April 16, 2001

Dear Shareholder:

The  Annual  Meeting of Shareholders of Cerner Corporation (the  "Company")
will  be  held  at 10:00 a.m., local time, on May 25, 2001, at  the  Cerner
Associate  Center, located on the Cerner campus at 2901 Rockcreek  Parkway,
North Kansas City, Missouri 64117.  The enclosed notice of the meeting  and
Proxy  Statement  contains detailed information about the  business  to  be
transacted at the meeting.

The  Board of Directors has nominated Gerald E. Bisbee, Jr., Ph.D., Michael
E.  Herman, the present Class III Directors, and Nancy-Ann DeParle to stand
for  election as Class III Directors for a term ending at the  2004  Annual
Meeting  of  Shareholders.  The Board recommends that you  vote  for  these
nominees.

In  addition to the election of the Board of Directors, you are being asked
to approve:

1.  the adoption of the Cerner Corporation 2001 Long-Term Incentive Plan F;

2.  the   adoption of the Cerner Corporation 2001 Associate Stock  Purchase
Plan which qualifies under Section 423 of the Internal Revenue Code; and

3.  the   adoption of a qualified performance-based compensation plan,  the
Cerner Corporation Performance Plan, for purposes of complying with Section
162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code.

The Board recommends that you vote for these items.  On behalf of the Board
of  Directors and Management, I cordially invite you to attend  the  Annual
Meeting of Shareholders.

The  prompt  return of your Proxy in the enclosed postage prepaid  envelope
will help ensure that as many shares as possible are represented.

Very truly yours,
CERNER CORPORATION


Neal L. Patterson
Chairman of the Board of Directors and
Chief Executive Officer

Enclosures



                            CERNER CORPORATION
                          2800 Rockcreek Parkway
                     North Kansas City, Missouri 64117

                 NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                        TO BE HELD ON MAY 25, 2001

      NOTICE  IS  HEREBY GIVEN that the Annual Meeting of  Shareholders  of
Cerner Corporation, a Delaware corporation (the "Company"), will be held at
the Cerner Associate Center, located on the Cerner campus at 2901 Rockcreek
Parkway, North Kansas City, Missouri 64117, on May 25, 2001, at 10:00 a.m.,
local  time,  and thereafter as it may from time to time be adjourned,  for
the following purposes:

     a.   to elect three Class III Directors to serve for a three year term
   until the 2004 Annual Meeting of Shareholders and until their respective
   successors are duly elected and qualified;

     b.    to approve the adoption of the Cerner Corporation 2001 Long-Term
   Incentive Plan F;

     c.    to approve the adoption of the Cerner Corporation 2001 Associate
   Stock  Purchase   Plan which qualifies under Section 423 of the Internal
   Revenue Code;

     d.     to  approve  the  adoption  of  a  qualified  performance-based
   compensation   plan,  the   Cerner  Corporation  Performance  Plan,  for
   purposes  of  complying  with  Section 162(m) of  the  Internal  Revenue
   Code; and

     e.  to  consider  and  act upon any other matters which  may  properly
   come  before  the Annual     Meeting of Shareholders or  any adjournment
   thereof.

      The  foregoing  matters are more fully described in the  accompanying
Proxy Statement.

      In  accordance with the provisions of the Bylaws of the Company,  the
Board of Directors has fixed the close of business on March 30, 2001 as the
record  date for the determination of the holders of Common Stock  entitled
to notice of, and to vote at, the Annual Meeting of Shareholders.

      The Board of Directors of the Company solicits you to sign, date  and
promptly   mail  the  Proxy  in  the  enclosed  postage  prepaid  envelope,
regardless of whether or not you intend to be present at the Annual Meeting
of  Shareholders.  You are urged, however, to attend the Annual Meeting  of
Shareholders.

                              BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS,


                              Randy D. Sims
                              Secretary

North Kansas City, Missouri
April 16, 2001



                            CERNER CORPORATION
                          2800 Rockcreek Parkway
                     North Kansas City, Missouri 64117

                              --------------
                              PROXY STATEMENT
                              --------------

                               INTRODUCTION

      This Proxy Statement is furnished in connection with the solicitation
of  proxies  by  the Board of Directors of Cerner Corporation,  a  Delaware
corporation  (the "Company"), for use at the Annual Meeting of Shareholders
of  the Company to be held on May 25, 2001, commencing at 10:00 a.m., local
time, at the Cerner Associate Center, located on the Cerner campus at  2901
Rockcreek  Parkway, North Kansas City, Missouri 64117, and any  adjournment
thereof (the "Annual Meeting").  The Company anticipates mailing this Proxy
Statement, the accompanying form of Proxy and the Notice of Annual  Meeting
of  Shareholders to the holders of record of outstanding shares  of  common
stock, par value $.01 per share, of the Company (the "Common Stock") as  of
March 30, 2001, on or about April 16, 2001.

      Only  the holders of record of shares of Common Stock as of the close
of  business  on March 30, 2001 are entitled to vote on the matters  to  be
presented at the meeting, either in person or by proxy.  Holders of  shares
of  Common  Stock are entitled to one vote per share outstanding  in  their
names  on  the record date with respect to such matters.  At the  close  of
business on March 30, 2001, there were outstanding and entitled to  vote  a
total  of  34,825,141  shares  of Common Stock,  constituting  all  of  the
outstanding voting securities of the Company.

      You  are requested to complete, date and sign the accompanying  Proxy
and  return  it  promptly in the enclosed postage prepaid  envelope.   Your
Proxy may be revoked at any time prior to its exercise by written notice of
revocation  delivered to the Secretary of the Company.  Attendance  at  the
Annual  Meeting  will not in and of itself constitute  a  revocation  of  a
Proxy, but your Proxy will not be used if you attend the Annual Meeting and
prefer  to vote in person.  The persons designated as proxies were selected
by  the  Board of Directors and are officers and directors of the  Company.
Proxies  duly executed and received in time for the Annual Meeting will  be
voted  in  accordance with shareholders' instructions.  If no  instructions
are given, duly executed Proxies will be voted as follows:

       a.   to  elect  Gerald E.  Bisbee, Jr., Ph.D., Michael E. Herman and
     Nancy-Ann DeParle  as  Class  III  Directors to serve for a three year
     term  until  the  2004  Annual Meeting of Shareholders and until their
     respective successors are duly elected and qualified;

       b.  to approve  the Cerner Corporation 2001 Long-Term Incentive Plan
     F;

       c.  to approve the Cerner Corporation 2001 Associate Stock  Purchase
     Plan which qualifies under Section 423 of the Internal  Revenue  Code;

       d.  to approve a qualified performance-based compensation plan,  the
     Cerner Corporation Performance Plan, for purposes of  complying   with
     Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code; and

       e. in  the  discretion  of  the proxy holder as to  any other matter
     coming before the Annual Meeting.

                               2

                            QUORUM REQUIREMENTS

     The presence in person or by proxy of holders of record of a majority
of  the  outstanding  shares  of  Common Stock is required for a quorum to
transact  business  at  the  Annual Meeting, but if a quorum should not be
present,  the  Annual  Meeting  may be adjourned from time to time until a
quorum is obtained.

              VOTING SECURITIES AND PRINCIPAL HOLDERS THEREOF

      The  table below sets forth information, as of March 15, 2001 (unless
otherwise  indicated  below), with respect to the beneficial  ownership  of
shares  of  Common  Stock by (i) each person known to the  Company  to  own
beneficially  more  than  5%  of  the  aggregate  shares  of  Common  Stock
outstanding,  (ii) each director and nominee for election  as  a  director,
(iii)  each executive officer named in the Summary Compensation Table,  and
(iv)  the executive officers and directors of the Company as a group.  Each
of  the  persons, or group of persons, in the table below has  sole  voting
power  and  sole  dispositive  power as to  all  of  the  shares  shown  as
beneficially owned by them, except as otherwise indicated.



                                              Amount and Nature
                                                of Beneficial        Percent of Shares
Name and Address of Beneficial Owner              Ownership              Outstanding
------------------------------------          -----------------      -----------------
                                                                    
Neal L. Patterson...................             3,635,597(1)             10.38%
Clifford W. Illig...................             3,271,436(2)              9.37%
Waddell & Reed Financial, Inc.......             2,585,075(3)              7.43%
Wellington Management Company, LLP..             2,015,200(4)              5.79%
The Vanguard Group..................             2,006,600(5)              5.76%
Jack A. Newman, Jr..................               115,448                    *
Michael E. Herman...................                64,000                    *
Glenn P. Tobin, Ph.D................                52,167                    *
John C. Danforth....................                45,300                    *
Paul M. Black.......................                45,256                    *
Gerald E. Bisbee, Jr., Ph.D.........                41,400                    *
Earl H. Devanny, III................                32,384                    *
Jeff C. Goldsmith, Ph.D.............                16,215                    *
William B. Neaves, Ph.D.............                   ---                    *
Nancy-Ann DeParle...................                   ---                    *
All directors and executive officers,
as a group (20 persons).............             7,559,789                21.25%


____________________
*  Less than one percent

(1)Includes  196,000  shares held in trust for minor children  with  Jeanne
   Lillig-Patterson,  wife  of Neal L. Patterson, serving  as  trustee  and
   54,000  shares for which Mr. Patterson has shared voting and dispositive
   power.  Excludes 48,314 shares held by Jeanne Lillig-Patterson, wife  of
   Neal  L.  Patterson,  as  to  which Mr. Patterson  disclaims  beneficial
   ownership.   The  address for Mr. Patterson is Cerner Corporation,  2800
   Rockcreek Parkway, North Kansas City, Missouri 64117.

                                 3

(2)Includes  195,667  shares held in trust for minor children with Bonne A.
   Illig,  wife  of Clifford W. Illig, serving as trustee and 62,093 shares
   for  which  Mr.  Illig  has  shared  voting  and dispositive power.  The
   address  for   Mr. Illig is Cerner  Corporation, 2800 Rockcreek Parkway,
   North Kansas City, Missouri 64117.

(3)According  to   a Schedule  13G,  dated January 23, 2001  and  filed  by
   Waddell  &  Reed  Financial, Inc., Waddell & Reed Investment  Management
   Company, registered under Section 203 of the Investment Advisor's Act of
   1940,  has  sole dispositive and voting power with respect to  2,585,075
   shares  of Common Stock.  The address for Waddell & Reed Financial, Inc.
   and  Waddell  & Reed Investment Management Company is 6300 Lamar Avenue,
   P.O. Box   29217, Shawnee Mission, Kansas 66201-9217.

(4)According  to  a  Schedule  13G, dated February 13, 2001  and  filed  by
   Wellington  Management  Company, LLP, Wellington Management Company, LLP
   has  shared dispositive power with respect to 2,015,200 shares of Common
   Stock.   The  address for Wellington Management Company, LLP is 75 State
   Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109.

(5)According  to  a  Schedule 13G, dated February 9, 2001 and filed by  The
   Vanguard  Group, Vanguard Specialized Funds - Vanguard Health Care Funds
   has   sole voting and shared dispositive power with respect to 2,006,600
   shares  of  Common  Stock.    The  address  for The Vanguard  Group  and
   Vanguard   Specialized Funds - Vanguard Health Care Funds is Post Office
   Box  2600,  Valley Forge, Pennsylvania 19482-2600.

                             4

                           ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

      The  Certificate  of Incorporation of the Company provides  that  the
number  of  directors of the Company shall be fixed by, or  in  the  manner
provided in, the Bylaws of the Company and divided into three classes, each
having a term of three years.  Each year the term of office of one class of
directors  expires.   The Board of Directors currently  consists  of  seven
members.   The  Board  of  Directors has passed a Resolution  amending  the
Bylaws  to  increase the size of the Board of Directors  to  eight  members
effective  immediately  prior to the 2001 Annual Meeting  of  Shareholders.
Nancy-Ann DeParle has been nominated by the Board of Directors to fill  the
newly created Board position.

      The  Board  of Directors intends to present for action at the  Annual
Meeting the election of Gerald E. Bisbee, Jr., Ph.D., Michael E. Herman and
Nancy-Ann  DeParle, as Class III Directors to serve for a three  year  term
until  the  2004 Annual Meeting of Shareholders and until their  respective
successors are duly elected and qualified.

     The Directors in Class I (John C. Danforth, Neal L. Patterson and Jeff
C.  Goldsmith, Ph.D.) and the Directors in Class II (Clifford W. Illig  and
William  B. Neaves, Ph.D.) have been elected or appointed to terms expiring
at  the  time  of  the Annual Meetings of Shareholders in  2002  and  2003,
respectively.   No shareholder may vote in person or by proxy  for  greater
than  three  nominees  at  the Annual Meeting.  Shareholders  do  not  have
cumulative voting rights in the election of directors.  Directors  will  be
elected  by  the  plurality vote of the holders of shares of  Common  Stock
entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting and present in person or by proxy.

      It  is intended that shares represented by a Proxy given pursuant  to
this  solicitation  will be voted in favor of the election  of   Gerald  E.
Bisbee,  Jr., Ph.D., Michael E. Herman and Nancy-Ann DeParle as  the  Class
III  Directors,  unless such authority is specifically  withheld.   In  the
event  that any of such persons should become unavailable for election,  it
is  intended that the shares of Common Stock represented by the Proxy  will
be  voted  for such substitute nominee as may be nominated by the Board  of
Directors. The above named persons have indicated willingness to  serve  if
elected  and it is not anticipated that any of them will become unavailable
for election.

      The  Certificate of Incorporation and Bylaws of the  Company  provide
that advance notice of shareholder nominations for an election of directors
must  be  given.   Written notice of the shareholder's  intent  to  make  a
nomination  at a meeting of shareholders must be received by the  Secretary
of  the  Company  not later than 120 days in advance of the  date  of  such
meeting  in  the case of an annual meeting and, in the case  of  a  special
meeting,  not  more than seven days following the date  of  notice  of  the
meeting.   The  notice  must  contain (i)  the  name  and  address  of  the
shareholder who intends to make the nomination and of the person or persons
to  be nominated, (ii) a representation that the shareholder is a holder of
record of stock of the Company entitled to vote at such meeting and intends
to  appear  in person or by proxy at the meeting to nominate the person  or
persons  specified  in the notice, (iii) the names and addresses,  as  they
appear  in  the  Company's books, of such shareholder, (iv) the  class  and
number of shares beneficially owned by such nominating shareholder and each
nominee proposed by such shareholder, (v) a description of all arrangements
or  understandings between the nominating shareholder and each nominee  and
any  other  person or persons (naming such person or persons), pursuant  to
which  the  nomination  or  nominations are to be  made,  (vi)  such  other
information  regarding each nominee proposed by such 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,  as  then  in
effect,  if  the Company were soliciting proxies for the election  of  such
nominees,  and (vii) the consent of the nominee to serve as a  director  of
the  Company  if  so  elected.  No such notice has been received,  and  the
chairman  of  the  Annual Meeting is entitled to refuse to acknowledge  the
nomination of any person which is not made in compliance with the foregoing
procedure.   In any event, the Board of Directors has no reason to  believe
that anyone will attempt to nominate another candidate for director.

      The  following table sets forth certain information as to the persons
nominated  by  the  Board of Directors for election  as  directors  of  the
Company  and  each  director whose term of office will continue  after  the
Annual Meeting:


                                                        Director Since/
     Name                                          Age   Term Expires
     ----                                          ---   ------------

                                                      
     To Serve in Office Until 2001 (Class III)
         Gerald E. Bisbee, Jr., Ph.D. (1)(2)        58      1988/2001
         Michael E. Herman (2)                      59      1995/2001
         Nancy-Ann DeParle                          44      ----/----

                              5

     To Serve in Office Until 2002 (Class I)
         Neal L. Patterson                          51      1980/2002
         Jeff C. Goldsmith, Ph.D. (2)               52      1999/2002
         John C. Danforth (1)(2)                    64      1996/2002

     To Serve in Office Until 2003 (Class II)
         Clifford W. Illig                          50      1980/2003
         William B. Neaves, Ph.D. (1)               58      2001/2003



____________________
(1)  Member of Audit Committee.
(2)  Member of Compensation Committee.

      Gerald E. Bisbee, Jr., Ph.D. has been a Director of the Company since
February 1988.  Dr. Bisbee is Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of ReGen
Biologics, Inc., a company which designs, engineers and manufactures tissue
engineered products for orthopedic applications.  He has been a Director of
APACHE  Medical Systems, Inc. since December 1989, serving as  Chairman  of
the  Board  from December 1989 to November 1997 and from December  2000  to
present.   He  was Chief Executive Officer of APACHE Medical  Systems  from
December 1989 to November 1997.  Dr. Bisbee was also appointed Secretary of
APACHE Medical Systems in December 2000.  APACHE Medical Systems implements
software  decision  support systems for intensive care units.   Dr.  Bisbee
also  served  as a Director of SG Pacific Funds from 1989 to  1999  and  is
presently a Director of HealthGate Data Corporation.

      John  C. Danforth has been a Director of the Company since May  1996.
He  has  been a partner in the law firm of Bryan Cave LLP since 1995.   For
more  than  five years prior to 1995 he was a member of the  United  States
Senate.   Mr.  Danforth  is  a  Director of Dow  Chemical  Corporation  and
Metropolitan  Life  Insurance  Company.  Mr.  Danforth  also  served  as  a
Director of Time Warner, Inc. from 1998 to 2000.

     Nancy-Ann  DeParle  was  Administrator of the  Health  Care  Financing
Administration  (HCFA)  from 1997 to October 2000,  when  she  resigned  to
become  a  Fellow of the Institute of Politics and the Interfaculty  Health
Policy  Forum  at  Harvard  University.  She  is  currently  working  as  a
consultant  on health policy and regulatory issues.  As HCFA Administrator,
Ms.  DeParle  was  a  key  health policy advisor to President  Clinton  and
directed  the  Medicare,  Medicaid, and State Children's  Health  Insurance
programs.  Before joining HCFA, she served as Associate Director for Health
and  Personnel at the White House Office of Management and Budget from 1993
to 1997.  She has also worked as a lawyer in private practice and served as
the Commissioner of the Tennessee Department of Human Services. Ms. DeParle
is a nominee for Director of Guidant Corporation.

     Jeff  C.  Goldsmith, Ph.D. has been a Director of  the  Company  since
September  1999.   He  is a healthcare consultant and President  of  Health
Futures,  Inc.  Dr. Goldsmith served as National Advisor for Healthcare  to
Ernst  &  Young  for  twelve years, and lectured for eleven  years  at  the
Graduate  School of Business at the University of Chicago.   Dr.  Goldsmith
also  served  as  Director  of  Planning  and  Government  Affairs  at  the
University  of  Chicago Medical Center and worked as a  fiscal  and  policy
analyst in the Office of the Governor of Illinois.

      Michael E. Herman has been a Director of the Company since May  1995.
He was President of the Kansas City Royals Baseball Club from 1992 to 2000.
He  was  Chairman of the Finance and Investment Committee of  the  Kauffman
Foundation  from  1990 to 1999 and its President from 1985  to  1990.   Mr.
Herman  was  the  Executive Vice President and Chief Financial  Officer  of
Marion  Laboratories, Inc. from 1974 to 1990.  He is a  Director  of  Janus
Capital Corporation and Eloquent, Inc.

     Clifford  W.  Illig has been a Director of the Company for  more  than
five years.  Mr. Illig served as Chief Operating Officer of the Company for
more than five years until October 1998 and as President of the Company for
more  than  five  years  until March 1999.  Mr. Illig  was  appointed  Vice
Chairman of the Board of Directors in March 1999.

      William  B.  Neaves, Ph.D. has been a Director of the  Company  since
March  2001.   Dr. Neaves has been President, Chief Executive Officer,  and
member  of  the  Board  of Directors of The Stowers Institute  for  Medical
Research  since June 2000.   For twenty

                           6

years prior to  2000,  he  served  in  succession  as  Dean of Southwestern
Graduate School, Dean of  Southwestern Medical  School,  and Chief Academic
Officer and holder of  the  Wildenthal Distinguished  Chair  in  Biomedical
Science at  the  University  of  Texas Southwestern  Medical Center.  He is
presently a member of the University of Kansas  City  Trustees,  the Kansas
City Life Sciences Institute, and the Kansas City Area Development Council.

      Neal  L.  Patterson has been Chairman of the Board of  Directors  and
Chief  Executive  Officer of the Company for more  than  five  years.   Mr.
Patterson  also  served as President of the Company from March  1999  until
August 1999.

Meetings of the Board and Committees

      The  Board  of  Directors  has  established  Audit  and  Compensation
Committees  of  the  Board of Directors.  The Board  of  Directors  had  an
Executive  Committee during 2000, but the Executive Committee was disbanded
and  dissolved  effective March 9, 2001.  The Board of Directors  does  not
have a Nominating Committee.  During 2000, the Board of Directors held  six
meetings.

      The Executive Committee had authority to act in place of the Board of
Directors when the Board of Directors was not in session and could exercise
all of the powers of the Board of Directors, except with respect to certain
corporate  matters,  including  mergers,  dissolution,  sale  of  property,
issuance  of  stock,  declaring dividends or amending  the  Certificate  of
Incorporation  or Bylaws of the Company.  The Executive Committee  did  not
meet  during  2000.   The Executive Committee was disbanded  and  dissolved
effective March 9, 2001.

      The Audit Committee assists the Board of Directors in fulfilling  its
responsibilities  with  respect to the accounting and  financial  reporting
practices of the Company and in addressing the scope and expense  of  audit
and  related  services  provided by the Company's independent  accountants.
The Audit Committee met four times during 2000.

     The   Compensation  Committee  reviews  and  approves  the   Company's
compensation policies and practices, establishes compensation for directors
and  Mr.  Patterson,  reviews and approves the compensation  of  the  other
executive  officers  of  the Company, and approves  major  changes  in  the
Company's  benefit  plans  and compensation philosophy.   The  Compensation
Committee met four times during 2000.

Audit Committee Report

      NOTWITHSTANDING  ANYTHING TO THE CONTRARY SET FORTH  IN  ANY  OF  THE
COMPANY'S  FILINGS  UNDER  THE SECURITIES ACT OF  1933  OR  THE  SECURITIES
EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934, THE FOLLOWING REPORT OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE SHALL NOT
BE  INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE INTO ANY SUCH FILINGS AND SHALL NOT OTHERWISE
BE DEEMED FILED UNDER SUCH ACTS.

      The  Audit  Committee of the Company is currently composed  of  three
independent members of the Board of Directors and operates under a  written
charter  adopted by the Board of Directors (see attached Exhibit  A).   The
Audit  Committee recommends to the Board of Directors the selection of  the
Company's independent accountants.

      Management is responsible for the Company's internal controls and the
financial  reporting process.  The independent accountants are  responsible
for performing an independent audit of the Company's consolidated financial
statements in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards and  to
issue a report thereon.  The Audit Committee's responsibility is to monitor
and oversee these processes.

     In this context, the Audit Committee has met and held discussions with
management and the independent accountants.  Management represented to  the
Audit  Committee that the Company's consolidated financial statements  were
prepared  in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles,  and
the  Audit  Committee has reviewed and discussed the consolidated financial
statements  with  management and the independent  accountants.   The  Audit
Committee discussed with the independent accountants matters required to be
discussed  by  Statement on Auditing Standards No. 61 (Communications  with
Audit Committees).

                            7

      The  Company's  independent accountants also provided  to  the  Audit
Committee  the  written  disclosures and letter  required  by  Independence
Standards  Board  Standard  No.  1  (Independence  Discussions  with  Audit
Committees),  and  the  Audit  Committee  discussed  with  the  independent
accountants that firm's independence.

      Based  upon the Audit Committee's discussion with management and  the
independent   accountants  and  the  Audit  Committee's   review   of   the
representation of management and the report of the independent  accountants
to  the Audit Committee, the Audit Committee recommended that the Board  of
Directors  include  the audited consolidated financial  statements  in  the
Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December  30,  2000
to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Members of the Audit Committee:
Gerald E. Bisbee, Jr., Ph.D.
John C. Danforth
William B. Neaves, Ph.D. (1)
____________________

(1)  Dr. Neaves joined the Audit Committee on March 9, 2001.

                               8

                          EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

     The following table sets forth certain information with respect to the
Chief  Executive  Officer  and the four most highly  compensated  executive
officers  of  the Company as to whom the total salary and bonuses  for  the
fiscal year ended December 30, 2000 exceeded $100,000:

                        Summary Compensation Table




                                          Annual Compensation     Long-Term Compensation
                                          -------------------     ----------------------      All Other
                                                                                            Compensation
                                     Fiscal                          Number of Stock        ------------
Name and Principal Position           Year    Salary($)   Bonus($)   Options Granted           ($) (1)
---------------------------          ------   ---------   --------   ---------------        ------------

                                                                                  
Neal L. Patterson                    2000      436,154    191,250                -               2,970
Chairman of the Board of Directors   1999      390,000          -                -                 657
and Chief Executive Officer          1998      386,539    126,564           25,000                 660

Jack A. Newman, Jr.                  2000      386,539    239,270                -               2,950
Executive Vice President             1999      375,000     33,548          129,363                 657
                                     1998      369,230    131,094                -                 660

Paul M. Black                        2000      230,000    352,537            2,000               2,873
Executive Vice President and         1999      224,230     46,431              887                 657
Chief Sales Officer                  1998      203,847    135,417           29,940                 660

Earl H. Devanny, III (2)             2000      332,692    213,438           25,000               4,700
President                            1999      126,250    100,000          100,679                  19
                                     1998            -          -                -                   -

Glenn P. Tobin, Ph.D. (3)            2000      335,384    176,850           10,000               4,749
Executive Vice President and         1999      317,692          -            5,298                 657
Chief Operating Officer              1998      214,615     51,718          105,500                 640


____________________

(1)Includes   Company  matching  contributions  and  discretionary   profit
   sharing distributions to the named individual's account pursuant to  the
   Cerner  Corporation  401(k) Retirement Plan and  premiums  paid  by  the
   Company on group term life insurance.

(2)Mr. Devanny  became  an  executive officer of the Company on August 13,
   1999.

(3)Dr.  Tobin  became  an  executive officer of the Company on  April  27,
   1998.

                               9

Stock Option Plans

      The following table reports information with respect to the award  of
stock options during the year ended December 30, 2000 for each of the named
executive officers in the Summary Compensation Table:

                     Option Grants In Last Fiscal Year



                                 Number of     Percent of
                                 securities   total options
                                 underlying    granted to       Exercise
                                  options       employees         price        Expiration      Grant date
Name                             granted(#)   in fiscal year      ($/Sh)          date      present value ($)
----                             ----------   --------------    --------       ----------   -----------------

                                                                              
Neal L. Patterson                     -             -                 -                -           -

Jack A. Newman, Jr.                   -             -                 -                -           -

Paul M. Black (1)(2)              2,000            .2             24.00         06/05/10      29,184

Earl H. Devanny, III (1)(2)      25,000           1.9             24.00         06/05/10     364,803

Glenn P. Tobin, Ph.D. (1)(2)     10,000            .8             24.00         06/05/10     145,921


____________________
(1)  These options were issued at a price that was equal to the fair market
value  of  the  Company's Common Stock on the date of grant.   The  options
become exercisable in varying amounts per year over a period of five  years
from  the  date of the grant, assuming the optionee remains an employee  of
the Company.

(2)  The  grant  date present value was calculated using the  Black-Scholes
option  pricing  model  with  the following weighted  average  assumptions:
expected  dividend  yield  of zero percent; expected  stock  volatility  of
72.1%;  risk-free interest rate of 5.0%; and expected years until  exercise
of 4.7 years for each option.

     The  following table reports information with respect to the  December
30,  2000  option  values for each of the named executive officers  in  the
Summary Compensation Table:



            Aggregated Option Exercises In Last Fiscal Year and December 30, 2000 Option Values

                                                      Number of
                                                      Securities
                                                      Underlying
                                                      Unexercised
                                                      Options at       Value of Unexercised
                                                    December 30, 2000 In-the-Money Options at
                                                           (#)         December 30, 2000 ($)
                        Shares                       --------------  -----------------------
                      Acquired on      Value         Exercisable/        Exercisable/
Name                  Exercise (#)   Realized ($)   Unexercisable (1)   Unexercisable (1)
----                  ------------   ------------   -----------------   -----------------

                                                             
Neal L. Patterson          -              -          180,000/205,000     2,992,500/3,442,500
Jack A. Newman, Jr.        -              -           97,873/56,490      2,562,770/1,556,023
Paul M. Black          7,900        327,975           27,296/57,941        814,945/1,586,001
Earl H. Devanny, III       -              -           28,500/97,179        876,375/2,776,277
Glenn P. Tobin, Ph.D.      -              -           30,560/90,238        774,909/2,224,358


____________________
(1)The  numbers  in  the  column  headed Number  of  Securities  Underlying
   Unexercised Options at December 30, 2000 and the dollar amounts  in  the
   column headed Value of Unexercised In-the-Money Options at December  30,
   2000  reflect  (i)  the number of

                             10

   shares of the Company's  Common  Stock
   into  which  options  are  exercisable and unexercisable  and  (ii)  the
   difference  between the fair market value on December 30, 2000  of  such
   shares of Common Stock and the exercise price of the options.

Director Compensation

      Non-employee directors of the Company receive compensation of  $2,500
for  each meeting of the Board of Directors attended and an additional $500
for  each  committee  meeting  attended, plus  reimbursement  for  expenses
incurred  in  connection  with attendance at Board of  Directors  meetings.
During  2000, payments, excluding expense reimbursements, were  $16,000  to
Dr. Bisbee, $16,500 to Mr. Herman,  $16,500 to Dr. Goldsmith and $18,500 to
Mr. Danforth.

      In conjunction with becoming a Director of the Company in March 2001,
Dr.  Neaves was granted options to purchase 20,000 shares of the  Company's
Common  Stock.  These options were issued at a price that was equal to  the
fair market value of the Company's Common Stock on the date of grant.   The
options become exercisable in equal amounts each year over a period of five
years  from  the date of the grant, beginning in 2002, assuming Dr.  Neaves
remains a Director of the Company.  The options expire ten years from  date
of grant.

      In  2000, Dr. Bisbee was granted options to purchase 4,000 shares  of
the  Company's Common Stock.  These options were issued at a price that was
equal to the fair market value of the Company's Common Stock on the date of
grant.   The  options become exercisable one year from the date  of  grant,
assuming Dr. Bisbee remains a Director of the Company.  The options  expire
ten years from date of grant.

Report of the Compensation Committee

       The   Compensation  Committee  of  the  Board  of   Directors   (the
"Compensation Committee") is composed of the individuals listed below.  All
of  the  members of the Compensation Committee are outside directors.   The
Compensation  Committee  reviews and approves  the  Company's  compensation
policies  and  practices, establishes compensation for  directors  and  Mr.
Patterson,  reviews  and approves the compensation of the  other  executive
officers  of  the  Company,  and approves major changes  in  the  Company's
benefit plans and compensation philosophy.

      The compensation policies of the Company have been designed to enable
the  Company  to  attract,  motivate and retain experienced  and  qualified
executives.  The Company seeks to provide competitive salaries  based  upon
individual  performance, together with quarterly cash bonuses  awarded  for
the  achievement  of goals established by the Compensation  Committee.   In
addition,  it has been the policy of the Company to grant stock options  to
executives upon their commencement of employment with the Company or  their
becoming  such executive officers in an effort to strengthen the  mutuality
of interests between such executives and the Company's shareholders.

     Annual Compensation

     Historically, total annual cash compensation for executive officers of
the  Company consisted of base salary and a potential annual cash bonus (in
some  instances  payable by the award of restricted stock of  the  Company)
based upon incentive plans adopted each year by the Compensation Committee.
This year, the Company is seeking approval of a qualified performance-based
compensation  plan,  which is similar to the previous  years'  compensation
plans.  Total annual cash compensation varies each year based on changes in
base  salary  and  in  the cash bonus.  The incentive plans  for  executive
officers other than Mr. Patterson consists of various objective goals, both
related  to  areas for which such executive officer has responsibility  and
for  company  wide performance.  Attainment of each goal is objective,  but
the  amount  of  the  bonus  is also affected,  in  some  instances,  by  a
subjective  analysis of the executive's overall performance.  Beginning  in
year 2001, such bonus may only be adjusted downward from the maximum amount
stated in each individual's compensation plan.  For Mr. Patterson, the sole
goal during the 2000 plan year consisted of earnings per share.  Attainment
by  Mr.  Patterson of this goal is determined on an objective basis without
any  subjective analysis of his overall performance.  Under  the  incentive
plans,  each  executive  may earn up to a maximum amount  approved  by  the
Compensation Committee, based on and as determined by targets  designed  to
create  a  significant  incentive in relation to such  executive's  salary.
During   2000,  the  Company's  executive  officers,  as  a  group,  earned
approximately 83 percent of the targeted incentives available.

                           11

     The salary of each executive officer is approved on a subjective basis
by  the  Compensation  Committee at a level believed to  be  sufficient  to
attract  and  retain qualified individuals.  In making this  determination,
the  Compensation  Committee considers the executive's performance,  salary
levels  at  other  competing businesses and the Company's performance.   In
approving  salaries and incentive plan payments for 2000, the  Compensation
Committee considered, among other matters, the Company's performance during
1999  and  the  compensation  levels for 1998 and  1999  of  the  Company's
principle  competitors  for which information was available,  although  the
Compensation Committee did not target compensation to any particular  group
of  these  companies.   The factors impacting base salary  levels  are  not
independently assigned specific weights but are subjectively considered  by
the Compensation Committee.

      Mr.  Patterson's compensation during the year ended December 30, 2000
consisted  of $436,154 in salary and $191,250 in payments earned under  the
Company's  incentive plans.  Mr. Patterson earned approximately 78  percent
of the targeted incentives available under the incentive plans during 2000.
In determining Mr. Patterson's salary and potential incentive plan payments
for  2000, the Compensation Committee considered, among other matters,  the
Company's  performance  during  1999 and  the  compensation  of  the  chief
executive  officer for 1998 and 1999 of the Company's principle competitors
for  which  information was available, although the Compensation  Committee
did not target his compensation to any particular group of these companies.

     Long-Term Incentive Compensation

      The  long-term incentive compensation for executive officers consists
of  awards of stock options granted under the Company's stock option  plans
typically  upon  their  commencement of  employment  with  the  Company  or
promotion  to  executive  officer  and stock  options  granted  during  the
employment as executive officers. The Compensation Committee believes stock
options  create  an  incentive  for executive  officers  to  contribute  to
sustained, long-term growth in the Company's performance.  The Compensation
Committee  believes  that  stock options create  a  mutuality  of  interest
between  the  Company's executive officers and shareholders.  Stock  option
grants  provide the right to purchase shares of Common Stock at a specified
exercise  price.   All stock options issued to executive officers  to  date
have exercise prices equal to or greater than the fair market value of  the
Common Stock on the date of the grant of the stock option.

Members of the Compensation Committee:
Gerald E. Bisbee, Jr., Ph.D.
John C. Danforth
Jeff C. Goldsmith, Ph.D.
Michael E. Herman

                             12

Company Performance

      The  following  graph presents a comparison for the five-year  period
ended  December  29,  2000 of the performance of the Common  Stock  of  the
Company  with the Nasdaq Composite Index (as calculated by The  Center  for
Research in Security Prices) and the Nasdaq Computer/Data Processing  Group
(as calculated by The Center for Research in Security Prices):



                 Comparison of 5 year Cumulative Total Return



    Measurement Period                            Nasdaq Computer and   Nasdaq Stock Market
  (Fiscal Year Covered)     Cerner Corporation   Data Processing Index     (US Companies)
  ---------------------     ------------------   ---------------------  -------------------

                                                                    
Measurement Pt-12/30/95            $100.00               $100.00             $100.00
Measurement Pt-12/31/96            $ 75.61               $123.41             $123.03
Measurement Pt-12/30/97            $103.05               $151.61             $150.68
Measurement Pt-12/31/98            $130.49               $270.52             $212.46
Measurement Pt-12/31/99            $ 96.04               $594.39             $394.82
Measurement Pt-12/30/00            $225.61               $274.91             $237.37

     The above comparison assumes $100 was invested on December 30, 1995 in
Common  Stock  of  the  Company and in each of the  foregoing  indices  and
assumes reinvestment of dividends.  The results of each component issuer of
each   group   are  weighted  according  to  such  issuer's  stock   market
capitalization at the beginning of each year.

                               13

                      INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

      The  Board  of  Directors has selected the firm of KPMG  LLP  as  the
Company's  independent certified public accountants to audit the  financial
statements  of  the Company for the fiscal year ending December  29,  2001.
KPMG LLP has served as auditors for the Company since 1983.  It is expected
that  representatives of KPMG LLP will be present at  the  Annual  Meeting.
They  will have the opportunity to make a statement, if they desire  to  do
so, and also will be available to respond to appropriate questions.

Audit Fees

     The aggregate fees incurred for professional services for the audit of
the  Company's  annual  financial statements  for  the  fiscal  year  ended
December 30, 2000, and the reviews of the financial statements included  in
the  Company's Form 10-Q for the fiscal year ended December 30, 2000,  were
$123,000.

Financial Information Systems Design and Implementation Fees

      The  aggregate fees incurred for financial information systems design
and   implementation  services  (as  defined  by  Rule  2-01(c)(4)(ii)   of
Regulation S-X promulgated by the SEC) rendered to the Company by KPMG  for
the fiscal year ended December 30, 2000, were zero.

All Other Fees

      The  aggregate fees incurred for services rendered to the Company  by
KPMG,  other  than those services covered in the sections captioned  "Audit
Fees"  and "Financial Information Systems Design and Implementation  Fees,"
for the fiscal year ended December 30, 2000, were $150,600.

      In  making its determination regarding the independence of KPMG,  the
Audit Committee considered whether the provision of the services covered in
the  sections  herein regarding "Financial Information Systems  Design  and
Implementation  Fees" and "All Other Fees" was compatible with  maintaining
such independence.

                           14

                      APPROVAL OF THE ADOPTION OF THE
            CERNER CORPORATION 2001 LONG-TERM INCENTIVE PLAN F

      The  Board  of  Directors of the Company approved on March  9,  2001,
subject  to  shareholder  approval, a long-term  equity-based  compensation
plan, formally titled the "Cerner Corporation 2001 Long-Term Incentive Plan
F"  ("Plan  F"),  to provide key associates, consultants  and  non-employee
directors  of  the  Company and its subsidiaries ("eligible  participants")
with  added  incentive  to remain employed by the Company  and  align  such
individuals'  interests with those of the Company's  shareholders,  and  is
recommending to the shareholders that the shareholders adopt  Plan  F.  The
Board  of  Directors believes that Plan F will create additional  alignment
with  eligible  participants as shareholders.  The Board of Directors  also
believes  that the use of Plan F is necessary for the Company  to  attract,
hire  and  retain  quality  associates in  an  industry  that  has  a  very
competitive market for talented employees and meets the Company's  goal  of
establishing  a  broad based, long-term orientation for the Company's  high
performance  associates.   Plan  F would  permit  the  issuance  of  up  to
2,000,000  shares of the Company's Common Stock pursuant to Awards  granted
under  Plan  F,  such  as  stock  options,  restricted  stock  awards   and
performance  share  awards,  as  well  as  other  awards  such   as   stock
appreciation  rights  ("SARs"), phantom stock and performance  unit  awards
which may be payable in the form of Common Stock or cash (collectively  all
such  types of awards being hereinafter referred to as "Awards");  however,
not  more  than  500,000 of such shares will be available to  granting  any
types  of  grants other than Options or SARs as specifically set  forth  in
Plan F.

Description of Plan F

      The  following is only a brief summary of Plan F and is qualified  in
its  entirety  by reference to its full text, a copy of which  is  attached
hereto as Annex I.

      General.   Plan  F provides for the granting of stock options,  SARs,
restricted  stock  awards,  phantom  stock,  performance  unit  awards  and
performance share awards to designated eligible participants.

     Purpose.  The purpose of Plan F is to promote the success, and enhance
the  value,  of the Company by linking the personal interests  of  eligible
participants  to those of the Company's shareholders and by providing  such
eligible participants with an incentive for outstanding performance.   Plan
F  is further intended to provide flexibility to the Company in its ability
to  attract, motivate and retain the services of eligible participants upon
whose  judgment,  interest  and  special efforts  the  Company  is  largely
dependent for the successful conduct of its operations.

      Eligibility  to  Receive Awards.  Designated key  associates  of  the
Company  and  its subsidiaries, consultants and non-employee directors  are
eligible  to  be  granted  Awards under Plan F.  However,  incentive  stock
options (see below) may be granted only to associates of the Company.

      Plan  Administration.  Plan F is administered by a committee composed
of  outside  directors appointed by the Board of Directors of  the  Company
(the  "Committee").  Subject to the terms of Plan F, the Committee has  the
sole  discretion to administer and interpret Plan F and determine who shall
be  granted  Awards, the size and types of such Awards and  the  terms  and
conditions of such Awards.

      Stock  Options.  Both incentive stock options and nonqualified  stock
options may be granted under Plan F.  The exercise price per share  of  the
shares  of  the Company's Common Stock subject to each option (the  "option
price")  is  set by the Committee but may not be less than the fair  market
value  on  the date of grant.  Certain incentive stock options  granted  to
individuals owning more than 10% of the Company will be required to have  a
higher option price equal to at least 110% of the value of the stock on the
date  of  grant. Options granted under Plan F are exercisable at the  times
and on the terms established by the Committee.  The grant and the terms  of
incentive stock options shall be restricted to the extent required  by  the
Internal  Revenue Code.  The option price must be paid in full in  cash  or
the Committee also may permit payment of the option price by the tender  of
previously  acquired  shares of the Company's Common Stock  or  such  other
legal  consideration which the Committee determines to be  consistent  with
Plan  F's  purpose and applicable law.  Reload options, which  are  options
granted when an option holder exercises a stock option and makes payment of
the  purchase  price with previously owned shares of Common Stock,  may  be
granted  under Plan F.  A reload option grant is for the number  of  shares
utilized in payment of the purchase price and tax withholding, if any.  The
option  price for a reload option,

                            15

if  granted,  will  be equal  to  the  fair  market value as of the date of
exercise  of  the  option or the date of  grant of such additional options,
whichever is later.

      Section  162(m)  of  the Internal Revenue Code limits  the  Company's
deduction for compensation paid to certain executive officers to $1 million
per year unless such compensation is "performance-based."  For purposes  of
satisfying this requirement, Plan F limits the number of options  that  can
be  granted  to any individual during any calendar year to 500,000  shares.
This  limitation is applicable to other Awards made under  Plan  F  to  the
extent such Awards are settled in shares of Company Common Stock.

      Stock Appreciation Rights.  Plan F permits the grant of two types  of
SARs:  freestanding  SARs,  tandem SARs,  or  any  combination  thereof.  A
freestanding  SAR is a SAR that is granted independently of any  option.  A
tandem  SAR  is a SAR that is granted in connection with a related  option,
the  exercise  of which requires a forfeiture of the right  to  purchase  a
share  under  the related option (and when a share is purchased  under  the
option,  the SAR is similarly canceled). Tandem SARs may be granted  either
at  the  time the option is granted or any time thereafter while the option
remains  outstanding; provided, however, that in the case of  an  incentive
stock  option,  SARs  may  be granted only at the  time  of  grant  of  the
incentive  stock option. The Committee has complete discretion to determine
the  number of SARs granted to any optionee or recipient and the terms  and
conditions  pertaining  to  such  SARs.  Unless  the  Committee  determines
otherwise, the grant price shall be at least equal to the option  price  of
the  related  option  in the case of a tandem SAR, or  in  the  case  of  a
freestanding SAR, the fair market value of a share of the Company's  Common
Stock on the date of grant.

      Restricted  Stock.   Plan  F permits the grant  of  restricted  stock
awards.  Restricted stock may be issued or transferred for consideration or
for  no  consideration, as determined by the Committee.  The Committee  may
establish conditions under which restrictions on shares of Restricted Stock
shall lapse over a period of time or according to such other criteria, such
as  the  achievement of specific performance goals, as the Committee  deems
appropriate.  Unless the Committee determines otherwise, during the  period
of  time  in  which  the  shares of Restricted Stock  are  restricted,  the
individual to whom the shares have been granted shall not have the right to
vote  the shares but shall have the right to receive any dividends or other
distributions  paid  on  such shares, subject to  any  restrictions  deemed
appropriate  by the Committee.  The Committee may accelerate  the  time  at
which any restrictions lapse, and/or remove any restrictions.

      Performance Unit and Performance Shares.  Plan F permits the grant of
performance units and performance share awards which are bonuses payable in
cash,  Common Stock or a combination thereof.  Each Performance  Unit/Share
shall represent the right of the grantee to receive an amount based on  the
value  of  the Performance Unit/Share, if performance goals established  by
the Committee are met.  A Performance Unit shall have a value based on such
measurements or criteria as the Committee determines.  A Performance  Share
shall have a value equal to the fair market value of a share of the Company
Common  Stock.  When  Performance Units/Shares are granted,  the  Committee
shall  establish  a  performance period during which performance  shall  be
measured  and  at  the end of each performance period, the Committee  shall
determine to what extent the performance goals and other conditions of  the
Performance  Units/Shares  are  met.   If  the  grantee  of  a  Performance
Unit/Share  ceases to be an associate during a performance  period,  or  if
other  conditions established by the Committee are not met,  the  grantee's
Performance  Units/Shares shall be forfeited at the close  of  business  on
such  associate's  last  day  of employment. The  Committee  may,  however,
provide for complete or partial exceptions to this requirement as it  deems
appropriate.

      Phantom Stock.  Plan F permits the grant of shares of phantom  stock.
The  Committee  will establish the initial value of each share  of  Phantom
Stock at the time of the grant and may decide whether Company dividends, if
any,  will  be  paid  (either  currently  or  accrued  as  contingent  cash
obligations) on any shares of Phantom Stock.  Payments made with respect to
a  share  of  Phantom Stock will be in an amount equal to the  fair  market
value on the payment date of a share of Company Stock.  Any amounts payable
with  respect to Phantom Stock may be paid in the form of cash or in shares
of  Company  Stock  in  accordance with the terms  and  at  such  times  as
determined  by the Committee at the time of grant.  Generally, the  payment
of  amounts with respect to shares of Phantom Stock will be associated with
the achievement of specific performance goals established from time to time
by  the  Committee.   If  the grantee of Phantom  Stock  ceases  to  be  an
associate  prior to becoming vested or otherwise entitled to  payment,  the
associate's  Phantom Stock shall be forfeited at the close of  business  on
the associate's last day of employment. The Committee may, however, provide
for  complete  or  partial  exceptions to  this  requirement  as  it  deems
appropriate.

                           16

      Nontransferability of Awards.  Awards granted under Plan F may not be
sold,   transferred,   pledged,  assigned,  or   otherwise   alienated   or
hypothecated, other than by will or by the applicable laws of  descent  and
distribution,  or  as otherwise specifically permitted  by  the  Committee.
However, a grantee or recipient may designate one or more beneficiaries (in
the case of Nonqualified Stock Options only) to receive any exercisable  or
vested Awards following his or her death.

      Federal  Income Tax Consequences.  The following is  only  a  general
summary  of the possible federal income tax consequences that could  result
under  Plan  F and should not be relied upon as being a complete statement.
It does not address the state or local tax aspects of participation in Plan
F.

      The  grant of an option or SAR will create no tax consequences for  a
grantee  or  the  Company.  In general, the grantee will  have  no  taxable
income  upon exercising an incentive stock option if the applicable holding
period  is  satisfied (except that the alternative minimum tax may  apply),
and  the  Company  will receive no income tax deduction when  an  incentive
stock option is exercised.  Upon exercising a nonqualified option or a SAR,
the  grantee must recognize ordinary income equal to the difference between
the  exercise price and the fair market value of shares of Common Stock  on
the  date  of the exercise; the Company will be entitled to an  income  tax
deduction for the same amount, subject to the possible applicability of the
compensation deductibility limit of Section 162(m) of the Internal  Revenue
Code.   Generally,  there  will be no tax consequence  to  the  Company  in
connection with a disposition of shares acquired by a grantee upon exercise
of an option, except that the Company may be entitled to a tax deduction in
the  case  of a disposition of shares acquired by exercise of an  incentive
stock option before the applicable holding periods have been satisfied.

     With respect to other Awards made under Plan F that are settled either
in  cash or in stock or other property that is either transferable  or  not
subject  to  substantial  risk of forfeiture, the  grantee  generally  must
recognize  ordinary income equal to the cash or the fair  market  value  of
shares  or other property received, and the Company will be entitled  to  a
deduction for the same amount.  With respect to Awards that are settled  in
stock  or  other  property  that is restricted as  to  transferability  and
subject  to  substantial  risk of forfeiture, the  grantee  generally  must
recognize  ordinary income equal to the fair market value of the shares  or
other  property  received at the first time the shares  or  other  property
become  transferable  or not subject to a substantial risk  of  forfeiture,
whichever  occurs earlier, and the Company will be entitled to a  deduction
for the same amount, subject to possible limitation under Section 162(m) of
the Internal Revenue Code.

      Amendment and Termination of Plan F.  Except as specifically provided
for  in Plan F, the Committee or the Board of Directors of the Company  may
amend  or  terminate  Plan  F at any time or from  time  to  time,  without
obtaining  the  approval of the Company's shareholders.  Unless  terminated
earlier  by  the  Committee, Plan F shall terminate on the day  immediately
preceding  the tenth anniversary of its effective date, unless  Plan  F  is
extended with the approval of the shareholders.

Plan F Benefits

      All  key  associates, consultants and non-employee directors  of  the
Company  and  its subsidiaries are eligible to participate in  and  receive
Awards  under Plan F.  The value and number of shares that potentially  may
be  received  by  the  five individuals named in the  Summary  Compensation
Table,  all current executive officers and all associates are not currently
determinable due to the voluntary and discretionary nature of Plan F.

Approval of Plan F

     Approval of the proposal to adopt Plan F requires the affirmative vote
of  the holders of a majority of the shares of Common Stock represented  at
the  Annual  Meeting, in person or by proxy, and entitled to vote  thereon.
Abstentions will have the same effect as votes against the proposal.   Non-
voted  shares  will not be considered in attendance for the  vote  on  this
proposal.

         THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE "FOR" THE
    ADOPTION OF THE CERNER CORPORATION 2001 LONG-TERM INCENTIVE PLAN F

                            17

  APPROVAL OF THE ADOPTION OF THE CERNER CORPORATION 2001 ASSOCIATE STOCK
   PURCHASE PLAN WHICH QUALIFIES UNDER INTERNAL REVENUE CODE SECTION 423

     The  Board  of  Directors of the Company approved on  March  9,  2001,
subject  to shareholder approval, an employee stock purchase plan, formally
titled  the  "Cerner Corporation 2001 Associate Stock Purchase  Plan"  (the
"Stock  Purchase  Plan")  to provide associates  of  the  Company  and  its
domestic  subsidiaries  with added incentive to remain  employed  with  the
Company and to encourage increased efforts to promote the best interests of
the Company by permitting them to purchase shares of Common Stock at below-
market  prices.   The  Stock Purchase Plan is intended  to  qualify  as  an
"employee  stock purchase plan" within the meaning of Section  423  of  the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code").

Description of the Cerner Corporation 2001 Associate Stock Purchase Plan

      The following is only a brief summary of the Stock Purchase Plan  and
is qualified in its entirety by reference to its full text, a copy of which
is attached hereto as Annex II.

      General.   The Stock Purchase Plan gives all eligible associates  the
opportunity  to purchase shares of Common Stock at below-market  prices  on
the  last  day  of  a successive three-month period (each  such  period  is
referred  to  herein  as  a "Purchase Period"). There  will  be  four  such
Purchase  Periods per year with the end of each Purchase Period  being  the
last  business day of each calendar quarter and the beginning day  of  each
Purchase Period being the first business day following the end of the  last
Purchase Period. Eligible Associates may elect on a quarterly basis to have
the  Company withhold between 1% and 20% of their Compensation (as  defined
in  the Stock Purchase Plan) to be used to purchase Company Common Stock at
a 15% discount on the last day of the Purchase Period. All shares purchased
under the Stock Purchase Plan may not be sold, transferred or assigned  for
a period of one year after the date issued.

      Eligibility.  Each individual employed by the Company and  associates
of  the  Company's  United States based subsidiaries,  except  as  provided
below,  shall be eligible to participate in the Stock Purchase  Plan.   The
following  individuals  shall be excluded from participation:  (a)  persons
who,  as  of  the  beginning of a Purchase Period, have  been  continuously
employed  by  the Company or its domestic subsidiaries for  less  than  two
weeks;  (b)  persons  who, as of the beginning of a  Purchase  Period,  own
directly  or  indirectly, or hold options or rights to  acquire  under  any
agreement or Company plan, an aggregate of 5% or more of the total combined
voting  power or value of all outstanding shares of all classes of  Company
Common  Stock; and (c) persons who are customarily employed by the  Company
for  less  than twenty hours per week or for less than five months  in  any
calendar year.

      Shares  Subject to the Stock Purchase Plan.  A maximum  of  1,000,000
shares  of  Common  Stock may be purchased under the Stock  Purchase  Plan,
subject  to appropriate adjustment in the event of a stock dividend,  stock
split or combination, reorganization, merger, consolidation, liquidation or
any  combination  or exchange of shares of Common Stock. The  Common  Stock
subject  to  issuance  under the terms of the Stock Purchase  Plan  may  be
authorized  but  unissued  shares or reacquired shares  of  Company  Stock,
including treasury shares and shares purchased by the Company on  the  open
market  for  purposes of the Stock Purchase Plan or a combination  thereof.
At  the  present  time, the Company intends that all such  shares  will  be
purchased by the Company on the open-market, making the Stock Purchase Plan
non-dilutive to shareholders.  The Company may at some point in the future,
however,  elect to issue authorized but unissued shares or treasury  shares
to  fund the Stock Purchase Plan which would be potentially dilutive to the
shareholders.

     Administration.  The Stock Purchase Plan will be administered  by  the
Board  of  Directors  or  by  a committee of the  Board  (the  "Committee")
appointed by the Board and serving at its pleasure (the Board or  any  such
Committee  being  herein referred to as the "Administrator").   Until  such
time as the Board shall determine otherwise, the Compensation Committee  of
the  Board shall serve as Administrator.  Subject to the provisions of  the
Stock  Purchase  Plan, the Administrator has full power  and  authority  to
interpret  and administer the Stock Purchase Plan, to establish  rules  and
regulations,  to  appoint agents in connection therewith and  to  take  any
other  action  that  the  Administrator deems  necessary  or  desirable  to
administer the Stock Purchase Plan.

      Purchase  Price.  The purchase price of Common Stock under the  Stock
Option  Plan shall be 85% of the fair market value of the Company's  Common
Stock on the last trading day of the Purchase Period (the "Purchase Date").
Payment  for shares is made on the Purchase Date using the funds that  have
accumulated  through  the after-tax payroll deductions  over  the  Purchase
Period  or  in  such  other

                              18

form  of  payment  deemed  acceptable  by  the  Administrator.   Subject to
limitations as set forth in the Stock  Purchase  Plan or established by the
Committee  and  unless  other  means of payment  are  determined   by   the
Committee,  the  Company  will  deduct   from   each Participant's paycheck
on an after-tax basis an amount not less than 1% and  not  greater than 20%
of Compensation, such percentage to be determined  by the Participant.

     Limitations.   In no event shall a Participant be entitled to purchase
Common  Stock  under the Stock Option Plan (and any other Company  employee
stock  purchase  plan) at a rate which exceeds $25,000 of the  fair  market
value of such Common Stock during a calendar year, to be determined in  the
manner  provided by Section 423(b)(8) of the Code.  Except in the  case  of
death, a Participant's right to purchase the Company Stock at the end of  a
Purchase  Period  may  not  be  sold,  pledged,  assigned,  transferred  or
hypothecated  in  any way (whether by operation of law  or  otherwise)  and
shall  not  be  subject  to  sale under execution,  attachment  or  similar
process.

      Amendments and Duration.  The Administrator may terminate  the  Stock
Purchase  Plan  at any time and may amend the Stock Purchase  Plan  in  any
manner permitted by law.  No amendment shall be effective unless within one
year after it is adopted by the Board it is approved by the shareholders in
the  manner prescribed under the Treasury Regulations under Section 423  of
the  Code,  if  such  amendment would: (a) increase the  number  of  shares
reserved  for purchase under the Stock Purchase Plan, unless such  increase
is  by reason of any change in the capital structure of the Company as  set
forth  above; (b) change the designation of corporations or other  entities
whose employees may be given the opportunity to purchase Common Stock under
the  Plan,  except  as permitted under Treasury Regulations  1.423-2(c)(4);
(c)  materially modify the requirements as to eligibility for participation
in   the  Plan;  or  (d)  materially  increase  the  benefits  accruing  to
Participants under the Plan.

      Federal  Income  Tax Consequences. The following is  only  a  general
summary  of the possible federal income tax consequences that could  result
under  the  Stock Purchase Plan and should not be relied upon  as  being  a
complete statement.  It does not address the state or local tax aspects  of
participation in the Stock Purchase Plan.

      The  Stock Purchase Plan is intended to qualify as an "employee stock
purchase  plan"  within  the meaning of Section 423  of  the  Code.   Under
Section 423 of the Code, an eligible associate who elects to participate in
the  Stock  Purchase Plan will not realize any taxable income at  the  time
Common  Stock is purchased under the Stock Purchase Plan for such  eligible
associate.  If  an associate disposes of Common Stock purchased  under  the
Stock  Purchase Plan two years or more after the first day of the  Purchase
Period  or  one year or more after the date the Common Stock is transferred
to the associate, whichever is later, the associate will recognize ordinary
income  in  an amount equal to the lesser of: (a) the excess  of  the  fair
market  value of the Common Stock at the time of the disposition  over  the
purchase price under the Stock Purchase Plan or (b) 15% of the fair  market
value  of  the Common Stock on the first day of the Purchase  Period.   The
portion  of the gain that is in excess of the amount recognized as ordinary
income, if any, is taxed as long-term capital gain.  If the Common Stock is
disposed  of  at a price below the purchase price under the Stock  Purchase
Plan, the loss will be treated as long-term capital loss.  The Company will
not  be  entitled to any deduction with respect to a disposition of  Common
Stock occurring under the circumstances described in this paragraph.

      If  an  associate disposes of Common Stock purchased under the  Stock
Purchase Plan within two years after the first day of the Purchase  Period,
or  within one year after the date the Common Stock is transferred  to  the
associate,  whichever  is  later,  the associate  will  recognize  ordinary
income,  and the Company will be entitled to a corresponding deduction,  in
an  amount equal to the excess of the fair market value of the Common Stock
on  the  last  day of the Purchase Period over the purchase  price  of  the
Common Stock under the Stock Purchase Plan.  The associate's cost basis  of
the  Common  Stock will be increased by the amount of the  ordinary  income
recognized by the associate. In addition, on the disposition of the  Common
Stock,  an  associate  will recognize capital gain or  loss  equal  to  the
difference between the price at which the Common Stock is disposed  of  and
the  cost basis in the Common Stock, as so increased.  The Company will not
be  entitled to any deduction with respect to the amount recognized by  the
associate as capital gain.

      Miscellaneous Information. The Stock Purchase Plan is not subject  to
the provisions of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974.

      The  Stock  Purchase Plan is intended to satisfy the requirements  of
Section  423  of the Code.  A Participant will not obtain the  benefits  of
this provision of the Code if such Participant disposes of shares of Common
Stock acquired pursuant to the Plan within two

                             19

years from the first day  of  the  applicable Purchase Period or within one
year  from  the  date  such  Common  Stock is purchased by the Participant,
whichever is later.

      A  Participant shall have no rights as a shareholder under  the  Plan
until  he  or  she acquires the Common Stock on one of the Plan's  Purchase
Dates, at which time the Participant will become a shareholder with respect
to  shares for which payment has been completed as of the close of business
on the Purchase Date.

Stock Purchase Plan Benefits

      All associates of the Company, except for those specifically excluded
as  set  forth above, are eligible to participate under the Stock  Purchase
Plan.  Directors who are not otherwise associates will not be permitted  to
participate.  The dollar value and number of shares that will be  purchased
and  received  by  the  five individuals named in the Summary  Compensation
Table (so long as such individuals are not restricted from participating in
the Stock Purchase Plan), all current executive officers and all associates
are  not  currently  determinable due to the  voluntary  and  discretionary
nature of the Stock Purchase Plan.

Approval of the Stock Purchase Plan

      Approval  of  the  proposal  to adopt  the  Cerner  Corporation  2001
Associate Stock Purchase Plan requires the affirmative vote of the  holders
of  a  majority  of the shares of Common Stock represented  at  the  Annual
Meeting,  in person or by proxy, and entitled to vote thereon.  Abstentions
will  have the same effect as votes against the proposal.  Non-voted shares
will not be considered in attendance for the vote on this proposal.

 THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE "FOR" THE ADOPTION OF THE
           CERNER CORPORATION 2001 ASSOCIATE STOCK PURCHASE PLAN
          WHICH QUALIFIES UNDER INTERNAL REVENUE CODE SECTION 423

                                20

  APPROVAL OF A QUALIFIED PERFORMANCE-BASED COMPENSATION PLAN, THE CERNER
CORPORATION PERFORMANCE PLAN, FOR THE CORPORATION'S EXECUTIVE OFFICERS FOR
  PURPOSES OF COMPLYING WITH SECTION 162(m) OF THE INTERNAL REVENUE CODE

     The  Board  of  Directors of the Company recommends  approval  of  the
Cerner  Corporation Performance Plan (the "Performance Plan") for  purposes
of  complying  with  Section  162(m) of  the  Internal  Revenue  Code.  The
Performance Plan is similar to previous years' incentive compensation plans
approved  by  the  Compensation Committee of the Board  of  Directors.  The
reason  for  obtaining shareholder approval of the Performance Plan  is  to
ensure  that  all  amounts  paid  under the  Performance  Plan  to  certain
executives  will  remain deductible to the Company for federal  income  tax
purposes.   The federal tax law requires certain plans, like the  Company's
Performance Plan, to be approved by shareholders at least once  every  five
years in order to ensure that all amounts paid are fully tax-deductible.

     The  Board of Directors has determined that it is appropriate  and  in
the  best interests of the Company and the shareholders to ensure that  all
amounts payable under the Performance Plan are fully tax-deductible to  the
Company.  The Board has determined, by resolution adopted on March 9, 2001,
to submit the plan to shareholders for their approval at this year's annual
meeting.   If  the shareholders approve the Performance Plan,  all  amounts
paid  to associates and executive officers pursuant to the Performance Plan
in  forthcoming periods, including at the end of 2001, will be  fully  tax-
deductible to the Company, generating substantial after-tax savings.

General Description of the Plan

     The following is only a brief summary of the significant provisions of
the  Performance Plan and is qualified in its entirety by reference to  its
full  text, a copy of which is attached as an exhibit to the Company's 2000
Annual Report on Form 10-K.

     The  Performance  Plan  has  two  components: a general feature and an
executive feature. Under the general feature, a broad range of officers and
associates may be  eligible to receive awards that entitle such individuals
to   quarterly   and   annual  bonus  payments  if  certain  pre-determined
performance  targets  are met for such respective quarters or the year. The
executive  feature, which applies only to executive officers of the Company
who are determined  by the Company to be "Section 16 Insiders" for purposes
of  Section  16  of  the  Securities  Exchange  Act  of 1934, is similar in
concept,  except  that the determination of the performance targets is less
flexible than under  the  general feature, and the bonus amounts payable if
the targets  are  met  are still subject to additional reductions under the
executive feature.   Included  within  the group of individuals eligible to
receive awards  under the executive feature of the Performance Plan are all
of  the  officers  listed  in  the Summary Compensation Table of this Proxy
Statement.

Purpose

     The  purpose  of  the  Performance  Plan  is  to  provide a meaningful
incentive  on  both  a  quarterly  and  annual  basis to key associates and
executive  officers  of  the  Company  and  to  motivate them to assist the
Company  in  achieving  ambitious, attainable short-term goals.  Individual
payments  made  under  the  Performance  Plan  will  vary,  depending  upon
individual  performance  and,  in  some cases, operation unit achievements.
The  Performance  Plan is administered by the Compensation Committee of the
Board, which makes all determinations, including establishment of quarterly
and  yearly  performance  targets,   the  associates/officers  eligible for
awards,  and  the size of individual awards.  In making determinations, the
Committee  evaluates  management's  input  and  other relevant information.

General Feature

      The general feature of the Plan applies to those individuals who  are
not  determined by the Company to be "Section 16 Insiders".  The  Committee
establishes  general  performance targets for the year  or  for  particular
quarters, and if such targets are achieved, the Company will pay bonuses to
the  eligible  participants.  The performance targets  established  by  the
Committee may vary from participant to participant and may include  targets
based  on  stock price, earnings per share, net income,  return on  equity,
return on assets, profit margins on a contract-by-contract basis, reduction
of  certain  accounts receivable or achievement of subsidiary or  operating
plans.

      Under  the  general feature, following the initial  determination  of
performance   targets,   the  Committee  will  monitor   actual   corporate
performance  throughout each fiscal quarter, and may  decide  at  any  time
before  quarter or final year-end determinations are

                             21

reached to adjust  the earlier  target  levels as appropriate, for example,
to  take  account  of unusual  or  unanticipated corporate or industry-wide
developments.    Final  determination  of  the  amounts  to  be  paid  to a
participant  under  the  general  feature  of the plan may also be adjusted
upward or downward depending  upon subjective evaluations by an associate's
executive or manager.

Executive Feature

     The  executive award feature of the Performance Plan was  specifically
created  and has been structured so as to ensure that all amounts  paid  to
Section  16  Insiders  under the Performance Plan  are  deductible  by  the
Company for federal income tax purposes.

       The  principle  difference  between  the  general  feature  of   the
Performance Plan and the executive feature is that (a) separate, more rigid
performance targets are set under the executive feature which  may  not  be
changed  during  the  applicable performance period  and  (b)  the  maximum
amounts  payable  to the eligible executive officers if those  targets  are
reached are determined under pre-established objective formulas, with  only
limited discretion permitted to the Committee to reduce the amount  of  the
bonus payable.

Tax Law Requiring Shareholder Approval

     Section  162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code provides that a publicly-
traded  company will not be able to deduct for federal income tax  purposes
any  compensation in excess of $1 million paid by it in any one year to any
"covered employee" of the company, subject to certain exemptions.  "Covered
employees" are essentially the senior executives, i.e., the officers listed
in  the  Summary  Compensation Table in this Proxy Statement.   The  annual
compensation  that  is counted under the statute for  purposes  of  the  $1
million  limit includes, among other things, base salary and cash  bonuses.
However,  various  forms of compensation are exempt under  Section  162(m),
including  performance-based compensation paid  under  shareholder-approved
plans  that meet certain criteria.  The executive feature of the  Company's
Performance Plan meets these criteria.

Operation of the Executive Feature

     Under the executive feature of the Performance Plan, no later than the
90th  day  of each calendar year (in the case of annual-based awards  or  a
combination  of annual and quarterly based awards) or no later  than  after
25% of a fiscal quarter has elapsed (in the case of awards based solely  on
such fiscal quarter's performance targets), the Committee will set forth in
writing  the  executive  targets for that period  of  time.  The  executive
targets are drawn from a limited number of financial measures specified  in
the  executive's award.  These targets include: (a) Earnings Per Share, (b)
Company  Operating Margins, (c) Agreement Margin or (d)  other  targets  as
specifically set forth below and as determined by the Committee.

      (a)   The  Earnings Per Share Target shall be expressed as a specific
target earnings per share for such year for the Company's common stock on a
fully  diluted  basis,  before the after-tax effect  of  any  extraordinary
items,  the  cumulative effect of accounting changes, or other nonrecurring
items of income or expense including restructuring charges.

      (b)   The  Company Operating Margin Target shall be  expressed  as  a
target percentage reflecting the leverage of the Company's revenue relative
to the expense  associated with that revenue.

      (c)   The  Agreement Margin Targets shall be expressed  as  a  dollar
amount  of  booking margins on specified types of sales, adjusted  for  the
costs associated with delivery of the solutions.

      (d)   The  Other  Targets shall be determined  based  solely  on  the
following list of targets:

          (i)         Total shareholder return
          (ii)        Stock price increase
          (iii)       Return on equity
          (iv)        Return on capital
          (v)         Cash flow, including operating cash flows, free cash flow,
                      discounted cash flow return on investment, and cash flow
                      in excess of cost of capital
          (vi)        Economic value added
          (vii)       Market share

                            22

          (viii)      Client/associate satisfaction as measured by survey
                      instruments
          (ix)        Revenue Levels
          (x)         Employee Retention
          (xi)        Productivity measures
          (xii)       Diversification of business opportunities
          (xiii)      Price to earnings ratio
          (xiv)       Expense ratios
          (xv)        Total expenditures
          (xvi)       Completion of key projects
          (xvii)      Operating margin

      The  Committee  need  not  apply all of the  above  measures  to  any
particular executive for any year.  The Committee may select one or more of
the measures for any of the executives.  In selecting one or more financial
measures, the Committee establishes a target level of performance for  that
measure  for  the forthcoming year or quarters, which may  not  be  changed
after it is selected.

Maximum Payments

      The  Committee determines the maximum payment for which the executive
is  eligible.  Such determination is based on a number of factors including
but not limited to their role in the Company, ratio of performance bonus to
salary  and total potential compensation.  The Committee has discretion  to
reduce  the amount of the bonus payable under the executive feature of  the
Performance  Plan but in no event may the amount of the bonus be  increased
beyond  its maximum limit. The amount of the bonus reduction, if any,  will
depend  upon  a  subjective bonus reduction factor, formally  known  as  an
Annual Performance Evaluation (APE) Factor, which will be determined at the
executive's end-of-the-year evaluation.  This factor will range  from  100%
of  the maximum bonus amount (i.e., 100% of the maximum allowed bonus  will
be  paid)  for demonstrated distinguished performance to 40% if performance
does not satisfy the required standard.  Beginning in fiscal year 2001, the
maximum amount payable to the Chief Executive Officer shall be 175% of  the
Chief  Executive  Officer's  base salary, and for  all  other  "Section  16
Insiders", 150% of such individual's base salary.

Certification

       Prior  to  making  payments  under  the  executive  feature  of  the
Performance  Plan, the Compensation Committee must certify in writing  that
at  least  one of the preestablished targets for that quarter or  year  was
satisfied, and the Committee minutes must reflect this certification.

      While the amounts of the quarterly or annual bonuses that may be paid
to executives under the executive feature in any one quarter or year cannot
be determined, the following table indicates the maximum bonus amounts that
would  have  been  payable to each of the named executive officers  in  the
Summary Compensation Table and to all the current Section 16  executives as
a group in 2000 under the Performance Plan.





                                           Maximum Potential Payment
                                           -------------------------
      Name                                  under Performance Plan
      ----                                  ----------------------

                                             
Neal L. Patterson,                                $763,269
Chairman of the Board
and Chief Executive Officer

Jack A. Newman, Jr.                               $579,808
Paul M. Black                                     $345,000
Earl H. Devanny, III                              $499,039
Glenn P. Tobin, Ph.D.                             $503,076
All Section 16 executives as a group            $5,417,084



                            23

Approval of the Cerner Corporation Performance Plan

      Approval  of the proposal to adopt the Cerner Corporation Performance
Plan  requires  the affirmative vote of the holders of a  majority  of  the
shares of Common Stock represented at the Annual Meeting, in person  or  by
proxy, and entitled to vote thereon.  Abstentions will have the same effect
as  votes against the proposal.  Non-voted shares will not be considered in
attendance for the vote on this proposal.


 THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE "FOR" THE ADOPTION OF THE
               QUALIFIED CERNER CORPORATION PERFORMANCE PLAN

                               24

                           CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS

      The  Company leases an airplane from a company owned by Mr.  Neal  L.
Patterson and Mr. Clifford W. Illig.  The airplane is leased on a per  mile
basis  with  no  minimum usage guarantee.  The lease rate  is  believed  to
approximate fair market value for this type of aircraft.  During  1999  and
2000, respectively, the Company paid an aggregate of  $511,853 and $495,664
for  rental  of  the  airplane.  The airplane is used  principally  by  Mr.
Patterson,  Mr.  Tobin  and Mr. Devanny to increase the  number  of  client
visits  each  can  make and to reduce the physical strain  of  their  heavy
travel  schedules.  The Company intends to continue the use of the airplane
in 2001.

      On  February  2,  2001, the Company announced its intent  to  acquire
certain  assets and certain liabilities for cash of APACHE Medical Systems,
Inc.,  a  Delaware corporation ("APACHE").  One of the Company's directors,
Gerald E. Bisbee, Jr., Ph.D., is currently Chairman of the Board of APACHE.
APACHE  is  a  recognized  leader  in  clinical  decision  support/outcomes
management  systems  and  consulting services for  the  care  of  high-risk
patients,  and  provides products and services that enable health  systems,
hospitals  and  providers to apply an evidence-based  approach  to  achieve
clinical performance excellence, reduce cost and compete effectively  under
managed  care.   APACHE  also provides advanced  clinical  data  collection
tools,  registry  management and analytic services for  federal  government
research,  as  well  as in support of clinical trial  design  and  product-
effectiveness  evaluations  for  the  pharmaceutical  and  medical   device
industries.  A definitive asset purchase agreement has not been executed as
of  April  2, 2001, but it is anticipated that the cash purchase price  for
the  APACHE  assets  being  purchased will be approximately  $3.5  million,
subject  to certain adjustments at closing.  Dr. Bisbee's current ownership
of  shares  in  APACHE  is 500,000. As of April 2, 2001,  Dr.  Bisbee  held
156,310  options  to purchase APACHE stock, with 135,830 of  those  options
being  vested.  None of such 135,830 options were in the money as of  April
2,  2001.  Additionally, Dr. Bisbee was granted 300,000 performance,  five-
year,  $.75  warrants  tied to raising capital for  APACHE  (which  is  not
related to the pending transaction with the Company).  As of March 1, 2001,
APACHE  had  7,466,966  shares  of stock  outstanding.   Dr.  Bisbee  fully
disclosed his relationship with APACHE and his financial interest in APACHE
in  a  meeting  with  all members of the Board of Directors  present.   Dr.
Bisbee  left  the  board  room  when the proposed  APACHE  transaction  was
discussed and approved by remaining members of the Board of Directors.

      The Company loaned to Earl H. Devanny, III, Stephen M. Garver, Steven
M.  Goodrich,  Jack  A.  Newman, Jr. and Glenn P. Tobin,  Ph.D.,  executive
officers  of  the  Company, $225,000, $270,000, $168,750,  $205,468.75  and
$116,875, respectively.  The loan to Mr. Devanny in the amount of  $200,000
is  interest-free for the first two years and thereafter bears interest  at
the rate of 5% per annum.  The loan to Mr. Newman in the amount of $100,000
is  interest  free.  The loan to Dr. Tobin in the amount of $100,000  bears
interest at the rate of 3% per annum.  The loans to Mr. Devanny, Mr. Newman
and   Dr.  Tobin  in  the  amount  of  $25,000,  $105,468.75  and  $16,875,
respectively,  and  the  loans to Mr. Garver and  Mr.  Goodrich  were  made
pursuant to an Executive Stock Purchase Plan and bear interest at a rate of
5.5%  per  annum.  The loans to Dr. Tobin and Mr. Garver, made pursuant  to
the  Executive  Stock  Purchase Plan, were paid in full  during  2000.  The
balance due on the loans made to Mr. Newman was $185,468.75 at the  end  of
2000.  The remaining loans are outstanding but not due.


   COMPLIANCE WITH SECTION 16(a) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

      Section  16(a)  of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934  requires  the
Company's  directors and executive officers, and persons who own more  than
ten  percent  of a registered class of the Company's equity securities,  to
file  with  the  Securities  and  Exchange Commission  initial  reports  of
ownership  and  reports of changes in ownership of Common Stock  and  other
equity  securities  of  the  Company.  Executive  officers,  directors  and
holders  of  ten  percent or more of the Company's  equity  securities  are
required  to  furnish the Company with copies of all Section 16(a)  reports
they file.

      Based solely on review of the copies of such reports furnished to the
Company or written representations that no other reports were required, the
Company  believes that during the fiscal year ended December 30,  2000  all
Section  16(a)  filing requirements applicable to its  executive  officers,
directors  and  holders  of ten percent or more  of  the  Company's  equity
securities were complied with.

                           25

                           FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

      The  Annual Report to Shareholders of the Company for the fiscal year
ended December 30, 2000 is enclosed with this Proxy Statement.


                            GENERAL INFORMATION

Other Matters

      The  Bylaws  of the Company require that for business to be  properly
brought  before  an  annual shareholders' meeting, the  Company  must  have
received prior written notice of such business not later than 120  days  in
advance of the date of such meeting.  The notice must describe the proposed
business,  the shareholders' name and address, a description of  the  class
and  number of shares of stock of the Company which are beneficially  owned
(as  that  term  is  defined in the Certificate  of  Incorporation  of  the
Company)  by  the shareholder, any material interest of the shareholder  in
such  business and all other information regarding the proposal  which  the
Company would be required to provide in a proxy statement filed pursuant to
the  proxy  rules of the Securities and Exchange Commission if proxies  for
the  proposal were being solicited by the Company.  Because no such  notice
has  been  received  in  a timely manner, the only business  which  may  be
properly brought before the Annual Meeting are the matters set forth herein
or  those brought before the meeting by or at the direction of the Board of
Directors.

      The  Board  of  Directors does not intend to present any  matter  for
action  at  the annual meeting other than the matters referred to  in  this
Proxy  Statement.   If any other matters properly come  before  the  Annual
Meeting,  it  is intended that the holders of the proxies hereby  solicited
will act in respect of such matters in accordance with their best judgment.

Deadline for Shareholder Proposals

      Proposals by holders of the shares of Common Stock which are intended
to be presented at the 2002 Annual Meeting of Shareholders must be received
by the Company no later than December 17, 2001 to be eligible for inclusion
in  the  Company's  Proxy  Statement and form of  proxy  relating  to  that
meeting.  Such proposals must also comply in full with the requirements  of
Rule  14a-8  under  the  Securities Act of 1934 and must  comply  with  the
advance  notice  and information requirement described  under  the  heading
"GENERAL  INFORMATION  --  Other Matters" above to  be  presented  at  that
meeting.

Voting Matters

     In accordance with Delaware law, a shareholder entitled to vote in the
election  of directors can withhold authority to vote for all nominees  for
directors  or  can  withhold authority to vote  for  certain  nominees  for
directors.  Abstentions from the proposals to approve the adoption  of  the
Cerner Corporation 2001 Long-Term Incentive Plan F; to approve the adoption
of  the  Cerner  Corporation  2001  Associate  Stock  Purchase  Plan  which
qualifies under Section 423 of the Internal Revenue Code; or to approve the
adoption  of the Qualified Cerner Corporation Performance Plan for purposes
of  complying with Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code are  treated
as votes against the particular proposal.  Broker non-votes on the election
of  directors  or  the  proposals to approve the  adoption  of  the  Cerner
Corporation 2001 Long-Term Incentive Plan F; to approve the adoption of the
Cerner Corporation 2001 Associate Stock Purchase Plan which qualifies under
Section 423 of the Internal Revenue Code; or to approve the adoption of the
Qualified  Cerner  Corporation  Performance-Based  Compensation  Plan   for
purposes of complying with Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code  are
treated  as  shares  of  Common Stock as to which  voting  power  has  been
withheld by the respective beneficial holders and, therefore, as shares not
entitled to vote on the proposal as to which there is the broker non-vote.

Expenses of Solicitation

      All  costs  of  this solicitation will be borne by the  Company.   In
addition to the use of the mails, proxies may be solicited personally or by
telephone  or  telegraph by some of the regular employees of  the  Company.
The  Company  has  engaged  ADP  Investor Communication  Services  as  paid
solicitors  in  connection with the Annual Meeting.  ADP will  be  paid  to
solicit  proxies  and distribute proxy materials to nominees,  brokers  and
institutions.   The  anticipated  cost of such  services  is  approximately
$8,000, plus expenses.

                             26

The Company may reimburse  brokers  and  other  persons  holding  stock  in
their  names, or in the names of  nominees,  for  their  expenses  incurred
in sending proxy materials to their principals and obtaining their proxies.
The Company requests that brokerage  houses  and other custodians, nominees
and fiduciaries forward the soliciting materials to  the  beneficial owners
of the shares of Common Stock held of record  by such persons.



                         BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS,


                         Randy D. Sims
                         Secretary

North Kansas City, Missouri
April 16, 2001

                            27

EXHIBIT A

                                 EXHIBIT A
                            CERNER CORPORATION
                          AUDIT COMMITTEE CHARTER
I.  PURPOSE

The primary function of the Audit Committee is to assist the Board of
Directors in fulfilling its oversight responsibilities.  The Audit
Committee's primary duties and responsibilities are to:

     1.   Serve as an independent and objective party to monitor the
          Corporation's financial reporting process and internal control
          system.

     2.   Monitor the independence and performance of the Corporation's
          independent auditors and internal auditing department.

     3.   Provide an open avenue of communication among the independent
          auditors, financial and senior management, the internal auditing
          department, and the Board of Directors.

The Audit Committee will primarily fulfill these responsibilities by
carrying out the activities enumerated in Section IV of this Charter.
These responsibilities are in addition to those duties set out for a member
of the Board of Directors.

II.  COMPOSITION

The Audit Committee shall be comprised of three or more directors as
determined by the Board, each of whom shall be independent directors.
Members of the Audit Committee shall be considered independent if they have
no relationship to the Corporation that may interfere with the exercise of
their independence from management and the Corporation.  Examples of such
relationships include:

     *         a director being employed by the Corporation or any of
               its affiliates for the current year or any of the past
               three years;

     *         a director who accepts any compensation from the
               Corporation or any of its affiliates in excess of
               $60,000 during the previous fiscal year, other than
               compensation for Board service or benefits under a tax-
               qualified retirement plan, or non-discretionary
               compensation;

      *        a director being a member of the immediate family of an
               individual who is, or has been in any of the past three
               years, employed by the Corporation or any of its
               affiliates as an executive officer.  "Immediate family
               member" includes a person's spouse, parents, children,
               siblings, mother-in-law, father-in-law, brother-in-law,
               sister-in-law, son-in-law, daughter-in-law, and anyone
               who resides in such person's home;

      *        a director who is a partner in, or a controlling
               shareholder or an executive officer of, any for-profit
               business organization to which the Corporation made, or
               from which the Corporation received, payments (other
               than those arising solely from investments in the
               Corporation's securities) that exceed 5% of the
               Corporation's consolidated gross revenues for that
               year, or $200,000, whichever is more, in any of the
               past three years; and

      *        a director being employed as an executive of another
               entity where any of the Corporation's executives serve
               on that entity's compensation committee.

One director who is not an independent director (as defined above) and is
not a current employee or an immediate family member of such employee may
be appointed to the Audit Committee, if the Board, under exceptional and
limited circumstances, determines that membership on the Committee by the
individual is required in the best interests of the Corporation and its
shareholders, and the Board discloses, in the next annual proxy statement
subsequent to such determination, the nature of the relationship and the
reasons for that determination.

                           28

All members of the Committee shall be capable of reading and understanding
fundamental financial statements, including a company's balance sheet,
income statement and cash flow statement or will be able to do so within a
reasonable period of time after his or her appointment to the Committee.
At least one member of the Committee shall have past employment experience
in accounting or finance, requisite professional certification in
accounting or any comparable experience or background which results in the
individual's financial sophistication, including being or having been a
chief executive officer, chief financial officer or other senior officer
with financial oversight responsibilities.  Committee members may enhance
their familiarity with finance and accounting by participating in
educational programs conducted by the Corporation or an outside consultant.
The members of the Committee shall be elected by the Board at the annual
organizational meeting of the Board or until their successors shall be duly
elected and qualified. Unless a Chair is elected by the full Board, the
members of the Committee may designate a Chair by majority vote of the full
Committee membership.

III.  MEETINGS

The Committee shall meet at least four times annually, or more frequently
as circumstances dictate.  As part of its job to foster open communication,
the Committee should meet at least annually with management, the director
of the internal auditing department and the independent auditors in
separate executive sessions to discuss any matters that the Committee or
each of these groups believe should be discussed privately.  In addition,
the Committee or at least its Chair should communicate with the independent
auditors and management quarterly to review the Corporation's financials
consistent with Section IV.3 below.

IV.  RESPONSIBILITIES AND DUTIES

To fulfill its responsibilities and duties the Audit Committee shall:

Documents/Reports Review

1.   Review, and if necessary, update this Charter at least annually.
     Submit the Charter to the Board of Directors for approval and have the
     document published at least every three years in accordance with SEC
     regulations.

2.   Review the Corporation's annual audited financial statements prior to
     filing.  Review should include discussion with management and independent
     auditors of significant issues regarding accounting principles, practices,
     and judgements. Discuss any items required to be communicated by the
     independent auditors to the Audit Committee in accordance with SAS 61.

3.   Discuss any items required to be communicated by the independent
     auditors to the Audit Committee in accordance with SAS 61 in connection
     with the Company's quarterly financial statements.  The Chair of the
     Committee may represent the entire Audit Committee for purposes of this
     review.

4.   Review significant findings prepared by the independent auditors and
     internal reports to management prepared by the internal auditing department
     and management's response thereto.

Independent Auditors

5.   Recommend to the Board of Directors the selection of the independent
     auditors, considering independence and effectiveness and approve the fees
     and other compensation to be paid to the independent auditors.  On an
     annual basis, the Committee should review and discuss with the auditors all
     significant relationships the auditors have with the Corporation that could
     impair the auditors' independence.

6.   The independent auditors are ultimately accountable to the Audit
     Committee and the Board of Directors.  The Audit Committee shall review the
     performance of the independent auditors and approve any proposed discharge
     of the independent auditors when circumstances warrant.

7.   Consider the independent auditors' judgments about the quality and
     appropriateness of the Corporation's accounting principles as applied to
     its financial reporting.

                               29

8.   In consultation with the independent auditors and the internal
     auditors, review the integrity of the Corporation's financial reporting
     processes and controls, both internal and external.

Ethical and Legal Compliance

9.   Review or authorize the review of any matters within the Audit
     Committee's scope of responsibilities.  The Committee shall have the power
     to retain independent counsel, auditors, or others to assist it in the
     conduct of any such review.

10.  Establish, review, and update periodically a Code of Ethical Conduct
     and review  management's controls for establishing a system to enforce this
     Code.

11.  Review activities, organizational structure, and qualifications of the
     internal audit department.

12.  Review, with the Corporation's counsel, legal compliance matters
     including corporate securities trading policies.

13.  Review, with the Corporation's counsel, any legal matter that could
     have a significant impact on the Corporation's financial statements.

14.  Annually prepare a report to shareholders as required by the
     Securities and Exchange Commission.  The report should be included in the
     Company's annual proxy statement.

15.  Perform any other activities consistent with this Charter, the
     Corporation's by-laws, and governing law, as the Committee or the Board
     deems necessary or appropriate.

                               #     #     #

                                30

ANNEX I

                                  ANNEX I

                            CERNER CORPORATION
                     2001 LONG - TERM INCENTIVE PLAN F

     The purpose of the Cerner Corporation Long-Term Incentive Plan F (the
"Plan") is to encourage designated key associates, consultants and non-
employee directors of Cerner Corporation (the "Company") and its
subsidiaries to contribute materially to the growth of the Company, thereby
benefiting the Company's shareholders by aligning the economic interests of
the participants with those of the shareholders.

     1. Administration

     (a) Committee.  The Plan shall be administered and interpreted by a
committee (the "Committee") appointed by the Board of Directors of the
Company (the "Board").  The Committee shall consist of two or more persons
appointed by the Board, all of whom shall be "outside directors" as defined
under section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
"Code") and related Treasury regulations, and "non-employee directors" as
defined under Rule 16b-3 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended (the "Exchange Act").

     (b) Committee Authority.  The Committee shall have the sole authority
to (i) determine the individuals to whom grants shall be made under the
Plan; (ii) determine the type, size and terms of the grants to be made to
each such individual; (iii) determine the time when the grants will be made
and the duration of any applicable exercise or restriction period,
including the criteria for exercisability and the acceleration of
exercisability; (iv) amend the terms of any previously issued Grant; and
(v) deal with any other matters arising under the Plan.

     (c) Committee Determinations.  The Committee shall have full power and
authority to administer and interpret the Plan, to make factual
determinations and to adopt or amend such rules, regulations, agreements
and instruments for implementing the Plan and for the conduct of its
business as it deems necessary or advisable, in its sole discretion.  The
Committee's interpretations of the Plan and all determinations made by the
Committee pursuant to the powers vested in it hereunder shall be conclusive
and binding on all persons having any interest in the Plan or in any awards
granted hereunder.  All powers of the Committee shall be executed in its
sole discretion, in the best interest of the Company, not as a fiduciary,
and in keeping with the objectives of the Plan and need not be uniform as
to similarly situated individuals.

     2. Grants

     Awards under the Plan may consist of grants of incentive stock options
as described in Section 5 ("Incentive Stock Options"), nonqualified stock
options as described in Section 5 ("Nonqualified Stock Options") (Incentive
Stock Options and Nonqualified Stock Options are collectively referred to
as "Options"), restricted stock as described in Section 6 ("Restricted
Stock"), stock appreciation rights as described in Section 7 ("SARs"),
performance units as described in Section 8 ("Performance Units"),
performance shares as described in Section 8 ("Performance Shares"), and
phantom stock as described in Section 9 ("Phantom Stock") (hereinafter
collectively referred to as "Grants").  All Grants shall be subject to the
terms and conditions set forth herein and to such other terms and
conditions consistent with this Plan as the Committee deems appropriate and
as are specified in writing by the Committee to the individual in a grant
instrument (the "Grant Instrument") or an amendment to the Grant
Instrument.  The Committee shall approve the form and provisions of each
Grant Instrument.  Grants under a particular Section of the Plan need not
be uniform as among the Grantees.

     3. Shares Subject to the Plan

     (a) Shares Authorized.  Subject to the adjustment specified in Section
3(c) below, the aggregate number of shares of common stock of the Company
("Company Stock") that may be issued or transferred under the Plan is two
million (2,000,000) shares.  Not more than five hundred thousand (500,000)
of such shares, subject to adjustment as provided in Section 3(c) below,
will be available to granting any types of Grants other than Grants of
Options or SARs. The shares may be authorized but unissued shares of
Company Stock or reacquired shares of Company Stock, including treasury
shares and shares purchased by the Company on the open market for purposes
of the Plan.  If and to the extent Options or SARs granted under the Plan
terminate, expire, or are canceled, forfeited,

                             31

exchanged or surrendered without having been exercised or if any shares of
Restricted Stock, Performance Units, Performance Shares or Phantom Stock are
forfeited, the shares (if any) subject to such Grants shall again be
available for purposes of the Plan and credited back to the 2,000,000 share
limitation on Company Stock, as applicable.  In addition, if any shares are
used by a Grantee as full or partial payment to the Company of the purchase
price relating to a Grant, whether by actual delivery or attestation, or in
connection with satisfaction of tax obligations relating to a Grant,
whether by actual delivery, attestation or having shares withheld from the
Grant, only the number of shares issued net of the shares tendered or
withheld shall be deemed delivered for purposes of determining the maximum
number of shares available for Grants under the Plan.

     (b) Individual Limit.  During any calendar year, no individual may be
granted Options or other Grants under the Plan that, in the aggregate, may
be settled by delivery of more than five hundred thousand (500,000) shares
of Company Stock, subject to adjustment as provided in Section 3(c).  In
addition, with respect to Grants the value of which is based on the Fair
Market Value of Company Stock and that may be settled in cash (in whole or
in part), no individual may be paid during any calendar year cash amounts
relating to such Grants that exceed the greater of the Fair Market Value
(as defined in Section 5(b)(iii)) of the number of shares of Company Stock
set forth in the preceding sentence either at the date of grant or at the
date of settlement.  This provision sets forth two separate limitations, so
that Grants that may be settled solely by delivery of Company Stock will
not operate to reduce the amount or value of cash-only Grants, and vice
versa; nevertheless, Grants that may be settled in Company Stock or cash
must not exceed either limitation.

     With respect to Grants, the value of which is not based on the Fair
Market Value of Company Stock, no individual may receive during any
calendar year cash or shares of Company Stock with a Fair Market Value at
date of grant that, in the aggregate, exceeds five hundred thousand
dollars.

     (c) Adjustments.  If there is any change in the number or kind of
shares of Company Stock outstanding (i) by reason of a stock dividend, spin-
off, recapitalization, stock split, or combination or exchange of shares,
(ii) by reason of a merger, reorganization or consolidation in which the
Company is the surviving corporation, (iii) by reason of a reclassification
or change in par value, or (iv) by reason of any other extraordinary or
unusual event affecting the outstanding Company Stock as a class without
the Company's receipt of consideration, or if the value of outstanding
shares of Company Stock is substantially reduced as a result of a spin-off
or the Company's payment of an extraordinary dividend or distribution, the
maximum number of shares of Company Stock available for Grants, the maximum
number of shares of Company Stock that any individual participating in the
Plan may be granted in any year, the number of shares covered by
outstanding Grants, the kind of shares issued under the Plan, and the price
per share or the applicable market value of such Grants may be
appropriately adjusted by the Committee to reflect any increase or decrease
in the number of, or change in the kind or value of, issued shares of
Company Stock to preclude, to the extent practicable, the enlargement or
dilution of rights and benefits under such Grants; provided, however, that
any fractional shares resulting from such adjustment shall be eliminated.
Any adjustments determined by the Committee shall be final, binding and
conclusive.  If and to the extent that any such change in the number or
kind of shares of Company Stock outstanding is effected solely by
application of a mathematical formula (e.g., a 2-for-1 stock split), the
adjustment described in this Section 3(c) shall be made and shall occur
automatically by application of such formula, without further action by the
Committee.

     4. Eligibility for Participation

     (a) Eligible Persons.  All key associates of the Company and its
subsidiaries ("Associates"), including Associates who are officers or
members of the Board, shall be eligible to participate in the Plan.
Members of the Board who are not Associates shall be eligible to
participate in the Plan.

     (b) Selection of Grantees.  The Committee shall select the Associates
to receive Grants and shall determine the number of shares of Company Stock
subject to a particular Grant, and/or shall establish such other terms and
conditions applicable to such Grant, in such manner as the Committee
determines.  Associates who receive Grants under this Plan shall
hereinafter be referred to as "Grantees."

     5. Granting of Options

     (a) Number of Shares.  The Committee shall determine the number of
shares of Company Stock that will be subject to each Grant of Options.

                              32

     (b) Type of Option and Price.

     (i) The Committee may grant Incentive Stock Options that are intended
to qualify as "incentive stock options" within the meaning of section 422
of the Code or Nonqualified Stock Options that are not intended so to
qualify or any combination of Incentive Stock Options and Nonqualified
Stock Options, all in accordance with the terms and conditions set forth
herein.

     (ii) The purchase price (the "Exercise Price") of Company Stock
subject to an Option shall be determined by the Committee and may be equal
to or greater than the Fair Market Value (as defined below) of a share of
Company Stock on the date the Option is granted; provided, however, that an
Incentive Stock Option may not be granted to an Associate who, at the time
of grant, owns stock possessing more than 10% of the total combined voting
power of all classes of stock of the Company or any parent or subsidiary of
the Company, unless the Exercise Price per share is not less than 110% of
the Fair Market Value of Company Stock on the date of grant.

     (iii) The Fair Market Value per share as of any date shall be the
closing reported sale prices of the Stock on The Nasdaq Stock Market (or
such other national securities exchange in the event the Company stock is
not then traded on The Nasdaq Stock Market) as of that date, or if there is
no such reported sales price on the relevant date, then on the last
previous day on which a sale was reported.

     (c) Option Term.  The Committee shall determine the term of each
Option.  The term of any Option shall not exceed twenty-five years from the
date of grant.  However, an Incentive Stock Option that is granted to an
Associate who, at the time of grant, owns stock possessing more than 10% of
the total combined voting power of all classes of stock of the Company, or
any parent or subsidiary of the Company, may not have a term that exceeds
five years from the date of grant.

     (d) Exercisability of Options.  Options shall become exercisable in
accordance with such terms and conditions, consistent with the Plan, as may
be determined by the Committee and specified in the Grant Instrument or an
amendment to the Grant Instrument.  The Committee may accelerate the
exercisability of any or all outstanding Options at any time for any
reason.

     (e) Termination of Employment, Disability or Death. Except as provided
below, an Option may only be exercised while the Grantee is employed by the
Company.  In the event that a Grantee ceases to be so employed for any
reason other than a "disability", death, retirement, or a termination for
the convenience of the Company, any Option held by the Grantee shall
terminate at the close of business ninety days after the Grantee's last day
of employment. In all such cases as described below under (i), (ii), (iii)
and (iv) the Option may be exercised only as to the shares of Company Stock
as to which the Option had become exercisable on or before the date the
Grantee ceases to be an Associate.

     (i) In the event that the Grantee ceases to be employed in a manner
determined by the Committee or Board, in its sole discretion, to constitute
retirement (which determination shall be communicated to the Grantee within
sixty days of such termination), the Option may be exercised by the
Grantee, or in the case of the Grantee's death, by the Grantee's
beneficiaries entitled to do so, within three months following the
Grantee's retirement if the Option is an Incentive Stock Option or within
twelve months following the Grantee's retirement if the Option is a
Nonqualified Stock Option (provided in each case that such exercise must
occur within the Option term), but not thereafter.

     (ii) In the event the Grantee dies (A) while he or she is an
Associate, (B) within the three-month period referred to in clause (iv)
below, or (C) within the three or twelve-month period referred to in clause
(i) above, the Option may be exercised by those beneficiaries of the
Associate entitled to do so within the twelve months following the
Grantee's death (provided that such exercise must occur within the Option
term), but not thereafter.

     (iii) In the event the Grantee ceases to be employed by the Company
because the Grantee becomes "disabled", Incentive Stock Options held by the
Grantee may be exercised by the Grantee within twelve months following the
date the Grantee ceases to be an Associate (provided that such exercise
must occur within the Option term), but not thereafter.  If the Grantee
becomes disabled within the three month period referred to in clause (iv)
below or within the three or twelve month period following his or her
retirement as provided in clause (i) above, Nonqualified Stock Options held
by the Grantee may be exercised by the Grantee within twelve months
following the date of the Grantee's disability (provided that such exercise
must occur within the Option term), but not thereafter.

                            33

     (iv)  In the event the Grantee ceases to be employed by the Company
because the Grantee is terminated for the convenience of the Company (as
determined by the Committee or the Board in its sole discretion), any
Incentive Stock Option and/or Nonqualified Stock Option may be exercised by
the Grantee within three months after the date on which the Grantee ceases
to be employed by the Company (or within such shorter period of time as may
be specified by the Committee) provided that such exercise must occur
within the Option term, but not thereafter.

     (v)  For purposes of this Section 5(e) and Sections 6, 7 and 8:

     (A) The term "Company" shall mean the Company and its subsidiary
corporations.

     (B) "Disability" or "disabled" shall mean a Grantee's becoming
disabled within the meaning of section 22(e)(3) of the Code.

     (f) Exercise of Options.  A Grantee may exercise an Option that has
become exercisable, in whole or in part, by delivering a notice of exercise
to the Company with payment of the Exercise Price.  The Grantee shall pay
the Exercise Price for an Option as specified by the Committee (x) in cash,
(y) with the approval of the Committee, by delivering shares of Company
Stock owned by the Grantee (including Company Stock acquired in connection
with the exercise of an Option, subject to such restrictions as the
Committee deems appropriate) and having an aggregate Fair Market Value for
such shares on the date of exercise equal to the aggregate Exercise Price
or (z) by such other method as the Committee may approve, including
attestation (on a form prescribed by the Committee) to ownership of shares
of Company Stock having a Fair Market Value on the date of exercise equal
to the Exercise Price, or payment through a broker in accordance with
procedures permitted by Regulation T of the Federal Reserve Board.  In
addition, the Committee may authorize loans by the Company to Grantees in
connection with the exercise of an Option, upon such terms and conditions
that the Committee, in its sole discretion, deems appropriate.  Shares of
Company Stock used to exercise an Option shall have been held by the
Grantee for the requisite period of time to avoid adverse accounting
consequences to the Company with respect to the Option.  The Grantee shall
pay the Exercise Price and the amount of any withholding tax due (pursuant
to Section 10) at the time of exercise. Shares of the Company Stock shall
not be issued upon exercise of an Option until the Exercise Price is fully
paid and any required withholding is made.  In the event that shares of
Company Stock are used to exercise an Option, the terms of such Option may
provide for a Grant of additional Options, or the Committee may grant
additional Options, to purchase, at Fair Market Value as of the date of
exercise of the Option or the date of grant of such additional Options,
whichever is later, for a term equal to the unexpired term of the exercised
Option, a number of shares of Company Stock equal to the sum of the number
of whole shares used to exercise the Option and the number of whole shares,
if any, withheld in payment of any withholding taxes.

     (g) Limits on Incentive Stock Options.  Each Incentive Stock Option
shall provide that, if the aggregate Fair Market Value of the stock on the
date of grant with respect to which Incentive Stock Options are exercisable
for the first time by a Grantee during any calendar year, under the Plan or
any other stock option plan of the Company or a parent or subsidiary,
exceeds one hundred thousand U.S. dollars ($100,000), then the Option, as
to the excess, shall be treated as a Nonqualified Stock Option.

     6. Restricted Stock Grants

     The Committee may issue or transfer shares of Company Stock to a
Grantee under a Grant of Restricted Stock, upon such terms as the Committee
deems appropriate.  The following provisions are applicable to Restricted
Stock:

     (a) General Requirements.  Shares of Company Stock issued or
transferred pursuant to Restricted Stock Grants may be issued or
transferred for consideration or for no consideration, as determined by the
Committee.  The Committee may establish conditions under which restrictions
on shares of Restricted Stock shall lapse over a period of time or
according to such other criteria as the Committee deems appropriate
including, without limitation, restrictions based upon the achievement of
specific performance goals.  The period of time during which the Restricted
Stock will remain subject to restrictions will be designated in the Grant
Instrument as the "Restriction Period."

     (b) Number of Shares.  The Committee shall determine the number of
shares of Company Stock to be issued or transferred pursuant to a
Restricted Stock Grant and the restrictions applicable to such shares.

                             34

     (c) Requirement of Employment.  If the Grantee ceases to be employed
by the Company during the Restriction Period, or if other specified
conditions are not met, the Restricted Stock Grant shall terminate as to
all shares covered by the Grant as to which the restrictions have not
lapsed at the close of business on the Grantee's last day of employment,
and those shares of Company Stock must be immediately returned to the
Company.  The Committee may, however, accelerate the termination of the
restrictions for all or a portion of such Restricted Stock as it deems
appropriate.

     (d) Restrictions on Transfer and Legend on Stock Certificate.  During
the Restriction Period, a Grantee may not sell, assign, transfer, pledge or
otherwise dispose of the shares of Restricted Stock except to a Successor
Grantee under Section 11(a).  Each certificate for a share of Restricted
Stock shall contain a legend giving appropriate notice of the restrictions
in the Grant.  The Grantee shall be entitled to have the legend removed
from the stock certificate covering the shares subject to restrictions when
all restrictions on such shares have lapsed.  The Committee may determine
that the Company will not issue certificates for shares of Restricted Stock
until all restrictions on such shares have lapsed, or that the Company will
retain possession of certificates for shares of Restricted Stock until all
restrictions on such shares have lapsed.

     (e) Right to Vote and to Receive Dividends.  Unless the Committee
determines otherwise, during the Restriction Period the Grantee shall not
have the right to vote shares of Restricted Stock.  During the Restriction
Period the Grantee shall have the right to receive any dividends or other
distributions paid on such shares, subject to any restrictions deemed
appropriate by the Committee.  Such dividends, if any, may be paid
currently, accrued as contingent cash obligations, or converted into
additional shares of Restricted Stock, upon such terms as the Committee may
establish, including the achievement of specific performance goals.

     (f) Lapse of Restrictions.  All restrictions imposed on Restricted
Stock shall lapse upon the expiration of the applicable Restriction Period
and the satisfaction of all conditions imposed by the Committee.  The
Committee may terminate the restrictions, as to any or all Restricted Stock
Grants, without regard to any Restriction Period.

     7. Stock Appreciation Rights

     (a) General Requirements.  The Committee may grant SARs to a Grantee
separately or in tandem with any Option (for all or a portion of the
applicable Option).  Tandem SARs may be granted either at the time the
Option is granted or at any time thereafter while the Option remains
outstanding; provided, however, that, in the case of an Incentive Stock
Option, SARs may be granted only at the time of grant of the Incentive
Stock Option.  The Committee shall establish the base amount of the SAR at
the time the SAR is granted.  Unless the Committee determines otherwise,
the base amount of each SAR shall be equal to the per share Exercise Price
of the related Option or, if there is no related Option, the Fair Market
Value of a share of Company Stock as of the date of grant of the SAR.

     (b) Tandem SARs.  In the case of tandem SARs, the number of SARs
granted to a Grantee that shall be exercisable during a specified period
shall not exceed the number of shares of Company Stock that the Grantee may
purchase upon the exercise of the related Option during such period.  Upon
the exercise of an Option, the SARs relating to the Company Stock covered
by such Option shall terminate.  Upon the exercise of SARs, the related
Option shall terminate to the extent of an equal number of shares of
Company Stock.

     (c) Exercisability.  An SAR shall be exercisable during the period
specified by the Committee in the Grant Instrument and shall be subject to
such vesting and other restrictions as may be specified in the Grant
Instrument; provided, however, that the term of the SAR shall not exceed
ten years.  The Committee may accelerate the exercisability of any or all
outstanding SARs at any time for any reason.  SARs may only be exercised
while the Grantee is employed by the Company or during the applicable
period after termination of employment as described in Section 5(e) for
Options.  For purposes of the preceding sentence, the rules applicable to a
tandem SAR shall be the rules applicable under Section 5(e) to the Option
to which it relates, and the rules applicable to any other SAR shall be the
rules applicable under Section 5(e) for a Nonqualified Stock Option.  A
tandem SAR shall be exercisable only during the period when the Option to
which it is related is also exercisable.

     (d) Value of SARs.  When a Grantee exercises SARs, the Grantee shall
receive in settlement of such SARs an amount equal to the value of the
stock appreciation for the number of SARs exercised, payable in cash,
Company Stock or a combination thereof.  The stock appreciation for an SAR
is the amount by which the Fair Market Value of the underlying Company
Stock on the date of exercise of the SAR exceeds the base amount of the SAR
as described in Subsection (a).

                            35

     (e) Form of Payment.  The Committee shall determine whether the
appreciation in an SAR shall be paid in the form of cash, shares of Company
Stock, or a combination of the two, in such proportion as the Committee
deems appropriate.  For purposes of calculating the number of shares of
Company Stock to be received, shares of Company Stock shall be valued at
their Fair Market Value on the date of exercise of the SAR.  If shares of
Company Stock are to be received upon exercise of an SAR, cash shall be
delivered in lieu of any fractional share.

     8. Performance Units and Performance Shares

     (a) General Requirements.  The Committee may grant Performance Units
or Performance Shares to a Grantee.  Each Performance Unit/Share shall
represent the right of the Grantee to receive an amount based on the value
of the Performance Unit/Share, if performance goals established by the
Committee are met.  A Performance Unit shall have a value based on such
measurements or criteria as the Committee determines.  A Performance Share
shall have a value equal to the Fair Market Value of a share of Company
Stock.  The Committee shall determine the number of Performance
Units/Shares to be granted and the requirements applicable to such
Units/Shares.

     (b) Performance Period and Performance Goals.  When Performance
Units/Shares are granted, the Committee shall establish the performance
period during which performance shall be measured (the "Performance
Period"), performance goals applicable to the Units/Shares ("Performance
Goals") and such other conditions of the Grant as the Committee deems
appropriate.

     (c) Payment with respect to Performance Units/Shares.  At the end of
each Performance Period, the Committee shall determine to what extent the
Performance Goals and other conditions of the Performance Units/Shares are
met, the value of the Performance Units (if applicable) and the amount, if
any, to be paid with respect to the number of Performance Units/Shares that
have been earned.  Payments with respect to Performance Units/Shares shall
be made in cash, in Company Stock, or in a combination of the two, as
determined by the Committee.

     (d) Requirement of Employment.  If the Grantee ceases to be employed
by the Company during a Performance Period, or if other conditions
established by the Committee are not met, the Grantee's Performance
Units/Shares shall be forfeited at the close of business on the Grantee's
last day of employment.  The Committee may, however, provide for complete
or partial exceptions to this requirement as it deems appropriate.  If the
Grantee ceases to be employed by the Company after the expiration of a
Performance Period but prior to payment, payment shall be made to the
Grantee or the Successor Grantee, if applicable.

     9. Phantom Stock

     (a) General Requirements.  The Committee may grant Phantom Stock to a
Grantee in such amounts and upon such terms, and at any time and from time
to time, as shall be determined by the Committee.

     (b) Value of Phantom Stock.  The Committee shall establish the initial
value of the Phantom Stock at the time of grant which may be greater than,
equal to or less than the Fair Market Value of a share of Company Stock.

     (c) Form and Timing of Payment.  The Committee shall determine whether
the Phantom Stock shall be paid in the form of cash, shares of Company
Stock or a combination of the two, in such proportion as the Committee
deems appropriate.  Cash payments shall be in an amount equal to the Fair
Market Value on the payment date of the number of shares of Company Stock
equal to the number of shares of Phantom Stock with respect to which
payment is made.  The number of shares of Company Stock distributed in
settlement of a Phantom Stock Grant shall equal the number of shares of
Phantom Stock with respect to which settlement is made.  Payment shall be
made in accordance with the terms and at such times as determined by the
Committee at the time of grant.

     (d) Requirement of Employment.  If the Grantee ceases to be employed
by the Company prior to becoming vested or otherwise entitled to payment,
the Grantee's Phantom Stock shall be forfeited at the close of business on
the Grantee's last day of employment.  The Committee may, however, provide
for complete or partial exceptions to this requirement as it deems
appropriate.

                          36

     10.  Withholding of Taxes

     (a) Required Withholding.  All Grants under the Plan shall be subject
to applicable federal (including FICA), state and local tax withholding
requirements.  The Company shall have the right to deduct from all Grants
paid in cash, or from other wages paid to the Grantee, any federal, state
or local taxes required by law to be withheld with respect to such Grants.
In the case of Options and other Grants paid in Company Stock, the Company
may require the Grantee or other person receiving such shares to pay to the
Company the amount of any such taxes that the Company is required to
withhold with respect to such Grants, or the Company may deduct from other
wages paid by the Company the amount of any withholding taxes due with
respect to such Grants.

     (b) Election to Withhold Shares.  If the Committee so permits, a
Grantee may elect to satisfy the Company's income tax withholding
obligation with respect to an Option, SAR, Restricted Stock, Performance
Units, Performance Shares or Phantom Stock, any of which is paid in Company
Stock, by having shares withheld having an aggregate Fair Market Value up
to an amount that does not exceed the required minimum amount necessary to
satisfy the federal (including FICA), state and local tax liabilities.  The
election must be in a form and manner prescribed by the Committee and shall
be subject to the prior approval of the Committee.

     11.  Transferability of Grants

     (a) Nontransferability of Grants.  Except as provided below, only the
Grantee may exercise rights under a Grant during the Grantee's lifetime.  A
Grantee may not transfer those rights except by will or by the laws of
descent and distribution or, with respect to Grants other than Incentive
Stock Options, if permitted in any specific case by the Committee, pursuant
to a domestic relations order (as defined under the Code or Title I of the
Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended, or the
regulations thereunder).  When a Grantee dies, the personal representative
or other person entitled to succeed to the rights of the Grantee
("Successor Grantee") may exercise such rights which have not been
extinguished by the Grantee's death.  A Successor Grantee must furnish
proof satisfactory to the Company of his or her right to receive the Grant
under the Grantee's will or under the applicable laws of descent and
distribution.

     (b) Transfer of Nonqualified Stock Options.  Notwithstanding the
foregoing, the Committee may provide in a Grant Instrument that a Grantee
may transfer Nonqualified Stock Options to family members or other persons
or entities according to such terms as the Committee may determine;
provided that the Grantee receives no consideration for the transfer of an
Option and the transferred Option shall continue to be subject to the same
terms and conditions as were applicable to the Option immediately before
the transfer.

     12.  Grants Subject to Code Section 162(m)

     (a) Performance Based Grants.  Any Grant to a Grantee who is a
"covered employee" within the meaning of Code Section 162(m), the
exercisability or settlement of which is subject to the achievement of
performance goals, shall qualify as "qualified performance-based
compensation" within the meaning of Code Section 162(m) and regulations
thereunder.  The performance goals for such a Grant shall consist of one or
more of the business criteria set forth in Section 12(b), below, and a
targeted level or levels of performance with respect to such criteria, as
specified by the Committee in writing prior to (or, in the event the
applicable performance period is one year, within 90 days after
commencement of) the applicable performance period.  Performance goals
shall be objective and shall otherwise meet the requirements of Section
162(m)(4)(C) of the Code and regulations thereunder.  Performance goals may
differ for such Grants to different Grantees.  The Committee shall specify
the weighting to be given to each performance goal for purposes of
determining the final amount payable with respect to any such Grant.  The
Committee may, in its discretion, reduce the amount of a payout otherwise
to be made in connection with such a Grant, but may not exercise discretion
to increase such amount.  All determinations by the Committee as to the
achievement of performance goals shall be certified in writing prior to
payment under the Plan, in the form of minutes of a meeting of the
Committee or otherwise.

     (b) Business Criteria.  Unless and until the Committee proposes for
shareholder approval and the Company's shareholders approve a change in the
general business criteria set forth in this Section, the attainment of
which may determine the amount and/or vesting with respect to Grants, the
business criteria to be used for purposes of establishing performance goals
for such Grants shall be selected from among the following alternatives,
each of which may be based on absolute standards or peer industry group
comparatives and may be applied at various organizational levels (e.g.,
corporate, business unit, division):

                           37

     (i)       Total shareholder return
     (ii)      Stock price increase
     (iii)     Return on equity
     (iv)      Return on capital
     (v)       Cash flow, including operating cash flows, free cash flow,
               discounted cash flow return on investment, and cash flow in
               excess of cost of capital
     (vi)      Economic value added
     (vii)     Market share
     (viii)    Client/associate satisfaction as measured by survey
               instruments
     (ix)      Earnings per share
     (x)       Revenue Levels
     (xi)      Personal performance
     (xii)     Productivity measures
     (xiii)    Diversification of business opportunities
     (xiv)     Price to earnings ratio
     (xv)      Expense ratios
     (xvi)     Total expenditures
     (xvii)    Completion of key projects
     (xviii)   Employee Retention

     In the event that Code Section 162(m) or applicable tax and/or
securities laws change to permit Committee discretion to alter the
governing performance measures without disclosing to shareholders and
obtaining shareholder approval of such changes and without thereby exposing
the Company to potentially adverse tax or other legal consequences, the
Committee shall have sole discretion to make such changes without obtaining
shareholder approval.

     13.  Deferrals

     The Committee may permit or require a Grantee to defer receipt of the
payment of cash or the delivery of shares that would otherwise be due to
such Grantee by virtue of the exercise of any Option or SAR, the lapse or
waiver of restrictions applicable to Restricted Stock, the satisfaction of
any requirements or objectives with respect to Performance Units/Shares or
the vesting or satisfaction of any terms applicable to Phantom Stock.  If
any such deferral election is permitted or required, the Committee shall,
in its sole discretion, establish rules and procedures for such deferrals.

     14. Requirements for Issuance or Transfer of Shares

     No Company Stock shall be issued or transferred in connection with any
Grant hereunder unless and until all legal requirements applicable to the
issuance or transfer of such Company Stock have been complied with to the
satisfaction of the Committee.  The Committee shall have the right to
condition any Grant made to any Grantee hereunder on such Grantee's
undertaking in writing to comply with such restrictions on his or her
subsequent disposition of such shares of Company Stock as the Committee
shall deem necessary or advisable as a result of any applicable law,
regulation or official interpretation thereof, and certificates
representing such shares may be legended to reflect any such restrictions.
Certificates representing shares of Company Stock issued or transferred
under the Plan will be subject to such stop-transfer orders and other
restrictions as may be required by applicable laws, regulations and
interpretations, including any requirement that a legend be placed thereon.

     15. Amendment and Termination of the Plan

     (a) Amendment.  The Committee or the Board of Directors of the Company
may amend or terminate the Plan at any time or from time to time, without
obtaining the approval of the Company's shareholders, except that the Plan
may not be amended (i) to increase the aggregate number of shares issuable
under the Plan for incentive stock options (but not nonqualified stock
options and excepting proportionate adjustments made under Section 3(c) to
give effect to stock splits, etc); (ii) to change the option price of
optioned stock (excepting proportionate adjustments made under Section
3(c); (iii) to change the requirement that the option price per share of
common stock covered by an incentive stock option (but not a nonqualified
stock option) granted under this plan not be less than 100% of the fair
market value of the Company's common stock on the date such option is
granted; (iv) to extend the time within

                           38

which Options may be granted or the time without which a granted Option may
be exercised; (v) to change, without the consent of the Optionee (or the
Optionee's, or the Optionee's estate's, legal representative), any Option
previously granted to him or her under the Plan; or (vi) make any amendment
if shareholder approval is required by Section 162(m) of the Code or the rules
of any stock exchange on which Company Stock is listed.

     (b) Termination of Plan.  The Plan shall terminate on the day
immediately preceding the tenth anniversary of its effective date, unless
the Plan is terminated earlier by the Committee or is extended by the
Committee with the approval of the shareholders.

     (c) Termination and Amendment of Outstanding Grants.  A termination or
amendment of the Plan that occurs after a Grant is made shall not
materially impair the rights of a Grantee unless the Grantee consents or
unless the Committee acts under Section 23(b).  The termination of the Plan
shall not impair the power and authority of the Committee with respect to
an outstanding Grant.  Whether or not the Plan has terminated, an
outstanding Grant may be terminated or amended under Section 23(b) or may
be amended by agreement of the Company and the Grantee consistent with the
Plan.

     (d) Governing Document.  The Plan shall be the controlling document.
No other statements, representations, explanatory materials or examples,
oral or written, may amend the Plan in any manner.  The Plan shall be
binding upon and enforceable against the Company and its successors and
assigns.

     16.  Funding of the Plan

     This Plan shall be unfunded.  The Company shall not be required to
establish any special or separate fund or to make any other segregation of
assets to assure the payment of any Grants under this Plan.  In no event
shall interest be paid or accrued on any Grant, including unpaid
installments of Grants.

     17.  Rights of Participants

     Nothing in this Plan shall entitle any Associate or other person to
any claim or right to be granted a Grant under this Plan, and no Grant
shall entitle any Associate or other person to any future Grant.  Neither
this Plan nor any action taken hereunder shall be construed as giving any
individual any rights to be retained by or in the employ of the Company or
any other employment rights.

     18.  No Fractional Shares

     No fractional shares of Company Stock shall be issued or delivered
pursuant to the Plan or any Grant.  The Committee shall determine whether
cash, other awards or other property shall be issued or paid in lieu of
such fractional shares or whether such fractional shares or any rights
thereto shall be forfeited or otherwise eliminated.

     19.    Reorganization, Merger, Consolidation, Sale of Assets or Change
of Control.

     (a) General. Except as otherwise provided in any Grant Instrument or
other agreement approved by the Committee to which any Board Director or
Eligible Associate is a party, in the event that the Company undergoes a
Change of Control, as defined in Section 19(c), each Option, share of
Restricted Stock and other Grant held by a Board Director shall without
regard to any vesting schedule, restriction or performance target,
automatically become fully exercisable or payable, as the case may be, as
of the date of such Change of Control.  In addition to the foregoing, in
the event the Company undergoes a Change of Control or in the event of a
corporate merger, consolidation, major acquisition of property for stock,
separation, reorganization or liquidation in which the Company is a party
to and in which a Change of Control does not occur, the Committee, or the
board of directors of any corporation assuming the obligations of the
Company, shall also have the full power and discretion to prescribe and
amend the terms and conditions of any outstanding Grants granted hereunder.
The Committee may remove restrictions on Restricted Stock and may modify
the performance requirements for any other Grants. The Committee may
provide that Options or other Grants granted hereunder must be exercised in
connection with the closing of such transactions, and that if not so
exercised such Grants will expire. Any such determinations by the Committee
may be made generally with respect to all Grantees, or may be made on a
case-by-case basis with respect to particular Grantees. Notwithstanding the
foregoing, any transaction undertaken for the purpose of reincorporating
the Company under the laws of another jurisdiction, if such transaction
does not materially affect the beneficial ownership of the

                              39

Company's capital stock shall not constitute a merger, consolidation, major
acquisition of property for stock, separation, reorganization, liquidation
or Change of Control.

     (b) Stock Options. By way of illustration, and not by way of
limitation, in the event of a Change of Control or in the event of
corporate merger, consolidation, major acquisition of property for stock,
separation, reorganization or liquidation in which the Company is a party
to and in which a Change of Control does not occur, the Committee may,
without obtaining shareholder approval (i) in all such events other than a
liquidation, cause any Option then outstanding to be assumed by the
surviving corporation in such corporate transaction; (ii) require the
mandatory surrender to the Company by any Grantee of some (in all such
events other than a liquidation) or all of the outstanding Options held by
a Grantee as of a date specified by the Company or the surviving
corporation, in which event the Company or the surviving corporation shall
thereupon cancel such Options and pay to each Grantee an amount of cash per
share equal to the amount that could have been attained upon the exercise
of such Option or realization of the Grantee's rights to the extent that
such cash is available for distribution to Grantees after payment of all
debt and senior securities of the Company; (iii) in all such events other
than a liquidation, require the substitution of a new Option for some or
all of the outstanding Options held by a Grantee provided that any
replacement or substituted Option shall be equivalent in economic value to
the Grantee; or (iv) in all such events other than a liquidation, make such
adjustment to any such Option then outstanding as the Company deems
appropriate to reflect such merger, consolidation, major acquisition of
property for stock, separation, reorganization or liquidation.

     (c) Definition of Change of Control. For purposes of this Plan, a
Change of Control of the Company shall mean:

     (i)     The acquisition by any individual, entity or group within the
meaning of Section 12(d)(3) or 13(d)(2) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, as amended (the "Exchange Act" a ("Person") of beneficial ownership
(within the meaning of Rule 13d-3 promulgated under the Exchange Act) of
35% or more of either: (A) the then outstanding shares of common stock of
the Company (the "outstanding Corporation Common Stock") or (B) the
combined voting power of the then outstanding voting securities of the
Company entitled to vote generally in the election of directors (the
"Outstanding Corporation Voting Securities"); provided, however, that for
purposes of this subsection (i), the following acquisitions shall not
constitute a Change of Control: (X) any acquisition directly from the
Company, (Y) any acquisition by the Company, (E) any acquisition by any
employee benefit plan (or related trust) sponsored or maintained by the
Company or any corporation controlled by the Company or (Z) any acquisition
by any corporation pursuant to a transaction which complies with clauses
(A) and (B) of subsection (i) of this Section 19(c); or

     (ii)     Individuals who, as of the date hereof, constitute the Board
(the "Incumbent Board") cease for any reason to constitute at least a
majority of the Board; provided, however, that any individual becoming a
director subsequent to the date hereof whose election, or nomination for
election by the Company's shareholders, was approved by a vote of at least
a majority of the directors then comprising the Incumbent Board shall be
considered as though such individual were a member of the Incumbent Board,
but excluding, for this purpose, any such individual whose initial
assumption of office occurs as a result of an actual or threatened election
contest with respect to the election or removal of directors or other
actual or threatened solicitation of proxies or consents by or on behalf of
a Person other than the Board; or

     (iii)     Consummation of a reorganization, merger or consolidation or
sale or other disposition of all or substantially all of the assets of the
Company ( a "Business Combination"), in each case, unless, following such
Business Combination, (A), all or substantially all of the individuals and
entities who were the beneficial owners, respectively, of the Outstanding
Corporation Common Stock and Outstanding Corporation Voting Securities
immediately prior to such Business Combination beneficially own, directly
or indirectly, more than 50% of, respectively, the then outstanding shares
of common stock and the combined voting power of the then outstanding
voting securities entitled to vote generally in the election of directors,
as the case may be, of the Company resulting from such Business Combination
(including, without limitation, a corporation which as a result of such
transaction owns the Company or all or substantially all of the Company's
assets either directly or through one or more subsidiaries) in
substantially the same proportions as their ownership, immediately prior to
such Business Combination of the Outstanding Corporation Common Stock and
Outstanding Corporation Voting Securities, as the case may be, (B) no
Person ( excluding any employee benefit plan (or related trust) of the
Company or such corporation resulting from such Business Combination)
beneficially owns, directly or indirectly, 35% or more of, respectively,
the then outstanding shares of common stock of the Company resulting from
such Business Combination or the combined voting power of the then
outstanding voting securities of such corporation except to the extent that
such ownership existed prior to the Business Combination and (C) at least a
majority of the members of the board of directors of the Company resulting
from such Business Combination were members of the Incumbent Board at the
time of the execution of the initial agreement, or of the action of the
board, providing for such Business Combination; or

                              40

     (iv)     Approval by the shareholders of the Company of a complete
liquidation or dissolution of the Company.

     20.  Effective Date of the Plan

     This Plan will become effective on May 25, 2001, as approved by the
shareholders of the Company on May 25, 2001.

     21.  Headings

     Section headings are for reference only.  In the event of a conflict
between a title and the content of a Section, the content of the Section
shall control.

     22.  Miscellaneous

     (a) Grants in Connection with Corporate Transactions and Otherwise.
Nothing contained in this Plan shall be construed to (i) limit the right of
the Committee to make Grants under this Plan in connection with the
acquisition, by purchase, lease, merger, consolidation or otherwise, of the
business or assets of any corporation, firm or association, including
Grants to associates thereof who become Associates of the Company, or for
other proper corporate purposes, or (ii) limit the right of the Company to
grant stock options or make other awards outside of this Plan.  Without
limiting the foregoing, the Committee may make a Grant to an associate of
another corporation who becomes an Associate by reason of a corporate
merger, consolidation, acquisition of stock or property, reorganization or
liquidation involving the Company or any of its subsidiaries in
substitution for a stock option or restricted stock grant made by such
corporation.  The terms and conditions of the substitute grants may vary
from the terms and conditions required by the Plan and from those of the
substituted stock incentives.  The Committee shall prescribe the provisions
of the substitute grants.

     (b) Compliance with Law.  The Plan, the exercise of Options and SARs
and the obligations of the Company to issue or transfer shares of Company
Stock under Grants shall be subject to all applicable laws and to approvals
by any governmental or regulatory agency as may be required.  With respect
to persons subject to Section 16 of the Exchange Act, it is the intent of
the Company that the Plan and all transactions under the Plan comply with
all applicable provisions of Rule 16b-3 or its successors under the
Exchange Act.  In particular, and without otherwise limiting the provisions
of this Section 22(b), no Grantee subject to section 16 of the Exchange Act
may exercise any Option or SAR except in accordance with applicable
requirements of Rule 16b-3 or its successors under the Exchange Act.  The
Committee may revoke any Grant if it is contrary to law or modify a Grant
to bring it into compliance with any valid and mandatory government
regulation.  The Committee may also adopt rules regarding the withholding
of taxes on payments to Grantees.  The Committee may, in its sole
discretion, agree to limit its authority under this Section.

     (c) Governing Law.  The validity, construction, interpretation and
effect of the Plan and Grant Instruments issued under the Plan shall
exclusively be governed by and determined in accordance with the law of the
State of Missouri.

                           41

ANNEX II

                                 ANNEX II

                            CERNER CORPORATION
                    2001 Associate Stock Purchase Plan


SECTION 1.     PURPOSE OF PLAN
               ---------------

     The Cerner Corporation 2001 Associate Stock Purchase Plan (the "Plan")
is  designed  to  encourage  and assist associates  of  Cerner  Corporation
("Cerner"  or  "Company"), including all associates of  Cerner  U.S.  based
subsidiaries, to acquire an equity interest in Cerner through the  purchase
of  shares  of  Cerner  common stock, par value  $.01  per  share  ("Common
Stock").  This  Plan is intended to constitute an "employee stock  purchase
plan"  within the meaning of Section 423 of the Internal Revenue Code  (the
"Code").

SECTION 2.     ADMINISTRATION OF THE PLAN
               --------------------------

      The  Plan  shall be administered by Cerner's Board of Directors  (the
"Board") or by a committee of the Board (the "Committee") appointed by  the
Board  and  serving at its pleasure (the Board or any such Committee  being
herein  referred to as the "Administrator"). Until such time as  the  Board
shall  determine otherwise, the Compensation Committee of the  Board  shall
serve  as  Administrator.  The Administrator  shall  have  full  power  and
authority,  not inconsistent with the express provisions of  the  Plan,  to
administer and interpret the Plan, including the authority to:

     (i)     grant options and authorize the issuance of shares;
     (ii)    make  and amend all rules, regulations, guidelines, procedures
             and policies for administering the Plan;
     (iii)   decide all questions and settle all disputes that may arise in
             connection with the Plan;
     (iv)    appoint    persons    and    entities  to  act  as  designated
             representatives on the Administrator's behalf in administering
             the Plan pursuant to its    provisions (in which case the term
             "Administrator" as used herein shall  include  such persons or
             entities to the extent of such appointment);
     (v)     establish  accounts with a person or entity appointed pursuant
             to  (iv)  above  ("Custodian")  to hold Common Stock purchased
             under the Plan ("Stock Account");
     (vi)    cause  Cerner  to  enter  into  a   written agreement with the
             Custodian  setting  forth  the terms and conditions upon which
             Stock Accounts shall be  governed ("Custodial Agreement"); and
     (vii)   require  Participants to hold shares of Common Stock under the
             Plan  in  Stock  Accounts  (in  which  case each Participant's
             decision   to   participate  in  the Plan shall constitute the
             appointment  of  such  Custodian  as  custodial  agent for the
             purpose of holding such shares) until such time    as shall be
             specified in the Custodial Agreement.

     All interpretations, decisions and determinations made by the
Administrator shall be binding on all persons concerned.

SECTION 3.     NATURE AND NUMBER OF SHARES
               ---------------------------

     The Common Stock subject to issuance under the terms of the Plan shall
be  authorized  but unissued shares or previously issued shares  reacquired
and  held by the Company. The aggregate number of shares that may be issued
under the Plan shall not exceed 1,000,000 shares of Common Stock.

      In  the  event of any reorganization, recapitalization, stock  split,
reverse  stock  split, stock dividend, combination of shares,  exchange  of
shares,  merger, consolidation, offering of rights or other similar  change
in  the  capital structure of the Company, the Board or the  Committee  may
make  such adjustment, if any, as it deems appropriate in the number,  kind
and  purchase price of the shares available for purchase under the Plan and
in the maximum number of shares which may be issued under the Plan.

SECTION 4.     ELIGIBILITY
               -----------

      Each individual employed by Cerner, including associates employed  by
its  U.S. based subsidiaries ("Associate"), except as provided below, shall
be eligible to participate in the Plan.  The following individuals shall be
excluded from participation:

                               42

      (a)   Persons  who, as of the date of grant of an Option,  have  been
continuously employed by Cerner for less than two (2) weeks;

     (b)    Persons who,  immediately upon the  grant  of  an  Option,  own
directly  or  indirectly, or hold options or rights to  acquire  under  any
agreement or Company plan, an aggregate of five percent (5%) or more of the
total  combined  voting  power or value of all outstanding  shares  of  all
classes of Cerner Common Stock; and

     (c)    Persons  who  are  customarily employed by the Company for less
than twenty (20) hours per week or for not more than five (5) months in any
calendar year.

SECTION 5.     ENROLLMENT AND WITHDRAWAL
               -------------------------

      Each eligible Associate may enroll or re-enroll in the Plan as of the
first day of any Option Period (as hereinafter defined) after the Associate
first  becomes  eligible  to  participate. To  enroll,  an  Associate  must
complete  and  sign  an  enrollment form  (including  a  payroll  deduction
authorization) in a form acceptable to the Administrator and submit  it  to
the  Company,  or  use such other means to enroll as is authorized  by  the
Administrator, at least 15 calendar days prior to the commencement of  such
Option  Period  or by such other date as the Administrator  may  prescribe.
Participation  in  the  Plan  is voluntary.  A "Participant"  shall  be  an
Associate enrolled in the Plan.

      A  Participant  will automatically be enrolled in all  future  Option
Periods  unless the Participant withdraws from the Plan.  If a  Participant
withdraws from the Plan, he or she will cease to be a Participant  and  may
only  participate in future Option Periods if he or she re-enrolls  in  the
Plan.   Any Participant may withdraw from the Plan by notifying the Company
in  writing during the Option Period provided that such notification is  at
least  three  (3)  business  days prior to the Purchase  Date  (as  defined
below).  Upon such a withdrawal, the entire amount contributed to the  Plan
by  the  Participant (and not yet used to purchase Common  Stock)  will  be
refunded without interest as soon as administratively practicable.  In  the
event  that  a  Participant notifies the Company within the three  (3)  day
period  prior to the Purchase Date, the Participant will be withdrawn  from
participating in the next following Option Period.

SECTION 6.     GRANT OF OPTIONS
               ----------------

      Except as described below with respect to the first year the Plan  is
in  effect, and unless changed by the Board or the Committee, the Plan will
be  implemented by four (4) annual offerings of the Company's Common  Stock
each  calendar  year (the "Option Periods").  There will be  only  two  (2)
Option Periods in calendar year 2001, which will be as follows: (i) July 1,
2001   - September 30, 2001; and (ii) October 1, 2001 - December 31,  2001.
Thereafter,  in  each  year that the Plan is in effect,  the  first  Option
Period  will  begin  on January 1 and end on March 31,  the  second  Option
Period  will  begin on April 1 and end on June 30, the third Option  Period
will  begin on July 1 and end on September 30, and the fourth Option Period
will begin on October 1 and end on December 31.

      Each person who is a Participant on the first day of an Option Period
(the  "Grant Date") will as of such day be granted an option for the Option
Period  (the "Option").  Such Option will be for the purchase of a  maximum
number  of  shares  of Common Stock to be determined by  dividing  (i)  the
balance  credited  to  the Participant's Payment  Account  (as  defined  in
Section  7(b)) during such Option Period by means of payroll deduction  (or
such other means deemed acceptable by the Administrator) as of the Purchase
Date (as determined under Section 8 below), by (ii) the purchase price  per
share of the Common Stock as determined under Section 8.

      In  no  event  shall a Participant be entitled to purchase,  for  any
Option Period, more than the lesser of (i) the number of shares obtained by
dividing $25,000 by the fair market value of a share of Common Stock on the
Grant  Date  for such Option Period, or (ii) the maximum number  of  shares
permitted to be purchased under Section 7(c) below.

     The Administrator will reduce, on a substantially proportionate basis,
the  number  of shares of Common Stock receivable by each Participant  upon
exercise  of his or her Option for an Option Period in the event  that  the
number  of  shares then available under the Plan is otherwise insufficient,
and  will  return  to  Participant without interest  any  remaining  unused
balance  in  the  Participant's Payment Account as soon as administratively
practicable.

                               43

SECTION 7.     METHOD OF PAYMENT
               -----------------

       (a)   Form  of  Payment.
             -----------------    Payment  for  shares  shall  be  made  in
installments through after-tax payroll deductions during the Option Period,
with  such deductions taken from pay periods paid during the Option Period,
or in such other form of payment deemed acceptable by the Administrator.

      Subject to Section 18 and to the limits below and in Section 8,  each
Participant may elect through payroll withholding during the Option  Period
(or such other means deemed acceptable by the Company) to have credited  to
his or her Payment Account an amount not less than one percent (1%) and not
greater  than  twenty  percent (20%) of Compensation  (as  defined  below);
provided that the Administrator from time to time before an enrollment date
may establish limits other than those herein described for all purchases to
occur during the relevant Option Period.

      For  purposes of the Plan, "Compensation" shall mean all compensation
paid  to the Participant by the Company and currently includible in his  or
her  income, including variable compensation (such as commissions,  bonuses
or  other  short-term  incentive payments),  overtime,  and  other  amounts
includible  in the general definition of compensation provided in  Treasury
Regulation  1.415-2(d)(1), plus any amount that would be  so  included  but
for the fact that it was contributed to (a) a qualified plan pursuant to an
elective  deferral  under Section 401(k) of the Code,  (b)  a  nonqualified
deferred  compensation plan, and/or (c) a cafeteria plan  on  a  before-tax
basis  pursuant  to  an election under Section 125 of  the  Code,  but  not
including  (i) payments under stock option plans (including any  amount  of
income  recognized upon the exercise of a stock option) and other  employee
benefit plans or other amounts excluded from the definition of compensation
provided  in  the Treasury Regulations under Section 415 of the  Code,  and
(ii) reimbursements or other expense allowances, fringe benefits (cash  and
noncash), moving expenses, payments of benefits under nonqualified deferred
compensation plans, and welfare benefits.

      A  Participant may decrease the rate of withholding on a  prospective
basis  effective as to future pay periods within an Option Period by giving
written  notice (in a form acceptable to the Administrator) to the  Company
not  less  than two (2) weeks prior to the desired effective date  of  such
decrease.   A  Participant may increase the rate of withholding  by  giving
written  notice (in a form acceptable to the Administrator) to the  Company
at  least two (2) weeks prior to the next Option Period; provided, however,
that  an  increase  in  withholding shall be effective  for  future  Option
Periods  only and shall not be effective as to future pay periods with  the
Option Period in which such request for an increase in withholding is made.

      (b)   Accounts.
            --------    A  "Payment Account" means the book  entry  account
maintained  by  the  Company  or Administrator  to  record  the  amount  of
Participant's  payments made pursuant to Section 7(a) and any  cash  amount
carried forward from an Option Period to the Grant Date for the next Option
Period  pursuant  to Section 9. All payments by each Participant  shall  be
credited  to  such Participant's Payment Account pending  the  purchase  of
Common  Stock  in  accordance with the provisions of  the  Plan.  All  such
amounts  in the Payment Account shall be assets of the Company and  may  be
used by the Company for any corporate purpose. No interest will be paid  on
amounts credited to a Participant's Payment Account.

      (c)   Limits  on  Purchase.
            --------------------   In no event  shall  the  rights  of  any
Participant  to purchase shares (under this Plan and under any other  stock
purchase plans of Cerner which are intended to qualify under Section 423 of
the  Code)  accrue  at  a rate that exceeds $25,000 per  calendar  year  as
measured by the fair market value of such shares (determined in the case of
each such share as of the Grant Date of the related Option).

SECTION 8.     PURCHASE PRICE
               --------------

      The purchase price of Common Stock issued pursuant to the exercise of
an  Option  shall be eighty-five (85%) of the fair market value  of  Common
Stock on the last trading day of the Option Period (the "Purchase Date").

      Fair  market  value shall mean the closing price of Common  Stock  as
reported  on The Nasdaq Stock Market or other national securities  exchange
on which the Common Stock is then principally traded or, if that measure of
price is not available, on a composite index of such exchanges or, if  that
measure  of  price  is  not  available, in a  national  market  system  for
securities.   In the event that there are no sales of Common Stock  on  any
such exchange or market on the Purchase Date, the fair market value of  the
Common  Stock  shall be deemed to be the closing sales price  on  the  next
preceding day on which Common Stock is sold on any such exchange or market.
In  the

                              44

event  that the Common Stock is not listed on any such  market  or exchange
on  the Purchase Date, a reasonable valuation of the fair  market  value of
the Common Stock on such dates shall be made by the Administrator.

SECTION 9.     AUTOMATIC EXERCISE OF OPTIONS; STOCK TRANSFER RESTRICTIONS
               ----------------------------------------------------------

     If an Associate is a Participant in the Plan on a Purchase Date, he or
she  will be deemed to have exercised the Option granted to him or her  for
the  period ending on that Purchase Date.  Upon such exercise, the  Company
will apply the balance of the Participant's Payment Account to the purchase
of  the  number of whole shares of Common Stock determined under Section  6
and,  as soon as practicable thereafter, will issue and deliver said  whole
shares  to  the Participant (unless Stock Accounts are established  by  the
Administrator pursuant to Section 2 of the Plan). Any cash remaining in the
Participant's Payment Account shall either be carried forward to  the  next
Grant Date (without interest) and become a part of the Payment Account  for
the  Option Period to which such next Grant Date applies, or, upon  written
request  of  the  Participant to the Administrator, be paid to  Participant
without   interest   (unless  Stock  Accounts  are   established   by   the
Administrator pursuant to Section 2 of the Plan).

      Notwithstanding anything herein to the contrary, Cerner's  obligation
to  issue and deliver whole shares of Common Stock under the Plan  will  be
subject  to  the  approval  required  by  any  governmental  authority   in
connection  with  the  authorization, issuance, sale or  transfer  of  said
shares,  to any requirements of any national securities exchange applicable
thereto,   and  to  compliance  by  Cerner  with  other  applicable   legal
requirements in effect from time to time.

      This  Plan is intended to satisfy the requirements of Section 423  of
the Code.  A Participant will not obtain the benefits of this provision  of
the  Code  if such Participant disposes of shares of Common Stock  acquired
pursuant to the Plan within two (2) years from the Grant Date or within one
(1)  year  from the date such Common Stock is purchased by the Participant,
whichever is later.

     Additionally, any shares of Common Stock issued under the Plan may not
be  sold,  transferred or assigned for a period of one (1) year  after  the
date  issued.  Each certificate representing shares of Common Stock  issued
under  this  Plan during such one (1) year period shall bear the  following
legend:

               "The Shares represented by this certificate may  not
          be  sold,  transferred or assigned, and the issuer  shall
          not  be  required  to give effect to any attempted  sale,
          transfer  or assignment, until a date that is  more  than
          one   (1)  year  after  the  date  of  issuance  of  this
          certificate.";

or such other legend as shall be approved by the Administrator.

SECTION 10.    TERMINATION OF EMPLOYMENT
               -------------------------

      Subject  to  Section  11,  upon the termination  of  a  Participant's
employment  with  the  Company for any reason,  the  Participant's  Payment
Account  balance  shall be frozen to future accruals  and  the  Participant
shall  be  withdrawn from Plan participation and cease to be a Participant.
Upon  the  cessation of participation, any Option held by  the  Participant
under  the Plan shall be treated as follows: (i) the Participant  may  give
written  notice to the Administrator within three (3) business  days  after
the  Participant's  termination (so long as there is  at  least  three  (3)
business  days  remaining before the Purchase Date) of  his/her  desire  to
cancel  his/her  Option  under the Plan, in which  case  the  Participant's
Payment  Account balance will be returned to Participant; or,  (ii)  if  no
such notice is received by Participant, or if there are less than three (3)
business  days remaining before the Purchase Date when the written  request
is  made, then the Option will be exercised on the next Purchase Date.   In
the  case  of  death of the Participant, the Participant's Payment  Account
shall be refunded in accordance with Section 11, without interest, as  soon
as  administratively practicable and the Participant will have  no  further
rights under the Plan.

SECTION 11.    DEATH OF A PARTICIPANT
               ----------------------

      Each Participant may designate one or more beneficiaries who, in  the
event  of  the  Participant's death, would receive any Common Stock  and/or
cash  credited  to  the  Participant under the  Plan.  In  the  case  of  a
Participant  who  is  married  at  time of  death,  the  Administrator  may
condition  any  designation of a beneficiary other than  the  Participant's
spouse  on the written consent of such spouse. A designation of beneficiary
and  election  may  be changed by the Participant at  any  time.  Any  such
designation or change in designation, if made in accordance with  the  Plan
and in a form and manner that is acceptable to the Administrator, shall  be
effective upon receipt by the Company and shall be the exclusive  means  of
designating  a  beneficiary under the Plan. In  the  absence  of  a  proper
beneficiary  designation

                            45

under the Plan, the balance in the deceased Participant's  Payment  Account
under the Plan  will  be  refunded  without interest to his or her estate.

     As soon as administratively feasible after the death of a Participant,
any  Common  Stock and/or cash credited to the Participant under  the  Plan
shall be delivered to the Participant's designated beneficiaries or, in the
absence of such designation, to the executor, administrator or other  legal
representative of the Participant's estate. Such delivery and payment shall
relieve the Company of further liability to the deceased Participant or his
or her beneficiaries with respect to the Plan. If more than one beneficiary
is  designated,  each  beneficiary shall receive an equal  portion  of  the
Payment Account and, if any, the Stock Account, unless the Participant  has
given express contrary instructions.

SECTION 12.    ASSIGNMENT
               ----------

     Except as provided in Section 11 above, a Participant's Option, funds,
securities,  rights or other property held for the account of a Participant
shall  not be sold, pledged, assigned, transferred, or hypothecated in  any
way (whether by operation of law or otherwise) and shall not be subject  to
sale  under execution, attachment, or similar process.  Any attempted sale,
pledge,  assignment,  transfer, hypothecation or other  disposition  of  an
Option,  or  levy  of  attachment or similar process upon  the  Option  not
specifically  permitted herein shall be null and void and  without  effect.
A   Participant's  right  to  purchase  shares  under  the  Plan  shall  be
exercisable during the Participant's lifetime only by the Participant.   If
this  provision is violated, the Participant's election to purchase  Common
Stock  shall  terminate  and the only obligation of the  Company  remaining
under  the  Plan  will  be  to refund to the Participant  the  amount  then
credited to his or her Payment Account and deliver to Participant any whole
shares of Common Stock credited to him or her under any Stock Account.

SECTION 13.    DISSOLUTION, MERGER AND CONSOLIDATION
               -------------------------------------

      Upon  the dissolution or liquidation of the Company, or upon a merger
or  consolidation of the Company in which the Company is not the  surviving
corporation, each Option granted hereunder shall expire as of the effective
date  of such transaction; provided, however, that the Administrator  shall
give  at  least  30 days' written notice of such event to each  Participant
during  which  time  he or she shall have a right to exercise  his  or  her
wholly  or  partially unexercised Option and, subject to  earlier  exercise
pursuant  to Section 9, each Option shall be exercisable after  receipt  of
such written notice and prior to the effective date of such transaction.

SECTION 14.    EQUAL RIGHTS AND PRIVILEGES
               ---------------------------

      All  eligible Associates shall have equal rights and privileges  with
respect  to  the  Plan  so that the Plan qualifies as  an  "employee  stock
purchase  plan"  within  the  meaning  of  Section  423  or  any  successor
provisions of the Code and related regulations.  Any provision of the  Plan
that  is  inconsistent with Section 423 or any successor provision  of  the
Code  shall without further act of amendment by the Company be reformed  to
comply  with  the requirements of Section 423. This Section 14  shall  take
precedence over all other provisions of the Plan.

SECTION 15.    RIGHTS AS STOCKHOLDER
               ---------------------

      A  Participant shall have no rights as a stockholder under an  Option
until  he  or  she becomes a stockholder as herein provided.  A Participant
will become a stockholder with respect to shares for which payment has been
completed  as  provided in Section 8 as of the close  of  business  on  the
Purchase Date for the Option Period.

SECTION 16.    MODIFICATION AND TERMINATION OF THE PLAN
               ----------------------------------------

      The Board or the Committee may terminate the Plan at any time and may
at any time and from time to time amend the Plan in any manner permitted by
law.   No amendment shall be effective unless within one (1) year after  it
is  adopted  by  the Board it is approved by Cerner's shareholders  in  the
manner  prescribed under the Treasury Regulations under Section 423 of  the
Code, if such amendment would:

     (i)  increase the number of shares reserved for purchase under the Plan,
          unless such increase is by reason of any change in the capital
          structure of the Company referred to in Section 3 hereof;

                                 46
     (ii) change  the  designation of corporations or other entities  whose
          employees may be offered Options under the Plan, except as permitted
          under Treasury Regulations 1.423-2(c)(4);
     (iii)materially  modify the requirements as to  eligibility  for
          participation in the Plan; or
     (iv) materially increase the benefits accruing to Participants under the
          Plan.

      In the event the Plan is terminated, the Board or Committee may elect
to  terminate all outstanding Options either immediately or upon completion
of  the purchase of shares on the next Purchase Date, unless the Board  has
determined that the right to make all such purchases shall expire  on  some
other designated date occurring prior to the next Purchase Date. If Options
are  terminated prior to expiration, all funds contributed to the Plan that
have not been used to purchase shares shall be returned without interest to
the Participants.

SECTION 17.    BOARD AND SHAREHOLDER APPROVAL; EFFECTIVE DATE
               ----------------------------------------------

      This  Plan  was adopted by the Board on March 9, 2001. The  Effective
Date of the Plan shall be May 25, 2001, subject to shareholder approval  at
the annual meeting of shareholders of Cerner Corporation on that date.

SECTION 18.    RETIREMENT PLAN HARDSHIP DISTRIBUTIONS
               --------------------------------------

      In  the event that a Participant has received a hardship distribution
under  the Cerner Corporation Foundations Retirement Plan, such Participant
shall be prohibited from making payments under Section 7 of this Plan for a
period  of  twelve  (12)  months  after the Participant's  receipt  of  the
hardship distribution.

SECTION 19.    OTHER PROVISIONS
               ----------------

      Options  and  other documentation under the Plan shall  contain  such
other  provisions as the Administrator shall deem advisable, provided  that
no such provision shall conflict with the express terms of the Plan.

SECTION 20.    USE OF FUNDS.
               ------------

      All payroll deductions received or held by the Company under the Plan
may  be  used by the Company for any corporate purpose.  The Company  shall
not be obligated to segregate such payroll deductions.

SECTION 21.    ERISA
               -----

      This Plan is not subject to the provisions of the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act of 1974.

SECTION 22.    EFFECT OF PLAN
               --------------

      The  Provisions of the Plan shall, in accordance with its  terms,  be
binding upon, and inure to the benefit of, all successors of each Associate
participating in the Plan, including, without limitation, such  Associate's
estate  and  the executors, administrators or trustees thereof,  heirs  and
legatees,  and  any  receiver, trustee in bankruptcy or  representative  of
creditors of such Associate.

SECTION 23.    WITHHOLDING TAXES
               -----------------

     Upon the exercise of any Option under the Plan, the Company shall have
the  right  to  require  the Associate to remit to the  Company  an  amount
sufficient  to  satisfy  all  federal,  state  and  local  withholding  tax
requirements  prior to the delivery of any certificate or certificates  for
shares of Common Stock.

SECTION 24.    EMPLOYMENT RIGHTS
               -----------------

      Nothing contained in the provisions of the Plan shall be construed to
give  to  any  individual the right to be retained in  the  employ  of  the
Company  or  to  interfere with the right of the Company to  discharge  any
Associate at any time.

                             47

SECTION 25.    GOVERNING LAW
               -------------

      The Law of the State of Missouri will govern all matters relating  to
this Plan except to the extent superseded by the federal laws of the United
States.

                             48

SHAREHOLDERS LETTER

A LETTER TO OUR SHAREHOLDERS, CLIENTS AND ASSOCIATES

Cerner had a great start to the new millennium, delivering
strong financial and operating results and making meaningful
progress in our efforts to transform healthcare.

SUMMARY OF THE YEAR 2000
Impressive Financial Results:  In 2000, we set record levels
of bookings, revenues and cash flow.  For the year ended
December 30, 2000, revenues increased 19 percent to $404.5
million from $340.2 million for 1999, demonstrating a strong
rebound of growth within our business.  Our record new
bookings, included our highest quarter ever when we recorded
$113.4 million in the fourth quarter.  Net earnings before
non-recurring and extraordinary items increased 197 percent
to $20.4 million compared with $6.9 million in the prior
year.  Diluted earnings per share before non-recurring and
extraordinary items were $0.57 per share compared with $0.20
per share for the 1999 year, demonstrating our ability to
grow earnings in a difficult healthcare environment.
Operating margins expanded, excluding non-recurring items,
for the year to 9.2 percent, more than double the prior
year's 4.3 percent and demonstrating the overall strength of
our business model.  Cash flow increased which led to
improving an already strong balance sheet.

Increased our market presence: During the last half of the
`90s, we completely rebuilt our Health Network Architecture
(HNA), creating the Millennium version and expanding our
product line from 11 healthcare information products to more
than 37 at the end of 2000.  Over the last 18 months, we
more than doubled our direct sales force.  Also, during
2000, we created a strategic, direct Cerner presence in
Europe.  Between the new client relationships created
through our direct sales efforts and the acquisitions we
completed during the year, we grew our client base by 40
percent.  These 430 new client relationships substantially
increase the potential cross-selling opportunities for our
technology.  We created more than 330 new HNA Millennium
(Registered)footprints during the year.  Cerner's total client
base now numbers more than 1,500.  We also signed licensing
agreements with more than 80 other healthcare information
technology (HIT) companies to use HNA components, either
software or content, as key elements of their architecture
under our Power By Cerner program.

Expanded our platforms, market reach, products and services:
Our hosting services, Cerner Online, where we provide our
clients the technical infrastructure and services for Cerner
solutions in our world-class data center, became the
delivery platform of choice for more than $50 million of new
bookings in its first year.  Many of these clients are
community hospitals and represent a significantly expanded
market for our products.  The expanded sales force is
addressing these and other increased opportunities.
PowerChart Office (Trademarn), Cerner's physician clinical
practice solution, is having a significant impact on the way
many of our clients practice medicine.  And ProFit (Trademark),
Cerner's new patient accounting solution, completed alpha
testing, opening up a market estimated at $3 billion.

Improved our business model:  Historically, our revenue
visibility has been as low as 60 percent.  In 2000, we were
able to start each period with close to 85 percent of that
period's revenue already in our backlog or available from
highly predictable sources.  Our consulting organization
experienced record levels of profitability, increasing their
margins substantially and contributing positively to our
corporate profitability.  Based on a healthy backlog of
profitable work, we expect the consulting  profitability to
continue to increase over the next several years.

Delivered Impressive Operating Results:  We now have more
than 800 applications in production on our HNA Millennium
product set in more than 125 client organizations worldwide.
Over the last several years, we have reduced implementation
times and resources by 50 percent.  Today, over 85 percent
of Cerner Consulting associates have experience with our new
architecture, up from 40 percent two years ago.  HNA
Millennium has scaled to support varied environments, with
more than 6,000 active users at our largest client.  Our
overall system reliability has increased to more than 99.9
percent, as measured by reported unscheduled downtime.  And
it is still improving.  Our support calls have not increased
even though we have increased the number of converted
applications by nearly 25 percent in the past year.

Created Winona Health:  We formed a unique partnership with
a Midwest community with a population of approximately
25,000, Winona, Minn., where we are in the process of
conducting a five-year study to investigate the impact
greater connectivity will have on the health status of a
community.  We are working with the local medical community
to create a personal health system for all of the
community's citizens.  Today, 48 of the 50 Winona physicians
have agreed to "wire" their practices to allow electronic
communications with their patients for scheduling requests,
prescription refills, and communicating results and
treatment plans, creating the basis of a new medium of
health care.  We also are "wiring" all four of the locally-
owned pharmacies, the local clinical laboratory, the
emergency room, the acute care hospital and two nursing
homes.  (See "Connecting the Person," below.)

                                       Cerner Corporation | 1
                                 2000 Annual Report

Fortune 100 Best Employer Award:  In 2000, Cerner earned its
second Fortune magazine "100 Best Companies To Work For"
award in three years.  We were the 56th best company to work
for in the country, according to this national business
publication.

Cerner Stock Price:  The Cerner shareholder was rewarded in
2000 with a 135 percent increase in stock price (comparing
the closing price on December 31, 1999 to the closing price
on December 29, 2000), even more impressive when compared to
the 41 percent loss for the Nasdaq during the same period.
In the Wall Street Journal's Shareholder Scoreboard
published February 26, 2001, Cerner ranked as the 31st best
performer over the last 10 years out of the 1,000 companies
ranked in the study; and produced the 3rd best 10-year
performance of all software companies, finishing ahead of
companies such as Microsoft.

CERNER EMERGES AS THE CLEAR LEADER IN AN IMPROVING
HEALTHCARE INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY MARKET, SETTING THE STAGE
FOR AN EXCITING FUTURE
In 2000, Cerner emerged as the clear leader in the
healthcare information industry, even as healthcare provider
organizations struggled with low operating margins, access
to capital, labor shortages and public scrutiny of
fundamental systemic flaws in healthcare delivery.  The
recently published Institute of Medicine report, Crossing
the Quality Chasm, clearly articulated the central role of
information technology in reinventing our healthcare
capabilities: "If we want safer, higher-quality care, we
will need to have redesigned systems of care, including the
use of information technology to support clinical and
administrative processes."

Relative to 1999, the healthcare provider market for
information technology clearly improved in 2000.  The impact
of the Balanced Budget Act (BBA) was assimilated by
healthcare executives.  Healthcare organizations made the
budgetary adjustments to the changes in reimbursement that
came from Medicare, at the same time Congress passed some
BBA relief, putting some funds back into the system.  Our
clients still have thin operating margins and their access
to capital is constrained, but healthcare executives are
beginning to focus on creating better organizations and more
effective processes.

As we projected in last year's annual report, spending on
new projects by our clients in 2000 expanded in the wake of
the Y2K situation.  With the passing of the Y2K issue, funds
that had been set aside to handle remediation were freed for
new projects.

Going forward, we believe this is one of the best
environments we have seen in the last ten years.  We
anticipate a relatively stable, provider-friendly set of
policies and practices coming out of Washington, which
impacts as much as 50 percent of the revenue of our acute
care clients.  The managed care organizations, which have a
cyclical business, have been getting rate increases, which
in part are being passed along to the provider
organizations.

The largest internal pressure point for providers is that
almost all healthcare organizations' core method of
operations are paper-based, manual systems which depend
heavily on the memories of doctors and nurses to make the
appropriate decision at the appropriate time.  In the
increasingly complex medical environment, these processes
are inefficient, and result in a large number of avoidable
medical errors, and produce a huge variance in how
physicians diagnose and treat the same medical condition.
These variances of course lead to large variances in the
outcomes we receive as patients in the system.

The most significant external pressure on healthcare
organizations is increasing dramatically as the public
becomes more informed about the waste, errors and variance
produced by the current healthcare system.  The USA Today,
March 2, 2001, front page headline following the release of
the IOM document was:  "Report:  Health System Broken".
The article also cited the 1999 IOM report, which documented
that there is evidence that up to 98,000 lives are lost to
avoidable medical errors in the nations hospitals in the
United States each year.  There is no data to estimate the
number of deaths which occur outside the hospitals.

This environment is creating what we call "wild cards" that
could increase the rate of adoption of information
technology significantly beyond our current plan.  An
example of such a wild card is the Leapfrog Group, a
subgroup of large employers from the Business Roundtable,
that is becoming a forceful proponent for change.  Leapfrog
recommends that employers select health plans with hospitals
that, among other recommendations, use a computerized,
physician-order-entry system.  Also, legislators are
increasingly logging in on the safety issues in healthcare.
California recently passed a bill requiring every hospital
in the state to prepare and file a plan on safety
improvement within their organizations by January 1, 2002.
Additionally, some form of patient safety legislation is
proposed in 40 different states.  Congress is considering
including patient safety in a Patient Bill of Rights in the
current session.

Another potential wild card is the new privacy provisions of
the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act
(HIPAA), which strengthened the case for Cerner's integrated
architecture strategy.  In its coverage of both electronic
and paper medical records, the new HIPAA provisions point
toward a centralized and systematized method of access
control that we think is best met with a single integrated
architecture.

Cerner Corporation | 2
2000 Annual Report




YEAR 2000 BROUGHT COMPETITIVE LANDSCAPE CHANGES
Our competitive landscape changed as much in 2000 as almost
any of the previous five years.  What a year!

  *  2000 started with a consensus belief that Internet-
     based companies would revolutionize our industry, and these
     "new age" companies would consolidate the traditional
     companies along the way.  Before the dot-com bubble burst,
     there was a rapid consolidation of these companies, merging
     about as fast as they were created.  Next came the well-
     publicized implosion of the dot-com companies in March of
     2000, including those focused on healthcare.  The
     realization was that the Internet is a revolution in
     connectivity, not a revolution in the way of doing business.
     The second realization was that healthcare is complex and
     difficult.  The conclusion: Cerner has a bright future.

  *  Along the way, our two large competitors disappeared
     into even larger companies.  The first one did so in early
     1999, the second one during 2000.  Exit the largest HIT
     companies; enter much larger equipment and drug companies.
     We do not expect this to be the last time a large
     capitalization company enters this market.  Cerner has now
     become the largest independent company in this business.

  *  Our industry has a history of a large number of niche
     companies. The industry consultants coined the term, "best
     of breed" to describe these niche, stand-alone products.
     The year 2000 saw the market turn on the "best of breed."
     Cerner acquired the assets and the operations of six smaller
     HIT companies, which had literally run out of steam, and on
     average paid less than one times revenues.  The cost of
     competing in this industry is getting larger, mainly due to
     the high cost of development, which is caused by the
     skyrocketing cost of programmers and the complexity of
     contemporary information system architectures.  These
     factors and our investment in HNA Millennium are significant
     barriers to entry and represent a strong opportunity for
     Cerner.

OUR 2001 PLAN
The first four of our five business imperatives for 2001
have been basically the same since 1998.  We believe it is
essential to grow our top line, expand our operating
margins, set the standard for operational excellence in our
industry and connect the person to their healthcare system.
Our new imperative added this year is to advance our
leadership of the market, with the ultimate goal of
transforming healthcare delivery - making it safer, more
efficient and better able to meet the needs of healthcare
consumers.

GROWING OUR REVENUES OVER THE NEXT DECADE
From 1990 to 2000, we maintained a 10-year compounded
average revenue growth rate that exceeded 20 percent.  We
believe that we are well positioned to continue good growth
rates into the future.  Here are our thoughts:

Over this last decade, our environment has been extremely
tough.  Healthcare, and particularly healthcare providers,
struggled as an industry.  Managed care became a major
factor in the early `90s, extracting margins and forcing
operational and clinical improvements.  Strategies to cope
were abundant, but they all failed.  The provider industry
consolidated both horizontally and vertically, creating
unwieldy organizations with few operating benefits.  A
number of for-profit organizations were created focusing on
physician care or acute care systems with better management
approaches.  After a brief period of excitement, these
techniques lost their luster, and management abandoned their
strategies, leaving dysfunctional pieces of healthcare in
many communities.  And in the last four years, healthcare
has had a massive margin crunch caused by the 1997 Balanced
Budget Act, and all of the information systems world  -
especially healthcare - was dramatically impacted by Y2K.
On top of all the environmental issues, Cerner completely
rebuilt its HNA architecture and all of the application
product sets.

We grew Cerner well throughout this period by focusing on a
clear strategy of organic growth based on aggressive
software development, using a common architecture focusing
on the person.  This strategy has created two decades of
growth.   From 1990 to 2000, our annual new business
bookings increased from $9.6 million to $399 million.  We
believe we  have laid the foundation to continue our growth
into this decade.

Our organic growth strategy and our attitude toward future
growth is illustrated with  PathNetr, our original
application and market-leading, clinical laboratory system.
PathNet was first converted in 1982 at St. John Medical
Center, in Tulsa Okla.  In 1985, PathNet understandably
constituted 100 percent of our new contracts.  In 1990, it
was still close to 90 percent of our bookings revenue.  In
2000, even after recording the highest level of laboratory
system bookings in the Company's history, PathNet
contributed only three percent of our total new contract
bookings.  Products introduced after PathNet contributed the
remaining 97 percent.  The unlocking of the human genome
will explode the role of laboratory medicine, creating a new
role for predictive medicine, in addition to diagnostic
medicine.  Exciting.  Plus we have virtually no market share
in laboratory systems outside of North America.  We expect
to be able to continue to grow our PathNet revenues well
into this decade.

                                       Cerner Corporation | 3
                                 2000 Annual Report

However, the most impressive part of our outlook for growth
has to do with our clients' environment.  Unlike the `90s,
we expect the issues facing healthcare will strongly
encourage the industry to completely endorse and adopt
information technology as it has never done before.  In our
opinion, major factors such as cost, efficiency, safety,
quality and sensitivity to the consumer will have to be
dealt with over the next 10 years, creating a very good
environment for growth of Cerner.  This, in conjunction with
how well we are prepared internally, creates true optimism
and confidence for future revenue growth.

EXPAND OPERATING MARGINS
We believe that operating margins of 20 percent are possible
and desirable for our type of business.  Cerner operated for
three years, 1993-95, at operating margins greater than 20
percent.  These margins make it possible to invest in the
information technology and architecture that healthcare
needs to address the issues illuminated by the IOM report.
As indicated above, we doubled our operating margins in
2000, from 4.3 percent to 9.2 percent.  We intend to
continue to work to increase our operating margins.

The improvements in our business model, growing revenues
faster than spending, and general gains in quality,
productivity and efficiencies are the keys to making these
fundamental improvements.  Growing our revenues while
expanding our operating margins will make for a financially
vibrant Cerner.

OPERATIONAL EXCELLENCE
We plan to set the standard for quality in all of
healthcare.  Our business is complex, it demands excellence.
Our vision is large, it demands excellence.  We need to
improve everything we do.  We must improve how we develop
software and knowledge content, improving its quality,
reliability and our efficiency in its manufacture.  We must
improve our professional services, improving the advice and
counsel we provide in how to transform healthcare
organizations.  We need to become more efficient in order to
reduce our cost to our clients while we improve the value of
our services.  We must improve client service, the way we
support the large number of clients who have our technology
running their clinical, managerial and financial processes.
A large job, a large challenge.  If we continue to make the
progress we have over the last several years, we will
establish the operational standards in our industry.

CONNECTING THE PERSON
Connecting the person (the consumer) to their physician and
the rest of the healthcare community is an imperative for
Cerner and a fundamental part of the value information
technology can bring to healthcare (see "Created Winona
Health," above).  We believe it will create profound changes
in healthcare, moving the center of healthcare closer to the
person, empowering them to become more responsible for
management of their health.  As the Institute of Medicine
noted in Crossing the Quality Chasm:

     . . .systems must be designed to serve the needs of
     patients, and to ensure that they are fully
     informed, retain control and participate in care
     delivery whenever possible, and receive care that
     is respectful of their values and preferences.
     Patients should have unfettered access to their
     own medical information and to clinical knowledge.
     Clinicians and patients should communicate
     effectively and share information.

Our Winona Health project will help Cerner and this industry
understand the value of this connection.  We believe it will
be very valuable to the shareholders, as well as to the
communities in which we live.

Cerner Corporation | 4
2000 Annual Report




EXTEND CERNER'S LEADERSHIP POSITION
Healthcare has very large, systemic issues.  We believe that
Cerner must continue to create innovative solutions and
services to make fundamental changes to healthcare and be an
advocate for these necessary changes to make healthcare
much safer, more efficient and capable of consistently
producing higher quality results.

One of the keys to extending our leadership is capitalizing
on our ability to deliver real knowledge-based medicine as
we develop our products.  Through the power of Cerner's
single, integrated architecture, we believe that healthcare
will make a dramatic leap forward in the quality and safety
of the care it delivers.  We see a transformed healthcare
system in the future, with healthcare organizations that:
make no avoidable errors, efficiently operate in a paperless
environment, consistently deliver the highest quality of
care based on the most current knowledge available, and are
highly sensitive to the needs of the persons and communities
which they serve.

To make that transformation possible will require strong
leadership and serious commitment, not just from Cerner's
top executives, but from our managers and all associates.
This is an important focus for us, as illustrated by a
recent episode in which our CEO, Neal Patterson, challenged
our managers to ensure the full productivity of our
associates.  He also asked for and has received heightened
focus and renewed energy.  This focus and energy is needed
to meet our clients' immediate needs, solve their future
challenges and move healthcare forward dramatically.


Cerner has an exciting, promising future.  We have momentum.
We also have what we believe to be the most important
ingredients for the future: a strong vision and a very
talented, committed organization.  It was these two
ingredients that made 2000 a success.  It will be those two
ingredients which will create our future.


NEAL L. PATTERSON - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

CLIFFORD W. ILLIG - Vice Chairman

EARL H. DEVANNY, III - President

GLENN P. TOBIN, Ph.D. - Executive Vice President and Chief
Operating Officer



                                       Cerner Corporation | 5
                                 2000 Annual Report

PROXY CARD


CERNER CORPORATION
2800 Rockcreek Parkway                                                PROXY
North Kansas City, Missouri 64117
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

This  Proxy  is  for  the  2001 Annual Meeting of  Shareholders  of  Cerner
Corporation,  a  Delaware corporation, to be held May 25,  2001,  at  10:00
a.m.,  local  time, at the Cerner Associate Center, located on  the  Cerner
Campus at 2901 Rockcreek Parkway, North Kansas City, Missouri  64117.

THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF CERNER CORPORATION.

The  undersigned hereby appoints Clifford W. Illig and Neal  L.  Patterson,
and  each  of them, jointly and severally, with full power of substitution,
as  attorneys-in-fact,  to vote all the shares of Common  Stock  which  the
undersigned  is entitled to vote at the 2001 Annual Meeting of Shareholders
of  Cerner  Corporation to be held on May 25, 2001, and at any  adjournment
thereof,  on the transaction of any and all business which may come  before
said meeting, as fully and with the same effect as the undersigned might or
could do if personally present for the purposes set forth.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR" PROPOSALS 1, 2, 3 and 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

1.  Election of Directors:
    Gerald E. Bisbee, Jr. Ph.D.,  Michael E. Herman and Nancy-Ann DeParle

    ___ FOR all the nominees    ____ WITHHOLD AUTHORITY to vote for all the
                                     nominees

                                ____ WITHHOLD  AUTHORITY  to  vote  for the
                                     following nominee(s):
                                     ______________________________________

2.   Adoption of the Cerner Corporation 2001 Long-Term Incentive Plan F

     ___ FOR          ___ AGAINST    ___ ABSTAIN

3.   Adoption of the Cerner Corporation 2001 Associate Stock Purchase Plan

     ___ FOR          ___ AGAINST    ___ ABSTAIN

4.   Adoption of a qualified performance-based compensation plan, titled
     the Cerner Corporation Performance Plan

     ___ FOR          ___ AGAINST    ___ ABSTAIN


(PLEASE SIGN AND DATE ON THE REVERSE SIDE AND MAIL PROMPTLY IN THE ENCLOSED
                                 ENVELOPE)


This proxy when properly executed will be voted in the manner directed
herein by the undersigned stockholder(s).  If no direction is made, this
proxy will be voted "FOR" proposals 1, 2, 3 and 4.

In their discretion, the proxies are to vote upon such other business as
may properly come before the meeting which the Board of Directors does not
have knowledge of a reasonable period of time before the solicitation of
this proxy.

Please date and sign as name appears hereon.  If shares are held jointly or
by  two  or  more persons, each shareholder named should sign.   Executors,
administrators,  trustees, etc. should so indicate when  signing.   If  the
signer is a corporation, please sign full corporate name by duly authorized
officer.   If a partnership, please sign in partnership name by  authorized
person.

The undersigned hereby acknowledges receipt of the Notice of Annual Meeting
and Proxy Statement, dated April 16, 2001.


                                              DATE
                                                  -------------------------


                                                  -------------------------
                                                       (Signature)

                                                  -------------------------
                                                       Signature(s)


                                              PLEASE  MARK,  SIGN, DATE AND
                                              MAIL   THIS   PROXY   IN  THE
                                              ENVELOPE PROVIDED.

                                              If you expect to attend the
                                              2001 Annual Meeting of
                                              Shareholders please check
                                              this box.      _________
401K PROXY

I  am  a  participant in the Cerner Corporation  Foundations
Retirement  Plan  (the  "Plan") of Cerner  Corporation  (the
"Company") entitled to vote the number of shares  of  Common
Stock, par value $.01 per share, of the Company (the "Common
Stock") indicated on this form.

I  understand  that  AMERICAN  CENTURY  SERVICES,  INC.,  as
trustee of the Plan (the "Trustee"), will vote the shares of
Common Stock upon instructions from participants.  I further
understand  that  I may direct the Trustee to  vote  certain
shares of Common Stock in favor and certain shares of Common
Stock  against  any  of the proposals, but  that  to  do  so
requires separate forms.

THE  BOARD  OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR PROPOSALS 1,
2, 3, AND 4.

CERNER CORPORATION
2800 Rockcreek Parkway                                                PROXY
North Kansas City, Missouri 64117
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

This  Proxy  is  for  the  2001 Annual Meeting of  Shareholders  of  Cerner
Corporation,  a  Delaware corporation, to be held May 25,  2001,  at  10:00
a.m.,  local  time, at the Cerner Associate Center, located on  the  Cerner
Campus at 2901 Rockcreek Parkway, North Kansas City, Missouri  64117.

THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF CERNER CORPORATION.

The  undersigned hereby appoints Clifford W. Illig and Neal  L.  Patterson,
and  each  of them, jointly and severally, with full power of substitution,
as  attorneys-in-fact,  to vote all the shares of Common  Stock  which  the
undersigned  is entitled to vote at the 2001 Annual Meeting of Shareholders
of  Cerner  Corporation to be held on May 25, 2001, and at any  adjournment
thereof,  on the transaction of any and all business which may come  before
said meeting, as fully and with the same effect as the undersigned might or
could do if personally present for the purposes set forth.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR" PROPOSALS 1, 2, 3 and 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

1.  Election of Directors:
    Gerald E. Bisbee, Jr. Ph.D.,  Michael E. Herman and Nancy-Ann DeParle

    ___ FOR all the nominees    ____ WITHHOLD AUTHORITY to vote for all the
                                     nominees

                                ____ WITHHOLD  AUTHORITY  to  vote  for the
                                     following nominee(s):
                                     ______________________________________

2.   Adoption of the Cerner Corporation 2001 Long-Term Incentive Plan F

     ___ FOR          ___ AGAINST    ___ ABSTAIN

3.   Adoption of the Cerner Corporation 2001 Associate Stock Purchase Plan

     ___ FOR          ___ AGAINST    ___ ABSTAIN

4.   Adoption of a qualified performance-based compensation plan, titled
     the Cerner Corporation Performance Plan

     ___ FOR          ___ AGAINST    ___ ABSTAIN





                                              DATE
                                                  -------------------------


                                                  -------------------------
                                                       Signature


                                              PLEASE  MARK,  SIGN, DATE AND
                                              MAIL   THIS   PROXY   IN  THE
                                              ENVELOPE PROVIDED.



TO:  All Cerner Corporation Associate 401(k) Participants

The Annual Meeting of the Shareholders of Cerner Corporation
("Cerner" or the "Company") will be held at the Cerner
Associate Center on the Cerner campus at 2901 Rockcreek
Parkway, North Kansas City, Missouri 64117, on May 25, 2001,
commencing at 10:00 a.m.  As a participant in the Cerner
Corporation Foundation Retirement Plan (the "Plan"), you are
entitled to instruct American Century Services, Inc. as
trustee of the Plan (the "Trustee"), to vote the shares of
Common Stock, par value $.01 per share, of the Company (the
"Common Stock"), which have been credited to you under the
Plan as of March 30, 2001.

As of this date, your Plan account has been credited with
<> shares of Common Stock.  The number of shares of
Common Stock shown includes any shares of Common Stock
purchased with your elective deferrals, Company matching
contribution, and allocations to your account of shares of
Common Stock forfeited by terminated associates, as
allocated by the provisions of the Plan.  Therefore, you may
not be fully vested in the total number of shares of Common
Stock indicated.

The Plan gives you the right to direct the Trustee to vote
your shares in accordance with your instructions.
Participants in the Plan for 2001 vote their shares on-line.
This email will provide the necessary links and information
to complete the voting process.  Attached to this message
you will find links to: (i) all portions of Cerner's 2000
Annual Report, which includes: Annual Report Cover Pages;
Illustrative Map; Letter to Shareholders; and the Company's
10-K, and (ii) the Company's 2001 Proxy Statement, all of
which are located, in "read only" format, on the Knowledge
Repository.  To access this information please use the
following links to these documents on the Knowledge
Repository.

          LINK      LINK      LINK      LINK      LINK

The Company's 2000 Annual Report and its 2001 Proxy
Statement may also be provided, at the participant's
request, in hard copy form.  To receive a paper copy of the
Company's 2000 Annual Report and its 2001 Proxy Statement,
please contact Steve Morrison at  (816) 201-3073.

This link http://www.umb.com/proxy
          ------------------------ to a UMB Bank web site
will direct you to the correct page to vote the shares
allotted to you.  You will need to type in the last 4-digits
of your Social Security Number and use this 17-digit control
number (<<17-digit control #>>) to access the voting
instructions page.  The voting instructions page will ask
you to enter your email address in the space provided to
receive a confirmation notice.  Follow the instructions
provided on the voting instructions page to vote your shares
and submit your votes.  Your voting instructions must be
received by 5:00 p.m. CDT May 23, 2001.

Once you submit your votes the process is complete and your
votes will remain confidential.



ANNUAL REPORT COVER

Transforming Healthcare with Technology
Cerner Corporation 2000 Annual Report



CERNER LEADERSHIP AND CORPORATE INFORMATION
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

BOARD OF DIRECTORS
----------------------------------------------------------------------------



                                               
Neal L. Patterson          John C. Danforth          Michael E. Herman
Chairman of the Board      Partner                   President, The Herman
& Chief Executive Officer  Bryan Cave LLP            Family Trading Company
Cerner Corporation         St. Louis, MO             & Past President,
                                                     Kansas City Royals
Clifford W. Illig          Jeff C. Goldsmith, Ph.D.  Club
Vice Chairman              President                 Kansas City, MO
Cerner Corporation         Health Futures, Inc.
                           Charlottesville, VA       William B. Neaves, Ph.D.
Gerald E. Bisbee Jr.,                                President & Chief
Ph.D., Chairman &                                    Executive Officer
Chief Executive Officer                              The Stowers Institute
ReGen Biologics Inc.,                                for Medical Research
Redwood City, CA                                     Kansas City, MO



MANAGEMENT
----------------------------------------------------------------------------



                                                     
Executive Committee           Executive Management         Senior Management
-------------------           --------------------         -----------------
Neal L. Patterson             Alan D. Dietrich             Richard J. Flanigan Jr.
Chairman of the Board         Senior Vice President        Senior Vice President,
& Chief Executive Officer     & Chief Marketing Officer    Enterprise Business Units

Clifford W. Illig             Stephen M. Goodrich          Stephen D. Garver
Vice Chairman                 Senior Vice President        Senior Vice President &
                              & Chief Quality Officer      Managing Partner,
Earl H. Devanny, III                                       Cerner Consulting
President                     David P. McCallie Jr., M.D.
                              Vice President &             Thomas C. Tinstman, M.D.
Glenn P. Tobin, Ph.D.         Chief Scientist              Senior Vice President,
Executive Vice President &                                 Cerner Consulting
Chief Operating Officer       Randy D. Sims
                              Vice President, Chief Legal  Kathryn A. Bingman
Paul M. Black                 Officer & Secretary          Vice President &
Executive Vice President                                   General Manager, IQHealth
& Chief Sales Officer         Jeffrey A. Townsend
                              Vice President & Chief       Robert J. Campbell
Jack A. Newman Jr.            Engineering Officer          Vice President of
Executive Vice President                                   Learning Services
                              Charlotte A. Weaver
Douglas M. Krebs              Vice President & Chief       Mitchell Clark
Senior Vice President         Nursing Officer              Vice President &
& President,                                               General Manager
Cerner Global Organization
                                                           Michael L. Fiorito
Marc G. Naughton                                           Vice President &
Vice President                                             General Manager
& Chief Financial Officer
                                                           Tonya M. Hongsermeier,
Stanley M. Sword                                           M.D. Vice President,
Vice President &                                           Patient Safety
Chief People Officer
                                                           Paul J. Sinclair
                                                           Vice President &
                                                           Senior Partner,
                                                           Cerner Consulting



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


Annual Meeting of Shareholders
------------------------------
The annual meeting will be held at 10:00 a.m. on May 25,
2001, at the Cerner Associate Center, located on the Cerner
campus at 2901 Rockcreek Parkway, North Kansas City,
Missouri. A formal notice of the meeting, with a proxy
statement and proxy form, will be mailed to each shareholder
in April 2001.

Annual Report/10-K Report
-------------------------
Publications of interest to current and potential Cerner
investors are available upon
written request or via Cerner's Web site at www.cerner.com.
These include annual and
quarterly reports and the Form 10-K filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission.

Such requests should be made to:
   Administrator of
   Shareholder Relations
   Cerner Corporation
   2800 Rockcreek Parkway
   North Kansas City, MO
   64117-2551

Inquiries of an administrative nature relating to
shareholder accounting records, stock transfer, change of
address, and miscellaneous shareholder requests should be
directed to the transfer agent and registrar, UMB Bank, at
(816) 860 7786.

Transfer Agent and Registrar
----------------------------
Securities Transfer Division
UMB Bank
P.O. Box 410064
Kansas City, MO 64141-0064
(816) 860 7786

Stock Listings
--------------
Cerner Corporation's common stock trades on
The Nasdaq Stock Market (Service Mark) under the symbol CERN.

Independent Accountants
-----------------------
KPMG LLP
Kansas City, MO

Legal Counsel
-------------
Stinson, Mag & Fizzell
Kansas City, MO



CERNER SOLUTIONS AND SERVICES

ENTERPRISE-WIDE SOLUTIONS
Cerner's CapStone (Registered)Enterprise Access Management
         --------             ----------------------------
System
------ creates the enterprise-wide master person identifier
(EMPI)and automates the identification, eligibility,
registration and scheduling processes across hospitals,
clinics, physician practices and other care delivery
organizations,integrating the health system and incorporating
existing systems.
PowerChart (Registered) Electronic Medical Record System
----------              --------------------------------
is the enterprise clinician's desktop solution for viewing,
ordering, documenting and managing care delivery.
The Open Clinical Foundation (Registered)
    ------------------------             manages clinical
information,providing the foundation for the electronic
medical record.
The Open Management Foundation (Trademark)
    --------------------------            stores
management information of enterprise financial, operational
and process results, creating the foundation for the
enterprise-wide management and executive information system.
The Open Agreement Foundation (Trademark)
    -------------------------             manages health plan
contracts and agreements, and member information.
The Open Research Foundation (Trademark)
    ------------------------             provides open
repository storage of clinical and medical information to
support medical research.

FINANCIAL AND OPERATIONAL
The ProFit (Trademark) Enterprise Billing and Accounts
    ------             -------------------------------
Receivable System
-----------------is Cerner's system for revenue accounting,
billing and accounts receivable for the entire health system
as well as each individual domain or organization.  ProFit
integrates clinical and financial data and creates a single
bill.
PowerVision (Registered) Enterprise Decision Support
-----------              --------------------------- links
comprehensive clinical and financial data and makes it
available at the point of care-allowing care to be better
managed as it occurs.
The ProFile (Trademark) Health Information Management System
    -------             ------------------------------------
helps meet the operations management needs of the health
information management (medical records) department and
includes functionality for the various chart tracking and
completion tasks.

The ProCure (Trademark) Materials Management System
    -------             --------------------------- automates
the business operations around supply chain, materials
acquisition and equipment management for the organization.
The ProCare (Trademark) Medical Management System
    -------             ------------------------- automates
medical management for the health system, addressing the
areas of utilization, case and risk management, as well as
infection control.


DECISION SUPPORT SYSTEMS AND KNOWLEDGE SOLUTIONS
Discern Expert (Registered) is an event-driven, rule-based
-------------- decision support software application that allows
users to define clinical and management rules (Alerts (Trademark))
that are applied to event data captured or generated by other
applications.  It supports both synchronous (real-time, interactive)
processing and asynchronous (noninteractive) processing of
events.  Discern Expert manages the evaluation and display
of executable clinical knowledge through either Cerner-
developed Alerts, which are licensed separately, or client-
developed Alerts.
Discern Explorer (Registered) is a decision support software
--------------- application integrated with other Cerner HNA
Millennium clinical and management information systems that allows
users to execute predetermined or ad hoc queries and reports
regarding process-related data that is generated by the other
applications.
Care Designs (Trademark)
------------             are clinical pathways and protocols that
automate the specific plans of care for an individual and
operate within Cerner's clinical systems.

POINT OF CARE CLINICAL SOLUTIONS
The INet (Registered) Intensive Care Management System
    ----              -------------------------------- is designed
to automate the entire care process in intensive care settings.
It supports chart review and browsing, order management,
documentation management and automatic data acquisition.
The CareNet (Registered) Acute Care Management System
    -------              ---------------------------- is designed
to automate the entire care process in acute or institutional
settings.  The application collects, refines, organizes and
evaluates detailed clinical and management data.  It enables
the entire care team to plan and manage individual
activities and plans, as well as measure outcomes and goals.
The CVNet (Registered) Cardiology Information System
    -----              ----------------------------- automates the
processes within the cardiology department, supporting the
scheduling, ordering, documentation and data capture
required by professionals in the cardiology domain.
The SurgiNet (Registered) Surgery Information System
    --------              -------------------------- is designed
to address the needs of the surgical department, including
automating the functions of resource and equipment
scheduling, inventory management, anesthesia management and
operating room management.
The FirstNet (Registered) Emergency Medicine Information System
    --------              -------------------------------------
offers patient and provider tracking and an intuitive presentation
of patient diagnoses and clinical events for the emergency
department.  FirstNet provides basic emergency department
functionality, including quick admits, tracking, triage and
patient history, as well as a graphical reference to patient
location and order status.
The PowerChart Office (Trademark) Management System
    -----------------             ----------------- supports the
broad range of clinical and business activities that occur within
a physician office, clinic or large physician organization.
This system ties the office together with other medical
entities and automates key care team activities in both
primary and specialty care settings.
The ProCall (Registered) Home Care Management System
    -------              --------------------------- automates
the clinical and business processes of home care organizations,
such as home health agencies, visiting nurse associations
and hospices.



CLINICAL CENTERS
The PathNet (Registered) Laboratory Information System
    -------              ----------------------------- addresses
the information management needs of six clinical areas: general
laboratory, microbiology, blood bank transfusion services,
blood bank donor services, anatomic pathology and Human
Leukocyte Antigen.  PathNet automates the ordering and
reporting of procedures, the production of accurate and
timely reports and the maintenance of accessible clinical
records.
The RadNet (Registered) Radiology Information System
    ------              ---------------------------- addresses
the operational and management requirements of radiology
departments or services.  It allows a department to replace
its manual, paper-based system of record-keeping with an
efficient computer-based system that integrates with their
imaging systems. Cerner also provides image management
systems with picture archival and communications systems
(PACS) that are fully integrated with Cerner's radiology
information systems.
The PharmNet (Registered) Pharmacy Information System
    --------              --------------------------- provides
full integration for rapid pharmacy order entry and support of
the clinical pharmacy in either an inpatient or retail
setting.  PharmNet streamlines medication order entry,
enabling the pharmacist or technician to place all types of
pharmaceutical orders, and automates dispensing functions.

CONSUMER/PERSONAL HEALTH
Cerner's IQHealth (Trademark)
         --------            facilitates powerful business-to-
consumer and business-to-business connections via the Internet.
With IQHealth, healthcare organizations can create and brand a
"health exchange" in the community to directly connect
hospitals, physicians, payers, consumers and others.
IQHealth provides the tools to create such local connections
as well as health information to improve the quality and
safety of care.
IQHealth's Personal Health Record (PHR)
--------------------------------------- is a personal health
management tool that gives consumers the ability to build a
permanent electronic record in which health information can
be securely stored as it accrues over time. Cerner Multum
(Trademark) drug database provides caregivers and consumers
alike with access to drug information and the ability to perform
drug interaction checking to prevent adverse events.
IQHealth's Health Risk Assessments
---------------------------------- allow organizations to
create Web-based surveys to assess individual and community
health risks.
Health Connections (Trademark),
------------------              a 24x7 call center staffed
by nurses, provides ready access to accurate health
information so that consumers can better manage their health
and participate in care decisions.
Health Facts (Registered)
------------              is Cerner's comparative data
warehouse for benchmarking information and services for
subscribers to support their own improvement processes.


INTERFACE TECHNOLOGIES
The Open Engine (Trademark) Application Gateway System
    --------------------------------------------------
facilitates the exchange of data and assists in the management of
interfaces between foreign systems in a network environment.  It
serves as a toolkit to help write interface code.
The Open Port (Trademark) Interface System
    ---------             ---------------- represents Cerner's
standardized technology for providing reliable foreign
system, medical device and other standard interfaces in a
timely manner.  Message translation and data mapping are
done with point-and-click tools and a scripting environment.
Communications protocols are configured via table driven
parameters.  These sophisticated methodologies result in
decreased implementation times and greater client
satisfaction.



CERNER COMMUNITY HEALTH MODEL

THE CERNER VISION
Cerner's business and information solutions are organized
and developed around a central vision of how healthcare can
and should operate within our communities.  This vision is
founded on four stages which Cerner believes can be achieved
using information technology:
  *  Automate the core processes of healthcare:  eliminate the
     paper medical record and memory-based decision making.
  *  Connect the person:  create the personal health system.
  *  Structure the knowledge: position every clinical decision
     as a future learning event.
  *  Close the loop:  implement evidence-based medicine.

These stages describe Cerner's business today and plans for
Cerner's business both in 2001 and beyond.

Automate the Care Process
Cerner is dedicated to the elimination of the manual-based
systems producing the paper medical record and the memory-
based methods physicians currently use to make medical
decisions.
Cerner is replacing manual processes with a complete
electronic medical record and interactive decision support
systems to assist physicians in making appropriate medical
decisions.  Medical care cannot make significant steps
forward in quality and safety without leveraging the power
and advantages of information technology.  As long as a
person's medical information is locked and isolated in a
paper-based record, a physician is cut-off from rapid,
contextual reference to the vast knowledge available in
today's medicine.  The elimination of the paper record will
lead to a transformed health system that is more efficient,
safer and of higher quality.

Connect the Person
Cerner is dedicated to helping its clients build a personal
health system; creating a "new medium" between the person
and physician; empowering the individual; creating a new
center to healthcare and, ultimately, healthier communities.
The healthcare system is undergoing fundamental changes as
the person becomes more informed and demands to become more
involved in the decisions that affect their care and
treatment.  Over the coming years, these forces will grow
and combine with movements toward more self-care, self-
payment and self-knowledge in the post human genome era.
The personal health system will interact with healthcare
organizations, enabling the person to better manage their
own health needs.  They also will deliver benefits like
personal health management and aiding the move from a
reactive care system to a predictive health system.

Structure the Knowledge
Cerner is dedicated to building systems that treat every
clinical decision as a future learning event by structuring,
storing and studying the content surrounding each episode of
medical care, creating the evidence for improved methods of
diagnosing or treating a medical problem.
The knowledge that can be generated by studying the variance
in outcomes from different treatment regimens can only be
used to improve those regimens if there is a structure, or
fundamental common nomenclature, that can exactly capture
the express meaning implicit in the physician's
documentation and orders and from other supporting
clinicians.  This information must be stored in such a way
that makes it comparable to similar encounters.
Organization of knowledge will speed scientific discovery.
In today's paper-based medical records, the study of data
presented by just a single hospital can take months or even
years.  The promise of structured systems is that as the
data is accumulated, order is brought to the data
simultaneous to its collection, slashing the time required
to process information.  Additionally, the volume of
information will provide heightened reliability of analysis
due to the wealth and quality of the data that is the
foundation of the analysis.
The knowledge generated by the outcomes of different
treatment regimens will help not only to improve those
regimens, but will deepen understanding of medicine in
general.  Such immense amounts of knowledge will lead to
undetermined benefits in deepening our understanding of
medicine and its effect on the human body.

Close the Loop
Cerner is dedicated to building systems that implement
evidence-based medicine, dramatically reducing the current
average time from the discovery of an improved method to the
change in "standard of care" medical practice.
These advances in technology will offer great opportunities
to healthcare and must be used to practical effect.  The new
knowledge gained today about better methods of diagnosing or
treating medical problems must be used tomorrow to deliver
better care, faster.  Today, the current system of knowledge
dissemination may take as long as ten years before new
knowledge reaches widespread use.  With information systems
designed to embed evidence-based medicine inside the
clinicians' workflow using pathways, guidelines and alerts,
physicians can ensure that every medical decision is based
on the best and most recent knowledge available.
The results will be better outcomes and reduced variance.



CERNERCORPORATION
2800 Rockcreek Parkway
North Kansas City, MO 64117-2551
(816) 221 1024
(816) 474 1742 (Fax)
http://www.cerner.com

UNITED STATES
DETROIT
Cerner Corporation
28333 Telegraph Road
Suite 500
Southfield, MI 48034-1903
(248) 357 1818

KANSAS CITY
Cerner Corporation
2800 Rockcreek Parkway
North Kansas City, MO 64177-2551
(816) 221 1024

DENVER
Cerner IQHealth
3200 Cherry Creek South Drive
Suite 300
Denver, CO 80209
(303) 733 4447

WASHINGTON D.C.
Cerner Corporation
Two Skyline Place
Suite 301
5203 Leesburg Pike
Falls Church, VA  22041
(703) 310 1100

HOUSTON
Cerner Radiology Information Systems
5 Greenway Plaza
Suite 1900
Houston, TX 77046
(713) 960 1907

ST. LOUIS
Cerner Citation
424 South Woods Mill Road
Suite 200
St. Louis, MO 63017
(314) 579 7900


WORLDWIDE

AUSTRALIA
Cerner Corporation Pty Limited
Level 10, 52 Alfred Street
Milsons Point
NSW 2061
Australia
+61 2 9900 4800

MALAYSIA
Cerner Malaysia Sdn Bhd
Level 36, Menara Citibank
165 Jalan Ampang
50450 Kuala Lumpur
Malaysia
+603 2169 6218

SAUDI ARABIA
Cerner Arabia Ltd.
6/F Suite 609 Al-Akaria Bldg. 3
Olaya Road
Riyadh
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
+966 1 460 0510

SINGAPORE
Cerner Singapore Limited
391A Orchard Road
# 12-01 NgeeAnn City Tower A
Singapore 238873
+65 734 3566

EUROPE
Cerner International, Inc.
Waterloo Office Park
Dre're Richelle 161
Batiment N
B-1410 Waterloo
Belgium
+32 2 352 8880

CANADA
Cerner Canada Ltd.
Cerner Vision Centre
Phase 1, Tower 2, Level 3
800 Commissioners Road East
London, Ontario N6A4G5
Canada
(519) 685 8499


(Copyright) 2001 CernerCorporation                         010/2001

COVER LETTER


March 28, 2001



Securities and Exchange Commission
450 Fifth Stree, N.W.
Judiciary Plaza
Washington, D.C  20549


     RE:  Cerner Corporation


Dear Sirs:

Pursuant to regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission
submitted herwith for filing on behalf of Cerner Corporation (the
"Company"), a Delaware corporation, is the Company's Annual Report
on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 30, 2001.

This filing is effected by direct transmission to the Commission's
Operational EDGAR System.

Very truly yours,

Cerner Corporation



Randy D. Sims
Chief Legal Counsel