SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION STATEMENT
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 Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)
    (2))
[X] Definitive Proxy Statement
[ ] Definitive Additional Materials
[ ] Soliciting Material Pursuant to ss. 240.14a-11(c) or ss. 240.14a-12


                          PRE-PAID LEGAL SERVICES, INC.
                (Name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)


                                 NOT APPLICABLE
       (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement if Other Than Registrant)

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

[X] No fee required.
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    (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: ___________________.

    (4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:_________________.

    (5) Total fee paid: ___________________.

[ ] Fee paid previously 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: __________________.

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     (3) Filing Party: __________________________.

     (4) Date Filed: ___________________________.



                          PRE-PAID LEGAL SERVICES, INC.
                              321 East Main Street
                                  P. 0. Box 145
                            Ada, Oklahoma 74821-0145


                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS


TO THE HOLDERS OF SHARES OF COMMON STOCK:

     The Annual Meeting of Shareholders  of PRE-PAID LEGAL  SERVICES,  INC. (the
"Company") will be held in the Seminar Center at Pontotoc  Technology  Center at
601 West 33rd Street in Ada, Oklahoma, on Thursday,  May 29, 2003, at 1:00 p.m.,
local time, for the following purposes:

     (1)  To elect two members to the Company's Board of Directors.

     (2)  To  approve  the  amendment  of the  Company's  Stock  Option  Plan to
          increase  the maximum  number of shares of Common  Stock in respect of
          which  options  may be  granted  under  the  Stock  Option  Plan  from
          2,000,000  shares to  3,000,000  shares and to extend the  termination
          date of the Stock  Option Plan from  December 12, 2005 to December 12,
          2012.

     (3)  To transact such other  business as may properly be brought before the
          Annual Meeting or any adjournment thereof.

     The Annual Meeting may be recessed from time to time and, at any reconvened
meeting,  action  with  respect to the matters  specified  in this notice may be
taken without further notice to shareholders unless required by the bylaws.

     Shareholders of record of Common Stock at the close of business on April 4,
2003 are  entitled  to notice  of,  and to vote on all  matters  at,  the Annual
Meeting.  A list of all  shareholders  will be available  for  inspection at the
Annual Meeting and, during normal business hours the ten days prior thereto,  at
the offices of the Company, 321 East Main Street, Ada, Oklahoma.


                                   BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

                                   /s/ KATHRYN WALDEN
                                   ----------------------------------
                                   Kathryn Walden, Secretary


Ada, Oklahoma
April 14, 2003

Please vote by telephone or by using the Internet as  instructed on the enclosed
Proxy  Card or  complete,  sign and date the  enclosed  Proxy Card and return it
promptly in the envelope enclosed for that purpose. You may nevertheless vote in
person if you do attend the meeting.





                                 PROXY STATEMENT
                          PRE-PAID LEGAL SERVICES, INC.
                              321 East Main Street
                                  P. 0. Box 145
                            Ada, Oklahoma 74821-0145

                       2003 ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

     The following  information is furnished in connection  with the 2003 Annual
Meeting of Shareholders  of PRE-PAID LEGAL SERVICES,  INC. (the "Company") to be
held in the Seminar Center at Pontotoc Technology Center at 601 West 33rd Street
in Ada,  Oklahoma,  on Thursday,  May 29, 2003, at 1:00 p.m.,  local time.  This
Proxy Statement and accompanying  materials will be mailed on or about April 14,
2003 to holders of record of Common Stock as of the record date.

     The record  date for  determining  shareholders  entitled  to notice of the
Annual  Meeting  and to vote has been  established  as the close of  business on
April 4, 2003. On that date, the Company had 17,835,726  shares of Common Stock,
par value  $.01 per  share,  outstanding  and  eligible  to vote,  exclusive  of
treasury  stock.  Holders of record of the Company's  Common Stock on the record
date will be entitled  to one vote for each share held on all  matters  properly
brought before the Annual Meeting.

     The Board of Directors of the Company is soliciting the enclosed proxy. All
costs of soliciting proxies for the Annual Meeting will be borne by the Company.
In addition to use of the mails, proxies may be solicited by telephone, telecopy
or personal  interview by directors,  officers or other regular employees of the
Company. No additional compensation will be paid to directors, officers or other
regular  employees for such services.  Copies of solicitation  materials will be
furnished to banks,  brokerage  houses,  fiduciaries  and custodians  holding in
their names  shares of Common Stock  beneficially  owned by others to forward to
such beneficial owners.  The Company will, upon request,  reimburse such persons
for their  reasonable  expenses in  forwarding  proxy  materials  to  beneficial
owners.

     Any shareholder  returning the accompanying proxy or voting by telephone or
the  Internet  may revoke  such proxy at any time prior to its  exercise  by (a)
giving written notice to the Company of such revocation, (b) voting in person at
the Annual Meeting,  (c) voting by telephone or using the Internet as instructed
below (your latest  telephone or Internet proxy is counted) or (d) executing and
delivering  to the Company a later dated proxy.  Written  revocations  and later
dated proxies  should be sent to PRE-PAID LEGAL  SERVICES,  INC., P. O. Box 145,
Ada, Oklahoma 74821-0145, Attention: Kathryn Walden, Secretary.

                              ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

     The Board of  Directors  of the  Company  consists  of six  members  and is
divided into three classes  equal in size,  with the term of office of one class
expiring each year.  The Board of Directors has nominated and proposes that John
W.  Hail,  whose  term  as a  director  expires  as of  the  Annual  Meeting  of
Shareholders  for 2003, be re-elected for a three-year  term as a director,  and
Steven R. Hague,  a nominee for election to the Board of  Directors,  be elected
for a three-year term as a director.

     The election of directors  requires the affirmative  vote of a plurality of
the shares of Common Stock  voting in person or by proxy at the Annual  Meeting.
All proxies  received by the Board of Directors of the Company will be voted, in
the absence of instructions to the contrary, FOR the re-election of John W. Hail
and the election of Steven R. Hague to the Board of Directors.

     Should the  nominees  for  election to the Board of  Directors be unable to
serve for any reason, the Board of Directors may, unless the Board by resolution
provides for a lesser  number of  directors,  designate  substitute  nominees in
which  event all proxies  received  without  instructions  will be voted for the
election of such  substitute  nominees.  However,  to the best  knowledge of the
Board of Directors of the Company, the named nominees will serve if elected.

     The  following is certain  information  about each director and nominee for
director of the Company:



                                                                                     Existing
                Name                          Age            Director Since        Term Expires
----------------------------               --------          --------------        ------------
                                                                              
John W. Hail                                  72                  1998                 2003
Peter K. Grunebaum                            69                  1980                 2004
Randy Harp                                    47                  1990                 2004
Harland C. Stonecipher                        64                  1976                 2005
Martin H. Belsky                              58                  1998                 2005
Steven R. Hague                               58                   NA                   NA


John W. Hail
     John W. Hail is the founder of Advantage  Marketing  Systems,  Inc. and has
served as Chief  Executive  Officer and  Chairman of the Board of  Directors  of
Advantage  Marketing  Systems,  Inc. since its inception in June 1988. From July
1986 through May 1988, Mr. Hail served as Executive Vice President, Director and
Agency  Director  of the  Company  and also  served as  Chairman of the Board of
Directors of TVC Marketing, Inc., which was the exclusive marketing agent of the
Company  from April 1984  through  September  1985.  Mr.  Hail also  serves as a
director of Duraswitch Industries, Inc.

Peter K. Grunebaum
     Mr. Grunebaum is currently Managing Director of Fortrend International,  an
investment  firm  headquartered  in New York,  New York,  a position he has held
since 1989.

Randy Harp
     Mr. Harp was named Chief Financial Officer in March 1990 and served in that
capacity  until May 2000 and has served as Chief  Operating  Officer since March
1996. Mr. Harp is a Certified Public Accountant.

Harland C. Stonecipher
     Mr.  Stonecipher  has been the  Chairman of the Board of  Directors  of the
Company since its  organization  in 1976 and served as Chief  Executive  Officer
until  March  1996 and since  February  1997.  Mr.  Stonecipher  also  served as
President  of the  Company  at  various  times  through  January  1995 and since
December 2002. Mr.  Stonecipher  also serves as an executive  officer of various
subsidiaries  of the Company and as a director of Advantage  Marketing  Systems,
Inc. Mr.  Stonecipher  is employed  pursuant to an employment  agreement  which,
unless sooner terminated, expires on June 30, 2003, subject to automatic renewal
for  successive  one-year  periods  unless  either  party gives at least 30 days
notice of an election to terminate.

Martin H. Belsky
     Mr. Belsky,  currently Dean and Professor of Law at the University of Tulsa
College of Law, teaches courses in  constitutional  law,  ethics,  international
law, and oceans policy.  Previously, Mr. Belsky was Dean and Professor of Law at
Albany Law School from 1986 to 1995.

Steven R. Hague
     Steven R. Hague has been a partner at One Source  Advisors  since 1999. One
Source  Advisors is a management  and  actuarial  consulting  firm that provides
services  related  to  product  development;  merger,  acquisition  and  venture
development;  bank insurance development and analysis;  operational  performance
analysis and financial reporting and forecasting. Previously Mr. Hague was Chief
Executive  Officer of American  Southwest  Holding Company from 1998 to 1999 and
President  and CEO of Bankers  Protective  Life  Insurance  Company from 1993 to
1997. Mr. Hague has been nominated to serve as a director of Advantage Marketing
Systems, Inc.

Board Meetings and Committees

     The Board of Directors  held four meetings  during the year ended  December
31,  2002 and  acted by  unanimous  consent  four  times.  During  such year all
directors  listed above  attended at least 75% of the meetings of the full Board
and the committees on which they served.

     The Board of Directors has  established  an Executive  Committee  currently
consisting of Messrs.  Stonecipher,  Harp and  Grunebaum and an Audit  Committee
currently  consisting of Messrs.  Grunebaum and Belsky. The Executive  Committee
may exercise all of the powers of the Board of  Directors,  except to the extent
limited  by law.  The  Audit  Committee  makes  recommendations  to the Board of
Directors  concerning  the selection of and oversees the Company's  relationship
with its  independent  auditors  and reviews with the  independent  auditors the
scope and  results  of the  annual  audit.  The  Audit  Committee  also  reviews
financial  statements and reports  including  proxy  statements,  Forms 10-K and
Forms 10-Q, reviews all significant financial reporting issues and practices and
monitors internal control  policies.  Each of the members of the Audit Committee
meets the  independence  standards  of the New York  Stock  Exchange.  The Audit
Committee held five meetings during 2002.

     Additionally,  during  2002,  the Board of  Directors  formed a  nominating
committee and a compensation  committee,  both  currently  consisting of Messrs.
Grunebaum and Belsky.  The  nominating  committee is designed to assist the full
Board  of  Directors  in  selecting  individuals  for  service  on the  Board of
Directors and  evaluating  their  performance.  The  compensation  committee was
designed to evaluate and recommend the compensation of the executive officers of
the Company to assure they are  compensated  effectively in a manner  consistent
with the overall  objectives  of the Company and to  communicate  the  Company's
compensation  policies and the reasoning  behind such policies to  shareholders.
Both of these  committees  were  designed to consist of two or more  independent
directors  as defined in and  determined  pursuant to the  corporate  governance
policies of the New York Stock Exchange. Members of these committees are elected
by the Board of Directors annually for one-year terms, or until their successors
shall be duly elected and qualified.  During 2002, the nominating  committee did
not meet and the compensation committee met one time.

Compensation of Directors

     Directors who are also employees of the Company or its subsidiaries receive
no  additional  compensation  for  their  services  as  directors.  Non-employee
directors of the Company receive $500 per board and committee  meeting attended.
Under the Company's Stock Option Plan, each non-employee  director also receives
on March 1 of each year options to purchase 10,000 shares of Common Stock. These
options are immediately  exercisable as of the date of grant as to one-fourth of
the shares covered by the options and vest in additional  one-fourth  increments
on the following June 1st,  September 1st and December 1st in the year of grant,
subject to continued  service by the non-employee  director during such periods.
Options  granted to  non-employee  directors under the Stock Option Plan have an
exercise  price  equal to the closing  price of the Common  Stock on the date of
grant as reported by the New York Stock  Exchange and expire five years from the
date of grant. Additionally,  Martin H. Belsky receives a consulting fee, not to
exceed $6,000 annually,  for his consulting  services,  primarily related to the
relationship  between  the  Company  and its  provider  law firms.  The Board of
Directors has considered such  compensation and determined that such arrangement
does not impair his judgment or independence.

     The Board of  Directors  recommends  that the  shareholders  vote "FOR" the
re-election  of John W. Hail and the election of Steven R. Hague to the Board of
Directors.


                                  PROPOSAL TWO
        APPROVAL OF AMENDMENT TO INCREASE SHARES UNDER STOCK OPTION PLAN
           AND TO EXTEND THE TERMINATION DATE OF THE STOCKOPTION PLAN

     The  Company's  Stock  Option Plan (the  "Plan") is intended to promote and
advance the interests of the Company and its  shareholders  by providing a means
for the  Company  to  encourage  stock  ownership  by  directors,  officers  and
employees  of the  Company  and  its  subsidiaries  in  order  to  increase  the
proprietary interests of such persons in the growth and financial success of the
Company.  The  Plan  was  originally  adopted  by  the  Board  and  approved  by
shareholders  in 1995. In May 2000,  the Plan was amended to increase the number
of shares authorized under the Plan from 1,000,000 to 2,000,000 shares. The Plan
currently expires in December 2005.

     The Board of Directors has adopted,  subject to  shareholder  approval,  an
amendment to the Plan to increase  the maximum  number of shares of Common Stock
in respect of which options may be granted under the Plan from 2,000,000  shares
to  3,000,000  shares  and to extend  the Plan  until  December  12,  2012.  The
amendment  was adopted in order to ensure that the Company will continue to have
appropriate  equity  incentive  compensation  opportunities  for its  directors,
officers, and employees.  The Board of Directors considers the Company's ability
to offer  competitive  compensation  opportunities,  including  long-term equity
based  compensation in the form of stock options,  as an important  component of
the Company's  management  retention  and  strategy.  Because it is necessary to
amend  the Plan to  authorize  additional  shares,  the Board  believes  it is a
convenient  time to extend the term of the Plan to avoid having to do so in 2004
or 2005.

Description of the Plan

     Administration.  The Plan is  administered by the Board of Directors of the
Company. The Board has the authority to appoint a committee ("Committee") of not
less  than  two  members  of the  Board  to  administer  the  Plan  and to  make
determinations  concerning  the  granting of options  thereunder.  The Board may
appoint and remove  members of the  Committee  as it sees fit from time to time.
The Board or Committee  has sole  authority  to determine  the persons who shall
participate  in the Plan and the extent of their  participation  and to construe
and  interpret  provisions  of the Plan and any option  granted  thereunder.  No
member of the Board or Committee will be liable for any action or  determination
made in good faith,  and such  members will be entitled to  indemnification  and
reimbursement   in  the  manner   provided  in  the  Company's   Certificate  of
Incorporation, or as otherwise permitted by law.

     Shares  Subject to the Plan.  The maximum  number of shares of Common Stock
reserved  for  issuance  under the Plan and in respect of which  options  may be
granted  pursuant  to the terms of the Plan will be  increased  by the  proposed
amendment from  2,000,000  shares to 3,000,000  shares.  These shares consist of
authorized  but unissued  shares or treasury  shares held by the  Company.  This
number  is  subject  to  appropriate  equitable  adjustment  in the event of any
subdivision  or  consolidation  of shares or other  capital  adjustment,  or the
payment of a stock  dividend  or other  increase  or  decrease  in such  shares,
effected without receipt of consideration by the Company.  In the event that any
outstanding  option under the Plan for any reason expires or is terminated prior
to the end of the period  during  which  options may be  granted,  the shares of
Common Stock  allocable to the  unexercised  portion of such option may again be
subject to options granted under the Plan.

     Eligibility.  Persons  eligible to  participate in the Plan consist of such
directors,  officers and  employees of the Company and its  subsidiaries  as the
Board or Committee  may  determine  from time to time.  There is no limit to the
total number of eligible  persons to whom options may be granted under the Plan.
The Board or Committee will determine in accordance with the Plan the persons to
whom option awards are granted, the size of any option awards and the conditions
applicable thereto.

     Exercise of Options. Options may be exercised solely by the optionee during
the  optionee's  lifetime  at the rate of 20% of the  number of  shares  covered
thereby per year  beginning  one year from the date of grant,  unless  otherwise
provided  by the Board or  Committee  at the time the option is  granted.  After
becoming exercisable,  options granted under the Plan may be exercised, in whole
or in part, at any time prior to the  expiration or  termination of the options.
The exercise price of options  granted under the Plan is determined by the Board
or the  Committee,  but may not be less than the fair market value of the Common
Stock on the date of grant of the option.  The exercise price of options granted
under the Plan must be paid upon the  exercise  of the option and may be paid in
cash or, if so determined by the Board or the Committee,  the exercise price may
be paid in property or installment payments.

     Nontransferability.  Options  granted under the Plan are not  assignable or
transferable  by the  optionee  except  by will or by the  laws of  descent  and
distribution,  and are  exercisable  during the optionee's  lifetime only by the
optionee.

     Effect of Death,  Termination of Employment and Retirement.  If an optionee
dies while  employed by the  Company at a time when the  optionee is entitled to
exercise  an option  granted  pursuant  to the  Plan,  then at any time or times
within 12 months after the optionee's  death the options may be exercised by the
optionee's  estate,  personal  representative,  beneficiary or other person upon
whom such right  devolves by will or the laws of descent and  distribution,  and
except as so exercised,  will expire at the end of such 12-month period.  If the
optionee's  employment  is  terminated  as a result of a violation of law or for
cause,  the optionee's  options whether or not then  exercisable  will terminate
immediately. If the termination is for a reason other than a violation of law or
for cause,  the  optionee  will have the right to exercise his or her options at
any time within 30 days after such termination,  except if the termination is as
a  result  of  retirement  as  described  below.  In  the  event  an  optionee's
termination  of employment is as a result of retirement  with the consent of the
Company,  the optionee  will have the right to exercise his or her option within
three  months  after  retirement  to  the  extent  exercisable  on  the  day  of
retirement.  However,  in any  event,  no  option  may be  exercised  after  its
expiration date set forth in the applicable option agreement.

     Option  Awards  to  Non-Employee  Directors.  Each  member  of the Board of
Directors who is not an employee of the Company (a  "Non-Employee  Director") is
eligible  to  receive  option  grants  under the Plan on the same basis as other
eligible persons. In addition, each Non-Employee Director receives annual grants
of stock options to purchase  10,000 shares of Common Stock on March 1st of each
year during the term of the Plan, subject to there being at the time of any such
grant sufficient remaining shares of Common Stock available for awards under the
Plan.  The purchase price for each share placed under an annual option grant for
a Non-Employee  Director is equal to 100% of the fair market value of such share
on the date the option is granted.  No options will be granted to a Non-Employee
Director after any date that the  Non-Employee  Director ceases to be a director
of the Company.  All stock  options  granted to a  Non-Employee  Director  shall
consist of options  that do not qualify as  incentive  stock  options  under the
Code.

     Except as  otherwise  provided  in the Plan,  the annual  option  grants to
Non-Employee Directors are fully vested and immediately  exercisable as to 2,500
shares on the date of grant and will become vested and exercisable in additional
increments  of 2,500  shares on June 1,  September 1, and December 1 in the year
the option is granted;  provided however,  that it is a condition to the vesting
of each  incremental  portion  of the  option  that  the  Non-Employee  Director
continue to be a  Non-Employee  Director of the Company  through the  applicable
vesting date. The period during which such Non-Employee  Director options may be
exercised is 5 years from the date of grant,  subject to earlier  termination as
provided in the Plan.

     Recapitalization  or  Reorganization.  In the  event  of a  subdivision  or
consolidation of shares or other capital  adjustment,  or the payment of a stock
dividend or other increase or decrease in such shares  effected  without receipt
of  consideration  by  the  Company,  the  number  of  shares  covered  by  each
outstanding   option  and  the  price  of  each   outstanding   option  will  be
proportionately adjusted.

     Subject to any  required  action by the  shareholders,  if the Company is a
party to a merger or consolidation  which does not result in a change of control
of the Company,  any option  granted under the Plan will apply to the securities
to which a holder of the number of shares of Common Stock  subject to the option
would have been entitled. If, however, the Company dissolves,  liquidates, or is
reorganized in a manner which results in a change in control of the Company,  or
in the event of a tender or exchange  offer which results in a change in control
of the Company,  the Board or Committee will  determine:  (i) whether all or any
part of the unexercised  portion of any option  outstanding  under the Plan will
terminate;  (ii) whether the options  will become  immediately  exercisable;  or
(iii) whether such options may be exchanged for options  covering  securities of
any  surviving or resulting  corporation,  subject to the  agreement of any such
surviving  or  resulting  corporation,  on terms  and  conditions  substantially
similar to options under the Plan.

     Modification  and  Termination of the Plan. The Board of Directors may from
time to time amend,  alter,  suspend,  or discontinue the Plan or alter or amend
(including any decrease of the option price by cancellation  and substitution of
options or otherwise) any and all options granted thereunder. However, the Board
may not, without  shareholder  approval,  alter the Plan so as to (i) materially
increase the benefits  accruing to participants  under the Plan; (ii) materially
increase the number of  securities  which may be issued under the Plan; or (iii)
materially  modify the  requirements as to eligibility for  participation in the
Plan.  Additionally,  no amendment  may affect any then  outstanding  options or
unexercised   portions  thereof  without  the  consent  of  the  optionee.   The
termination  date of the Plan  will be  extended  from  December  12,  2005,  to
December 12, 2012 except with respect to awards then outstanding.

     Special Provisions  Applicable to Incentive Stock Options. The Board or the
Committee  will  determine at the time of any option  grant  whether such option
will be an incentive  stock option  intended to qualify under Section 422 of the
Internal  Revenue  Code or a  nonstatutory  stock  option.  Options  granted  to
Non-Employee  Directors will not qualify as incentive  stock options.  Incentive
stock options  granted  pursuant to the Plan will comply with all the previously
mentioned  provisions of the Plan  modified by the  following  special terms and
conditions:

          (i) Eligibility.  Persons eligible to receive  incentive stock options
     are employees  (including  officers and directors who are employees) of the
     Company or its subsidiaries only.

          (ii)  Limitations  on Aggregate  Value of Shares  Subject to Incentive
     Stock Options.  The aggregate fair market value as of the date of the grant
     of shares with respect to which incentive stock options are exercisable for
     the first  time by an  optionee  during any  calendar  year will not exceed
     $100,000.

          (iii) Term of Incentive  Stock Options.  Each  Incentive  stock option
     granted under the Plan will not be exercisable  more than 10 years from the
     date the option is granted.

          (iv)  Limitations  for  Certain  Shareholders.  Any  person  who owns,
     directly  or  indirectly,  stock  possessing  more  than  10% of the  total
     combined  voting  power  of all  classes  of stock  of the  Company  or its
     subsidiaries  may not receive an  incentive  stock  option  under the Plan,
     unless at the time the option is granted to such person the exercise  price
     is at least  110% of the fair  market  value of the  shares  covered by the
     option and the option is not exercisable after the expiration of five years
     from the date of the grant.

     Federal Income Tax Consequences. An optionee receiving an option qualifying
as an "incentive  stock  option" under Section 422 of the Internal  Revenue Code
will not recognize taxable income upon the grant or exercise of the option. Upon
disposition of the shares  acquired,  the optionee will recognize a capital gain
or loss  based on the  difference  between  the amount  realized  and the option
price, assuming certain holding period requirements are satisfied and the shares
are held as a capital asset. However, alternative minimum tax may be applicable.
The Company will not receive any tax deduction in  connection  with the grant or
exercise  of  an  incentive   stock  option  or,  assuming  the  holding  period
requirements are satisfied, sale of the shares by an optionee.

     An  optionee  receiving a  nonstatutory  stock  option  will not  recognize
taxable  income on the grant of an option,  but will be deemed to have  received
ordinary  income on the exercise of an option equal in amount to the  difference
between the fair market value of the shares  acquired as of the date of exercise
and the option  price.  The Company  will be entitled to a tax  deduction at the
same time in the same amount.  An  optionee's  tax basis in the shares  acquired
will be equal to the fair market  value of the shares as of the date of exercise
for  purposes of measuring  any gain or loss on  subsequent  disposition  of the
shares.

Summary of Award Activity Pursuant to the Plan

     The  following  table  indicates  as of April 4, 2003 the  number of shares
authorized for issuance under the Plan  (including the proposed  increase in the
authorized  number  of  shares),  the  aggregate  number of  shares  subject  to
outstanding awards (net of cancellations),  the number of shares issued pursuant
to prior awards, and the number of shares available for future awards (including
the proposed increase in the authorized number of shares):



                                 Subject to Outstanding                                    Available for Future
    Authorized (including             Awards (net of          Issued Pursuant to Prior   Awards (including proposed
     proposed increase)             cancellations) (1)                 Awards                     increase)
    ---------------------        -----------------------      -------------------------  ---------------------------
                                                                                     
          3,000,000                     1,052,752                    791,998                     1,155,250


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

(1)  Includes  options to purchase  821,252  shares of Common  Stock  granted to
     executive officers and eligible employees of the Company at exercise prices
     ranging  from  $16.46 to $32.81  per  share.  The  exercise  prices of such
     options  are 100% of the market  value of the  Common  Stock on the date of
     grant.  The expiration dates of such options range from April 2004 to March
     2011. Of such options,  685,000 were granted to four executive  officers of
     the Company and 136,252  were  granted to a total of ten  employees  of the
     Company  other than  executive  officers.  Also  includes  231,500  options
     granted  to  five  Non-Employee  Directors  pursuant  to the  annual  grant
     provisions described above at exercise prices ranging from $17.03 to $39.50
     per share.

     Based on the closing  sale price of the Common Stock as reported by the New
York Stock  Exchange on April 1, 2003 of $17.48 per share,  the market  value of
the  total  number  of shares of Common  Stock  previously  issued  pursuant  to
exercise of option awards under the Plan was $13.8 million,  the market value of
shares  underlying  outstanding  awards under the Plan was $18.4 million and the
market  value of shares  available  for future  awards  (including  the proposed
increase in the number of shares  authorized  for  issuance  under the Plan) was
$20.2 million.

Consequences of Non-Approval

     If the  shareholders do not approve the proposed  amendment of the Plan, no
further  awards will be made  pursuant to the Plan after all existing  available
awards of 155,250  options are granted  before the existing  expiration  date of
December 12, 2005.

Recommendation

     Provided that the shareholders  approve the proposed amendment of the Plan,
the  increased  number of shares will be  available  for awards to all  eligible
participants  in the Plan and the Plan will be  extended.  Except  as  described
above in connection with the annual awards to Non-Employee Directors,  the Board
of Directors has not at this time considered or approved any future awards under
the Plan, and, as a result, the identity of future award recipients and the size
and terms of future awards are not known at this time.


     The  Board of  Directors  recommends  that the  shareholders  for "FOR" the
proposed  amendment to increase the number of shares under the Stock Option Plan
and to extend the termination date of the Stock Option Plan.


Fiscal 2002 Audit and Other Fees

     The firm of Grant Thornton LLP was originally  engaged in September 2001 to
serve as the Company's  independent  auditor and  subsequently  retained for the
annual audit for the fiscal year ended  December 31, 2002.  The  aggregate  fees
billed by Grant Thornton LLP for the annual audit of the Company's  consolidated
financial  statements  for the fiscal year 2002 and for reviews of the Company's
interim financial statements included in Forms 10-Q for 2002 are set forth below
under the caption  Audit Fees.  Grant  Thornton LLP  performed no services,  and
therefore no fees were billed by Grant  Thornton LLP for  financial  information
systems design and  implementation,  or for other  professional  services during
fiscal 2002:

   Audit Fees......................................................  $   157,500
   Financial Information Systems Design and Implementation Fees....  $         -
   All Other Fees..................................................  $    22,350

     The Audit  Committee  has  considered  whether the  provision  of non-audit
services  by  Grant  Thornton  LLP  is  compatible  with   maintaining   auditor
independence.


                             AUDIT COMMITTEE REPORT

In  accordance  with its  written  charter  adopted  by the  Board of  Directors
("Board"),  the Audit Committee of the Board ("Committee")  assists the Board in
fulfilling its  responsibility for oversight of the quality and integrity of the
accounting,  auditing and financial reporting  practices of the Company.  During
fiscal  2002,  the  Committee  met  five  times,  and the  Committee  chair,  as
representative  of the Committee,  discussed the interim  financial  information
contained in each quarterly  earnings  announcement with the CFO and independent
auditors prior to public release.

In discharging its oversight  responsibility as to the audit process,  the Audit
Committee  obtained from the  independent  auditors a formal  written  statement
describing  all  relationships  between the  auditors and the Company that might
bear on the auditors' independence  consistent with Independence Standards Board
Standard No. 1, "Independence Discussions with Audit Committees," discussed with
the  auditors  any   relationships   that  may  impact  their   objectivity  and
independence  and  satisfied  itself  as  to  the  auditors'  independence.  The
Committee  also  discussed  with  management  and the  independent  auditors the
quality and adequacy of the Company's internal controls.  The Committee reviewed
with the independent auditors their audit plans, audit scope, and identification
of audit risks.

The  Committee  discussed  and  reviewed  with  the  independent   auditors  all
communications  required by generally  accepted  auditing  standards,  including
those  described  in  Statement  on  Auditing  Standards  No.  61,  as  amended,
"Communication  with Audit Committees" and, with and without management present,
discussed and reviewed the results of the independent  auditors'  examination of
the financial statements.

The Committee reviewed the audited financial statements of the Company as of and
for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2002, with management and the independent
auditors. Management has the responsibility for the preparation of the Company's
financial  statements and the independent  auditors have the  responsibility for
the examination of those statements.

Based on the  above-mentioned  review and  discussions  with  management and the
independent auditors,  the Committee recommended to the Board that the Company's
audited  financial  statements be included in its Annual Report on Form 10-K for
the fiscal year ended  December 31,  2002,  for filing with the  Securities  and
Exchange  Commission.  The Committee  intends to recommend  reappointment of the
independent auditors to the Board.

          Peter K. Grunebaum                       Martin H. Belsky
          Committee Chairman                       Committee Member


                  EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION AND OTHER INFORMATION

Executive Officers

         The current executive officers of the Company are named below:
           Name                                 Position
----------------------       ---------------------------------------------------
Harland C. Stonecipher       Chairman of the Board of Directors, Chief Executive
                              Officer and President (since December 30, 2002)
Randy Harp                   Chief Operating Officer
Kathleen S. Pinson           Vice President of Regulatory Compliance
Steve Williamson             Chief Financial Officer

     For  descriptions  of  the  business   background  and  other   information
concerning Mr. Stonecipher and Mr. Harp, see "Election of Directors" above.

Kathleen S. Pinson
     Ms.  Pinson was named  Controller of the Company in May 1989 and has been a
Vice President of the Company since June 1982. Ms. Pinson served on the Board of
Directors  from April 1990 until August 2002 when she resigned from the Board of
Directors together with three other directors as part of a corporate  governance
initiative  to have outside  directors  comprise the majority of the Board.  Ms.
Pinson has been employed by the Company since 1979 and currently  serves as Vice
President of Regulatory Compliance. Ms. Pinson is a Certified Public Accountant.

Steve Williamson
     Mr.  Williamson  was named  Chief  Financial  Officer of the Company in May
2000.  From April 1997 until his employment  with the Company in March 2000, Mr.
Williamson  served as the Chief  Financial  Officer of Peripheral  Enhancements,
Inc., an electronic memory assembly company. Prior to April 1997, Mr. Williamson
served as Director in Charge of Banking  Practice for Horne & Company,  a public
accounting firm. Mr. Williamson is a Certified Public Accountant.

Executive Compensation

     The following table sets forth the compensation paid by the Company and its
subsidiaries  for services  rendered  during the years ended  December 31, 2002,
2001 and 2000 to the chief executive officer and to each other person serving as
an executive officer of the Company as of December 31, 2002 (or former executive
officers) whose compensation exceeded $100,000 during 2002. Such individuals are
referred to herein as the "named executive officers."



                           Summary Compensation Table

                                                                          Long Term
                                            Annual Compensation(1)      Compensation

                                                                         Securities
                                                                         Underlying          All Other
  Name and Principal Position      Year     Salary       Bonus (2)         Options        Compensation (3)
-------------------------------    ----     --------     ----------     -------------     ----------------

                                                                               
Harland C. Stonecipher.........    2002     $160,789     $2,011,785        100,000            $11,404
   Chairman of the Board and       2001      157,755      1,473,556        100,000             11,740
   Chief Executive Officer         2000      157,755      1,230,297        100,000             11,970

Wilburn L. Smith...............    2002            -      2,483,260              -              7,135
   Former President (until         2001            -      1,967,795              -              7,110
   December 30, 2002)              2000            -      1,562,532              -              5,250

Randy Harp.....................    2002      233,654              -         50,000              8,800
   Chief Operating Officer         2001      167,019         32,500         80,000              5,282
                                   2000      145,196         40,000         50,000              7,575

Kathleen S. Pinson.............    2002      130,095              -          5,000              5,300
   Vice President of Regulatory    2001      110,613         12,500          5,000              5,282
   Compliance                      2000      100,763          9,000          5,000              3,900

Steve Williamson...............    2002      120,384          5,414          5,000              3,774
   Chief Financial Officer         2001       99,365          7,500         15,000              1,740


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

(1)  Annual compensation amounts include amounts deferred at the election of the
     named individuals  pursuant to a non-qualified  deferred  compensation plan
     adopted by the Company in 2002.

(2)  Bonus to Mr.  Stonecipher  consists of override  commissions  earned by Mr.
     Stonecipher  pursuant  to his  employment  agreement  with the  Company  of
     $240,000  during  each of 2002,  2001 and 2000,  and  override  commissions
     earned by Mr. Stonecipher with respect to commissions earned by PPL Agency,
     Inc.,  a Company  affiliated  insurance  agency,  of  $57,932,  $56,576 and
     $50,467  during 2002,  2001 and 2000,  respectively.  The bonus amount also
     includes  $1,176,980  and  $939,830  during  2001 and  2000,  respectively,
     representing a payment of $10 for each marketing associate who participated
     in the Company's "Fast Start to Success" training program that commenced in
     January  1997.  Effective  August  2002,  and in lieu of the $10  fee,  Mr.
     Stonecipher began receiving one-half of one percent of collected membership
     fees and,  accordingly,  the 2002 bonus amount includes  $1,033,340 of Fast
     Start  bonuses and  $680,513 of  membership  fee  bonuses.  See  "Executive
     Compensation and Other Information-Employment  Contracts and Termination of
     Employment and Change-in-Control  Arrangements" and "Certain  Relationships
     and Related Transactions."

     Bonus to Mr.  Smith  consists of override  commissions  and other fees paid
     with respect to commissions earned by, and new sales associate sponsorships
     within,  the  Company's  multilevel  marketing  sales  force.  The  amounts
     indicated for Mr. Smith do not include any amounts received by Mr. Smith as
     a  result  of his  equity  ownership  in  certain  entities  which  are not
     affiliated  with the Company but which are engaged in the  marketing of the
     Company's  legal service  memberships  and earn  commissions  from sales of
     memberships. See "Certain Relationships and Related Transactions."

     Bonus to Mr.  Williamson  during  2002  pertained  to the  completion  of a
     transaction related to the sale of a subsidiary and bonuses to Messrs. Harp
     and Williamson and Ms. Pinson during 2001 and 2000 consisted of performance
     bonuses based upon the  achievement by the Company of certain  earnings per
     share goals.

(3)  All Other  Compensation  of Mr.  Stonecipher  includes  $4,972,  $5,331 and
     $5,660 for the years  2002,  2001 and 2000,  respectively,  relating to the
     time  value of  premiums  paid  pursuant  to a certain  split  dollar  life
     insurance  agreement  that provides for such premiums to be refunded to the
     Company upon Mr. Stonecipher's death, and also includes $6,432,  $6,409 and
     $6,310 for the years 2002, 2001 and 2000, respectively, representing vested
     contributions  by the Company to the Employee  Stock  Ownership  and Thrift
     Plan and Trust (the "ESOP").

     All Other Compensation of Messrs. Smith, Harp and Williamson and Ms. Pinson
     consists of vested contributions by the Company to the ESOP.

     The following  table  contains  information  concerning  the grant of stock
options during the year ended December 31, 2002 under the Company's Stock Option
Plan to each of the named  executive  officers who received option grants during
such year.





                        Option Grants in Last Fiscal Year
                                                                                       Potential Realizable
                                                                                         Value at Assumed
                                                                                       Annual Rates of Stock
                                                                                      Price Appreciation For
                                 Individual Grants                                        Option Term (3)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -----------------------
                                           % of Total
                              Number of      Options
                             Securities    Granted to
                             Underlying     Employees    Exercise or
                               Options      in Fiscal     Base Price   Expiration
           Name              Granted (1)      Year       ($/Sh) (2)       Date           5%            10%
-------------------- ---------------------- ---------- -------------- -------------- ----------- -------------
                                                                              
Harland C. Stonecipher         100,000         20.0%        $24.20      5/31/2007      $668,601    $1,477,434
Randy Harp                      50,000         10.0          24.20      5/31/2007       334,301       738,717
Kathleen S. Pinson               5,000          1.0          24.20      5/31/2007        33,430        73,872
Steve Williamson                 5,000          1.0          24.20      5/31/2007        33,430        73,872
-----------------




(1)  All  options  granted  to the named  executive  officers  during  2002 were
     granted under the Company's  Stock Option Plan.  The exercise price of such
     options is equal to 100% of the market  price per share of the Common Stock
     on the date of grant.  The options granted to Mr.  Stonecipher and Mr. Harp
     were  immediately  exercisable  as of the date of grant as to one-fourth of
     the shares covered thereby and became exercisable in additional  one-fourth
     increments  on June 1,  September  1, and  December  1, 2002.  The  options
     granted to Ms. Pinson and Mr.  Williamson  become  exercisable  in one-half
     increments  beginning one year after the grant date.  The options expire if
     not exercised five years after the date of grant.

(2)  Exercise  price of the  options  must be paid in cash or,  if the  Board of
     Directors  so  permits,  by  tender  of  shares  of  Common  Stock or other
     property, or by a combination of such means of payment.

(3)  Potential  realizable  value is the  amount  that  would be  realized  upon
     exercise by the named executive officer of the options immediately prior to
     the expiration of their respective terms,  assuming the specified  compound
     annual  rates  of  appreciation  of the  Company's  Common  Stock  over the
     respective terms of the options.  These amounts  represent assumed rates of
     appreciation  only.  Actual gains, if any, on stock option exercises depend
     on  the  future   performance  of  the  Common  Stock  and  overall  market
     conditions.  There can be no assurances that the potential values reflected
     in this table will be achieved.






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


                                                            Number of Securities                 Value of
                                                           Underlying Unexercised        Unexercised In-the-Money
                                                                 Options at                     Options at
                                                             December 31, 2002            December 31, 2002 (1)
                             Acquired          Value     ---------------------------    ---------------------------
           Name            on Exercise       Realized    Exercisable   Unexercisable    Exercisable   Unexercisable
-------------------------  -----------      ----------   -----------   -------------    -----------   --------------
                                                                                         
Harland C. Stonecipher        100,000       $1,265,000     500,000              -       $1,181,500      $       -
Randy Harp                     50,000          636,000     256,000         24,000          632,750        168,000
Kathleen S. Pinson              5,000           45,250      12,500          7,500           24,725         34,350
Steve Williamson                 -               -          19,500         10,500           38,350         80,350
----------------------------



(1)  Value  of  unexercised   in-the-money  options  at  December  31,  2002  is
     calculated  based on the market  price per share of Common  Stock of $26.20
     per share on December 31, 2002 less the option exercise price.


Equity Compensation Plans

     The  following  table  provides  information  with respect to the Company's
equity compensation plans as of December 31, 2002, (other than its tax qualified
Employee Stock Ownership Plan designed to provide retirement benefits).



                                                                                            Number of securities
                                                                                          remaining available for
                                        Number of securities                               future issuance under
                                          to be issued upon        Weighted average      equity compensation plans
                                             exercise of           exercise price of       (excluding securities
                                        outstanding options,     outstanding options,          reflected in
                                         warrants and rights      warrants and rights           column (a))
            Plan Category                        (a)                     (b)                        (c)
------------------------------------    --------------------     --------------------    -------------------------
                                                                                         
Equity compensation plans approved
  by security holders (1)...........            1,192,752                 $26.69                  15,250 (1)
Equity compensation plans not
  approved by security holders (2)..              305,640                  23.72                       - (2)
                                        --------------------     --------------------    -------------------------
Total...............................            1,498,392                 $26.09                  15,250
                                        --------------------     --------------------    -------------------------
-----------


(1)  These stock options have been issued pursuant to the Company's Stock Option
     Plan which has been approved by security holders.

(2)  These  stock  options  have been  issued  to the  Company's  Regional  Vice
     Presidents  ("RVPs") in order to encourage  stock ownership by its RVPs and
     to increase  the  proprietary  interest  of such  persons in its growth and
     financial  success.  These options have been granted  periodically  to RVPs
     since 1996.  Options  are  granted at fair market  value at the date of the
     grant and are generally immediately exercisable for a period of three years
     or  within 90 days of  termination,  whichever  occurs  first.  There  were
     244,679,  131,288  and 90,892  total  options  granted to RVPs in the years
     ended December 31, 2002, 2001 and 2000,  respectively.  The Company has not
     adopted any limit for the number of options that may be granted to RVPs.



Employment Contracts and Termination of Employment and Change-in-Control
 Arrangements

     The Company has an employment agreement with Mr. Stonecipher that commenced
in January 1993,  and, unless sooner  terminated,  expires on June 30, 2003. The
agreement will be automatically  extended for successive one-year periods unless
either party elects to terminate at least 30 days prior to the expiration  date.
Under the terms of the  employment  agreement,  Mr.  Stonecipher  is to  receive
compensation  as determined by the Board of Directors but not less than $157,755
per year. In addition to his annual salary,  Mr. Stonecipher also is entitled to
receive a  supplemental  retirement  benefit in the  amount of $26,000  per year
payable on the first day of the month  following his  termination  of employment
and  annually  thereafter  until the earlier of his death or the date upon which
ten such  payments have been made.  Mr.  Stonecipher  must meet certain  minimal
conditions  subsequent to the  termination of his employment in order to receive
such payments.  The Company's  obligation for supplemental  retirement  benefits
pursuant to the employment agreement is subject to the continuation of a certain
split  dollar  life  insurance  agreement  between  the  Company  and Shirley A.
Stonecipher,  Mr. Stonecipher's wife, described below. If the Company terminates
the employment  agreement for any reason (other than Mr. Stonecipher's death) or
Mr. Stonecipher  terminates the agreement for certain specified events including
a change of control of the Company (as defined in the agreement), the Company is
required to pay Mr.  Stonecipher  a lump sum payment  equal to the present value
(using a 3%  discount  rate) of the  remaining  salary and  retirement  benefits
throughout the term of the agreement.

     Pursuant to an agreement with the Company, Mr. Stonecipher is also entitled
to an override  commission,  payable  monthly,  in an amount  equal to $.025 per
active membership as compensation for his efforts in assisting in the growth and
development  of new  production  for  the  Company  and  its  subsidiaries.  The
agreement  provides that the amount of the commissions  shall in no event exceed
$20,000 per month. The payment of such commissions to Mr. Stonecipher  continues
during his  lifetime  and after his death to his  designated  beneficiaries  and
their successors.  The agreement requires that Mr. Stonecipher devote reasonable
efforts to the generation of new membership  sales for the Company.  The amounts
paid to Mr.  Stonecipher  under this  agreement  during  the  fiscal  year ended
December  31, 2002 are  reflected  in the summary  compensation  table set forth
above. Mr.  Stonecipher has deferred payments under this agreement of $63,176 at
December 31, 2002.  Mr.  Stonecipher  also receives a portion of the  annualized
commission  revenue of PPL Agency,  Inc., which is owned by Mr. Stonecipher as a
nominee for the Company. See "Certain  Relationships and Related  Transactions."
Such  amounts  paid  to Mr.  Stonecipher  are  also  reflected  in  the  summary
compensation table set forth above.

     Commencing  in January  1997,  the Company  implemented  its "Fast Start to
Success" program pursuant to which electing marketing associates may participate
in Company-sponsored sales training programs, including use of a video and other
training aides  developed by the Company.  The cost to each marketing  associate
for  participation  in  the  program  is  typically  $249,  except  for  special
promotions the Company implements from time to time. Mr. Stonecipher  received a
payment of $10 for each  marketing  associate  who  participated  in the program
until  August  2002 at which  time  this  form of  compensation  ceased  and was
replaced by one-half of one percent (.5%) of Membership premiums collected. Such
amounts paid to Mr. Stonecipher are reflected in the summary  compensation table
set forth above. Mr.  Stonecipher has deferred  payments under this agreement of
$134,279  at  December  31,  2002.  In January  2003,  the Board of the  Company
approved a modification in this compensation arrangement for 2003 to provide for
Mr.  Stonecipher  to receive a monthly  commission of one-quarter of one percent
(0.25%) of monthly Membership  premiums so long as monthly  Membership  premiums
are at least  85% of the  comparable  month of the  prior  year and a  quarterly
commission  of  one-quarter  of one  percent  (0.25%)  of  quarterly  Membership
premiums so long as quarterly Membership premiums exceed Membership premiums for
the comparable quarter of the prior year.

     In July 1984, the Company  entered into a life insurance  arrangement  with
Shirley A. Stonecipher,  Mr.  Stonecipher's  wife, whereby the Company agreed to
pay  premiums on a life  insurance  policy  covering Mr.  Stonecipher.  The face
amount  of the  policy  is  $600,000  and  Mrs.  Stonecipher  is the  owner  and
beneficiary. Mrs. Stonecipher has an agreement with the Company whereby upon Mr.
Stonecipher's  death,  the proceeds of the policy will be paid to the Company in
an amount  sufficient to reimburse  premiums paid to date by the Company and any
supplemental  retirement payments made pursuant to his employment contract. This
agreement is secured by a collateral assignment of the policy proceeds.

     In November 2002, the Company adopted a deferred  compensation  plan, which
permits executive officers to defer receipt of a portion of their  compensation.
Deferred  amounts  accrue  hypothetical  returns based upon  investment  options
selected  by the  participant.  Deferred  amounts  are paid in cash based on the
value of the investment option and are generally  payable following  termination
of employment in a lump sum or in  installments  as elected by the  participant,
but the plan  permits  on  demand  distributions,  which  are  subject  to a 10%
penalty, and provides for financial hardship distributions, distributions in the
event of total disability or death and  distributions  upon a change in control.
The plan also  provides for a death  benefit of $500,000  for each  participant.
Although  the plan is unfunded  and  represents  an  unsecured  liability of the
Company to the participating  officers, the Company has purchased  company-owned
variable life insurance policies insuring the lives of the group of participants
to finance its  obligations  under the plan.  Such life  insurance was purchased
subsequent  to December  31, 2002.  As of December  31, 2002,  the Company had a
deferred compensation  liability for Mr. Stonecipher,  Mr. Harp, Ms. Pinson, Mr.
Williamson  and Mr. Smith (the  Company's  former  President)  in the amounts of
$258,249, $5,192, $1,923, $1,846 and $40,095, respectively.


Board of Director Interlocks and Insider Participation in Executive Compensation
 Decisions

     The Board of  Directors  of the  Company is  responsible  for  establishing
compensation of Harland C.  Stonecipher,  Chairman,  Chief Executive Officer and
President of the Company. The Board of Directors formed a compensation committee
during 2002 as  described  above and  recommended  that Mr.  Stonecipher  accept
one-half of one percent  (.5%) of Membership  premiums  collected in lieu of the
$10 payment for each  associate that  participated  in the Fast Start to Success
training program.  Mr.  Stonecipher's  cash compensation for 2002 was determined
pursuant to his  employment  agreement and other  arrangements  with the Company
approved by the Board of Directors prior to 2002, as amended by the Compensation
Committee's  recommendation  described above. However, during 2002, the Board of
Directors  approved the grant of stock options to Mr.  Stonecipher,  Randy Harp,
Steve Williamson and Kathleen S. Pinson,  each executive  officers and directors
of the Company,  for the purchase of 100,000,  50,000,  5,000 and 5,000  shares,
respectively,  under the Company's Stock Option Plan. Messrs. Stonecipher, Smith
and  Harp and Ms.  Pinson  participated  in the  deliberations  of the  Board of
Directors with respect to such stock option grants.


Report On Executive Compensation

     As  previously  indicated,  the  Board of  Directors  of the  Company  (the
"Board") is responsible for establishing compensation of Harland C. Stonecipher,
the  Chairman,  Chief  Executive  Officer  and  President.  The  Board  formed a
compensation  committee during 2002. The compensation  committee was designed to
evaluate and recommend the compensation of the executive officers of the Company
to assure  they are  compensated  effectively  in a manner  consistent  with the
overall objectives of the Company and to communicate the Company's  compensation
policies  and  the  reasoning   behind  such  policies  to   shareholders.   The
compensation  committee met one time during 2002 and recommended a change in the
compensation  structure of Mr.  Stonecipher but did not recommend any changes to
the compensation of any other executive officer.

     The  base  salary  of Mr.  Stonecipher  for  2002  was as  provided  in his
employment  agreement with the Company entered into in 1993. The principal terms
of his  employment  agreement are described  elsewhere  herein.  See  "Executive
Compensation  and Other  Information - Employment  Contracts and  Termination of
Employment and Change-in-Control Arrangements." The level of base salary for Mr.
Stonecipher in the employment agreement was determined through negotiations with
Mr.  Stonecipher at the time the employment  agreement was entered into, and the
base  salaries  of the other  executive  officers  of the  Company for 2002 were
determined  by Mr.  Stonecipher  based  upon his  assessment  of the  respective
executive  officer's  performance  and potential  contribution  to the Company's
financial and operational objectives.

     Pursuant to his employment  agreement,  Mr. Stonecipher  receives a monthly
override  commission  of  $.025  per  active  membership,   subject  to  certain
limitations,  and a portion of the annualized  commission revenue of PPL Agency,
Inc.,  which is owned by Mr.  Stonecipher  as a nominee of the  Company.  During
2002,  Mr.  Stonecipher  earned  $297,932  pursuant  to  these  commission-based
incentive compensation arrangements.  These arrangements foster the goals of the
Company's  compensation  policy by  linking a  significant  portion of the chief
executive  officer's  annual  compensation to the level of revenues derived from
active  memberships,  thereby creating strong financial  incentives to the chief
executive  officer for the continued  growth of the Company's  membership  base.
During 2002, new membership  sales  increased 6% to 773,767  compared to 728,295
during 2001,  and active  memberships in force of 1,382,306 at December 31, 2002
increased 11% compared to 1,242,908  memberships  in force at December 31, 2001.
Over the last five years,  the  compounded  growth rate of the Company's  active
membership  base has exceeded 25% per year and earnings per share has grown from
$.48 per share to $1.82 per share for 2002.

     During 1997, the Company  implemented its "Fast Start to Success"  program.
The "Fast  Start to  Success"  program  is a  Company-sponsored  field  training
program for the Company's  marketing  associates that utilizes audio,  video and
other  training  aides  developed by the Company and is designed to increase new
memberships sold and new sales associates recruited per participating associate.
Participating associates are required to pay the Company a one-time training fee
to offset the Company's  direct and indirect  costs  incurred in developing  and
maintaining the program.  Mr. Stonecipher received a payment from the Company of
$10 for each marketing associate who participated in the "Fast Start to Success"
program through July 2002 and such payments totaled  $1,033,340 during 2002. Mr.
Stonecipher  was  instrumental in the conception and development of the program,
which the Board  believes  has  enhanced  the  Company's  marketing  efforts and
contributed  to the growth of new  membership  sales during  2002.  Beginning in
August  2002  and in lieu  of the  $10 for  each  Fast  Start  participant,  Mr.
Stonecipher began receiving one-half of one percent (.5%) of Membership premiums
collected.  This change in Mr.  Stonecipher's  compensation was designed to more
closely link his compensation with realized membership revenues.  Another change
in this arrangement was made for 2003 as described above to tie the compensation
based on percentage of premiums to the  achievement  of specified  thresholds of
total membership premiums in 2003 compared to membership premiums in 2002.

     The Company  maintains a Stock Option Plan (the  "Plan")  pursuant to which
the Board may grant options to purchase  Common Stock to directors and employees
of the Company,  including the executive officers. The exercise price of options
granted  under the Plan may not be less than the fair market  value per share of
Common Stock on the date of grant.  In authorizing  option awards under the Plan
to  executive  officers,  the Board  considers  various  factors  including  the
recommendation of the Chairman,  the relative  responsibilities of the optionee,
the  Board's  subjective  evaluation  of the  optionee's  performance,  and  the
optionee's  relative  equity  interest  in the  Company in the form of stock and
options.  The Board  granted  options  during  2002 to the  Company's  executive
officers  as follows:  Harland C.  Stonecipher  - 100,000;  Randy Harp - 50,000,
Steve  Williamson  - 5,000 and Kathleen S. Pinson - 5,000.  The Board  considers
stock options to be an important element of the Company's incentive compensation
policies  and  anticipates  that  additional  options will be granted to certain
executive officers during 2003.

     In 2002, the Company adopted a deferred compensation plan for its executive
officers as described under  "Executive  Contracts and Termination of Employment
and  Change-in-Control  Arrangements."  This plan is intended to supplement  the
Company's  existing  tax-qualified  retirement plans to provide the participants
with improved long-term retirement security.

     Section  162(m) of the Internal  Revenue Code provides that the Company may
be limited in  deducting  annual  compensation  in excess of $1 million  paid to
certain executive officers.  The Board of Directors has considered the effect of
Section 162(m) on the Company's  compensation program. The deferred compensation
plan was adopted in 2002 in part to be responsive to the  limitations of Section
162,  to permit  the  deferral  of  compensation  that  would not  otherwise  be
deductible  under  Section 162. In certain  circumstances  it may be in the best
interests of the Company and its  shareholders  to retain the flexibility to pay
compensation that may not be deductible under Section 162.

     The  preceding  report is presented  by each of the current  members of the
Board of Directors.

 Harland C. Stonecipher        Randy Harp          Martin H. Belsky
    John W. Hail           Peter K. Grunebaum



Shareholder Return Performance Graph

     The following graph compares the cumulative  total  shareholder  returns of
the  Company's  Common Stock during the five years ended  December 31, 2002 with
the cumulative total shareholder returns of the Russell 2000 Index and the Media
General Personal Services  industry index. The comparison  assumes an investment
of $100 on January 1, 1998 in each of the Company's  Common  Stock,  the Russell
2000 Index and Media  General's  Personal  Services  industry index and that any
dividends were reinvested.




                Comparison of Cumulative Total Return of Company,
                      Russell 2000 Index and Industry Index

                              [GRAPH APPEARS HERE]

                                                               FISCAL YEAR ENDING

                                        1997        1998        1999        2000        2001        2002
                                        ----        ----        ----        ----        ----        ----
                                                                                   
Pre-Paid Legal Services, Inc.           100.00       96.53       70.20       74.59       64.06       76.64
Personal Services Index                 100.00      102.69       46.71       43.55       71.00       68.78
Russell 2000 Index                      100.00       97.20      116.24      111.22      112.36       88.11





                 SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS
                                 AND MANAGEMENT

     The  following  table  sets  forth  certain   information   concerning  the
beneficial  ownership  of shares of Common  Stock of the  Company by each person
(other  than  directors  and  executive  officers of the  Company)  known by the
Company to be the  beneficial  owner of more than five percent of the issued and
outstanding Common Stock. The information is based on Schedules 13D or 13G filed
by the applicable  beneficial owner with the Securities and Exchange  Commission
or other information provided to the Company by the beneficial owner.



                 Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners
                                                                           Beneficial Ownership
                                                                        --------------------------
                                                                          Number         Percent
                                                                            of              of
               Name and Address of Beneficial Owner                       Shares          Claim
               ------------------------------------                     -------------   ----------
                                                                                      
Thomas W. Smith
    323 Railroad Avenue
    Greenwich, CT  06830.........................................       4,038,951 (1)       22.7

Thomas N. Tryforos
    323 Railroad Avenue
    Greenwich, CT  06830.........................................       2,845,503  (1)      16.0
Scott Vassalluzzo
    323 Railroad Avenue
    Greenwich, CT  06830.........................................       2,800,700  (1)      15.7
---------------------


(1)  Included in the shares of Common Stock indicated as  beneficially  owned by
     Thomas W.  Smith  ("Smith"),  Thomas  N.  Tryforos  ("Tryforos")  and Scott
     Vassalluzzo  ("Vassalluzzo")  are  2,780,600  shares as to which  they have
     shared voting and shared dispositive power. In addition, Smith beneficially
     owns  1,258,351  shares of Common  Stock as to which he has sole voting and
     dispositive power, Tryforos beneficially owns 64,903 shares of Common Stock
     as to  which he has sole  voting  and  dispositive  power  and  Vassalluzzo
     beneficially  owns  20,100  shares of Common  Stock as to which he has sole
     voting and dispositive power. Of the shares indicated as beneficially owned
     by Smith,  Tryforos and  Vassalluzzo,  3,138,951,  2,785,103  and 2,791,600
     shares in the  aggregate,  respectively,  are  beneficially  owned in their
     capacities as investment managers for certain managed accounts.

     The  following  table  sets  forth  certain   information   concerning  the
beneficial  ownership  of shares of Common  Stock of the  Company as of April 4,
2003 by (a) each  director or nominee for director of the  Company,  (b) each of
the named executive  officers,  and (c) all of the directors,  nominee and named
executive officers of the Company as a group.



                       Security Ownership of Directors, Nominee and Named Executive Officers

                                                                               Beneficial Ownership (1)
                                                                             ------------------------------
                                                                                Number of        Percent of
          Name of Director, Nominee or Named Executive Officer                   Shares             Class
          ----------------------------------------------------               ---------------     ----------
                                                                                               
Harland C. Stonecipher
    321 East Main Street, Ada, Oklahoma 74820..........................      1,616,619   (2)         8.8
Randy Harp.............................................................        255,492   (3)         1.4
Kathleen S. Pinson.....................................................         78,646   (4)          *
Peter K. Grunebaum.....................................................         46,200   (5)          *
John W. Hail...........................................................         53,912   (6)          *
Martin H. Belsky.......................................................         44,350   (7)          *
Steve Williamson.......................................................         22,636   (8)          *
Steven R. Hague........................................................              -                -
Wilburn Smith..........................................................        106,217   (9)          *
All directors, nominees and executive officers as a group (9 persons)..      2,224,072   (10)       11.9

--------------------
* Less than 1%.

(1)  Unless  otherwise  indicated  in the  footnotes to the table and subject to
     community property laws where applicable, each of the shareholders named in
     this table has sole voting and investment  power with respect to the shares
     indicated as  beneficially  owned.  The  percentage  of ownership  for each
     person  is  calculated  in  accordance  with  rules of the  Securities  and
     Exchange  Commission without regard to shares of Common Stock issuable upon
     exercise of outstanding  stock options,  except that any shares a person is
     deemed to own by having a right to  acquire  by  exercise  of an option are
     considered  outstanding  solely for purposes of  calculating  such person's
     percentage ownership.

(2)  Included in the shares of Common Stock indicated as  beneficially  owned by
     Mr.  Stonecipher are (i) 1,147,325  shares as to which he has shared voting
     and shared  dispositive  power with his wife;  (ii) 50,000 shares  issuable
     upon  exercise of  outstanding  options held by his wife earned  during the
     time she was a member of the Board of Directors;  (iii) 19,294 shares owned
     under the ESOP as to which  Mr.  Stonecipher  has sole  voting  power,  but
     shared  dispositive  power;  and,  (iv)  400,000  shares  issuable  to  Mr.
     Stonecipher upon exercise of outstanding options.

(3)  Includes  17,442  shares owned under the ESOP as to which Mr. Harp has sole
     voting power,  but shared  dispositive  power,  and 212,000 shares issuable
     upon exercise of outstanding options.

(4)  Includes 19,285 shares owned under the ESOP as to which Ms. Pinson has sole
     voting power, but shared dispositive power, and 12,500 shares issuable upon
     the exercise of  outstanding  options.  Also,  includes  3,254 shares owned
     under the ESOP by Ms. Pinson's husband, also an employee of the Company, as
     to which he has sole voting power, but shared dispositive power. Ms. Pinson
     disclaims beneficial ownership of shares that are owned by her husband.

(5)  Includes 42,500 shares issuable upon exercise of outstanding options.

(6)  Includes  500 shares  owned by a  corporation  that Mr. Hail  controls  and
     52,500 shares issuable upon exercise of outstanding options.

(7)  Includes 44,000 shares issuable upon exercise of outstanding options.

(8)  Includes  746 shares  owned under the ESOP as to which Mr.  Williamson  has
     sole voting power, but shared dispositive power, and 21,500 shares issuable
     upon exercise of outstanding options.

(9)  Includes  35,351 shares owned under the ESOP as to which Mr. Smith has sole
     voting power, but shared  dispositive  power. Mr. Smith is included in this
     ownership  table because he was an executive  officer during 2002 until his
     resignation  as  President  on  December  30,  2002 to devote  more time to
     membership sales and recruiting.

(10) Includes  835,000 shares issuable upon exercise of outstanding  options and
     95,372  shares  owned under the ESOP as to which the  respective  executive
     officers  and  directors  have sole voting  power,  but shared  dispositive
     power.


                 CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS

     The Company's Chairman, Harland C. Stonecipher, is the owner of PPL Agency,
Inc.  ("Agency").  The Company has agreed to  indemnify  and hold  harmless  the
Chairman for any personal  losses  incurred as a result of his ownership of this
corporation and any income earned by Agency accrues to the Company.  The Company
provides  management  and  administrative  services  for  Agency,  for  which it
receives specified management fees and expense reimbursements.

     Agency's  financial  position and results of operations are included in the
Company's  financial  statements on a combined basis. Agency earned commissions,
net of amounts paid directly to its agents by the underwriter, during 2002, 2001
and 2000 of $138,000, $121,000 and $122,000, respectively,  through its sales of
insurance products of an unaffiliated company. Agency had net income of $33,000,
$16,000  and  $12,000  for the years ended  December  31,  2002,  2001 and 2000,
respectively  after  incurring  commissions  earned by the  Chairman of $58,000,
$57,000  and  $50,000,  respectively,  and  annual  management  fees paid to the
Company of $36,000 for 2002, 2001 and 2000.

     Mr.  Stonecipher  and his wife,  Shirley A.  Stonecipher,  own  Stonecipher
Aviation LLC ("SA") and Mr. and Mrs. Stonecipher together with Wilburn L. Smith,
National  Marketing  Director  and  formerly  President  and a  director  of the
Company, own S & S Aviation LLC ("S&SA"). The Company has agreed to reimburse SA
and S&SA for certain expenses  pertaining to trips made by Company personnel for
Company   business   purposes  using  aircraft  owned  by  SA  and  S&SA.   Such
reimbursement represents the pro rata portion of direct operating expenses, such
as fuel,  maintenance,  pilot fees and landing fees, incurred in connection with
such aircraft based on the relative number of flights taken for Company business
purposes  versus the number of other flights  during the applicable  period.  No
reimbursement  is made for  depreciation,  capital  expenditures or improvements
relating to such  aircraft.  During 2002,  the Company paid  $397,000,  to SA as
reimbursement  for such  transportation  expenses.  The Company paid $436,000 to
S&SA during 2002 as reimbursement for such transportation  expenses. The Company
expects to make similar reimbursements in 2003.

     Mr. Smith had loans from the Company made in December  1992,  December 1996
and October  1998.  The largest  aggregate  balance of the loans during the year
ended December 31, 2002 was $521,000.  These loans were fully repaid during 2002
including interest of $24,100.  Mr. Smith also owns corporations or partnerships
not  affiliated  with the Company but engaged in the  marketing of the Company's
legal service  memberships and which earn commissions from sales of memberships.
These entities earned  commissions of $15,000,  during 2002, of which $9,000 was
net of amounts passed through as commissions to their sales agents.

     Randy Harp,  Chief  Operating  Officer and a director of the  Company,  had
loans from the Company  made in 2000 and 2002,  including an advance of $489,000
during 2002.  The largest  aggregate  balance of the loans during the year ended
December 31, 2002 was $1.0  million.  These loans were fully repaid  during 2002
including interest of $105,200.

     John  W.  Hail,  a  director  of the  Company,  served  as  Executive  Vice
President,  Director  and Agency  Director of the Company from July 1986 through
May 1988 and also served as Chairman of the Board of Directors of TVC Marketing,
Inc.,  which was the  exclusive  marketing  agent of the Company from April 1984
through September 1985.  Pursuant to agreements between Mr. Hail and the Company
entered into during the period in which Mr. Hail was an executive officer of the
Company,  Mr.  Hail  receives  override  commissions  from  renewals  of certain
memberships  initially sold by the Company during such period. During 2002, such
override  commissions on renewals totaled $87,000.  Mr. Hail also owns interests
ranging  from 12% to 100% in  corporations  not  currently  affiliated  with the
Company,  including TVC Marketing, Inc., but which were engaged in the marketing
of the Company's legal service  memberships  and which earn renewal  commissions
from memberships  previously sold. These entities earned renewal  commissions of
$526,000  during 2002, of which  $266,000 was net of amounts  passed  through as
commissions to their sales agents. The Company expects similar  commissions will
be paid in 2003.


                COMPLIANCE WITH SECTION 16 REPORTING REQUIREMENTS

     Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 requires directors and
executive officers of the Company and persons who beneficially own more than 10%
of the  Company's  Common  Stock to file  reports of  ownership  and  changes in
ownership  of the  Company's  Common  Stock  with the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission. The Company is required to disclose delinquent filings of reports by
such persons  during  2002.  Based on a review of the copies of such reports and
amendments thereto received by the Company, or written  representations  that no
filings were required,  the Company  believes that during 2002 all Section 16(a)
filing  requirements  applicable  to its executive  officers,  directors and 10%
shareholders were met.


                                     VOTING

     Directors will be elected by a plurality of the votes of the shares present
in person or  represented  by proxy at the  Annual  Meeting.  All other  matters
properly brought before the Annual Meeting,  including the proposal to amend the
Stock Option Plan will be decided by a majority of the votes cast on the matter,
unless otherwise required by law

     Shares  represented by proxies which are marked  "withhold  authority" with
respect to the election of any one or more nominees for election as directors or
"abstain"  with respect to the Stock Option Plan will be counted for the purpose
of determining  the number of shares  represented by proxy at the meeting.  As a
result,  proxies marked "abstain" with respect to the proposed  amendment to the
Stock  Operation  Plan will have the same  effect as if they were voted  against
approval.  However,  because  directors are elected by a plurality rather than a
majority of the shares  present in person or  represented by proxy at the Annual
Meeting,  proxies marked  "withhold  authority"  with respect to any one or more
nominee will not affect the outcome of the nominee's election unless the nominee
receives no  affirmative  votes or unless other  candidates  are  nominated  for
election as directors.

     Shares represented by limited proxies will be treated as represented at the
meeting only as to such matter or matters for which  authority is granted in the
limited  proxy.  Shares  represented  by proxies  returned by brokers  where the
brokers'  discretionary  authority  is limited by stock  exchange  rules will be
treated as  represented  at the Annual Meeting only as to such matter or matters
voted on in the proxies.


                         INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

     Grant Thornton LLP served as the Company's independent  accountants for the
year ended December 31, 2002. Representatives of Grant Thornton LLP are expected
to be present at the Annual Meeting, with the opportunity to make a statement if
they desire to do so, and will be available to respond to appropriate questions.

     As  previously  reported,  on August 1, 2001,  the  Company  and its former
independent  auditor,  Deloitte  & Touche  LLP  ("Deloitte"),  reached  a mutual
agreement to cease their client-auditor relationship.  Deloitte's reports on the
Company's  financial  statements  for 1999 and 2000 did not  contain  an adverse
opinion or a disclaimer of opinion,  nor were such reports qualified or modified
as to uncertainty, audit scope, or accounting principle. The mutual agreement to
cease the  client-auditor  relationship  was  approved  by the  Company's  audit
committee of the Board of Directors.

     During  the  Company's  two most  recent  fiscal  years and the  subsequent
interim  period  preceding  the  mutual  agreement  to cease the  client-auditor
relationship there were no disagreements between the Company and Deloitte on any
matter of accounting principles or practices, financial statement disclosure, or
auditing  scope  or  procedure,  which  disagreements,  if not  resolved  to the
satisfaction of Deloitte,  would have caused it to make reference to the subject
matter of the disagreement in connection with its report, except as described in
the following paragraph.

     On July 30, 2001, the Company publicly announced that, although it believed
its historical  accounting  policies for commission advance  receivables were in
compliance  with  generally  accepted  accounting  principles  ("GAAP"),  it had
decided not to further contest the SEC's  conclusion that the Company's  advance
commission  payments should be expensed over the one month term of the Company's
legal plan  membership  contracts.  Accordingly,  the Company  announced that it
would amend its previously filed SEC reports to restate its financial statements
to reflect the SEC's conclusion.  In addition,  the Company prepared its interim
financial  statements for the three- and six-month  periods ended June 30, 2001,
in  accordance  with  the  revised   accounting   policy  reflecting  the  SEC's
conclusion.  Deloitte informed the Company and publicly  announced that Deloitte
continues to believe that the Company's  historical  accounting  for  commission
advances was correct and in compliance  with GAAP,  that  Deloitte  respectfully
disagrees with the SEC staff's interpretation of GAAP in this case and the SEC's
decision to require that the Company restate its financial statements,  and that
Deloitte is therefore  unable to render an  unqualified  opinion with respect to
the Company's  restated  financial  statements.  Deloitte  previously  issued an
unqualified opinion on the December 31, 2000 financial  statements  contained in
the Company's Form 10-K and issued unqualified opinions for each of the previous
six years.  Because an unqualified opinion is necessary for the Company to be in
compliance with the SEC reporting  requirements and Deloitte is unable to render
such  an  opinion,  the  Company  had no  choice  but to seek  another  auditor.
Accordingly, Deloitte and the Company, after discussion of these issues with the
Company's audit committee, agreed to cease the client-auditor relationship.  The
Company  authorized  Deloitte to respond fully to the inquiries of the Company's
successor accountant concerning this matter.

     Except for the matter  described  in the  preceding  paragraph,  during the
Company's  two most  recent  fiscal  years  and the  subsequent  interim  period
preceding the mutual agreement to cease the  client-auditor  relationship  there
were no "reportable events" as defined in Item 304 of Regulation S-K promulgated
by the SEC.

     The Company engaged Grant Thornton LLP as its new  independent  accountants
as of September 17, 2001.  During the two most recent fiscal years prior to, and
through, September 17, 2001, the Company did not consult with Grant Thornton LLP
regarding (i) the application of accounting principles to any specific completed
or contemplated transaction, or the type of audit opinion that might be rendered
on the Company's financial statements or (ii) any matter that was the subject of
a disagreement  or reportable  event with the former auditor except as described
in the following paragraph.

         As described above, the Company and Deloitte, its former auditor,
agreed to cease the client-auditor relationship after the Company decided not to
further contest the SEC's conclusion that the Company's advance commission
payments should be expensed over the one month term of the Company's legal plan
     membership contracts. The Company provided Grant Thornton LLP copies of all
correspondence with, and from, the SEC regarding the accounting for advance
commission payments. Based on review of this correspondence and discussions with
the Company, Grant Thornton LLP advised the Company that expensing advance
commission payments over the one-month term of the Company's legal membership
contracts is acceptable under accounting principles generally accepted in the
United States of America.


                          ANNUAL REPORT TO SHAREHOLDERS

     The Company's Annual Report to Shareholders for the year ended December 31,
2002, including audited financial statements,  accompanies this Proxy Statement.
The Annual Report is not  incorporated by reference into this Proxy Statement or
deemed to be a part of the materials for the solicitation of proxies.


                   AVAILABILITY OF ANNUAL REPORT ON FORM 10-K

     A copy of the  Company's  Annual  Report  on Form  10-K for the year  ended
December 31, 2002 filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission is available
without charge to any  shareholder of the Company who requests a copy in writing
from the Company, Attn.: Janice Stinson, Investor Relations, P. O. Box 145, Ada,
Oklahoma 74821-0145.


                            PROPOSALS OF SHAREHOLDERS

     The Board of  Directors  will  consider  properly  presented  proposals  of
shareholders  intended  to be  presented  for  action at the  Annual  Meeting of
Shareholders. Such proposals must comply with the applicable requirements of the
Securities and Exchange Commission and the Company's bylaws. Under the Company's
bylaws, a notice of intent of a shareholder to bring any matter before a meeting
shall be made in writing and  received by the  Secretary of the Company not more
than 150 days and not less than 90 days in advance of the annual  meeting or, in
the event of a special meeting of shareholders, such notice shall be received by
the  Secretary  of the  Company  not later than the close of the  fifteenth  day
following   the  day  on  which  notice  of  the  meeting  is  first  mailed  to
shareholders.  Every such notice by a shareholder  shall set forth: (a) the name
and  address  of the  shareholder  who  intends  to bring up any  matter;  (b) a
representation  that the  shareholder  is a registered  holder of the  Company's
voting stock and intends to appear in person or by proxy at the meeting to bring
up the matter  specified in the notice;  (c) with respect to notice of an intent
to make a nomination,  a description of all understandings among the shareholder
and each nominee and any other person  (naming such person or persons)  pursuant
to which the nomination or  nominations  are to be made by the  shareholder  and
such other  information  regarding each nominee  proposed by the  shareholder as
would have been required to be included in a proxy  statement  filed pursuant to
the proxy rules of the Securities and Exchange  Commission had each nominee been
nominated  by the Board of  Directors  of the  Company;  and (d) with respect to
notice of an intent to bring up any other matter,  a description  of the matter,
and any material interest of the shareholder in the matter.  Notice of intent to
make a nomination shall be accompanied by the written consent of each nominee to
serve as a director of the Company, if elected. All shareholder proposals should
be sent  to the  Secretary  of the  Company  at  P.O.  Box  145,  Ada,  Oklahoma
74821-0145.

     A  shareholder   proposal  submitted  pursuant  to  Rule  14a-8  under  the
Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934 and  intended to be included in the  Company's
proxy  statement  relating to the 2004 Annual  Meeting must be received no later
than  December 12, 2003. To be considered  for  presentation  at the 2004 Annual
Meeting,  although  not  included in the Proxy  Statement  for such  meeting,  a
proposal  must be  received  within the time  period set forth in the  Company's
bylaws as  described  above.  In addition,  the proxy  solicited by the Board of
Directors  for the 2004 Annual  Meeting will confer  discretionary  authority to
vote on any such  shareholder  proposal  presented  at the 2004  Annual  Meeting
unless the Company is provided with notice of such proposal no later than ninety
days prior to the date of the 2004 annual meeting.

                                  OTHER MATTERS

     The Board of Directors of the Company does not know of any other matters to
be  presented  for action at the Annual  Meeting  other than those listed in the
Notice of Meeting and referred to herein.  If any other  matters  properly  come
before the Annual Meeting or any  adjournment  thereof,  it is intended that the
proxy  solicited  hereby be voted as to any such matter in  accordance  with the
recommendations of the Board of Directors of the Company.


                             YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT!
You can vote one of three ways:
1.       Vote by Telephone.
2.       Vote by Internet.
3.       Vote by Mail.

                                VOTE BY TELEPHONE
Your Telephone vote is quick, easy and immediate. Just follow these easy steps:
1.       Read the accompanying Proxy Statement.
2.       Using a Touch-Tone Telephone, call Toll Free 1-800-758-6973 and follow
         the instructions.
3.       When instructed, enter the Control Number, which is printed on the
         lower right-hand corner of the back-side of your proxy card.
4.       Follow the simple recorded instructions.
Please note that all votes cast by Telephone must be made prior to 5:00 p.m.
Central Time, May 27, 2003.

Your telephone vote authorizes the named proxies to vote your shares to the same
extent as if you marked, signed, dated, and returned the proxy card.

       If you vote by telephone, please do not return your proxy by mail.

                                VOTE BY INTERNET
Your Internet vote is quick, convenient and your vote is immediately submitted.
Just follow these easy steps:
1.       Read the accompanying Proxy Statement.
2.       Visit our Internet voting site at http://www.eproxyvote.com/ppd and
         follow the instructions on the screen.

Please note that all votes cast by Internet must be submitted prior to 5:00 p.m.
Central Time, May 27, 2003.

Your Internet vote authorizes the named proxies to vote your shares to the same
extent as if you marked, signed, dated and returned the proxy card.

     If you vote by Internet, please do not return your proxy card by mail.

                                  VOTE BY MAIL
To vote by mail, read the accompanying Proxy Statement then complete, sign and
date the proxy card below. Detach the card and return it in the envelope
provided herein.

  IF YOU ARE NOT VOTING BY TELEPHONE OR INTERNET, DETACH PROXY CARD AND RETURN.

                                      PROXY

                          PRE-PAID LEGAL SERVICES, INC.
               Proxy Solicited on Behalf of the Board of Directors
     Annual Meeting of the Shareholders to be held on Thursday, May 29, 2003

     The undersigned  shareholder of Pre-Paid Legal Services,  Inc., an Oklahoma
corporation (the "Company"), hereby acknowledges receipt of the Notice of Annual
Meeting of  Shareholders  and Proxy  Statement,  each dated April 14, 2003,  and
hereby appoints Randy Harp and Kathleen S. Pinson, or either of them, as proxies
and attorneys-in-fact, with full power to each of substitution, on behalf and in
the name of the  undersigned,  to represent the  undersigned  at the 2003 Annual
Meeting of  Shareholders  of the  Company,  to be held in the Seminar  Center at
Pontotoc  Technology  Center  at 601  West  33rd  Street  in Ada,  Oklahoma,  on
Thursday,  May 29,  2003,  at 1:00  p.m.,  local  time,  and at any  adjournment
thereof,  and to vote all  shares  of  Common  Stock of the  Company  which  the
undersigned would be entitled to vote if then and there personally  present,  on
the matters set forth below.
     (1) Election of  directors:
          ____ FOR all nominees listed below  (except as  indicated).
          ____ WITHHOLD  AUTHORITY to vote for all nominees listed below.

     If you  wish to  withhold  authority  to vote for any  individual  nominee,
     strike a line through that nominee's name in the list below.

                          John W. Hail     Steven R. Hague

     (2)  Approval of  amendment  to increase  number of shares  under the Stock
          Option  Plan  from  2,000,000  to  3,000,000  shares  and  extend  the
          termination date of the Stock Option Plan to December 12, 2012.
          ____     FOR          ____     AGAINST            ____     ABSTAIN

     (3)  In their discretion, upon such matters as may properly come before the
          meeting or any adjournment or adjournments thereof.
  PLEASE SIGN ON THE REVERSE SIDE AND RETURN PROMPTLY IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE.



     THIS  PROXY  WILL BE VOTED AS  DIRECTED  OR, IF NO  CONTRARY  DIRECTION  IS
     INDICATED,  WILL BE VOTED "FOR" THE NOMINEES LISTED IN ITEM 1 AND "FOR" THE
     PROPOSAL  LISTED IN ITEM 2. IF ANY OTHER  MATTERS  ARE  BROUGHT  BEFORE THE
     MEETING  OR IF A NOMINEE  FOR  ELECTION  AS A  DIRECTOR  NAMED IN THE PROXY
     STATEMENT  FOR  ELECTION AS A DIRECTOR IS UNABLE TO SERVE OR FOR GOOD CAUSE
     WILL  NOT  SERVE,   THE  PROXY  WILL  BE  VOTED  IN  ACCORDANCE   WITH  THE
     RECOMMENDATIONS  OF THE  BOARD  ON  SUCH  MATTERS  OR FOR  SUCH  SUBSTITUTE
     NOMINEES AS THE BOARD MAY RECOMMEND.

                                   DATED:   ___________________________, 2003
                                   Printed Name(s) of Shareholder(s)

                                   Signature(s):     ___________________________

                                                     ___________________________

(Please  sign  exactly  as name  appears on the proxy  card.  If shares are held
jointly,  only one  holder  is  required  to sign.  When  signing  as  attorney,
executor, administrator, trustee or guardian, please give full title as such. If
a  corporation,  please  sign  in full  corporate  name by  President  or  other
authorized officer. If a partnership, limited liability company or other entity,
please sign in the name of the entity by an authorized person).