UNITED STATES
                     SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                           WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549

                                  FORM 10-Q

[Mark one]
 [ X ]  QUARTERLY  REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES
                            EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the quarterly period ended June 30, 2007
                                     OR
 [   ]  TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES
                            EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

Commission file number 0-14690

                          WERNER ENTERPRISES, INC.
           (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

NEBRASKA                                                        47-0648386
(State or other jurisdiction of       (I.R.S. Employer Identification No.)
incorporation or organization)


14507 FRONTIER ROAD
POST OFFICE BOX 45308
OMAHA, NEBRASKA                                                 68145-0308
(Address of principal                                           (Zip Code)
executive offices)
     Registrant's telephone number, including area code: (402) 895-6640
                     _________________________________

     Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports
required  to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange  Act
of  1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the
registrant  was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject  to
such filing requirements for the past 90 days.
                              Yes  X     No
                                  ---       ---

     Indicate  by check mark  whether the registrant is a large  accelerated
filer, an accelerated filer, or a non-accelerated filer.  See definition  of
"accelerated  filer  and  large accelerated filer"  in  Rule  12b-2  of  the
Exchange Act.  (Check one):
Large accelerated filer  X   Accelerated filer     Non-accelerated filer
                        ---                    ---                       ---

     Indicate  by check mark  whether the registrant is a shell company  (as
defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act).
                              Yes       No  X
                                  ---      ---

     As  of  July  27,  2007, 72,848,612 shares of the  registrant's  common
stock, par value $.01 per share, were outstanding.



                            INDEX TO FORM 10-Q
                                                                        PAGE
                                                                        ----
PART I - FINANCIAL INFORMATION
Item 1.  Financial Statements


         Consolidated  Statements of Income for the Three Months  Ended
         June 30, 2007 and 2006                                            3

         Consolidated  Statements of Income for the  Six  Months  Ended
         June 30, 2007 and 2006                                            4

         Consolidated Condensed Balance Sheets as of June 30, 2007  and
         December 31, 2006                                                 5

         Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the Six Months Ended
         June 30, 2007 and 2006                                            6

         Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements as of June 30, 2007    7

Item 2.  Management's  Discussion and Analysis of  Financial  Condition
         and Results of Operations                                        12

Item 3.  Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk       26

Item 4.  Controls and Procedures                                          27

PART II - OTHER INFORMATION
Item 2.  Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds      28

Item 4.  Submission of Matters to a  Vote  of Security Holders            28


Item 6.  Exhibits                                                         30


                                   PART I

                            FINANCIAL INFORMATION

Item 1.  Financial Statements.

     The interim consolidated  financial statements contained herein reflect
all adjustments, which in the opinion of management are necessary for a fair
statement of the financial condition, results of operations, and cash  flows
for  the  periods  presented. The interim consolidated financial  statements
have  been prepared in accordance with the instructions to Form 10-Q and  do
not  include  all  the  information  and footnotes  required  by  accounting
principles  generally accepted in the United States of America for  complete
financial statements.

     Operating results for  the three-month and six-month periods ended June
30, 2007, are not necessarily indicative of the results that may be expected
for  the  year ending December 31, 2007.  In the opinion of management,  the
information  set  forth in the accompanying consolidated  condensed  balance
sheets  is  fairly  stated  in  all material respects  in  relation  to  the
consolidated balance sheets from which it has been derived.

     These  interim  consolidated  financial statements should  be  read  in
conjunction with the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended
December 31, 2006.

                                      2


                          WERNER ENTERPRISES, INC.
                      CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME





                                                     Three Months Ended
(In thousands, except per share amounts)                  June 30
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     2007          2006
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                        (Unaudited)

                                                           
Operating revenues                                 $ 531,286     $ 528,889
                                                 ---------------------------

Operating expenses:
   Salaries, wages and benefits                      150,335       149,743
   Fuel                                               99,918       102,812
   Supplies and maintenance                           40,077        38,982
   Taxes and licenses                                 29,317        27,905
   Insurance and claims                               23,922        21,613
   Depreciation                                       41,629        41,072
   Rent and purchased transportation                 108,903       101,335
   Communications and utilities                        5,182         4,827
   Other                                              (6,383)       (5,751)
                                                 ---------------------------
    Total operating expenses                         492,900       482,538
                                                 ---------------------------

Operating income                                      38,386        46,351
                                                 ---------------------------

Other expense (income):
   Interest expense                                    1,057             4
   Interest income                                      (923)       (1,221)
   Other                                                  46            85
                                                 ---------------------------
    Total other expense (income)                         180        (1,132)
                                                 ---------------------------

Income before income taxes                            38,206        47,483

Income taxes                                          15,952        19,462
                                                 ---------------------------

Net income                                         $  22,254     $  28,021
                                                 ===========================

Earnings per share:

     Basic                                         $     .30     $     .36
                                                 ===========================

     Diluted                                       $     .30     $     .35
                                                 ===========================

Dividends declared per share                       $    .050     $    .045
                                                 ===========================

Weighted-average common shares outstanding:

     Basic                                            73,395        78,236
                                                 ===========================

     Diluted                                          74,748        79,689
                                                 ===========================


                                      3




                          WERNER ENTERPRISES, INC.
                      CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME





                                                      Six Months Ended
(In thousands, except per share amounts)                  June 30
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     2007          2006
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                        (Unaudited)

                                                          
Operating revenues                                $ 1,035,199   $ 1,020,811
                                                 ---------------------------

Operating expenses:
   Salaries, wages and benefits                       300,856       296,356
   Fuel                                               189,003       191,458
   Supplies and maintenance                            79,668        76,774
   Taxes and licenses                                  59,480        57,374
   Insurance and claims                                48,127        40,808
   Depreciation                                        84,186        82,173
   Rent and purchased transportation                  209,118       189,354
   Communications and utilities                        10,274         9,722
   Other                                              (11,165)       (6,381)
                                                 ---------------------------
    Total operating expenses                          969,547       937,638
                                                 ---------------------------

Operating income                                       65,652        83,173
                                                 ---------------------------

Other expense (income):
   Interest expense                                     2,393           277
   Interest income                                     (1,974)       (2,216)
   Other                                                  118           126
                                                 ---------------------------
    Total other expense (income)                          537        (1,813)
                                                 ---------------------------

Income before income taxes                             65,115        84,986

Income taxes                                           27,193        34,936
                                                 ---------------------------

Net income                                        $    37,922   $    50,050
                                                 ===========================
Earnings per share:

     Basic                                        $       .51   $       .63
                                                 ===========================

     Diluted                                      $       .50   $       .62
                                                 ===========================

Dividends declared per share                      $      .095   $      .085
                                                 ===========================

Weighted-average common shares outstanding:

     Basic                                             74,080        78,837
                                                 ===========================

     Diluted                                           75,477        80,324
                                                 ===========================


                                      4


                          WERNER ENTERPRISES, INC.
                    CONSOLIDATED CONDENSED BALANCE SHEETS





 (In thousands, except share amounts)            June 30       December 31
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                   2007           2006
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                               (Unaudited)

                                                          
ASSETS

Current assets:
   Cash and cash equivalents                      $    32,897   $    31,613
   Accounts receivable, trade, less allowance of
     $9,381 and $9,417, respectively                  223,747       232,794
   Other receivables                                   13,890        17,933
   Inventories and supplies                            10,862        10,850
   Prepaid taxes, licenses and permits                  8,217        18,457
   Current deferred income taxes                       27,440        25,251
   Other current assets                                19,904        24,143
                                                 ---------------------------
     Total current assets                             336,957       361,041
                                                 ---------------------------

Property and equipment                              1,662,218     1,687,220
Less - accumulated depreciation                       610,540       590,880
                                                 ---------------------------
     Property and equipment, net                    1,051,678     1,096,340
                                                 ---------------------------

Other non-current assets                               19,488        20,792
                                                 ---------------------------

                                                  $ 1,408,123   $ 1,478,173
                                                 ===========================

LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY

Current liabilities:
   Accounts payable                               $    66,487   $    75,821
   Current portion of long-term debt                   30,000             -
   Insurance and claims accruals                       82,609        73,782
   Accrued payroll                                     23,786        21,344
   Other current liabilities                           18,683        19,963
                                                 ---------------------------
     Total current liabilities                        221,565       190,910
                                                 ---------------------------

Long-term debt, net of current portion                 20,000       100,000


Other long-term liabilities                             6,897           999

Insurance and claims accruals, net of current
  portion                                             101,000        99,500

Deferred income taxes                                 207,030       216,413

Commitments and contingencies

Stockholders' equity:
   Common stock, $.01 par value, 200,000,000
     shares authorized; 80,533,536 shares issued;
     72,947,352 and 75,339,297 shares
     outstanding, respectively                            805           805
   Paid-in capital                                    102,429       105,193
   Retained earnings                                  893,084       862,403
   Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)          106          (207)
   Treasury stock, at cost; 7,586,184 and
     5,194,239 shares, respectively                  (144,793)      (97,843)
                                                 ---------------------------
     Total stockholders' equity                       851,631       870,351
                                                 ---------------------------
                                                  $ 1,408,123   $ 1,478,173
                                                 ===========================


                                      5


                          WERNER ENTERPRISES, INC.
                    CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS




                                                      Six Months Ended
(In thousands)                                            June 30
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     2007          2006
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                        (Unaudited)
                                                          
Cash flows from operating activities:
   Net income                                     $    37,922   $    50,050
   Adjustments to reconcile net income to net
    cash provided by operating activities:
     Depreciation                                      84,186        82,173
     Deferred income taxes                             (6,502)        2,697
     Gain on disposal of property and equipment       (13,779)      (15,958)
     Stock based compensation                             794         1,312
     Other long-term assets                             1,688            68
     Insurance claims accruals, net of current
       portion                                          1,500         2,500
     Other long-term liabilities                          560           219
     Changes in certain working capital items:
       Accounts receivable, net                         9,047         6,720
       Other current assets                            18,510        10,969
       Accounts payable                                (9,334)       10,886
       Other current liabilities                        9,732        (4,521)
                                                 ---------------------------
    Net cash provided by operating activities         134,324       147,115
                                                 ---------------------------
Cash flows from investing activities:
   Additions to property and equipment                (87,125)     (129,893)
   Retirements of property and equipment               57,750        88,058
   Decrease in notes receivable                         3,246         2,561
                                                 ---------------------------
    Net cash used in investing activities             (26,129)      (39,274)
                                                 ---------------------------
Cash flows from financing activities:
   Proceeds from issuance of long-term debt            10,000             -
   Repayments of long-term debt                       (60,000)            -
   Repayments of short-term debt                            -       (60,000)
   Dividends on common stock                           (6,716)       (6,328)
   Repurchases of common stock                        (58,123)      (39,477)
   Stock options exercised                              4,870         3,112
   Excess tax benefits from exercise of stock
     options                                            2,745         2,089
                                                 ---------------------------
    Net cash used in financing activities            (107,224)     (100,604)
                                                 ---------------------------

Effect of exchange rate fluctuations on cash              313        (1,010)
Net increase in cash and cash equivalents               1,284         6,227
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of period         31,613        36,583
                                                 ---------------------------
Cash and cash equivalents, end of period          $    32,897   $    42,810
                                                 ===========================
Supplemental disclosures of cash flow
  information:
Cash paid during the period for:
   Interest                                       $     3,061   $       388
   Income taxes                                   $    30,865   $    34,370
Supplemental schedule of non-cash investing
  activities:
   Notes receivable issued upon sale of revenue
     equipment                                    $     3,630   $     3,526


                                      6


                           WERNER ENTERPRISES, INC.

                 NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                 (Unaudited)
(1)  Comprehensive Income

     Other  than  its  net  income,  the  Company's  only  other  source  of
comprehensive  income  (loss) is foreign currency  translation  adjustments.
Other   comprehensive  income  (loss)  from  foreign  currency   translation
adjustments  was $892 and ($712) (in thousands) for the three-month  periods
and  $313  and ($1,010) (in thousands) for the six-month periods ended  June
30, 2007 and 2006, respectively.

(2)  Long-Term Debt

     Long-term debt consisted of the following (in thousands):




                                                 June 30      December 31
                                              -------------  -------------
                                                   2007           2006
                                              -------------  -------------
                                                        
      Notes payable to banks under committed
        credit facilities                      $     50,000   $    100,000
      Less current maturities                        30,000              -
                                              -------------  -------------
      Long-term debt, net                      $     20,000   $    100,000
                                              =============  =============



     The  notes  payable  to  banks under committed credit  facilities  bear
variable  interest  (5.7% at June 30, 2007) based on  the  London  Interbank
Offered  Rate  ("LIBOR") and mature at various dates from May  2008  to  May
2011.  As of June 30, 2007, the Company has an additional $175.0 million  of
available  credit  under these credit facilities with  two  banks  which  is
further reduced by $37.1 million in letters of credit the Company maintains.
Subsequent to June 30, 2007, the Company repaid $10.0 million on these notes
shown  as  current  maturities above.  Each of the debt agreements  include,
among  other things, two financial covenants that the Company (1) not exceed
a  maximum ratio of total debt to total capitalization and (2) not exceed  a
maximum  ratio  of  total  funded debt to earnings before  interest,  income
taxes,  depreciation, amortization and rentals payable  as  defined  in  the
credit facility.  The Company was in compliance with these covenants at June
30, 2007.

(3)  Income Taxes

     The  Company adopted the provisions of FASB Interpretation No. 48 ("FIN
48"), Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes, on January 1, 2007.  As  a
result of the adoption of FIN 48, the Company recognized an additional  $0.3
million net liability for unrecognized tax benefits, which was accounted for
as  a  reduction  to  retained earnings.  After recognizing  the  additional
liability,  the  Company had a total gross liability  for  unrecognized  tax
benefits of $5.3 million as of the adoption date, which is included in other
long-term  liabilities.   If recognized, $3.4 million  of  unrecognized  tax
benefits  would impact the Company's effective tax rate.  Interest  of  $1.4
million has been reflected as a component of the total liability.  It is the
Company's policy to recognize as additional income tax expense the items  of
interest and penalties directly related to income taxes.

     For  the  three-month and six-month periods ended June 30, 2007,  there
were  no  material changes to the total amount of unrecognized tax benefits.
The  Company  does  not expect any significant increases  or  decreases  for
uncertain  tax positions during the next 12 months, except for the potential
outcome of the matter discussed in Note 4.

                                      7


     The Company files income tax returns in the U.S. and various states  as
well as several foreign jurisdictions.  The Company has tax returns, subject
to  examination, primarily for tax returns filed during 2003 through 2007 in
addition  to  returns filed during 1999 through 2002 due to an extension  of
the statute of limitations.

(4)  Commitments and Contingencies

     As  of  June  30,  2007, the Company has commitments  for  net  capital
expenditures of approximately $19.8 million.

     During first quarter 2006, in connection with an audit of the Company's
federal  income tax returns for the years 1999 to 2002, the Company received
a  notice from the Internal Revenue Service ("IRS") proposing to disallow  a
significant  tax  deduction.  This deduction is a timing difference  between
financial reporting and tax reporting and, if the Company did not ultimately
prevail,  would result in interest charges, which the Company records  as  a
component of income tax expense in the Company's financial statements.  This
timing  difference  deduction  reversed in the  Company's  2004  income  tax
return.  The Company filed a protest in this matter in April 2006, which  is
currently  under  review by an IRS appeals officer.  The initial  conference
with  the appeals officer occurred in March 2007.  The Company and  its  tax
advisors believe the Company has a strong position and, therefore,  at  this
time the Company has not recorded an accrual for interest for this issue  in
the  financial  statements.  It is possible the Company may  not  ultimately
prevail  in its position, which may have a material impact on the  Company's
financial  condition.  The Company estimates the accrued  interest,  net  of
taxes, if the Company would not prevail in its position with the IRS  to  be
no more than $6.5 million as of June 30, 2007.

(5)  Earnings Per Share

     Basic  earnings per share  is computed by dividing net  income  by  the
weighted-average number of common shares outstanding during the period.  The
difference  between  basic and diluted earnings per share  for  all  periods
presented  is  due to the common stock equivalents that are  assumed  to  be
issued  upon  the exercise of stock options.  The computation of  basic  and
diluted  earnings per share is shown below (in thousands, except  per  share
amounts).




                               Three Months Ended       Six Months Ended
                                     June 30                 June 30
                             ----------------------  ----------------------
                                 2007       2006         2007       2006
                             ----------------------  ----------------------
                                                     
 Net income                   $  22,254  $  28,021    $  37,922  $  50,050
                             ======================  ======================

 Weighted-average common
   shares outstanding            73,395     78,236       74,080     78,837
 Common stock equivalents         1,353      1,453        1,397      1,487
                             ----------------------  ----------------------
 Shares used in computing
   diluted earnings per share    74,748     79,689       75,477     80,324
                             ======================  ======================
 Basic earnings per share     $     .30  $     .36    $     .51  $     .63
                             ======================  ======================
 Diluted earnings per share   $     .30  $     .35    $     .50  $     .62
                             ======================  ======================


                                      8


     Options  to  purchase  shares of common stock  which  were  outstanding
during  the  periods indicated above, but were excluded from the computation
of  diluted earnings per share because the option purchase price was greater
than the average market price of the common shares, were:




                                  Three Months Ended              Six Months Ended
                                         June 30                       June 30
                             ----------------------------  ----------------------------
                                  2007           2006           2007           2006
                             ----------------------------  ----------------------------
                                                                     
 Number of options                  29,500         24,500          29,500         5,000

 Range of option purchase
   prices                    $19.26-$20.36  $19.84-$20.36   $19.26-$20.36        $20.36




(6)  Stock Based Compensation

     At  the  May  8, 2007 Annual  Meeting of Stockholders, the stockholders
approved  and adopted an amended and restated plan and renamed  the  amended
plan  the  "Werner  Enterprises,  Inc. Equity  Plan"  (the  "Equity  Plan"),
pursuant  to which it will be able to grant shares of restricted  stock  and
grant awards of stock options and stock appreciation rights to employees and
non-employee directors.  A copy of the Equity Plan is filed as an exhibit to
this  10-Q and is incorporated by reference to the Company's Current  Report
on Form 8-K dated May 8, 2007.

     The  Equity  Plan provides  for grants of nonqualified  stock  options,
restricted  stock  and  stock appreciation rights. Options  are  granted  at
prices  equal to the market value of the common stock on the date the option
is  granted.   The  Board or Compensation Committee  will  set  the  vesting
conditions  of  the  award.   Option  awards  currently  outstanding  become
exercisable  in installments from eighteen to seventy-two months  after  the
date  of grant. The options are exercisable over a period not to exceed  ten
years  and  one day from the date of grant. The maximum number of shares  of
common stock that may be awarded under the Equity Plan is 20,000,000 shares.
The maximum aggregate number of shares that may be awarded to any one person
under the Equity Plan is 2,562,500.  At June 30, 2007, 8,892,657 shares were
available for granting additional awards.

     Effective January 1, 2006, the  Company adopted Statement of  Financial
Accounting  Standards ("SFAS") No. 123 (revised 2004),  Share-Based  Payment
("No.  123R") using a modified version of the prospective transition method.
Under  this transition method, compensation cost is recognized on  or  after
the  required effective date for the portion of outstanding awards for which
the  requisite  service has not yet been rendered, based on  the  grant-date
fair  value  of  those  awards calculated under  SFAS  No.  123  for  either
recognition  or  pro  forma disclosures.  Stock-based employee  compensation
expense  was  $0.4 million and $0.6 million for the three-month periods  and
$0.8  million and $1.3 million for the six-month periods ended June 30, 2007
and  2006,  respectively, and is included in salaries,  wages  and  benefits
within  the consolidated statements of income.  The total income tax benefit
recognized in the income statement for stock-based compensation arrangements
was  $0.1  million  and $0.2 million for the three-month  periods  and  $0.3
million  and $0.5 million for the six-month periods ended June 30, 2007  and
2006,  respectively.  There was no cumulative effect of  initially  adopting
SFAS No. 123R.

                                      9


     The following table  summarizes Stock Option Plan activity for the  six
months ended June 30, 2007:




                                                              Weighted
                                                               Average
                                      Number     Weighted     Remaining    Aggregate
                                        of        Average    Contractual   Intrinsic
                                     Options     Exercise       Term          Value
                                    (in 000's)   Price ($)     (Years)     (in 000's)
                                   ---------------------------------------------------
                                                               
Outstanding at beginning of period       4,565   $   11.03
   Options granted                           -   $       -
   Options exercised                      (608)  $    8.01
   Options forfeited                         -   $       -
   Options expired                          (2)  $    8.65
                                   -----------
Outstanding at end of period             3,955   $   11.49          4.65   $   34,231
                                   ===========
Exercisable at end of period             2,906   $    9.97          3.88   $   29,584
                                   ===========



     The  Company granted no stock  options during the three-month and  six-
month  periods ended  June 30,  2007 and  granted 5,000  options during  the
three-month  and six-month periods  ended June 30, 2006.  The  fair value of
stock options  granted was estimated  using a Black-Scholes  valuation model
with the following assumptions:




                                                               Six Months
                                                                  Ended
                                                                 June 30
                                                             ---------------
                                                                  2006
                                                             ---------------
                                                                
Risk-free interest rate                                              4.7%
Expected dividend yield                                             0.88%
Expected volatility                                                   36%
Expected term (in years)                                             4.9
Grant date fair value                                              $7.37



     The risk-free interest rate assumption was based on average 5-year U.S.
Treasury note yields.  The expected volatility was based on historical daily
price changes of the Company's stock since June 2001.  The expected term was
the average number of years that the Company estimated these options will be
outstanding.   The Company considers groups of employees that  have  similar
historical exercise behavior separately for valuation purposes.

     The  total intrinsic value of share options exercised was $6.0  million
and  $0.4  million  for the three-month periods and $6.7  million  and  $5.1
million   for  the  six-month  periods  ended  June  30,  2007   and   2006,
respectively. As of June 30, 2007, the total unrecognized compensation  cost
related to nonvested stock option awards was approximately $1.8 million  and
is expected to be recognized over a weighted average period of 1.2 years.

     Although the Company does not a have a formal policy for issuing shares
upon  exercise  of  stock  options, such shares are  generally  issued  from
treasury  stock.  From time to time, the Company has repurchased  shares  of
its common stock, the timing and amount of which depends on market and other
factors.   Historically, the shares acquired under these regular  repurchase
programs  have  provided sufficient quantities of stock  for  issuance  upon
exercise  of  stock  options.  Based on current treasury stock  levels,  the
Company   does   not  expect  the  need  to  repurchase  additional   shares
specifically for stock option exercises during 2007.

                                      10


(7)  Segment Information

     The  Company  has  two  reportable segments - Truckload  Transportation
Services  and  Value  Added Services ("VAS").  The Truckload  Transportation
Services  segment consists of six operating fleets that have been aggregated
since  they  have  similar  economic  characteristics  and  meet  the  other
aggregation  criteria  of SFAS No. 131, Disclosures  about  Segments  of  an
Enterprise  and Related Information.  The Dedicated Services fleet  provides
truckload  services  required  by  a  specific  customer,  generally  for  a
distribution center or manufacturing facility.  The medium-to-long-haul  Van
fleet  transports  a  variety  of consumer, nondurable  products  and  other
commodities  in  truckload quantities over irregular routes  using  dry  van
trailers.   The Regional short-haul fleet provides comparable truckload  van
service within five geographic regions.  The Expedited fleet provides  time-
sensitive  truckload  services  utilizing driver  teams.   The  Flatbed  and
Temperature-Controlled fleets provide truckload services for  products  with
specialized  trailers.   Revenues for the Truckload Transportation  Services
segment  include non-trucking revenues of $2.3 million and $2.8 million  for
the  three-month periods and $5.4 million and $5.6 million for the six-month
periods  ended June 30, 2007 and 2006, respectively, which consist primarily
of  the  portion of shipments delivered to or from Mexico where the  Company
utilizes a third-party capacity provider.

     The  VAS  segment, which generates the majority of the  Company's  non-
trucking  revenues,  provides truck brokerage, freight  management  (single-
source logistics), intermodal, and international services.

     The  Company generates other revenues related to third-party  equipment
maintenance, equipment leasing, and other business activities. None of these
operations  meet the quantitative threshold reporting requirements  of  SFAS
No. 131.  As a result, these operations are grouped in "Other" in the tables
below.   "Corporate" includes revenues and expenses that are  incidental  to
the  activities  of  the  Company and are not attributable  to  any  of  its
operating segments. The Company does not prepare separate balance sheets  by
segment and, as a result, assets are not separately identifiable by segment.
The  Company  has no significant intersegment sales or expense  transactions
that would result in adjustments necessary to eliminate amounts between  the
Company's segments.

                                      11


     The  following  tables summarize the Company's segment information  (in
thousands of dollars):




                                                        Revenues
                                                        --------
                                      Three Months Ended        Six Months Ended
                                            June 30                  June 30
                                    ----------------------   ----------------------
                                       2007        2006         2007        2006
                                    ----------------------   ----------------------
                                                             
Truckload Transportation Services   $  451,069  $  456,920   $  880,876  $  889,917
Value Added Services                    75,849      68,807      145,726     124,978
Other                                    3,795       2,418        7,397       4,280
Corporate                                  573         744        1,200       1,636
                                    ----------------------   ----------------------
Total                               $  531,286  $  528,889   $1,035,199  $1,020,811
                                    ======================   ======================






                                                    Operating Income
                                                    ----------------
                                      Three Months Ended        Six Months Ended
                                            June 30                  June 30
                                    ----------------------   ----------------------
                                       2007        2006         2007        2006
                                    ----------------------   ----------------------
                                                             
Truckload Transportation Services   $   34,632  $   44,043   $   58,408  $   79,126
Value Added Services                     3,457       2,365        6,397       3,876
Other                                      814         167        1,643         630
Corporate                                 (517)       (224)        (796)       (459)
                                    ----------------------   ----------------------
Total                               $   38,386  $   46,351   $   65,652  $   83,173
                                    ======================   ======================



Item  2.   Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial  Condition  and
Results of Operations.

     This report contains historical information, as well as forward-looking
statements  that  are  based  on  information  currently  available  to  the
Company's  management.   The  forward-looking  statements  in  this  report,
including  those made in this Item 2, "Management's Discussion and  Analysis
of  Financial Condition and Results of Operations", are made pursuant to the
safe  harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform  Act  of
1995,  as  amended.  The Company believes the assumptions  underlying  these
forward-looking  statements are reasonable based  on  information  currently
available;  however,  any  of  the  assumptions  could  be  inaccurate,  and
therefore,  actual results may differ materially from those  anticipated  in
the   forward-looking  statements  as  a  result  of   certain   risks   and
uncertainties.  These risks include, but are not limited to, those discussed
in  Item 1A, "Risk Factors", of the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for
the  year  ended December 31, 2006.  Caution should be taken  not  to  place
undue  reliance  on  forward-looking  statements  made  herein,  since   the
statements  speak only as of the date they are made.  The Company undertakes
no  obligation  to  publicly release any revisions  to  any  forward-looking
statements  contained  herein to reflect events or circumstances  after  the
date of this report or to reflect the occurrence of unanticipated events.

Overview:

     The  Company operates in the truckload sector of the trucking industry,
with  a  focus on transporting consumer nondurable products that  ship  more
consistently  throughout the year.  The Company's  success  depends  on  its
ability  to  efficiently manage its resources in the delivery  of  truckload
transportation   and   logistics  services  to  its   customers.    Resource
requirements vary with customer demand, which may be subject to seasonal  or
general  economic conditions.  The Company's ability to adapt to changes  in
customer  transportation  requirements  is  a  key  element  in  efficiently
deploying  resources  and  in  making capital investments  in  tractors  and
trailers.    Although   the  Company's  business  volume   is   not   highly

                                      12


concentrated, the Company may also be affected by the financial  failure  of
its customers or a loss of a customer's business from time-to-time.

     Operating  revenues consist of trucking revenues generated by  the  six
operating   fleets   in  the  Truckload  Transportation   Services   segment
(dedicated,   medium-to-long-haul  van,  regional   short-haul,   expedited,
flatbed,  and  temperature-controlled) and non-trucking  revenues  generated
primarily   by   the   Company's  VAS  segment.   The  Company's   Truckload
Transportation Services segment ("truckload segment") also includes a  small
amount  of non-trucking revenues, which consist primarily of the portion  of
shipments  delivered  to  or  from Mexico where it  utilizes  a  third-party
capacity   provider.   Non-trucking  revenues  reported  in  the   operating
statistics  table include those revenues generated by the  VAS  segment,  as
well  as  the  non-trucking  revenues generated by  the  truckload  segment.
Trucking  revenues  accounted  for  approximately  84%  of  total  operating
revenues  in  second  quarter  2007, and non-trucking  and  other  operating
revenues accounted for approximately 16%.

     Trucking  services  typically generate  revenue on  a  per-mile  basis.
Other  sources  of trucking revenue include fuel surcharges and  accessorial
revenue  such  as  stop  charges, loading/unloading charges,  and  equipment
detention charges.  Because fuel surcharge revenues fluctuate in response to
changes in the cost of fuel, these revenues are identified separately within
the  operating  statistics table and are excluded  from  the  statistics  to
provide a more meaningful comparison between periods.  Non-trucking revenues
generated by a fleet whose operations are part of the truckload segment  are
included in non-trucking revenues in the operating statistics table so  that
the  revenue statistics in the table are calculated using only the  revenues
generated  by  company-owned and owner-operator trucks.  The key  statistics
used  to  evaluate trucking revenues, excluding fuel surcharges, are average
revenues per tractor per week, the per-mile rates charged to customers,  the
average monthly miles generated per tractor, the average percentage of empty
miles,  the  average  trip length, and the average  number  of  tractors  in
service.   General  economic conditions, seasonal freight  patterns  in  the
trucking  industry, and industry capacity are key factors that impact  these
statistics.

     The  Company's  most  significant  resource  requirements  are  company
drivers, owner-operators, tractors, trailers, and related costs of operating
its  equipment (such as fuel and related fuel taxes, driver pay,  insurance,
and  supplies and maintenance). The Company has historically been successful
mitigating  its  risk  to increases in fuel prices by recovering  additional
fuel  surcharges from its customers that recoup a majority of the  increased
fuel costs; however, there is no assurance that current recovery levels will
continue  in  future  periods.  The Company's  financial  results  are  also
affected  by  availability of company drivers and  owner-operators  and  the
market  for  new  and used revenue equipment. Because the Company  is  self-
insured  for  a significant portion of cargo, personal injury, and  property
damage  claims  on  its  revenue  equipment and  for  workers'  compensation
benefits  for  its employees (supplemented by premium-based  coverage  above
certain  dollar  levels), financial results may also be affected  by  driver
safety,  medical  costs, weather, the legal and regulatory environment,  and
the costs of insurance coverage to protect against catastrophic losses.

     A  common industry measure  used to evaluate the profitability  of  the
Company  and its trucking operating fleets is the operating ratio (operating
expenses  expressed  as  a  percentage of  operating  revenues).   The  most
significant variable expenses that impact the trucking operation are  driver
salaries  and benefits, payments to owner-operators (included  in  rent  and
purchased  transportation expense), fuel, fuel taxes (included in taxes  and
licenses  expense),  supplies and maintenance,  and  insurance  and  claims.
These  expenses generally vary based on the number of miles  generated.   As
such,  the Company also evaluates these costs on a per-mile basis to  adjust
for  the  impact  on  the percentage of total operating revenues  caused  by
changes in fuel surcharge revenues, per-mile rates charged to customers, and
non-trucking revenues.  As discussed further in the comparison of  operating
results  for  second quarter 2007 to second quarter 2006, several  industry-
wide issues, including a softer freight market, changing fuel prices, and  a
challenging  driver recruiting and retention market, could  cause  costs  to
increase  in  future  periods.   The  Company's  main  fixed  costs  include
depreciation expense for tractors and trailers and equipment licensing  fees
(included  in  taxes and licenses expense).  Depreciation expense  has  been
affected  by  the  new  engine emission standards that became  effective  in

                                      13


October  2002 (phase 1) for all newly purchased trucks, which have increased
truck purchase costs.  In addition, beginning in January 2007, a new set  of
more  stringent  engine emissions standards mandated  by  the  Environmental
Protection  Agency  ("EPA")  became effective  for  all  newly  manufactured
trucks.   The  Company  expects that the engines  produced  under  the  2007
standards  will  be  less fuel-efficient and have a  higher  cost  than  the
current   engines.    The  trucking  operations  require  substantial   cash
expenditures for the purchase of tractors and trailers.  In 2005  and  2006,
the Company accelerated its normal three-year replacement cycle for company-
owned tractors.  These purchases were funded by net cash from operations and
financing  available  under  the Company's existing  credit  facilities,  as
management deemed necessary.  The Company's new truck fleet will allow it to
delay purchases of trucks with the 2007 engines.

     Non-trucking services  provided by the Company, primarily  through  its
VAS  division,  include  truck brokerage, freight management  (single-source
logistics), intermodal, and international, as discussed further on page  18.
Unlike  the  Company's trucking operations, the non-trucking operations  are
less  asset-intensive  and are instead dependent upon  qualified  employees,
information  systems,  and  the services of qualified  third-party  capacity
providers.   The most significant expense item related to these non-trucking
services  is  the cost of transportation paid by the Company to  third-party
capacity  providers, which is recorded as rent and purchased  transportation
expense.   Other expenses include salaries, wages and benefits and  computer
hardware  and software depreciation.  The Company evaluates the non-trucking
operations by reviewing the gross margin percentage (revenues less rent  and
purchased transportation expense expressed as a percentage of revenues)  and
the  operating income percentage.  The operating income percentage  for  the
non-trucking  business is lower than those of the trucking  operations,  but
the return on assets is substantially higher.

                                      14


Results of Operations:

     The  following  table sets forth certain industry  data  regarding  the
freight revenues and operations of the Company for the periods indicated.




                               Three Months Ended              Six Months Ended
                                     June 30           %            June 30           %
                             ----------------------         ----------------------
                                2007        2006     Change    2007        2006     Change
                             ----------  ----------  ------ ----------  ----------  ------
                                                                  
Trucking revenues, net of
  fuel surcharge (1)           $375,169    $375,897  -0.2%    $741,475    $744,153  -0.4%
Trucking fuel surcharge
  revenues (1)                   73,403      78,213  -6.1%     133,786     140,101  -4.5%
Non-trucking revenues,
  including VAS (1)              78,184      71,569   9.2%     151,135     130,549  15.8%
Other operating revenues (1)      4,530       3,210  41.1%       8,803       6,008  46.5%
                             ----------  ----------         ----------  ----------
       Operating revenues (1)  $531,286    $528,889   0.5%  $1,035,199  $1,020,811   1.4%
                             ==========  ==========         ==========  ==========

Operating ratio
  (consolidated) (2)               92.8%       91.2%              93.7%       91.9%
Average monthly miles
  per tractor                    10,078       9,938   1.4%       9,792       9,886  -1.0%
Average revenues per
  total mile (3)                 $1.463      $1.463   0.0%      $1.453      $1.456  -0.2%
Average revenues per
  loaded mile (3)                $1.685      $1.679   0.4%      $1.680      $1.671   0.5%
Average percentage of
  empty miles                     13.19%      12.84%  2.7%       13.51%      12.87%  5.0%
Average trip length in
  miles (loaded)                    561         584  -3.9%         567         585  -3.1%
Total miles (loaded and
  empty) (1)                    256,486     256,852  -0.1%     510,200     511,169  -0.2%
Average tractors in service       8,483       8,615  -1.5%       8,684       8,618   0.8%
Average revenues per
  tractor per week (3)           $3,402      $3,356   1.4%      $3,284      $3,321  -1.1%
Total tractors (at
  quarter end)
       Company                    7,530       7,905              7,530       7,905
       Owner-operator               820         805                820         805
                             ----------  ----------         ----------  ----------
              Total tractors      8,350       8,710              8,350       8,710


Total trailers (truck and
  intermodal, at quarter end)    24,800      25,180             24,800      25,180

(1) Amounts in thousands.
(2) Operating  expenses  expressed  as  a  percentage of operating revenues.
    Operating  ratio  is  a  common measure in the trucking industry used to
    evaluate profitability.
(3) Net of fuel surcharge revenues.


                                      15


     The  following  table sets forth the revenues, operating expenses,  and
operating  income  for the truckload segment.  Revenues  for  the  truckload
segment  include non-trucking revenues of $2.3 million and $2.8 million  for
the  three-month periods and $5.4 million and $5.6 million for the six-month
periods ended June 30, 2007 and 2006, respectively, as described on page 11.




                                        Three Months Ended               Six Months Ended
                                              June 30                        June 30
                                  ------------------------------  ------------------------------
                                       2007            2006            2007            2006
Truckload Transportation Services --------------  --------------  --------------  --------------
 (amounts in 000's)                   $      %        $      %        $      %        $      %
---------------------             --------------  --------------  --------------  --------------
                                                                   
Revenues                          $451,069 100.0  $456,920 100.0  $880,876 100.0  $889,917 100.0
Operating expenses                 416,437  92.3   412,877  90.4   822,468  93.4   810,791  91.1
                                  --------        --------        --------        --------
Operating income                  $ 34,632   7.7  $ 44,043   9.6  $ 58,408   6.6  $ 79,126   8.9
                                  ========        ========        ========        ========



     Higher  fuel  prices  and higher fuel surcharge  collections  have  the
effect  of  increasing the Company's consolidated operating  ratio  and  the
truckload segment's operating ratio when fuel surcharges are reported  on  a
gross  basis  as revenues versus netting against fuel expenses.  Eliminating
fuel  surcharge  revenues, which are generally a  more  volatile  source  of
revenue,  provides  a  more consistent basis for comparing  the  results  of
operations  from  period  to  period.  The following  table  calculates  the
truckload segment's operating ratio as if fuel surcharges were excluded from
revenue and instead reported as a reduction of operating expenses.




                                        Three Months Ended               Six Months Ended
                                              June 30                         June 30
                                  ------------------------------  ------------------------------
                                       2007            2006            2007            2006
Truckload Transportation Services --------------  --------------  --------------  --------------
 (amounts in 000's)                   $      %        $      %        $      %        $      %
---------------------             --------------  --------------  --------------  --------------
                                                                   
Revenues                          $451,069        $456,920        $880,876        $889,917
Less: trucking fuel surcharge
  revenues                          73,403          78,213         133,786         140,101
                                  --------        --------        --------        --------
Revenues, net of fuel surcharges   377,666 100.0   378,707 100.0   747,090 100.0   749,816 100.0
                                  --------        --------        --------        --------
Operating expenses                 416,437         412,877         822,468         810,791
Less: trucking fuel surcharge
  revenues                          73,403          78,213         133,786         140,101
                                  --------        --------        --------        --------
Operating expenses, net of
  fuel surcharges                  343,034  90.8   334,664  88.4   688,682  92.2   670,690  89.4
                                  --------        --------        --------        --------
Operating income                  $ 34,632   9.2  $ 44,043  11.6  $ 58,408   7.8  $ 79,126  10.6
                                  ========        ========        ========        ========



     The  following  table sets forth the non-trucking  revenues,  rent  and
purchased transportation and other operating expenses, and operating  income
for the VAS segment.  Other operating expenses for the VAS segment primarily
consist  of  salaries, wages and benefits expense.  VAS also incurs  smaller
expense  amounts  in  the supplies and maintenance, depreciation,  rent  and
purchased  transportation  (excluding  third-party  transportation   costs),
communications and utilities, and other operating expense categories.




                                       Three Months Ended                Six Months Ended
                                             June 30                         June 30
                                 ------------------------------  ------------------------------
Value Added Services                  2007            2006             2007            2006
--------------------             --------------  --------------  --------------  --------------
  (amounts in 000's)                 $      %        $      %        $      %        $      %
  ------------------             --------------  --------------  --------------  --------------
                                                                  
Revenues                         $ 75,849 100.0  $ 68,807 100.0  $145,726 100.0  $124,978 100.0
Rent and purchased
  transportation expense           67,308  88.7    62,204  90.4   129,237  88.7   113,095  90.5
                                 --------        --------        --------        --------
Gross margin                        8,541  11.3     6,603   9.6    16,489  11.3    11,883   9.5
Other operating expenses            5,084   6.7     4,238   6.2    10,092   6.9     8,007   6.4
                                 --------        --------        --------        --------
Operating income                 $  3,457   4.6  $  2,365   3.4  $  6,397   4.4  $  3,876   3.1
                                 ========        ========        ========        ========



                                      16


Three  Months  Ended June 30, 2007 Compared to Three Months Ended  June  30,
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
2006
----

Operating Revenues

     Operating  revenues increased 0.5% for the three months ended June  30,
2007,  compared  to  the  same  period of the prior  year.   Excluding  fuel
surcharge  revenues, trucking revenues decreased 0.2% due  primarily  to   a
1.5%  decrease  in the average number of tractors in service,  as  discussed
further  below,  offset  by  a 1.4% increase in average  monthly  miles  per
tractor.  The average percentage of empty miles increased to 13.2% in second
quarter  2007 from 12.8% in second quarter 2006.  A significant  portion  of
the  increase  in  the empty mile percentage is due to  the  softer  freight
market.  Average revenues per loaded mile increased by 0.4% which offset the
increase  in  the average percentage of empty miles as average revenues  per
total  mile  was the same in second quarter 2007 compared to second  quarter
2006.

     Market  conditions  continued to be challenging during  second  quarter
2007  due  to  (1) the immense truck prebuy prompted by the changes  to  the
engine  emission  regulations that became effective for  newly  manufactured
engines beginning January 2007, which added 6% more trucks than are normally
produced  in  the years 2005 and 2006 (or 170,000 extra trucks)  and  (2)  a
softer freight market due to weakness in the housing and automotive sectors,
inventory  tightening,  and moderating growth in the  retail  sector.   Load
volumes  for the Company's Van Network (comprised of the medium-to-long-haul
van,  regional  short-haul, and expedited operating fleets)  were  lower  in
April and May 2007 than in the same months of the previous four years.  Load
volumes  in  the  first  half of June 2007 improved meaningfully  to  levels
nearly  as  high  as  those during the first half of  June  2006,  and  then
declined in the second half of June 2007 below levels in the second half  of
June  of  the  prior  four  years.   Load volumes  in  second  quarter  2007
progressively  improved  from  April to May to  June,  which  is  a  typical
seasonal pattern for second quarter.

     Load volumes were softer for the Van Network during July 2007  compared
to July 2006, particularly  in the  latter half  of the  month of July 2007.
Prebook percentages of loads to trucks were comparable in July 2007 and July
2006, after  considering  the  effect of the  medium-to-long-haul Van  fleet
reduction that was intitiated in mid-March 2007 and completed in June 2007.

     The  Company  has historically served its partner customers  by  making
available a portion of its medium-to-long-haul Van fleet to meet their  flex
and  surge  shipment needs, at contractually agreed terms and  rates.   This
fleet, which has the greatest exposure to the spot freight market, faced the
most  operational  challenges  since August 2006.   In  mid-March  2007  the
Company  began reducing its medium-to-long-haul Van fleet by 250  trucks  to
better match freight and trucks and to improve profitability.  By the latter
part of April 2007, this initial goal was achieved, and the Company had  not
yet  achieved the desired balance of trucks and freight.  As a  result,  the
Company  decided to further reduce its medium-to-long-haul Van fleet  by  an
additional  400  trucks, which was completed by the end of June  2007.   The
Company was able to transfer a portion of its Van fleet trucks to other more
profitable  fleets.  The net  impact to the  total fleet  was an approximate
500-truck  reduction  from  mid-March  2007  to  the  end of June 2007.  The
Company intends to meet its partner customers' flex and surge shipment needs
using the breadth and depth of the 5,000 qualified carriers managed  by  the
experienced Brokerage team.

     Fuel surcharge revenues, which represent collections from customers for
the  higher cost of fuel, decreased to $73.4 million in second quarter  2007
from  $78.2  million  in  second quarter 2006.   To  lessen  the  effect  of
fluctuating fuel prices on the Company's margins, the Company collects  fuel
surcharge  revenues  from  its  customers.   The  Company's  fuel  surcharge
programs are designed to recoup the higher cost of fuel from customers  when
fuel  prices rise and provide customers with the benefit of lower costs when
fuel prices decline.  The truckload industry's fuel surcharge standard is  a
one-cent  per mile increase in rate for every five-cent per gallon  increase
in  the  Department of Energy ("DOE") weekly retail on-highway diesel prices
that  are  used for most fuel surcharge programs.  As discussed  further  on
page  20,  decreases  in  the DOE national average fuel  price,  changes  to

                                      17


customer  fuel  surcharge programs, and a change in  the  mix  of  customers
contributed to the decrease in fuel surcharge revenues even though costs per
gallon were essentially flat in both periods.

     VAS  revenues increased 10% to $75.8 million for the three months ended
June  30, 2007 from $68.8 million for the three months ended June 30,  2006.
VAS  revenues are generated by the following VAS operating divisions:  truck
brokerage,  freight  management (single-source logistics),  intermodal,  and
international.   Brokerage  continued to produce  strong  results  with  33%
revenue  growth and improved operating income as a percentage  of  revenues.
During  the  three-month  period ended June 30,  2007,  Brokerage  generated
revenue   at  an  annualized  rate  of  $135  million.   Freight  Management
successfully distributed freight to other operating divisions and  continues
to secure new customer business awards that are generating growth across all
Company  business  units.   Intermodal  revenues  declined  due  to  a  more
difficult  intermodal  market,  but produced  significant  operating  income
improvement  as the Company benefited from intermodal strategy changes  that
it  began implementing during the latter part of 2006.  In addition, Freight
Management  and Brokerage provided more freight for the truckload  divisions
in  second  quarter 2007 compared to second quarter 2006.  This  freight  is
included in truckload revenue and not included in VAS revenues.

     Werner  Global  Logistics ("WGL") is actively assisting customers  with
innovative  global  supply  chain solutions.  Business  licenses  have  been
obtained;  an  experienced management team is fully staffed and  trained  in
Shanghai  and Shenzen, China and in Omaha; and WGL has successfully  managed
over  1,000 international container shipments to date.  Customer development
efforts  are  actively in process, and WGL is expecting  to  be  a  positive
operating  income  contributor  by the  end  of  third  quarter  2007.   WGL
continues  to  produce several new and meaningful customer business  awards.
WGL is a licensed U.S. NVOCC, U.S. Customs Broker, Class A Freight Forwarder
in China, licensed China NVOCC and a TSA approved Indirect Air Carrier.

     Effective  at the beginning of  third quarter 2007, the Company  and  a
large  VAS  customer  negotiated a structural  change  to  their  continuing
arrangement related to the use of third-party carriers that will affect  the
reporting  of  VAS revenues and purchased transportation expenses  for  this
customer in future periods.  Because of this structural change, the  Company
will  report future VAS revenues for this customer on a net basis  (revenues
net  of  purchased  transportation expense) rather than on  a  gross  basis.
While  the  reported  amount  of VAS revenues and  purchased  transportation
expenses will be lower, it is expected that this change will have no  impact
on the dollar amount of VAS gross margin or operating income.  The amount of
these  revenues and purchased transportation expenses averaged $18.7 million
per quarter over the last four quarters.

Operating Expenses

     Operating  expenses,  expressed as a percentage of operating  revenues,
were  92.8% for the three months ended June 30, 2007, compared to 91.2%  for
the  three  months  ended June 30, 2006.  Expense items  that  impacted  the
overall operating ratio are described on the following pages.  The tables on
page  16  show the operating ratios and operating margins for the  Company's
two  reportable segments, Truckload Transportation Services and Value  Added
Services.

                                      18


     The  following  table sets forth the cost per total mile  of  operating
expense  items  for  the truckload segment for the periods  indicated.   The
Company  evaluates  operating costs for this segment on  a  per-mile  basis,
which  is  a better measurement tool for comparing the results of operations
from period to period.




                                Three Months Ended   Increase   Six Months Ended   Increase
                                     June 30        (Decrease)      June 30       (Decrease)
                                ------------------              ----------------
                                   2007    2006      per Mile     2007    2006     per Mile
                                ------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                  
Salaries, wages and benefits      $0.566  $0.567     $(0.001)    $0.570  $0.565     $0.005
Fuel                               0.388   0.398      (0.010)     0.368   0.372     (0.004)
Supplies and maintenance           0.147   0.144       0.003      0.148   0.144      0.004
Taxes and licenses                 0.114   0.108       0.006      0.116   0.112      0.004
Insurance and claims               0.093   0.084       0.009      0.094   0.080      0.014
Depreciation                       0.157   0.155       0.002      0.159   0.156      0.003
Rent and purchased transportation  0.162   0.152       0.010      0.156   0.148      0.008
Communications and utilities       0.020   0.018       0.002      0.020   0.019      0.001
Other                             (0.023) (0.019)     (0.004)    (0.019) (0.010)    (0.009)
                                ------------------------------------------------------------
Total                             $1.624  $1.607     $ 0.017     $1.612  $1.586     $0.026
                                ============================================================



     Owner-operator  costs are included in rent and purchased transportation
expense.   Owner-operator miles were a greater percentage of total miles  at
12.4% in second quarter 2007 compared to 11.6% in second quarter 2006 due to
the  van  fleet  reduction (as discussed on page 17).   Owner-operators  are
independent  contractors who supply their own tractor  and  driver  and  are
responsible  for  their  operating expenses  including  fuel,  supplies  and
maintenance,  and fuel taxes.  This increase in owner-operator  miles  as  a
percentage  of  total  miles  shifted  costs  to  the  rent  and   purchased
transportation  category  from  other  expense  categories.    The   Company
estimates  that rent and purchased transportation expense for the  truckload
segment  was  higher by approximately 1.0 cent per total mile  due  to  this
increase, and other expense categories had offsetting decreases on a  total-
mile  basis, as follows: salaries, wages and benefits (0.4 cents), fuel (0.3
cents),  depreciation (0.1 cent), supplies and maintenance (0.1  cent),  and
taxes and licenses (0.1 cent).

     The  decrease in salaries, wages and benefits of 0.1 cent per mile  for
the  truckload segment is primarily due to lower driver pay per  total  mile
resulting from the decrease in the percentage of company truck miles  versus
owner-operator miles (see above) and a decrease in state unemployment  taxes
offset  by an increase in student driver pay.  Student pay increased as  the
average  number of student drivers being trained during second quarter  2007
was  higher  than in second quarter 2006.  Salaries, wages and benefits  for
non-drivers increased in second quarter 2007 compared to second quarter 2006
due to an increase in personnel to support the growth in the VAS segment.

     The  Company renewed its workers' compensation insurance coverage,  and
for  the policy year beginning April 2007, the Company continues to maintain
a  self-insurance  retention of $1.0 million per  claim  and  is  no  longer
responsible for an annual aggregate amount of $1.0 million for claims  above
$1.0  million  and below $2.0 million.  The Company's workers'  compensation
insurance premiums for the policy year beginning April 1, 2007 are  slightly
higher  than  the previous policy year, but the Company expects  to  realize
cost  savings  by eliminating its liability for the portion of  claims  that
occur between $1.0 million and $2.0 million.

     The   driver  market  remained  challenging  in  second  quarter  2007.
Normally in the spring and summer months, the driver market is difficult due
to  outdoor  jobs  that become available with improving weather  conditions.
The  Company  anticipates that the competition for  qualified  drivers  will
continue  to be high and cannot predict whether it will experience shortages
in the future.  If such a shortage were to occur and additional increases in

                                      19


driver pay rates were necessary to attract and retain drivers, the Company's
results  of  operations  would be negatively impacted  to  the  extent  that
corresponding freight rate increases were not obtained.

     Fuel  decreased  1.0  cent per mile for the truckload  segment  despite
steady  diesel fuel prices, due primarily to the decrease in the  percentage
of  company  truck miles versus owner-operator miles, increasing percentages
of  aerodynamic trucks to improve fuel miles per gallon, and lowering out of
route miles.  Average fuel expense per gallon in second quarter 2007 was the
same  as second quarter 2006.  The DOE national average fuel price was three
cents per gallon lower in second quarter 2007 than second quarter 2006.  The
DOE  price,  which is reported each Monday, establishes the  fuel  surcharge
rate  per  mile  billable  to  the customer  for  shipments  dispatched  the
following  week. The Company's actual fuel costs are based on supplier  rack
fuel  prices and can vary significantly from day-to-day, while the surcharge
revenue rate typically changes only once a week.  As a result, there can  be
significant  variations  between fuel costs  and  fuel  surcharge  revenues.
During  second quarter 2007 compared to second quarter 2006, the  effect  of
the  lower average DOE price per gallon compared to the flat fuel price  per
gallon  caused  fuel surcharge revenues to decline more than fuel  costs  in
second quarter 2007 and resulted in a one-cent per share negative impact  to
earnings per share.  In addition, there was a shifting of revenues from fuel
surcharges to base rates due to (1) increased brokerage freight with  all-in
base and surcharge rates during the first five months of 2007 and (2) a  few
customers  changing their fuel surcharge programs which had  the  effect  of
lowering  fuel  surcharge revenues and increasing base  rate  revenues.  The
industry-wide adoption of ultra-low sulfur diesel ("ULSD") fuel beginning in
fourth  quarter 2006 resulted in an approximate 2% degradation of fuel  mile
per gallon for all trucks, due to the lower energy content (btu) of ULSD.

     Shortages  of fuel, increases in fuel prices, or rationing of petroleum
products  can  have  a  materially adverse  effect  on  the  operations  and
profitability of the Company.  The Company is unable to predict whether fuel
price  levels  will continue to increase or decrease in the  future  or  the
extent  to  which fuel surcharges will be collected from customers.   As  of
June 30, 2007, the Company had no derivative financial instruments to reduce
its exposure to fuel price fluctuations.

     Supplies and maintenance for the truckload segment increased 0.3  cents
on  a  per-mile basis in second quarter 2007 due primarily to  increases  in
over-the-road tractor repairs.

     Taxes  and  licenses for the truckload segment increased 0.6 cents  per
total  mile  due  to  higher state sales tax credits  recognized  in  second
quarter 2006.

     Insurance and claims for the truckload segment increased 0.9 cents on a
per-mile basis due primarily to less favorable claims experience on  higher-
dollar  liability claims and on cargo claims in second quarter 2007 compared
to  second quarter 2006.  For the policy year that began August 1, 2006, the
Company  is responsible for the first $2.0 million per claim with an  annual
aggregate of $2.0 million for claims between $2.0 million and $3.0  million,
and  the  Company is fully insured (i.e., no aggregate) for  claims  between
$3.0  million  and $5.0 million.  For claims in excess of $5.0  million  and
less  than  $10.0  million, the Company is responsible for  the  first  $5.0
million  of  claims  in  the policy year.  The Company  maintains  liability
insurance coverage with reputable insurance carriers substantially in excess
of  the  $10.0 million per claim.  For the policy year beginning  August  1,
2007,  the Company will be responsible for the first $2.0 million per  claim
with an annual aggregate of $8.0 million for claims between $2.0 million and
$5.0 million and an annual aggregate of $5.0 million for claims between $5.0
million  and $10.0 million.  The Company's liability insurance premiums  for
the  policy  year  beginning  August 1, 2007 are  slightly  lower  than  the
previous policy year.

     Rent and purchased transportation consists mainly of payments to third-
party  capacity  providers in the VAS and other non-trucking operations  and
payments to owner-operators in the trucking operations.  As shown in the VAS
statistics  table on page 16, rent and purchased transportation expense  for
the  VAS  segment  increased  in response to  higher  VAS  revenues.   These
expenses  generally  vary depending on changes in  the  volume  of  services

                                      20


generated by the segment.  VAS lowered its rent and purchased transportation
expense  as  a  percentage of VAS revenues to 88.7% in second  quarter  2007
compared to 90.4% in second quarter 2006.

     Rent  and  purchased transportation for the truckload segment increased
1.0 cent per total mile in second quarter 2007 due primarily to the increase
in  the percentage of owner-operator truck miles versus company truck  miles
and  an  increase  of  the  van and regional over-the-road  owner-operators'
settlement  rate  by  two cents per mile effective May 1,  2006,  offset  by
slightly  lower  reimbursements to owner-operators for fuel.  The  Company's
customer  fuel  surcharge  programs  do  not  differentiate  between   miles
generated  by  Company-owned  trucks and miles generated  by  owner-operator
trucks;  thus,  the small decrease in owner-operator fuel reimbursements  is
included  with Company fuel expenses in calculating the per-share impact  of
fuel prices on earnings.

     The Company continues to experience difficulty attracting and retaining
owner-operator drivers due to the challenging operating conditions including
inflationary  cost  increases  that are the  responsibility  of  the  owner-
operators.   The number of owner-operators increased slightly to 820  as  of
June  30,  2007  from a total of 805 as of June 30, 2006.  The  Company  has
historically been able to add company-owned tractors and recruit  additional
company  drivers to offset any decreases in owner-operators.  If a  shortage
of  owner-operators  and  company  drivers  were  to  occur  and  additional
increases  in  per  mile settlement rates became necessary  to  attract  and
retain  owner-operators,  the  Company's  results  of  operations  would  be
negatively impacted to the extent that corresponding freight rate  increases
were not obtained.

     Other  operating expenses for the truckload segment decreased 0.4 cents
per  mile in second quarter 2007.  Gains on sales of assets (a reduction  of
other operating expenses), primarily trucks and trailers, increased to  $7.6
million  in  second quarter 2007 compared to $7.1 million in second  quarter
2006.  In second quarter 2007, the Company continued to sell its oldest  van
trailers  that are fully depreciated, replacing them with new trailers,  and
expects to continue doing so throughout the remainder of 2007.

     The  Company's  effective income tax rate (income taxes expressed as  a
percentage of income before income taxes) was 41.8% for second quarter  2007
versus 41.0% for second quarter 2006.

Six Months Ended June 30, 2007 Compared to Six Months Ended June 30, 2006
-------------------------------------------------------------------------

Operating Revenues

     Operating revenues increased by 1.4% for the six months ended June  30,
2007,  compared  to  the same period of the previous year.   Excluding  fuel
surcharge  revenues, trucking revenues decreased 0.4%, due  primarily  to  a
0.2% decrease in average revenues per total mile.  VAS revenues increased by
$20.7 million (16.6%) due to ongoing growth in brokerage.

Operating Expenses

     Operating  expenses,  expressed as a percentage of operating  revenues,
were 93.7% for the six months ended June 30, 2007, compared to 91.9% for the
same  period of the previous year.  Expense items that impacted the  overall
operating  ratio  are  described below.  The tables  on  page  16  show  the
operating  ratios  and  operating margins for the Company's  two  reportable
segments, Truckload Transportation Services and Value Added Services.

     Owner-operator miles as a percentage of total miles increased to  12.1%
for  the six months ended June 30, 2007, from 11.7% for the six months ended
June  30,  2006.  This increase in owner-operator miles as a  percentage  of
total  miles shifted costs to the rent and purchased transportation category
from  other  expense  categories.   The  Company  estimates  that  rent  and
purchased  transportation expense for the truckload segment  was  higher  by

                                      21


approximately  0.5  cents  per total mile due to this  increase,  and  other
expense  categories  had  offsetting decreases on  a  total-mile  basis,  as
follows:  salaries, wages and benefits (0.2 cents), fuel  (0.2  cents),  and
depreciation (0.1 cent).

     Salaries,  wages and benefits for non-drivers increased to support  the
growth  in  the VAS segment.  Salaries, wages and benefits for the truckload
segment increased 0.5 cents on a per-mile basis due to higher driver pay per
mile resulting from the increase in discretionary pay items and higher group
health  insurance costs, offset by lower state unemployment tax expense  and
workers'  compensation costs.  Fuel decreased 0.4 cents per total  mile  due
primarily  to  lower  fuel  expense per  gallon  and  the  decrease  in  the
percentage  of company truck miles versus owner-operator miles (see  above).
Supplies and maintenance increased 0.4 cents per total mile due to increases
in  over-the-road tractor repairs.  Taxes and licenses were  0.4  cents  per
mile higher during the first six months of 2007 than the same period of 2006
due  to increases in state fuel tax rates in 2007 and higher state sales tax
credits recognized by the Company in 2006.  Insurance increased 1.4 cents on
a  per-mile basis due primarily to an increase in the frequency and severity
of  claims.   Rent  and purchased transportation for the  truckload  segment
increased  0.8  cents per total mile due primarily to  an  increase  in  the
number  of owner-operator tractors and the corresponding increase in  owner-
operator  miles.   Rent and purchased transportation  expense  for  the  VAS
segment  increased  in  response  to higher VAS  revenues.  Other  operating
expenses  decreased  0.9 cents per total mile as lower  gains  on  sales  of
assets  in  2007  were  offset by the additional $7.2 million  of  bad  debt
expense recorded in first quarter 2006 related to the bankruptcy of  one  of
the Company's customers, APX Logistics, Inc.  The Company's effective income
tax  rate  was  41.8% and 41.1% for the six months ended June 30,  2007  and
2006, respectively.

Liquidity and Capital Resources:

     During  the six months ended June 30, 2007, the Company generated  cash
flow  from operations of $134.3 million, a 8.7% decrease ($12.8 million)  in
cash flow compared to the same six-month period a year ago.  The decrease in
cash  flow  from operations is due primarily to a $7.8 million  increase  in
accounts  payable  for revenue equipment from December  2005  to  June  2006
compared  to  a  $15.6  million  decrease in accounts  payable  for  revenue
equipment  from  December  2006 to June 2007 as  the  Company  is  currently
delaying  the purchase of trucks with 2007 engines and lower net  income  in
2007,  offset partially by improved working capital changes in other current
assets and other current liabilities.  Cash flow from operations enabled the
Company  to make net capital expenditures, make net repayments of debt,  and
repurchase common stock as discussed below.

     Net  cash used in  investing activities  for the six-month period ended
June  30,  2007 decreased by $13.1 million, from $39.3 million for the  six-
month  period ended June 30, 2006 to $26.1 million for the six-month  period
ended  June  30, 2007.  Net property additions, primarily revenue equipment,
were $29.4 million for the six-month period ended June 30, 2007 versus $41.8
million  during the same period of 2006.  The decrease was due primarily  to
the  Company  taking delivery of substantially fewer new trucks  during  the
first  half of 2007 as it delays purchases of trucks with the 2007  engines.
The  average age of the Company's truck fleet is 1.68 years at June 30, 2007
compared to 1.32 years as of June 30, 2006.

     As  of  June  30,  2007,  the Company  has committed  to  property  and
equipment purchases of approximately $19.8 million.  The Company intends  to
fund  these  net capital expenditures through cash flow from operations  and
through  financing  available  under  its  existing  credit  facilities,  as
management deems necessary.

     Net  financing activities used $107.2 million and $100.6 million during
the six months ended June 30, 2007 and 2006, respectively.  The $6.6 million
increase  in cash used for financing activities was primarily the result  of
an increase in $18.6 million of repurchases of the Company's common stock in
2007,  offset  by  $10.0  million  in  lower  repayments  of  debt  (net  of
borrowings) and an additional $2.4 million of proceeds and tax benefits from
the  exercise of stock options in 2007.  The Company paid dividends of  $6.7
million in the six-month period ended June 30, 2007 and $6.3 million in  the

                                      22


six-month  period ended June 30, 2006.  The Company increased its  quarterly
dividend  rate by $.005 per share beginning with the dividend paid  in  July
2006  and by an additional $.005 per share beginning with the dividend  paid
in  July  2007.  Financing activities also included common stock repurchases
of  $58.1 million and $39.5 million in the six-month periods ended June  30,
2007   and  2006,  respectively.   From  time  to  time,  the  Company   has
repurchased,  and  may continue to repurchase, shares of its  common  stock.
The timing and amount of such purchases depends on market and other factors.
As  of June 30, 2007, the Company had purchased 3,791,200 shares pursuant to
its  current  repurchase  authorization and had 2,208,800  shares  remaining
available for repurchase.

     Management  believes the Company's financial position at June 30,  2007
is  strong.  As of June 30, 2007, the Company had $32.9 million of cash  and
cash equivalents and $851.6 million of stockholders' equity.  As of June 30,
2007,  the Company had $225.0 million of available credit pursuant to credit
facilities,  of which it had borrowed $50.0 million.   The credit  available
under these facilities is further reduced by the $37.1 million in letters of
credit  the  Company  maintains.   These letters  of  credit  are  primarily
required as security for insurance policies.  Based on the Company's  strong
financial position, management foresees no significant barriers to obtaining
sufficient financing, if necessary.

Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements:

     As  of  June  30,  2007,  the  Company had  no  non-cancelable  revenue
equipment  operating  leases, and had no other arrangements  that  meet  the
definition of an off-balance sheet arrangement.

Regulations:

     Effective  October  1, 2005, all truckload carriers became  subject  to
revised  hours  of  service ("HOS")  regulations issued by the Federal Motor
Carrier  Safety  Administration ("FMCSA").  The  most significant change for
the Company from the previous regulations is that drivers using the  sleeper
berth  provision must  take at least  eight consecutive hours in the sleeper
berth during their ten hours off-duty.  Previously, drivers were allowed  to
split their ten hour off-duty time  in the sleeper  berth into two  periods,
provided  neither  period  was  less  than two hours.  This more restrictive
sleeper berth provision is requiring some drivers to plan their time better.
The greatest impact of these HOS changes was lower mileage productivity  for
those customers with multiple-stop shipments or those shipments with  pickup
or  delivery  delays.  The  Owner-Operator  Independent  Drivers Association
("OOIDA")  filed a petition  for review of  the current HOS regulations with
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, challenging  several
issues,  including  the  FMCSA  justification  for  the 8-hour sleeper berth
requirements   described   above.   Public   Citizen,   a  consumer   safety
organization, also  filed a  petition  for  review  of the  HOS regulations,
challenging  an 11-hour daily  drive  time  limit  and  the  34-hour restart
rule, which  permits drivers  who are  off duty  for 34 consecutive hours to
reset their 8-day, 70-hour clock to zero hours.

     On  December  4,  2006,  a three-judge  panel heard  arguments  on  the
petitions for review, and on July 24, 2007, the U.S. Court of Appeals issued
its  decision  on  the challenges made by OOIDA and Public  Citizen  to  the
driver  HOS  rules  issued in 2005 by FMCSA.  The Court rejected  the  OOIDA
claims,  including  its challenge to the 8-hour sleeper berth  requirements,
and ruled in favor of Public Citizen on the 11-hour daily driving limit rule
and the 34-hour restart rule.

     The Court described its concerns as procedural and vacated only the 11-
hour daily driving limit and 34-hour restart provisions, leaving the rest of
the  2005 rule in place.  FMCSA has 45 days to petition for reconsideration.
After  that  time, unless a stay is granted, the Court's mandate will  issue
within  seven  (7) days and the daily driving limit would be reduced  to  10
hours  and  the  34-hour restart provision eliminated.  The flaws  that  the
Court  found were procedural in nature and can be corrected by FMCSA  should
it elect to do so.  The American Trucking Associations ("ATA") has indicated
that  it  will  work to  provide  support  to FMCSA  for  re-adoption of the

                                      23


11-hour  daily driving limit  and 34-hour restart, and in the meantime, will
seek a  stay from  the Court  that would  allow those  provisions to stay in
place pending FMCSA's reevaluation.

     If  not  reversed,  both rule changes could have a negative  impact  on
mileage  productivity for many carriers, since both rules  can,  in  certain
circumstances, have the effect of restricting a driver's hours on duty.  The
Company has begun the process of evaluating the impact of this ruling on its
operations  and is preparing to make modifications to its electronic  driver
hours  of  service system (paperless logs system) to implement the rules  as
modified by the Court's ruling, should that become necessary.

     On  January 18, 2007, the  Federal Motor Carrier  Safety Administration
published  a Notice of Proposed  Rulemaking ("NPRM") in the Federal Register
on  the use  of Electronic  On-Board Recorders  ("EOBRs")  by  the  trucking
industry for compliance with HOS rules.  The intent of this proposed rule is
to  improve highway safety  by fostering development  of new EOBR technology
for  HOS  compliance,   encouraging  its  use  by   motor  carriers  through
incentives,  and requiring its use by  operators with serious and continuing
HOS compliance problems.  Comments on the NPRM were to be received by  April
18,  2007.  Over eight  years ago, the Company  became the  first, and only,
trucking company in the United States to receive authorization from the  DOT
to  use a global positioning  system based paperless  log system in place of
the paper logbooks traditionally used by truck drivers to track their  daily
work activities.  While the Company does not believe the rule, as  proposed,
would have a significant effect on its operations and profitability, it will
continue to monitor future developments.

     Beginning  in  January 2007, all newly manufactured truck engines  must
comply  with a new set of more stringent engine emission standards  mandated
by  the  Environmental Protection Agency ("EPA").  Trucks manufactured  with
these new engines are estimated to cost $5,000-$10,000 more per truck,  have
slightly lower miles per gallon ("mpg"), and have higher maintenance  costs.
To  delay the cost impact of these new emission standards, the Company  kept
its  truck  fleet new relative to historical company and industry standards.
The Company's capital expenditures for new trucks have been and are expected
to continue to be much lower in 2007.  A new set of more stringent emissions
standards  mandated by the EPA will become effective for newly  manufactured
trucks beginning in January 2010.

     Several  states,  counties  and  cities  have  enacted  legislation  or
ordinances restricting idling of trucks to short periods of time.   This  is
significant when it impacts the ability of the driver to idle the truck  for
purposes  of  operating  air conditioning and heating  systems  particularly
while in the sleeper berth.  Many of the statutes or ordinances, recognizing
the need of the drivers to have a comfortable environment in which to sleep,
have made exceptions for those circumstances.  California currently has such
an  exemption,  however, the sleeper berth exemption will  no  longer  exist
after January 1, 2008.  The Company is currently working on plans to address
this  issue  in  California.  California has also  enacted  restrictions  on
Transport Refrigeration Units ("TRUs") emissions, which are scheduled to  be
phased  in  over  several  years beginning year-end  2008.   Although  legal
challenges may be mounted, if the law becomes effective as scheduled it will
require  companies to operate only compliant TRUs in California.  There  are
several  alternatives for meeting these requirements which  the  Company  is
currently evaluating.

Critical Accounting Policies:

     The  most significant accounting policies and estimates that affect our
financial statements include the following:

     * Selections of estimated useful lives and salvage values for purposes
       of depreciating tractors and trailers. Depreciable lives of tractors
       and trailers range from 5 to 12  years.  Estimates of salvage  value
       at the expected date of trade-in or  sale (for example, three  years
       for  tractors) are based on the  expected market values of equipment
       at the time of disposal.  Although the Company's current replacement
       cycle  for   tractors  is   three  years,  the   Company  calculates
       depreciation  expense  for  financial  reporting  purposes  using  a

                                      24


       five-year  life  and  25%  salvage   value.   Depreciation   expense
       calculated  in this manner continues at the same straight-line rate,
       which  approximates  the  continuing  declining  market value of the
       tractors, in those instances in which a tractor is  held beyond  the
       normal  three-year  age.  Calculating  depreciation  expense using a
       five-year  life  and 25% salvage  value results  in the  same annual
       depreciation rate (15% of cost per year) and the same net book value
       at the normal three-year replacement  date (55% of cost) as using  a
       three-year  life  and  55%  salvage  value.  The Company continually
       monitors  the  adequacy  of  the  lives  and  salvage values used in
       calculating  depreciation  expense  and  adjusts  these  assumptions
       appropriately when warranted.
     * The  Company reviews  its long-lived  assets for impairment whenever
       events or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying amount
       of  a long-lived  asset may not be  recoverable.  An impairment loss
       would  be recognized if the  carrying amount of the long-lived asset
       is not recoverable, and it exceeds its  fair value.  For  long-lived
       assets  classified  as  held  and used, if the carrying value of the
       long-lived asset exceeds the sum of the future net cash flows, it is
       not recoverable.  The Company does not separately identify assets by
       operating  segment,  as  tractors   and   trailers   are   routinely
       transferred from one operating fleet to another.  As a result,  none
       of the Company's long-lived assets have identifiable cash flows from
       use  that are largely independent of  the cash flows of other assets
       and  liabilities.  Thus,  the asset  group used to assess impairment
       would include all assets and liabilities of the Company.  Long-lived
       assets  classified  as held  for sale  are reported  at the lower of
       their carrying amount or fair value less costs to sell.
     * Estimates  of  accrued  liabilities  for  insurance  and  claims for
       liability and physical damage losses and workers' compensation.  The
       insurance and claims accruals (current  and long-term) are  recorded
       at  the  estimated  ultimate  payment  amounts  and  are  based upon
       individual  case  estimates,  including  negative  development,  and
       estimates  of  incurred-but-not-reported  losses  based  upon   past
       experience.  The  Company's self-insurance  reserves are reviewed by
       an actuary every six months.
     * Policies for revenue recognition. Operating revenues (including fuel
       surcharge  revenues) and related  direct costs are recorded when the
       shipment  is delivered.  For  shipments where a third-party capacity
       provider  (including owner-operator  drivers under contract with the
       Company) is  utilized to provide some  or all of the service and the
       Company  is the  primary obligor  in regards  to the delivery of the
       shipment, establishes customer pricing separately from carrier  rate
       negotiations, generally has discretion in carrier selection,  and/or
       has credit risk on the shipment, the  Company records both  revenues
       for  the  dollar  value  of  services  billed  by the Company to the
       customer and rent and purchased transportation expense for the costs
       of  transportation paid  by the Company  to the third-party capacity
       provider  upon  delivery  of  the  shipment.  In  the absence of the
       conditions  listed  above,  the  Company  records  revenues  net  of
       expenses related to third-party capacity providers.
     * Accounting  for  income  taxes.  Significant  management judgment is
       required  to  determine  the  provision  for  income  taxes  and  to
       determine whether deferred income taxes will be realized in full  or
       in  part.  Deferred income  tax assets and  liabilities are measured
       using  enacted tax rates expected  to apply to taxable income in the
       years  in  which  those  temporary  differences  are  expected to be
       recovered  or  settled.  When  it  is  more  likely that all or some
       portion of specific deferred income tax assets will not be realized,
       a valuation allowance must be established for the amount of deferred
       income tax assets that  are  determined  not  to  be  realizable.  A
       valuation  allowance for  deferred income  tax assets  has  not been
       deemed  to be necessary due to the  Company's profitable operations.
       Accordingly, if the facts or financial circumstances were to change,
       thereby  impacting the  likelihood of  realizing the deferred income
       tax  assets, judgment  would  need  to  be  applied to determine the
       amount of valuation allowance required in any given period.

                                      25


     Management  periodically  evaluates these  estimates  and  policies  as
events  and  circumstances  change.  There have been  no  changes  to  these
policies  that  occurred  during the Company's most recent  fiscal  quarter.
Together with the effects of the matters discussed above, these factors  may
significantly  impact  the Company's results of operations  from  period  to
period.

Accounting Standards:

     In   September  2006,  the  FASB  issued  SFAS  No.  157,  Fair   Value
Measurements.   This Statement defines fair value, establishes  a  framework
for  measuring  fair  value  in  generally  accepted  accounting  principles
("GAAP"),  and  expands  disclosures about  fair  value  measurements.   The
provisions  of SFAS No. 157 are effective as of the beginning of  the  first
fiscal  year  that  begins after November 15, 2007.  As of  June  30,  2007,
management believes that SFAS No. 157 will not have a material effect on the
financial position, results of operations, and cash flows of the Company.

     In  February 2007, the FASB issued SFAS No. 159, The Fair Value  Option
for  Financial  Assets and Financial Liabilities-Including an  amendment  of
FASB  Statement  No.  115.  This statement permits  entities  to  choose  to
measure  many financial instruments and certain other items at  fair  value.
The  provisions  of SFAS No. 159 are effective as of the  beginning  of  the
first fiscal year that begins after November 15, 2007.  As of June 30, 2007,
management believes that SFAS No. 159 will not have a material effect on the
financial position, results of operations, and cash flows of the Company.

Item 3.  Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk.

     The Company is exposed to market risk from changes in commodity prices,
foreign currency exchange rates, and interest rates.

Commodity Price Risk

     The  price  and availability of diesel fuel are subject to fluctuations
due  to  changes  in the level of global oil production, refining  capacity,
seasonality, weather, and other market factors.  Historically,  the  Company
has  been able to recover a significant portion of fuel price increases from
customers  in  the  form  of fuel surcharges.  The Company  has  implemented
customer  fuel surcharges programs with most of its revenue base  to  offset
most  of  the  higher fuel cost per gallon.  The Company cannot predict  the
extent to which higher fuel price levels will continue in the future or  the
extent to which fuel surcharges could be collected to offset such increases.
As  of June 30, 2007, the Company had no derivative financial instruments to
reduce its exposure to fuel price fluctuations.

Foreign Currency Exchange Rate Risk

     The  Company  conducts  business in Mexico and  Canada  and  has  begun
operations in Asia.  Foreign currency transaction gains and losses were  not
material to the Company's results of operations for second quarter 2007  and
prior  periods.  To date, virtually all foreign revenues are denominated  in
U.S.  dollars, and the Company receives payment for foreign freight services
primarily   in  U.S.  dollars  to  reduce  direct  foreign  currency   risk.
Accordingly,  the  Company  is  not currently subject  to  material  foreign
currency  exchange rate risks from the effects that exchange rate  movements
of  foreign currencies would have on the Company's future costs or on future
cash flows.

                                   26


Interest Rate Risk

     The  Company had $50.0  million of debt outstanding at June  30,  2007.
The  interest  rates  on  the variable rate debt are  based  on  the  London
Interbank  Offered  Rate ("LIBOR").  Assuming this level  of  borrowings,  a
hypothetical one-percentage point increase in the LIBOR interest rate  would
increase the Company's annual interest expense by $500,000.  The Company has
no  derivative financial instruments to reduce its exposure to interest rate
increases.

Item 4.  Controls and Procedures.

     As  of  the  end  of  the period  covered by this report,  the  Company
carried  out an evaluation, under the supervision and with the participation
of the Company's management, including the Company's Chief Executive Officer
and  Chief  Financial  Officer,  of  the effectiveness  of  the  design  and
operation of the Company's disclosure controls and procedures, as defined in
Exchange  Act  Rule  15d-15(e).   The  Company's  disclosure  controls   and
procedures  are  designed to provide reasonable assurance of  achieving  the
desired control objectives.  Based upon that evaluation, the Company's Chief
Executive  Officer and Chief Financial Officer concluded that the  Company's
disclosure controls and procedures are effective in enabling the Company  to
record, process, summarize and report information required to be included in
the Company's periodic SEC filings within the required time period.

     Management,  under  the supervision and with the participation  of  the
Company's  Chief  Executive Officer and Chief Financial  Officer,  concluded
that  there  have  been  no changes in the Company's internal  control  over
financial  reporting that occurred during the Company's most  recent  fiscal
quarter  that  have  materially  affected,  or  are  reasonably  likely   to
materially affect, the Company's internal control over financial reporting.

     The  Company  has  confidence in its internal controls and  procedures.
Nevertheless,  the  Company's  management,  including  the  Chief  Executive
Officer  and  Chief  Financial Officer, does not expect  that  the  internal
controls  or disclosure procedures and controls will prevent all  errors  or
intentional fraud.  An internal control system, no matter how well conceived
and  operated, can provide only reasonable, not absolute, assurance that the
objectives  of such internal controls are met.  Further, the  design  of  an
internal  control  system  must reflect the fact  that  there  are  resource
constraints,  and the benefits of controls must be relative to their  costs.
Because  of  the  inherent limitations in all internal control  systems,  no
evaluation  of  controls  can provide absolute assurance  that  all  control
issues  and  instances  of  fraud, if any,  within  the  Company  have  been
detected.

                                      27


                                   PART II

                              OTHER INFORMATION

Item 2.  Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds.

     On  April  17, 2006, the Company announced that its Board of  Directors
approved  an  increase to its authorization for common stock repurchases  of
6,000,000  shares.  As of June 30, 2007, the Company had purchased 3,791,200
shares  pursuant  to this authorization and had 2,208,800  shares  remaining
available for repurchase.  The Company may purchase shares from time to time
depending  on  market, economic, and other factors.  The authorization  will
continue unless withdrawn by the Board of Directors.

     The  following table summarizes the Company's common stock  repurchases
during  the second quarter of 2007 made pursuant to this authorization.   No
shares  were  purchased during the quarter other than through this  program,
and  all purchases were made by or on behalf of the Company and not  by  any
"affiliated purchaser", as defined by Rule 10b-18 of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934.


                    Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities




                                                                                   Maximum Number
                                                                                   (or Approximate
                                                           Total Number of        Dollar Value) of
                                                          Shares (or Units)    Shares (or Units) that
                   Total Number of                       Purchased as Part of        May Yet Be
                  Shares (or Units)  Average Price Paid   Publicly Announced     Purchased Under the
    Period            Purchased      per Share (or Unit)   Plans or Programs      Plans or Programs
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                          
April 1-30, 2007        502,300            $19.23                502,300              3,206,500
May 1-31, 2007          604,900            $18.95                604,900              2,601,600
June 1-30, 2007         392,800            $19.03                392,800              2,208,800
                ---------------------                    ---------------------
Total                 1,500,000            $19.06              1,500,000              2,208,800
                =====================                    =====================



Item 4. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders.

     The Annual Meeting of Stockholders of Werner Enterprises, Inc. was held
on  May  8,  2007  for the purpose of electing two directors for  three-year
terms,  adopting  an amended and restated Equity Plan, and  approving  three
proposed amendments to the Company's Articles of Incorporation.  Proxies for
the  meeting  were  solicited pursuant to Regulation 14A of  the  Securities
Exchange  Act  of  1934.   There  was  no  solicitation  in  opposition   to
management's  nominees,  and  all  such  nominees  were  elected.   Of   the
73,900,461  shares  entitled to vote, stockholders  representing  72,297,798
shares  (97.8%)  were present in person or by proxy.  The voting  tabulation
was as follows:




                                  Shares         Shares
                                  Voted          Voted
                                  "FOR"        "ABSTAIN"
                                ----------     ---------
                                         
     Gerald H. Timmerman        68,216,571     4,081,227
     Kenneth M. Bird            69,106,935     3,190,863



                                      28


     Clarence  L.  Werner, Gary  L.  Werner, Gregory  L.  Werner, Michael L.
Steinbach, Patrick J. Jung, and Duane K. Sather continued as directors after
the meeting.

     The  stockholders  approved the adoption of  an  amended  and  restated
Equity Plan.  The voting tabulation was as follows:




                                     Shares Voted  Shares Voted  Shares Voted    Broker
                                        "FOR"       "AGAINST"     "ABSTAIN"    Non-Votes
                                     ------------  ------------  ------------  ---------
                                                                   
    Amended and Restated Equity Plan  51,808,593    15,194,068      53,665     5,241,472



     The stockholders approved the amendment to Article III of the Company's
Articles  of  Incorporation regarding the Company's purpose and  conduct  of
business.  The voting tabulation was as follows:




                                          Shares Voted  Shares Voted  Shares Voted
                                             "FOR"       "AGAINST"     "ABSTAIN"
                                          ------------  ------------  ------------
                                                               
     Articles of Incorporation Amendment   71,326,904      78,640       892,254



     The  stockholders  approved  the  amendment  to  Article  VIII  of  the
Company's  Articles of Incorporation  regarding indemnification  provisions.
The voting tabulation was as follows:




                                          Shares Voted  Shares Voted  Shares Voted
                                             "FOR"       "AGAINST"     "ABSTAIN"
                                          ------------  ------------  ------------
                                                               
     Articles of Incorporation Amendment   70,376,209    1,878,022      43,567



     The  stockholders approved the amendment to Article VIII, Section A  of
the  Company's  Articles of Incorporation regarding  greater  limitation  on
liabilities of directors.  The voting tabulation was as follows:




                                          Shares Voted  Shares Voted  Shares Voted
                                             "FOR"       "AGAINST"     "ABSTAIN"
                                          ------------  ------------  ------------
                                                               
     Articles of Incorporation Amendment   70,947,766    1,304,109      45,923



                                      29


Item 6.  Exhibits.

   Index of Exhibits

   Exhibit 3(i) Restated Articles of Incorporation (filed herewith)
   Exhibit 3(ii) Revised and Restated By-Laws (filed herewith)
   Exhibit 10.1 Werner  Enterprises,   Inc.  Equity  Plan  (Incorporated  by
       reference to Exhibit 99.1 to the Company's report on Form  8-K  dated
       May 8, 2007)
   Exhibit 31.1 Rule 13a-14(a)/15d-14(a) Certification (filed herewith)
   Exhibit 31.2 Rule 13a-14(a)/15d-14(a) Certification (filed herewith)
   Exhibit 32.1 Section 1350 Certification (filed herewith)
   Exhibit 32.2 Section 1350 Certification (filed herewith)

                                      30





                                 SIGNATURES


     Pursuant  to the  requirements of  the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,
the Registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the
undersigned thereunto duly authorized.


                                WERNER ENTERPRISES, INC.



Date:     August 2, 2007       By:   /s/ John J. Steele
       --------------------          ---------------------------------------
                                     John J. Steele
                                     Executive Vice President, Treasurer and
                                     Chief Financial Officer



Date:     August 2, 2007       By:   /s/ James L. Johnson
       --------------------          ---------------------------------------
                                     James L. Johnson
                                     Senior Vice President, Controller and
                                     Corporate Secretary

                                      31