently  exercisable;   (b)  53  shares  owned  by  Mr. Cable
        directly;  (c)  120,000   shares, owned  by  3414850   Canada   Inc.,  a
        corporation organized under the laws of Canada, of which  (i)  Mr. Cable
        is a 70% shareholder, and (ii) a trust for the benefit of Mr. Cable is a
        30%  shareholder;  (d)  601,062  exchangeable shares  of  the  Company's
        wholly-owned subsidiary, 3688283  Canada  Inc., which  are  exchangeable
        into shares of the Company's  Common  Stock currently held  by  American
        Stock Transfer and Trust Company as Exchange Agent  and Voting  Trustee,
        in the following amounts:  (i)  6,006  shares that will be owned by  Mr.
        Cable directly; and  (ii) 595,056 shares that will be owned  by  3414850
        Canada  Inc.   Excludes  22,916  shares of Common  Stock  issuable  upon
        exercise of options not yet vested.

(6)     The following information is derived from a Schedule 13G  dated February
        4, 2003  filed by Royce & Associates, LLC.  Royce & Associates,  LLC has
        sole dispositive power and sole power to vote or to direct the voting of
        786,250 shares.

(7)     Includes  (a)  10,000  shares of Common  Stock issuable upon exercise of
        options currently exercisable; and  (b)  103,247 shares of Common  Stock
        owned  of  record  by  Mr. Maginness'  wife.    Mr. Maginness  disclaims
        beneficial ownership of the shares owned by his wife.   Excludes  10,000
        shares of Common Stock issuable upon exercise of options not yet vested.

(8)     Includes  (a) 19,000 shares of Common  Stock  issuable  upon exercise of
        options currently exercisable;  and  (b)  15,000 shares of Common  Stock
        owned of record  by  Mr. Slusser  as  custodian for his  minor  children
        living in his household. Excludes 10,000 shares of Common Stock issuable
        upon exercise of options not yet vested.

(9)     Includes  (a)  19,000  shares of Common  Stock issuable upon exercise of
        options currently exercisable;  (b) 39,000 shares of Common  Stock owned
        of record by The Jayme E. Fund Trust U/A, Benjamin J. Fund Trust U/A and
        Ariel D. Fund Trust  U/A over which  Mr. Kozel has voting and investment
        powers;  (c) 186,279 shares of Common Stock owned of record by the Kozel
        Family, LLC,  over which Mr. Kozel has voting and investment power;  and
        (d) 189,144 shares of Common Stock owned of record by  The Kozel Holding
        Company,  LLC,  over which  Mr. Kozel  has  voting and investment power.
        Excludes 10,000 shares of Common Stock issuable upon exercise of options
        not yet vested.

(10)    Includes  (a)  223,645 shares of Common  Stock issuable upon exercise of
        options currently exercisable;  (b)  87,876 shares owned jointly by  Mr.
        Turrell  and his wife; and  (c)  4,975 shares of Common  Stock  owned of
        record by Mr. Turrell's  wife as custodian for their child.  Mr. Turrell
        disclaims  beneficial  ownership  of  the  shares  owned  by his wife as
        custodian for their  child.  Excludes  40,105  shares  of  Common  Stock
        issuable upon exercise of options not yet vested.

(11)    Includes 75,000 shares of Common Stock issuable upon exercise of options
        currently exercisable.

(12)    Includes  116,909 shares of  Common  Stock  issuable  upon  exercise of
        options currently  exercisable.  Excludes  28,646 shares of Common Stock
        issuable upon exercise of options not yet vested.

(13)    Includes  (a)  119,334  shares of Common Stock issuable upon exercise of
        options currently exercisable; and (b) 150 shares of Common  Stock owned
        of record by  Mr. Grana's  wife  as custodian for their  child living in
        their household.  Excludes 22,916  shares of Common  Stock issuable upon
        exercise of options not yet vested.

(14)    Includes 98,884 shares of Common Stock issuable upon exercise of options
        currently exercisable.  Excludes  26,666 shares of Common Stock issuable
        upon exercise of stock options not yet vested.

(15)    Includes  (a)  19,000  shares of Common  Stock issuable upon exercise of
        options currently exercisable; and  (b)  29,045  shares of Common  Stock
        owned of record by Mr. Mooney's  wife.  Mr. Mooney  disclaims beneficial
        ownership of the shares owned by  his wife.  Excludes 10,000  shares  of
        Common Stock issuable upon exercise of options not yet vested.

(16)    Includes 14,500 shares of Common Stock issuable upon exercise of options
        currently  exercisable.  Excludes 10,000 shares of Common Stock issuable
        upon exercise of options not yet vested.

(17)    Includes 10,000 shares of Common Stock issuable upon exercise of options
        currently  exercisable.  Excludes 10,000 shares of Common Stock issuable
        upon exercise of options not yet vested.

(18)    Excludes 1,667 shares of Common  Stock issuable upon exercise of options
        not yet vested.

(19)    Includes 725,272 shares of Common  Stock issuable upon exercise of stock
        options currently exercisable.  Excludes 180,000 shares of Common  Stock
        issuable upon exercise of stock options not yet vested.




                                   PROPOSAL 1

                              ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

     The Board of Directors is divided into three classes. The Company currently
has  eight  directors,  three in two  classes  and two in one  class.  Terms are
staggered  so that  only  one  class  is  elected  at  each  Annual  Meeting  of
Stockholders.  Each director so elected  serves for a three-year  term and until
his or her  successor  is elected  and  qualified,  subject  to such  director's
earlier death, resignation or removal.

     The Board of Directors  recommends  the election of the two nominees  named
below,  both of whom  are  currently  directors  of the  Company.  The  Board of
Directors does not contemplate  that any of the nominees will be unable to serve
as a director,  but if that contingency  should occur prior to the voting of the
proxies,  the persons named in the enclosed  proxy reserve the right to vote for
such  substitute  nominee  or  nominees  as  they,  in their  discretion,  shall
determine.

     Paul L. Smith,  who has been a director since 1993, has chosen not to stand
for  reelection  to the  Board  of  Directors  due to  changes  in his  personal
priorities and obligations  that would make it difficult for him to actively and
fully participate as a director.

Information about the Directors

     The  following  table sets forth  certain  information  with respect to the
director of the Company who is being proposed for reelection at the  Meeting for
a three-year  term  expiring in 2006 and the nominee for director of the Company
who is being proposed for a three-year term expiring in 2006.


          PROPOSED FOR ELECTION AS DIRECTORS AT THE 2003 ANNUAL MEETING
                     FOR A THREE-YEAR TERM EXPIRING IN 2006

                                                                       Director
                           Name and Background                           Since

Donald L. Turrell,  age 55, has served as Chief Executive  Officer of
the Company since 1997, and President  and  Chief  Operating  Officer    1995
since 1995. From 1985 to 1990, he held the position of Vice President
of Sales and  Marketing and from 1990 to 1993,  he held the  position
of Vice President and  General  Manager of the  Workstation  Products
business unit.  From 1993 to 1995, he held the position of  President
of the Company's  Performance  Computer  business unit.  From 1977 to
1984, Mr. Turrell  held various positions with  Rochester  Instrument
Systems, including Sales Manager,  Product  Marketing  Manager,  Vice
President of Sales and Vice President of Marketing.

Robert L. Tillman, age 55, is an independent  business consultant.
From 2000 to 2002,  he served as  General Manager in Intel's Embedded    March
Intel  Architecture Division,  where  he  was  responsible  for  the     2003
operations  of  Ziatech  Corporation.  From 1997 to 2000 he held the
position of President  of Ziatech Corporation.  From 1971 until 1997,
he held  various  positions  including division  general  manager  at
four different locations with  Hewlett-Packard Company.  Mr.  Tillman
was appointed to the Board  of  Directors  on  March 26, 2003  by the
Board of  Directors  to fill the vacancy  created by the  resignation
of Arlen  Vanderwel on October 1, 2002. He has served on the Board of
Directors  for  a   number  of  industrial  trade  organizations  and
charitable organizations.


         THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE IN FAVOR OF PROPOSAL 1





     The  following  table sets forth certain  information  with respect to each
director of the Company whose term in office does not expire at the Meeting.

                       DIRECTORS WHOSE TERMS DO NOT EXPIRE
                           AT THE 2003 ANNUAL MEETING
                                                                        Director
                           Name and Background                           Since

John  M. Slusser, age  50, a founder  of  the  Company, has served as
Chairman  of the  Board since June  2001,  as a  director  since  the    1981
Company's  inception  in  1981 and as the Company's  Chief  Strategic
Officer since January 2003.   From 1981 through 1995, he held various
positions within the Company, including President and Chief Executive
Officer.  From 1995 until 2000, he served as Chairman of the Board of
InformationView Solutions Corporation and from 1995 to 1999 he served
as  that  company's  Chief  Executive  Officer.  Since  2000, he  has
served  as President of Radio Daze LLC.

Bernard Kozel, age 81, has served as a director of the Company  since
1983.  He is the former  Chairman of  the  Board of J. Kozel & Son, a    1983
Rochester,  New York-based structural steel company.  He is President
of K.G. Capital Corporation.

Charles E. Maginness,  age 70, served as Chairman of the  Board  from
1986 to 2001 and served as  Chief  Executive  Officer of the  Company    1983
from 1995 to 1997.  From 1984 through  1986, he held the position of
President and from 1984 through 1995 was also Chief Financial Officer.
From 1970 to 1983,  Mr. Maginness was employed  by  Kayex Corporation
where  he  held  several  positions,  including  President and  Chief
Executive Officer, and President of its Hamco Division.

Stuart B. Meisenzahl, age 61, has served as a director of the Company
since  2001.   He is a former  partner  in the law firm  of   Harter,     2001
Secrest  &  Emery  LLP,  general  counsel to the  Company.    He  was
affiliated  with  the  firm  for 36  years, retiring  in 1999, and he
practiced  principally in  the  areas of federal securities  law  and
biotechnology  licensing.  Following  his  retirement, Mr. Meisenzahl
has acted as a  business  consultant  to a number  of   biotechnology
companies  and  is  Acting  General  Counsel  to  Vaccinex,  Inc.,  a
biotechnology company in  Rochester, New York.  In  addition,  he has
served as director or trustee of a number of charitable organizations
in Rochester, New York.

John E. Mooney, age 58, has served as a director of the Company since
1984. He is Chairman  and Chief Executive Officer of Essex  Partners,    1984
Inc., a property development and management company in Rochester, New
York.


Committees of the Board of Directors

     The Board has a Compensation Committee to evaluate executive  compensation.
Messrs.   Kozel,   Mooney  and  Smith  comprise  the   Compensation   Committee.
Additionally,  the Board has a Stock Option Committee to determine option grants
pursuant to the Company's 2001 Stock Option Plan. For purposes of complying with
Securities  Exchange Act Rule 16b-3,  the Company has at least two  non-employee
directors administer the 2001 Stock Option Plan. Messrs.  Maginness,  Smith, and
Tillman  currently  comprise the Stock Option  Committee.  The Board also has an
Audit Committee for the purposes of reviewing the Company's  financial reporting
procedures.  Messrs. Meisenzahl,  Mooney and Smith comprise the Audit Committee.
The written charter for the Audit  Committee,  which was adopted by the Board of
Directors,  more  specifically  sets forth the duties of the Audit Committee and
was  attached as Appendix B to the  Company's  proxy  statement  dated April 23,
2001.  The Board also has a  Nominating  Committee  to  identify  potential  new
directors and to designate officers of the Company. Messrs. Kozel and Meisenzahl
comprise the  Nominating  Committee.  The  Nominating  Committee  considers  and
establishes procedures regarding  recommendations for nomination to the Board of
Directors submitted by stockholders.  Such recommendations should be sent to the
Company, to the attention of the Secretary.

     The Compensation Committee,  Stock Option Committee,  Audit Committee,  and
Nominating  Committee met three,  one, four, and three times,  respectively,  in
2002.  The Company's  Board of Directors held eight meetings in 2002. All of the
directors  attended at least 75 percent of the Board of Directors'  meetings and
committee meetings that required their attendance.


Compensation of Directors

     Members of the Board of  Directors  who are not  employees  of the  Company
receive  $1,000 for each  meeting  attended.  Each Board  member  also  receives
$10,000 per year if he attends at least 75 percent of the scheduled meetings. In
addition,  each committee  member receives $400 for each meeting attended if the
meeting is not  scheduled on the same day as a Board of Directors  meeting.  The
Company's  2001 Stock  Option  Plan  currently  provides  that on the day of the
Company's Annual Meeting of Stockholders,  each individual elected, reelected or
continuing as an Outside  Participating  Director will  automatically  receive a
non-statutory  option for 10,000 shares of Common Stock.  The exercise price for
these options will be the fair market value of the Company's Common Stock on the
date of the option  grant.  Options vest on the first  anniversary  of the grant
date and  expire  five  years  from the date of grant.  From  time to time,  the
Company may grant  additional  options to  directors.  At the 2002  Stockholders
Meeting, Messrs. Kozel, Maginness,  Meisenzahl,  Mooney, Slusser, and Smith each
received a  non-qualified  option to purchase 10,000 shares at an exercise price
of $8.60 per share.  Mr.  Tillman  received a  non-qualified  option to purchase
1,667 shares at an exercise price of $3.44 upon his  appointment to the Board on
March 26, 2003.

                               EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
     The Company is currently served by the following  executive  officers,  who
are elected  annually by the Board of Directors and serve until their successors
are elected and qualify.

                                                                       Executive
                           Name and Background                          Officer
                                                                         Since
John J. Grana,  age  47, has served as  Vice  President,  Engineering
since 1994. From 1997 to 2000, he held the position of Vice President    2000
and General Manager of the Controller  Products Group.   From 1994 to
1997, he held the position of Vice President of Software Engineering.
From 1990 to 1994, he held the position of Technical  Director of the
Workstation  Products business unit, and from 1986 to 1990, he served
in  various  engineering  positions.  Prior to  joining  the Company,
he held various engineering positions with  Computer  Consoles,  Inc.
(now a division of Nortel Networks).   Mr. Grana holds a BS degree in
Computer Science from Rochester Institute of Technology.

Dorrance W. Lamb, age 55, has served as Chief  Financial  Officer of
the Company since 1995 and as Vice  President  of Finance since 1992.    1995
Prior to  joining the  Company,  he was  Senior  Vice  President  for
Finance  and   Administration  at  Infodata  Systems,  Inc.  based in
Fairfax,  Virginia.  Mr. Lamb is a certified  public  accountant  and
holds a BS degree in Accounting  from Benjamin  Franklin University.

William E. Mahuson, age 52, has served as Vice President  since 1987.
From 1987 to 1990,  he  served  as Vice  President,  Engineering  and    1987
from 1992 to 1995 he served as General Manager of the UconX  business
unit of the Company.  Prior to joining the  Company,  he held various
technical  and technical management positions with Computer Consoles,
Inc.  (now a division of Nortel  Networks) and the Xerox Corporation.
Mr.  Mahuson  holds  a  BS  degree  in  Electrical  Engineering  from
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

John J. Peters,  age 44, has served as  Vice  President,  Engineering
since 1994.   From  1997 to  2000,  he  held  the  position  of  Vice    2000
President  of  Development, Network Switching Products.  From 1994 to
1997, he held the position of Vice President of Hardware Engineering.
From  1990 to 1994,  he served as Technical Director of the  Hardware
Products  business  unit, and from 1986 to 1990, he served in various
engineering positions.  Prior to joining the Company, he held various
engineering  positions with Computer Consoles,  Inc.  (now a division
of Nortel Networks). Mr. Peters holds a BS degree in Engineering from
the Rochester Institute of Technology.

John M. Slusser, age 50, has served as Chief Strategic Officer of the    1981
Company since January 2003.  Further information about Mr. Slusser is   through
set forth under  "DIRECTORS  WHOSE TERMS DO NOT EXPIRE                  1995 and
AT THE 2003 ANNUAL  MEETING" above.                                      2003

Donald L. Turrell,  age 55, has served as Chief Executive  Officer of
the Company since 1997.  Further  information about Mr.Turrell is set    1985
forth under  "PROPOSED FOR ELECTION AS DIRECTORS AT THE  2003  ANNUAL
MEETING FOR A  THREE-YEAR TERM EXPIRING IN 2006" above.


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% of a  registered  class of the
Company's equity securities to file certain reports regarding  ownership of, and
transactions  in, the  Company's  securities  with the  Securities  and Exchange
Commission (the "SEC"). Such officers,  directors, and 10% stockholders are also
required by SEC rules to furnish the  Company  with copies of all Section  16(a)
forms that they file.

     Based  solely on its  review of such forms  furnished  to the  Company  and
written  representations  from certain reporting  persons,  the Company believes
that all filing  requirements  applicable to the Company's  executive  officers,
directors and more than 10% stockholders were complied with.


Report of the Compensation Committee with Respect to Executive Compensation

     General

     The Compensation  Committee, in conjunction with the Stock Option Committee
of the Board of  Directors,  administers  the Company's  executive  compensation
program.  The  Compensation  Committee is comprised of three outside  directors,
Paul L. Smith,  Chairman,  John E. Mooney and Bernard  Kozel.  The  Compensation
Committee considers internal and external  information in determining  executive
officer compensation, including data provided by KPMG LLP.

     The  Company's  executive  pay  program is  designed  to attract and retain
executives who will  contribute to the Company's  long-term  success,  to reward
executives for achieving  short and long-term  strategic  Company goals, to link
executive and stockholder  interests through equity-based plans and to provide a
compensation  package  that  recognizes  individual  contributions  and  Company
performance.

     The three key components of the Company's  executive  compensation are base
salary,  short-term  incentives  (cash bonus) and  long-term  incentives  (stock
options).

     Base Salary.  Annually,  the Compensation  Committee reviews with the Chief
Executive Officer and approves,  with any modifications it deems appropriate,  a
salary  plan for all of the  Company's  executives,  none of whom have a written
employment  agreement with the Company.  The salary plan is developed  under the
ultimate direction of the Chief Executive Officer based on performance judgments
as to the past and expected future contributions of each executive.

     Annual Short-term  Incentive Awards. The short-term incentive award program
is intended to be variable and is directly  related to the  Company's  financial
performance.  The  parameters  of  the  short-term  incentive  program  for  the
Company's employees,  including executive officers, are generally established at
the beginning of each year.  Amounts  contributed to this program are based upon
the Company's  performance and comparisons  with the performance of a peer group
of companies.

     Long-term Incentive Awards. Stock options are granted to executive officers
and employees under the Performance Technologies, Incorporated 2001 Stock Option
Plan administered by the Stock Option Committee.  The Compensation Committee, in
conjunction  with the Stock Option  Committee,  believes that stock options have
been an important  means of aligning the long-range  interests of all employees,
including executives, with those of the Company's stockholders by providing them
with the opportunity to acquire an equity stake in the Company.  The size of the
stock option award has been based primarily on the individual's responsibilities
and position with the Company, as well as on the individual's performance. Stock
options are granted at an exercise  price equal to the fair market  value of the
Company's Common Stock on the date of grant and options  generally vest in three
to five years.  This  approach has been  designed to  encourage  the creation of
stockholder  value over the long term since no benefit is realized  from a stock
option grant unless the price of the Company's Common Stock rises.

     Executive Officer Compensation

     Due to the changes in economic climate in 2002, the Compensation  Committee
recommended  that the  Company  retain  the  services  of KPMG LLP to  perform a
comparative  analysis  of the  compensation  of  its  executive  officers.  KPMG
compared the total  compensation of the Company's  executives to a peer group of
companies with similar products and target markets.  The analysis indicated that
the total compensation levels for executive officers is generally appropriate in
the years that short term  incentive  bonuses  are earned and stock  options are
granted.  However,  the  analysis  indicated  that the base salary  compensation
levels of executives  could be adjusted  upward to become more  comparable.  The
Company is addressing  executive officer compensation  deficiencies  outlined in
the KPMG analysis and increased executive salaries accordingly in 2002.

     The Company  exceeded the  performance  measurement in comparison to a peer
group established in the Company's 2002 annual short-term  incentive plan, which
resulted in a cash incentive  bonus being earned by the executives and employees
in 2002.

     Stock options  granted for 2002 were issued to executive  officers in March
2002.

     President and Chief Executive Officer

     Mr.  Turrell's base salary,  short-term  incentive and long-term  incentive
awards are determined by the Compensation  Committee based upon the same factors
as  those  employed  by  the  Compensation   Committee  for  executive  officers
generally. Mr. Turrell's base salary for 2002 was $190,772, which was lower than
reported  in the peer  companies  in the KPMG  analysis.  Mr.  Turrell  earned a
short-term incentive bonus,  associated with the Company's  performance relative
to the peer  group,  in the amount of  $70,000  for 2002 and was  granted  stock
options  for 35,000  shares in March 2002 as part of his  compensation  plan.  A
restricted  stock award in the amount of $25,000 was recommended for Mr. Turrell
but  is  subject  to  stockholder  approval  of  the  Performance  Technologies,
Incorporated 2003 Omnibus Incentive Plan.

                             Compensation Committee
                             Paul L. Smith, Chairman
                                 John E. Mooney
                                  Bernard Kozel

Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation

     The Chief  Executive  Officer of the Company,  Donald L. Turrell,  consults
with the Compensation  Committee and makes  recommendations.  He participates in
discussions  with the  Compensation  Committee  but  does not vote or  otherwise
participate  in  the  Compensation  Committee's  determinations.   None  of  the
Company's executive officers has served as a member of a compensation  committee
of a board of  directors  of any other  entity  which has an  executive  officer
serving as a member of the Company's Board of Directors,  and there are no other
matters  regarding  interlocks  or  insider  participation  that the  Company is
required to report.



EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

     Shown on the  table  below  is  information  on the  annual  and  long-term
compensation  for  services  rendered to the Company in all  capacities  for the
fiscal  years ended  December 31,  2002,  2001 and 2000,  paid by the Company to
those persons who were,  during the fiscal year ended  December 31, 2002 (i) the
Chief Executive Officer of the Company and (ii) the other executive  officers of
the Company who earned over $100,000  during the fiscal year ended  December 31,
2002 (the "Named Executives"):



                           SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE
                                                                                                    

Name and                                                                                  Long Term               All Other
Principal Position                              Annual Compensation                      Compensation          Compensation (2)
------------------                              -------------------                      ------------          -------------
                                                                                    Securities Underlying
                                    Year            Salary              Bonus           Options (#)(1)
                                    ----            ------              -----           -----------

Donald L. Turrell                   2002           $190,772           $ 70,000              35,000                 $10,756
Chief Executive Officer             2001           $180,381           $ 35,000                                     $12,680
and  President                      2000           $174,519                                 60,000                 $15,434

Dorrance W. Lamb                    2002           $153,682           $ 60,000              25,000                 $ 2,689
Vice President - Finance            2001           $150,885           $ 28,000                                     $ 6,359
Chief Financial Officer             2000           $139,615                                 40,000                 $11,314

William E. Mahuson                  2002           $124,459           $ 55,000                                     $ 3,877
Vice President                      2001           $120,193           $ 20,000                                     $ 5,175
                                    2000           $113,808                                                        $ 9,004

John J. Grana                       2002           $142,301           $ 50,000              20,000                 $   305
Vice President                      2001           $125,770           $ 22,000                                     $ 1,910
                                    2000           $115,615                                 35,000                 $ 4,413

John J. Peters                      2002           $141,652           $ 50,000              25,000                 $ 4,194
Vice President                      2001           $124,192           $ 22,000                                     $ 4,856
                                    2000           $106,808                                 30,000                 $ 7,215


(1)   Stock options granted in 2002 were issued to executive  officers in  March
      2002,  while options granted for 2001 were issued to executive officers in
      December  2000,  and  options granted  for 2000  were  issued to executive
      officers in February 2000.
(2)   Includes payments for life insurance, car allowances and car expenses, and
      401(k) allowance.



Employment Agreements

     The Company does not have  employment  agreements with any of its executive
officers.

Stock Option Grants And Exercises

     The following sets forth  information with respect to stock options granted
to the Named Executives  during the fiscal year ended December 31, 2002 pursuant
to the Performance Technologies, Incorporated 2001 Stock Option Plan.





                        OPTION GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR

                                                                                                       

                                                  Individual Grants
                                                                                                 Potential Realizable Value at
                              Number of             % of Total                                  Assumed Annual Rates of Stock Price
                              Securities          Options Granted     Exercise                   Appreciation for Option Term (2)
                           Underlying Options     to Employees in       Price    Expiration      --------------------------------
           Name                Granted (1)          Fiscal Year       ($/Share)    Date            5%($)              10%($)
           ----                -----------          -----------       ---------    ----            -----              ------

Donald L. Turrell                35,000               5.7%            $8.50       3/18/08          $101,180           $229,551
Dorrance W. Lamb                 25,000               4.1%            $8.50       3/18/08           $72,271           $163,965
William E. Mahuson                  0                   -               -            -
John J. Grana                    20,000               3.3%            $8.50       3/18/08           $57,817           $131,172
John J. Peters                   25,000               4.1%            $8.50       3/18/08           $72,271           $163,965


(1)   These options vest in four annual increments of 25% per year commencing on
      the first anniversary of  the grant date.  Option  shares  consist of both
      non-qualified and qualified stock options.
(2)   Amounts  represent  potential gains that could be achieved for the options
      granted in 2002 based on assumed annual growth rates of 5% and 10%  in the
      price  of  the  Company's Common  Stock over six-year life  of  the option
      (which would equal a total increase in stock price of 34% and 77% for six-
      year options, respectively). Actual gains, if any, will depend upon market
      conditions and the Company's future performance and prospects.

     The following table sets forth  information with respect to the exercise of
stock options by the Named  Executives,  if any,  during the year ended December
31,  2002,  and it also  sets  forth  information  with  respect  to  status  of
unexercised stock options as of December 31, 2002.

              AGGREGATED OPTION EXERCISES IN LAST FISCAL YEAR AND
                         FISCAL YEAR END OPTION VALUES




                                                                                                       
                                                                        Number of Shares Underlying       Value of Unexercised
                                                                          Unexercised Options at        In-The-Money Options at
                                                                                FY-End (#)                   FY-End ($) (1)
                                                                    -          -----------                   --------------
                            Shares Acquired           Value
          Name               on Exercise (#)      Realized ($)(2)    Exercisable    Unexercisable    Exercisable     Unexercisable
          ----               ---------------      ---------------    -----------    -------------    -----------     -------------

Donald L. Turrell                                                      221,064         65,186             $0               $0

Dorrance W. Lamb                                                       111,763         45,042             $0               $0

William E. Mahuson                                                      81,000              0             $0               $0

John J. Grana                                                          117,470         37,530             $0               $0

John J. Peters                                                          98,154         40,146             $0               $0



(1)   Represents  the  difference  between  the fair  market value of the Common
      Stock  as of December 31, 2002 and  the  exercise  price  of  the  option.
      Options   that  are  not  in-the-money  have   been   excluded  from   the
      computation.
(2)   Represents the difference  between the fair  market  value  of  the Common
      Stock  underlying  the  options as of the exercise date and  the  exercise
      price of the options.


Report of the Audit Committee to Stockholders

     The Audit Committee of the Board of Directors is comprised of three members
of the Company's Board of Directors, each of whom is independent pursuant to the
NASDAQ  National  Market's  listing  standards.  Among other  things,  the Audit
Committee   recommends  to  the  Board  that  the  Company's  audited  financial
statements  be included  in the Annual  Report on Form 10-K and  recommends  the
selection of the independent  auditors to audit the Company's books and records.
The Audit Committee has:

o     reviewed and discussed all of the regulatory  changes occurring during the
      past  year including the  Sarbanes-Oxley  Act  passed on July 30, 2002 and
      new   Securities  and  Exchange   Commission  and    NASDAQ  Stock  Market
      requirements;

o     reviewed and discussed the  Company's  audited  financial  statements  for
      2002  with  management and with PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, the  Company's
      independent auditors;

o     reviewed  and discussed management's selection, application and disclosure
      of critical accounting policies;

o     reviewed and discussed the adequacy of the Company's internal controls and
      accounting and financial personnel;

o     discussed  with PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP  the matters  required  to  be
      discussed  by  SAS   61,  as  amended   (Codification  for  Statements  on
      Auditing Standards);

o     discussed  the  process  used  by  management  in  formulating  accounting
      estimates and  the  basis for  the  auditors'  conclusions  regarding  the
      reasonableness of those estimates; and

o     received  and  discussed the written  disclosures and the letter from  the
      independent auditors required by Independence  Standards  Board  Statement
      No. 1  (Independent Discussions with Audit Committees)  and has discussed
      with the independent auditor the independent auditor's independence.

     Based on such review and  discussions  with  management and the independent
auditors,  the Audit  Committee  recommended  to the Board of Directors that the
audited financial  statements be included in the Company's Annual Report on Form
10-K for 2002 for filing with the SEC.

Audit Fees and All Other Fees

     Audit  Fees:  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP billed  fees to the  Company  for
fiscal years 2002 and 2001 of $54,000 and $52,000,  respectively,  for the audit
of the Company's annual financial  statements and review of Quarterly Reports on
Form 10-Q.

     Audit-Related  Fees:  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP billed fees of $37,000 in
2002 for acquisition assistance. In 2001, the audit-related fees totaled zero.

     Tax-Related   Fees:   PricewaterhouseCoopers   LLP  billed   $112,000   for
tax-related services in 2002. Tax-related fees in 2001 totaled $44,000.

     All Other Fees: PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP billed no other fees in 2002 and
2001.

     Prior to approving  PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as the Company's independent
accountants    for   2003,    the    Audit    Committee    considered    whether
PricewaterhouseCoopers   LLP's   provision  of  other  than  audit  services  is
compatible with maintaining the accountants' independence and has concluded that
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP meets the independence standards.

                                 Audit Committee
                            John E. Mooney, Chairman
                                  Paul L. Smith
                              Stuart B. Meisenzahl


Report of the Stock Option Committee to Stockholders

     General

     The Stock  Option  Committee  of the  Board of  Directors  administers  the
Company's stock option program. The Stock Option Committee is comprised of three
outside  directors,  Charles E.  Maginness,  Chairman,  Paul L. Smith and Robert
Tillman.  The Stock Option Committee considers internal and external information
in  determining  overall  guidelines  for stock option  grants,  including  data
provided by KPMG LLP.

     Stock  options are granted to executive  officers and  employees  under the
2001 Performance  Technologies,  Incorporated  Stock Option Plan administered by
the Stock Option  Committee.  The Stock  Option  Committee  believes  that stock
options are a means of  aligning  the  long-range  interests  of all  employees,
including executives, with those of the Company's stockholders by providing them
with the opportunity to acquire an equity stake in the Company.  The size of the
stock option award is based primarily on the individual's  responsibilities  and
position with the Company,  as well as on the  individual's  performance.  Stock
options are granted at an exercise  price equal to the fair market  value of the
Company's Common Stock on the date of grant and options  generally vest in three
to  five  years.  This  approach  is  designed  to  encourage  the  creation  of
stockholder  value over the long term since no benefit is realized  from a stock
option grant unless the price of the Company's Common Stock rises.

     Annually, the Stock Option Committee reviews specific option requests along
with option grant  guidelines  submitted  by the Chief  Executive  Officer,  and
approves,  with any  modifications  it deems  appropriate,  stock option  grants
requested for several categories of employees throughout the Company.

     The Stock Option Committee in cooperation  with the Executive  Compensation
Committee approves stock option grants for the executive officers, key employees
and the Chief Executive  Officer.  Stock option requests for executive  officers
are  developed  under the  direction of the Chief  Executive  Officer,  based on
criteria that evaluate past and expected future contributions of each executive.

     In 2002, the Stock Option Committee referenced a year 2002 report from KPMG
LLP, to review the status of the  Company's  option grant level for a variety of
employee  groups.  The KPMG report  analyzed the Company's  stock option program
with respect to option  program trends in the high  technology  industry and the
impact of such  programs  on  attracting,  retaining  and  motivating  necessary
skilled personnel.

                             Stock Option Committee
                         Charles E. Maginness, Chairman
                                  Paul L. Smith
                                Robert L. Tillman



Stock Performance Graph

     The following  graph compares the cumulative  total return on the Company's
Common  Stock at the end of each  calendar  year since  December 31, 1997 to the
NASDAQ Stock Market (U.S.) Index,  and the NASDAQ Computer  Manufacturer  Index.
The stock  performance  shown in the graph below is not  intended to forecast or
necessarily be indicative of future performance.

[The following  descriptive  data is supplied in accordance  with Rule 304(d) of
regulation S-T.]

                Performance              NASDAQ               NASDAQ
               Technologies,             Stock               Computer
               Incorporated              Market            Manufacturer

12/31/97           100                     100                  100
12/31/98            91                     141                  217
12/31/99           180                     261                  462
12/31/00           141                     158                  263
12/31/01           138                     125                  181
12/31/02            34                      87                  120



                              CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS

     Until May 2002, the Company  leased a facility at 315 Science  Parkway from
Vortex  Enterprises,  LLC ("Vortex"),  a New York limited  liability  company of
which  Mr.  Maginness  and Mr.  Slusser,  directors  of the  Company,  are equal
members.  Vortex  acquired the property and  constructed  the facility  with the
proceeds of an  industrial  development  revenue  bond with the County of Monroe
Industrial  Development  Agency  ("COMIDA") in September  1990.  Pursuant to the
terms of the facility  lease,  the Company was obligated to pay annual rental of
$270,000 plus annual increases based on the Consumer Price Index,  together with
real property taxes and assessments,  expenses and other charges associated with
the facility.

     Arlen  Vanderwel,  who resigned  from the Board of  Directors  for personal
reasons on October 1, 2002, is an employee of Sun Microsystems, Inc., serving as
that company's Vice President of Technology  since 1999.  During the past fiscal
year,  Sun  Microsystems  was a customer of the  Company  from which the Company
received  payments  for  goods or  services  in excess  of five  percent  of the
Company's consolidated gross revenues for that fiscal year.




                                   PROPOSAL 2

  ADOPTION OF PERFORMANCE TECHNOLOGIES INCORPORATED 2003 OMNIBUS INCENTIVE PLAN

     The  Board of  Directors  is  proposing  the  adoption  of the  Performance
Technologies,  Incorporated 2003 Omnibus Incentive Plan ("Omnibus Plan"),  which
is attached as Appendix A to this proxy  statement.  The Omnibus  Plan  reserves
1,500,000 shares of the Company's Common Stock for future issuance.  The purpose
of the Omnibus Plan is to provide  motivation to selected  employees,  directors
and   consultants   to  put  forth  the  maximum   efforts  toward  the  growth,
profitability and success of the Company by providing  incentives to attract and
retain such  individuals  through the ownership and performance of the Company's
Common Stock. The Board of Directors believes that the successful conduct of the
business largely depends on these individuals.

     The Omnibus Plan would  permit the Stock  Option  Committee of the Board of
Directors,  or  such  other  committee  as may be  designated  by the  Board  of
Directors  (the  "Committee")  to grant various types of  stock-based  incentive
awards  to the  Company's  executive  officers,  key  employees,  directors  and
consultants.  The Performance Technologies,  Incorporated 2001 Stock Option Plan
would continue if the Company's stockholders approve the Omnibus Plan.

     The  Board  of  Directors  believes  that it is  important  to have  shares
available for the recruitment,  retention and motivation of employees, directors
and   consultants.   The  Board  of  Directors  has  approved  the   Performance
Technologies,  Incorporated 2003 Omnibus Incentive Plan,  subject to stockholder
approval,  and  recommends  a vote in favor of the  adoption of the  Performance
Technologies,   Incorporated  2003  Omnibus  Incentive  Plan.  Unless  otherwise
indicated the shares  represented  by the enclosed  proxy will be voted FOR such
proposal.


Summary of 2003 Omnibus Incentive Plan

Purpose

     The  purpose of the  Omnibus  Plan is to  provide  motivation  to  selected
employees, directors and consultants to put forth the maximum efforts toward the
continued  growth,  profitability,  and  success  of the  Company  by  providing
incentives to such  individuals  through the ownership  and  performance  of the
Company's Common Stock. (See Section 1.1)

Shares Available

     A total of 1,500,000 shares of the Company's Common Stock will be available
for grant of awards  under the Omnibus  Plan.  The Omnibus  Plan  provides  that
equitable  adjustments  will be made in the  number of  shares  of Common  Stock
covered by  outstanding  awards,  the price per share  applicable to outstanding
awards and the number of shares that are thereafter  available for awards in the
event of a change in the capital or capital  stock of the Company or any special
distributions  to  stockholders.  Any shares of Common  Stock under  awards that
terminate by reason of expiration, forfeiture,  cancellation or otherwise become
available for grant again under the Omnibus Plan. (See Article 6)

Administration

     The  Stock  Option  Committee  of the  Board of  Directors,  or such  other
committee as may be designated by the Board of Directors (the "Committee"), will
administer  the Omnibus  Plan.  The Committee has the authority to interpret the
Plan,  establish rules and regulations for the operation and  administration  of
the Plan,  select the individuals to receive awards,  determine the form,  size,
terms, conditions,  limitations,  and restrictions of awards, and take all other
action it deems necessary or advisable to administer the Omnibus Plan; provided,
however,  the  Committee  does not have the  authority to reprice  stock options
without stockholder  approval.  The Committee may allocate all or any portion of
its  responsibilities  and  powers  under  the  Plan  to any  one or more of its
members,  the Chief  Executive  Officer or other senior members of management as
the Committee  deems  appropriate.  The Company also has the right to redeem any
outstanding  stock  options or SARs at any time for an amount  equal to the fair
market value of the underlying stock and the exercise price. (See Article 4)

Eligible Participants

     The following  persons are eligible to participate in the Omnibus Plan (See
Article 3):

o        all employees of the Company and its subsidiaries;
o        certain foreign  nationals  who, but for  the laws  of their countries,
         would be employees of the Company or its subsidiaries;
o        the Company's directors; and
o        the  consultants, advisors  and independent contractors retained by the
         Company or its subsidiaries.

     The  selection of those  participants  who will receive  awards is entirely
within the discretion of the Committee.

Types of Awards

         The Omnibus Plan authorizes the grant of:

o        non-qualified and incentive stock options;
o        stock appreciation rights ("SARs");
o        restricted and unrestricted stock awards;
o        performance  shares  (which  are stock or stock-based awards contingent
         upon  attaining  performance  objectives  during a performance period);
o        performance  units   (which  are  units valued by reference to criteria
         chosen by the Committee); and
o        any other award established by the  Committee  which is consistent with
         the Omnibus Plan's purpose.

     Stock Options.  The Committee may grant awards in the form of stock options
to purchase shares of the Company's  Common Stock.  For each stock option grant,
the Committee  will  determine the number of shares  subject to the option,  the
manner and time of the option's  exercise and the exercise price.  Stock options
must be granted for a term of 10 years or less.  The  exercise  price of a stock
option  may not be less  than  100% of the fair  market  value of the  Company's
Common  Stock on the  date  the  stock  option  is  granted.  Upon  exercise,  a
participant  may pay the  exercise  price in cash,  shares  of Common  Stock,  a
combination  thereof, or such other  consideration as the Committee  determines.
Any stock option  granted in the form of an incentive  stock option will satisfy
the requirements of Section 422A of the Internal Revenue Code. (See Article 8)

     Stock  Appreciation  Rights.  The Committee may grant SARs either in tandem
with  a  stock  option   ("Tandem  SARS")  or  independent  of  a  stock  option
("Freestanding SARs"). (See Article 9)

     A Tandem SAR may be granted  either at the time of the grant of the related
stock option or at any time  thereafter  during the term of the stock option.  A
Tandem  SAR will be  exercisable  to the  extent  its  related  stock  option is
exercisable, and the exercise price of such a SAR will be the same as the option
price of its related  stock  option.  Upon the  exercise of a stock option as to
some or all of the  shares  covered by the award,  the  related  Tandem SAR will
automatically  be canceled to the extent of the number of shares  covered by the
stock option exercise.

     The Committee will determine the number of shares subject to a Freestanding
SAR, the manner and time of the SAR's  exercise,  and the exercise  price of the
SAR.  Freestanding  SARs  must be  granted  for a term of 10 years or less.  The
exercise  price  of a  Freestanding  SAR may not be less  than  100% of the fair
market value of the Company's Common Stock on the date of grant.

     Performance Awards. Only those employees who are "covered employees" within
the  meaning of Section  162(m) of the  Internal  Revenue  Code are  eligible to
receive  "Performance  Awards."  Generally,  "covered employees" means the Chief
Executive   Officer  and  the  other  four  highest  paid  executive   officers.
Performance  Awards are structured to qualify as deductible  "Performance-Based"
compensation  for purposes of Section 162(m) of the Internal  Revenue Code. See,
"Limitation on Income Tax Deduction" below.

     Within the first 90 days of a performance  period,  the Committee  will, in
its sole  discretion,  designate  which covered  employees  will be eligible for
performance  awards for the  performance  period,  the length of the performance
period, the types of performance  awards to be issued, the performance  criteria
that  are to be used to  establish  performance  goals,  the  kind or  level  of
performance goals and other relevant matters.

     After the close of each  performance  period,  the Committee will determine
whether the performance  goals for the cycle have been achieved.  In determining
the actual award to be paid to a participant, the Committee has the authority to
reduce  or  eliminate  the  award  earned  by the  participant,  based  upon any
objective or subjective  criteria it deems appropriate.  (See Articles 7, 11 and
12)

Payment Terms

     Awards may be paid in cash,  Common Stock, a combination of cash and Common
Stock, or any other form of property, as the Committee  determines.  If an award
is granted in the form of a stock award,  stock option, or performance share, or
in the form of any other stock-based grant, the Committee may include as part of
the award an entitlement to receive  dividends or dividend  equivalents.  At the
discretion of the Committee,  a participant  may defer payment of a stock award,
performance share,  performance unit,  dividend,  or dividend  equivalent.  (See
Article 13)

Effect of Certain Events

     Death or Disability.  The Committee  shall have the authority to promulgate
rules and regulations to determine the treatment of a participant under the Plan
in the  event  of such  participant's  death  or  disability.  Unless  otherwise
provided in an Award Notice, in the event that a participant shall die or become
disabled  prior to the  complete  exercise  of the  stock  options  or  complete
maturity of the SARs held by such  participant  may be  exercised in whole or in
part within one year after the date of the  participant's  death or  disability.
(See Sections 14.1(a), (b) and (c))

     Retirement or Approved  Reason.  The Committee  shall have the authority to
promulgate  rules and  regulations  to determine  the treatment of a participant
under  the  Omnibus  Plan in the  event  of  such  participant's  retirement  or
termination  for an "Approved  Reason" (as defined in the Omnibus Plan).  Unless
otherwise  provided  in an Award  Notice,  upon a  participant's  retirement  or
termination from the Company for an Approved Reason, any vested stock options or
matured  SARs  held by such  participant  may be  exercised  in whole or in part
within one year after the date of the  participant's  retirement or  termination
for an Approved Reason.  (See Sections 14.1 (a) and (d))

     Other  Termination.  Unless  otherwise  provided in an Award  Notice,  if a
participant's  employment with the Company  terminates for any reason other than
death,  disability,  retirement or an "Approved Reason," any vested stock option
or matured SAR held by such  participant  may be  exercised  in whole or in part
within 30 days after the date of the  participant's  termination.  (See Sections
14.1(a) and (e))

Termination and Amendment of Omnibus Plan

     The Board of Directors or the  Committee  may, at any time and from time to
time, suspend, amend, modify or terminate the Plan without stockholder approval;
provided,  however,  that the Board or Committee  may condition any amendment or
modification  on the approval of stockholders of the Company if such approval is
necessary  or  deemed  advisable  with  respect  to  tax,  securities  or  other
applicable laws, policies or regulations. (See Section 17.5)

Award Limits

     The maximum  performance  award  payable to any one  participant  under the
Omnibus  Plan for a calendar  year is 150,000  shares of Common Stock or, in the
event the  performance  award is paid in cash,  $500,000.  The maximum number of
shares for which stock  options may be granted under the Omnibus Plan to any one
participant  for a calendar  year is 250,000.  The maximum  number of shares for
which SARs may be granted  under the Omnibus Plan to any one  participant  for a
calendar  year is 100,000.  The maximum  number of shares for which stock awards
may be granted under the Omnibus Plan to any one  participant  during a calendar
year is 100,000. (See Section 6.3)

Securities Act Registration

     The Company will register the shares of Common Stock  purchasable under the
Omnibus Plan pursuant to a Registration Statement on Form S-8.

Non-U.S. Jurisdictions

     To  facilitate  the  granting of awards to  participants  who are  employed
outside of the United  States,  the Omnibus  Plan  authorizes  the  Committee to
modify and amend the terms and conditions of an award to accommodate differences
in local law, policy or custom. (See Section 5.2)

Federal Tax Treatment

     Non-Qualified Stock Options.  Under present federal income tax regulations,
there will be no federal  income tax  consequences  to either the Company or the
participant  upon the  grant  of a  non-qualified  stock  option.  However,  the
participant  will  realize  ordinary  income on the exercise of the option in an
amount equal to the excess of the fair market value of the Common Stock acquired
upon the exercise of such option over the exercise  price,  and the Company will
receive  a  corresponding  deduction.  The  gain,  if  any,  realized  upon  the
subsequent  disposition by the  participant of the Common Stock will  constitute
short- or long-term capital gain, depending on the participant's holding period.

     Incentive  Stock Options.  Under present  federal  income tax  regulations,
there will be no federal  income tax  consequences  to either the Company or the
participant  upon the grant of an  incentive  stock option (an option that meets
the  requirement  of Section 422 of the Internal  Revenue  Code) or the exercise
thereof by the participant.  If the participant holds the shares of Common Stock
underlying the option for the greater of two years after the date the option was
granted or one year after the  acquisition  of such shares of Common  Stock (the
"required holding period"),  the difference between the aggregate exercise price
and the amount  realized  upon  disposition  of the shares of Common  Stock will
constitute  a  long-term  capital  gain or  loss,  and the  Company  will not be
entitled to a federal  income tax  deduction.  If the shares of Common Stock are
disposed of in a sale,  exchange or other  disqualifying  disposition during the
required holding period, the participant will realize taxable ordinary income in
an amount  equal to the  excess of the fair  market  value of the  Common  Stock
purchased at the time of exercise over the  aggregate  exercise  price,  and the
Company will be entitled to a federal income tax deduction equal to such amount.

     SARs. Under present federal income tax regulations, a participant receiving
a  non-discounted  SAR will not  recognize  income,  and the Company will not be
allowed a tax  deduction,  at the time the Award is granted.  When a participant
exercises the SAR, the amount of cash and the fair market value of any shares of
Common Stock  received will be ordinary  income to the  participant  and will be
allowed as a deduction for federal income tax purposes to the Company.

     Performance  Shares.  Under  present  federal  income  tax  regulations,  a
participant  receiving  performance  shares  will not  recognize  income and the
Company  will not be allowed a tax  deduction  at the time the Award is granted.
When a participant  receives payment of performance  shares,  the amount of cash
and the fair  market  value of any  shares  of  Common  Stock  received  will be
ordinary  income  to  the  participant  and,  subject  to  Code  Section  162(m)
limitations,  if  applicable,  will be allowed as a deduction for federal income
tax purposes to the Company.

     Restricted Stock. Under present federal income tax regulations,  and unless
the participant makes an election to accelerate recognition of the income to the
date of grant,  a  participant  receiving  a  restricted  stock  Award  will not
recognize  income,  and the Company will not be allowed a tax deduction,  at the
time the Award is granted.  When the  restrictions  lapse,  the participant will
recognize  ordinary  income equal to the fair market value of the Common  Stock,
and, subject to Code Section 162(m) limitations, if applicable, the Company will
be entitled to a corresponding tax deduction at that time.

     Unrestricted  Stock.  Under  present  federal  income  tax  regulations,  a
participant receiving an unrestricted stock Award will recognize ordinary income
and, subject to Code Section 162(m) limitations, if applicable, the Company will
be allowed a tax deduction, at the time the Award is granted.

Limitation on Income Tax Deduction

     Pursuant to Section  162(m) of the Internal  Revenue Code,  the Company may
not  deduct  compensation  in excess of $1 million  paid to the Chief  Executive
Officer  and the four next most  highly  compensated  executive  officers of the
Company (each, a "Covered Employee"). The Board had the Omnibus Plan approved by
the stockholders in order to permit the grant of certain awards thereunder, such
as  options,   SARs  and  certain   performance  shares,  that  will  constitute
"Performance-Based"  compensation,  which is excluded  from the  calculation  of
annual  compensation of Covered  Employees for purposes of Section 162(m) and is
fully  deductible by the Company.  The Committee may grant awards under the Plan
that do not qualify as  "Performance-Based"  compensation  under Section 162(m).
The payment of any such  non-qualifying  awards to a Covered  Employee  could be
non-deductible  by the  Company,  in  whole or in part,  under  Section  162(m),
depending on such Covered Employee's total compensation in the applicable year.

     Performance  Goals for Certain  Section  162(m)  Awards.  Under the Omnibus
Plan, the Committee may determine that, in order to meet the "Performance-Based"
award criteria of Section 162(m) and the  regulations  thereunder,  a particular
award granted  under the Plan will be  determined  solely on the basis of one or
more  of  the  following  measures  of  corporate   performance,   alone  or  in
combination,  for the Company as a whole:  increase in total  revenue,  earnings
before interest and taxes,  earnings before  interest,  depreciation,  taxes and
amortization ("EBIDTA"),  return on stockholders' equity, gross margin, earnings
per share, net income,  operating income, net profit, operating profits, profits
before  tax,  Net Cash  Provided by  Operating  Activities,  ratio of  operating
earnings  to  capital  spending,  free cash flow,  return on  assets,  equity or
stockholder's  equity  and Common  Stock  price per  share.  Measurement  of the
Company's  performance  against such goals established by the Committee shall be
objectively determinable, and to the extent such goals are expressed in standard
accounting  terms,  performance  shall be measured in accordance  with generally
accepted  accounting  principles.  The  Committee  shall  have the right for any
reason  to  reduce  (but not  increase)  any  such  award,  notwithstanding  the
achievement  of a  specified  goal.  If an  award  is made on  such  basis,  the
Committee  shall  establish  goals prior to the beginning of the period to which
such  performance  goal  relates (or such later date as may be  permitted  under
Section 162(m) or the regulations  thereunder).  Any payment of an award granted
with performance goals under this section of the Plan will be conditioned on the
written  certification of the Committee in each case that the performance  goals
and any other material conditions were satisfied.

     Although the Omnibus Plan contains provisions regarding "Performance-Based"
compensation  for  purposes of  complying  with  Section  162(m) of the Internal
Revenue Code, the Company  historically  has not  compensated  its executives at
levels  that  would  trigger  the  application  of that  section  and  does  not
anticipate doing so in the foreseeable future.

     The above  summary of the Plan is qualified in its entirety by reference to
the full text of the 2003 Plan,  which is  attached  as Appendix A to this proxy
statement.


         THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE IN FAVOR OF PROPOSAL 2



                                   PROPOSAL 3

        RATIFICATION OF THE APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

     The firm of  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP served as the  independent  public
accountants  of the Company for the fiscal year ended  December 31, 2002 and the
Board  of  Directors  has  again  selected  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP  as  the
Company's independent public accountants for the fiscal year ending December 31,
2003. This selection will be presented to the stockholders for their approval at
the Meeting.  The Board of Directors  recommends a vote in favor of the proposal
to approve and ratify this selection and (unless otherwise  directed therein) it
is intended that the shares  represented by the enclosed properly executed proxy
will be  voted  FOR  such  proposal.  If the  stockholders  do not  ratify  this
selection, the Board of Directors may reconsider its choice.

     A representative of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP is expected to be present at
the Meeting. The representative will be given an opportunity to make a statement
if he so desires  and will be  available  to respond  to  appropriate  questions
concerning the audit of the Company's financial statements.


         THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE IN FAVOR OF PROPOSAL 3

                  STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS FOR 2004 ANNUAL MEETING

     In order for any stockholder proposal to be included in the Company's proxy
statement  to  be  issued  in  connection   with  the  2004  Annual  Meeting  of
Stockholders,  such  proposal  must be  delivered  to the  Company no later than
January 1, 2004. If the proposal is in compliance  with all of the  requirements
of Rule 14a-8 under the  Securities  Exchange  Act, the Company will include the
stockholder  proposal in its proxy  statement  and place it on the form of proxy
issued for the 2004 Annual Meeting of Stockholders.  Stockholder  proposals that
are not submitted for inclusion in the  Company's  proxy  materials  pursuant to
Rule 14a-8  under the  Securities  Exchange  Act may be brought  before the 2004
Annual  Meeting  of  Stockholders  only if  written  notice of the  proposal  is
delivered to the Company's  Secretary no earlier than March 6, 2004 and no later
than  April 5,  2004,  and if the  stockholder  complies  with all of the  other
provisions of Article II, Section 12 of the Company's By-laws.  All such notices
should be delivered to Reginald T. Cable, Secretary of Performance Technologies,
Inc., 205 Indigo Creek Drive, Rochester, New York 14626.



OTHER MATTERS

     As of the date of this Proxy  Statement,  the Board of  Directors  does not
intend to present,  and has not been informed  that any other person  intends to
present,  any matter  other than those  specifically  referred  to in this Proxy
Statement. If any other matters properly come before the Meeting, it is intended
that the holders of the proxies will act in respect  thereto in accordance  with
their best judgment.

                                           By Order of the Board of Directors,


                                           /s/ Reginald T. Cable
                                           ------------------------------------
                                           Reginald T. Cable
                                           Secretary to the Board

Dated at Rochester, New York
May 1, 2003




                                                                   Appendix A

                     PERFORMANCE TECHNOLOGIES, INCORPORATED



                           2003 OMNIBUS INCENTIVE PLAN





                         Effective _______________, 2003










                                TABLE OF CONTENTS


Article 1 PURPOSE AND TERM OF PLAN............................................23

      Section 1.1          Purpose............................................23
      Section 1.2          Term...............................................23

Article 2 DEFINITIONS.........................................................23

      Section 2.1          "Approved Reason"..................................23
      Section 2.2          "Award"............................................23
      Section 2.3          "Award Notice".....................................23
      Section 2.4          "Board"............................................23
      Section 2.5          "Cause"............................................23
      Section 2.6          "CEO"..............................................23
      Section 2.7          "Code".............................................23
      Section 2.8          "Committee"........................................23
      Section 2.9          "Common Stock".....................................24
      Section 2.10         "Company"..........................................24
      Section 2.11         "Consultants"......................................24
      Section 2.12         "Covered Employee".................................24
      Section 2.13         "Director".........................................24
      Section 2.14         "Disability".......................................24
      Section 2.15         "Effective Date"...................................24
      Section 2.16         "Employee".........................................24
      Section 2.17         "Exchange Act".....................................24
      Section 2.18         "Fair Market Value"................................24
      Section 2.19         "Negative Discretion"..............................24
      Section 2.20         "Net Cash Provided by Operating Activities"........24
      Section 2.21         "Participant"......................................24
      Section 2.22         "Performance Awards"...............................24
      Section 2.23         "Performance Criteria".............................24
      Section 2.24         "Performance Formula"..............................25
      Section 2.25         "Performance Goals"................................25
      Section 2.26         "Performance Period"...............................25
      Section 2.27         "Plan".............................................25
      Section 2.28         "PTI"..............................................25
      Section 2.29         "Retirement".......................................25
      Section 2.30         "Stock Award"......................................25
      Section 2.31         "Subsidiary".......................................25
      Section 2.32         "Unit".............................................25

Article 3 ELIGIBILITY.........................................................25

      Section 3.1          In General.........................................25
      Section 3.2          Incentive Stock Options............................26

Article 4 PLAN ADMINISTRATION.................................................26

      Section 4.1          Responsibility.....................................26
      Section 4.2          Authority of the Committee.........................26
      Section 4.3          Option Repricing...................................26
      Section 4.4          Company's Right to Redeem Stock Options and SARs...26
      Section 4.5          Discretionary Authority............................26
      Section 4.6          Section 162(m) of the Code.........................26
      Section 4.7          Action by the Committee............................26
      Section 4.8          Allocation and Delegation of Authority.............26

Article 5 FORM OF AWARDS......................................................27

      Section 5.1          In General.........................................27
      Section 5.2          Foreign Jurisdictions..............................27

Article 6 SHARES  SUBJECT TO PLAN.............................................28
      Section 6.1          Available Shares...................................28
      Section 6.2          Adjustment to Shares...............................28
      Section 6.3          Maximum Award Payable..............................28

Article 7 PERFORMANCE AWARDS..................................................28

      Section 7.1          Purpose............................................28
      Section 7.2          Eligibility........................................29
      Section 7.3          Discretion of Committee with Respect to Performance
                           Awards.............................................29
      Section 7.4          Payment of Performance Awards......................29

Article 8 STOCK OPTIONS.......................................................29

      Section 8.1          In General.........................................29
      Section 8.2          Terms and Conditions of Stock Options..............30
      Section 8.3          Restrictions Relating to Incentive Stock Options...30
      Section 8.4          Additional Terms and Conditions....................30
      Section 8.5          Exercise...........................................30

Article 9 STOCK APPRECIATION RIGHTS...........................................30

      Section 9.1          In General.........................................30
      Section 9.2          Terms and Conditions of Tandem SARs................30
      Section 9.3          Terms and Conditions of Freestanding SARs..........30
      Section 9.4          Deemed Exercise....................................31
      Section 9.5          Additional Terms and Conditions....................31

Article 10 STOCK AWARDS.......................................................31

      Section 10.1         Grants.............................................31
      Section 10.2         Award Restrictions.................................31
      Section 10.3         Rights as Stockholders.............................31
      Section 10.4         Evidence of Award..................................31

Article 11 PERFORMANCE UNITS..................................................31

      Section 11.1         Grants.............................................31
      Section 11.2         Performance Criteria...............................31
      Section 11.3         Additional Terms and Conditions....................31

Article 12 PERFORMANCE SHARES.................................................31

      Section 12.1         Grants.............................................31
      Section 12.2         Performance Criteria...............................31
      Section 12.3         Additional Terms and Conditions....................32

Article 13 PAYMENT OF AWARDS..................................................32

      Section 13.1         Payment............................................32
      Section 13.2         Withholding Taxes..................................32

Article 14 EFFECT OF CERTAIN EVENTS...........................................32

      Section 14.1         Stock Options and SARs.............................32
      Section 14.2         Other Awards.......................................33

Article 15 DIVIDEND AND DIVIDEND EQUIVALENTS..................................33


Article 16 DEFERRAL OF AWARDS.................................................33


Article 17 MISCELLANEOUS......................................................33

      Section 17.1         Nonassignability...................................33
      Section 17.2         Amendments to Awards...............................34
      Section 17.3         Regulatory Approvals and Listings..................34
      Section 17.4         No Right to Continued Employment or Grants.........34
      Section 17.5         Amendment/Termination..............................35
      Section 17.6         Governing Law......................................35
      Section 17.7         No Right, Title, or Interest in Company Assets.....35
      Section 17.8         Section 16 of the Exchange Act.....................35
      Section 17.9         No Guarantee of Tax Consequences...................35







                     PERFORMANCE TECHNOLOGIES, INCORPORATED

                           2003 OMNIBUS INCENTIVE PLAN

                           Effective __________, 2003

                                    Article 1
                            PURPOSE AND TERM OF PLAN

     Section 1.1 Purpose.  The purpose of the Plan is to provide  motivation  to
selected  Employees,  Directors and  Consultants  to put forth  maximum  efforts
toward the  continued  growth,  profitability,  and  success  of the  Company by
providing  incentives to such Employees,  Directors and Consultants  through the
ownership and performance of Common Stock.

     Section 1.2 Term. The Plan was approved by the Board on March 26, 2003, and
will become effective upon the date of the approval by PTI's stockholders at the
2003  Annual  Meeting  of the  Stockholders.  The  Plan and any  Awards  granted
thereunder shall be null and void if stockholder approval is not obtained at the
2003 Annual Meeting of the Stockholders.

                                    Article 2
                                   DEFINITIONS

In any necessary  construction of a provision of this Plan, the masculine gender
may include the  feminine,  and the  singular  may include the plural,  and vice
versa.

     Section 2.1  "Approved  Reason" means a reason for  terminating  employment
with  the  Company  which,  in the  opinion  of the  Committee,  is in the  best
interests of the Company.

     Section  2.2 "Award"  means any form of stock  option,  stock  appreciation
right, Stock Award,  performance unit, performance share,  Performance Award, or
other incentive award granted under the Plan, whether singly, in combination, or
in tandem, to a Participant by the Committee pursuant to such terms, conditions,
restrictions and/or  limitations,  if any, as the Committee may establish by the
Award Notice or otherwise.

     Section 2.3 "Award  Notice"  means the written  document  establishing  the
terms, conditions,  restrictions,  and/or limitations of an Award in addition to
those  established  by  this  Plan  and  by  the  Committee's  exercise  of  its
administrative  powers.  The  Committee  will  establish the form of the written
document in the exercise of its sole and absolute discretion.

     Section 2.4 "Board" means the Board of Directors of PTI.

     Section  2.5  "Cause"  means (a) the  willful  and  continued  failure by a
Participant  to  substantially  perform his or her duties with the Company after
written warnings  identifying the lack of substantial  performance are delivered
to the Participant by the Company to  specifically  identify the manner in which
the Company believes that the Participant has not substantially performed his or
her duties,  (b) the willful  engaging by a Participant in illegal conduct which
is materially and demonstrably injurious to the Company, (c) the commission of a
felony by a Participant, (d) the breach by a Participant of a material fiduciary
duty owed by that Participant to the Company,  (e) the intentional  unauthorized
disclosure by a Participant to any person of  confidential  information or trade
secrets of a material  nature  relating to the  Company's  business,  or (f) the
engaging by a  Participant  in any conduct  that the  Company's  written  rules,
regulations or policies specify as constituting grounds for discharge.

     Section 2.6 "CEO" means the Chief Executive Officer of PTI.

     Section 2.7 "Code" means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended from
time to time, including the regulations  thereunder and any successor provisions
and the regulations thereto.

     Section 2.8 "Committee"  means the Stock Option  Committee of the Board, or
such other Board  committee as may be designated by the Board to administer  the
Plan; provided that the Committee shall consist of two or more Directors, all of
whom are both a "Non-Employee  Director"  within the meaning of Rule 16b-3 under
the Exchange Act and an "outside  director" within the meaning of the definition
of  such  term  as   contained   in   Proposed   Treasury   Regulation   Section
1.162-27(e)(3),  or any successor definition adopted under Section 162(m) of the
Code.

     Section  2.9  "Common  Stock"  means the common  stock,  $.01 par value per
share, of PTI that may be newly issued or treasury stock.

     Section 2.10 "Company" means PTI and its Subsidiaries.

     Section 2.11 "Consultants" means the consultants,  advisors and independent
contractors retained by the Company.

     Section  2.12  "Covered  Employee"  means  an  Employee  who is a  "covered
employee" within the meaning of Section 162(m) of the Code.

     Section 2.13 "Director" means a non-Employee member of the Board.

     Section 2.14  "Disability,"  for a Participant who is an Employee,  means a
disability  under the terms of the long-term  disability  plan maintained by the
Participant's  employer,  or in the  absence  of  such a plan,  the  Performance
Technologies,  Incorporated  Long  Term  Disability  Plan;  and  for  all  other
Participants,   means  a   disability   under  the   Performance   Technologies,
Incorporated Long Term Disability Plan.

     Section 2.15  "Effective  Date" means the date an Award is determined to be
effective by the Committee upon its grant of such Award, which date shall be set
forth in the applicable Award Notice.

     Section 2.16 "Employee"  means any person employed by the Company on a full
or part-time basis.

     Section 2.17 "Exchange  Act" means the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended from time to time,  including  the rules  thereunder  and any  successor
provisions and the rules thereto.

     Section 2.18 "Fair Market Value" means the fair market value  determined by
the  Committee,  in good  faith,  based upon a  reasonable  method of  valuation
adopted by the Committee, or such method as may be permitted by the Code, or the
regulations or rulings thereunder.

     Section 2.19 "Negative  Discretion" means the discretion  authorized by the
Plan to be applied by the  Committee in  determining  the size of an Award for a
Performance  Period if, in the Committee's  sole judgment,  such  application is
appropriate.  Negative Discretion may only be used by the Committee to eliminate
or reduce the size of an Award.  By way of example and not by way of limitation,
in no event shall any  discretionary  authority  granted to the Committee by the
Plan, including,  but not limited to Negative Discretion,  be used to: (a) grant
Awards for a Performance  Period if the Performance  Goals for such  Performance
Period have not been attained under the applicable  Performance  Formula; or (b)
increase an Award  above the maximum  amount  payable  under  Section 6.3 of the
Plan.

     Section  2.20 "Net Cash  Provided by Operating  Activities"  means net cash
provided  by  operating   activities   computed  in  accordance  with  generally
acceptable  accounting  principles,  consistently  applied,  and  shall  exclude
investing and financing activities.

     Section 2.21 "Participant" means either an Employee, Director or Consultant
to whom an Award has been granted by the Committee under the Plan.

     Section 2.22 "Performance Awards" means the Stock Awards, performance units
and performance  shares granted to Covered Employees  pursuant to Article 7. All
Performance Awards are intended to qualify as  "performance-based  compensation"
under Section 162(m) of the Code.

     Section 2.23 "Performance Criteria" means the one or more criteria that the
Committee shall select for purposes of establishing the Performance  Goal(s) for
a Performance  Period.  The Performance  Criteria that will be used to establish
such  Performance  Goal(s) shall be limited to the following:  increase in total
revenue,   earnings  before  interest  and  taxes,   earnings  before  interest,
depreciation, taxes and amortization ("EBIDTA"), return on stockholders' equity,
gross margin,  earnings per share,  net income,  operating  income,  net profit,
operating   profits,   profits  before  tax,  Net  Cash  Provided  by  Operating
Activities,  ratio of operating  earnings to capital  spending,  free cash flow,
return on assets,  equity or  stockholders'  equity and Common  Stock  price per
share.  To the extent  required  by Section  162(m) of the Code,  the  Committee
shall, within the time period required by Section 162(m) of the Code (generally,
the first 90 days of a Performance  Period),  define in an objective fashion the
manner of  calculating  the  Performance  Criteria  it  selects  to use for such
Performance Period.

     Section 2.24 "Performance Formula" means, for a Performance Period, the one
or more  objective  formulas  (expressed as a percentage  or otherwise)  applied
against the relevant Performance Goal(s) to determine, with regards to the Award
of a particular  Participant,  whether  all,  some portion but less than all, or
none of the Award has been earned for the Performance Period.

     Section 2.25 "Performance  Goals" means, for a Performance  Period, the one
or more goals established by the Committee for the Performance Period based upon
the  Performance  Criteria.  The  Committee is authorized at any time during the
time period  permitted by Section  162(m) of the Code  (generally,  the first 90
days of a  Performance  Period),  or at any  time  thereafter,  in its  sole and
absolute  discretion,  to adjust or modify the calculation of a Performance Goal
for such  Performance  Period in order to prevent the dilution or enlargement of
the  rights of  Participants  (a) in the event of, or in  anticipation  of,  any
unusual or extraordinary corporate item, transaction,  event or development; (b)
in  recognition  of, or in  anticipation  of, any other unusual or  nonrecurring
events affecting the Company, or the financial  statements of the Company, or in
response to, or in  anticipation  of, changes in applicable  laws,  regulations,
accounting  principles,  or  business  conditions;   and  (c)  in  view  of  the
Committee's  assessment of the business strategy of the Company,  performance of
comparable  organizations,  economic  and  business  conditions,  and any  other
circumstances deemed relevant.

     Section 2.26  "Performance  Period"  means the one or more periods of time,
which may be of varying and overlapping durations,  as the Committee may select,
over which the attainment of one or more Performance  Goals will be measured for
the  purpose  of  determining  a  Participant's  right to and the  payment  of a
Performance Award.

     Section 2.27 "Plan" means the 2003 Omnibus Incentive Plan.

     Section 2.28 "PTI" means Performance Technologies, Incorporated.

     Section 2.29 "Retirement"  means, in the case of a Participant  employed by
the Company, voluntary termination of employment on or after age 62.

     Section 2.30 "Stock Award" means an award granted pursuant to Article 10 in
the form of shares of Common Stock,  restricted  shares of Common Stock,  and/or
Units of Common Stock.

     Section 2.31  "Subsidiary"  means a corporation or other business entity in
which PTI  directly or  indirectly  has an  ownership  interest of 50 percent or
more,  except that with respect to incentive stock options,  "Subsidiary"  shall
mean "subsidiary corporation" as defined in Section 424(f) of the Code.

     Section 2.32 "Unit" means a bookkeeping entry used by the Company to record
and account for the grant of the  following  Awards until such time as the Award
is paid, canceled,  forfeited or terminated, as the case may be: Units of Common
Stock, performance units, and performance shares which are expressed in terms of
Units of Common Stock.

                                    Article 3
                                   ELIGIBILITY

     Section 3.1 In General.  Subject to Section 3.2, all  Employees,  Directors
and  Consultants  are eligible to  participate  in the Plan.  The  Committee may
select, from time to time, Participants from those Employees who, in the opinion
of the Committee,  can further the Plan's purposes.  In addition,  the Committee
may select, from time to time, Participants from those Directors and Consultants
(who may or may not be Committee  members) who, in the opinion of the Committee,
can  further  the  Plan's  purposes.  Once a  Participant  is so  selected,  the
Committee  shall  determine the type(s) of Awards to be made to the  Participant
and shall  establish  in the  related  Award  Notice(s)  the terms,  conditions,
restrictions and/or limitations,  if any, applicable to the Award(s) in addition
to those  set forth in this Plan and the  administrative  rules and  regulations
issued by the Committee.

     Section 3.2 Incentive  Stock Options.  Only Employees  shall be eligible to
receive  "incentive  stock  options"  (within  the meaning of Section 422 of the
Code).

                                   Article 4
                               PLAN ADMINISTRATION

     Section 4.1  Responsibility.  The Committee  shall have total and exclusive
responsibility to control, operate, manage and administer the Plan in accordance
with its terms.

     Section 4.2 Authority of the  Committee.  The Committee  shall have all the
authority  that may be  necessary  or  helpful  to  enable it to  discharge  its
responsibilities  with respect to the Plan.  Without  limiting the generality of
the preceding  sentence,  the Committee  shall have the exclusive  right to: (a)
select  the  Participants  and  determine  the  type  of  Awards  to be  made to
Participants,  the number of shares subject to Awards and the terms, conditions,
restrictions  and  limitations  of the  Awards;  (b)  interpret  the  Plan;  (c)
determine  eligibility for  participation  in the Plan; (d) decide all questions
concerning  eligibility for and the amount of Awards payable under the Plan; (e)
construe  any  ambiguous  provision of the Plan;  (f) correct any  default;  (g)
supply any omission;  (h) reconcile any inconsistency;  (i) issue administrative
guidelines as an aid to administer the Plan and make changes in such  guidelines
as it from time to time deems proper;  (j) make regulations for carrying out the
Plan and make changes in such  regulations as it from time to time deems proper;
(k) determine  whether  Awards should be granted  singly,  in  combination or in
tandem; (l) to the extent permitted under the Plan, grant waivers of Plan terms,
conditions, restrictions, and limitations; (m) accelerate the vesting, exercise,
or payment of an Award or the Performance Period of an Award when such action or
actions would be in the best interest of the Company;  (n) establish  such other
types of Awards,  besides  those  specifically  enumerated  in Article 5 hereof,
which the Committee  determines  are  consistent  with the Plan's  purpose;  (o)
subject to Section 4.3, grant Awards in replacement of Awards previously granted
under this Plan or any other  executive  compensation  plan of the Company;  (p)
establish and administer the Performance Goals and certify whether,  and to what
extent,  they have been attained;  (q) determine the terms and provisions of any
agreements  entered into  hereunder;  (r) take any and all other action it deems
necessary or advisable for the proper operation or  administration  of the Plan;
and (s) make all other  determinations  it deems  necessary or advisable for the
administration of the Plan, including factual determinations.

     Section 4.3 Option  Repricing.  Except for adjustments  pursuant to Section
6.2, the  Committee  shall not reprice any stock  options  unless such action is
approved by the  Company's  stockholders.  For  purposes  of the Plan,  the term
"reprice"  shall mean the  granting of a stock  option(s)  to a  Participant  in
exchange  for such  Participant's  agreement  to  cancel a  higher-priced  stock
option(s) that was previously granted to such Participant.

     Section 4.4 Company's  Right to Redeem Stock Options and SARs.  Every stock
option  vested and granted under this Plan may be redeemable by PTI at any time.
The  purchase  price for any stock option  redeemed by the Company  shall be the
Fair Market Value of the Common Stock  underlying  such stock  option,  less the
exercise price of such stock option.  The purchase price for any SAR redeemed by
PTI shall be the Fair Market Value of the Common Stock underlying such SAR, less
the exercise price of such SAR. The purchase  price,  less any amount of federal
or state taxes  attributable  to the  redemption  that PTI deems it necessary or
advisable to pay or withhold, shall be paid in cash.

     Section  4.5  Discretionary   Authority.  The  Committee  shall  have  full
discretionary  authority  in  all  matters  related  to  the  discharge  of  its
responsibilities  and the exercise of its  authority  under the Plan  including,
without  limitation,  its  construction  of  the  terms  of  the  Plan  and  its
determination of eligibility for  participation and Awards under the Plan. It is
the intent of Plan that the  decisions  of the  Committee  and its actions  with
respect to the Plan shall be final,  binding  and  conclusive  upon all  persons
having or claiming to have any right or interest in or under the Plan.

     Section  4.6  Section  162(m)  of the Code.  With  regards  to all  Covered
Employees,  the Plan shall,  for all purposes,  be interpreted  and construed in
accordance with Section 162(m) of the Code.

     Section  4.7  Action  by the  Committee.  The  Committee  may act only by a
majority of its members. Any determination of the Committee may be made, without
a  meeting,  by a  writing  or  writings  signed  by all of the  members  of the
Committee.  In addition,  the  Committee  may  authorize  any one or more of its
number to execute and deliver documents on behalf of the Committee.

     Section 4.8  Allocation  and  Delegation  of  Authority.  The Committee may
allocate all or any portion of its responsibilities and powers under the Plan to
any one or more of its members, the CEO or other senior members of management as
the  Committee  deems  appropriate  and  may  delegate  all or any  part  of its
responsibilities  and powers to any such  person or persons,  provided  that any
such allocation or delegation be in writing;  provided,  however,  that only the
Committee may select and grant Awards to Participants who are subject to Section
16 of the Exchange Act or are Covered  Employees.  The  Committee may revoke any
such  allocation  or delegation at any time for any reason with or without prior
notice.

                                   Article 5
                                 FORM OF AWARDS

     Section 5.1 In General. Awards may, at the Committee's sole discretion,  be
paid in the form of  Performance  Awards  pursuant  to Article 7, stock  options
pursuant to Article 8, stock  appreciation  rights  pursuant to Article 9, Stock
Awards  pursuant  to Article  10,  performance  units  pursuant  to Article  11,
performance shares pursuant to Article 12, any form established by the Committee
pursuant  to Section  4.2(n),  or a  combination  thereof.  All Awards  shall be
subject to the terms, conditions,  restrictions and limitations of the Plan. The
Committee  may,  in its sole  judgment,  subject an Award to such  other  terms,
conditions,  restrictions and/or limitations (including, but not limited to, the
time  and  conditions  of  exercise  and  restrictions  on  transferability  and
vesting),  provided they are not inconsistent with the terms of the Plan. Awards
under a particular  Article of the Plan need not be uniform and Awards under two
or more Articles may be combined into a single Award Notice.  Any combination of
Awards  may be  granted  at one time and on more than one  occasion  to the same
Participant.

     Section 5.2 Foreign Jurisdictions.

     (a)  Special  Terms.  In order to  facilitate  the  making  of any Award to
Participants  who are  employed or  retained  by the Company  outside the United
States as  Employees,  Directors or  Consultants  (or who are foreign  nationals
temporarily  within the United  States),  the  Committee  may  provide  for such
modifications and additional terms and conditions ("special terms") in Awards as
the Committee may consider  necessary or appropriate to accommodate  differences
in local law, policy or custom or to facilitate  administration of the Plan. The
special  terms  may  provide  that  the  grant of an  Award  is  subject  to (1)
applicable  governmental or regulatory  approval or other  compliance with local
legal  requirements  and/or (2) the  execution by the  Participant  of a written
instrument in the form  specified by the  Committee,  and that in the event such
conditions  are not  satisfied,  the grant shall be void.  The special terms may
also provide that an Award shall become  exercisable or redeemable,  as the case
may be, if an  Employee's  employment or Director or  Consultant's  relationship
with the Company ends as a result of workforce reduction, realignment or similar
measure  and the  Committee  may  designate  a person  or  persons  to make such
determination  for a location.  The  Committee  may adopt or approve  sub-plans,
appendices  or  supplements  to, or  amendments,  restatements,  or  alternative
versions of, the Plan as it may consider  necessary or appropriate  for purposes
of implementing  any special terms,  without thereby  affecting the terms of the
Plan as in effect for any other purpose;  provided,  however, no such sub-plans,
appendices  or  supplements  to, or  amendments,  restatements,  or  alternative
versions of, the Plan shall:  (a) increase the limitations  contained in Section
6.3; (b) increase  the number of available  shares under  Section 6.1; (c) cause
the Plan to cease to satisfy any conditions of Rule 16b-3 under the Exchange Act
or,  with  respect  to Covered  Employees,  Section  162(m) of the Code;  or (d)
revoke,  remove or reduce any vested  right of a  Participant  without the prior
written consent of such Participant.

     (b) Currency  Effects.  Unless  otherwise  specifically  determined  by the
Committee,  all Awards and payments  pursuant to such Awards shall be determined
in U.S. currency. The Committee shall determine, in its discretion,  whether and
to the extent any  payments  made  pursuant  to an Award  shall be made in local
currency,  as opposed to U.S.  dollars.  In the event payments are made in local
currency,  the Committee may determine,  in its discretion and without liability
to any  Participant,  the method and rate of  converting  the payment into local
currency.

     (c) Modifications to Awards. The Committee shall have the right at any time
and from time to time and without prior notice to modify  outstanding  Awards to
comply  with  or  satisfy  local  laws  and   regulations  or  to  avoid  costly
governmental  filings.  By  means  of  illustration,  but  not  limitation,  the
Committee  may  restrict  the  method  of  exercise  of an Award  to  facilitate
compliance with applicable  securities laws or exchange control filings, laws or
regulations.

     (d) No Acquired Rights.  No Employee in any country shall have any right to
receive an Award,  except as expressly  provided for under the Plan.  All Awards
made at any time are subject to the prior approval of the Committee.

                                   Article 6
                             SHARES SUBJECT TO PLAN

     Section 6.1 Available Shares.  The maximum number of shares of Common Stock
which shall be available for grant of Awards under the Plan (including incentive
stock options) during its term shall not exceed 1,500,000.  Such amount shall be
subject to  adjustment  as provided in Section  6.2.  Any shares of Common Stock
related to Awards which  terminate by expiration,  forfeiture,  cancellation  or
otherwise  without the issuance of such  shares,  are settled in cash in lieu of
Common Stock,  or are exchanged with the  Committee's  permission for Awards not
involving  Common  Stock,  shall be  available  again for grant  under the Plan.
Moreover,  if the option price of any stock option granted under the Plan or the
tax withholding  requirements with respect to any stock option granted under the
Plan are satisfied by tendering shares of Common Stock to the Company (by either
actual  delivery or by  attestation),  only the number of shares of Common Stock
issued net of the shares of Common Stock  tendered will be deemed  delivered for
purposes of determining  the maximum number of shares of Common Stock  available
for delivery under the Plan. The maximum number of shares available for issuance
under the Plan  shall not be  reduced  to  reflect  any  dividends  or  dividend
equivalents  that are  reinvested  into  additional  shares of  Common  Stock or
credited as additional  performance shares. The shares of Common Stock available
for issuance  under the Plan may be authorized  and unissued  shares or treasury
shares.  For the purpose of computing the total number of shares of Common Stock
granted  under the Plan,  where one or more types of  Awards,  both of which are
payable in shares of Common Stock,  are granted in tandem with each other,  such
that the  exercise  of one type of Award  with  respect  to a number  of  shares
cancels  an equal  number of shares of the other,  the number of shares  granted
under both Awards shall be deemed to be equivalent to the number of shares under
one of the Awards.

     Section 6.2 Adjustment to Shares.

     (a) In General.  The  provisions of this Section  6.2(a) are subject to the
limitation  contained in Section 6.2(b). If there is any change in the number of
outstanding  shares of Common Stock through the declaration of stock  dividends,
stock splits or the like, the number of shares available for Awards,  the shares
subject to any Award and the option prices or exercise prices of Awards shall be
automatically  adjusted.  If there is any  change in the  number of  outstanding
shares of Common  Stock  through  any change in the  capital  account of PTI, or
through  a  merger,  consolidation,  separation  (including  a spin off or other
distribution  of  stock  or  property),  reorganization  (whether  or  not  such
reorganization  comes  within the meaning of such term in Section  368(a) of the
Code) or partial or complete  liquidation,  the Committee shall make appropriate
adjustments  in the maximum number of shares of Common Stock which may be issued
under the Plan and any adjustments and/or modifications to outstanding Awards as
it, in its sole discretion,  deems appropriate. In the event of any other change
in the capital structure or in the Common Stock of PTI, the Committee shall also
be  authorized to make such  appropriate  adjustments  in the maximum  number of
shares of Common Stock available for issuance under the Plan and any adjustments
and/or modifications to outstanding Awards as it, in its sole discretion,  deems
appropriate.  The maximum number of shares available for issuance under the Plan
shall be automatically  adjusted to the extent necessary to reflect any dividend
equivalents paid in the form of Common Stock.  Subject to Section 6.2(b), if the
maximum  number of shares of Common Stock  available for issuance under the Plan
are adjusted pursuant to this Section 6.2(a), corresponding adjustments shall be
made to the limitations set forth in Section 6.3.

     (b) Covered  Employees.  In no event shall the Award of any Participant who
is a Covered  Employee be adjusted  pursuant to Section  6.2(a) to the extent it
would  cause such Award to fail to qualify as  "performance-based  compensation"
under Section 162(m) of the Code.

     Section 6.3 Maximum Award Payable.  Notwithstanding any provision contained
in the  Plan  to the  contrary,  the  maximum  Award  payable  (or  granted,  if
applicable)  to any one  Participant  under the Plan for a calendar year is: (a)
for  Performance  Awards,  150,000  shares of Common  Stock or, in the event the
Performance  Award is paid in cash,  $500,000;  (b) for stock  options,  250,000
shares of Common Stock;  (c) for SARs,  100,000 shares of Common Stock;  (d) for
Stock Awards  (including  those issued in the form of  Performance  Awards under
Article 7), 100,000 shares of Common Stock.

                                   Article 7
                               PERFORMANCE AWARDS

     Section 7.1 Purpose.  For purposes of grants  issued to Covered  Employees,
the  provisions  of this  Article  7  shall  apply  in  addition  to and,  where
necessary,  in lieu of the  provisions of Article 10, Article 11 and Article 12.
The purpose of this Article is to provide the  Committee  the ability to qualify
the Stock  Awards  authorized  under  Article  10, the  performance  units under
Article 11, and the  performance  shares under Article 12 as  "performance-based
compensation" under Section 162(m) of the Code. The provisions of this Article 7
shall control over any contrary provision contained in Article 10, Article 11 or
Article 12.

     Section  7.2  Eligibility.  Only  Covered  Employees  shall be  eligible to
receive  Performance  Awards.  The  Committee  will,  in  its  sole  discretion,
designate  within  the first 90 days of a  Performance  Period  (or,  if longer,
within the  maximum  period  allowed  under  Section  162(m) of the Code)  which
Covered Employees will be Participants for such period. However,  designation of
a Covered  Employee as a Participant  for a Performance  Period shall not in any
manner  entitle  the  Participant  to  receive  an  Award  for the  period.  The
determination as to whether or not such Participant becomes entitled to an Award
for such  Performance  Period  shall be decided  solely in  accordance  with the
provisions of this Article 7. Moreover,  designation of a Covered  Employee as a
Participant for a particular Performance Period shall not require designation of
such Covered Employee as a Participant in any subsequent  Performance Period and
designation  of  one  Covered  Employee  as  a  Participant  shall  not  require
designation of any other Covered  Employee as a Participant in such period or in
any other period.

     Section 7.3  Discretion of Committee  with Respect to  Performance  Awards.
With regards to a particular  Performance  Period, the Committee shall have full
discretion  to select  the length of such  Performance  Period,  the  type(s) of
Performance Awards to be issued,  the Performance  Criteria that will be used to
establish  the  Performance   Goal(s),   the  kind(s)  and/or  level(s)  of  the
Performance  Goal(s),  whether the  Performance  Goal(s) is(are) to apply to the
Company or any one or more subunits thereof, and the Performance Formula. Within
the first 90 days of a  Performance  Period (or,  if longer,  within the maximum
period  allowed under Section  162(m) of the Code),  the Committee  shall,  with
regards  to the  Performance  Awards to be issued for such  Performance  Period,
exercise its  discretion  with respect to each of the matters  enumerated in the
immediately  preceding  sentence  of this  Section  7.3 and  record  the same in
writing.

     Section 7.4 Payment of Performance Awards.

     (a) Condition to Receipt of Performance Award. Unless otherwise provided in
the relevant Award Notice,  a Participant must be employed by the Company on the
last day of a Performance Period to be eligible for a Performance Award for such
Performance Period.

     (b)  Limitation.  A Participant  shall be eligible to receive a Performance
Award for a  Performance  Period only to the extent  that:  (1) the  Performance
Goals for such  period  are  achieved;  and (2) and the  Performance  Formula as
applied against such  Performance  Goals  determines that all or some portion of
such Participant's Performance Award has been earned for the Performance Period.

     (c)  Certification.  Following the completion of a Performance  Period, the
Committee  shall meet to review and  certify  in  writing  whether,  and to what
extent, the Performance Goals for the Performance Period have been achieved and,
if so, to also  calculate  and certify in writing the amount of the  Performance
Awards earned for the period based upon the Performance  Formula.  The Committee
shall then determine the actual size of each Participant's Performance Award for
the Performance Period and, in so doing, shall apply Negative Discretion, if and
when it deems appropriate.

     (d) Negative  Discretion.  In determining  the actual size of an individual
Performance  Award  for a  Performance  Period,  the  Committee  may  reduce  or
eliminate  the amount of the  Performance  Award  earned  under the  Performance
Formula for the Performance Period through the use of Negative Discretion, if in
its sole judgment, such reduction or elimination is appropriate.

     (e) Timing of Award Payments.  The Awards granted for a Performance  Period
shall be paid to Participants as soon as administratively  practicable following
completion of the certifications required by Section 7.4(c).

                                   Article 8
                                  STOCK OPTIONS

     Section 8.1 In General. Awards may be granted in the form of stock options.
These stock options may be incentive stock options within the meaning of Section
422 of the Code or  non-qualified  stock options (i.e.,  stock options which are
not incentive  stock  options),  or a combination  of both. All Awards under the
Plan issued to Covered  Employees  in the form of  non-qualified  stock  options
shall qualify as  "performance-based  compensation"  under Section 162(m) of the
Code.

     Section  8.2 Terms and  Conditions  of Stock  Options.  An option  shall be
exercisable  in accordance  with such terms and conditions and at such times and
during such periods as may be  determined by the  Committee.  The price at which
Common Stock may be purchased  upon exercise of a stock option shall be not less
than 100 percent of the Fair Market Value of the Common Stock,  as determined by
the Committee, on the Effective Date of the option's grant.

     Section 8.3 Restrictions Relating to Incentive Stock Options. Stock options
issued in the form of  incentive  stock  options  shall,  in  addition  to being
subject to the terms and  conditions of Section 8.2,  comply with Section 422 of
the Code.  Accordingly,  the aggregate Fair Market Value (determined at the time
the option was  granted)  of the Common  Stock with  respect to which  incentive
stock options are  exercisable  for the first time by a  Participant  during any
calendar  year  (under  this Plan or any other  plan of the  Company)  shall not
exceed  $100,000  (or such other  limit as may be required by Section 422 of the
Code). Furthermore,  stock options issued in the form of incentive stock options
must be issued  within ten years from the  effective  date of the Plan,  and the
term of such  stock  options  may not exceed  ten years (or any  shorter  period
required by Section 422 of the Code).

     Section 8.4 Additional  Terms and Conditions.  The Committee may, by way of
the  Award  Notice  or  otherwise,   establish  such  other  terms,  conditions,
restrictions  and/or  limitations,  if any, of any stock option Award,  provided
they are not inconsistent with the Plan.

     Section 8.5 Exercise. Upon exercise, the option price of a stock option may
be paid in cash,  or by  tendering,  by either  actual  delivery of shares or by
attestation,  shares of Common Stock, a combination  of the  foregoing,  or such
other consideration as the Committee may deem appropriate.  Any shares of Common
Stock  tendered by a Participant  upon exercise of a stock option must have been
purchased  on the open market or, if acquired by the  Participant  pursuant to a
previous stock option  exercise,  be owned by the  Participant  for at least six
months prior to the date of exercise of the stock option.  The  Committee  shall
establish  appropriate methods for accepting Common Stock, whether restricted or
unrestricted,  and may impose such conditions as it deems appropriate on the use
of such Common Stock to exercise a stock option.  Subject to Section 17.8, stock
options  awarded  under the Plan may also be exercised  by way of the  Company's
broker-assisted  stock option exercise program, if any, provided such program is
available at the time of the option's exercise.

                                   Article 9
                            STOCK APPRECIATION RIGHTS

     Section  9.1 In  General.  Awards  may be  granted  in the  form  of  stock
appreciation rights ("SARs").  SARs entitle the Participant to receive a payment
equal to the  appreciation in a stated number of shares of Common Stock from the
exercise  price to the Fair  Market  Value  of the  Common  Stock on the date of
exercise.  The  "exercise  price" for a  particular  SAR shall be defined in the
Award  Notice for that SAR. A SAR may be granted in tandem with all or a portion
of a related  stock option  under the Plan  ("Tandem  SARs"),  or may be granted
separately ("Freestanding SARs"). A Tandem SAR may be granted either at the time
of the grant of the related  stock option or at any time  thereafter  during the
term of the stock option.  All Awards under the Plan issued to Covered Employees
in the form of a SAR shall  qualify as  "performance-based  compensation"  under
Section 162(m) of the Code.

     Section  9.2 Terms and  Conditions  of Tandem  SARs.  A Tandem SAR shall be
exercisable to the extent, and only to the extent, that the related stock option
is exercisable,  and the "exercise price" of such a SAR (the base from which the
value of the SAR is measured at its  exercise)  shall be the option  price under
the related  stock option.  However,  at no time shall a Tandem SAR be issued if
the option price of its related  stock option is less than the Fair Market Value
of the Common Stock,  as determined by the  Committee,  on the Effective Date of
the Tandem SAR's grant. If a related stock option is exercised as to some or all
of the shares  covered by the Award,  the related  Tandem SAR, if any,  shall be
canceled  automatically  to the  extent of the  number of shares  covered by the
stock option  exercise.  Upon  exercise of a Tandem SAR as to some or all of the
shares  covered  by the  Award,  the  related  stock  option  shall be  canceled
automatically  to the extent of the number of shares  covered by such  exercise.
Moreover,  all  Tandem  SARs  shall  expire  not later  than ten years  from the
Effective Date of the SAR's grant.

     Section 9.3 Terms and Conditions of Freestanding  SARs.  Freestanding  SARs
shall be exercisable or  automatically  mature in accordance with such terms and
conditions and at such times and during such periods as may be determined by the
Committee.  The exercise price of a Freestanding  SAR shall be not less than 100
percent of the Fair  Market  Value of the Common  Stock,  as  determined  by the
Committee,  on the Effective Date of the Freestanding SAR's grant. Moreover, all
Freestanding  SARs shall expire not later than ten years from the Effective Date
of the Freestanding SAR's grant.

     Section 9.4 Deemed Exercise.  The Committee may provide that a SAR shall be
deemed to be exercised at the close of business on the scheduled expiration date
of such SAR if at such time the SAR by its terms remains  exercisable and, if so
exercised, would result in a payment to the holder of such SAR.

     Section 9.5 Additional  Terms and Conditions.  The Committee may, by way of
the  Award  Notice  or  otherwise,   determine  such  other  terms,  conditions,
restrictions and/or limitations, if any, of any SAR Award, provided they are not
inconsistent with the Plan.

                                   Article 10
                                  STOCK AWARDS

     Section  10.1  Grants.  Awards may be granted in the form of Stock  Awards.
Stock  Awards shall be awarded in such numbers and at such times during the term
of the Plan as the Committee shall determine.

     Section  10.2 Award  Restrictions.  Stock  Awards  shall be subject to such
terms, conditions,  restrictions,  and/or limitations,  if any, as the Committee
deems  appropriate  including,  but not by way of  limitation,  restrictions  on
transferability  and  continued  employment;  provided,  however,  they  are not
inconsistent  with the Plan. The Committee may modify or accelerate the delivery
of a Stock Award under such circumstances as it deems appropriate.

     Section  10.3  Rights  as  Stockholders.  During  the  period  in which any
restricted shares of Common Stock are subject to any restrictions  imposed under
Section  10.2,  the  Committee  may,  in  its  sole  discretion,  grant  to  the
Participant to whom such  restricted  shares have been awarded all or any of the
rights of a stockholder with respect to such shares,  including,  but not by way
of  limitation,  the right to vote such shares and,  pursuant to Article 15, the
right to receive dividends.

     Section 10.4 Evidence of Award.  Any Stock Award granted under the Plan may
be  evidenced  in such manner as the  Committee  deems  appropriate,  including,
without limitation,  book-entry  registration or issuance of a stock certificate
or certificates.

                                   Article 11
                                PERFORMANCE UNITS

     Section  11.1  Grants.  Awards may be  granted  in the form of  performance
units.  Performance  units,  as that term is used in this Plan,  shall  refer to
Units valued by reference to designated  criteria  established by the Committee,
other than Common Stock.

     Section 11.2 Performance Criteria. Performance units shall be contingent on
the attainment during a performance  period of certain  performance  objectives.
The length of the performance period, the performance  objectives to be achieved
during the  performance  period,  and the  measure of whether and to what degree
such  objectives  have been  attained  shall be  conclusively  determined by the
Committee in the exercise of its absolute discretion. Performance objectives may
be revised by the Committee,  at such times as it deems  appropriate  during the
performance period, in order to take into consideration any unforeseen events or
changes in circumstances.

     Section 11.3 Additional Terms and Conditions.  The Committee may, by way of
the  Award  Notice  or  otherwise,   determine  such  other  terms,  conditions,
restrictions,  and/or  limitations,  if any, of any Award of performance  units,
provided they are not inconsistent with the Plan.

                                   Article 12
                               PERFORMANCE SHARES

     Section  12.1  Grants.  Awards may be  granted  in the form of  performance
shares.  Performance  shares,  as that term is used in this Plan, shall refer to
shares of Common Stock or Units that are expressed in terms of Common Stock.

     Section 12.2 Performance  Criteria.  Performance shares shall be contingent
upon  the  attainment  during  a  performance  period  of  certain   performance
objectives.  The length of the performance period, the performance objectives to
be achieved  during the  performance  period,  and the measure of whether and to
what degree such objectives have been attained shall be conclusively  determined
by  the  Committee  in the  exercise  of its  absolute  discretion.  Performance
objectives  may  be  revised  by  the  Committee,  at  such  times  as it  deems
appropriate  during the performance  period, in order to take into consideration
any unforeseen events or changes in circumstances.

     Section 12.3 Additional Terms and Conditions.  The Committee may, by way of
the  Award  Notice  or  otherwise,   determine  such  other  terms,  conditions,
restrictions  and/or  limitations,  if any, of any Award of performance  shares,
provided they are not inconsistent with the Plan.

                                   Article 13
                                PAYMENT OF AWARDS

     Section 13.1 Payment.  Absent a Plan provision to the contrary,  payment of
Awards may, at the discretion of the Committee, be made in cash, Common Stock, a
combination  of cash and  Common  Stock,  or any other form of  property  as the
Committee  shall  determine.  In  addition,  payment of Awards may include  such
terms,  conditions,  restrictions and/or  limitations,  if any, as the Committee
deems appropriate,  including,  in the case of Awards paid in the form of Common
Stock,  restrictions on transfer and forfeiture provisions;  provided,  however,
such terms,  conditions,  restrictions  and/or  limitations are not inconsistent
with the Plan.

     Section 13.2  Withholding  Taxes.  The Company  shall be entitled to deduct
from any payment under the Plan,  regardless  of the form of such  payment,  the
amount of all  applicable  income and  employment  taxes  required  by law to be
withheld with respect to such payment or may require the  Participant  to pay to
it such tax prior to and as a condition of the making of such payment.

                                   Article 14
                            EFFECT OF CERTAIN EVENTS

     Section 14.1 Stock Options and SARs.

     (a) Committee  Rules.  The Committee shall have the authority to promulgate
rules and regulations to determine the treatment of a Participant under the Plan
in the event of such Participant's death,  Disability,  Retirement,  termination
for an Approved Reason and other termination.

     (b)  Death.   Unless  otherwise  provided  in  an  Award  Notice,   upon  a
Participant's  death,  any stock  option or SAR may be  exercised in whole or in
part  within one year after the date of the  Participant's  death and then only:
(a) by the beneficiary  designated by the Participant in a writing  submitted to
the Company prior to the Participant's  death, or in the absence of same, by the
Participant's  estate or by or on behalf of such  person or  persons to whom the
Participant's  rights  pass  under  his or her will or the laws of  descent  and
distribution, (b) to the extent that the Participant would have been entitled to
exercise  the stock option or SAR at the date of his or her death and subject to
all of the conditions on exercise imposed by the Plan and the Award Notice,  and
(c) prior to the expiration of the term of the stock option or SAR.

     (c)  Disability.  Unless  otherwise  provided  in an Award  Notice,  upon a
Participant's  Disability,  any stock option or SAR may be exercised in whole or
in part within one year after the date of the Participant's  Disability and then
only to the extent that the Participant would have been entitled to exercise the
stock option or SAR at the date of his or her Disability,  subject to all of the
conditions on exercise imposed by the Plan and the Award Notice and prior to the
expiration of the term of the stock option or SAR.

     (d)  Retirement or Termination  for an Approved  Reason.  Unless  otherwise
provided in an Award Notice, upon a Participant's  Retirement or termination for
an Approved Reason, any stock option or SAR may be exercised in whole or in part
within one year after the date of the  Participant's  Retirement or  termination
for an Approved  Reason and then only to the extent that the  Participant  would
have been entitled to exercise the stock option or SAR at the date of his or her
Retirement  or  termination  for an Approved  Reason,  and subject to all of the
conditions on exercise imposed by the Plan and the Award Notice and prior to the
expiration of the term of the stock option or SAR.

     (e) Other  Termination.  If a  Participant's  employment  with the  Company
terminates for a reason other than death, Disability, Retirement, or an Approved
Reason,  and unless otherwise  provided in an Award Notice,  any stock option or
SAR may be  exercised  in  whole or in part  within  30 days  after  the date of
termination  of employment  and then only to the extent such stock option or SAR
is vested and  exercisable at the time of the  termination  of  employment,  and
subject to all of the  conditions on exercise  imposed by the Plan and the Award
Notice and prior to the expiration of the term of the stock option or SAR.

     (f) Acceleration and Extension.  Notwithstanding  this Section or the terms
of  an  Award  Notice,  the  Committee  may:  (i)  accelerate  the  vesting  and
exercisability  of a stock  option or SAR in order to allow its  exercise by the
estate or beneficiary of a deceased  Participant or by the disabled,  retired or
terminated  Participant;  and (ii)  extend the period  for  exercise  of a stock
option or SAR,  provided such  extension  does not exceed the term of such stock
option or SAR.

     Section  14.2 Other  Awards.  The  Committee  shall have the  authority  to
promulgate  rules and regulations to determine the treatment of the other Awards
of a  Participant  under  the  Plan in the  event of such  Participant's  death,
Disability, Retirement, or termination from the Company.

                                   Article 15
                        DIVIDEND AND DIVIDEND EQUIVALENTS

     If an Award is  granted  in the form of a Stock  Award,  stock  option,  or
performance  share, or in the form of any other stock-based grant, the Committee
may choose,  at the time of the grant of the Award or any time  thereafter up to
the time of the Award's payment, to include as part of such Award an entitlement
to receive dividends or dividend equivalents, subject to such terms, conditions,
restrictions  and/or  limitations,  if  any,  as the  Committee  may  establish.
Dividends and dividend  equivalents shall be paid in such form and manner (i.e.,
lump sum or installments), and at such time(s) as the Committee shall determine.
All dividends or dividend  equivalents  which are not paid currently may, at the
Committee's discretion, accrue interest, be reinvested into additional shares of
Common Stock or, in the case of dividends  or dividend  equivalents  credited in
connection  with Stock Awards or performance  shares,  be credited as additional
Stock Awards or performance  shares and paid to the Participant if and when, and
to the extent that,  payment is made pursuant to such Award. The total number of
shares available for grant under Section 6.1 shall not be reduced to reflect any
dividends or dividend  equivalents that are reinvested into additional shares of
Common Stock or credited as additional Stock Awards or performance shares.

                                   Article 16
                               DEFERRAL OF AWARDS

     At the  discretion of the  Committee,  payment of any Award,  dividend,  or
dividend  equivalent,  or any portion thereof,  may be deferred by a Participant
until such time as the  Committee may  establish.  All such  deferrals  shall be
accomplished  by  the  delivery  of  a  written,  irrevocable  election  by  the
Participant prior to the time established by the Committee for such purpose,  on
a form  provided  by the  Company.  Further,  all  deferrals  shall  be  made in
accordance with administrative guidelines established by the Committee to ensure
that  such  deferrals  comply  with all  applicable  requirements  of the  Code.
Deferred payments shall be paid in a lump sum or installments,  as determined by
the Committee. Deferred Awards may also be credited with interest, at such rates
to be determined by the Committee,  and, with respect to those  deferred  Awards
denominated in the form of Common Stock, with dividends or dividend equivalents.

                                   Article 17
                                  MISCELLANEOUS

     Section 17.1 Nonassignability.

     (a) In General.  Except as  otherwise  determined  by the  Committee  or as
otherwise provided in Section 17.1(b),  no Awards or any other payment under the
Plan shall be subject in any manner to alienation,  anticipation, sale, transfer
(except by will or the laws of descent and distribution), assignment, pledge, or
encumbrance,  nor shall any Award be payable to or  exercisable  by anyone other
than the Participant to whom it was granted.

     (b) Non-qualified Stock Options. The Committee shall have the discretionary
authority to grant Awards of  non-qualified  stock options or amend  outstanding
Awards of  non-qualified  stock  options to provide  that they be  transferable,
subject  to such terms and  conditions  as the  Committee  shall  establish.  In
addition to any such terms and  conditions,  the following  terms and conditions
shall apply to all transfers of non-qualified stock options:

         (1) Permissible  Transferors. Except  as  otherwise  permitted  by  the
Committee, the only Participants permitted to transfer their non-qualified stock
options are those  Participants  who are,  on the date of the  transfer of their
non-qualified stock option, a corporate officer of PTI, or a Director.

         (2) Permissible Transferees.  Transfers shall only be permitted to: (i)
the Participant's "Immediate Family Members," as that term is defined in Section
17.1(b)(9);  (ii) a trust or trusts for the exclusive  benefit of such Immediate
Family Members;  or (iii) a family partnership or family limited  partnership in
which each partner is, at the time of transfer and all times subsequent thereto,
either an Immediate Family Member or a trust for the exclusive benefit of one or
more Immediate Family Members.

         (3) No Consideration. All transfers shall be made for no consideration.

         (4) Subsequent Transfers.  Once a Participant transfers a non-qualified
stock  option,  any  subsequent  transfer  of  such  transferred  option  shall,
notwithstanding  Section  17.1(b)(1)  to the contrary,  be permitted,  provided,
however,  such subsequent transfer complies with all of the terms and conditions
of this Section 17.1, with the exception of Section 17.1(b)(1).

         (5) Transfer  Agent.   In  order for a transfer to  be  effective,  the
Committee's  designated  transfer agent must be used to effectuate the transfer.
The costs of such transfer agent shall be borne solely by the transferor.

         (6) Withholding. In order for a transfer to be effective, a Participant
must agree in writing prior to the transfer on a form provided by the Company to
pay  any and  all  payroll  and  withholding  taxes  due  upon  exercise  of the
transferred  option. In addition,  prior to the exercise of a transferred option
by a transferee,  arrangements  must be made by the Participant with the Company
for the payment of all payroll and withholding taxes.

         (7) Terms and Conditions of Transferred Option.  Upon transfer,  a non-
qualified stock option  continues to be governed by and subject to the terms and
conditions  of the Plan and the  option's  applicable  administrative  guide and
Award Notice.  A transferee of a  non-qualified  stock option is entitled to the
same rights as the  Participant  to whom such  non-qualified  stock  options was
awarded,  as if no  transfer  had taken  place.  Accordingly,  the rights of the
transferee  are subject to the terms and conditions of the original grant to the
Participant,  including provisions relating to expiration date,  exercisability,
option price and forfeiture.

         (8) Notice to Transferees.  The Company shall be under no obligation to
provide a transferee with any notice  regarding the transferred  options held by
the transferee upon forfeiture or any other circumstance.

         (9) Immediate  Family  Member.  For purposes of this Section  17.1, the
term "Immediate Family Member" shall mean the Participant and his or her spouse,
children  or  grandchildren,  whether  natural,  step  or  adopted  children  or
grandchildren.

     Section  17.2  Amendments  to  Awards.   The  Committee  may  at  any  time
unilaterally amend any unexercised,  unearned, or unpaid Award,  including,  but
not by way of limitation, Awards earned but not yet paid, to the extent it deems
appropriate; provided, however, that any such amendment which, in the opinion of
the Committee,  is adverse to the  Participant  shall require the  Participant's
consent.

     Section 17.3 Regulatory  Approvals and Listings.  Notwithstanding  anything
contained in this Plan to the contrary,  the Company shall have no obligation to
issue or deliver  certificates  of Common Stock  evidencing  Stock Awards or any
other Award  resulting in the payment of Common Stock prior to (i) the obtaining
of any approval from any  governmental  agency which the Company  shall,  in its
sole discretion,  determine to be necessary or advisable,  (ii) the admission of
such shares to listing on the stock  exchange  on which the Common  Stock may be
listed,  and (iii) the completion of any registration or other  qualification of
said shares  under any state or federal law or ruling of any  governmental  body
which the Company shall,  in its sole  discretion,  determine to be necessary or
advisable.

     Section 17.4 No Right to Continued  Employment or Grants.  Participation in
the Plan  shall not give any  Employee  any right to remain in the employ of the
Company.  The Company  reserves the right to terminate any Employee at any time.
Further,  the  adoption of this Plan shall not be deemed to give any Employee or
any other  individual any right to be selected as a Participant or to be granted
an Award. In addition, no Employee having been selected for an Award, shall have
at any time the right to receive any additional Awards.

     Section 17.5 Amendment/Termination.  The Committee may suspend or terminate
the Plan at any time for any reason with or without prior  notice.  In addition,
the  Committee  may,  from time to time for any reason and with or without prior
notice,  amend the Plan in any manner, but may not without stockholder  approval
adopt any amendment  which would increase the number of shares  available  under
the Plan, or which would require the vote of the stockholders of PTI pursuant to
Section 162(m) of the Code, but only insofar as such amendment  affects  Covered
Employees,  or if such approval is necessary or deemed advisable with respect to
tax,   securities,   or  other  applicable  laws,   policies,   or  regulations.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, and subject to Section 4.4, the Committee may not
revoke,  remove or reduce any vested  right of a  Participant  without the prior
written consent of such Participant.

     Section 17.6  Governing Law. The Plan shall be governed by and construed in
accordance  with the laws of the  State of  Delaware,  except as  superseded  by
applicable   federal  law,  without  giving  effect  to  its  conflicts  of  law
provisions.

     Section 17.7 No Right, Title, or Interest in Company Assets. No Participant
shall have any rights as a stockholder as a result of  participation in the Plan
until the date of issuance of a stock  certificate  in his or her name,  and, in
the case of restricted  shares of Common  Stock,  such rights are granted to the
Participant under the Plan. To the extent any person acquires a right to receive
payments from the Company  under the Plan,  such rights shall be no greater than
the rights of an unsecured creditor of the Company and the Participant shall not
have any rights in or against any  specific  assets of the  Company.  All of the
Awards granted under the Plan shall be unfunded.

     Section 17.8 Section 16 of the Exchange Act. In order to avoid any Exchange
Act  violations,  the  Committee  may,  from  time to  time,  impose  additional
restrictions upon an Award, including but not limited to, restrictions regarding
tax  withholdings  and  restrictions  regarding  the  Participant's  ability  to
exercise  Awards  under the  Company's  broker-assisted  stock  option  exercise
program, if any.

     Section 17.9 No Guarantee of Tax Consequences. No person connected with the
Plan in any  capacity,  including,  but not  limited  to,  the  Company  and its
directors, officers, agents and employees, makes any representation, commitment,
or guarantee that any tax  treatment,  including,  but not limited to,  federal,
state and local income,  estate and gift tax treatment,  will be applicable with
respect to the tax treatment of any Award,  any amounts deferred under the Plan,
or paid to or for the benefit of a Participant  under the Plan, or that such tax
treatment  will  apply  to  or be  available  to a  Participant  on  account  of
participation in the Plan.