WASHINGTON POST CO
DEF 14A, 1999-03-31
NEWSPAPERS: PUBLISHING OR PUBLISHING & PRINTING
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                            Schedule 14A Information

                    Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a)
                     Of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

[X]  Filed by Registrant
[ ]  Filed by Party other than Registrant


Check the appropriate box:
[ ]  Preliminary Proxy Statement
[ ]  Confidential,  for  use  by Commission only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6 (e)
     (2))
[X]  Definitive Proxy Statement
[ ]  Definitive  Additional  Materials
[ ]  Soliciting Materials Pursuant to Section 240.14a-11 (c) or 240.14a-12

                          THE WASHINGTON POST COMPANY
                (Name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)

                          THE WASHINGTON POST COMPANY
                   (Name of Person(s) filing Proxy Statement)

Payment of Filing Fee (check appropriate box):
[X]  No Fee required
[ ]  Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6 (i) (1) and 0-11.

     1)   Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies: N/A

     2)   Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies: N/A

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

     4)   Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction: N/A

     5)   Total Fee paid: N/A

[ ]  Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.  N/A
[ ]  Check box if any part of the fee is offset  as  provided  by  Exchange  Act
     Rule 0-11 (a)(2) and identify the Filing for which the  offsetting  fee was
     paid  previously.  Identify the previous  Filng by  registration  statement
     number,  or the Form or Schedule  and the date of its filing.

     1)   Amount Previously Paid: N/A

     2)   Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.: N/A

     3)   Filing Party: N/A

     4)   Date Filed: N/A

<PAGE>

THE WASHINGTON POST COMPANY
1150 15TH STREET, N.W., WASHINGTON, D. C. 20071



                                                                 March 31, 1999



TO OUR STOCKHOLDERS:

     You  are  cordially  invited  to  the  Company's  1999  Annual  Meeting  of
Stockholders, which will be held in the Ninth Floor Meeting Room, The Washington
Post Building,  1150 15th Street, N.W.,  Washington,  D.C., on Thursday, May 13,
1999, at 8:00 o'clock in the morning.

     At the  meeting  there will be a report on the  Company's  activities,  and
Directors will be elected for the ensuing year.

     It is important that your shares be represented at the meeting. Please sign
the accompanying Proxy and return it promptly in the envelope  provided.  If you
plan to attend, kindly so indicate in the space provided on the Proxy.

                                          Sincerely yours,




      ALAN G. SPOON                                      DONALD E. GRAHAM
        President                                            Chairman


<PAGE>


THE WASHINGTON POST COMPANY



              NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS/MAY 13, 1999

     The Annual Meeting of  Stockholders  of The Washington Post Company will be
held in the Ninth Floor Meeting Room,  The Washington  Post Building,  1150 15th
Street, N.W.,  Washington,  D.C., 20071 on Thursday, May 13, 1999, at 8:00 a.m.,
Eastern Daylight Saving Time, for the following purposes:

          1. To elect Directors for the ensuing year, as more fully described in
     the accompanying Proxy Statement.

          2. To transact  such other  business as may  properly  come before the
     meeting or any adjournment thereof.

     The Board of  Directors  has fixed the close of business on March 15, 1999,
as the record date for the  determination of stockholders  entitled to notice of
and to vote at the Annual Meeting.

     It is important that your shares be  represented  and voted at the meeting,
and  you  should   therefore  sign  and  return  your  Proxy  at  your  earliest
convenience.

                                            By Order of the Board of Directors,


                                              DIANA M. DANIELS, Secretary


Washington, D.C., March 31, 1999

<PAGE>


THE WASHINGTON POST COMPANY
1150 15th Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20071



                                PROXY STATEMENT



                                                                 March 31, 1999

     The  accompanying  Proxy is  solicited  by the  Board of  Directors  of The
Washington Post Company (hereinafter called the "Company") for use at the Annual
Meeting  of  Stockholders  to be held on  Thursday,  May  13,  1999,  and at any
adjournment or adjournments  thereof.  A Proxy may be revoked at any time before
it is  voted  at the  meeting.  Solicitation  of  proxies  will  be  made by the
Company's  management  through the mail, in person or by telegraph or telephone,
without  additional  compensation  being paid to such  members of the  Company's
management,  and the cost of such solicitation will be borne by the Company.  In
addition,  the Company will request brokers and other  custodians,  nominees and
fiduciaries  to  forward  proxy  cards  and  proxy  soliciting  material  to the
beneficial owners of shares held of record by such persons, and the Company will
reimburse them for their expenses in so doing.

     This Proxy Statement and the  accompanying  Proxy,  together with a copy of
the Annual Report of the Company for the fiscal year ended January 3, 1999,  are
being mailed to the  stockholders  on March 31, 1999. The Company has also filed
with the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission  a report  on Form 10-K for such
fiscal  year,  a copy of which will be  furnished  without  charge  (except  for
exhibits) to any stockholder  upon his or her written  request  addressed to the
Treasurer of the Company at the address  shown above.  No material  contained in
either  of such  reports  is to be  considered  a part of the  proxy  soliciting
material.

     As of the close of  business  on March 15,  1999,  the record  date for the
Annual  Meeting,  the Company had  outstanding  and  entitled to vote  1,739,250
shares  of  Class A Common  Stock  (hereinafter  called  "Class  A  Stock")  and
8,359,752 shares of Class B Common Stock  (hereinafter  called "Class B Stock"),
each of which is  entitled  to one vote upon all  matters on which such class of
stock is entitled to vote. Only  stockholders of record at the close of business
on  March  15,  1999,  are  entitled  to vote at the  Annual  Meeting  or at any
adjournment thereof.

     As of the date of this Proxy  Statement  the only  matter that the Board of
Directors  expects to present to the Annual Meeting is the election of Directors
for the ensuing year.  Information with respect to the principal  holders of the
Class A Stock and the Class B Stock is given below.


<PAGE>


                              ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

     A Board of  thirteen  Directors  is to be  elected,  nine by the holders of
Class A Stock  voting  separately  as a class and four by the holders of Class B
Stock voting  separately as a class.  All  Directors  will hold office until the
next Annual Meeting of Stockholders and until their respective  successors shall
have been  elected  and shall have  qualified  or as  otherwise  provided in the
By-laws of the Company.

     Each Class A Stock Proxy and each Class B Stock Proxy executed and returned
by a  stockholder  will be voted for the  election of the  respective  Directors
hereinafter  shown as  nominees  for each  respective  class  of  stock,  unless
otherwise  indicated on such Proxy.  In the event that any nominee  withdraws or
for any  reason is not able to serve as a  Director,  the  persons  named in the
accompanying  Proxy  will  either  vote for such  other  person  as the Board of
Directors may nominate or will not vote for anyone to replace such nominee.  The
Board of Directors knows of no reason which would cause any nominee to be unable
to act or to refuse to accept nomination or election.  Directors will be elected
by a plurality of the votes cast.  Any shares not voted  (whether by abstention,
broker non-vote or otherwise) have no impact on the vote.

NOMINEES FOR ELECTION BY CLASS A STOCKHOLDERS

     WARREN E. BUFFETT

          Mr. Buffett, age 68, has for more than thirteen years been Chairman of
          the Board and Chief  Executive  Officer  of  Berkshire  Hathaway  Inc.
          (insurance    underwriting,    newspaper    publishing   and   various
          manufacturing and marketing activities).  He was elected a Director of
          the  Company  in May  1996  and  serves  as  Chairman  of the  Finance
          Committee of the Board.  Mr.  Buffett also served as a Director of the
          Company between 1974 and 1986. He is a director of Berkshire  Hathaway
          Inc., The Coca-Cola Company and The Gillette  Company.  Mr. Buffett is
          also a trustee of Grinnell College,  The Business Enterprise Trust and
          The Urban Institute.

     GEORGE J. GILLESPIE, III

          Mr.  Gillespie,  age 68,  has since  1963 been a partner  in  Cravath,
          Swaine & Moore,  which is one of  several  law firms  retained  by the
          Company in 1997 and 1998 and which it proposes  to retain in 1999.  He
          has been a  Director  of the  Company  and is a member of the  Finance
          Committee of the Board.  Mr.  Gillespie is also a director of The Fund
          American  Enterprises  Holdings,   Inc.,  and  the  National  Multiple
          Sclerosis  Society, a director and Chairman of the Madison Square Boys
          & Girls Club, a director and  Secretary-Treasurer  of the John M. Olin
          Foundation,  Inc.,  and a  director  and  President  of the  Pinkerton
          Foundation.  Mr.  Gillespie  also  serves on the boards of a number of
          other   foundations,    educational   institutions,   and   charitable
          organizations.

                                       2

<PAGE>


     RALPH E. GOMORY

          Mr.  Gomory,  age 69, has since 1989 been  President  of the Alfred P.
          Sloan Foundation, a charitable foundation. Before assuming his present
          position he had served for thirty years with IBM Corporation, where he
          was Senior Vice President for Science and Technology from 1986 to 1989
          after having been Senior Vice President and Director of Research since
          1970. He became a Director of the Company in July 1989 and is a member
          of the Audit  Committee of the Board.  In addition he is a director of
          Ashland Oil, Inc., Lexmark  International,  Inc., Polaroid Corporation
          and The Bank of New York.  Mr. Gomory is also a member of the National
          Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineering.

     DONALD E. GRAHAM

          Mr.  Graham,  age 53, has been  Chairman  of the Board of the  Company
          since September 1993 and Chief Executive  Officer of the Company since
          May 1991.  Mr. Graham  served as President of the Company  between May
          1991 and September 1993. He is also Publisher of The Washington  Post,
          a  position  he has held since  January  1979.  Mr.  Graham has been a
          Director of the Company  since 1974 and is a member of the Finance and
          Executive  Committees of the Board. He is the son of Katharine Graham,
          who is a Director  and  Chairman  of the  Executive  Committee  of the
          Company.  By virtue of his ownership of 15.1% of the outstanding Class
          A Stock of the Company, his right to control the vote, as a trustee of
          a certain family trust, of an additional 14.3% of such stock, together
          with  the  ownership  right of his  mother,  Katharine  Graham,  of an
          additional   30.8%  of  such  stock,   Donald  and  Katharine   Graham
          effectively vote a total of 60.2% of the Class A shares. Mr. Graham is
          a trustee of the Federal  City  Council and the Philip L. Graham Fund,
          and chairman of the board of the D.C. College Access Program.

     KATHARINE GRAHAM

          Mrs.  Graham,  age 81, has been  Chairman of the  Executive  Committee
          since  September  1993. In September 1993, Mrs. Graham stepped down as
          Chairman of the Board, a position she had held since 1973. Mrs. Graham
          and her son, Donald Graham,  effectively  vote a total of 60.2% of the
          Class A shares  (see  above).  Mrs.  Graham has been a Director of the
          Company  since 1957 and is a member of the  Finance  and  Chairman  of
          Executive  Committees of the Board.  Mrs. Graham is also a director of
          the  Council for Aid to  Education,  a trustee of the Philip L. Graham
          Fund, and The Urban Institute, and a Life Trustee of the University of
          Chicago.

     WILLIAM J. RUANE

          Mr. Ruane, age 73, has for more than eleven years been Chairman of the
          Board of Ruane,  Cunniff & Co., Inc., an investment  management  firm,
          and Sequoia  Fund,  Inc., a mutual fund.  He was elected a Director of
          the Company in September 1985 and is a member of

                                       3

<PAGE>


          the Audit and Finance Committees of the Board of Directors. He is also
          a director of the New York  Theatre  Workshop  and is a trustee of the
          Y.W.C.A. of New York and The Carmel Hill Fund.

     RICHARD D. SIMMONS

          Mr.  Simmons,  age 64, has been retired since June 1991;  prior to his
          retirement he had been  President and Chief  Operating  Officer of the
          Company  for nearly ten years.  Since  September  1981,  he has been a
          Director of the Company and is a member of the Finance  Committee  and
          until May 1996 was a member of the Compensation Committee of the Board
          of Directors.  Through March 1996,  Mr. Simmons served as President of
          International Herald Tribune,  S.A., a French publishing company owned
          jointly by the Company and The New York Times  Company,  a position he
          had held since  1989.  Mr.  Simmons is a director  of Morgan  Guaranty
          Trust Company of New York,  J.P.  Morgan & Co. Inc., and Union Pacific
          Corporation,  and a Trustee  of the  White  Burkett  Miller  Center of
          Public  Affairs at the  University  of Virginia  and a director of the
          Protestant Episcopal Cathedral Foundation.

     ALAN G. SPOON

          Mr. Spoon,  age 47, has been President  since September 1993 and Chief
          Operating  Officer of the Company and a Director of the Company  since
          May 1991 and is a member of the  Executive  and Finance  Committees of
          the Board. Mr. Spoon has served in various capacities with the Company
          since joining in 1982 as Vice President for business  development  and
          planning.  He is a director  of  American  Management  Systems,  Inc.,
          Ticketmaster Online-CitySearch,  Inc., Human Genome Sciences, Inc. and
          a trustee of the National Museum of Natural History.

     GEORGE W. WILSON

          Mr.  Wilson,  age 61, has for more than eighteen  years been President
          and Chief  Executive  Officer  of  Newspapers  of New  England,  Inc.,
          Newspapers of New Hampshire,  Inc., Newspapers of Massachusetts,  Inc.
          and President of the Concord  Monitor,  which is published in Concord,
          N.H. He was elected a Director  of the Company in  September  1985 and
          serves  as  Chairman  of the  Compensation  Committee  of the Board of
          Directors.   Mr.  Wilson  is  also  a  director  of  The   Bakersfield
          (California) Californian and The Associated Press.

NOMINEES FOR ELECTION BY CLASS B STOCKHOLDERS

     DANIEL B. BURKE

          Mr. Burke,  age 70, has been retired since February 1994; prior to his
          retirement  he had been  President  and  Chief  Executive  Officer  of
          Capital  Cities/ABC,  Inc.,  a leading  media  company.  He has been a
          member of the Board of Directors of the Company since May

                                       4

<PAGE>


          1996 and is a member of the  Compensation  and Audit Committees of the
          Board.  Mr.  Burke  is a  director  of  C.F.  Hathaway  & Co.,  Darden
          Restaurants, Morgan Stanley, Dean Witter, and Rohm & Haas Company. Mr.
          Burke is also Vice-Chair of the Board of The New York and Presbyterian
          Hospital in the City of New York. Mr. Burke is the brother of James E.
          Burke, a Director of the Company.

     JAMES E. BURKE

          Mr.  Burke,  age 74, is  Chairman of the  Partnership  for a Drug-Free
          America. Prior to his retirement in April 1989 he had been Chairman of
          the Board and Chief Executive Officer of Johnson & Johnson,  a leading
          manufacturer of health care and other products. He joined the Board of
          Directors  of the  Company  in  November  1989 and is a member  of the
          Finance  and  Compensation  Committees  of the Board.  Mr.  Burke is a
          trustee of the Robert  Wood  Johnson  Foundation  and  Chairman of the
          Business Enterprise Trust. He also serves on the boards of a number of
          other foundations, councils and charitable organizations. Mr. Burke is
          the brother of Daniel B. Burke, a Director of the Company.

     DONALD R. KEOUGH

          Mr. Keough, age 72, has been Chairman of Allen & Company  Incorporated
          since  April  1993  following  his  retirement  as  President,   Chief
          Operating  Officer and a director of The  Coca-Cola  Company,  a major
          international  beverage company. He has been a Director of the Company
          since 1989 and is a member of the Compensation Committee and was until
          May 1996 a member  of the Audit  Committee  of the  Board.  He is also
          Chairman of Excaliber Technologies,  and a director of The Home Depot,
          Inc.,  McDonald's  Corporation,  USA Networks,  Inc.,  and H.J.  Heinz
          Company. Mr. Keough is also a trustee of the University of Notre Dame,
          Morehouse School of Medicine and St. Joseph's Hospital Foundation, and
          serves on the boards of a number of other educational institutions and
          charitable organizations.

     BARBARA SCOTT PREISKEL

          Mrs. Preiskel,  age 74, has been an attorney in private practice since
          March  1983,  when she retired as Senior  Vice  President  and General
          Counsel of the Motion Picture Association of America, Inc., a position
          she had held since  December  1977.  She was elected a Director of the
          Company in  September  1985 and is Chairman of the Audit  Committee of
          the Board of Directors.  Mrs.  Preiskel is also a director of American
          Stores  Company,  and  serves as a trustee  of  Tougaloo  College  and
          Wellesley College.

                                       5

<PAGE>


     The  standing  committees  of the  Board  include  an  Audit  Committee,  a
Compensation  Committee,  an Executive  Committee and a Finance  Committee.  The
Board does not have a nominating committee.

     The Audit Committee recommends the independent accountants appointed by the
Board to audit the  consolidated  financial  statements  of the  Company,  which
includes an  inspection  of the books and accounts of the  Company,  and reviews
with such  accountants  the  scope of their  audit  and  their  report  thereon,
including  any  questions and  recommendations  that may arise  relating to such
audit and report or the Company's internal  accounting and auditing  procedures.
The Audit Committee met two times in 1998.

     The Compensation  Committee  considers and approves the Company's incentive
compensation  and bonus  programs,  and  specifically  approves  all salaries of
$200,000  or more per year,  all  incentive  compensation  awards  and all other
bonuses  (other than sales  bonuses) of $20,000 or more,  and also awards  stock
options. During 1998 the Committee held three meetings.

     The Executive Committee has and may exercise all of the powers of the Board
delegable by law in the  management  of the business and affairs of the Company.
During 1998 the Executive Committee met six times.

     The Finance  Committee  considers  and makes  recommendations  to the Board
relating to dividend policy,  major acquisitions and dispositions of businesses,
incurrence  of  indebtedness,  selection  of  managers of defined  benefit  plan
assets,  stock  repurchase  programs and certain other  financial  matters.  The
Finance Committee met twice in 1998.

     During  1998 the  Board  held six  regular  bi-monthly  meetings.  With the
exception  of Mr.  Gillespie,  each of the  persons  nominated  by the Board for
election as a Director  and who served as a Director  in 1998  attended at least
75% of the  aggregate  of the total  number of meetings  held during 1998 of the
Board and of the committees on which he or she served.

COMPENSATION OF DIRECTORS

     The only Directors of the Company who are  compensated  for serving in that
capacity  are those who are not  employees  of the Company or its  subsidiaries.
Each such person receives an annual fee of $40,000 for service as a Director and
an  additional  $5,000 for service as chairman of a committee of the Board.  The
Company  reimburses all such Directors for their expenses  incurred in attending
Board and committee meetings.

     The Company has in place a voluntary fee deferral plan for Directors of the
Company. The plan provides an opportunity for participants to elect to defer the
receipt  of all or a portion of the fees  received  for  service as a  Director.
Elections  to defer  must be filed in advance  of  earning  such fees.  Deferred
amounts will earn investment  credits in accordance with  participant  elections
from a choice  of  investment  indexes.  Deferred  amounts  will be  payable  at
retirement or such other future date as specified by the participant at the time
of election.

                                       6

<PAGE>


STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS

     The Securities and Exchange  Commission requires the Company to submit to a
vote at its annual  meetings,  and to include  in its proxy  materials  for such
meetings,  stockholder  proposals  meeting the  requirements of the Commission's
proxy rules if such proposals are submitted in a timely fashion by  stockholders
entitled to vote  thereon.  Eligible  proposals  intended to be submitted to the
Company's annual meeting to be held in 2000 must be received by the Secretary of
the Company at its offices in Washington, D.C., no later than November 27, 1999.

     Holders of Class B Stock are  entitled to vote only for the election of 30%
of the members of the Board of Directors  (and,  if required by the rules of the
New York Stock  Exchange,  on management  proposals to reserve  shares for stock
options  or to  acquire  the stock or assets of other  companies  under  certain
circumstances).  In  accordance  with the rules of the  Securities  and Exchange
Commission,  proposals  submitted  on other  matters by holders of Class B Stock
have not been and will not be  included in the  Company's  proxy  materials  for
annual meetings.

STOCK HOLDINGS OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT

     The  information  in the following two tables relates to each person who on
February 1, 1999, was a "beneficial  owner" (as defined under the proxy rules of
the Securities and Exchange Commission) of more than 5% of the Company's Class A
or Class B Stock. Under the proxy rules a person is deemed to be the "beneficial
owner" of stock if such person has (or shares) either investment power or voting
power over such stock, or has (or shares) the right to acquire such stock within
60 days by any of a  number  of  means,  including  the  conversion  of  another
security which is convertible into such stock. A substantial number of shares of
the  Company's  Class A and Class B Stock is held in trusts or  subject to other
agreements  which provide for the sharing of investment  power,  voting power or
both  among  several  persons,  each of whom is  deemed  by the  Securities  and
Exchange  Commission  to  be  a  "beneficial  owner"  of  the  shares  so  held.
Furthermore,  in many cases such persons do not include the  beneficiary  of the
trust who,  although  not deemed to be a  "beneficial  owner" in the  absence of
voting or investment  power over the shares,  is  nevertheless  shown below as a
beneficial owner because of the  beneficiary's  economic interest in the shares.
In addition, since all the shares of Class A Stock are convertible at the option
of the holder into Class B Stock on a  share-for-share  basis,  each "beneficial
owner"  of shares of Class A Stock is  deemed  by the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission  to be a  "beneficial  owner" of the same number of shares of Class B
Stock; in indicating below a person's "beneficial  ownership" of shares of Class
B Stock it has been  assumed that such person has  converted  into Class B Stock
all shares of Class A Stock of which such person is a  "beneficial  owner".  For
these reasons there is very substantial duplication in the numbers of shares and
percentages shown in the following table.

                                       7

<PAGE>


                           PRINCIPAL HOLDERS OF STOCK

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                      SHARES(%)
             NAME AND ADDRESS OF                -----------------------------------------------------
               BENEFICIAL OWNER                       CLASS A STOCK              CLASS B STOCK*
- ---------------------------------------------   ------------------------   --------------------------
<S>                                             <C>                        <C>
Katharine Graham(a)(i) ......................      536,257(30.8%)                 781,432(7.7%)
  2920 R Street, N.W.
  Washington, D.C.

Donald E. Graham(b)(i) ......................      941,469(54.1%)               3,406,682(33.7%)
  3110 Newark Street, N.W.
  Washington, D.C.

William W. Graham(c)(i) .....................      227,627(13.1%)                       **
  Suite 401
  11661 San Vincente Blvd.
  Los Angeles, California

Stephen M. Graham(d)(i) .....................      309,889(17.8%)                       **
  18 E. 78th Street
  New York, N.Y.

Elizabeth G. Weymouth(e)(i) .................      404,874(23.3%)                 580,834(5.8%)
  21 East 79 Street
  New York, N.Y.

George J. Gillespie, III(f)(i) ..............      455,523(26.2%)               1,283,952(12.7%)
  Sterling Road
  Harrison, N.Y.

Berkshire Hathaway Inc.(g) ..................           --                      1,727,765(17.1%)
  1440 Kiewit Plaza
  Omaha, Nebraska

Morgan Guaranty Trust Company of New York(h).           --                        661,853(6.6%)
  9 West 57th Street
  New York, N.Y.
</TABLE>

- ----------
*    The calculations  set forth in this table relating to percentage  ownership
     of Class B Stock include  1,739,250  shares of Class B Stock  issuable upon
     conversion of shares of Class A Stock beneficially owned.

**   Less than five percent.

                                         (Footnotes continued on following page)


                                       8

<PAGE>


(Footnotes continued from preceding page)

(a)  According  to  information  as of February 1, 1999,  and  available  to the
     Company, Mrs. Graham has voting and investment power with respect to shares
     of Class A Stock as follows: sole voting power, 536,257 (30.8%) shares, and
     sole investment power,  536,257 (30.8%) shares. Mrs. Graham also has voting
     and  investment  power with  respect to shares of Class B Stock as follows:
     shared voting power,  115,870 (1.1%) shares,  and shared  investment power,
     115,870 (1.1%) shares.  In addition Mrs.  Graham,  as the  beneficiary of a
     revocable trust, is deemed the beneficial owner of 129,305 (1.3%) shares of
     Class B Stock.  Mrs. Graham is also deemed the beneficial  owner of 536,257
     (5.3%) shares of Class B Stock issuable upon  conversion of shares of Class
     A Stock beneficially owned by her.

(b)  According  to  information  as of  February  1, 1999 and  available  to the
     Company,  Mr. Donald Graham has voting and investment power with respect to
     shares of Class A Stock as follows:  sole  voting  power,  262,314  (15.1%)
     shares, sole investment power, 262,314 (15.1%) shares, shared voting power,
     679,155  (39.0%)  shares,  and shared  investment  power,  679,155  (39.0%)
     shares.  Mr.  Graham also has voting and  investment  power with respect to
     shares of Class B Stock as follows:  sole voting power,  1,958,192  (19.4%)
     shares,  sole investment  power 230,427 (2.3%) shares,  shared voting power
     472,021 (4.7%) shares, and shared investment power,  472,021 (4.7%) shares.
     The  holdings of Class B Stock  recorded  for Mr.  Graham  includes  35,000
     shares  held  by Mr.  Graham's  wife,  in  which  he  disclaims  beneficial
     ownership,  and 941,469 (9.3%) shares issuable upon conversion of shares of
     Class A Stock  beneficially  owned by Mr.  Graham.  The holdings of Class B
     Stock recorded for Mr. Graham also include shares of Class B Stock owned by
     subsidiaries of Berkshire  Hathaway,  Inc.,  which have the sole investment
     power of the shares;  sole voting power is held by Mr.  Donald Graham under
     an agreement  dated as of February  25,  1977,  and amended and extended on
     September  13, 1985,  and on May 15,  1996,  which has a  termination  date
     (which may be extended) of February 24, 2007.

(c)  According  to  information  as of February 1, 1999,  and  available  to the
     Company, Mr. William Graham has voting and investment power with respect to
     shares  of Class A Stock as  follows:  sole  voting  power,  17,514  (1.0%)
     shares, sole investment power,  17,514 (1.0%),  shared voting power, 85,697
     (4.9%)  shares,  and shared  investment  power,  85,697 (4.9%)  shares.  In
     addition,  Mr. William Graham,  as the beneficiary of trusts even though he
     has no voting or investment power with respect thereto, is deemed to be the
     beneficial owner of 124,416 (7.2%) shares of Class A Stock. The holdings of
     Class B Stock  recorded for Mr.  Graham,  including  shares  issuable  upon
     conversion of shares of Class A Stock beneficially owned by Mr. Graham, are
     less than five percent.

(d)  According  to  information  as of February 1, 1999,  and  available  to the
     Company, Mr. Stephen Graham has voting and investment power with respect to
     shares of Class A Stock as  follows:  sole  voting  power,  124,976  (7.2%)
     shares, sole investment power, 124,976 (7.2%) shares,  shared voting power,
     60,497 (3.5%) shares and shared investment power,  60,497 (3.5%) shares. In
     addition,  Mr. Stephen Graham,  as the beneficiary of trusts even though he
     has no voting or investment power with respect thereto, is deemed to be the
     beneficial owner of 124,416 (7.2%) shares of Class A Stock. The holdings of
     Class B Stock  recorded for Mr.  Graham,  including  shares  issuable  upon
     conversion of shares of Class A Stock beneficially owned by Mr. Graham, are
     less than five percent.

(e)  According  to  information  as of February 1, 1999,  and  available  to the
     Company,  Mrs.  Weymouth  has voting and  investment  power with respect to
     shares  of Class A Stock as  follows:  sole  voting  power,  93,834  (5.4%)
     shares, sole investment power,  93,834 (5.4%) shares,  shared voting power,
     248,832  (14.3%)  shares,  and shared  investment  power,  248,832  (14.3%)
     shares.  In addition  Mrs.  Weymouth,  as the  beneficiary  of a trust even
     though she has no voting or  investment  power  with  respect  thereto,  is
     deemed the beneficial owner of 62,208 (3.6%) shares of Class A Stock.  Mrs.
     Weymouth  also has voting and  investment  power with  respect to shares of
     Class B Stock as follows:  sole voting power, 20,000 (less than 1%) shares,
     sole investment power,  20,000 (less than 1%), shared voting and investment
     power,  135,168  (1.3%)  shares.  In  addition,   Mrs.  Weymouth,   as  the
     beneficiary  of a trust even though she has no voting or  investment  power
     with respect  thereto,  is deemed the beneficial  owner of 20,792(less than
     1%)shares  of Class B Stock.  Mrs.  Weymouth is also deemed the  beneficial
     owner of 404,874 (4.0%) of Class B Stock issuable upon conversion of shares
     of Class A Stock beneficially owned by her.

                                         (Footnotes continued on following page)


                                       9

<PAGE>


(Footnotes continued from preceding page)

(f)  According  to  information  as of February 1, 1999,  and  available  to the
     Company,  Mr.  Gillespie,  as  trustee of  various  trusts,  has voting and
     investment power with respect to shares of Class A Stock as follows: shared
     voting power,  455,523 (26.2%) shares, and shared investment power, 455,523
     (26.2%) shares. In addition,  Mr. Gillespie has voting and investment power
     with  respect to shares of Class B Stock as  follows:  sole  voting  power,
     593,606 (5.9%) shares, sole investment power, 139,305 (1.4%) shares, shared
     voting power,  234,823 (2.3%) shares, and shared investment power,  689,124
     (6.8%)  shares.  The holdings of Class B Stock  recorded for Mr.  Gillespie
     include 4,000 shares held in trust for the benefit of Mr. Gillespie's wife,
     in which shares he disclaims any  beneficial  interest,  and 455,523 (4.5%)
     shares  issuable  upon  conversion  of shares of Class A Stock deemed to be
     beneficially owned by Mr. Gillespie, as trustee of various trusts.

(g)  According  to  information  as of February 1, 1999,  and  available  to the
     Company, Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. ("Berkshire") was the beneficial owner of
     1,727,765 (17.1%) shares of Class B Stock. The ownership of these shares is
     through  several  subsidiaries  of  Berkshire.  Mr.  Warren E.  Buffett  is
     Chairman  of the Board of  Berkshire.  Mr.  Buffett,  his wife and  certain
     trusts of which Mr.  Buffett is a trustee,  but in which he has no economic
     interest,  own  approximately  33.9% of the aggregate  economic interest of
     Berkshire Class A and Class B common stock and Mr. Buffett may be deemed to
     be in control of Berkshire under Federal  securities  laws. With respect to
     shares of Class B Stock owned by  subsidiaries  of Berkshire,  Mr. Buffett,
     Berkshire  and such  subsidiaries  may be  considered  to share  investment
     power.  Pursuant to an agreement  dated as of February 25, 1977 and amended
     and  extended  on  September  13,  1985,  and on May 15,  1996 (which has a
     termination  date  (which may be  extended)  of  February  24,  2007),  Mr.
     Buffett,  Berkshire and such  subsidiaries have granted Mr. Donald Graham a
     proxy to vote such shares in his discretion.

(h)  According  to  information  as of February 1, 1999,  and  available  to the
     Company,  Morgan  Guaranty  Trust Company of New York  ("Morgan"),  was the
     beneficial  owner of 661,853  (6.6%)  shares of Class B Stock.  This number
     includes  shares of Class B Stock as to which  Morgan has or shares  voting
     and investment power as follows: sole voting power, 127,762 (1.3%) shares ,
     sole investment power,  176,562 (1.7%) shares,  shared voting power, 28,790
     (less than 1%) shares, and shared investment power, 485,291 (4.8%) shares.

(i)  According  to  information  as of February 1, 1999,  and  available  to the
     Company,  Mr. Donald Graham, Mrs. Weymouth,  and Mr. Gillespie share voting
     and  investment  power over 248,832  (14.3%)  shares of Class A Stock;  Mr.
     Gillespie and Mr.  William  Graham share voting and  investment  power over
     25,200 (1.4%) shares of Class A Stock;  Mr.  Gillespie,  Mr. William Graham
     and Mr. Donald Graham share voting and investment  power over 60,497 (3.5%)
     shares of Class A Stock; Mr.  Gillespie,  Mr. Stephen Graham and Mr. Donald
     Graham share voting and investment power over 60,497 (3.5%) shares of Class
     A Stock;  Mr. Donald Graham and Mr.  Gillespie  share voting and investment
     power over 60,497 (3.5%) shares of Class A Stock;  Mr. Donald Graham,  Mrs.
     Weymouth and Mr.  Gillespie share voting and investment  power over 135,168
     (1.3%) shares of Class B Stock;  Mr. Donald Graham and Mr.  Gillespie share
     voting and  investment  power over 66,333  (less than 1%) shares of Class B
     Stock; Mr. Donald Graham, Mr. Gillespie and Mr. William Graham share voting
     and  investment  power over 23,622  (less than 1%) shares of Class B Stock;
     Mr.  Donald  Graham,  Mrs.  Graham  and  Mr.  Gillespie  share  voting  and
     investment  power of 2,600  (less  than 1%)  shares  of Class B Stock;  Mr.
     Donald  Graham  and Mrs.  Graham  share  voting and  investment  power over
     113,270  (1.1%) shares of Class B Stock held by the Philip L. Graham Trust;
     and Mr.  Gillespie and Morgan Guaranty Trust share  investment  powers over
     456,901 (4.5%) shares of Class B Stock.


                                       10

<PAGE>


     The table below,  which is based upon information  furnished to the Company
by its  Directors and  officers,  shows as of February 1, 1999,  for each person
nominated  for  election  as a Director,  and for all  Directors  and  executive
officers of the Company as a group, the number of shares of each class of Common
Stock   "beneficially   owned"  (as  defined  in  the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission's  proxy  rules) and, in the case of each  nominee for  election as a
Director, the nature of such "beneficial  ownership".  For the reasons set forth
in the first  paragraph  of this section of the Proxy  Statement,  there is very
substantial  duplication in the numbers of shares and  percentages  shown in the
following table.

                      HOLDINGS OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS***

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                            SHARES (%)
                                                   -------------------------------------------------------------
                                                             CLASS A                       CLASS B(E)
                                                   --------------------------   --------------------------------
<S>                                                <C>                          <C>
Warren E. Buffett**** ..........................                   --                       1,727,765(17.1%)
Daniel B. Burke ................................                   --                             500*
James E. Burke .................................                   --                           1,000*
George J. Gillespie, III** .....................              455,523(26.2%)                1,283,952(12.9%)
Ralph E. Gomory ................................                   --                           1,400*
Donald E. Graham**(d) ..........................              941,469(54.1%)                3,406,682(34.5%)
Katharine Graham**(d) ..........................              536,257(30.8%)                  781,432(8.2%)
Donald R. Keough ...............................                   --                             500*
Barbara Scott Preiskel .........................                   --                             350*
William J. Ruane(a) ............................                   --                          13,497*
Richard D. Simmons .............................                   --                           7,428*
Alan G. Spoon(b) ...............................                   --                          58,716*
George W. Wilson ...............................                   --                             200*
All Directors and executive officers as a group,
  eliminating duplications .....................            1,502,926(86.4%)                4,675,670(46.8%)(c)
</TABLE>

- ----------
*    Less than one percent.

**   See Table of "Principal Holders of Stock" on page 8.

***  Unless  otherwise  indicated,  the Directors and officers listed below have
     sole voting and investment power with respect to such securities.

**** With respect to voting  securities  which may be beneficially  owned by Mr.
     Buffett, see footnote (g) on page 10.

                                         (Footnotes continued on following page)


                                       11

<PAGE>


(Footnotes continued from preceding page)

(a)  According  to  information  as of February 1, 1999,  and  available  to the
     Company, this number includes shares of Class B Stock as to which Mr. Ruane
     has voting and investment power as follows: sole voting power, 12,569 (less
     than 1%) shares,  and sole investment power,  13,469 (less than 1%) shares.
     This number  includes 28 shares owned by Mr.  Ruane's  children in which he
     disclaims beneficial ownership.

(b)  This number  includes  51,750 shares of Class B Stock as to which Mr. Spoon
     has a right to  purchase  on or before  April 1, 1999 by  exercise of stock
     option.

(c)  This  number  includes  1,502,926  shares  of Class B Stock  issuable  upon
     conversion of shares of Class A Stock "beneficially owned" by Directors and
     officers and 61,750  shares of Class B Stock which  Directors  and officers
     have the right to  purchase  on or before  April 1, 1999  pursuant to stock
     options;  it does not  include  172,584  shares of Class B Stock held as of
     February 1, 1999 by the trustee of various savings plans  maintained by the
     Company  and its  business  units  over  which the  trustee  has voting and
     investment powers.

(d)  In addition to the  information  set forth in footnote  (i) in the Table of
     "Principal  Holders of Stock",  Mr.  Donald  Graham and Mrs.  Graham  share
     voting and investment  power over 113,270 (1.1%) shares of Class B Stock in
     connection with the Philip L. Graham Fund.

(e)  Includes  1,739,250  shares of Class B Stock  issuable  upon  conversion of
     shares of Class A Stock beneficially owned.

SECTION 16(A) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE

     Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 requires the Company's
directors and executive officers, and persons who own more than ten percent of a
registered class of the Company's equity securities, to file with the Securities
and  Exchange  Commission  and the New York Stock  Exchange  initial  reports of
ownership and reports of changes in ownership of Class B Common Stock.

     To the Company's knowledge, based solely on a review of such reports and on
information  furnished to the Company and written  representations that no other
reports  were  required,  during the  fiscal  year  ended  January 3, 1999,  all
applicable Section 16(a) filing requirements were complied with.


                                       12

<PAGE>


EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

     The following table shows the compensation paid by the Company during 1998,
1997 and 1996 to each of the chief  executive  officer  and the four most highly
compensated executive officers of the Company.

                           SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE
                           --------------------------

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                          ANNUAL COMPENSATION
                                 --------------------------------------
                                                                OTHER
                                                               ANNUAL
         NAME AND                                             COMPENSA-
    PRINCIPAL POSITION     YEAR   SALARY ($)   BONUS ($)(1)   TION ($)
- ------------------------- ------ ------------ -------------- ----------
<S>                       <C>    <C>          <C>            <C>
Donald E. Graham ........ 1998     $399,996            --        --
 Chief Executive          1997      399,996            --        --
 Officer                  1996      399,996            --        --
Alan G. Spoon ........... 1998      605,004      $367,235        --
 President and            1997      540,000       420,390        --
 Chief Operating          1996      499,998       346,500        --
 Officer
John B. Morse, Jr. ...... 1998      309,996       169,353        --
 Vice President and       1997      290,004       203,189        --
 Chief Financial          1996      280,004       174,636        --
 Officer
Beverly R. Keil ......... 1998      279,996       135,968        --
 Vice President           1997      260,004       161,928        --
                          1996      240,000       133,056        --
Diana M. Daniels ........ 1998      252,504       122,614        --
 Vice President           1997      234,504       146,047        --
                          1996      221,670       122,892        --

<CAPTION>

                                       LONG TERM COMPENSATION
                          ------------------------------------------------
                                      AWARDS                  PAYOUTS
                            RESTRICTED      SECURITIES  ------------------   ALL OTHER
         NAME AND              STOCK        UNDERLYING         LTIP          COMPENSA-
    PRINCIPAL POSITION     AWARDS ($)(2)   OPTIONS (#)    PAYOUTS ($)(1)    TION ($)(3)
- ------------------------- --------------- ------------- ------------------ ------------
<S>                       <C>             <C>           <C>                <C>
Donald E. Graham ........     $171,000            --                 --       $ 8,320
 Chief Executive               148,838            --      $     871,416         8,320
 Officer                            --            --                 --         7,800
Alan G. Spoon ...........      171,000            --                 --        31,460
 President and                 132,300        50,000          4,898,434(4)     28,083
 Chief Operating                    --            --                 --        26,000
 Officer
John B. Morse, Jr. ......       99,750         1,000                 --        16,120
 Vice President and             66,150            --            294,588        15,080
 Chief Financial                    --         1,000                 --        14,560
 Officer
Beverly R. Keil .........       85,500            --                 --        14,560
 Vice President                 49,613         2,000            168,021        13,520
                                    --         1,000                 --        12,480
Diana M. Daniels ........       71,250            --                 --        13,130
 Vice President                 49,613            --            168,021        12,194
                                    --         1,000                 --        11,572
</TABLE>

- ----------
(1)  Awards may be in the form of cash or deferred cash.

(2)  The numbers in this column  represent  the dollar  value of the  restricted
     stock awarded to the named executive in the relevant fiscal year. As of the
     end of  fiscal  1998,  the Chief  Executive  Officer  and the  other  named
     executives  had the following  aggregate  restricted  stock  holdings:  Mr.
     Graham--1,301  shares,  $741,570;  Mr. Spoon--1164  shares,  $663,480;  Mr.
     Morse--655  shares,  $373,350;  Ms.  Keil--513  shares,  $292,410;  and Ms.
     Daniels--488 shares,  $278,160.  Dividends are paid on restricted stock and
     are the same as dividends on non-restricted stock.

(3)  Contributions  to  401(k)  savings  plans  and the  Supplemental  Executive
     Retirement Plan ("SERP")  constitute "all other  compensation"  for 1998 as
     follows:  Mr.  Graham--$8,320 in Company  contributions to 401(k) plan; Mr.
     Spoon--$8,320  in  Company  contributions  to 401(k)  plan and  $23,140  in
     Company credits to SERP account; Mr. Morse--$8,320 in Company contributions
     to  401(k)  plan  and  $7,800  in  Company  credits  to SERP  account;  Ms.
     Keil--$8,320 in Company  contributions to 401(k) plan and $6,240 in Company
     credits to SERP account; and Ms.  Daniels--$8,320 in Company  contributions
     to 401(k) and $4,810 in Company credits to SERP account.

(4)  Mr. Spoon received a payout for performance units awarded under the 1993-96
     Award  Cycle of the  Company's  Long-Term  Incentive  Compensation  Plan of
     $718,830  and a payout  of  $4,179,604  under a special  incentive  program
     created  in 1995 for Mr.  Spoon by the  Compensation  Committee,  which was
     based  primarily on the  attainment of financial  goals relating to average
     annual  operating  income and cumulative cash flow targets for three of the
     Company's major business units.


                                       13

<PAGE>


                        OPTION GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                  POTENTIAL REALIZABLE  
                                                                                 VALUE AT ASSUMED ANNUAL
                                                                                          RATES         
                                                                                     OF STOCK PRICE     
                               INDIVIDUAL GRANTS                                      APPRECIATION      
                        --------------------------------------------------------     FOR OPTION TERM    
                         NUMBER OF       PERCENT OF                                  ---------------    
                         SECURITIES    TOTAL OPTIONS
                         UNDERLYING     GRANTED TO     EXERCISE OF
                           OPTION        EMPLOYEES     BASE PRICE   EXPIRATION
NAME                     GRANTED (#)   IN FISCAL YEAR     ($/SH)        DATE        5%($)       10%($)
- ----------------------- ------------- ---------------- ------------ ----------- ------------ ------------
<S>                     <C>           <C>              <C>          <C>         <C>          <C>
Donald E. Graham ......        --             --               --          --           --          --
Alan G. Spoon .........        --             --               --          --           --          --
John B. Morse,Jr. .....     1,000            3.9%        $ 517.25    12/11/08    $ 325,300   $ 824,370
Beverly R. Keil .......        --             --               --          --           --          --
Diana M. Daniels ......        --             --               --          --           --       --
</TABLE>

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

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                               VALUE OF
                                                        NUMBER OF            UNEXERCISED
                                                       UNEXERCISED           IN-THE-MONEY
                                                        OPTIONS AT            OPTIONS AT
                                                     FISCAL YEAR-END       FISCAL YEAR-END
                                                           (#)                   ($)
                                                    ----------------- -------------------------
                             SHARES
                          ACQUIRED ON      VALUE       EXERCISABLE/          EXERCISABLE/
          NAME            EXERCISE(#)   REALIZED($)   UNEXERCISABLE         UNEXERCISABLE
- ------------------------ ------------- ------------ ----------------- -------------------------
<S>                      <C>           <C>          <C>               <C>
Donald E. Graham .......        --              --         --                   --
Alan G. Spoon ..........     5,000      $1,491,250   51,750/61,250     $4,923,688/$13,087,500
John B. Morse, Jr. .....        --              --    3,500/1,500      $   1,212,844/$181,156
Beverly R. Keil ........        --              --    3,000/2,000      $     838,031/$280,531
Diana M. Daniels .......        --              --     3,500/500       $   1,204,031/$118,156
</TABLE>


                                       14

<PAGE>


           LONG-TERM INCENTIVE PLANS -- AWARDS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR(1)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                  NUMBER OF         PERFORMANCE           ESTIMATED FUTURE PAYOUTS UNDER
                                SHARES, UNITS     OR OTHER PERIOD           NON-STOCK PRICE-BASED PLANS
                                   OR OTHER       UNTIL MATURATION   -----------------------------------------
            NAME                    RIGHTS           OR PAYOUT        THRESHOLD       TARGET        MAXIMUM
            ----                    ------           ---------        ---------       ------        -------
<S>                            <C>               <C>                 <C>           <C>           <C>
Donald E. Graham ...........       7,500             12/31/02         $375,000      $750,000      $1,375,000
Alan G. Spoon ..............       7,500             12/31/02          375,000       750,000       1,375,000
John B. Morse, Jr. .........       2,600             12/31/02          130,000       260,000         476,666
Beverly R. Keil ............       1,900             12/31/02           95,000       190,000         348,333
Diana M. Daniels ...........       1,500             12/31/02           75,000       150,000         275,000
</TABLE>

- ----------
(1)  In December  1998,  the  Compensation  Committee  of the Board of Directors
     approved  grants of  Performance  Units for the  1999-2002  Award  Cycle to
     various key employees of the Company, including the Chief Executive Officer
     and the four most highly compensated executive officers as set forth in the
     table. The payout opportunities will be based on the achievement of various
     financial  targets  for major  operating  units of the  Company and for the
     Company's consolidated operations.


                                       15

<PAGE>



                               RETIREMENT PLANS

     Basic Plan.  Most  employees  of the  Company,  including  the  individuals
identified  in the table on page 13, are  eligible  to  participate  (subject to
minimum service  requirements) in the Company's defined benefit retirement plan.
(Prior to 1996, the Company and its newspaper,  magazine and broadcast divisions
maintained separate defined benefit plans. These plans have been merged into the
Company  plan.)  Benefits  under this basic plan are  determined on the basis of
base salary  only,  exclusive of all bonuses,  deferred  compensation  and other
forms of remuneration.  The Company and each of its business units also maintain
401(k)  savings  plans in which  most  employees  are  eligible  to  participate
(subject to minimum service requirements).

     Supplemental  Executive  Retirement  Plan.  All amounts over  $130,000 that
would  otherwise be payable under a basic defined  benefit  retirement  plan are
currently subject to reduction because of the annual pension  limitation imposed
by the Tax Equity and Fiscal  Responsibility Act of 1982, although the extent of
such reductions may vary in individual cases depending on circumstances existing
at the time retirement payments commence.  In addition,  defined benefit pension
benefits and defined  contribution plan benefits payable by tax-qualified  plans
may not be based on annual compensation exceeding maximum amounts imposed by the
Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993 (currently $160,000 per year).

     To offset these  limitations on retirement  benefits,  the Company  adopted
effective January 1, 1989, an unfunded  Supplemental  Executive  Retirement Plan
(the  "SERP")  which is  patterned  after  similar  plans  adopted by many other
companies.  Under the  Company's  SERP  there  will be  calculated  for  certain
participating executives (including the executive officers included in the table
on page 13) a "supplemented normal retirement benefit", which will be determined
under the rules of the qualified  defined benefit  retirement  plan, but without
reference to either of the above-mentioned  limitations and will also include in
earnings not only base salary (as in the past) but also bonuses under the Annual
Incentive  Compensation  Plan.  The SERP also  provides a  supplemental  defined
contribution  plan benefit,  which is equal to the applicable  company  matching
contribution percentage times the participating  executive's base salary that is
in excess of the annual  covered  compensation  limit with  respect to qualified
plan benefits.  The executive is required to make  contributions  to the SERP in
order to receive the applicable  matching company credit each year.  Starting in
1994,  a number of other  management  employees  (not  including  the  executive
officers  included  in the  table  on page 13)  became  participants  under  the
Company's SERP with respect to the supplemental  normal retirement benefit only.
For these  participants,  the supplemented  normal  retirement  benefits will be
determined without reference to either of the above-mentioned  limitations,  but
will include in earnings only base salary and not bonuses. In each case in which
a retiring  executive's  supplemented  normal  retirement  benefit  exceeds  the
benefit  payable  by the  retirement  plan or plans in which the  executive  has
participated,  the  Company  will  pay  such  excess  amount  to him or her as a
supplemental retirement benefit.  Participation in the SERP is determined by the
Compensation  Committee  of the  Board of  Directors,  which has  designated  as
participants a num-


                                       16

<PAGE>


ber of  senior  executives  including  all  those  named in the table on page 13
(except  that Mr.  Graham,  who has elected not to  participate  in savings plan
features of the SERP,  will be covered only by the  retirement  plan features of
the SERP described above).

     As of  December  31,  1998,  Mr.  Graham had 25 years of service  under the
Company  plan,  Mr. Spoon had 17 years of service  under the Company  plan,  Mr.
Morse had 10 years of service under the Company  plan,  Ms. Keil had 20 years of
service  under the Company plan,  and Ms.  Daniels had 21 years of service under
the Company plan.

     The following  table shows the estimated  maximum annual  benefits  payable
upon   retirement   at  age  65  to  persons  in  specified   remuneration   and
years-of-service  classifications  who participate in both the basic  retirement
plans and the SERP (which includes all the  individuals  identified in the table
on page 13):

                              PENSION PLAN TABLES
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                   ESTIMATED MAXIMUM ANNUAL PENSION (COMPUTED AS
    COVERED                                 STRAIGHT LIFE ANNUITY) FOR
 COMPENSATION                        REPRESENTATIVE YEARS OF CREDITED SERVICE
- --------------   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    COMPANY
  PLAN(A)(B)          10            15            20            25            30            35
- --------------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------   -----------
<S>              <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>
$   300,000       $ 54,000      $ 81,000      $108,000      $135,000      $162,000      $162,000
    400,000         71,500       107,250       143,000       178,750       214,500       214,500
    450,000         80,250       120,375       160,500       200,625       240,750       240,750
    500,000         89,000       133,500       178,000       222,500       267,000       267,000
    550,000         97,750       146,625       195,500       244,375       293,250       293,250
    600,000        106,500       159,750       213,000       266,250       319,500       319,500
    650,000        115,250       172,875       230,500       288,125       345,750       345,750
    700,000        124,000       186,000       248,000       310,000       372,000       372,000
    750,000        132,750       199,125       265,500       331,875       398,250       398,250
    800,000        141,500       212,250       283,000       353,750       424,500       424,500
    850,000        150,250       225,375       300,500       375,625       450,750       450,750
</TABLE>

- ----------
(a)  Before deducting the effect on benefits of an offset  applicable to certain
     benefits paid under the Company Plan and based on average  social  security
     covered compensation over the employee's career. For an individual retiring
     at age 65 during 1999 the  deduction  would be as follows for the indicated
     number of years of credited service: 10 years, $2,480; 15 years, $3,719; 20
     years, $4,959; 25 years, $6,199; 30 and 35 years, $7,439.

(b)  Plan  provides  increased  benefits  for years of service  after 1991.  The
     benefits shown in the table are those provided for service after that year.


                                       17

<PAGE>


            COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

OVERALL POLICY

     The Company's executive  compensation  program is based on the premise that
compensation should be competitive and linked to corporate performance.  To that
end, the Company has developed an overall compensation strategy and compensation
plans that tie a significant portion of executive  compensation to the Company's
success in meeting specified  short-term and long-term  performance goals and to
long-term  appreciation in the Company's stock price. The strategy also supports
an environment that rewards Company and business unit achievement as compared to
that  of  industry  performance  levels  over a  number  of  years,  where  such
comparisons  are  appropriate.  The overall  objectives  of this strategy are to
attract and retain key executive talent critical to the long-term success of the
Company, to motivate these executives to achieve goals inherent in the Company's
business  strategy,   to  link  executive  and  shareholder   interests  through
equity-based plans and finally to provide a compensation package that recognizes
individual contributions as well as overall business results.

     Each  year  the  Compensation  Committee  conducts  a  full  review  of the
Company's executive  compensation  program. This review includes a comprehensive
report  from the  Company's  Vice  President  responsible  for  human  resources
assessing the effectiveness of the Company's  compensation program and comparing
the Company's executive compensation,  corporate performance and total return to
shareholders to a group of corporations  that represent  companies with business
portfolios  similar to that of the Company.  The Compensation  Committee reviews
the  selection  of  peer  companies  used  for  compensation  purposes.  Certain
information about compensation  levels in other media companies included in this
report is collected by independent consultants.  The Compensation Committee uses
the median executive compensation range of such peer companies as a guideline in
evaluating the compensation of the Company's executives. The peer companies used
for  compensation  purposes are constructed on a division by division basis. For
example,  in  determining  the  companies  by which  to  measure  the  Company's
broadcasting division, the comparison is made with purely broadcasting companies
or broadcasting  divisions within multimedia companies.  The annual compensation
reviews  permit an ongoing  evaluation of the link between the Company's and its
business units' performance and its executive compensation in the context of the
compensation  programs of other  companies and of the Company's  total return to
shareholders.

     The Compensation Committee determines the compensation of approximately the
80 most highly compensated  corporate and divisional  executives,  including the
chief executive officer and the other individuals whose compensation is detailed
in this proxy  statement (the "named  executives").  In reviewing the individual
performance  of  these   executives,   including  the  named   executives,   the
Compensation  Committee takes into account the views of Mr. Graham and Mr. Spoon
(who expressed no view with respect to his own salary).


                                       18

<PAGE>


     The key elements of the Company's  executive  compensation  consist of base
salary, annual bonus, performance units, restricted stock and stock options. The
Compensation  Committee's  policies  with  respect  to each of  these  elements,
including the bases for the  compensation  awarded to Mr. Graham,  the Company's
chief executive officer, are discussed below. In addition, while the elements of
compensation  described  below  are  considered  separately,   the  Compensation
Committee  takes into  account  the full  compensation  package  afforded by the
Company  to an  individual,  including  special  incentive  compensation  plans,
pension and savings plan benefits,  supplemental  retirement  benefits and other
benefits as well.

BASE SALARIES

     Base salaries for executive officers are initially determined by evaluating
the  responsibilities of the position held and the experience of the individual,
and by reference to the competitive marketplace for executive talent, including,
where available, a comparison to base salaries for comparable positions at other
media companies.

     Salary  adjustments  are generally  implemented on a twelve-month or longer
cycle and upon  promotion.  Such  adjustments  are  determined by evaluating the
performance of the Company and the individual  executive  officer,  and may also
take into account new  responsibilities.  In the case of executive officers with
responsibility for a particular business unit, such unit's financial results are
also considered,  including,  depending on the business unit, revenue, operating
income  and cash flow.  The  Compensation  Committee,  where  appropriate,  also
considers other measures.  These may include, among other factors,  increases in
market share, reduction or cost containment in operating expenses,  journalistic
achievements, improvements in product quality and improvements in relations with
customers,  suppliers  and  employees,  and  comparisons  to base  salaries  for
comparable positions at other media companies.  In order to preserve flexibility
in setting compensation, the Compensation Committee has not established specific
elements of Company or business  unit  performance  which must be  evaluated  or
assigned relative weights to such elements.  Different factors are considered in
evaluating  each  executive  officer's  base salary  depending on such officer's
position and business unit.

     With  respect  to  the  base  salary  paid  to  Mr.  Graham  in  1998,  the
Compensation  Committee took into account a comparison of base salaries of chief
executive  officers of peer  companies,  the  Company's  results in 1997 and the
performance of the Company.  The  Compensation  Committee also took into account
Mr. Graham's service to the Company and his performance  since 1979 as publisher
of The Washington Post. The Compensation  Committee noted that Mr. Graham's base
salary  is  significantly  below  the  median  of base  salaries  paid to  chief
executive  officers of peer companies;  and furthermore  that the performance of
the Company in 1997  exceeded  budgeted  financial  goals.  However,  due to Mr.
Graham's  continued  request,  for  personal  reasons,  to forego a base  salary
increase,  Mr.  Graham's  base salary in 1998  remained at  $400,000,  the level
established in 1991 upon his promotion to President and chief executive officer.
The Compensation Committee


                                       19

<PAGE>


does not give  significance  to the  below  market  salary  of Mr.  Graham  when
reviewing and establishing base salary levels for other executives.

INCENTIVE COMPENSATION PLANS

     The Company has two incentive  compensation  plans -- the Annual  Incentive
Compensation Plan and the Long-Term  Incentive  Compensation Plan -- under which
awards  are  made  primarily  to  key  management  and  professional  employees,
including the Company's executive  officers,  who have made or are in a position
to make  significant  contributions  to the  profitability  of the  Company  and
enhance  shareholder  value.  Each  plan  is  administered  by the  Compensation
Committee.

ANNUAL BONUS PLAN

     The  Company's  Annual  Incentive  Compensation  Plan  provides  for annual
incentive  compensation  awards based on the Company's  and its business  units'
short-term,  i.e.,  annual,  financial  performance.  At the  end of  1997,  the
Compensation  Committee  approved a range of incentive payouts for 1998 keyed to
performance  against specified goals related to budgeted operating income,  cash
flow or earnings  per share,  which vary by business  unit.  In 1998 the Company
exceeded its budgeted  earnings per share goal. Mr. Graham waived  participation
in the Annual Incentive  Compensation  Plan with respect to 1998.  Awards to the
other  executives  whose  compensation  is detailed in this proxy  statement are
shown in the column headed  "Bonus" in the Summary  Compensation  Table shown on
page 13.

LONG-TERM PLAN

     To balance the Annual  Incentive  Compensation  Plan,  which is intended to
reward  short-term  financial  performance,  the Company's  Long-Term  Incentive
Compensation  Plan (the  "Long-Term  Plan")  provides  incentives  for  improved
financial performance over periods of Award Cycles (which beginning in 1983 have
consisted,  and are  expected  to  continue to  consist,  of  four-year  periods
starting at two-year intervals).

   Performance Units.

     In December 1998, executive officers, including the Chief Executive Officer
and the four most highly  compensated  executive  officers of the Company,  were
granted  Performance  Units for the  1999-2002  Award  Cycle.  Pursuant to these
grants,  the chief  executive  officer  and the named  executives  received  the
following:  Donald E. Graham,  7,500  Performance  Units;  Alan G. Spoon,  7,500
Performance Units; John B. Morse, Jr., 2,600 Performance Units; Beverly R. Keil,
1,900 Performance  Units; and Diana M. Daniels,  1,500 Performance  Units. As in
the past, each Performance Unit has a nominal value of $100. The number of Units
awarded   is   determined   with   reference   to  an   individual's   scope  of
responsibilities and level of Plan participation. The payout opportunities


                                       20

<PAGE>


for the 1999-2002 Award Cycle for Performance Units granted to these individuals
will be  based  on the  achievement  of  various  financial  targets  for  major
operating units of the Company and for the Company's consolidated operations.

     In December  1996,  the  Compensation  Committee  of the Board of Directors
approved grants of Performance Units under the Company's  Long-Term Plan for the
1997-2000  Award Cycle to various key  employees of the Company,  including  the
chief  executive  officer and the executive  officers named in the table on page
13.  Pursuant  to these  grants,  the  chief  executive  officer  and the  named
executives  received the following:  Donald E. Graham,  7,000 Performance Units;
Alan G. Spoon,  6,000  Performance  Units; John B. Morse, Jr., 2,200 Performance
Units;  Beverly R. Keil, 1,600  Performance  Units; and Diana M. Daniels,  1,400
Performance Units. Each Performance Unit has a nominal value of $100. The number
of Units  awarded was  determined  with  reference to an  individual's  scope of
responsibilities  and  level of  participation.  The  payout  opportunities  for
Messrs.  Graham and Spoon the other  executive  officers  named are based on the
simple  average of the earned payouts for the major  operating  divisions of the
Company (66.6% weighting), and the Company's total shareholder return during the
Award  Cycle  compared to total  shareholder  returns of peer  companies  (33.3%
weighting).

     In December 1994, executive officers, including the chief executive officer
and the  executive  officers  named  in the  table  on  page  13,  were  granted
Performance  Units for the 1995-1998 Award Cycle.  The payout  opportunities  of
Messrs.  Graham and Spoon,  and the other  executive  officers  was based on the
simple  average of the  payout  values  based on the  achievement  of  financial
targets  by  each  of the  Company's  four  major  operating  divisions  and the
Company's  total  shareholder  return  during the Award Cycle  compared to total
shareholder  returns  of  peer  companies  (33.3%  weighting).  The  final  Unit
valuation for the 1995-1998  Award Cycle will be determined by the  Compensation
Committee in May 1999.

   Restricted Stock.

     In December 1998,  executive  officers and other key employees were granted
new Restricted Stock for the 1999-2002 Award Cycle, based on plan levels similar
to those used for determining the number of shares of Restricted  Stock in prior
years,  including 300 shares of  Restricted  Stock  awarded to Mr.  Graham.  The
number of shares of Restricted  Stock  awarded is determined by an  individual's
scope of responsibilities  and relative level of Plan  participation.  Awards to
the named  executives  are  referenced  in the  footnote  to the  column  headed
"Restricted Stock Awards" in the Summary Compensation Table shown on page 13.

     In December 1996, the named executives and other key employees were granted
Restricted Stock for the 1997-2000 Award Cycle,  based on plan levels similar to
those used for  determining  the number of shares of  Restricted  Stock in prior
years,  including 450 shares of  Restricted  Stock  awarded to Mr.  Graham.  The
footnote  to  the  column  headed  "Restricted  Stock  Awards"  in  the  Summary
Compensation  Table shown on page 13  includes  the shares of  Restricted  Stock
awarded for the 1997-2000 Award Cycle.


                                       21

<PAGE>


     On January 5, 1999,  the  restrictions  terminated  on shares of Restricted
Stock awarded to Mr. Graham and the other named executives for the 1995-98 Award
Cycle. Mr. Graham received unrestricted title to 551 shares having a fair market
value of $319,184 on January 5, 1999.

   Special Incentives.

     From  time to time  the  Compensation  Committee  adopts  special  targeted
incentive  plans for key  executives.  These  plans  provide a one-time  special
incentive opportunity based on the achievement of special quantifiable operating
objectives.  In 1998 the Committee  adopted a special  incentive program for Mr.
Spoon. A special  incentive may be earned at the end of 2000, based  principally
on the  attainment  of  financial  goals  specified  in this  plan  relating  to
cumulative  operating  income targets and other cash flow and operating  targets
for the Company's major business units that report to him. No incentives will be
paid if the financial goals are not met.

     At the end of 1997,  Mr.  Spoon  earned a  one-time  award  under a special
incentive  plan that was adopted in 1995.  Under that plan, a special  incentive
was earned based  principally on the attainment of financial  goals specified in
the plan  primarily  relating to average  annual  operating  income  targets and
cumulative cash flow targets for three of the Company's major business units.

STOCK OPTION PLAN

     Under the Company's Stock Option Plan,  which was approved by shareholders,
shares of Class B Stock are  issuable  upon the  exercise of stock  options that
have  been  or  may  be  granted  to  key  employees  of  the  Company  and  its
subsidiaries,  including the executives  whose  compensation is detailed in this
proxy statement.

     The Compensation  Committee  believes that significant  equity interests in
the Company held by key employees  responsible  for the Company's  future growth
and continued success align the interests of shareholders and management,  since
the full benefit of the  compensation  package  cannot be realized  unless stock
appreciation occurs over a number of years. In the opinion of management,  which
is  concurred  in by the  Compensation  Committee,  there are at  present 54 key
employees  who fall  within that  category.  Although  there is no target  stock
ownership  level for key employees,  in  determining  the number of shares to be
granted under options, the Compensation  Committee takes into account the amount
and value of options currently held, as well as makes a judgment about the level
of  contribution  already  made by and the  potential  of such key  employees to
continue to make contributions to the Company.  The Compensation  Committee does
not assign relative weights to such factors.

     Given  Mr.  Graham's  significant ownership in the Company (see description
of   holdings   under   "Stock   Holdings   of  Certain  Beneficial  Owners  and
Management"),  the  Compensation  Committee has not granted any stock options to
Mr. Graham.


                                       22

<PAGE>


     In 1998,  one  non-qualified  stock  option was granted to Mr. Morse at the
fair market value price on the date of grant.  No other stock option awards were
granted to the executives whose compensation is detailed in this proxy statement
during 1998.

OTHER COMPENSATION PLANS

     At various  times in the past the Company has adopted  certain  broad-based
employee  benefit  plans in which  the  chief  executive  officer  and the other
individuals whose  compensation is detailed in this proxy statement are eligible
to participate on the same terms as non-executive  employees who meet applicable
eligibility  criteria,  subject to applicable legal limitations on the amount of
benefits that may be payable pursuant to those plans. Benefits under the savings
and retirement plans are not tied to Company performance.

     For the chief  executive  officer and certain other senior  executives  and
managerial employees including the named executives,  the Company's Supplemental
Executive  Retirement Plan ("SERP")  provides  tax-deferred  accruals of amounts
proportionate to the benefits available to non-highly  compensated  participants
in the  Company's  savings  and  retirement  plans,  but which  exceed  benefits
permitted  under  the  Company's  plans due to tax law  limitations.  In 1998 no
amount was  accrued for the  benefit of Mr.  Graham with  respect to an employer
credit under the Company's SERP inasmuch as Mr. Graham waived his right for 1998
to maintain a separate  unfunded savings plan account under the SERP. The amount
accrued to the named  executives  are shown in the footnote to the column headed
"All other compensation" in the Summary Compensation Table shown on page 13. The
estimated  annual  pension  amounts  set  forth in the table on page 18 show the
maximum  benefits  payable to Mr. Graham and the named  executives to the extent
they  participate in the basic  retirement plan and the  supplemental  executive
retirement  plan.  The benefits  payable to Mr. Graham and the named  executives
under the SERP are determined with reference to compensation  including  bonuses
under the Annual Incentive Compensation Plan.

     The Company has in place a voluntary  deferred  compensation plan for named
executives.  The plan provides an opportunity for participants to elect to defer
the receipt of all or a portion of cash awards under the annual and/or long-term
cash  incentive  plans.  Elections  to defer must be filed in advance of earning
such awards.  Deferred  amounts will earn investment  credits in accordance with
participant elections from a choice of investment indexes. Deferred amounts will
be  payable  at  retirement  or  such  other  future  date as  specified  by the
participant at the time of election.

CONCLUSION

     Through  the  programs  described  above,  a  significant  portion  of  the
Company's  executive  compensation  is  linked  directly  to  business  unit and
corporate performance and stock price appreciation.  The Compensation  Committee
intends to continue the policy of linking  executive  compensation  to corporate
performance and returns to shareholders and deems it desirable that compensation
paid under the Annual  Incentive  Compensation  Plan,  the  Long-Term  Incentive
Compensation


                                       23

<PAGE>


Plan  and  the  Stock  Option  Plan  meet  the  performance-based   compensation
requirements  of  Section  162(m)  of  the  Internal   Revenue  Code  concerning
deductibility of executive  compensation.  However,  the Committee  reserves the
right to put in place compensation programs that do not meet the requirements of
Section 162(m) so as to result in compensation  payments that are not deductible
by the  Company,  if such  programs are  otherwise in the best  interests of the
Company.

                              George W. Wilson, Chairman
                              Daniel B. Burke
                              James E. Burke
                              Donald R. Keough

COMPENSATION COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION

     Daniel B. Burke,  James E. Burke,  Donald R.  Keough,  and George W. Wilson
served  as  members  of the  Compensation  Committee  in 1998.  No member of the
Compensation  Committee  was,  during the fiscal year, an officer or employee of
the Company or any of its  subsidiaries or formerly an officer of the Company or
any of its subsidiaries or had any relationship  requiring disclosure under Item
404 of Regulation S-K.

                                PERFORMANCE GRAPH

     The following graph is a comparison of the yearly  percentage change in the
Company's  cumulative total shareholder  return with the cumulative total return
of  the   Standard  &  Poor's  500  Stock  Index  and  the   Standard  &  Poor's
Publishing/Newspapers  Index. The Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index is comprised
of 500 U.S. companies in the industrial, transportation, utilities and financial
industries,   weighted  by  market   capitalization.   The   Standard  &  Poor's
Publishing/Newspapers  Index is comprised of Dow Jones & Company,  Inc., Gannett
Co., Inc.,  Knight-Ridder,  Inc.,  The New York Times Company,  The Times Mirror
Company and Tribune Company, weighted by market capitalization.

     The graph  reflects  the  investment  of $100 on  December  31, 1993 in the
Company's  Class B Common  Stock,  the Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index and the
Standard & Poor's  Publishing/  Newspapers Index. For purposes of this graph, it
has been assumed that dividends were  reinvested on the date paid in the case of
the Company and the group of peer issuers and on quarterly  basis in the case of
the Standard & Poor's 500 Index and the  Standard & Poor's  Publishing/Newspaper
Index.


                                       24

<PAGE>


                           THE WASHINGTON POST COMPANY

                     CUMULATIVE TOTAL SHAREHOLDER RETURN FOR
                    FIVE-YEAR PERIOD ENDING DECEMBER 31, 1998


                               [GRAPHIC OMITTED]


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
     DECEMBER 31,...              1993         1994          1995          1996          1997          1998
     ---------------              ----         ----          ----          ----          ----          ----
<S>                              <C>           <C>          <C>           <C>           <C>           <C>
 WASHINGTON POST                 100.00         96.84       114.51        138.14        203.08        243.59
 S&P 500                         100.00        101.32       139.40        171.40        228.59        293.91
 S&P PUBLISHING (NEWSPAPERS)     100.00         92.38       116.39        147.97        241.22        249.67
</TABLE>


                                       25

<PAGE>


CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS

     The firm of Ruane,  Cunniff & Co.,  Inc., of which Mr.  William J. Ruane, a
Director of the Company,  is Chairman of the Board and a principal owner, is one
of two firms that managed the  investment of the Company's  retirement  funds in
1998, for which services it received $3,283,462.

     Effective May 1, 1998, the Company  renewed a contract with Mrs.  Elizabeth
Weymouth,  the daughter of Mrs.  Katharine  Graham and the sister of Mr.  Donald
Graham,  under which she contributes  articles to The Washington Post newspaper.
Since May 1998,  Mrs.  Weymouth  has  received  compensation  of  $85,000  on an
annualized basis and reimbursement of certain expenses associated with providing
those articles. In addition in 1998, Newsweek,  Inc., a wholly-owned  subsidiary
of the Company,  entered into an agreement with Mrs.  Weymouth,  under which she
contributes  articles to Newsweek  magazine.  During  1998,  Mrs.  Weymouth  has
received  compensation  of  $47,000  (in the  form of fees and a  retainer)  and
reimbursement of certain expenses associated with providing those articles.


                 OTHER MATTERS THAT MAY COME BEFORE THE MEETING

     As of the date of this Proxy  Statement  the only matters that the Board of
Directors  expects to present to the meeting are those discussed  herein. If any
other  matter  or  matters  are  properly  brought  before  the  meeting  or any
adjournment   thereof,  it  is  the  intention  of  the  persons  named  in  the
accompanying  form of Proxy to vote on those  matters in  accordance  with their
best judgment.

     Upon the recommendation of the Audit Committee,  the Board of Directors has
selected  PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as the Company's independent accountants to
audit and report on its financial  statements for the fiscal year 1998. The same
firm has acted as the Company's independent  accountants  continuously since the
Company  was  organized  in 1946.  As in previous  years,  a  representative  of
PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP will be present at the Annual Meeting, will have the
opportunity  to make any  statement he may desire with respect to the  Company's
financial  statements for 1998 and his firm's relationship with the Company, and
will be available to respond to appropriate questions from stockholders.


                                       26

<PAGE>


                                    NOTICE OF
                                 ANNUAL MEETING
                                       AND
                                 PROXY STATEMENT
                                      1999




                           THE WASHINGTON POST COMPANY
                           ---------------------------


<PAGE>

[X]  PLEASE   MARK   YOUR
     VOTES   AS  IN  THIS
     EXAMPLE.

     THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED AS  SPECIFIED.  IF NO  DIRECTION IS
GIVEN, THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED "FOR" PROPOSALS 1 AND 2.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                         FOR       WITHHELD
1.   Election     of     [ ]         [ ]     Nominees: Warren E. Buffett, George
     Directors                               J. Gillespie, III, Ralph E. Gomory,
     (Check only one                         Donald E. Graham, Katharine Graham,
     box)                                    William   J.   Ruane,   Richard  D.
                                             Simmons,  Alan G. Spoon,  George W.
                                             Wilson.                            
For   all   nominees   (except   as
stockholder may indicate below)

                                      FOR    AGAINST   ABSTAIN
2.   To    transact    such   other   [ ]      [ ]       [ ]
     business as may properly  come
     before  said  meeting  or  any
     adjournment thereof.
                                      I will attend the meeting. [ ]
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


                                        Please  sign  exactly  as  name  appears
                                        hereon.  Joint owners  should each sign.
                                        When  signing  as  attorney,   executor,
                                        administrator,   trustee  or   guardian,
                                        please  give full title as such.  If the
                                        signer  is a  corporation,  please  sign
                                        full corporate  name by duly  authorized
                                        officer.


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

                                      ------------------------------------------
                                                  SIGNATURE(S)        DATE

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

   P                       THE WASHINGTON POST COMPANY
   R                          CLASS A COMMON STOCK
   O           PROXY--ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS--MAY 13, 1999
   X              SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
   Y

The  undersigned  hereby  appoints  Katharine  Graham, Donald E. Graham, Alan G.
Spoon,  John  B. Morse, Jr. and Diana M. Daniels, and each of them, his/her true
and  lawful  agents  and  proxies,  with  full power of substitution in each, to
represent  the  undersigned,  and  to  vote  as indicated on the reverse of this
Proxy  all  shares  of Class A Common Stock which the undersigned is entitled to
vote,  at  the  Annual Meeting of Stockholders of THE WASHINGTON POST COMPANY to
be  held on May 13, 1999, and at any adjournments thereof, on all matters coming
before said meeting.

THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED AS SPECIFIED ON THE REVERSE SIDE

                                   (CONTINUED, AND TO BE SIGNED ON REVERSE SIDE)


<PAGE>


   P                       THE WASHINGTON POST COMPANY
   R                          CLASS B COMMON STOCK
   O           PROXY--ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS--MAY 13, 1999
   X              SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
   Y

The  undersigned  hereby  appoints  Katharine  Graham, Donald E. Graham, Alan G.
Spoon,  John  B. Morse, Jr. and Diana M. Daniels, and each of them, his/her true
and  lawful  agents  and  proxies,  with  full power of substitution in each, to
represent  the  undersigned,  and  to  vote  as indicated on the reverse of this
Proxy  all  shares  of Class B Common Stock which the undersigned is entitled to
vote,  at  the  Annual Meeting of Stockholders of THE WASHINGTON POST COMPANY to
be  held on May 13, 1999, and at any adjournments thereof, on all matters coming
before said meeting.

THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED AS SPECIFIED ON THE REVERSE SIDE

                                   (CONTINUED, AND TO BE SIGNED ON REVERSE SIDE)


<PAGE>

[X]  PLEASE   MARK   YOUR
     VOTES   AS  IN  THIS
     EXAMPLE.

     THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED AS  SPECIFIED.  IF NO  DIRECTION IS
GIVEN, THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED "FOR" PROPOSALS 1 AND 2.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                         FOR       WITHHELD
1.   Election     of     [ ]         [ ]     Nominees: Daniel B. Burke, James E.
     Directors                               Burke, Donald R. Keough and Barbara
     (Check only one                         Scott Preiskel                     
     box)

For all nominees  (except as stockholder
may indicate below)

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


                         FOR   AGAINST   ABSTAIN
2.   To     transact     [ ]     [ ]       [ ]
     such      other
     business as may
     properly   come
     before     said
     meeting  or any
     adjournment
     thereof.            I will attend the meeting. [ ]
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


                                        Please  sign  exactly  as  name  appears
                                        hereon.  Joint owners  should each sign.
                                        When  signing  as  attorney,   executor,
                                        administrator,   trustee  or   guardian,
                                        please  give full title as such.  If the
                                        signer  is a  corporation,  please  sign
                                        full corporate  name by duly  authorized
                                        officer.


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

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                                                SIGNATURE(S)        DATE



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