NORTHROP CORP
DEF 14A, 1994-04-18
AIRCRAFT
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<PAGE>
                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
 
                  Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of
                      the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
 
    Filed by the Registrant /X/
    Filed by a Party other than the Registrant / /
    Check the appropriate box:
    / /  Preliminary Proxy Statement
    /X/  Definitive Proxy Statement
    / /  Definitive Additional Materials
    / /  Soliciting  Material  Pursuant  to  Section  240.14a-11(c)  or  Section
         240.142-12
 
                                      NORTHROP CORPORATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)
                                      NORTHROP CORPORATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                   (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement)
 
Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):
 
/X/  $125 per Exchange Act Rules 0-11(c)(1)(ii), 14a-6(i)(1), or 14a-6(j)(2)
/ /  $500 per  each party  to  the controversy  pursuant  to Exchange  Act  Rule
     14a-6(i)(3)
/ /  Fee   computed  on   table  below   per  Exchange   Act  Rules  14a-6(i)(4)
     and 0-11
     1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     3) Per unit  price  or  other  underlying  value  of  transaction  computed
        pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11:*
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
*    Set forth the amount on which the filing fee is calculated and state how it
     was determined.
/ /  Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule
     0-11(a)(2)  and identify the  filing for which the  offsetting fee was paid
     previously. Identify the previous filing by registration statement  number,
     or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.
     1) Amount Previously Paid:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     3) Filing Party:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     4) Date Filed:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
<PAGE>
                                     [LOGO]
 
                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                              AND PROXY STATEMENT
 
                                     NOTICE
 
    Notice  is hereby given that the  Annual Meeting of Stockholders of Northrop
Corporation (the "Company") will  be held on Wednesday,  May 18, 1994, at  10:00
A.M. at the Sheraton Los Angeles Airport Hotel, 6101 West Century Boulevard, Los
Angeles, California 90045 for the following purposes:
 
    (1)  To elect four  Class III directors  to hold office  for three years and
       until their respective successors are elected and qualified.
 
    (2) To  consider  and act  upon  a proposal  to  ratify the  appointment  of
       Deloitte & Touche as the Company's independent auditors.
 
    (3)  To consider and act  upon a proposal to  amend the Northrop Corporation
       Certificate of Incorporation  to change  the corporate  name to  Northrop
       Grumman Corporation.
 
    (4) To consider and act upon such other business as may properly come before
       the Annual Meeting or any adjournments thereof.
 
    Stockholders  of record  at the  close of  business on  March 22,  1994, are
entitled to receive notice of and to vote at the Annual Meeting.
 
                                          By order of the Board of Directors,
 
                                          SHEILA M. GIBBONS
                                          CORPORATE VICE PRESIDENT AND SECRETARY
 
1840 Century Park East
Los Angeles, California 90067
April 18, 1994
 
                                    IMPORTANT
      TO ASSURE YOUR REPRESENTATION AT  THE ANNUAL MEETING, PLEASE SIGN  AND
    MAIL  PROMPTLY  THE  ENCLOSED  PROXY  FOR  WHICH  A  RETURN  ENVELOPE IS
    PROVIDED. NO POSTAGE IS REQUIRED IF MAILED IN THE UNITED STATES.
<PAGE>
                                PROXY STATEMENT
                              GENERAL INFORMATION
 
    This  Proxy Statement,  which is part  of the accompanying  Notice of Annual
Meeting of Stockholders, is  furnished in connection  with the solicitation,  by
the Board of Directors of Northrop Corporation (the "Company"), of proxies to be
used at the Company's 1994 Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the "Annual Meeting")
and  at any  and all  adjournments of  such Annual  Meeting. If  a proxy  in the
accompanying form is duly executed and returned, the shares represented by  such
proxy  will be voted as indicated. Any  person executing the proxy may revoke it
prior to its exercise. Unless otherwise directed in the accompanying proxy,  the
persons  named therein (or their substitutes) will  vote FOR the election of the
four director nominees listed  below under "Election of  Directors" and FOR  the
proposal  to ratify  the appointment  of Deloitte  & Touche  as auditors  of the
Company for the year ending December 31, 1994 and FOR the proposal to amend  the
Northrop  Corporation Certificate of Incorporation  to change the corporate name
to Northrop Grumman  Corporation. As to  any other business  which may  properly
come  before the Annual Meeting, the named  proxies will vote in accordance with
their best  judgment. The  Company does  not presently  know of  any other  such
business.
 
    At  the close of business on February  22, 1994 there were 49,132,906 shares
of Common Stock of the Company, par value $1.00 per share (the "Common  Stock"),
outstanding.  Only holders of record of Common Stock at the close of business on
March 22, 1994 are entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the Annual Meeting  or
any  adjournment thereof. Each  share of Common  Stock is entitled  to one vote.
Proxies for  shares  marked "abstain"  on  a matter  will  be considered  to  be
represented at the meeting, but not voted, for these purposes. Shares registered
in  the names of brokers  or other "street name"  nominees for which proxies are
voted on some but not  all matters will be considered  to be represented at  the
meeting,  but will be considered  to be voted only  as to those matters actually
voted.
 
    The principal office of  the Company is located  at 1840 Century Park  East,
Los  Angeles, California 90067. This Proxy Statement  and the form of proxy will
be sent to stockholders commencing approximately April 18, 1994.
 
                               VOTING SECURITIES
 
    The following table lists the beneficial  ownership of each person or  group
who,  as of December 31,  1993, owned to the  Company's knowledge more than five
percent of the Company's Common Stock then outstanding.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    AMOUNT AND NATURE OF     PERCENT OF
NAME AND ADDRESS OF BENEFICIAL OWNER                                BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP       CLASS
- ----------------------------------------------------------------  ------------------------  ------------
<S>                                                               <C>                       <C>
Bankers Trust Company (a).......................................       6,149,445 shares(b)        12.6%
300 So. Grand Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90071
U.S. Trust Company of California, N.A. (c)......................       7,574,800 shares(d)        15.5%
555 So. Flower St., Los Angeles, CA 90071-2429
Wellington Management Company...................................       3,921,310 shares(e)         8.0%
75 State Street, Boston, MA 02109
<FN>
- ------------------------
(a)   Bankers Trust  Company  is  Trustee (the  "Trustee")  under  the  Northrop
      Corporation Employee Benefit Plans Master Trust (the "Trust").
(b)   These  shares  are  held under  the  Northrop Savings  Plan,  the relevant
      portion of which is an Employee  Stock Ownership Plan, for the account  of
      (but  not  beneficially owned  by) the  Trustee.  The Trustee  votes these
      shares   in    accordance   with    instructions   received    from    the
      employee-participants  in such Plan to whose accounts the shares have been
      allocated. Undirected shares are  voted in the  same proportion as  shares
      for which instructions are received.
</TABLE>
 
                                       1
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<S>   <C>
(c)   U.S. Trust Company is an Investment Manager (the "Investment Manager") for
      the  Northrop Retirement Plan and the  pension plans for certain divisions
      of the Company (the "Retirement  Plans"); under the Trust, the  Investment
      Manager  has responsibility for the management and control of the Northrop
      shares held in the Trust as assets of the Retirement Plans.
(d)   These shares are held for the  account of (but not beneficially owned  by)
      the  Trustee. The Investment  Manager has voting  power over these shares,
      except in the event of a contested election of directors or in  connection
      with  a tender offer. In such case the shares are voted in accordance with
      instructions received from eligible participants in the Retirement  Plans.
      Undirected  shares are  voted in the  same proportion as  shares for which
      instructions are received.
(e)   This information was  provided by Wellington  Management Company  ("WMC").
      According  to  WMC,  as  of  the date  set  forth  above,  WMC  had shared
      dispositive power over 3,921,310 shares but shared voting power over  only
      911,160 shares.
</TABLE>
 
STOCK OWNERSHIP OF OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS
 
    The  total number of shares of Common Stock beneficially owned by directors,
nominees and Named Executive Officers  and all directors and executive  officers
as a group at the close of business on February 22, 1994 was as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                           AMOUNT AND NATURE OF    PERCENT OF
NAME OF BENEFICIAL OWNER                                 BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP (1)     CLASS
- -------------------------------------------------------  ------------------------  -----------
<S>                                                      <C>                       <C>
Oliver C. Boileau, Jr..................................        27,390                   *
Jack R. Borsting.......................................         1,570                   *
John T. Chain, Jr. ....................................           570                   *
Jack Edwards...........................................           170                   *
Barbara C. Jordan......................................           570                   *
Kent Kresa.............................................       583,416                 1.2 %
Richard R. Molleur.....................................        13,666                   *
Aulana L. Peters.......................................           370                   *
John Robson............................................         1,070                   *
Richard M. Rosenberg...................................         1,070                   *
William F. Schmied.....................................         2,070                   *
Brent Scowcroft........................................           670                   *
John Slaughter.........................................            70                   *
Wallace C. Solberg.....................................        72,250                   *
Richard J. Stegemeier..................................         1,070                   *
Richard B. Waugh, Jr...................................         9,459                   *
    Total..............................................       715,451                 1.5 %
Directors and executive officers as a group............       774,533                 1.6 %
<FN>
- ------------------------
 *    Denotes ownership of less than 1% of the outstanding shares
(1)   Includes  shares which, as of March 15, 1994, may be acquired within sixty
      days pursuant to  the exercise  of options  (which shares  are treated  as
      outstanding  for  the  purposes of  determining  beneficial  ownership and
      computing the  percentage  set forth);  shares  held by  trusts  of  which
      directors and their wives are trustees; shares held by a trust in which an
      officer and director is trustee; Restricted Award Shares held by the Named
      Executive  Officers,  issued pursuant  to  the Long-Term  Incentive Plans,
      which shares  carry voting  and dividend  rights; and  shares held  as  of
      December  31,  1993  in  the  Northrop Savings  Plan  for  the  benefit of
      officers.
</TABLE>
 
                                       2
<PAGE>
                             ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
 
    Under the  Company's  Certificate of  Incorporation,  which provides  for  a
classified  Board of Directors, four  directors in Class III  will be elected at
the 1994 Annual Meeting  to hold office  for three years  until the 1997  Annual
Meeting  of Stockholders and  until their successors have  been duly elected and
qualified. Unless instructed  otherwise, the persons  named in the  accompanying
proxy  (or their substitutes) will vote the shares represented by such proxy for
the election of the  four Class III  Director Nominees listed  in the table  set
forth  below. In case any of such nominees shall become unavailable for election
to the Board of Directors, an event which is not anticipated, the persons  named
as  proxies (or their  substitutes) shall have full  discretion and authority to
vote or  refrain from  voting for  any other  nominee in  accordance with  their
judgment.
 
    The  following  information,  furnished with  respect  to each  of  the four
nominees for election as a Class III director, and each of the five Class I  and
five  Class II directors whose terms will  continue after the Annual Meeting, is
obtained from the Company's  records or from  information furnished directly  by
the  individual to the  Company. All the  nominees are presently  serving on the
Board of Directors.  It is the  Company's policy  that members of  the Board  of
Directors are ineligible to stand for election to the Board of Directors if they
will  have  attained age  70  by the  date of  the  Company's Annual  Meeting of
Stockholders at which such election is held.
 
                       NOMINEES FOR DIRECTOR -- CLASS III
 
JOHN T. CHAIN, JR.,  59.  EXECUTIVE  VICE   PRESIDENT,  SAFETY   AND   CORPORATE
                          SUPPORT, BURLINGTON NORTHERN RAILROAD COMPANY.
 
ELECTED 1991
CHAIRMAN OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE; MEMBER OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE.
 
During  his  military career,  John T.  Chain, Jr.  held a  number of  Air Force
commands. In 1978,  he became  military assistant to  the Secretary  of the  Air
Force.  In 1984, he became the Director of Politico-Military Affairs, Department
of State. General Chain has been Chief of Staff for Supreme Headquarters  Allied
Powers  Europe, and Commander in Chief, Strategic Air Command, the position from
which he  retired in  February 1991.  In March  1991, he  became Executive  Vice
President  of  Operations  for  Burlington Northern  Railroad,  serving  in that
capacity until  March of  1992. General  Chain is  a member  of the  Council  on
Foreign  Relations and  Chairman of  the Wellness  Council of  America. He  is a
director of Kemper Corporation.
 
JACK EDWARDS,  65.  PARTNER, HAND, ARENDALL, BEDSOLE, GREAVES & JOHNSTON.
ELECTED 1991
MEMBER OF THE EXECUTIVE AND THE AUDIT COMMITTEES.
 
Jack Edwards was elected in 1964 to  the House of Representatives and served  in
the Congress for twenty years representing the First District of Alabama. In his
tenure  in the  House, Mr.  Edwards served  on the  Appropriations Committee for
sixteen  years,  including  ten  years  as  Senior  Republican  on  the  Defense
Subcommittee,  and  sixteen years  on the  Transportation Subcommittee.  He also
served on the Banking, Finance and Urban Affairs Committee. He retired from  the
Congress  in January 1985 and became a partner  in his current law firm. He is a
director of Southern Company, Holnam Inc., and Dravo Corporation. Mr. Edwards is
also a member of the Board of Trustees of the University of Alabama System.
 
                                       3
<PAGE>
KENT KRESA,  55.  CHAIRMAN, PRESIDENT AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER.
ELECTED 1987
 
Before joining Northrop Corporation, Kent Kresa was associated with the  Lincoln
Laboratories  of M.I.T.  and the Defense  Advanced Research  Projects Agency. In
1975, he joined  Northrop as  Vice President  and Manager  of the  Corporation's
Research  and  Technology  Center.  He became  General  Manager  of  the Ventura
Division in 1976, Group Vice President of the Aircraft Group in 1982 and  Senior
Vice  President for  Technology and Development  in 1986. Mr.  Kresa was elected
President and Chief Operating  Officer of Northrop in  1987. He was named  Chief
Executive  Officer in  1989 and Chairman  of the Board  in 1990. Mr.  Kresa is a
member of the Massachusetts Institute  of Technology Visiting Committee for  the
Department  of Aeronautics and Astronautics, a  Fellow of the American Institute
of Aeronautics  and  Astronautics, serves  on  the  Board of  Governors  of  the
Aerospace  Industries  Association,  on  the  Board  of  Directors  of  Chrysler
Corporation, Atlantic  Richfield  Company, and  the  Los Angeles  World  Affairs
Council,  and  is also  a  director of  the John  Tracy  Clinic for  the hearing
impaired.
 
BRENT SCOWCROFT,  69.  LIEUTENANT GENERAL, USAF (RET.)  AND FORMER ASSISTANT  TO
                       THE PRESIDENT FOR NATIONAL SECURITY AFFAIRS.
 
ELECTED 1993
MEMBER   OF  THE  COMPENSATION  AND   MANAGEMENT  DEVELOPMENT  AND  THE  FINANCE
COMMITTEES.
 
General Scowcroft served  as Assistant  to the President  for National  Security
Affairs  for  Presidents Bush  and  Ford. A  retired  U.S. Air  Force Lieutenant
General, General Scowcroft  served in  numerous national security  posts in  the
Pentagon  and the  White House  prior to  his appointments  as Assistant  to the
President for  National Security  Affairs. He  also held  a number  of  teaching
positions  at West  Point and the  Air Force Academy,  specializing in political
science. He received his B.S. degree from West Point, and M.A. and Ph.D. degrees
from Columbia University. General Scowcroft is also a director of Pennzoil.
 
                        CONTINUING DIRECTORS -- CLASS I
 
JACK R. BORSTING,  65.  E. MORGAN STANLEY PROFESSOR OF BUSINESS  ADMINISTRATION,
                        UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA.
 
ELECTED 1991
CHAIRMAN  OF THE NOMINATING COMMITTEE; MEMBER OF THE COMPENSATION AND MANAGEMENT
DEVELOPMENT AND THE FINANCE COMMITTEES.
 
Dr. Jack Borsting was at the  Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey,  California
from 1959 to 1980. During his tenure at Monterey, he was professor of Operations
Research,  Chairman of the Department  of Operations Research and Administration
Science, and Provost and Academic Dean. Dr. Borsting was Assistant Secretary  of
Defense  (Comptroller) from 1980 to  1983 and Dean of  the School of Business at
the University of Miami from 1983 to 1988. From 1988 to 1994, he was the  Robert
R.  Dockson professor and Dean  of the School of  Business Administration at the
University of Southern California, Los Angeles. He is past president of both the
Operations Research  Society of  America and  the Military  Operations  Research
Society. He is currently a trustee of the Orthopaedic Hospital Foundation of Los
Angeles and serves as a director of Delta Research and TROLearning.
 
                                       4
<PAGE>
AULANA L. PETERS,  52.  PARTNER, GIBSON, DUNN & CRUTCHER.
ELECTED 1992
MEMBER OF THE EXECUTIVE AND THE AUDIT COMMITTEES.
 
Aulana  L. Peters  joined the law  firm of Gibson,  Dunn & Crutcher  in 1973. In
1980, she was named a partner in the  firm and continued in the practice of  law
until  1984 when she  accepted an appointment as  Commissioner of the Securities
and Exchange Commission. In  1988, after serving four  years as a  Commissioner,
she returned to Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher. Ms. Peters is a director of 3M, the New
York Stock Exchange, IDS Mutual Fund Group and Mobil Corporation.
 
RICHARD M. ROSENBERG,  63.  CHAIRMAN  OF THE BOARD  AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER,
                            BANKAMERICA CORPORATION  AND BANK  OF AMERICA  NT  &
                            SA.
 
ELECTED 1991
CHAIRMAN OF THE FINANCE COMMITTEE AND MEMBER OF THE NOMINATING COMMITTEE.
 
Richard  M. Rosenberg became Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of BankAmerica
Corporation (BAC)  and  Bank of  America  in May  1990  after having  served  as
President  since February 1990 and as Vice  Chairman of the Board and a director
of BAC and  the Bank  since 1987.  Before joining  BankAmerica Corporation,  Mr.
Rosenberg   served  as  President  and   Chief  Operating  Officer  of  Seafirst
Corporation and  Seattle-First  National  Bank  which he  joined  in  1986.  Mr.
Rosenberg  is  a retired  Commander  in the  U.S.  Navy Reserve,  a  director of
Airborne Express  and  Potlatch Corporation,  a  trustee of  the  University  of
Southern  California and the California Institute  of Technology and a member of
the Federal Advisory Council  of the Board of  Governors of the Federal  Reserve
System.
 
WALLACE C. SOLBERG,  62.  CORPORATE VICE PRESIDENT AND GENERAL MANAGER, AIRCRAFT
                          DIVISION.
 
ELECTED 1992
MEMBER OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE.
 
Before  joining Northrop Corporation, Wallace C. Solberg was a research engineer
at the  Hotpoint  Division  of  General Electric  Company.  In  1959  he  joined
Hallicrafters  Company which  was acquired by  Northrop in 1966  and renamed the
Defense Systems  Division. While  at  Northrop he  has  held such  positions  as
Manager  of Engineering,  Program Management, Customer  Requirements and Finance
before being named Vice President and  General Manager of the Division in  1974.
In November 1990, when Northrop integrated its three electronics operations, Mr.
Solberg  was named  Vice President  and General  Manager of  the new Electronics
Systems Division. In  November 1991 he  was named Corporate  Vice President  and
General Manager of the Aircraft Division.
 
RICHARD J. STEGEMEIER,  65.  CHAIRMAN   AND  CHIEF   EXECUTIVE  OFFICER,  UNOCAL
                             CORPORATION, AN ENERGY RESOURCES COMPANY.
 
ELECTED 1990
CHAIRMAN OF THE COMPENSATION AND MANAGEMENT DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE; MEMBER OF THE
FINANCE COMMITTEE.
 
Richard  J.  Stegemeier  joined  Union  Oil  Company  of  California,  principal
operating  subsidiary of  Unocal Corporation, in  1951. Mr.  Stegemeier has been
Chairman of  the  Board for  Unocal  Corporation  since April  1989,  and  Chief
Executive  Officer  since July  1988. From  December  1985 to  June 1992  he was
President for Unocal Corporation. Mr.  Stegemeier is Chairman of the  California
Chamber of Commerce and the
 
                                       5
<PAGE>
Los  Angeles  World Affairs  Council and  a  member of  the National  Academy of
Engineering, the Council on  Foreign Relations, the Advisory  Board of the  U.S.
Secretary  of Energy, The Conference Board and the California Council on Science
and Technology. He is a director of First Interstate Bancorp, Foundation  Health
Corporation and Outboard Marine Corporation.
 
                        CONTINUING DIRECTORS -- CLASS II
 
OLIVER C. BOILEAU, JR.,  67.  CORPORATE  VICE  PRESIDENT, PRESIDENT  AND GENERAL
                              MANAGER, B-2 DIVISION.
 
ELECTED 1992
MEMBER OF THE FINANCE COMMITTEE.
 
Oliver C. Boileau, Jr. joined The Boeing Company in 1953 as a research engineer.
He progressed through several technical  and management positions and was  named
Vice  President in 1968 and then President of Boeing Aerospace in 1973. In 1980,
he joined General Dynamics as President and a member of the Board of  Directors.
In  January 1988, Mr. Boileau was promoted  to Vice Chairman and then retired in
May 1988.  Mr. Boileau  joined Northrop  Corporation in  December 1989  as  Vice
President  and  President and  General Manager  of  the B-2  Division. He  is an
Honorary Fellow of  the American  Institute of Aeronautics  and Astronautics,  a
member  of the  National Academy  of Engineering, the  Board of  Trustees of St.
Louis   University,   and   Chairman   of   the   Massachusetts   Institute   of
Technology-Lincoln Laboratory Advisory Board.
 
BARBARA C. JORDAN,  58.  LYNDON  B. JOHNSON SCHOOL OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS, UNIVERSITY
                         OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN.
 
ELECTED IN 1993
MEMBER OF THE AUDIT, THE EXECUTIVE AND THE NOMINATING COMMITTEES.
 
After graduating  MAGNA CUM  LAUDE from  Texas Southern  University, Ms.  Jordan
received  her LLB from Boston University in  1959. She was admitted to the Texas
and Massachusetts bars the same year  and began her career as an  Administrative
Assistant  to a County  Judge in Harris  County, Texas. In  1966, Ms. Jordan was
elected to the Texas State  Senate and in 1972 she  became a member of the  93rd
Congress,  representing the  18th District  of Texas.  As a  Congressperson, Ms.
Jordan was  a member  on  the Judiciary  and Government  Operations  Committees.
During  the 94th Congress, she was a member of the Steering and Policy Committee
of the House  Democratic Caucus.  After serving three  terms in  the House,  Ms.
Jordan  assumed her current association  with the University of  Texas. She is a
director of The Mead Corporation,  Burlington Northern Railroad, Texas  Commerce
Bankshares, Inc. and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation.
 
JOHN E. ROBSON,  63.  SENIOR  ADVISOR, ROBERTSON  STEVENS &  COMPANY, INVESTMENT
                      BANKERS.
 
ELECTED 1993
MEMBER  OF  THE  COMPENSATION  AND   MANAGEMENT  DEVELOPMENT  AND  THE   FINANCE
COMMITTEES.
 
From  1989 to 1993, Mr.  Robson served as Deputy  Secretary of the United States
Treasury. Prior to that, he  was Dean and Professor  of Management at the  Emory
University  School of  Business Administration (1986-1989),  President and Chief
Executive Officer and Executive  Vice President and  Chief Operating Officer  of
G.D.  Searle & Co., a pharmaceutical company  (1977-1986). From 1975 to 1977, he
served as Chairman of the U.S. Civil Aeronautics Board, regulator of the airline
industry. Mr. Robson earned his B.A. from Yale University in 1952 and his  J.D.,
with    honors,   from    Harvard   Law    School   in    1955.   He    was   in
 
                                       6
<PAGE>
the U.S. Army from 1955 to 1957 and returned to Illinois to become a partner  in
a major Chicago law firm. Mr. Robson became General Counsel of the Department of
Transportation  in  1967.  In 1968,  he  was  appointed Under  Secretary  of the
Department of Transportation, leaving  government service in  1969 to return  to
the  private practice of law as a partner of Sidley & Austin, into which his old
law firm merged. Mr. Robson is a  director of Rand McNally Company and  Security
Capital  Industrial  Trust,  a  Distinguished  Visiting  Fellow  of  the  Hoover
Institution and a Visiting Fellow at the Heritage Foundation.
 
WILLIAM F. SCHMIED,  65.  RETIRED CHAIRMAN, PRESIDENT  AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE,  THE
                          SINGER  COMPANY, FORMERLY AN ELECTRONICS AND AEROSPACE
                          COMPANY.
ELECTED 1990
CHAIRMAN OF  THE AUDIT  COMMITTEE;  MEMBER OF  THE COMPENSATION  AND  MANAGEMENT
DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE.
 
William  F. Schmied  joined the Autonetics  Division of  North American Aviation
(Rockwell International) in 1953 as a research electronics engineer. In 1959  he
joined  the  newly  formed  Guidance  and  Control  Systems  Division  of Litton
Industries  and  progressed  through  a  number  of  technical  and   management
positions.  He joined the  Singer Company Kearfott Division  in 1969 as Division
President and advanced  through the  Aerospace &  Marine Systems  Group and  the
Products  & Services for Government Group until he was named President and Chief
Operating Officer  of  Singer in  1980.  In 1987  Mr.  Schmied was  named  Chief
Executive  and Chairman of the Board, the position from which he retired in 1988
following the acquisition of The Singer  Company by an investment group. He  has
been  a  director  of  Northeast  Bancorp,  Inc.,  Union  Trust  Company,  Tiger
International, Flying Tiger Line, Inc., and trustee of the Link Foundation.  Mr.
Schmied is a fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics.
 
JOHN BROOKS SLAUGHTER,  59.  PRESIDENT, OCCIDENTAL COLLEGE.
ELECTED 1993
MEMBER OF THE AUDIT AND THE NOMINATING COMMITTEES.
 
Dr.  Slaughter earned his B.S.E.E. from Kansas State University in 1956, and was
an electronics engineer with General Dynamics Convair in San Diego from 1956  to
1960. He earned his M.S. in Engineering from the University of California at Los
Angeles  in 1961 and  was with the  Naval Electronics Laboratories  in San Diego
from 1960 until 1975. In 1971, Dr. Slaughter was awarded a Ph.D. in  Engineering
Sciences  from the University of California at San Diego. In 1975, he joined the
University of Washington  as a director  of the applied  physics laboratory  and
became   academic  Vice  President  and,  later,  Provost  of  Washington  State
University from  1979  to 1980.  During  this  period, Dr.  Slaughter  was  also
associated  with the  National Science  Foundation, first  as Assistant Director
and, later,  as Director.  From 1982  through  1988, he  was Chancellor  of  the
University  of Maryland and  in 1988 he became  President of Occidental College.
Dr. Slaughter, who is  a fellow of  the I.E.E.E. and  the recipient of  numerous
honorary  doctoral degrees, serves on the  Board of Directors of Monsanto, ARCO,
Avery Dennison, and IBM.
 
MEETINGS OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS, COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD AND DIRECTORS' FEES
 
    The Board  of  Directors schedules  regular  meetings throughout  the  year.
Normally,  such  meetings  convene  at the  Company's  principal  office  in Los
Angeles. Provision  has been  made in  the Bylaws  for special  meetings of  the
Board,  should they be required,  and for meetings of  the various committees of
the Board at appropriate times. In 1993 nine meetings of the Board of  Directors
were  held. During 1994  the Board has  scheduled eight regular  meetings of the
Board.
 
                                       7
<PAGE>
    The  Company  has  an  Audit   Committee,  a  Compensation  and   Management
Development  Committee and a Nominating Committee,  each of which is composed of
at least three members, all of  whom must be "Independent Outside Directors"  as
defined  in the Company's Bylaws. The members of the Audit Committee are William
F. Schmied,  John T.  Chain, Jr.,  Jack Edwards,  Barbara C.  Jordan, Aulana  L.
Peters,  and  John  Brooks  Slaughter.  The  members  of  the  Compensation  and
Management Development Committee  are Richard J.  Stegemeier, Jack R.  Borsting,
John  E. Robson,  William F.  Schmied and  Brent Scowcroft.  The members  of the
Nominating Committee  are  Jack  R.  Borsting, Barbara  C.  Jordan,  Richard  M.
Rosenberg  and John Brooks Slaughter. During  1993, the Audit Committee met five
times, the Compensation and Management Development Committee met five times  and
the Nominating Committee met once.
 
    The  Audit Committee meets periodically  with both the Company's independent
auditors and the Company's  chief internal auditor to  review audit results  and
the  adequacy of  the Company's systems  of internal controls.  In addition, the
Audit Committee  recommends  to  the  Board  of  Directors  the  appointment  or
discharge  of the Company's independent  auditors, and reviews each professional
service of a  non-audit nature  to be provided  by the  independent auditors  to
evaluate  the impact  on the  independence of  the auditors  of undertaking such
added services.
 
    The Compensation  and Management  Development  Committee recommends  to  the
Board  of Directors  the base salary  and incentive compensation  of all elected
officers,  takes  final  action  with  respect  to  base  salary  and  incentive
compensation  for  certain other  officers and  key  employees, and  reviews the
Company's compensation policies and management actions to assure the  succession
of  qualified officers.  In addition,  this Committee  establishes the Company's
annual performance objectives under the Company's incentive compensation  plans,
recommends  to the Board of Directors the  amounts to be appropriated for awards
under such  plans,  recommends  to  the Board  of  Directors  awards  under  the
Company's  1973  Incentive Compensation  Plan (the  "1973 Plan"),  grants awards
under, administers the Company's Long-Term Incentive Plans and recommends to the
Board of Directors all compensation plans in which Company officers are eligible
to participate.
 
    The Nominating  Committee  reviews  candidates to  serve  as  directors  and
recommends  to the  Board of Directors  nominees for election  as directors. The
activities and associations of each candidate are examined to ensure that  there
is  no legal impediment, conflict of interest, or other consideration that might
prevent service on the Board of Directors. In making its selection, the Board of
Directors bears in mind that the foremost responsibility of a Northrop  director
is to represent the interests of the stockholders as a whole. The Committee will
consider  nominees  recommended by  stockholders if  such nominations  have been
submitted in  writing,  accompanied  both  by  a  description  of  the  proposed
nominee's  qualifications  and  an indication  of  the consent  of  the proposed
nominee and  relevant biographical  information.  The recommendation  should  be
addressed to the Committee in care of the Secretary of the Company. In addition,
the  Nominating  Committee  makes  recommendations  to  the  Board  of Directors
concerning the composition  and size of  the Board of  Directors, candidates  to
fill  vacancies, the performance of incumbent directors, and the remuneration of
Non-Employee Directors.
 
    In addition, the Company has an Executive Committee and a Finance Committee.
 
    During 1993, each  of the directors  attended at  least 75% or  more of  all
meetings  of the  Board of  Directors and the  various committees  on which they
serve, with the exception of Barbara C. Jordan and Brent Scowcroft.
 
                                       8
<PAGE>
    Directors are  compensated  for  their  services  according  to  a  standard
arrangement  authorized  by  resolution of  the  Board of  Directors.  An annual
retainer fee of  $25,000 was  paid to  each director  and an  additional fee  of
$1,000  was paid to each director for  every Board meeting attended during 1993.
Committees of  the Board  usually meet  on the  same day  as the  regular  Board
meeting.  Members of each committee who  attended such meetings were compensated
at the rate of $1,000 for  each such committee meeting. Committee chairmen  were
compensated  an extra  $200 for attendance  at the committee  meetings for which
they were chairmen. If a director performed extraordinary services for the Board
at the request of the Chairman of the Board or the chairman of a committee, such
director was compensated at the rate of $1,000 per day. Directors are reimbursed
for all reasonable expenses incurred by them in attending meetings of the  Board
of  Directors or committee meetings  and in performing compensable extraordinary
services. Board  members  who  are  employees of  the  Company  do  not  receive
compensation under the above provisions.
 
    In  1993, the  stockholders approved  the 1993  Stock Plan  For Non-Employee
Directors which provides that  20% of the retainer  fee earned by each  director
will  be paid  in Northrop stock,  which will  be issued as  soon as practicable
following the close of the fiscal  year, on December 31. In addition,  directors
may  defer payment of all  or a portion of  their remaining retainer fees and/or
their Board  and Committee  meeting fees.  Deferred compensation  may either  be
distributed  in Northrop stock, issued as soon as practicable after the close of
the fiscal year,  or such compensation  may be  placed in a  Stock Unit  Account
until  the conclusion of a director-specified  deferral period, a minimum of two
years from the time the compensation  is earned. All deferral instructions  must
be  received prior to the performance of  the services for which the director is
compensated. Directors are credited with dividend equivalents in connection with
the Northrop stock  which is distributed  early in the  year following the  year
earned  or  deferred into  the Stock  Unit Account  for longer  periods, pending
distribution.
 
    The Northrop Corporation Board of Directors Retirement Plan (the  "Directors
Plan") provides that outside directors, as defined in the Bylaws of the Company,
are  eligible to receive a retirement benefit  pursuant to the Directors Plan if
they retire  from  the Board  following  completion of  at  least five  or  more
consecutive  years of service as an  outside Board member. Outside directors are
also eligible for benefits if they are  ineligible to stand for election to  the
Board  of Directors by  virtue of the fact  that they will  have attained age 70
prior to the Annual Meeting of Stockholders and have not completed at least five
consecutive years of service as an outside director. The annual benefit  payable
pursuant  to the Directors Plan  is equal to the  annual retainer fee then being
paid to active  directors or such  lesser amount  as is provided  for under  the
Directors  Plan. Benefits are payable for ten years or less (as set forth in the
Directors Plan), from the retirement  date of the director.  In the case of  the
death  of a director while  receiving benefits, the benefits  are payable to the
director's surviving spouse, as defined in the Directors Plan.
 
                                       9
<PAGE>
                             COMPENSATION COMMITTEE
 
REPORT OF THE COMPENSATION AND MANAGEMENT DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE
 
    The Compensation  and  Management  Development Committee  of  the  Board  of
Directors  (the  "Committee") has  furnished the  following report  on executive
compensation applicable to  employees elected  as officers of  the Company.  The
Committee is comprised exclusively of outside directors, all of whom are free of
interlocking relationships with the Company.
 
COMPENSATION PHILOSOPHY
 
    Under  the direction  of the  Committee, the  Corporation has  developed and
implemented compensation policies  and programs that  promote the attainment  of
the strategic business goals of the Company. As a vital element of the Company's
overall  plan to accomplish its mission, its compensation philosophy is designed
to enable acquisition and retention of executives of exceptional ability, and to
concentrate  their  attention,  energy  and  skill  on  achieving  high  current
performance  on commitments  to customers, financial  results exceeding specific
acceptable thresholds, and long-term prosperous growth.
 
    Northrop executive compensation programs comprise a set of linked incentives
and rewards  that  impel  management  to achieve  the  strategic  business  plan
established  by  the  Chief  Executive  Officer and  approved  by  the  Board of
Directors. They include base  salary, annually determined variable  compensation
referred  to as incentive pay or bonus,  and a long-term incentive plan based on
stock ownership,  appreciation  and  total return  to  shareholders.  Successful
accomplishment  of  goals  tied to  the  business plan  can  produce significant
individual reward. Most components of this reward are at risk and vary  directly
in their amount with each executive's impact on desired business results. While,
in  combination, these reward  opportunities raise motivation,  they also foster
behaviors and attitudes common  to owners and  entrepreneurs -- creating  equity
partners with Company shareholders.
 
    The  Company's administration  of executive  total compensation  is based on
both  performance  and  competitive  market  considerations.  Base  salaries  of
executives  are targeted  at a competitive  market median on  a job-by-job basis
with individual variations explained by training, experience, skills of  special
value  to the Company  and sustained performance.  Incentive compensation varies
directly with Company and business element performance, and also with individual
job level,  scope  and  performance. Normalized  for  aforementioned  individual
variations,  annual total cash compensation -- base salary plus incentive pay --
will  be  lower  than  competitive  market  median  in  years  of  below  target
performance,  and above competitive  market median in  years performance exceeds
target. At the  time of their  initial grant, the  size of individual  long-term
incentive awards is targeted at competitive market median.
 
COMPLIANCE WITH INTERNAL REVENUE CODE SECTION 162(M)
 
    Section  162(m) of the Internal Revenue  Code (the "Code"), enacted in 1993,
generally disallows a  deduction to  public companies for  compensation over  $1
million  paid to the  corporation's chief executive officer  and four other most
highly compensated executive officers. Qualifying performance-based compensation
will not be subject to the deduction limit.
 
    Prior to  the  enactment  of  Section  162(m),  the  Company's  stockholders
approved  the 1993 Long Term Incentive Stock Plan ("Stock Plan"). Initial grants
of certain awards  under that plan  while perfomance-based, do  not satisfy  the
definition   of  performance-based   compensation  under   Section  162(m)  and,
therefore, deductions  with respect  to compensation  related to  those  initial
grants may
 
                                       10
<PAGE>
be  lost. The 1973 Incentive Compensation Plan  ("1973 Plan") is also subject to
Section 162(m) of the Code. With respect to the 1973 Plan, the impact of Section
162(m) for the tax year 1994 is not expected to be material.
 
    After the proposed Internal Revenue Service regulations for this section  of
the  code are finalized,  the Committee will  determine if changes  to any plans
will be recommended to retain tax deductibility of compensation.
 
MEASUREMENT OF COMPANY PERFORMANCE
 
    Consistent with the business plan, management in each organizational element
prepares  an  Annual   Operating  Plan  containing   strategic,  financial   and
supplemental business goals together with defined measures and weights for their
assessment. Strategic goals focus on such factors as new product development and
new  business initiatives;  while financial  goals focus  on operating earnings,
cash flow and  shareholder value  metrics. Supplemental  business goals  include
contract   acquisition,  productivity   and  quality   improvement,  work  place
diversity, management  development, and  environmental management.  These  goals
cascade   within  each  organizational  element   culminating  in  formation  of
individual performance goals specific to each salaried employee. Documented  and
approved  in  accordance  with  the  Company's  Performance  Management Process,
accomplishments against individual goals  are evaluated on  an interim basis  at
mid-year and, on a final basis, at year-end.
 
    For  the Named  Executive Officers,  three measurement  factors weighted 1/3
each are used  to determine annual  incentive awards: pre-tax  return on  3-year
average  shareholder equity; profitability  as measured by  return on assets and
return on equity --  weighted equally; and supplemental  business goals such  as
are  delineated  above. Associated  with each  financial  measure is  a specific
numerical threshold approved by  the Committee below which  no value is  earned.
Supplemental  business goals  have stated  milestones, objectives  and numerical
targets also approved by  the Committee. In 1993,  the category of  supplemental
business goals included seven corporate goals and 15 divisional goals.
 
    Annually,  the  Committee  reviews, approves  and  -- at  its  discretion --
modifies the  Chief Executive  Officer's  written proposal  of goals  and  their
numerical values within each of the three measurement factors stated above. Goal
performance  highlights  for  1993  can  be  found  below  in  ANNUAL  INCENTIVE
COMPENSATION and in CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER COMPENSATION.
 
COMPANY PERFORMANCE AND THE ELEMENTS OF COMPENSATION
 
    COMPETITIVE COMPENSATION INFORMATION
 
    In determining  base  salaries  and incentive  compensation  for  the  Named
Executive  Officers, primary sources of competitive compensation information are
independent surveys of industry peer companies, specifically including those  in
the  Standard & Poors Aerospace and Defense Index cited in the SHAREOWNER RETURN
PERFORMANCE PRESENTATION following  this Report. These  primary sources  include
the  Hewitt  Associates  MCS  Project 777  Survey  (Aerospace  Segment)  and the
Towers-Perrin  Summit  Survey  of  Aerospace  Companies.  Secondary  sources  of
competitive  compensation information are the Consolidated Industries Segment of
Project 777, the Towers-Perrin Compensation Data Bank and the Hewitt  Associates
Total Compensation DataBase-TM-.
 
    Competitive  award guidelines contained in the Company's Long-Term Incentive
Plan Guide to  Administration have  been determined by  a reputable  independent
consulting firm and adopted by the Committee.
 
                                       11
<PAGE>
    BASE SALARY
 
    At  the  beginning  of each  year,  the  Committee reviews,  and  accepts or
modifies as it deems appropriate, an  annual salary plan submitted by the  Chief
Executive  Officer for  the Company's  senior executives  (other than  the Chief
Executive Officer). This  salary plan  is developed by  the Corporation's  human
resources  staff under  the ultimate direction  of the  Chief Executive Officer,
based on independent  market surveys  of compensation  as well  as judgments  of
performance  as  to past  and expected  future  contributions of  the individual
executives.
 
    Separately, the Committee  reviews the  base salary of  the Chief  Executive
Officer considering competitive compensation data and the Committee's assessment
of  his  past performance  and its  expectation of  his future  contributions in
leading the Corporation and its businesses.  The Committee then presents to  the
Board  (absent all  employee-directors) its recommendations  concerning both the
annual salary plan for senior executives, and the salary of the Chief  Executive
Officer. The Board approves this submission, modified as it deems appropriate.
 
    Measured  by  reputable third-party  published  compensation surveys  of the
aerospace and  defense industry,  the Chief  Executive Officer  is paid  a  base
salary  at  the  competitive market  median.  From the  Hewitt/MCS  '777' Ten-Hi
Report, a common standard for  comparing a company's compensation practices  for
top  executives below the Chief Executive Officer,  it can be concluded that the
average base salary paid by the Corporation to this executive group is below the
competitive market median.
 
    ANNUAL INCENTIVE COMPENSATION
 
    Executives,  including  the  Named  Executive  Officers,  are  eligible  for
incentive  pay annually  under the  Corporation's shareholder-approved Incentive
Compensation Plan. However, no awards may be  earned or paid for years in  which
the  pre-tax return on 3-year average shareholder equity is not at least 10%, or
in which no dividend is declared on common and preferred stock. When awards  are
payable,  their total  amount may  not exceed 3%  of the  pre-tax adjusted gross
margin for that year.
 
    In years in which incentive  compensation awards are payable, the  Committee
decides  individual  awards  for  the  Named  Executive  Officers  following its
consideration of  the  Chief Executive  Officer's  report of  overall  corporate
performance  against the  business measures  delineated above  in MEASUREMENT OF
COMPANY PERFORMANCE,  i.e.,  1) pre-tax  return  on 3-year  average  shareholder
equity, 2) profitability as measured by return on assets and return on equity --
weighted  equally, and 3) supplemental  business goals. The Committee determines
the size of  the annual  incentive awards  for executive  officers generally  by
calculating the product of individual base salary, target bonus percent based on
salary grade, Unit Performance Factor and an individual performance score termed
Individual Performance Factor. The Unit Performance Factor, which represents the
Chief Executive Officer's assessment of overall Company performance, is a single
numeric  value  for  each  business  unit and  the  Corporate  Office  which the
Committee accepts or revises as it deems appropriate.
 
    For 1993,  performance thresholds  were met  with respect  to dividends  and
exceeded  with respect to  pre-tax return on  3-year average shareholder equity.
However, the  Company's  higher target  for  pre-tax return  on  3-year  average
shareholder  equity and its target for  profitability were not met. Below target
performance in  these  two areas  was  attributable  primarily to  a  charge  to
earnings on the TSSAM fixed price development program. With respect to the third
performance  measure,  the  Company  significantly  exceeded  target performance
against its written plan of supplemental goals.
 
                                       12
<PAGE>
    Accompanying this performance  report, the Chief  Executive Officer  submits
recommendations  to the Committee for individual  incentive awards for the Named
Executive Officers,  except the  Chief Executive  Officer, which  reflect  their
contributions  to the accomplishment of annual  goals and the Company's business
plan.
 
    Separately, the Committee considers an incentive compensation award for  the
Chief  Executive Officer based on the  Committee's assessment of his recent-year
performance.  The   Committee   then  presents   to   the  Board,   absent   all
employee-directors,  its recommendations  concerning the  incentive compensation
for the Named  Executive Officers,  including the Chief  Executive Officer.  The
Board  considers the  Committee's recommendations and  approves this submission,
modified as it deems appropriate.
 
    In evaluating overall performance and formulating recommendations for annual
incentive compensation for 1993 for the Named Executive Officers, including  the
Chief  Executive Officer, the Committee considered the Chief Executive Officer's
report on  overall  corporate performance  as  well as  the  Company's  improved
financial  condition evidenced  by improved margin  rates on  all major aircraft
programs, an  increase  in shareholder's  equity,  reduced working  capital  and
interest  expense, and the reduction  in the Company's net  debt position to $60
million, the lowest level in  10 years. These factors  were listed in the  Chief
Executive  Officer's report  as "Additional  Considerations" and  are additional
factors that were  considered in determining  annual incentive compensation  for
the  named executive officers.  The Committee considered all  factors as a whole
and took into account subjective  evaluations of each Named Executive  Officer's
performance  to  arrive  at  a  determination  of  appropriate  annual incentive
compensation.
 
    LONG-TERM INCENTIVE COMPENSATION
 
    During each  fiscal  year,  the  Committee  considers  the  desirability  of
granting senior executives, including the Named Executive Officers, awards under
the  current shareholder-approved Long-Term Incentive  Stock Plan. The Committee
believes that its past grants of long-term incentives have successfully  focused
the  Corporation's senior  management on  building profitability  and shareowner
value.
 
    The Long-Term  Incentive  Stock  Plan  provides  the  flexibility  to  grant
incentives  spanning a number  of years in  a variety of  forms, including stock
options, stock appreciation rights and restricted performance stock rights.  The
purpose  of this form  of compensation is  to expand the  performance horizon of
Plan participants from several months  to several years. By promoting  ownership
of  Northrop  stock, the  Plan  creates shareholder-managers  interested  in the
long-term growth and prosperity  of the Company. To  promote retention of  stock
ownership,  the Chief Executive  Officer has given  to executives strong written
encouragement to acquire and hold significant amounts of Company stock.
 
    In the  Company's  fiscal  year  ended  December  31,  1993,  the  Committee
determined  to grant  stock options and  restricted performance  stock rights to
selected key  managers. Making  awards in  the  form of  these two  vehicles  is
consistent  with  the  Committee's  intention stated  in  Northrop's  1993 Proxy
Statement to Shareholders. Since,  by the Black-Scholes method,  the value of  a
Northrop  stock option at grant  is approximately 1/3 the  value of a restricted
stock right,  and since  stock options  are  granted on  an annual  basis  while
restricted  performance  stock rights  are granted  at three-year  intervals, an
equal number  of stock  options  and restricted  performance stock  rights  were
granted in 1993. In fixing grants for individuals, including the Named Executive
Officers  other than  the Chief  Executive Officer,  the Committee  reviewed the
Chief Executive Officer's recommendations  for individual awards. The  Committee
approved  awards  taking into  account the  scope  of accountability,  record of
 
                                       13
<PAGE>
achievement  and  contribution  and  anticipated  future  influence  on  company
performance  of each recipient.  Award recipients whose  planned retirements are
near may receive awards  in stock options  only, because restricted  performance
stock rights are valued at the end of a five year measurement period.
 
    Awards  under the  Long-Term Incentive  Stock Plan  in 1993  were granted on
November 17, 1993, and consisted of  non-statutory stock options at fair  market
value   and  restricted  performance  stock  rights.  The  performance  variable
governing the value of restricted performance stock rights is linked to  Company
total  shareholder return compared to that of  companies in the Standard & Poors
Aerospace  and  Defense  Index  cited  in  the  SHAREOWNER  RETURN   PERFORMANCE
PRESENTATION  that follows this Report.  Applying competitive guidelines for the
size of annual long-term incentive awards for executive officers, actual  grants
of  such awards in 1993 were  made-overall-at the established competitive market
median. In granting long-term incentive awards in 1993, the Committee considered
the incentive stock holdings of the Chief Executive Officer and other  executive
officers.  Satisfied that  holdings from  prior long-term  incentive grants were
appropriate, the Committee chose to adhere to competitive guidelines in its 1993
incentive stock  awards  to the  Chief  Executive Officer  and  other  executive
officers.
 
DETERMINING CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER COMPENSATION
 
    In  evaluating 1993 performance  of the Chief  Executive Officer and setting
his annual incentive  compensation, the  Committee noted a  number of  important
Company  achievements.  In  making  its  final  determination  as  to  the Chief
Executive Officer's 1993 annual incentive compensation, these important business
results were considered by  the Committee both separately  and in the  aggregate
without assigned specific relative values.
 
    Following  successful completion of  all critical milestones  in the design,
development and flight test  of the B-2 Bomber,  the first operational  aircraft
was  delivered in a flawless  flight to the Air  Combat Command at Whiteman AFB.
Following  this  accomplishment  and  continued  high  performance  to   quality
standards  and schedule requirements,  the Company secured  remaining funding to
complete the 20 aircraft program. The  Company also won the GPS Aided  Targeting
System   development  contract  to   implement  precision  conventional  weapons
capability of the B-2.
 
    Financial performance highlights in 1993  have strengthened the outlook  for
the Company. Increased margin rates were achieved on B-2, F/A-18 C/D, F/A-18 E/F
and  747  programs. Continuing  to  reduce debt,  Mr.  Kresa announced  that the
Company's plan to be debt-free -- should it choose to be -- will be achieved  by
the  end  of  1994,  ahead  of  schedule.  Under  Mr.  Kresa's  leadership total
shareholder value metrics were developed and introduced into measures of  future
business  performance and long-term compensation for the senior management team.
Responding to rising  health care  costs, Mr.  Kresa directed  major changes  to
group insurance programs that join the Company and employees in a partnership to
more effectively manage costs.
 
    Notwithstanding these positive developments, the Committee noted Mr. Kresa's
recent announcement of a loss in 1993 on the fixed price development Tri-Service
Standoff  Attack  Missile contract.  This  program performance  was  the primary
factor reducing the Company's return  to shareholders and overall  profitability
during 1993.
 
    In  the context of overall decline in the availability of defense contracts,
Mr. Kresa directed actions to address the organizational challenges the  Company
faces. An exhaustive Aircraft Segment Study was completed charting the Company's
strategy  in  aircraft  design,  development  and  manufacturing,  and  defining
critical  organizational  and  resource  requirements  for  the  future.   Teams
conducting proprietary
 
                                       14
<PAGE>
studies  have narrowed  the field  of new  business opportunities  to those that
leverage the  unique  strengths  of  the  Company.  Competencies  that  will  be
essential for future Company leaders have been defined and are being imbedded in
training curricula. Finally, Mr. Kresa has intelligently and humanely guided the
difficult,  but necessary, task of reducing  expenses and manpower while, at the
same time, maintaining productivity and preserving the Company's reputation as a
caring employer.
 
    Based on its evaluation  of these factors, the  Committee believes that  Mr.
Kresa and Northrop senior management are strengthening the Company's outlook for
long-term   profitable  growth.   The  Committee   further  believes   that  the
compensation policies,  plans and  programs it  has implemented  are  motivating
achievement  of objectives which are  crucial to the welfare  of the Company and
its shareholders.
 
    Based upon the median  range of competitive  market bonus practice,  derived
from  sources cited in the Competitive  Compensation Information section of this
report and Mr. Kresa's performance, as outlined in this section, and taking into
consideration Mr.  Kresa's  base salary,  the  Committee granted  Mr.  Kresa  an
incentive  compensation award to  recognize his 1993  performance. Following its
review of the total value of his incentive stock holdings (i.e., grants of stock
and stock  options under  present and  previous Long-Term  Incentive Plans)  and
considering  competitive market  long-term incentive practices,  as discussed in
the Long-Term Incentive Compensation section of this report, the Committee  also
granted  Mr. Kresa a long-term  incentive award to both  reward and motivate his
continuing contributions to  the future prosperity  of the Company.  Considering
Mr.  Kresa's performance and also that his base salary was not adjusted in 1992,
the Committee adjusted  his base  salary effective  March 1,  1993. The  Summary
Compensation Table on page 17 contains information detailing these actions.
 
             THE COMPENSATION AND MANAGEMENT DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE:
                        RICHARD J. STEGEMEIER, CHAIRMAN
                                JACK R. BORSTING
                                 JOHN E. ROBSON
                               WILLIAM F. SCHMIED
                                BRENT SCOWCROFT
 
                                       15
<PAGE>
SHAREOWNER RETURN PERFORMANCE PRESENTATION
 
    Set  forth below is a  line graph comparing the  yearly percentage change in
the cumulative total shareowner return on the Corporation's Common Stock against
the cumulative total  return of the  S&P Composite-500 Stock  Index and the  S&P
Aerospace  and  Defense Composite  Index  for the  period  of five  fiscal years
commencing January 1, 1989 and ended December 31, 1993.
 
                COMPARISON OF FIVE-YEAR CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN*
       NORTHROP CORPORATION, S&P 500 INDEX & S&P AEROSPACE/DEFENSE INDEX
                                   [GRAPHIC]
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                  NORTHROP CORP.    S&P 500    S&P AEROSPACE/DEFENSE
                                  --------------    -------    ---------------------
<S>                               <C>               <C>        <C>
1988..........................         100             100                100
1989..........................          66             132                118
1990..........................          71             128                123
1991..........................         112             166                147
1992..........................         153             179                155
1993..........................         175             197                202
</TABLE>
 
  Assumes $100 invested on December 31, 1988 in Northrop
  Common Stock, S&P 500 Index, and S&P Aerospace/Defense Index.
 
* Total return assumes reinvestment of dividends.
 
                                       16
<PAGE>
                             EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
 
    There  is  shown  below  information  concerning  the  annual  and long-term
compensation for services  in all capacities  to the Corporation  for the  years
ended December 31, 1993, 1992 and 1991 of those persons who were at December 31,
1993  the chief  executive officer  and the  other four  most highly compensated
officers of the Corporation (the "Named Executive Officers").
 
                           SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                LONG-TERM COMPENSATION
                                                               ------------------------
                                                                        AWARDS
                                                               ------------------------
                                                                             SECURITIES
                     ANNUAL COMPENSATION                        RESTRICTED   UNDERLYING
- -------------------------------------------------------------     STOCK       OPTIONS/        ALL OTHER
  NAME AND PRINCIPAL POSITION     YEAR  SALARY ($)  BONUS ($)  AWARD(S) ($)(1)  SARS (#) COMPENSATION ($)(2)
- --------------------------------  ----  ----------  ---------  ------------  ----------  -------------------
<S>                               <C>   <C>         <C>        <C>           <C>         <C>
KENT KRESA .....................  1993    675,000    450,000           0      34,400            9,434
     Chairman of the Board,       1992    650,000    500,000           0           0            9,154
     President and Chief          1991    656,250    600,000           0           0             --
     Executive Officer
OLIVER C. BOILEAU, JR. .........  1993    408,333    270,000           0       7,000            9,434
      Corporate Vice President,   1992    395,833    300,000           0      28,000            9,154
      President and General       1991    377,083    300,000           0           0             --
      Manager--B-2 Division
WALLACE C. SOLBERG .............  1993    266,667    115,000     128,700      12,000            8,686
      Corporate Vice President    1992    250,000    195,000           0      28,000            8,407
      and General Manager,        1991    215,583    180,000     165,937           0             --
      Aircraft Division
RICHARD R. MOLLEUR .............  1993    248,000    150,000     107,250      10,000            6,999
      Corporate Vice President    1992    235,833    160,000           0      15,000            6,365
      and General Counsel         1991    205,385    140,000     125,000      20,000             --
RICHARD B. WAUGH, JR. ..........  1993    225,000    136,000     128,700      12,000            9,434
      Corporate Vice President    1992    160,542     90,000     104,500       8,000            9,154
      and Chief                   1991    151,400    115,000           0           0             --
      Financial Officer
<FN>
- ------------------------
(1)   Aggregated restricted shares or rights  held by Named Executive  Officers,
      valued  at  12/31/93,  were: K.  Kresa  62,500 shares  @  $2,336,250, W.C.
      Solberg 14,225 shares @  $531,731, R.R. Molleur  6,000 shares @  $224,280,
      R.B. Waugh, Jr. 7,880 shares @ $294,554.
      Restricted   Stock  Rights  ("RSRs")  granted  under  the  1987  Long-Term
      Incentive Plan  (the  "Plan") provide  for  the issuance  of  unrestricted
      Common  Stock  in  yearly increments  equal  to  20% of  the  total grant,
      commencing within one  year of  the grant date.  The entire  RSR grant  is
      therefore  issued within five (5) years from  the date of grant. RSRs with
      vesting dates in less  than three (3)  years were granted  to K. Kresa  on
      1/02/90 for 50,000 shares, W.C. Solberg on 11/20/91 for 7,500 shares, R.R.
      Molleur  on 2/20/91 for 5,000 shares and  Richard B. Waugh, Jr. on 7/18/90
      for 2,700 shares and on 11/17/92 for 4,000 shares. No dividends have  been
      or  will  be paid  on awards  in  1991 reported  in this  column. Dividend
      equivalents will be paid on awards in 1993.
(2)   Company contributions to  Savings Plan for  the Named Executive  Officers.
      Where dashes are indicated, there is no requirement to report.
</TABLE>
 
                                       17
<PAGE>
OPTION GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
 
    There  is  shown below  information  concerning individual  grants  of stock
options made  during  the  last completed  fiscal  year  to each  of  the  Named
Executive Officers.
 
                       OPTION GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                      POTENTIAL REALIZABLE
                                         INDIVIDUAL GRANTS                                              VALUE AT ASSUMED
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------    ANNUAL RATES OF
                                     NUMBER OF                                                            STOCK PRICE
                                    SECURITIES     % OF TOTAL OPTIONS                                   APPRECIATION FOR
                                    UNDERLYING         GRANTED TO         EXERCISE OR                   OPTION TERM (1)
                                      OPTIONS      EMPLOYEES IN FISCAL       BASE        EXPIRATION   --------------------
NAME                              GRANTED(#) (2)          YEAR           PRICE ($/SH)       DATE       5% ($)     10% ($)
- --------------------------------  ---------------  -------------------  ---------------  -----------  ---------  ---------
<S>                               <C>              <C>                  <C>              <C>          <C>        <C>
KENT KRESA......................        34,400                 6.7         $   35.75       11/17/03     774,774  1,955,382
OLIVER C. BOILEAU, JR...........         7,000                 1.4             35.75       11/17/03     157,657    397,897
WALLACE C. SOLBERG..............        12,000                 2.3             35.75       11/17/03     270,270    682,110
RICHARD R. MOLLEUR..............        10,000                 1.9             35.75       11/17/03     225,225    568,425
RICHARD B. WAUGH, JR............        12,000                 2.3             35.75       11/17/03     270,270    682,110
<FN>
- ------------------------------
(1)   The  potential realizable value of each grant of options assuming that the
      market price of Northrop Common  Stock from the date  of the grant to  the
      end  of the option term (10 years),  appreciates in value at an annualized
      rate of 5% and 10%.
(2)   Commencing with  the  second  anniversary of  the  grant,  options  become
      exercisable  in annual  installments of 25%  of the total  grant, with the
      exception of Mr. Boileau's grant which becomes exercisable on 12/21/94  as
      to 100% of the total grant. There are no tandem SARs associated with these
      options.
</TABLE>
 
                                       18
<PAGE>
OPTION EXERCISES AND VALUES
 
    Shown  below is aggregated information with respect to the exercise of stock
options during the year ending December 31, 1993 of the Chief Executive  Officer
and  the  Named  Executive Officers,  and  the  value at  December  31,  1993 of
unexercised options, without stock appreciation rights.
 
    AGGREGATED OPTION EXERCISES IN LAST FISCAL YEAR AND FY-END OPTION VALUES
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                     AGGREGATED OPTIONS EXERCISES IN LAST FISCAL YEAR, AND FY-END OPTION VALUE
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                         SECURITIES
                                                                         UNDERLYING
                                                                     UNEXERCISED OPTIONS
                                                                             AT             VALUE OF UNEXERCISED
                                                                          FY-END(#)        IN-THE-MONEY OPTIONS AT
                                  SHARES ACQUIRED ON      VALUE         EXERCISABLE/       FY-END($) EXERCISABLE/
NAME                                 EXERCISE (#)      REALIZED ($)     UNEXERCISABLE         UNEXERCISABLE (1)
- --------------------------------  -------------------  ------------  -------------------  -------------------------
<S>                               <C>                  <C>           <C>                  <C>
KENT KRESA......................               0           N/A           300,000/234,400        5,814,000/3,932,072
OLIVER C. BOILEAU, JR...........               0           N/A             25,600/49,400            460,628/661,122
WALLACE C. SOLBERG..............               0           N/A             16,600/34,400            287,208/271,672
RICHARD R. MOLLEUR..............               0           N/A              7,000/34,000             83,285/299,920
RICHARD B. WAUGH, JR............               0           N/A              4,840/20,560             78,774/132,103
<FN>
- ------------------------
(1)   Valued at 12/31/93 -- $37.38
</TABLE>
 
RESTRICTED PERFORMANCE STOCK RIGHTS GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
 
    There is shown below information concerning grants of Restricted Performance
Stock Rights made to named officers during the last completed fiscal year.
 
             LONG-TERM INCENTIVE PLAN -- AWARDS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                       PERFORMANCE   ESTIMATED FUTURE PAYOUTS UNDER
                                                         NUMBER OF      OR OTHER               NON-STOCK
                                                       SHARES, UNITS  PERIOD UNTIL         PRICE-BASED PLANS
                                                         OR OTHER     MATURATION OR  ------------------------------
NAME                                                   RIGHTS (#)(1)     PAYOUT       THRESHOLD (#)    MAXIMUM (#)
- -----------------------------------------------------  -------------  -------------  ---------------  -------------
<S>                                                    <C>            <C>            <C>              <C>
KENT KRESA...........................................       34,400       5 yrs.                 0          51,600
WALLACE C. SOLBERG...................................       12,000       5 yrs.             3,600          18,000
RICHARD R. MOLLEUR...................................       10,000       5 yrs.             3,000          15,000
RICHARD B. WAUGH, JR.................................       12,000       5 yrs.             3,600          18,000
<FN>
- ------------------------
(1)   The number  of Restricted  Performance Stock  Rights which  may be  earned
      under  the 1993 Long-Term  Incentive Stock Plan is  based on Company total
      shareholder  return  compared  to  that  of   companies  in  the  S  &   P
      Aerospace/Defense  Index.  Earnouts  range over  a  five  year performance
      period from 0%  to 150%  of the  rights awarded to  Mr. Kresa  and from  a
      guaranteed  minimum of 30% (conditioned  upon the executive's retention in
      active employment for the full  five year performance measurement  period)
      to  150% of the rights awarded to  all other Named Executive Officers. Mr.
      Kresa has waived the 30% guaranteed minimum. Dividend equivalents will  be
      distributed  on those  shares earned  over the  five year  period. Interim
      payments may be made if earned by prorata performance at the end of  years
      3  and 4.  Interim payments  are reconciled with  and offset  by any final
      payment due at the  end of year  5 based on  performance. In the  unlikely
      event  that the sum of interim  payments made at the end  of years 3 and 4
      exceed the final payment  due, no restoration of  shares received will  be
      required.
</TABLE>
 
                                       19
<PAGE>
RETIREMENT PLANS
    For purposes of illustration, the following table shows the amount of annual
retirement  benefits  that  would  be  accrued  at  age  65  under  the Northrop
Retirement Plan (the "Retirement Plan"),  calculated on a straight life  annuity
basis,  at selected compensation levels and years of service. The listed benefit
amounts are not subject to any  reduction for Social Security benefits or  other
offset amounts.
 
    Actual  benefits  payable  under  the Retirement  Plan  are  limited  to the
compensation limitation of Section  401(a)(17) of the  Internal Revenue Code  of
1986,  as amended,  (the "Code")  and the limitations  under Section  415 of the
Code. The benefits  which exceed  these limits  are payable  from any  one or  a
combination  of the Company's Supplemental  Retirement Income Program for Senior
Executives (discussed below) or the Northrop Corporation ERISA Supplemental Plan
I ("ERISA 1") and  the ERISA Supplemental Program  2 ("ERISA 2")  (collectively,
the "Supplemental Retirement Plans").
 
                            YEARS OF BENEFIT SERVICE
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
   ANNUAL
  AVERAGE
COMPENSATION
  (HIGHEST         5           10          15          20          25          30           35
3 YEARS OUT     --------    --------    --------    --------    --------    --------    ----------
 OF LAST 5)                   ANNUAL BENEFITS FROM RETIREMENT PLAN AND ERISA 1 AND 2
- ------------    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>             <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>
$   100,000     $  7,500    $ 15,000    $ 22,500    $ 30,000    $ 40,000    $ 50,000    $   60,000
    150,000       11,250      22,500      33,750      45,000      60,000      75,000        90,000
    200,000       15,000      30,000      45,000      60,000      80,000     100,000       120,000
    250,000       18,750      37,500      56,250      75,000     100,000     125,000       150,000
    300,000       22,500      45,000      67,500      90,000     120,000     150,000       180,000
    400,000       30,000      60,000      90,000     120,000     160,000     200,000       240,000
    500,000       37,500      75,000     112,500     150,000     200,000     250,000       300,000
    600,000       45,000      90,000     135,000     180,000     240,000     300,000       360,000
  1,000,000       75,000     150,000     225,000     300,000     400,000     500,000       600,000
  1,400,000      105,000     210,000     315,000     420,000     560,000     700,000       840,000
  1,800,000      135,000     270,000     405,000     540,000     720,000     900,000     1,080,000
Compensation  covered by the plans is defined  by Income Tax Regulation Section 1.415-2(d)(10) and
generally includes,  but is  not limited  to, salary  and bonuses  as set  forth in  this  Summary
Compensation  Table. The  credited years  of service  under the  Retirement Plan  and Supplemental
Retirement Plans of the five individuals named  in the Summary Compensation Table are as  follows:
Mr.  Kresa, 19 years; Mr. Boileau,  4 years; Mr. Solberg, 10 years;  Mr. Molleur, 3 years; and Mr.
Waugh, 15 years. In  addition, Mr. Solberg  will receive an annual  retirement benefit of  $32,059
under a separate retirement plan of a Company division.
<FN>
- ------------------------
(1)   The  Supplemental Retirement Income Program for Senior Executives ("SRI"),
      under which certain employees  are designated by  the Board of  Directors,
      provides  a benefit in lieu of that otherwise payable under ERISA 1 and 2.
      The amount  of the  supplemental benefit  under the  SRI is  equal to  the
      greater  of  1)  the  participant's  benefit  under  the  Retirement  Plan
      calculated without  regard to  the limits  imposed under  Section 415  and
      401(a)(17)  of  the  Internal Revenue  Code,  as  amended, or  2)  a fixed
      percentage of the participant's final average salary (highest 3 years  out
      of  last 5) equal to 30% at age 55,  increasing 4% for each year up to and
      including age 60, and  increasing 2% for  each year beyond  age 60 to  65;
      less the benefit allowable under the Retirement Plan.
      Mr.  Kresa, who is eligible to receive  an annual benefit (estimated to be
      $710,940 payable at age 65,  assuming continued employment and based  upon
      current  final average salary) under the  SRI, is the only Named Executive
      Officer currently participating in that plan.
      SRI eligibility, in  addition to  designation by the  Board of  Directors,
      requires  the attainment of  age 55 and  10 years of  vesting service. The
      vesting service requirement may be waived by the Chief Executive Officer.
</TABLE>
 
                                       20
<PAGE>
CHANGE OF CONTROL AGREEMENT
 
    The Corporation  recently adopted  a plan  which permits  it to  enter  into
special  severance agreements ("Agreements") with  key employees, such employees
being  designated  from  time  to  time  by  the  Compensation  and   Management
Development Committee (the "Committee") of the Board of Directors. The Committee
has  designated eight key employees, including Messrs., Kresa, Solberg, Molleur,
and Waugh. The purpose of  the Agreements is to  encourage the key employees  to
continue  to carry out their duties in the  event of the possibility of a change
in control of the Corporation.  Payments under the special severance  agreements
would  be made only if there is (i) a Change in Control of the Corporation; (ii)
if the key employee is then in the employ of the Corporation; and (iii) the  key
employee's employment is terminated other than for narrowly defined causes.
 
    Generally,  a "Change in Control" shall be  deemed to have occurred if there
is a consolidation or merger of the Company and the Company is not the surviving
corporation. A Change in Control  shall also be deemed  to have occurred (i)  in
connection  with the sale, lease or transfer  of substantially all of the assets
of the Company,  (ii) if the  shareholders approve  a plan or  proposal for  the
liquidation  or dissolution of  the Company, (iii)  if any person  (other than a
trust established pursuant to an employee  benefit plan of the Company)  becomes
the  beneficial owner of 15% or more of the Company's outstanding stock, or (iv)
if during any  two-year period  the majority  of the  Company's directors  shall
cease  to be "continuing Directors." "Continuing Director" shall mean a director
who was a director of  the Company at the beginning  of any two year period,  as
well  as any person whose  election or nomination as  a director was approved by
two-thirds of the then Continuing Directors.
 
    The Executive shall be  entitled to certain benefits  upon a termination  of
employment within the thirty-month period following a Change in Control except a
termination of employment resulting from the Executive's death, a termination by
the  company for "cause" or "disability", or  a termination by the Executive for
"good cause."
 
    In the event of  a termination which required  the Company to make  payments
under  this Agreement, the Executive shall be  entitled to: (i) full base salary
through the  date  of  termination, (ii)  severance  pay  equal to  2.99  X  the
Executive's Full Base Amount (as defined under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986
as  amended), (iii)  medical, dental  and life  insurance benefits substantially
similar to  those to  which Executive  was receiving  immediately prior  to  the
Change in Control, and (iv) all deferred accrued and bonus vacation pay pursuant
to policies in effect immediately prior to the Change in Control.
 
    If  any  portion  of the  key  employee's severance  compensation  under the
Agreement (i) exceeds the  total amount of payments  or benefits which could  be
received  by the key  employee from the Corporation  without any portion thereof
constituting a nondeductible "excess parachute payment" pursuant to Section 280G
of the Code; or (ii) is subject to the excise tax imposed by Section 4999 of the
Code, such payments  or benefits  shall be reduced  to the  extent necessary  to
comply with the limitation. Such reduction shall be made in the order and manner
determined by the key employee as soon as administratively practicable following
the change in control.
 
MANAGEMENT CONTRACTS
 
    Coincident  with  the  election  of  Mr.  Oliver  C.  Boileau,  Jr.  as Vice
President, President  and  General  Manager, B-2  Division  in  December,  1989,
Northrop  entered  into a  five-year employment  agreement  with him.  Under the
agreement, Mr. Boileau is  entitled to an  annual base salary  of not less  than
$350,000  with  participation in  the Company's  bonus and  other plans.  If Mr.
Boileau's employment is terminated without cause, he will be entitled to a final
pro-rata  payment  not  greater  than  three  times  his  then  current  salary.
 
                                       21
<PAGE>
The  agreement also provides for the grant of 100,000 Stock Options for Northrop
Common Stock with companion Stock  Appreciation Rights with a five-year  vesting
schedule.   On  December  21,   1992,  Mr.  Boileau,   voluntarily  and  without
consideration, surrendered 60,000 unvested tandem stock appreciation rights.
 
    Under the terms  of his employment  agreement, in the  event Mr. Boileau  is
terminated  prior to December 10, 1994 the  Company will provide a straight life
retirement benefit  of $60,000  per year  for life  plus a  pro-rata portion  of
$40,000,  determined by dividing  $40,000 by 24 and  multiplying the quotient by
the number of months employed since the third anniversary of his agreement.  The
retirement benefit will be payable at the time of termination either through the
Northrop  Retirement Plan and the Supplemental Retirement Income Plan for Senior
Executives or through a  Deferred Annuity. If  Mr. Boileau continues  employment
for  a full  five years (until  December 10,  1994), the Company  will provide a
straight life retirement  benefit of $100,000  per year for  life. The  $100,000
straight life annuity benefit provided for under the employment contract will be
reduced  by the accrued benefit payable  under the Northrop Retirement Plan. The
balance of this  benefit will be  paid from the  Supplemental Retirement  Income
Plan for Senior Executives or through a deferred annuity.
 
CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS
 
    Mr.  Rosenberg is the Chairman  of the Board and  Chief Executive Officer of
BankAmerica Corporation. Bank  of America  is participating as  Co-Agent in  the
Company's  1994 Credit Agreement among the  Company, Bank of America and certain
other banks.  During  1993,  Bank  of  America was  one  of  a  group  of  banks
participating  in  the Company's  credit  facilities including  the  1987 Credit
Agreement and  the 1990  Credit Agreement  (the "Credit  Agreements") among  the
Company,  Bank of America and certain other  banks. During 1993, Bank of America
was prepared to extend  up to $56  Million on a committed  basis to the  Company
under  the Credit  Agreements. During 1993,  $227,098 in fees  and interest were
paid to Bank of America under the  terms of the Credit Agreements. In 1993,  the
Company  also  paid fees  in the  approximate  aggregate of  $48,855 to  Bank of
America in compensation for various  ancillary services such as cash  management
and letters of credit.
 
    Management believes the terms of the foregoing transactions were competitive
or  were as  favorable to  the Company  as could  have been  obtained from other
entities having no affiliation with the Company.
 
    Mr. Edwards is a senior partner at the law firm of Hand, Arendall,  Bedsole,
Greaves & Johnston. Hand Arendall has been a consultant for Northrop Corporation
during  the past  year and  continues this  status. Pursuant  to this Consulting
Agreement, Hand Arendall provides  analyses and advice  with respect to  pending
and  proposed legislation. During 1993 the Company paid Hand Arendall consulting
fees of $92,072 under this Agreement.
 
    Ms. Peters is a senior partner at the law firm of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher. A
partner  of  Gibson,  Dunn  &  Crutcher  has  been  a  consultant  for  Northrop
Corporation  providing analysis and advice with  respect to pending and proposed
legislation. No fees  were paid under  this Agreement in  1993. Gibson Dunn  has
represented Northrop in various legal matters and continues to do so.
 
VOTE REQUIRED
 
    The  affirmative vote of a majority of  the shares of Common Stock voting at
the Annual Meeting (with each share entitled to one vote), provided a quorum  is
present,  is  required for  the election  of directors.  THE BOARD  OF DIRECTORS
RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR THE FOUR NOMINEES FOR DIRECTOR LISTED ABOVE.
 
                                       22
<PAGE>
                      APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS
 
    The Board of Directors recommends  that the stockholders ratify the  Board's
appointment  of Deloitte & Touche as the independent auditors of the Company for
1994. Deloitte & Touche served the Company as its independent auditors for 1993.
Should the stockholders fail to ratify the appointment of Deloitte & Touche, the
Board of Directors will consider this an indication to select other auditors for
the following year.
 
    A representative of Deloitte & Touche will be present at the Annual  Meeting
of  Stockholders and will be offered an opportunity to make a statement if he so
desires. He  will  also  be  available  to  answer  appropriate  questions  from
stockholders.
 
VOTE REQUIRED
 
    The  affirmative vote of a majority of  the shares of Common Stock voting at
the Annual Meeting (with each share entitled to one vote), provided a quorum  is
present,  is  required for  approval of  this proposal.  THE BOARD  OF DIRECTORS
RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR THIS PROPOSAL.
 
COMPLIANCE WITH SECTION 16(A) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT
 
    Section 16(a)  of the  Securities Exchange  Act requires  the  Corporation's
officers  and  directors,  and  persons  who own  more  than  ten  percent  of a
registered class  of the  Corporation's equity  securities, to  file reports  of
ownership  and changes in ownership on Forms 3,  4 and 5 with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) and the  New York Stock Exchange. Officers,  directors
and  greater  than ten  percent shareowners  are required  by SEC  regulation to
furnish the Corporation with copies of all Forms 3, 4 and 5 they file.
 
    Based solely on the Corporation's review of the copies of such forms it  has
received  and written representations  from certain reporting  persons that they
were not required to  file Forms 5 for  specified fiscal years, the  Corporation
believes  that  all  its  officers,  directors,  and  greater  than  ten percent
beneficial owners complied with all filing requirements applicable to them  with
respect  to transactions during  fiscal 1993, except Charles  L. Jones, Jr., who
reported on December 31, 1993 the sale of 860 shares on October 26, 1993 and the
sale of 860 shares on December 15, 1992.
 
             APPROVAL OF AMENDMENT TO CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION
 
    The Board of Directors has approved,  and recommends to the stockholders  of
the  Company,  the adoption  of  an amendment  to  the Company's  Certificate of
Incorporation to  change  the  corporate name  from  "Northrop  Corporation"  to
"Northrop  Grumman Corporation." In connection with the Company's acquisition of
93.4% of the  outstanding shares  of Common  Stock of  Grumman Corporation,  the
Board  of Directors has approved the proposed  change in the name of the Company
in order to preserve  the proud heritage  of the Grumman  name in U.S.  military
aviation. The Company believes that the name change is an appropriate reflection
of its commitment to the combined Northrop/Grumman entity.
 
VOTE REQUIRED
 
    The  affirmative  vote  of the  holders  of  a majority  of  the  issued and
outstanding shares of Common Stock entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting  (with
each  share entitled to one vote), provided a quorum is present, is required for
approval of this  proposal. THE BOARD  OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS  A VOTE FOR  THIS
PROPOSAL.
 
                                       23
<PAGE>
                                 MISCELLANEOUS
 
VOTING ON OTHER MATTERS
 
    At  the time of filing this Proxy Statement with the Securities and Exchange
Commission, management was not aware of any matters not referred to herein  that
will  be  presented for  action  at the  Annual  Meeting. If  any  other matters
properly come  before  the  Annual  Meeting, it  is  intended  that  the  shares
represented by proxies will be voted with respect thereto in accordance with the
judgment of the persons authorized to vote them.
 
PROPOSAL OF SECURITY HOLDERS
 
    Copies  of  proposals  which security  holders  of  the Company  wish  to be
included in the Company's proxy statement  relating to its Annual Meeting to  be
held in 1995 must be received by the Company no later than December 1, 1994.
 
    Copies of such proposals of security holders should be sent to the Corporate
Secretary, Northrop Corporation, 1840 Century Park East, Los Angeles, California
90067.
 
COST OF SOLICITING PROXIES
 
    The  cost of soliciting proxies in the accompanying form has been or will be
paid by the  Company. In addition  to solicitation by  mail, arrangements  will,
where  appropriate, be made with brokerage houses and other custodians, nominees
and fiduciaries to send  proxy materials to beneficial  owners, and the  Company
will,  upon request, reimburse  them for their reasonable  expenses in so doing.
The Company has  retained Georgeson &  Company Inc. of  New York to  aid in  the
solicitation  of  proxies  at  an  estimated  fee  of  $10,000  plus  reasonable
disbursements. Officers,  directors and  regular employees  of the  Company  may
request  the return  of proxies personally,  by means of  materials prepared for
stockholders and employee-stockholders or by telephone or telegram to the extent
deemed appropriate by the Board of Directors. No additional compensation will be
paid  to  such  individuals  for  this  activity.  The  extent  to  which   this
solicitation  will  be  necessary  will depend  upon  how  promptly  proxies are
received; therefore,  stockholders are  urged to  return their  proxies  without
delay.
 
                                          Sheila M. Gibbons
                                          CORPORATE VICE PRESIDENT AND SECRETARY
 
April 18, 1994
 
    NOTICE:  THE COMPANY  FILED AN  ANNUAL REPORT ON  FORM 10-K  ON FEBRUARY 28,
1994. SHAREHOLDERS OF RECORD ON MARCH 22, 1994, MAY OBTAIN A COPY OF THIS REPORT
WITHOUT CHARGE  BY DIRECTING  A  REQUEST TO  THE CORPORATE  SECRETARY,  NORTHROP
CORPORATION, 1840 CENTURY PARK EAST, LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA 90067.
 
                                       24
<PAGE>
[LOGO]
ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS MAY 18, 1994
PROXY SOLICITED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

P
R
O
X
Y

   The undersigned hereby appoints R. R. MOLLEUR and S.M. GIBBONS, and each of 
them, proxies of the undersigned, with full power of substitution in each of 
them, to vote all shares of Common Stock of Northrop Corporation which the 
undersigned may be entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting of Stockholders of 
the Company to be held at the Sheraton Los Angeles Airport Hotel, 6101 West 
Century Boulevard, Los Angeles, California, on May 18, 1994 at 10:00 A.M., and 
at any adjournments thereof, with all powers the undersigned would possess if 
personally present and voting, as specified below, and in their discretion on 
any other matters that may properly come before the Meeting.

Election of Directors: Nominees--J. Chain, J. Edwards, K. Kresa and B. Scowcroft


PLEASE MARK, DATE AND SIGN THIS PROXY AND RETURN IT PROMPTLY, EVEN IF YOU PLAN
TO ATTEND THE MEETING.


COMMENTS/ADDRESS CHANGE: PLEASE MARK COMMENTS/ADDRESS BOX ON REVERSE SIDE

(Continued and to be signed on other side)

<PAGE>

X
PLEASE MARK YOUR CHOICES LIKE THIS

THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED AS DIRECTED, BUT IF NOT OTHERWISE DIRECTED, WILL BE
VOTED FOR PROPOSALS 1, 2 AND 3.

THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR ITEMS 1, 2 AND 3.

           FOR ALL

Item 1--Election of four Class III directors                  FOR      WITHHELD
        to hold office for three years and                             FOR ALL
        until their respective successors are                 /  /       /  /
        elected and qualified.

WITHHELD FOR :(Write that nominee's
name in the space provided below)
_______________________________________________

Item 2--The ratification of the appointment of        FOR    AGAINST    ABSTAIN
        Deloitte & Touche as the Company's 
        independent auditors.                         /  /     /  /       /  /

Item 3--Amend the Certificate of Incorporation        FOR    AGAINST    ABSTAIN
        to change the Corporate name.
                                                      /  /     /  /       /  /

COMMENTS/ADDRESS CHANGE
Please mark this box if you have comments/address change on reverse side. /  /


Signature(s)_____________________________Date_____________________

Note: Please sign as name appears hereon. Joint owners should each sign. When
signing as attorney, executor, administrator, trustee or guardian, please give
full title as such.


<PAGE>
[LOGO]
ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS MAY 18, 1994
CONFIDENTIAL INSTRUCTIONS TO BANKERS TRUST COMPANY. 
TRUSTEE FOR THE NORTHROP SAVINGS PLAN

   Receipt of proxy material for the above Meeting is acknowledged. I instruct 
you to vote (in person or by proxy) all shares of Common Stock of Northrop 
Corporation held by you for my account under the Plan at the Annual Meeting of 
Stockholders of Northrop Corporation to be held May 18, 1994 at 10:00 A.M., and 
at all adjournments thereof, on the following matters as indicated on the 
reverse side and in your discretion on any other matters that may come before 
the Meeting. If this card is signed and returned, but no choice is specified, I 
instruct you to vote this proxy in accordance with the Board of Directors' 
recommendations, "FOR all Nominees" in Proposal 1 and "FOR" Proposals 2 and 3.

Election of Directors: Nominees--J. Chain, J. Edwards, K. Kresa and B. Scowcroft

COMMENTS/ADDRESS CHANGE: PLEASE MARK COMMENTS/ADDRESS BOX ON REVERSE SIDE

(Continued and to be signed on other side)

<PAGE>

THIS INSTRUCTION CARD WILL BE VOTED AS DIRECTED, BUT IF NOT OTHERWISE DIRECTED,
WILL BE VOTED FOR PROPOSALS 1, 2 AND 3.

/X/  PLEASE MARK YOUR CHOICES LIKE THIS

THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR ITEMS 1, 2 AND 3.


Item 1--Election of four Class III directors to               FOR      WITHHELD 
        hold office for three years and until their                    FOR ALL
        respective successors are elected and qualified.      /  /      /   /

WITHHELD FOR: (Write that nominee's 
name in the space provided below)

_____________________________________________________

Item 2--The ratification of the appointment of       FOR     AGAINST     ABSTAIN
        Deloitte & Touche as the Company's 
        independent auditors.                        /  /      /  /        /  /

Item 3--Amend the Certificate of Incorporation       FOR     AGAINST     ABSTAIN
        to change the Corporate name.
                                                     /  /      /  /        /  /

COMMENTS/ADDRESS CHANGE Please mark this box if you have comments/address 
change on reverse side.  /  /

Signature(s)_________________________________________Date ____________________

Note: Please sign as name appears hereon. Joint owners should each sign. When
signing as attorney, executor, administrator, trustee or guardian, please give
full title as such.




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