Notice of Annual Meeting of Stockholders


New Orleans, Louisiana
March 27, 2002


To the Stockholders of ENTERGY CORPORATION:

NOTICE OF THE ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS


Date:     Friday, May 10, 2002
Time:     10:00 a.m. Central Daylight Time
Place:    Peabody Little Rock Hotel
          3 Statehouse Plaza
          Little Rock, AR 72201


MATTERS TO BE VOTED ON


1.   Election of Fifteen Directors.

2.   Stockholder proposal concerning certain wording on the

     Corporation's proxy card.

3.   Stockholder proposal concerning "poison pills."


/s/ Michael G. Thompson

Michael G. Thompson
Secretary


                           TABLE OF CONTENTS

  NOTICE OF THE ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS                     1
  MATTERS TO BE VOTED ON                                           1
  PROXY STATEMENT                                                  4
  GENERAL INFORMATION ABOUT VOTING                                 4
  WHO CAN VOTE                                                     4
  VOTING BY PROXIES.                                               4
  HOW YOU MAY REVOKE YOUR PROXY INSTRUCTIONS                       4
  QUORUM REQUIREMENT                                               4
  VOTES NECESSARY FOR ACTION TO BE TAKEN.                          4
  COST OF THIS PROXY SOLICITATION.                                 5
  ATTENDING THE ANNUAL MEETING.                                    5
  STOCKHOLDERS WHO OWN AT LEAST FIVE PERCENT                       5
  PROPOSAL 1  ELECTION OF DIRECTORS                                6
  GENERAL INFORMATION ABOUT NOMINEES                               6
  TERM OF OFFICE.                                                  6
  INFORMATION ABOUT THE NOMINEES.                                  6
  INFORMATION ABOUT THE BOARD AND ITS COMMITTEES                   9
     Audit Committee                                              10
     Finance Committee                                            10
     Personnel Committee                                          10
     Nuclear Committee                                            10
     Director Affairs/Public Affairs Committee                    11
     Executive Committee                                          11

  DIRECTOR COMPENSATION.                                          12
  SERVICE AWARDS FOR DIRECTORS.                                   12
  RETIREMENT FOR DIRECTORS                                        12
  PERSONNEL COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION        12
  SHARE OWNERSHIP OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS                       12
  SECTION 16(A) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE.        13
  AUDIT COMMITTEE REPORT.                                         14
  INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS.                                        14
  REPORT OF PERSONNEL COMMITTEE ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION         16
  COMPARISON OF FIVE YEAR CUMULATIVE RETURN                       18
  EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION TABLES                                   19
     Summary Compensation Table                                   19
     Option Grants to the Executive Officers in 2001              20
     Aggregated Option Exercises in 2001 and December 31,
      2001 Option Values                                          20
     Long-Term Incentive Plan Awards in 2001                      21
  RETIREMENT INCOME PLAN                                          21
     Retirement Income Plan Table                                 21
  PENSION EQUALIZATION PAYMENTS.                                  22
  SUPPLEMENTAL RETIREMENT PLANS.                                  22
  SYSTEM EXECUTIVE RETIREMENT PLAN                                22
     System Executive Retirement Plan Table                       23
  EXECUTIVE EMPLOYMENT CONTRACTS AND RETIREMENT AGREEMENTS.       23
  EXECUTIVE RETENTION AGREEMENTS.                                 23
  PROPOSAL 2 - STOCKHOLDER PROPOSAL CONCERNING CERTAIN WORDING
   ON THE CORPORATION'S PROXY CARD                                27
  PROPOSAL 3 - STOCKHOLDER PROPOSAL CONCERNING "POISON PILLS"     28
  STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS FOR 2003 MEETING                          30




                            PROXY STATEMENT


Your  vote is very important.  For this reason, the Board of Directors
is  requesting that unless you are able to, and intend  to  vote  your
shares  in  person  at this Annual Meeting of Stockholders,  that  you
allow  your Entergy Corporation Common Stock to be represented at  the
Annual  Meeting by J. Wayne Leonard, Robert v.d. Luft and Wm. Clifford
Smith, the persons named as proxies on the enclosed proxy card.   This
proxy  statement  has been prepared for the Board by  our  management.
The  terms "we", "our", "Entergy" and the "Corporation" each refer  to
Entergy  Corporation.   This proxy statement  is  being  sent  to  our
stockholders on or about March 27, 2002.


                   GENERAL INFORMATION ABOUT VOTING

WHO  CAN  VOTE.   You are entitled to vote your Common  Stock  if  our
records show that you held your shares as of March 12, 2002.   At  the
close  of  business on March 12, 2002, 222,928,270  shares  of  Common
Stock  were  outstanding and entitled to vote.  Each share  of  Common
Stock  has  one  vote.  The enclosed proxy card shows  the  number  of
shares that you are entitled to vote.

VOTING  BY  PROXIES. Of course, you may come to the meeting  and  vote
your shares in person.  If your Common Stock is held by a broker, bank
or  other nominee, you will receive instructions from them as  to  how
your shares may be voted in accordance with your instructions.  Follow
those  instructions carefully.  If you hold your shares  in  your  own
name, you may instruct the proxies as to how to vote your Common Stock
by  using  the  toll  free telephone number listed  or  accessing  the
Internet  address on the proxy card or by signing, dating and  mailing
the  proxy card in the postage paid envelope provided to you.  Proxies
granted  by these methods are valid under applicable state  law.  When
you  use  the telephone or Internet voting system, the system verifies
that  you  are  a  stockholder through the use  of  a  Control  Number
assigned  to you.  The telephone and Internet voting procedures  allow
you  to instruct the proxies as to how to vote your shares and confirm
that  your  instructions  have been properly recorded.   Your  Control
Number  and  specific directions for using the telephone and  Internet
voting  system  are  on  the  proxy  card.   Whether  you  send   your
instructions by mail, telephone or the Internet, the proxies will vote
your  shares in accordance with those instructions.  If you  sign  and
return a proxy card without giving specific voting instructions,  your
shares will be voted as recommended by our Board of Directors.  We are
not  currently  aware  of any matters to be presented  to  the  Annual
Meeting  other than those described in this proxy statement.   If  any
other matters are presented at the meeting, the proxies will use their
own  judgment in determining how to vote your shares.  If the  meeting
is adjourned, your Common Stock may be voted by the proxies on the new
meeting date.

HOW  YOU  MAY  REVOKE YOUR PROXY INSTRUCTIONS.  To revoke  your  proxy
instructions,  you must either advise the Secretary in writing  before
your shares have been voted by the proxies at the meeting, deliver  to
us later proxy instructions or attend the meeting and vote your shares
in person.

QUORUM REQUIREMENT.  The Annual Meeting cannot be held unless a quorum
equal  to  a  majority of the outstanding shares entitled to  vote  is
represented  at  the  meeting.   If  you  have  returned  valid  proxy
instructions  or  attend the meeting in person, your  shares  will  be
counted  to determine whether there is a quorum, even if you  wish  to
abstain  from voting on some or all matters introduced at the meeting.
"Broker  non-votes" also count for quorum purposes.  If you hold  your
Common Stock through a broker, bank or other nominee, it may only vote
those shares in accordance with your instructions.  However, if it has
not  received your instructions by a specified date, it  may  vote  on
matters that the New York Stock Exchange has determined to be routine.

VOTES  NECESSARY  FOR ACTION TO BE TAKEN.  Fifteen directors  will  be
elected  at  the meeting, meaning that the fifteen nominees  receiving
the  most  votes will be elected.  Abstentions will have no effect  on
the outcome of the election of directors.

COST  OF THIS PROXY SOLICITATION.  We will pay the cost of this  proxy
solicitation.   In addition to soliciting proxies by mail,  we  expect
that  certain  of  our  employees may solicit stockholders  for  their
proxies,  personally and by telephone.  None of these  employees  will
receive any additional or special compensation for doing so.  We  have
retained Morrow & Co. Inc. for a fee of $12,500 plus reasonable out-of-
pocket  costs and expenses, to assist in the solicitation of  proxies.
We will, upon request, reimburse brokers, banks and other nominees for
their  expenses  in  sending proxy materials to their  principals  and
obtaining their proxies.

ATTENDING THE ANNUAL MEETING.  If you are a holder of record  and  you
plan  to  attend  the Annual Meeting, please come to the  registration
desk  before  the  meeting.  If you are a beneficial owner  of  Common
Stock  held  by a bank or broker (i. e., in "street name"),  you  will
need  proof of ownership of your Common Stock as of March 12, 2002  to
be  admitted to the meeting.  A recent brokerage statement  or  letter
from a bank or broker are examples of proof of ownership.  If you want
to vote in person your shares of Common Stock held in street name, you
must obtain a proxy in your name from the registered holder.

STOCKHOLDERS   WHO   OWN  AT  LEAST  FIVE  PERCENT.    A   stockholder
"beneficially  owns"  Common Stock by having  the  power  to  vote  or
dispose of the Common Stock, or to acquire the Common Stock within  60
days.  Stockholders who beneficially own at least five percent of  the
Common  Stock are required to file certain reports with the Securities
and  Exchange  Commission.   Based on  these  reports,  the  following
beneficial  owners have reported their ownership as  of  December  31,
2001:



Name and Address of                              Amount and Nature of   Percent
Beneficial Owner                                 Beneficial Ownership  of Class
                                                                   
Barrow, Hanley, Mewhinney & Strauss, Inc. ("BHM&S")  24,207,898(1)       11.0%
One McKinney Plaza
3232 McKinney Avenue, 15th Floor
Dallas, Texas 75204-2429

FMR Corp ("FMR")                                     11,272,342 (2)       5.1%
82 Devonshire Street
Boston, Massachusetts 02109

Putnam Investments, Inc.                             14,925,850 (3)       6.7%
One Post Office Square
Boston, Massachusetts 02109


(1)  BHM&S  has indicated that it has sole voting power over 4,985,498
     shares, sole investment power over all 24,207,898 shares and shared
     voting power over 19,222,400 shares.  BHM&S also advised Entergy that
     it is a registered investment advisor and these shares are held on
     behalf of various clients.  These shares include 16,277,700 shares
     (7.34%) held on behalf of the Vanguard Windsor Funds-Vanguard Windsor
     II Fund, The Vanguard Group, 455 Devon Park Drive, Wayne, Pennsylvania
     19087-1815.

(2)  FMR  may not vote or transfer this Common Stock.  The shares  are
     beneficially owned by three wholly-owned subsidiaries of FMR each
     of  which may vote and transfer the shares beneficially owned  by
     it.   Fidelity Management and Research Company beneficially  owns
     and  has shared investment power over 10,566,460 shares, Fidelity
     Management  Trust  Company  beneficially  owns  and  has   shared
     investment power over 646,276 shares and Strategic Advisers, Inc.
     beneficially  owns  and  has  shared investment  power  over  206
     shares.   The remaining 59,400 shares are beneficially owned  and
     may be voted and transferred by Fidelity International Limited, a
     Bermudan joint stock company and former majority-owned subsidiary
     of Fidelity Management and Research Company.

(3)  Putnam  Investments, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of  Marsh  &
     McLennan  Companies, Inc., wholly owns two registered  investment
     advisers:  Putman Investment Management, LLC and The Putnam Advisory
     Company, LLC which beneficially own and have shared investment power
     over  12,553,963  and  2,371,887  shares,  respectively.   Putnam
     Investments, Inc. has shared voting power as to 1,351,387 shares.


                   PROPOSAL 1  ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

                  GENERAL INFORMATION ABOUT NOMINEES

All  nominees are currently members of the Board.  Each has agreed  to
be  named  in  this proxy statement and to serve if  elected.   Except
where  authority to vote for one or more nominee(s) is  withheld,  the
proxies  will  vote all Common Stock represented by an executed  proxy
equally for the election of the nominees listed below.

TERM OF OFFICE.  Directors are elected annually to serve a term of one
year  and  until  the  next  annual meeting of  stockholders  and  the
election of their successors.

INFORMATION   ABOUT   THE   NOMINEES.   The   following   biographical
information  was  supplied by each nominee.  Unless stated  otherwise,
all   nominees  have  been  continuously  employed  in  their  present
positions for more than five years.  The age of each individual is  as
of December 31, 2001.

               MAUREEN S. BATEMAN          Age 58        Director Since 2000
               Boston, Massachusetts

               - Executive Vice President and General Counsel of State Street
                 Corporation (administrative and financial services for
                 institutional investors)
               - Vice Chairman of the Board of Trustees of Fordham University
               - Director of Boston Public Library Foundation; the Boston Bar
                 Foundation; YMCA of Boston; and Catholic Schools Foundation
                 of Boston


               W. FRANK BLOUNT             Age 63       Director Since 1987
               Atlanta, Georgia

               - Chairman & CEO of JI Ventures, Inc. (high-tech venture
                 capital fund)
               - Former Chairman & CEO of Cypress Communications, Inc. (in-
                 building integrated communications supplier)
               - Former CEO and Director of Telstra Communications Corporation
                 (Australian- telecommunications company)
               - Former Group President of AT&T
               - Director of First Union National Bank of Georgia; Caterpillar,
                 Inc.; Alcatel Ltd.; Adtran, Inc.; Hanson PLC; and Global Light
                 Communications, Inc.


               VADM. GEORGE W. DAVIS      Age 68        Director Since 1998
               USN (Ret.)
               Columbia, South Carolina

               - Retired Director, President and Chief Operating Officer of
                 Boston Edison Company (utility company)
               - Vice Admiral (retired) U.S. Navy and former Commander Naval
                 Surface Force, Pacific
               - Former Director of The University of Chicago's Board of
                 Governors for Argonne National Laboratories
               - Former Chairman of the Board for the National Nuclear
                 Accrediting Board for the Institute of Nuclear Power
                 Operations


               SIMON D. deBREE             Age 64       Director Since 2001
               The Netherlands

               - Retired Director and CEO of DSM (chemicals, polymers, life
                 science products)
               - Chairman of the Supervisory Boards of Stork N.V., Koninklijke
                 Boskalis Westminster N.V. and Parenco B.V.
               - Commissioner of the Foundation de la Maison de la Chimie
               - Former President of the Association of Petrochemicals
                 Producers in Europe and the European Chemical Industry
                 Council
               - Former Vice President of the Association of Plastics
                 Manufacturers in Europe
               - Former Board Member of the Dutch-German Chamber of Commerce
               - Former Member of the Advisory Council of the Dutch and
                 Japanese Trade Federation


               CLAIBORNE P. DEMING         Age 47        Director Since 2002
               El Dorado, Arkansas

               - President and CEO of Murphy Oil Corporation (oil and gas)
               - Director of Murphy Oil Company, Ltd.
               - Member, Arkansas State Board of Education


               DR. NORMAN C. FRANCIS      Age 70         Director Since 1994
               New Orleans, Louisiana

               - President of Xavier University of Louisiana
               - Director of The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United
                 States; Liberty Bank & Trust
               - Member of the Advisory Board of The Times Picayune Publishing
                 Co.
               - Chairman of the Board for the Southern Education Foundation
               - Former Chairman of the Board of Trustees, Educational Testing
                 Service
               - Chairman of the Advisory Board for the Local Initiative
                 Support Corporation


               J. WAYNE LEONARD            Age 51        Director Since 1999
               New Orleans, Louisiana

               - Chief Executive Officer of Entergy and Entergy Services, Inc.,
                 January 1999-present
               - Director of Entergy Arkansas, Inc.; Entergy Gulf States, Inc.;
                 Entergy Louisiana, Inc.; Entergy Mississippi, Inc.; Entergy
                 New Orleans, Inc.; and Entergy Services, Inc.; June 1998-1999
               - Chief Operating Officer, Entergy Arkansas, Inc.; Entergy Gulf
                 States, Inc.; Entergy Louisiana, Inc.; Entergy Mississippi,
                 Inc.; and Entergy New Orleans; Inc.; March-December, 1998
               - President, Cinergy Capital & Trading, 1998
               - President, Energy Commodities Business Unit of Cinergy, 1998
               - Group Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Cinergy,
                 1994-1997


               ROBERT v.d. LUFT            Age 66         Director Since 1992
               Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania

               - Chairman of the Board, Entergy
               - Chairman of the Board of EKLP, L.L.C.
               - Member, Management Committee, EntergyShaw, L.L.C.
               - Acting Chief Executive Officer of Entergy, May-December 1998
               - Former Chairman of the Board of DuPont Dow Elastomers
               - Retired Senior Vice President-DuPont and President-DuPont
                 Europe (industrial products, fibers, petroleum, chemicals and
                 specialty products businesses)
               - Retired Chairman of DuPont International
               - Member of the Board of Visitors, School of Engineering,
                 University of Pittsburgh
               - Director of Stonebridge Bank
               - Director of U.S. Chamber of Commerce


               KATHLEEN A. MURPHY          Age 51         Director Since 2000
               Stamford, Connecticut

               - Former Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of
                 Connell Limited Partnership (diversified manufacturing
                 company)
               - Trustee of Emmanuel College, Boston, Massachusetts


               DR. PAUL W. MURRILL        Age 67         Director Since 1993
               Baton Rouge, Louisiana

               - Professional Engineer
               - Former Chairman of the Board of Piccadilly Cafeterias, Inc.,
                 Baton Rouge, Louisiana
               - Former Chancellor of Louisiana State University and A&M
                 College, Baton Rouge, Louisiana
               - Retired Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of
                 Entergy Gulf States, Inc.
               - Director of ChemFirst, Inc.; Tidewater, Inc.; Howell
                 Corporation; Baton Rouge Water Company; and MicroProbe Inc.
               - Chairman of Trustees, Burden Foundation


               JAMES R. NICHOLS            Age 63         Director Since 1986
               Boston, Massachusetts

               - Partner, Nichols & Pratt (family trustees), Attorney and
                 Chartered Financial Analyst
               - Partner, Nichols & Pratt Advisors (registered investment
                 adviser)
               - Life Trustee of the Boston Museum of Science





               WILLIAM A. PERCY, II        Age 62          Director Since 2000
               Greenville, Mississippi

               - President and Chief Executive Officer of Greenville Compress
                 Company (commercial warehouse and real estate)
               - Chairman of Staple Cotton (regional cotton marketing co-op)
                 and Enterprise Corporation of the Delta (a non-profit
                 economic development corporation)
               - Director of ChemFirst Inc. and Mississippi Chemical
                 Corporation


               DENNIS H. REILLEY           Age 48          Director Since 1999
               Danbury, Connecticut

               - Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of PRAXAIR,
                 Inc. (industrial gases)
               - Director of Marathon Oil Corporation
               - Former Chairman of American Chemical Council
               - Former Executive Vice President & Chief Operating Officer of
                 Dupont (industrial products, fibers, petroleum, chemicals,
                 and specialty business products)
               - Former Senior Vice President of DuPont
               - Former Vice President and General Manager of DuPont White
                 Pigment & Mineral Products
               - Former Vice President and General Manager of DuPont
                 Specialty Chemicals
               - Former Vice President and General Manager of DuPont Lycrar
                 /Terathaner
               - Director of Chemical Manufacturers Association


               WM. CLIFFORD SMITH          Age 66         Director Since 1983
               Houma, Louisiana

               - Chairman of the Board of T. Baker Smith & Son, Inc.
                 (consultants - civil engineering and land surveying).
                 During 2001, T. Baker Smith & Son, Inc. performed
                 land-surveying services for Entergy companies and was
                 paid approximately $105,229.  Mr. Smith's children own
                 100% of the voting stock of T. Baker Smith & Son, Inc.
               - Member of Mississippi River Commission
               - Member of Louisiana Board of Regents (Colleges and
                 Universities)


               BISMARK A. STEINHAGEN       Age 67          Director Since 1993
               Beaumont, Texas

               - Chairman of the Board of Steinhagen Oil Company, Inc. (oil
                 and gasoline distributor), Beaumont, Texas


            INFORMATION ABOUT THE BOARD AND ITS COMMITTEES

In  2001, the Board of Directors met twelve times.  Reference  to  the
"Board"  means to the Board of Directors.  In addition to meetings  of
the  Board,  directors attended meetings of separate Board Committees.
In  2001,  all who are directors attended at least 75% of the meetings
of the Board and committees on which they serve.

COMMITTEES  OF  THE BOARD.  The Board of Directors  has  six  standing
committees.

Audit Committee.     10 meetings in 2001

Present Members:     Dennis H. Reilley (Chairman)
                     George W. Davis
                     Maureen S. Bateman
                     Kathleen A. Murphy
                     Bismark A. Steinhagen
                     Claiborne P. Deming (elected March 8, 2002)

Functions:           Discusses the audit results with management, the
                     Company's own internal auditors and with its
                     independent accountants.

                     Reviews internal controls, financial
                     reporting and other financial matters.

                     Reports to the Board and makes
                     recommendations relevant to the audit.

Finance Committee.   7 meetings in 2001

Present Members:     Paul W. Murrill (Chairman)
                     Robert v.d. Luft
                     James R. Nichols
                     Wm. Clifford Smith
                     Dennis H. Reilley
                     Kathleen A. Murphy

Function:            Reviews all financial, budgeting and banking
                     policies.

                     Makes recommendations to the Board concerning
                     financial transactions and the sale of securities.

Personnel Committee. 6 meetings in 2001

Present Members:     Norman C. Francis (Chairman)
                     William A. Percy, II
                     George W. Davis
                     W. Frank Blount
                     Simon D. deBree
                     James R. Nichols

Functions:           Reviews major employee relations matters,
                     employment practices, compensation and employee
                     benefit plans.

                     Reviews officer performance and makes
                     recommendations to the Board concerning officer
                     compensation.

Nuclear Committee.   7 meetings in 2001

Present Members:     George W. Davis (Chairman)
                     Bismark A. Steinhagen
                     Robert v.d. Luft
                     Wm. Clifford Smith
                     William A. Percy, II

Functions:           Provides  non-management oversight and review  of
                     all  the Corporation's nuclear generating plants,
                     focusing   on   safety,  operating   performance,
                     operating costs, staffing and training.

                     Consults with management concerning  internal
                     and external nuclear-related issues.

                     Reports  to  the Board with  respect  to  the
                     Corporation's nuclear facilities.

Director Affairs/
Public Affairs
Committee.           2  meetings in 2001  (Note:  On May 11, 2001, the
                     Director Affairs Committee and the Public Affairs
                     Committee   were  consolidated  into   a   single
                     committee.)

Present Members:     William A. Percy, II (Chairman)
                     W. Frank Blount
                     Maureen S. Bateman
                     Kathleen A. Murphy
                     Simon D. deBree
                     Norman C. Francis
                     Claiborne P. Deming (elected March 8, 2002)

Functions:           Advises  and  counsels management and  the  Board
                     regarding  governmental,  regulatory  and  public
                     relations  matters and on all matters  concerning
                     Directors,   including   committee   memberships,
                     compensation and performance.

                     Makes  recommendations to the Board regarding
                     public policy issues and equal opportunity in all
                     corporate relationships.

                     Searches  for  and screens new  nominees  for
                     positions on the Board.

                     Considers  qualified candidates for  director
                     nominated  by  stockholders;  provided,  however,
                     that    written   notice   of   any   stockholder
                     nominations must be received by the Secretary  of
                     the  Corporation not less than 60 days  nor  more
                     than 85 days prior to the anniversary date of the
                     immediately preceding year's annual meeting.

Executive Committee. 5 meetings during 2001

Present Members:     Robert v.d. Luft (Chairman)
                     J. Wayne Leonard
                     Paul W. Murrill
                     Norman C. Francis
                     George W. Davis

Functions:           May   exercise  Board  powers  with  respect   to
                     management  and  the  business  affairs  of   the
                     Corporation between Board meetings.

                     Reports all actions to the Board.


DIRECTOR  COMPENSATION.   Directors who are Entergy  officers  do  not
receive any fee for service as a director.  Each non-employee director
receives a fee of $1,500 for attendance at Board meetings, $1,000  for
attendance  at committee meetings scheduled in conjunction with  Board
meetings and $2,000 for attendance at committee meetings not scheduled
in  conjunction with a Board meeting.  If a director attends a meeting
of  a committee on which that director does not serve as a member,  he
or she receives one-half of the fee of an attending member.  Directors
also  receive  $1,000  for participation in  any  inspection  trip  or
conference not held in conjunction with a Board or committee  meeting.
In  addition,  committee chairpersons are paid  an  additional  $5,000
annually.   Directors receive only one-half the fees set  forth  above
for  telephone  attendance at Board or committee meetings.   All  non-
employee  directors receive on a quarterly basis 150 shares of  Common
Stock and one-half the value of the 150 shares in cash.  In 2001,  Mr.
Luft  was  paid $200,000 plus 47,000 stock options (granted at  market
price)  to serve as Chairman of the Board.  The non-employee Directors
have  the  opportunity  to  receive  annually  an  executive  physical
examination either from their local physician or at the Mayo  Clinic's
Jacksonville, Florida location.  The Corporation will pay the cost  of
the physical examination, and, if at Mayo, travel and living expenses.
Non-employee  Directors  are reimbursed  for  all  normal  travel  and
expenses  associated  with attending Board and committee  meetings  as
well  as inspection trips and conferences associated with their  Board
duties.

SERVICE AWARDS FOR DIRECTORS.  All non-employee directors are credited
with 800 "phantom" shares of Common Stock for each year of service  on
the  Board.   The "phantom" shares are credited to a specific  account
for  each  director that is maintained solely for accounting purposes.
After separation from Board service, these directors receive an amount
in  cash  equal  to  the value of their accumulated "phantom"  shares.
Payments  are  made  in  at least five but  no  more  than  15  annual
payments.   Each  "phantom" share is assigned a value on  its  payment
date  equal  to  the value of a share of Common Stock  on  that  date.
Dividends are earned on each "phantom" share from the date of original
crediting.

RETIREMENT FOR DIRECTORS.  Before Entergy Gulf States, Inc.  became  a
subsidiary of Entergy, it established a deferred compensation plan for
its  officers  and non-employee directors.  A director could  defer  a
maximum  of  100% of his salary, and an officer could defer  up  to  a
maximum  of  50% of his salary.  Both Dr. Murrill, as an officer,  and
Mr.   Steinhagen,  as  a  director,  deferred  their  salaries.    The
directors' right to receive this deferred compensation is an unsecured
obligation   of   the  Corporation,  which  accrues  simple   interest
compounded  annually at the rate set by Entergy Gulf States,  Inc.  in
1985.  In addition to payments received prior to 1997, on
January   1,   2000,  Dr.  Murrill  began  to  receive  his   deferred
compensation  plus  interest  in equal installments  annually  for  15
years.   Beginning on the January 1 after Mr. Steinhagen turns 70,  he
will   receive  his  deferred  compensation  plus  interest  in  equal
installments annually for 10 years.


       PERSONNEL COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION

Dr.  Francis and Messrs. Blount, Percy, Nichols, deBree and Adm. Davis
served during 2001 as members of the Personnel Committee of the Board.
None  of  these directors was, during 2001, an officer or employee  of
Entergy or any of its subsidiaries.


               SHARE OWNERSHIP OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS

The following table shows how much Common Stock each current director,
nominee and executive officer named in the "Summary Compensation Table"
on  page 19 beneficially owned as of December 31, 2001, as well as how
much  they  and the other executive officers beneficially owned  as  a
group.  This information has been furnished by each individual.   Each
individual  has  sole  voting and investment power,  unless  otherwise
indicated.   The  amount  of  Common Stock  owned  by  all  directors,
nominees and executive officers as a group totals less than 1% of  the
outstanding Common Stock.

                       Entergy Corporation Common     Entergy
                                 Stock              Corporation
                                                       Stock
                                                     Equivalent
                                                      Units (d)
                          Amount and Nature
                            of Beneficial
                               Ownership
                       Sole Voting       Other
                           and        Beneficial
                        Investment     Ownership
          Name             Power          (a)
Maureen S. Bateman            900             -           800
W. Frank Blount             7,434             -         8,000
VADM. George W. Davis       2,100             -         2,400
Simon D. deBree               140             -             -
Claiborne P. Deming           (c)             -             -
Norman C. Francis           3,100             -         5,600
Frank F. Gallaher           8,091        54,667        47,041
Donald C. Hintz             3,715       414,499        26,861
Jerry D. Jackson           23,447       138,333        25,721
J. Wayne Leonard           13,065       585,600             -
Robert v.d. Luft           22,672       214,166         7,200
Kathleen A. Murphy          1,900 (b)         -           800
Dr. Paul W. Murrill         2,722             -         8,000
James R. Nichols            9,757             -         8,000
William A. Percy, II        1,150             -           800
Dennis H. Reilley             600             -         1,600
Wm. Clifford Smith         10,400             -         8,000
Bismark A. Steinhagen      10,247             -         8,000
C. John Wilder              9,234       140,199        53,693

All directors, nominees,
and executive officers    153,136     1,776,548       265,462

(a)  Includes  stock options that are exercisable within  60  days  of
     December 31, 2001.
(b)  Includes 1,000 shares in which Ms. Murphy has joint ownership.
(c)  Mr.  Deming was elected to the Board on January 25, 2002 and  now
     owns 50 shares.
(d)  Represents the balances of stock equivalent units each  executive
     holds under the Executive Annual Incentive Plan Deferral Program and
     the Defined Contribution Restoration Plan.  These units will be paid
     out in a combination of Entergy Corporation Common Stock and cash
     based on the value of Entergy Corporation Common Stock on the date of
     payout.  The deferral period is determined by the individual and is at
     least two years from the award of the bonus up until retirement for
     the Executive Annual Incentive Plan and at retirement for the Defined
     Contribution Restoration Plan.  For Directors of Entergy Corporation
     the  units are part of the Service Award for Directors.  All non-
     employee directors are credited with 800 units for each  year  of
     service on the Board up to a maximum of 10 years.


SECTION  16(A)  BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE.   Directors
and  certain executive officers must file reports with the  Securities
and  Exchange  Commission  indicating their ownership  of  any  equity
securities  of the Corporation at the time they became a  director  or
executive  officer.  Thereafter, reports must be filed to  update  any
changes  in ownership.  In 2001, all directors' and officers'  reports
were timely filed.


                        AUDIT COMMITTEE REPORT

The  Entergy  Corporation  Board  of  Directors'  Audit  Committee  is
comprised of five directors who are not officers of the Company.   All
members meet the criteria for independence as defined by the New  York
Stock  Exchange.  During 2001, the Audit Committee complied  with  its
written  charter, as adopted by the Board of Directors.   The  charter
was published in the 2000 Proxy Statement.

The  Committee  held  ten  meetings during 2001.   The  meetings  were
designed to facilitate and encourage private communication between the
Committee  and  management, the internal auditors  and  the  Company's
independent  public accountants.  In August 2001, the Audit  Committee
selected  Deloitte & Touche to succeed PricewaterhouseCoopers  as  the
Company's  independent auditors; the Board of Directors  ratified  the
selection in October 2001.

During  these  meetings,  the  Committee reviewed  and  discussed  the
audited  financial statements with management and Deloitte  &  Touche.
The  Audit  Committee believes that management maintains an  effective
system   of  internal  controls  which  results  in  fairly  presented
financial statements.  Based on these discussions, the Audit Committee
recommended  to  the  Board of Directors that  the  audited  financial
statements be included in Entergy's Annual Report on Form 10-K.

The  discussions  with  Deloitte & Touche also  included  the  matters
required  by Statement on Auditing Standards No. 61 and No.  90.   The
Audit  Committee  received from Deloitte & Touche written  disclosures
and  the letter regarding its independence as required by Independence
Standards  Board Standard No. 1.  This information was discussed  with
Deloitte  &  Touche.  The Audit Committee also has considered  whether
the provision of the non-audit services described below by Deloitte  &
Touche  is  compatible  with maintaining their  independence  and  has
concluded  that  it is.  Deloitte & Touche provides no internal  audit
services for the Corporation.

The Audit Committee of the Board of Directors of Entergy Corporation

Dennis  H. Reilley, Chairperson    Kathleen A. Murphy
Maureen S. Bateman                 Bismark A. Steinhagen
George W. Davis

March 8, 2002

                        INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS

On  the recommendation of the Audit Committee, the Executive Committee
(acting  between board meetings) has appointed Deloitte  &  Touche  as
independent  accountants  for the Corporation,  effective  August  13,
2001.     The    Corporation's    former   independent    accountants,
PricewaterhouseCoopers, were dismissed effective August 13, 2001.  The
reports   issued  by  PricewaterhouseCoopers  on  Entergy's  financial
statements  for  either of the two most recent fiscal  years  did  not
contain  any  adverse  opinion  or a disclaimer  of  opinion,  or  any
qualification  or  modification  as to  uncertainty,  audit  scope  or
accounting principles.  During Entergy's two most recent fiscal  years
and  through  August  13,  2001,  there  were  no  disagreements  with
PricewaterhouseCoopers  on  a  matter  of  accounting  principles   or
practices,  financial  statement  disclosure  or  auditing  scope   or
procedure,   which,   if   not  resolved  to   the   satisfaction   of
PricewaterhouseCoopers,  would have caused  PricewaterhouseCoopers  to
make reference to the subject matter of the disagreement in connection
with its reports.

The Corporation initially reported the change in accountants  on  Form
8-K on August  13,  2001.   The  Form  8-K  contained  a  letter  from
PricewaterhouseCoopers  to  the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission
stating that it agreed with the statements concerning their firm  made
therein.

A  representative of Deloitte & Touche will be present at the  meeting
and  will  be  available  to  respond  to  appropriate  questions   by
stockholders  and will be given an opportunity to make a statement  if
the representative desires to do so.

Aggregate fees billed to Entergy Corporation and its subsidiaries  for
the  year ended December 31, 2001 by Deloitte & Touche LLP, the member
firms  of  Deloitte  Touche Tohmatsu, and their respective  affiliates
(collectively,   "Deloitte  &  Touche"),   which   includes   Deloitte
Consulting:

  Audit Fees                                   $1,808,000
                                               ==========
  Financial Information Systems Design and             $0
       Implementation Fees                     ==========

  All Other Fees:
    Merger-related Consultation                $1,327,436 (1)
    Support for Regulatory Proceedings            309,878
    Audit and Accounting-related                  181,320
    Tax Compliance                                 55,785
    Tax Consultation                               23,758
    Other                                          50,723
                                               ----------
                                   Total       $1,948,900 (2)
                                               ==========

(1)  These  fees  were  for  services provided by Deloitte  Consulting
     prior  to  the appointment of Deloitte & Touche as the  Company's
     independent accountants.  Deloitte & Touche has recently announced
     its intent to separate Deloitte Consulting from the firm.

(2)  Includes fees of $1,757,392 for services in progress prior to the
     appointment  of  Deloitte & Touche as the  Company's  independent
     accountants.


        REPORT OF PERSONNEL COMMITTEE ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

The  Personnel Committee of the Entergy Corporation Board of Directors
(Committee)  reviews and makes recommendations to the Board  regarding
all  aspects of executive compensation including the adoption  of,  or
amendments  to,  the  various  compensation,  incentives  and  benefit
plans/programs  maintained  for  officers  and  other  key  management
employees of the Corporation.

The  Corporation's executive compensation programs provide competitive
rewards  designed  to  attract, retain  and  motivate  key  management
employees  who are critical to the Corporation's success.   For  2001,
the   Committee  assessed  the  competitiveness  of  its  compensation
programs to a peer group of similar-sized energy services companies as
well as a larger group of companies participating in the Towers Perrin
Competitive Compensation Survey (based on revenue).

For  2001,  the  comparator groups were used  for  all  components  of
Entergy's  compensation  including base salary  and  incentives  (both
annual and long-term).  An executive's base salary was targeted at the
median  of base salary within the comparator groups.  Incentive  plans
provided opportunities for executives to earn compensation at the 75th
percentile at target for the comparator groups, based upon performance
targets  approved  by  the  Board.  The total  executive  compensation
package consisted of the following four major components:

1.   Base Salary

Base  salary  was reviewed in conjunction with both of the  comparator
groups.  As a result of this review, the Board of Directors granted to
Mr.  Leonard  an increase, during 2001, as reflected in  the  "Summary
Compensation Table" on page 19.

2.   Benefits and Perquisites

Executives were eligible to participate in Entergy's pension  plan(s),
in  addition to the Company's standard medical, dental, life insurance
and  long-term  disability  coverage.  Additionally,  Executives  were
provided financial planning perquisites during 2001.

3.   Annual Incentive Compensation

Each  executive's  annual  incentive  compensation  is  based  on  the
attainment  of  key strategic goals and objectives which  may  include
improvement  in earnings per share, operating cash flows,  control  of
operation and maintenance costs, customer satisfaction, etc.  For  his
performance in the year 2001, Mr. Leonard received an annual incentive
award of $1,281,000.

4.   Long-Term Incentive Compensation

The Personnel Committee approved a three-year, performance-based, Long-
Term  Incentive  Plan  which spans the period of  2001  through  2003.
Under  the  Long-Term Incentive Plan, the corporation is  required  to
achieve  pre-set  levels of performance measured  against  a  selected
group of other companies in the area of total return to shareholders.

Stock  option  grants  are considered on an  annual  cycle  (i.e.,  in
January of each year) and are based upon each executive's performance,
as reviewed by the Committee.  Mr. Leonard received a grant of 330,600
stock  options  in  January 2001, based on his 2000 performance.   The
award was funded under the 1998 Equity Ownership Plan.

- Total Compensation

As  reported  in  the "Summary Compensation Table," during  2001,  Mr.
Leonard's  participation in each of Entergy's compensation  components
was as follows:

   - Base Salary                            16%
   - Bonus                                  30%
   - Long-Term Incentive Compensation
     - Performance Shares  (LTIP)            0%
     - Stock Options*                       54%
   - All Other Compensation                  0%

* Please  note  that this number includes the 330,600  stock  options
  granted  for 2001.  A Black Scholes model price of $9.15  is  assumed
  for the stock options.

- Deductibility of Executive Compensation

Section  162(m)  of the Internal Revenue Code generally  disallows  an
income  tax  deduction to public companies for individual compensation
over  one  million  dollars,  paid to the  Company's  Chief  Executive
Officer  and  to  the  four other most highly paid executives,  unless
certain  requirements  are  met.  Key  requirements  include  that  1)
compensation  over  $1  million  must  be  performance-based  and   2)
incentive plans must be approved by shareholders.

All of Entergy's incentive plans are intended to meet the requirements
of  the Internal Revenue Code for deductibility.  As a result,  we  do
not  believe that any executive officers earned compensation in excess
of  $1  million  in  2001 that was not tax deductible.   Although  the
Company  intends generally to comply with requirements of Code Section
162(m)  when consistent with the Company's objectives, executives  may
be paid compensation that is not deductible under Code Section 162(m).

Personnel Committee Members:

Dr. Norman C. Francis, Chairman
Mr. William A. Percy, II
Vice Adm. George W. Davis, USN (Ret.)
Mr.  James R. Nichols
Mr. W. Frank Blount
Mr. Simon D. DeBree


COMPARISON OF FIVE YEAR CUMULATIVE RETURN.  The following graph
compares the performance of the Common Stock of the Corporation to the
S&P 500 Index and the S&P Electric Utilities Index (each of which
includes the Corporation) for the last five years:

                        Years ended December 31,
                    1996  1997   1998  1999   2000  2001
        Entergy     $100   116    127   110    188   179
        S&P 500 (2) $100   133    171   208    189   166
        S&P EUI (2) $100   126    145   117    179   164


(1)  Assumes $100 invested at the closing price on December 31, 1996,
     in Entergy Common Stock, the S&P 500 and the S&P Electric Utilities
     Index, and reinvestment of all dividends.

(2)  Cumulative total returns calculated from the S&P 500  Index  and
     S&P  Electric  Utilities  Index maintained  by  Standard  &  Poor's
     Corporation.




                     EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION TABLES

                      Summary Compensation Table

                                                                                 Long-Term Compensation
                                          Annual Compensation                     Awards                Payouts
                                                                        Restricted      Securities        (a)
                                                         Other Annual     Stock         Underlying       LTIP         All Other
Name and Principal Position    Year   Salary     Bonus   Compensation     Awards         Options        Payouts    Compensation(b)
                                                                                               
J. Wayne Leonard               2001  $897,500 $1,684,800    $3,709    $7,400,000(c)(d) 330,600 shares  $        0      $    0
 Chief Executive Officer       2000   836,538  1,190,000    11,646          (c)        330,600          2,410,413           0
                               1999   771,938    840,000     2,570          (c)        255,000                  0           0

Frank F. Gallaher              2001  $432,828   $524,828  $161,787          (c)         60,000 shares  $        0     $16,574
 Senior Vice President         2000   416,390    504,642   127,484          (c)         34,500            328,084      13,910
                               1999   401,161    303,855    38,496          (c)         39,500                  0      13,545

Donald C. Hintz                2001  $599,423   $779,000  $198,321          (c)        160,000 shares  $        0     $21,605
 President                     2000   570,096    743,000   104,399          (c)        175,000          1,181,837      26,516
                               1999   535,713    495,000    76,188          (c)        272,000                  0      22,156

Jerry D. Jackson               2001  $475,345   $576,382   $19,646          (c)         80,000 shares  $        0     $17,378
 Executive Vice President      2000   458,223    554,214    58,758          (c)         58,500          1,181,575      15,162
                               1999   442,809    403,554    39,670          (c)         94,000                  0      15,497

C. John Wilder                 2001  $493,128   $600,000  $158,059          (c)         87,700 shares  $        0     $16,284
 Executive Vice President and  2000   468,392    619,370   148,540          (c)         87,700            953,006      13,919
 Chief Financial Officer       1999   445,191    406,693   119,878          (c)         52,500                  0      20,035


(a)  Amounts  include the value of restricted shares  that  vested  in
     2000 (see note (c) below) under Entergy's Equity Ownership Plan.

(b)  Includes the following:

     (1)  2001 benefit accruals under the Defined Contribution Restoration
          Plan as follows:  Mr. Gallaher $8,578; Mr. Hintz $14,415; Mr. Jackson
          $11,272; and Mr. Wilder $8,367.

     (2)  2001 employer contributions to the System Savings Plan as
          follows:  Mr. Gallaher $7,996; Mr. Hintz $6,681; Mr. Jackson $6,106;
          and Mr. Wilder $7,917.

     (3)  2001 reimbursements for moving expenses as follows:  Mr. Hintz
          $509.

(c)  Restricted  unit  (equivalent to shares  of  Entergy  Corporation
     common  stock)  awards in 2001 are reported under the  "Long-Term
     Incentive Plan Awards" table, and reference is made to that table for
     information on the aggregate number of restricted units awarded during
     2001 and the vesting schedule for such units.  At December 31, 2001,
     the number and value of the aggregate restricted unit holdings were as
     follows: Mr. Gallaher 24,500 units, $958,195; Mr. Hintz 57,000 units,
     $2,229,270; Mr. Jackson 25,400 units, $993,394; Mr. Leonard 246,000
     units, $9,621,060; and Mr. Wilder 25,400 units, $993,394.  Accumulated
     dividends are paid on restricted units when vested.  The value of
     restricted unit holdings as of December 31, 2001 are determined by
     multiplying the total number of units awarded by the closing market
     price  of Entergy Corporation common stock on the New York  Stock
     Exchange Composite Transactions on December 31, 2001 ($39.11  per
     share).  No restrictions were lifted in 2001.  The value of stock for
     which restrictions were lifted in 2000, and the applicable portion of
     accumulated cash dividends, are reported in the LTIP payouts column in
     the above table.

(d)  In  addition  to  the restricted units granted under  the  Equity
     Ownership  Plan, in January 2001 Mr. Leonard was granted  200,000
     restricted units. 50,000 of the restricted stock units will vest on
     each of December 31, 2001, December 31, 2002, December 31, 2003 and
     December  31,  2004,  based  on continued  service  with  Entergy
     Corporation. Accumulated dividends will not be paid on Mr. Leonard's
     restricted units when vested.  The value that Mr. Leonard may realize
     is dependent upon both the number of units that vest and the future
     market price of Entergy common stock.



            Option Grants to the Executive Officers in 2001

                                      Individual Grants                    Potential Realizable
                                     % of Total                                  Value
                     Number of        Options                               at Assumed Annual
                    Securities      Granted to   Exercise                     Rates of Stock
                    Underlying       Employees     Price                    Price Appreciation
                      Options           in         (per     Expiration      for Option Term(b)
        Name        Granted (a)        2001       share)       Date           5%          10%
                                                                   
 J. Wayne Leonard    330,600           3.8%       $37.00      1/25/11     $7,692,765 $19,494,977
 Frank F. Gallaher    60,000           0.7%        37.00      1/25/11      1,396,146   3,538,108
 Donald C. Hintz     160,000           1.9%        37.00      1/25/11      3,723,056   9,434,955
 Jerry D. Jackson     80,000           0.9%        37.00      1/25/11      1,861,528   4,717,478
 C. John Wilder       87,700           1.0%        37.00      1/25/11      2,040,700   5,171,535


(a)  Options were granted on January 25, 2001, pursuant to the  Equity
     Ownership Plan.  All options granted on this date have an exercise
     price equal to the closing price of Entergy common stock on the New
     York Stock Exchange Composite Transactions on January 25, 2001.  These
     options will vest in equal increments, annually, over a three-year
     period beginning in 2002.

 (b) Calculation   based  on  the  market  price  of  the   underlying
     securities  assuming the market price increases over  a  ten-year
     option  period  and  assuming  annual  compounding.   The  column
     presents   estimates  of  potential  values   based   on   simple
     mathematical assumptions.  The actual value, if any, an executive
     officer  may  realize is dependent upon the market price  on  the
     date of option exercise.

Aggregated Option Exercises in 2001 and December 31, 2001 Option Values



                                            Number of Securities         Value of Unexercised
                   Shares              Underlying Unexercised Options    In-the-Money Options
                   Acquired     Value      as of December 31, 2001    as of December 31, 2001 (b)
       Name      on Exercise  Realized   Exercisable   Unexercisable  Exercisable   Unexercisable
                                 (a)
                                                                    
 J. Wayne Leonard        -     $    -      280,200        636,000     $3,334,647      $5,027,873
 Frank F. Gallaher  38,833      604,807     10,000         96,167         81,726         617,905
 Donald C. Hintz     2,500       22,916    238,833        420,667      2,778,663       3,477,946
 Jerry D. Jackson        -            -     60,833        150,334        633,897       1,084,501
 C. John Wilder          -            -     64,233        163,667        791,982       1,287,469


(a)  Based on the difference between the closing price of Common Stock
     on the New York Stock Exchange Composite Transactions on the exercise
     date and the option exercise price.

(b)  Based on the difference between the closing price of Common Stock
     on the New York Stock Exchange Composite Transactions on December 31,
     2001, and the option exercise price.


                Long-Term Incentive Plan Awards in 2001

      The  following  table summarizes the awards of restricted  units
(equivalent  to  shares of Entergy Corporation common  stock)  granted
under  the  Equity  Ownership  Plan in 2001  to  the  Named  Executive
Officers.



                                                     Estimated Future Payouts Under
                                                   Non-Stock Price-Based Plans (a) (b)
                 Number of  Performance Period Until
      Name         Units      Maturation or Payout   Threshold   Target     Maximum
                                                             
J. Wayne Leonard   48,000       1/1/01-12/31/03        16,000    32,000     48,000
Frank F. Gallaher  12,700       1/1/01-12/31/03         4,300     8,500     12,700
Donald C. Hintz    28,500       1/1/01-12/31/03         9,500    19,000     28,500
Jerry D. Jackson   12,700       1/1/01-12/31/03         4,300     8,500     12,700
C. John Wilder     12,700       1/1/01-12/31/03         4,300     8,500     12,700



(a)  Restricted  units awarded will vest at the end  of  a  three-year
     period, subject to the attainment of approved performance goals for
     Entergy.  Restrictions are lifted based upon the achievement of the
     cumulative result of these goals for the performance period.  The
     value any Named Executive Officer may realize is dependent upon both
     the number of units that vest and the future market price of Entergy
     Corporation common stock.

(b)  The  threshold,  target  and maximum  levels  correspond  to  the
     achievement of 50%, 100% and 150%, respectively, of Equity Ownership
     Plan goals.  Achievement of a threshold, target or maximum level would
     result in the award of the number of units indicated in the respective
     column.  Achievement of a level between these three specified levels
     would result in the award of a number of units calculated by means of
     interpolation.

RETIREMENT  INCOME PLAN.  The Corporation has a defined  benefit  plan
for  employees,  including executive officers,  that  provides  for  a
retirement  benefit calculated by multiplying the number of  years  of
employment by 1.5% which is then multiplied by the final average  pay.
A  single  employee receives a lifetime annuity and a married employee
receives  a  reduced  benefit  with a 50%  surviving  spouse  annuity.
Retirement  benefits  are  not subject to  any  deduction  for  social
security or other offset amounts.  The credited years of service under
the plan, as of December 31, 2001, were for Mr. Gallaher (32), for Mr.
Jackson  (22)  and  for Mr. Leonard (3).  Because  they  entered  into
supplemental  retirement  agreements, the credited  years  of  service
under this plan were for Mr.  Hintz (30) and for Mr. Wilder (18).

The following table shows the annual retirement benefits that would be
paid  at  normal  retirement (age 65 or later)  and  includes  covered
compensation for the executive officers included in the salary  column
of the summary compensation table on page 19.

                   Retirement Income Plan Table (1)
     Annual
     Covered                              Years of Service
  Compensation      15          20          25          30          35

    $100,000     $ 22,500    $ 30,000    $ 37,500   $ 45,000    $ 52,500
     200,000       45,000      60,000      75,000     90,000     105,000
     300,000       67,500      90,000     112,500    135,000     157,500
     400,000       90,000     120,000     150,000    180,000     210,000
     500,000      112,500     150,000     187,500    225,000     262,500
     650,000      146,250     195,000     243,750    292,500     341,250
     950,000      213,750     285,000     356,250    427,500     498,750

(1)  Benefits are shown for various rates of final average pay,  which
     is the highest salary earned in any consecutive 60 months during the
     last 120 months of employment.

PENSION  EQUALIZATION PAYMENTS.  Supplemental retirement benefits  are
provided  to  all  executive  officers and  other  participants  whose
benefits  are limited under the qualified plans by applicable  federal
tax  laws and regulations equal to the difference between the benefits
that  would  have been payable under the qualified plans but  for  the
applicable  limitations and the benefits that  are  indicated  in  the
above referenced pension table.

SUPPLEMENTAL  RETIREMENT  PLANS.  Two  other  supplemental  plans  are
offered to executive officers.  Executives may participate in  one  or
the  other  of  these  supplemental plans at  the  invitation  of  the
Corporation.   These plans provide that a participant  may  receive  a
monthly  payment for 120 months.  The amount of monthly payment  shall
not   exceed  2.5%  or  3.33%,  depending  upon  the  plan,   of   the
participant's  average  basic annual pay (as defined  in  the  plans).
Current  estimates indicate that the annual payments to any  executive
officer  under  either  of these two plans  would  be  less  than  the
payments  to  that officer under the System Executive Retirement  Plan
discussed below.

SYSTEM  EXECUTIVE RETIREMENT PLAN (SERP).  This executive plan  is  an
unfunded defined benefit plan for senior executives, that includes all
of  the  executive  officers named in the Summary  Compensation  Table
(except   for  Mr.  Leonard).   Executive  officers  can  choose,   at
retirement,  between the retirement benefits paid under provisions  of
this  plan  or  those payable under the supplemental retirement  plans
discussed above.  The plan was amended in 1998 to provide that covered
pay  is  the  average of the highest three years annual base  pay  and
incentive  compensation earned by the executive during the  ten  years
immediately  preceding  his retirement.  Benefits  are  calculated  by
multiplying  the covered pay times the maximum pay replacement  ratios
of  55%,  60% or 65% (dependent on job rating at retirement) that  are
attained at 30 years of credited service.  The ratios are reduced  for
each  year  of  employment below 30 years.  The amended plan  provides
that  the  single employee receives a lifetime annuity and  a  married
employee  receives  the reduced benefit with a  50%  surviving  spouse
annuity.  These retirement payments are guaranteed for ten years,  but
are  offset  by  any  and all defined benefit plan payments  from  the
Corporation and from prior employers.  These payments are not  subject
to social security offsets.

Receipt  of  benefits under any of the supplemental  retirement  plans
described  above is contingent upon several factors.  The  participant
must agree not to take any employment after retirement with any entity
that is in competition with or similar in nature to the Corporation or
any affiliated company.  Benefits are forfeitable for various reasons,
including  a  violation  of  an  agreement  with  the  Corporation  or
resignation  or termination of employment for any reason  without  the
Corporation's permission.

The  credited years of service for the Named Executive Officers  under
this  plan  are  as follows:  Mr. Gallaher (32), Mr. Hintz  (30),  Mr.
Jackson (28) and Mr. Wilder (3).

     The following table shows the annual retirement benefits that
     would be paid at normal retirement (age 65 or later).

              System Executive Retirement Plan Table (1)
     Annual
     Covered                              Years of Service
       Pay         10          15          20          25          30+


   $200,000     $60,000    $ 90,000   $ 100,000   $ 110,000    $ 120,000
    300,000      90,000     135,000     150,000     165,000      180,000
    400,000     120,000     180,000     200,000     220,000      240,000
    500,000     150,000     225,000     250,000     275,000      300,000
    600,000     180,000     270,000     300,000     330,000      360,000
    700,000     210,000     315,000     350,000     385,000      420,000
  1,000,000     300,000     450,000     500,000     550,000      600,000


(1)  Covered  pay includes the average of the three highest  years  of
     annual base pay and incentive awards earned by the executive during
     the ten years immediately preceding retirement.  Benefits shown are
     based on a replacement ratio of 50% based on the years of service and
     covered pay shown.  The benefits for 10, 15 and 20 or more years of
     service at 45% and 55% replacement levels would decrease (in the case
     of 45%) or increase (in the case of 55%) by the following percentages:
     3.0%, 4.5% and 5.0%, respectively.

EXECUTIVE  EMPLOYMENT  CONTRACTS  AND  RETIREMENT  AGREEMENTS.    Upon
completion  of  a  transaction resulting  in  a  change-in-control  of
Entergy (a "Merger"), benefits already accrued under Entergy's  System
Executive   Retirement   Plan,  Post-Retirement   Plan,   Supplemental
Retirement Plan and Pension Equalization Plan will become fully vested
if  the  participant  is involuntarily terminated without  "cause"  or
terminates employment for "good reason" (as such terms are defined  in
such plans).

EXECUTIVE RETENTION AGREEMENTS

Retention  Agreement with Mr. Leonard - The retention agreement  with
Mr.  Leonard provides that upon a termination of employment  while  a
Merger  is pending  (a) by Entergy without "cause" or by Mr.  Leonard
for  "good reason", as such terms are defined in the agreement, other
than a termination of employment described in the next paragraph,  or
(b) by reason of Mr. Leonard's death or disability:

  -  Entergy will pay to him a lump sum cash severance payment equal
     to three times (in limited circumstances, five times) the sum of Mr.
     Leonard's base salary and target annual incentive award;

  -  Entergy will pay to him a pro rata annual incentive award, based
     on an assumed maximum annual achievement of applicable performance
     goals;

  -  his supplemental retirement benefit will fully vest, will  be
     determined as if he had remained employed with Entergy until the
     attainment of age 55, and will commence upon his attainment of age 55;

  -  he will be entitled to immediate payment of performance awards,
     based upon an assumed target achievement of applicable performance
     goals;

  -  all of his stock options will become fully vested and will remain
     outstanding for their full ten-year term; and

  -  Entergy will pay to him a "gross-up" payment in respect of any
     excise taxes he might incur.

     If Mr. Leonard's employment is terminated by Entergy for "cause"
at  any  time,  or by Mr. Leonard without "good reason"  and  without
Entergy's  permission prior to his attainment of age 55, Mr.  Leonard
will  forfeit  his supplemental retirement benefit. If Mr.  Leonard's
employment  is terminated by Mr. Leonard without "good  reason"  with
Entergy's  permission prior to his attainment of age 55, Mr.  Leonard
will  be  entitled to a supplemental retirement benefit,  reduced  by
6.5%  for each year that the termination date precedes his attainment
of  age  55, payable commencing upon Mr. Leonard's attainment of  age
62.  If Mr. Leonard's employment is terminated by Mr. Leonard without
"good reason" following his attainment of age 55, Mr. Leonard will be
entitled  to  his full supplemental retirement benefit.  The  amounts
payable under the agreement will be funded in a rabbi trust.

Retention  Agreement with Mr. Gallaher - The retention agreement  with
Mr.  Gallaher  provides that upon termination of  employment  while  a
Merger  is pending and for two years after completion of a Merger  (a)
by  Mr.  Gallaher for "good reason" or by Entergy without "cause",  as
such  terms  are  defined in the agreement or (b)  by  reason  of  Mr.
Gallaher's death or disability:

  -  Entergy will pay to him a lump sum cash severance payment equal
     to four times the sum of his base salary and maximum annual incentive
     award;

  -  Entergy will pay to him a pro rata annual incentive award, based
     on an assumed maximum achievement of applicable performance goals;

  -  he will be entitled to immediate payment of performance awards,
     based upon an assumed maximum achievement of applicable performance
     goals;

  -  all of his stock options will become fully vested and will remain
     outstanding for their full ten-year term;

  -  he may elect to receive either a lump sum supplemental retirement
     benefit equal to $3.8 million or the benefit he would have earned
     under  the terms of the SERP applicable to individuals who became
     participants on or after March 25, 1998; and

  -  Entergy will pay to him a "gross-up" payment in respect of any
     excise taxes he might incur.

Retention agreement with Mr. Hintz - The retention agreement with Mr.
Hintz  provides  that  Mr. Hintz will be paid  an  initial  retention
payment  of approximately $2.8 million on the date on which a  Merger
is  completed  and  an additional retention payment of  approximately
$2.3  million on the second anniversary of the completion of a Merger
if  he  remains  employed on each of those dates. The agreement  also
provides  that  upon  termination of employment  while  a  Merger  is
pending and for two years after completion (a) by Mr. Hintz for "good
reason"  or by Entergy without "cause", as such terms are defined  in
the agreement or (b) by reason of Mr. Hintz's death or disability:

  -  Entergy will pay to him a lump sum cash severance payment equal
     to $2.8 million if such termination occurs prior to completion of a
     Merger or equal to $2.3 million if such termination occurs following
     completion of a Merger;

  -  Entergy will pay to him a pro rata annual incentive award, based
     on an assumed maximum achievement of applicable performance goals, if
     such termination occurs following completion of a Merger;

  -  he will be entitled to immediate payment of performance awards
     based upon an assumed target achievement of applicable performance
     goals, if such termination occurs prior to completion of a Merger, or
     based upon an assumed maximum achievement of applicable performance
     goals, if such termination occurs following completion of a Merger;

  -  all of his stock options will become fully vested and will remain
     outstanding for their full ten-year term;

  -  he will be entitled to receive a supplemental retirement benefit
     that, when combined with Mr. Hintz's SERP benefit, equals the benefit
     he  would  have earned under the terms of the SERP as in  effect
     immediately prior to March 25, 1998; and

  -  Entergy will pay to him a "gross-up" payment in respect of any
     excise taxes he might incur.

Retention  Agreement with Mr. Jackson - The retention agreement  with
Mr.  Jackson  provides that upon retirement in  accordance  with  the
agreement,  Mr.  Jackson:   (a)  will be  entitled  to  a  subsidized
retirement  benefit  equal to the applicable nonqualified  retirement
benefit payable to Mr. Jackson without reduction for early retirement
("Subsidized  Retirement  Benefit");  and  (b)  may  enter   into   a
consulting  arrangement with Entergy through March  31,  2005,  under
terms and conditions set forth in the agreement.

     Pursuant  to  the  agreement, should Mr.  Jackson  experience  a
Qualifying  Event (as defined in the agreement) after  the  Successor
Placement  Date  (as defined in the agreement) but before  March  31,
2003, he shall not be entitled to benefits under the System Executive
Continuity Plan but shall instead be entitled to the following:

  -  a  lump sum amount equal to any unpaid base salary that would
     otherwise have been paid through March 31, 2003;

  -  the Subsidized Retirement Benefit; and

  -  all other benefits to which he may be entitled under the terms
     and  conditions of those Entergy plans and programs in which  he
     participates in accordance with the agreement.

     Additionally,  Mr. Jackson is entitled to certain  benefits,  as
described  in the agreement, in the event of a change in control  (as
defined  in the System Executive Continuity Plan) after which Entergy
or  its  successor  company fails to honor Mr.  Jackson's  consulting
arrangement.

Retention  Agreement with Mr. Wilder - The retention  agreement  with
Mr.  Wilder  provides  that if Mr. Wilder terminates  his  employment
without  "good  reason" and prior to a termination  for  "cause,"  as
those  terms are defined in his agreement, Entergy will pay to him  a
lump  sum cash severance payment equal to three times the sum of  his
base  salary  and  target annual award and a  "gross-up"  payment  in
respect of any excise taxes he might incur.

     The  agreement also provides that, as a substitute for the above
entitlement,  upon termination of employment (a) by  Mr.  Wilder  for
"good  reason"  or  by Entergy without "cause",  as  such  terms  are
defined in the agreement, in each case prior to the termination of  a
Merger  or  prior  to the second anniversary of the completion  of  a
Merger,  (b)  by reason of Mr. Wilder's death or disability  while  a
Merger  is pending and for two years after completion of a Merger  or
(c) for any reason following the second anniversary of a Merger:

  -  Mr. Wilder will be entitled to a lump sum cash severance payment
     equal to four times (in limited circumstances, three times) the sum of
     the his base salary and maximum annual incentive award;

  -  Mr. Wilder will be entitled to a pro rata annual incentive award,
     based on an assumed maximum achievement of applicable performance
     goals;

  -  except  in  the case of a termination by reason of  death  or
     disability, he will continue to be employed as a Special Project
     Coordinator at an annual base salary of $200,000, and will continue to
     participate in all of Entergy's benefit plans, until the earliest of
     (a) his attainment of age 55 (at which time he will be deemed eligible
     to retire under Entergy's plans then in effect), (b) his employment
     with a company listed in the Fortune Global 500 Index or (c) his
     employment with any company that has a conflict of interest policy
     that would prohibit his continued employment with Entergy;

  -  Entergy will credit him with 15 additional years of service under
     Entergy's supplemental retirement plan and he may elect to receive
     either (a) approximately $1.9 million in a cash lump sum in full
     settlement of all nonqualified retirement benefits or (b) the benefit
     that he would have earned under the terms of the SERP applicable to
     individuals who became participants on or after March 25, 1998 (which
     amount he may elect to receive upon completion of a Merger);

  -  he will be entitled to immediate vesting of performance awards,
     based upon an assumed maximum achievement of applicable performance
     goals;

  -  all of his stock options will become fully vested and will remain
     outstanding for their full ten-year term; and

  -  he will be entitled to a "gross-up" payment in respect of any
     excise taxes he might incur.

     If  Mr.  Wilder  terminates employment without good  reason  and
other  than  on  account  of death or disability,  on  or  after  the
completion  of  a  Merger and before the second  anniversary  of  the
completion of a Merger:

  -  Mr. Wilder is entitled to a lump sum cash severance payment equal
     to three times the sum of his base salary and target annual incentive
     award;

  -  Mr.  Wilder is entitled to a pro rata annual incentive award,
     based on an assumed maximum achievement of applicable performance
     goals;

  -  he will continue to be employed as a Special Project Coordinator
     at an annual base salary of $200,000, and will continue to participate
     in all of Entergy's benefit plans, until the earliest of (a) his
     attainment of age 55 (at which time he will be deemed eligible to
     retire under Entergy's plans then in effect), (b) his employment with
     a company listed in the Fortune Global 500 Index or (c) his employment
     with any company that has a conflict of interest policy that would
     prohibit his continued employment with Entergy;

  -  Entergy will credit him with 15 additional years of service under
     Entergy's supplemental retirement plan and he may elect either (a)
     approximately $1.9 million in a cash lump sum in full settlement of
     all nonqualified retirement benefits or (b) the benefit that he would
     have earned under the terms of the SERP applicable to individuals who
     became participants on or after March 25, 1998 (which amount he may
     elect to receive upon completion of a Merger);

  -  he will be entitled to immediate vesting of performance awards,
     based upon an assumed target achievement of applicable performance
     goals;

  -  all of his stock options will become fully vested and will remain
     outstanding for their full ten-year term; and

  -  he will be entitled to a "gross-up" payment in respect of any
     excise taxes he might incur.


    PROPOSAL 2 - STOCKHOLDER PROPOSAL CONCERNING CERTAIN WORDING ON
                     THE CORPORATION'S PROXY CARD

The  Corporation  has  been  advised that Mr.  Robert  D.  Morse,  212
Highland Avenue, Moorestown, New Jersey 08057, a holder of 600  shares
of  the  Corporation's Common Stock, proposes to submit the  following
resolution to the 2002 Annual Meeting of Stockholders:

     "Management and Directors are requested to change the  format  of
     the  Proxy  Material in the two areas which are not fair  to  the
     shareowners:   Remove  the word "EXCEPT" and  re-apply  the  word
     "AGAINST" in the Vote For Directors column.  Remove the statement
     (if  applicable) placed in the lower section announcing that  all
     signed  proxies but not voted as to choice will be voted  at  the
     discretion of Management."

STATEMENT  OF SECURITY HOLDER.  Reasons:  This entirely unfair  voting
arrangement   has   benefited  Management  and  Directors   in   their
determination to stay in office by whatever means.  Note that this  is
the only area in which an "AGAINST" choice is omitted, and has been so
for  about 15 years with no successful objections.  Claiming of  votes
by  Management  is unfair, as a shareowner has the right  to  sign  as
"Present"  and  not  voting,  showing receipt  of  material  and  only
preventing  further solicitation of a vote.  Since  Management  claims
the  right  to  advise  an  "AGAINST" vote  in  matters  presented  by
shareowners, I likewise have the right to ask for a vote "AGAINST" all
Company select nominees for Director until directors stop the practice
of excessive extra remuneration for Management other than base pay and
some acceptable perks.  Thank you.

BOARD OF DIRECTORS' RESPONSE:  Your Board of Directors recommends that
the  changes to the Company's proxy materials requested by  Mr.  Morse
not be adopted and that stockholders vote AGAINST the proposal.

The   Board  of  Directors  believes  that  the  first  part  of   the
stockholder's  request, if adopted, would create a  statement  in  the
Company's form of proxy card that would be unintelligible and would be
unnecessary. The proposal seeks stockholder approval of a request that
the  Company "remove the word `EXCEPT' and re-apply the word `AGAINST'
in the Vote for Directors column," on the Company's form of proxy card
(while  the  stockholder refers to the "Proxy  Material",  it  is  the
Company's interpretation that since this statement appears only on the
form  of proxy card, the reference should be to the form of proxy card
for  this  part  of the stockholder's request). The Company's  current
form  of  proxy card contains a selection box labeled "For All Except"
in  the "Election of Directors" row and then provides a space in which
stockholders  may list the nominees with respect to whom the  security
holder  chooses  to  withhold authority to  vote.  Removing  the  word
"except"  and  replacing  it with the word "against"  results  in  the
following  wording  above the selection box: "For  All  Against."  The
Company could not, and assumes the stockholders in general could  not,
reasonably  determine the actions required by the  inclusion  of  this
wording.  The  Company's  proxy material, including  the  proxy  card,
currently  provides  stockholders with the  opportunity  to  vote  for
directors  or to have their shares withheld from voting for directors.
No  changes are required to satisfy Delaware law (the laws under which
the  Company  is  incorporated)  or to provide  stockholders  adequate
choices.

With  respect  to  the second part of the stockholder's  request,  the
Board  of  Directors  believes  that  the  removal  of  the  statement
announcing that, in the absence of direction from the stockholder, all
proxies  properly  executed  will  be  voted  at  the  discretion   of
Management, effectively disenfranchises stockholders. The signing of a
proxy  shows unambiguous and unequivocal evidence of the stockholder's
intent  to  vote  its  shares despite the  fact  that  no  affirmative
indication  is  given as to the manner in which the  proxy  is  to  be
voted. Moreover, by signing the proxy and not indicating the manner of
the  vote,  the stockholder is evidencing a clear intent to  have  the
shares voted at the discretion of Management.

In   summary,  the  first  request  of  Mr.  Morse  would  create   an
unintelligible,  meaningless and unnecessary statement  in  the  proxy
card.  The  second  request  would  effectively  disenfranchise  those
stockholders  who wish to grant Management discretion  to  vote  their
shares.

YOUR  BOARD  OF  DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT STOCKHOLDERS  VOTE  AGAINST
PROPOSAL 2.

      PROPOSAL 3 - STOCKHOLDER PROPOSAL CONCERNING "POISON PILLS"

The  Corporation has been advised that Mr. Emil Rossi, P.O.  Box  249,
Boonville,  CA  95415,  a holder of 558 shares  of  the  Corporation's
Common Stock, proposes to submit the following resolution to the  2002
Annual Meeting of Stockholders:

     "Shareholders   request  that  our  Board   of   Directors   seek
     shareholder approval prior to adopting any poison pill  and  also
     redeem  or  terminate any pill now in effect unless it  has  been
     approved by a shareholder vote at the next shareholder meeting."

STATEMENT  OF  SECURITY  HOLDER.  Reasons:   The  poison  pill  is  an
important issue for shareholder vote even if our company does not  now
have  a  poison  pill or plan to adopt a poison pill  in  the  future.
Currently  our board can adopt a poison pill and/or redeem  a  current
poison pill and adopt a new poison pill:
          1)  At any time
          2)  In a short period of time
          3)  Without shareholder approval

     Negative Effects of Poison Pills on Shareholder Value
     A  study by the Securities and Exchange Commission found evidence
     that  the  negative  effect of poison pills to  deter  profitable
     takeover bids outweigh benefits.
     Source:   Office of the Chief Economist, Securities and  Exchange
     Commission.  The Effect of Poison Pills on the Wealth  of  Target
     Shareholders, October 23, 1986.

     Additional Support for this Proposal Topic
     - Pills adversely affect shareholder value.
       Power and Accountability
       Neil Minow and Robert Monks
     - The Council of Institutional Investors
       www.cii.org/ciicentral/policies.htm & www.cii.org
       recommends shareholder approval of all poison pills.

     Institutional Investor Support for Shareholder Vote
     Many institutional investors believe poison pills should be voted
     on by shareholders.  A poison pill can insulate management at the
     expense  of shareholders.  A poison pill is such a powerful  tool
     that  shareholders  should  be able to  vote  on  whether  it  is
     appropriate.  We believe a shareholder vote on poison pills  will
     avoid  an unbalanced concentration of power in our directors  who
     could  focus  on  narrow interests at the  expense  of  the  vast
     majority of shareholders.

     Institutional Investor Support is High-Caliber Support
     This   proposal  topic  has  significant  institutional  support.
     Shareholder right to vote on poison pill resolutions  achieved  a
     57%  average yes-vote from shareholders at 26 major companies  in
     2000  (Percentage based on yes-no votes).  Institutional investor
     support  is  high-caliber support.  Institutional investors  have
     the  advantage  of  a specialized staff and resources,  long-term
     focus,  fiduciary duty and independent perspective to  thoroughly
     study the issues involved in this proposal topic.

     68% Vote at a Major Company
     This  proposal topic won 68% of the yes-no vote at the Burlington
     Northern Santa Fe (BNI) 2001 annual meeting.  The text of the BNI
     proposal,  which  has  further information on  poison  pills,  is
     available at The Corporate Library website under Proposals.

     Shareholder Vote Precedent Set by Other Companies
     In  recent  years, various companies have been willing to  redeem
     poison  pills or at least allow shareholders to have a meaningful
     vote on whether a poison pill should remain in force.  We believe
     that our company should do so as well.

            In the interest of shareholder value vote yes:
                   SHAREHOLDER VOTE ON POISON PILLS
                               YES ON 3

BOARD OF DIRECTORS' RESPONSE:  Your Board of Directors recommends that
Mr.  Rossi's  proposal not be adopted and that the  shareholders  vote
AGAINST the proposal.

The  Board  of  Directors believes that the action requested  in  this
proposal  is  unnecessary and ill-advised. The Board of Directors  has
not  adopted  a  shareholder rights plan (sometimes called  a  "poison
pill").   Circumstances could arise in the future, however, where  the
adoption of such a plan would be an important tool for protecting  the
interests  of  the Corporation's stockholders in compliance  with  the
fiduciary  duties  of  the Board of Directors.  Requiring  stockholder
approval for the adoption of a rights plan would impede the ability of
the  Board  of  Directors  to  use such a  plan  for  the  benefit  of
stockholders when circumstances warrant.  The Board is comprised (with
one  exception) entirely of outside directors.  The Board  is  in  the
best  possible  position to be free from self-interest in  discharging
its  fiduciary duty to determine whether a shareholder rights plan  is
in the best interests of the shareholders.

Contrary  to  the  proponent's suggestion,  the  ability  to  adopt  a
shareholder  rights  plan does not give a board of directors  absolute
veto  power  over any business combination. Rather, in  upholding  the
legal validity of shareholder rights plans, the Delaware Supreme Court
has  made it clear that a board is required to act in accordance  with
its  fiduciary duties in adopting and maintaining a rights plan. As  a
result, rights plans should neither prevent unsolicited proposals from
being  made  nor prevent companies from being acquired at prices  that
are fair and adequate.

In  recommending a vote against the proposal, the Board  of  Directors
has  not  determined  that  a rights plan should  be  adopted  by  the
Corporation.  Any such determination would be made only after  careful
deliberation, in light of all circumstances then prevailing and in the
exercise of the Board's fiduciary duties.

The recommendation against the proposal is based on the Board's belief
that  it  would not be wise to limit the flexibility of the  Board  of
Directors  to  act  in the best interests of Entergy  stockholders  if
circumstances arise in the future that would warrant the adoption of a
rights plan.

YOUR  BOARD  OF  DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT STOCKHOLDERS  VOTE  AGAINST
PROPOSAL 3.



                STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS FOR 2003 MEETING

For  a stockholder proposal to be included in the proxy statement  for
our  next annual meeting, including a proposal for the election  of  a
director,  the  proposal must be received by the  Corporation  at  its
principal  offices no later than November 27, 2002.  Also,  under  our
Bylaws,  stockholders  must  give advance notice  of  nominations  for
director  or other business to be addressed at the meeting  not  later
than  the  close  of business on March 11, 2003 and not  earlier  than
February 14, 2003.



By order of the Board of Directors,

/s/ Robert v.d. Luft

Robert v.d. Luft
Chairman of the Board.
Dated:  March 27, 2002



                               ENTERGY CORPORATION

                Proxy Solicited by the Board of Directors for the
                  Annual Meeting of Stockholders--May 10, 2002

I  hereby  appoint  J. Wayne Leonard, Robert v.d. Luft and  Wm.  Clifford  Smith
jointly  and  severally,  as  Proxies,  each  with  the  power  to  appoint  his
substitute, and hereby authorize them to represent and to vote, as designated on
the  reverse  side,  all shares of Common Stock of Entergy Corporation  held  of
record by me on March 12, 2002, at the Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be held
in  the  Grand  Ballroom of The Peabody Little Rock Hotel, 3  Statehouse  Plaza,
Little  Rock,  Arkansas  72201, on Friday, May 10, 2002, at 10:00 a.m.,  Central
Daylight Time, and any adjournment or adjournments thereof, with all powers that
I would possess if personally present.

In their discretion, the Proxies are authorized to vote upon such other business
as  may  properly  come before the meeting, and any adjournment or  adjournments
thereof.

Receipt  of the notice of meeting, the proxy statement and the Annual Report  of
Entergy Corporation for 2001 is acknowledged.

       (Continued, and to be marked, dated and signed, on the other side)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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THIS  PROXY  WHEN  PROPERLY EXECUTED WILL BE  VOTED  IN  THE  MANNER
DIRECTED.   THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR PROPOSAL  1
AND A VOTE AGAINST PROPOSALS 2 AND 3.  IF NO DIRECTION IS MADE, THIS
PROXY WILL BE VOTED FOR PROPOSAL 1 AND AGAINST PROPOSALS 2 AND 3.
                                                                     Please
                                                                     mark     X
                                                                     your
                                                                     vote  as
                                                                     indicated
                                                                     in this
                                                                     example.
                                     FOR  WITHHOLD   FOR ALL
                                                      EXCEPT
1) Election of Directors

01 M.S. Bateman    09 K.A. Murphy
02 W.F. Blount     10 P.W. Murrill
03 G.W. Davis      11 J.R. Nichols
04 S.D. deBree     12 W.A. Percy, II
05 C.P Deming      13 D.H. Reilley
06 N.C. Francis    14 W.C. Smith
07 J.W. Leonard    15 B.A. Steinhagen
08 R.v.d. Luft


_____________________________________
Except Nominee(s) written above

                                         FOR   AGAINST    ABSTAIN
2) Stockholder proposal concerning
   certain wording on the
   Corporation's proxy card.

3) Stockholder proposal concerning
   "poison pills".


          Please  disregard  if  you  have  previously  provided  your  consent
          decision.

          By  checking  the box to the right, I consent to future  delivery  of
          annual  reports,  proxy statements, prospectuses and other  materials
          and  shareholder communications electronically via the Internet at  a
          web  page  which  well  be disclosed to me.  I  understand  that  the
          Company  may  no longer distribute printed materials to  me  for  any
          future  shareholder  meeting  until  such  consent  is  revoked.    I
          understand that I may revoke my consent at any time by contacting the
          company's  transfer agent, Mellon Investor Services  LLC,  Ridgefield
          Park, NJ and that costs normally associated with electronic delivery,
          such  as usage and telephone charges as well as any costs I may incur
          in printing documents, will be my responsibility.

Signature___________________ Signature___________________  Date_____________
If  acting  as  Attorney,  Executor,  Trustee  or  in  other  representative
capacity, please sign name and title
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                              FOLD AND DETACH HERE

                      Vote by Internet or Telephone or Mail
                          24 Hours a Day, 7 Days a Week

Your telephone or Internet vote authorizes the named proxies to vote your shares
    in the same manner as if you marked, signed and returned your proxy card.

        Internet                   Telephone                     Mail
http://www.proxyvoting.c        1-800-435-6710
om/ETR
                             Use   any  touch-tone        Mark,   sign    and
 Use  the  Internet  to  O   telephone   to   vote  OR    date   your   proxy
 vote your proxy.  Have  R   your   proxy.    Have        card and return  it
 your  proxy  card   in      your  proxy  card  in        in the
 hand  when you  access      hand  when you  call.        enclosed postage-
 the   web  site.   You      You  will be prompted        paid envelope.
 will  be  prompted  to      to     enter     your
 enter   your   control      control       number,
 number, located in the      located  in  the  box
 box  below, to  create      below,    and    then
 and     submit      an      follow            the
 electronic ballot.          directions given.

               If you vote your proxy by Internet or by telephone,
                  you do NOT need to mail back your proxy card.


You can view the Annual Report and Proxy Statement on the
Internet at:  http://investor.entergy.com/investor/financial/index.shtm