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               NATIONAL ALLIANCE OF SUPERIOR TECHNOLOGICAL YOUTH
                                 N.A.S.T.Y.
                              JOURNAL NUMBER 3
                               N.A.S.T.Y. IS:

                             THE RENEGADE HACKER
                                  /<LUDGE
                             POINT OF PRESENCE

                             <Mailing Addresses>
                             renegade@hale.uucp
                              kludge@hale.uucp


                                CONTENTS
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Contents/Header

2. Information on N.A.S.T.Y.               BY: THE RENEGADE HACKER!

3. The Art of Communication (Part 1)       BY: THE GATSBY & AL JADY

4. The W.D.I.A. Network (NCI)              BY: /<LUDGE

5. Trans Union Credit Information          BY: /<LUDGE

6. N.A.S.T.Y. World News

7. Networks of the Internet                BY: THE GATSBY

8. Hack/Phreak News & Rumors
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

=============================================================================
                   N.A.S.T.Y. JOURNAL RELEASE 3 - PART 02
=============================================================================

 
                        ===============================
                        =  INFORMATION ON N.A.S.T.Y.  =
                        =                             =
                        =             BY:             =
                        =                             =
                        =    THE RENEGADE HACKER!     =
                        ===============================
 
Welcome to the third release of The NASTY JOURNAL! Let me start off by
telling you what has happened during the past few months.
    Someone had created an account on a ROLM CBX with the account name of
NASTY.  After this happened DAMAGED SECTORZ, and CYBER LINK were busted.
JAMES BROWN gave his computer away (he lives near CYBER LINK and is a
close friend of his), and a handfull of other people were busted. All of 
which were asked questions about NASTY.
    I have retired from Hacking & Phreaking, all I will be doing is editing
the NASTY journal, and writing for it. You may see me on a few boards and
chat systems, but that's about it.
    After NASTY had all but disappeared alot of rumors had started. these
rumors ranged from me getting busted, to Corrupt saying that he had crushed
NASTY with his thumb. His comments led to NASTY JOURNAL RELEASE 2, not really
a Journal, but it was very intresting to say the least!
    After a long period of Chaos NASTY managed to survive.  Now NASTY
consists of only three  members, there is room for expansion. There is
no set time for release of a new journal, it could be in a month, two days,
or never. It all depends on you. Our intention is to create a
conglomerate of information from various sources in order to obtain a
uniform Journal.
    If you wish to write for the NASTY journal, have any news, rumors, gossip
or you just have a question or comment, please mail us at:

         Places to Contact NASTY Members:
         ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
            renegade@hale.uucp
            kludge@hale.uucp
            kludge@isis.cs.du.edu
            the account 'me' on Lutzifer
            Renegade Hacker #42 at Scantronics Publications
                  Scantronics Publications (619) 423-4852
                        SYSOP: /<ludge
            Renegade Hacker #7 at Bellcore Underground
                  Bellcore Underground (516) 466-8259
                        SYSOP: Code of Honor

    The future plans and wishes I have for NASTY are:
 
                 1. That we get a good programmer in 'C'.
 
                                    and 
 
                 2. I plan to set up a UNIX for use by NASTY. 
 
Well, until the next Journal, or in the ever growing underground-
             
                                                  Peace!
          
                                                  THE RENEGADE HACKER!

=============================================================================
                  N.A.S.T.Y. JOURNAL RELEASE 3 - PART 03
=============================================================================

   .....................................................................
  ........................................................................
 ..........................................................................
  .....                                                              ..... 
   ...                                                                ... 
   ...                 The Art of Communication (Part 1)              ...
   ...                                                                ... 
   ...                               by                               ...
   ...                                                                ... 
   ...                      The Gatsby & Al Jady                      ...
   ...                                                                ... 
  .....                                                              .....
 ..........................................................................
  ........................................................................
    ....................................................................

1 OUTLINE
~~~~~~~~~~~


1   OUTLINE                      -What you are looking at.


2   NETWORK EVOLUTION            - This covers different telephone networks 
                                   used by bell through the ages.

3   PULSE CODE MODULATION THEORY - This talks about PCM, if you do not know
                                   what it is, then read it.

4   CHANNEL BANKS AND TERMINALS  - This talks about Channel Banks (or 
                                   terminals) and different Transmission 
                                   System.




2   NETWORK EVOLUTION
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


                    Network Structure


               \     /               | /
                (EO)---------------(EO)--
                /  \               /
                    \             /
                     \           /
                      \         /
                       \       /
                        \     /
                         \   /
                          \ /
                          (TC)----------(EO)--
                          / \           / |
                         /   \
                        /     \    /
                       /       (EO)-
                      /          |
                  --(PC)


Prior to 1960 the network consisted of:

Analog Electromechanical Switching System

   - End Office (EO)
     A switching system where customer station loops are terminated for
     purpose of interconnection to each other and to trunks for access to the
     network.

   - Toll Offices
     Toll offices such as the ToIl Center (TC) and Primary Center (PC) are
     tandem switching system that establishes trunk-to-trunk connection.
     Analog transmission system were used throughout the network.

   - Voice Frequency (VF) metallic cable pairs in the subscriber loop and
     also in the inter-office facility environment.

   - Frequency-Division Multiplexing (FDM) carrier system in the inter-city
     environment.



                   \  /     "T" CXR             \ |
                   (EO)=========================(EO)--
                   / \                          /    Analog
                      \                        /      ESS
                       \                      /
                        \                    /
                         \                  /
                          \                /
                           \              /
                            \            /
                             \          /
                              \        /
                               \      /
                                \    /
                                 \  /
                                 (TC)-----------------(EO)--
                                 / | \
                                /  |  \
                               /   |   \
                              /    |    \
                         ---(PC)   |     \
                                   |     (EO)---
                                  (EO)--   |
                                  / |


   The first presentation of digital technology in the network was with the
introduction of "T"-carrier in the inter-office facility environment. "T"
carrier provides the opportunity to improve the economics of providing
communications between Central Offices and also improve the quality of the
transmission.uality of transmission. During the same time period the first
Analog Electronic Switching System (ESS) with Stored program Control (SPC)
was installed.


                   \  /           ^^            \ |
                   (EO)===========||============(EO)--
                   / \\                         //    Analog
                      \\                       //      ESS
                       \\                     //
                        \\                   //
                         \\                 //
                          \\               //
                           \\             //
                            \\           //
                             \\         //
                              \\       //
                               \\     //
                                \\   //
                                 \\ //                              o
         Digital Toll ESS ----->  (TC)====================(EO)-=-=-( )
                                 / | \                          ^   U
                                /  |  \                         |
                               /   |   \                      Analog
                              /    |    \                    Pair Gain
                         ---(PC)   |     \
                                   |     (EO)---
                                  (EO)--   |
                                  / |


  The Digital Toll Switch (No. 4ESS) was introduced in 1976. Use of digital
inter-office facilities increased. Analog pair-gainsystems were used in the
Subscriber Loop Plan primarily as temporary solutions regarding facility
exhaust problems. Fiber optic systems began to penetrate exhaust problems.
Fiber optic systems began to penetrate the interoffice facility area of the
network in the late 1970's.




                   \  /           ^^            \       o
                   (EO)==========(||)============(EO)====@o
                   / \\                         //||    o
                      \\                       // ||    ^
                       \\                     //  ||    |
                        \\                   //   ||    Digital Pair
                         \\                 //    ||     Gain
                          \\               //     ||/
                           \\             //     (__)-
                            \\           //        ^
                             \\         //         |
                              \\       //        Analog RSU
                               \\     //
                                \\   //
                                 \\ //                             o
                                 (TC)====================(EO)-=-=-(O)
                                // ||\\                            U
                              ^^/  || \\
                Fiber Optics (||)  ||  \\
                             //    ||   \\
                         ---(PC)   ||    \\
                                   ||    (EO)---
                                  (EO)--   |
                                  / |

Use of Digital Toll Switching and Digital Interoffice facilities continued to
grow. Analog Remote Switching Units (RSU), served by analog host ESS were
introduced. Digital pair-gain systems were introduced as long-term facility
alternatives in the subscriber loop plant. Penetration of fiber opticsystem
moved into the inter-city enviroment of the network.


         ..                    \ ..
  \   .      .       ^^       .      .      ^^   /
   O==:  EO  :=======||=======:  EO  :======||==O-
  /      ..                      .. \\
         ||                    //    \\     Fiber-Optics
         ||                   //      \\ _
         ||                  //        \| \
         ||                 //          |  \
         ||                //           |   \
         ||               //            | R  |
         ||              //             | S  |-
         ||             //              | U  |
         ||            //               |   /
         ||           //                |  /
     ____||__________//___              |_/
I --|   .   .    . | .    |             . ..
C --|  :     :  :  |  :   |    ^^      .  :::..    |
' --|______________|______|====||======:  :::::====O
s                                       . :: \     |
             /                            ||  Digital ESS
     Access Tandem/LATA Tandem            ||
                                          ||
                                          ||
                                        ::::::    |
                                         ::::=====o-
                                       /  ::      |
                                 Digital
                                  RSU


   Local Digital Switches and Digital Remote Switch Unit (RSU) were
introduced during the 1980's. Fiber optic systems began to penetrate the
Subscriber Loop Plant. The Modified Final Judgement (MFJ) requird AT&T to
divest itself of ownership of the Bell Operating Companies (BOC). One of the
provisions of the MFJ is that the BOCs must furnish equal access to the
network to all Interexchange Carriers (IC). The combined access tandem/LATA
tandem office may provide the equal access and the LATA tandem switching
functions for the BOC's.






3   PULSE CODE MODULATION (PCM) THEORY
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Analog Signal

   An analog signal is a signal in the form of a continuously varing physical
quantity such as voltage, which represents variations in another quantity,
such as the loudness of the human voice. In other words, we use electrical
waves to represent (or be analogous to) the acoustical speech waves generated
by the human voice.

Characteristics of the analog signal are:

   1.  It is continuous in time, and
   
   2.  All values are permitted (within the _+_ maximum limits defined).


Analog Transmission

   The purpose of the ideal transmission channel is to deliver an accurate
reproduction of the original signal to the receiving terminal. Transmission
of analog signals involves three major impairments-

    LOSS       -  Attenuation of the information signal
   
    NOISE      -  Unwanted electrical signals that interfere with the
                  information signal
   DISTORTION  -  Changing the information signal waveform

   
Loss can be overcome by introducing an amplifier to restore the signal to
its original amplitude. However, since the amplified cannot differentiate
between signal and noise, it amplifies the noise as well as anydistortion in
the signal. The amplified noise and distortion is now part of the input
signal for the next section of the analog transmission line.
   As the length of the analog transmission line increases, more amplifiers
must be used, and effect of noise and distortion accumulates. The cumulative
effect of noise and distortion can be minimized by proper system design and
component selection - but it cannot be eliminated. Noise and distortion
generally control the maximum design length of an analog transmission system.


Digital Signal

                     _____________
                    |             |   __     __   __    _    ___
/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\|     PCM     |__|  |___|  |_|  |__| |__|   |__
                    |   Terminal  |
                    |_____________|
^                 ^                  ^                          ^
 \_Analog signal_/                    \______PCM Signal________/


     8-Bit Binary Number = 2^8 or 256 discrete values



   Pulse Code Modulation (PCM)

   - Uses 8-bit binary numbers to represent periodic samples of the speech
     signal (or analog signal).

   - The pulses are of equal higth and width.
 
   - The information content of the digital (or PCM) signal is carried by the
     presence or absence of the pulses - not the shape of the pulses.

   Characteristics of the digital (PCM) signal are:

   1. It is discrete in time (non-continuous).

   2. It is discrete in value (only 256 levels are permitted.


   The major advantage of digital (PCM) transmission comes from the use of
regenerative repeaters.
   The digital signal is distorted by the loss, noise and distortion
characteristics of the transmission line. When the distorted signal arrives
at the input of the regenerative repeater, it is examined during each bit
position-

   - If the input signal exceeds a designed threshold level, the
     repeatdecides there is a pulse in that position, and the repeater
     generates a new pulse.

   - If the input signal dose not exceed the threshold level, the repeater
     decides there is no pulse in that bit position, and no pulse is
     generated.


   In this manner, the digital signal is re-generated (rather than amplified)
at each repeater, and the effects of transmission impairments on the waveform
are eliminated at repeater.
    Speech signals start at the transmitter button of a telephone set as an
analog signal. To carry the "information" in the analog signal over a digital
transmission line, it is nessary to convert the analog signal to a digital
signal. The process that bell uses is called Pulse Code Modulation, or PCM.
PCM essentially uses three steps in the analog to digital conversion.

   1. Sampling - the analog signal is sampled periodically. Each sample
      generates a PAM (Pulse Amplitude Modulation) signal, with an amplitude
      equal to the amplitude of the analog signal.

   2. Quantizing - the amplitude (or hight) of the PAM signal is "measured"
      to derive a number that represents its amplitude level.

   3. Encoding - the decimel (base 10) number derived in the quantizing step,
      is then converted to its equivalent 8-bit binary number.


   Since this process converts one instantaneous value of the analog signal
into an 8-bit word, it is obviously nessary to repeat the process many times
a second. Now that you have a overview of this process, lets look a little
closer at the individual steps.

Sampling -

   The first step in the analog-to-digital conversion is sampling. The analog
signal is sampled periodically to determine its instantaneous value at
different points in time. Each time the signal is sampled, Bell generate a
PAM (Pulse Amplitude Modulation) signal. The PAM signals are pulses with
uniform width, but varing in amplitude (or hight). the amplitude of each PAM
signal represents the instantaneous amplitude of the ana;og signa; represents
the instantaneous amplitude of the analog signal at one point in time.
   The rate that we sample the analog signal, and is based on the Nyquist
sampling theorem. This theorem says:

    If a band-limited signal is sampled at regular intervals of time and at a
    rate equal to or higher than twice the highest significant signal
    frequency, then the samples contain all the information of the original
    signal. The original signal may be reconstructed by use of a low-pass
    filter.

The standard sampling rate for telephone-band transmission is 8000 times a
second. Theoretically this would limit the voiceband signals to 4000 Hz, due to
imperfect filter characteristics.


Quantizing -

  Is essentially matching the PAM signals to a segmented scale. The purpose
of quantizing is to "measure" the amplitude (or height) of each PAM signal
coming from the sampling step, and assign an integer (whole) number between 0
and -\+127 to define the amplitude of each PAM signal. Once a number has been
assigned, the next step in the analog-to-digital conversion is encoding.

Encoding -

   Involves the conversion of the number that was determined in the
Quantizing step, to a binary number. Each quantized PAM signal is converted
to an 8-bit binary "word", in which each bit may be either a "1" (pulse) or a
"0" (no pulse). The 8-bit "word" represents the binary equivalent of the
number from the quantizing step.

For Example:

   If the PAM signal "measures" +47 on the quantizing scale, the output of
the encoding step is the 8-bit word "10101101" (i.e. the binary equivalent of
+45). 

 ________________________________________________________________________
|                |7     |6     |5     |4     |3     |2     |1     |0     |
|   Power        |   2  |   2  |   2  |   2  |   2  |   2  |   2  |   2  |
|________________|______|______|______|______|______|______|______|______|
|                |      |      |      |      |      |      |      |      |
| Bit Position   |   8  |   7  |   6  |   5  |   4  |   3  |   2  |   1  |
|________________|______|______|______|______|______|______|______|______|
|                |                           +                           |
|  Scale         | 127 <------------------------------------------> 0    |
|________________|___________________________-___________________________|
|                |      |      |      |      |      |      |      |      |
|  Weight        | +/-  |  64  |  32  |  16  |   8  |   4  |   2  |   1  |
|________________|______|______|______|______|______|______|______|______|
|                |      |      |      |      |      |      |      |      |
| Binary Word    |      |      |      |      |      |      |      |      |
|________________|______|______|______|______|______|______|______|______|


The binary word consists of pulses for binary one and no pulses for
binary zerors. Each bit is weighted by some power of two (2). Except fot the
8th bit position which indicates polarity (1 = positive, 0 = negative).


Quantizing Error or Distortion



127   ___
       |
126   _|_
       |                                   ______
125   _|_                                  ||||||
       |  <------------------------------> |    |
124   _|_                                  |    |
       |                                   |    |
123   _|_                                  |    |
       |                                   |    |
       ~                                    ~~~~
       ~                                   |~~~~|
5     _|_                        ______    |    |
       |  <--------------------> ||||||    |    |
4     _|_                        |    |    |    |
       |                         |    |    |    |
3     _|_                        |    |    |    |
       |                         |    |    |    |        
2     _|_                        |    |    |    |
       |                         |    |    |    | 
1     _|_              _____     |    |    |    |
       |  <----------> |||||     |    |    |    |
0     _|_______________|___|_____|____|____|____|
       |
     \_|_/


   In quantizing, PAM signals do nto always match exactly with the step on
the quantizing scale. For example, a PAM signal may measure +1/2, or +4 1/2,
or +124 1/2 or any fraction of a step.
   Since an 8-bit word limits us to 256 discrete number, only whole number.
For example, a PAM signal that "measures" + 4-1/2 might be  rounded up to +5
and encoded as "10000101". When  the distant terminal decodes this binary
number, it will rebuild a PAM signal exactly +5 unit high. As a result, the
system has introduced an error of +1/2 in the encoding and transmission of
that PAM signal. This error is called quantizing error or quantizing
distortion.
   Quantizing error or distortion is perceived by the listener as noise or
"graininess" of the signal.


   If we use a linear scale (equal steps), and decide to round up or down at
the half way point in the step, the maximum error that can be introduced is
-/+ 1/2. When that error (or distortion) is compared to the relative signal
level however, the ratio of signal-to-quantizing distortion (S/D ratio) is
much worse for low-level signals than for high-level signals.
   Since it is much more likely in speech transmission to have lowlevel
signals than high-level signals, linear quantizing would give us the poorest
S/D ratio in the area where most of the spech energy falls (i.e. low-level
signals).
   One solution might be to decrease, the size of the quantizing steps (i.e.
use more steps in the linear scale). For example experiments have shown that
a satisfactory S/D ratio for lowlevel signals can be odtained by using a
linear scale with 2048 step; but this would require an 11-bit word to encode
and a much larger bandwidth to transmit.

Quantizing With A Non-Linear Scale

   Another solution is to use a non-linear scale (unequal steps). Bell can
improve the S/D ratio for low-level signals by using smaller steps in the
lower amplitude portion of the scale, at the expense of the high-level
signals. Since the range of amplitudes has not changed, and we only have 256
steps to work with, Bell has to make the steps larger in the higher amplitude
portion of the scale. Ideally Bell would like to have a uniform S/D ratio
across the entire range of amplitudes.


                Time Division PCM  Companding


 +127   ____|____
           _|_
           _|_            ____
           _|_           |____|
        ____|____        |    |
         ___|___         |    |
         ___|___         |    |
         ___|___         |    |
       _____|_____       |    |
          __|__          |    |            ____
          __|__          |    |           |____|
          __|__          |    |           |    |
 0 _________|_______   __|____|___________|____|__________________
          __|__
          __|__
          __|__                       North American MU 255
       _____|____
        ____|___                       European A-LAW
        ____|___
        ____|___
      ______|_____
          __|__
          __|__
          __|__
   +127_____|_____
            |



 Companding  generally describes the methods used to reduce noise during the
transmission of low-level speech signals and during quiting intervals. In
todays standaed PCM system, companding is provided through the use of
non-linear quantizing scales in the encoding and decoding of speech signals.
  The design of the non-linear scale is defined by one of two modified
logarithmic formulas.

  - The companding formula used in North American standard systems (USA and
    Canada) is called MU-255.

  - The companding formula used in CCITT standard system is called A-LAW.


  CCITT standaed systems also differ from North American systems in the
number of channels and the transmission line bit rate. Since Bell dose not
comply with CCITT standars, Bell has to have the reaponsibility to provide
the conversion of the CCITT signal format to the North American signal format
when we interconnect the two systems.


                    Analog to Digital Conversion


                                                1 0 1 0 1 0 1  1 0  1 0 1
              ______  |  _______  |  _______    _   _   _   _  _    _   _
/\/\/\/\/\/\ |      |-|-|       |-|-|       |__| |_| |_| |_| || |__| |_| |___
            \|Sample|   |Quantiz|   |Encode |
             |______|   |_______|   |_______|
Analog                ^           ^            ^                          ^
Signal                |           |            |                          |
                       \         /              \                        /
                           PAM                          PCM Signal
                         Signals





The Analog-to-Digital Conversion essentally involves three steps:

   1. SAMPLING - The analog signal is sampled at periodic intervals. The
      output of the sampling step is a PAM (Pulse Amplityde Modulation)
      siganl.

   2. QUANTIZING - In this step the PAM signal is matched to a segmented
      scale. The purpose of this step is to "measure" the amplitude (or
      height) of the PAM signal and assign an integer number that defines
      that amplitude.
   
    3. ENCODING - In this step the integer base-10 number converted to an
      8-bit binary number. The output is an 8 bit "word", in which each bit
      may be either a "1" (pulse) or a "0" (no pulse).
   This process is repeated 8000 times a second for telephone voice cannel
service.


                Digital To Analog Conversion


  _    _   _   _     _    _________   |   __________
_| |__| |_| |_| |___| |__|         |  |  |          |/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/
^                      ^ | Decode  |--|--| Filter   |
|                      | |_________|     |__________|
 \                    /
      PCM Signal                PAM Signals                   Analog Signal


 After the Digital (PCM) signal is transmitted to the receiving terminal , it
must be converted back to an Analog signal. The Digital-to-Analog conversion
essantially consists of two steps:

  1. DECODING - The recived 8-bit "word" is decoded to recover the number
     that defines the amplitude of that sample. This information is used to
     rebuild a PAM signal of the orginal amplitude.

  2. FILTERING - The PAM signal of the original amplitude. When the 8000 PAM
     signals (per second) are passed through the filter, it reconstructs the
     original Analog waveform.


Single Channel PCM

   So far, I have discussed the Analog-to-Digital conversion for a signal
voice channel or circuit. If the Analog signal is sampled 8000 times a
second, there will be 8000 PAM signals per second, there will be 1/8000
seconds (or 125 microseconds) apart.
   The 8-bit word that is generated for each PAM signal can be transmitted in
a fraction of the 1/8000 second time frame. If Bell transmitted the single
channel PCM signal down the transmission line, there would be a considerable
amount of time between samples when the line would be a considerable amount
of transmission line, there would be a considerable amount of time between
samples when the line would not be "used".
   TIME DIVISION MULTIPLEXING takes advantage of the unused time between
samples of a single channel or circuit. In the standard North American PCM
system, 24 channels are time division multiplexed together and transmitted
over a common line.
   The 24 channels are sampled sequentially so that the PAM signals for
channels 2 through 24 occupy the time interval between subsequent PAM signals
for channel 1. Each PAM signal may then be passed in turn to a common
quantizer/encoder circuit. Since the PAM signals from the 24 channels are
staggered across the 1/8000 second time frame, the 8-bit words are generated
in sequence across time frame, the 8-bit words are generated in sequence
across that same time frame.
    Within the span of 125 microseconds (1/8000th of a second), an 8-bit
binary word is transmitted serially for each of the 24 channels (8
bit/channels - 192 bits).
   After 192 bits are transmitted, one more bit is added to identify the end
(or beginning) of a FRAME of information. This additional bit (can be a "1"
or a "0") is called the framing bit.
   The framing bit is used to synchronize the transmitting and receiving
terminals. (i.e. The frame bit provides the reciving terminals with a
starting point to separate the incoming bit stream into 8-bit words and
distribute them to the proper channels).
   A FRAME requires 125 microseconds to transmit and contains one encoded
sample (8-bit word) for each channel that is multiplexed, plus the framing
bit. The basic PCM frame contains 193 bits (192 encoded signal bits +1
framing bit).
   The FRAME is sub-divided into TIME SLOTS. A TIME SLOT represents the time
required to transmit one 8-bit word. (One PCM encoded sample).
   The basic PCM bit stream contains 1,544,000 bits/second (8000 frames/second
x 193 bits/frame = 1,544,000 bits/sec.). Every sixth frame Bell robs the last,
or least significant bit of each voice channel and substitute signaling
information in its place (bit robbing).
   Information is extracted by the terminal or machines as it is always in the
same place.

Encoded Unipolar

   Each "1" is transmitted in the positive direction and "o" are reference
level.

Encoded Bipolar

   Every other "1" pulse is alternated in the positive and negative axis.
Effectively cuts the frequency of the line signal in half. Noise bursts cause
two positive or negative pulses in a row, which is recognized as an error
(bipolar violation).

Bipolar Advantages

   - Simplified Error Detection
   - No DC Component
   - Easier Timing Recovery
   - Reduced Bandwidth Requirement

Low Bit Rate Voice Pulse Code Modulation Consideration LBRV - PCM

CONVENTIONAL PCM

   Various (PCM) techniques have been experimented within recent yeats
attempting to conserve digital bandwidth as compared to the standard 64 Kb/s,
PCM encoding.
   The 64 Kb/s, Norht American Standard, noted earlier in this lesson,
inherently possesses several transmission qualities. These are:

1. Dynamic Range - having 255 levels enadles PCM to handle a sudstantial
   input signal rage: -40dBm0 to 0dBm0.

2. Signal to Quantizing Distortion - having a S/D of 35 to 40dB enables up to
   10 analog/PCM conversions with minimal adverse affects.

3. In Band Signaling thru bit robbing, signaling is accomplished by utilizing
   the least significant bit of every 6th sample. Ths results in less than
   2.1% of bits robbed with no detectable analog distortion.

4. All Zeros Code treatment - the North American network cannot tolerate more
   than 15 consecutive zeros. Zero code suppression, the changing of the 2nd
   least significant bit of an all Zero PCM word, eliminates the all zero
   problem with minimal impairment.

   These qualities are the reasons that justify the "robust" discryption given
to 64 Kb/s PCM. The cost of these qualities is bandwidth.

ADPCM-DLQ

   Sampling of speech at the Nyquist rate yields sample differences that
differ much less than the original samples differ.
   Differential PCM is premised upon coding the difference between successive
samples. Again, because of the "difference" values in less (4 bit encoding
yields 16 values).
   As the analog signal level varies, so will the difference values vary.
Thus, the differential values and associated levels must be adjusted or
"adapted" based on signal size. The result is Adaptive differential PCM.
   The ability to adjust the quantization levels in an accordion fashion is
called dynamic quantization and is desirable for speech signals. For yones or
voice band data where analog values are constant, the quantization are locked
at an optimum point. Thus, dynamic locking quantizer, or DLQ.
   The net result is an analog signal, sampled at 8000 tiem/second, with the
difference between sample amplitudes being dynamically quantized into one of
16 levels, each level represented by 4 bits. In short, 32 Kb/s ADPCM-DLQ.

ADPCM-DLQ vs. PCM

   In comparing ADPCM-DLQ vs. PCM, both objective and subjective test were
performed:

   1. Assuming equal dynamic range input speech signals, ADPCM-DLQ was
      subjectively evaluated to be very close to PCM.

   2. Objective tests using 4.8Kb, PSK data sets yielded no errors for PCM
      and a 6*10^-7 bit error rate for ADPCM-DLQ with 16 level encoding. A
      3*10^-6 BER was odserved for 15 level ADPCM-DLQ.

   3. In band signaling thru bit robbing reduces ADPCM-DLQ to 15 levels and
      dose degrade its error performance (See Item 2 above).

   4. Zero code suppression dose not appreciably affreciably affect
      ADPCM-DLQ performance.

   5. At data rate greater than 4.8 Kb/s, ADPCM-DLQ contributed unacceptable
      error rates.

   6. PCM yields satisfactory performance for all types of voiceband signals
      with up to 10 analog/PCM conversions. For ADPCM-DLQ with 4.8 Kb/s voice
      band data, standard objectives cannot be guaranteed for more than 3
      back-to-back encodings.

ADPCM-DLQ Applications

   Assuming the CCITT facored standard is implenmeted, the following terminal
configurations could be used:

   1. Transcoding Terminals - input to the terminal are two 64 Kb/s based,
      DS1 signals (48 channels) with an output of single, 32 Kb/s based,
      DS1 signal (48 channels).

   2. Integrating Terminal - input to the terminal are 48 voice channels.
      Output is a single, 32 Kd/s based, DS1 signal.

   3. Bundling Application - where customers require private line trunk
      groups of 11 (or fewer) channels. Each bundle consisting of 11  32 Kb
      channels plus one signaling channel. 4 bundles would then comprise a
      DS1.


In a PCM system:

   Signal is composed of a group of pulses. Repeater looks for a pluses.
Repeater regenerates a new signal instead of amplifying the incoming signal.

                         GRADE OF SERVICE

   As the network becomes more digital, the grade of service should improve
because:

  1.  Loss in digital systems is not length-dependent.

  2.  Noise is controlled by companding, 8-bit word size, and the use of
      regenerative repeaters.

  3.  Distortion is controlled by the use of a nonlinear quantizing scale and
      regenerative repeaters.


                          BANDWIDTH

   Most analog systems require the use of a 4 kilohertz of bandwidth for each
voice channel. In our digital systems, each voice channel is composed of
8,000 8-bit words per second or 64 kilobits per second. The bandwidth
required to transmit this signal is several times greater than 4 kilohertz.
Primarily, this is of concern only in bandwidth-limited transmission systems
such as microwave radio.






4   CHANNEL BANKS AND TERMINALS
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


                            OVERVIEW

   The function of the digital facility is to provide 24 voice frequency (VF)
channels from one point to another over a PCM transmission system. The most
basic type of digital facility consists of two elements:

1. Channel Banks (or terminals) and

2. A Transmission System


   The channel banks provide the A/D interface between 24 VF circuits and a
digital (PCM) transmission system. The digital transmission system carries
the time division multiplexed PCM signals between two channel banks. This
section will discuss the channel banks, and other terminal equipment that
generate the PCM signal. The Digital Transmissionsystems will be discussed in
the following section.
   The basic function of the digital channel bank is to provide the VF
analog/PCM interface. On the analog side, the bank terminates 24 VF circuits
(message trunks or special service). On the digital side, the bank terminates
a single 4-wire, 1.544 Mb/s bipolar PCM circuit.

The general functions os the digital channel bank include:


   1. Analog transmission and signaling interface - that is, it provides
      termination for either 2- or 4-wire circuits using various modes of
      signaling.

   2. Analog-to-Digotal and Digital-to-Analog signal conversion - for each
      of the 24 VF channels

   3. Time Division Multiplexing and Demultiplexing

   4. Process signaling and supervision information

   5. Digital Line Interface
      - unipolar to bipolar conversion, clock signals, etc..

   6  Performance monitoring and alarms


   The general structure of a digital channel bank consists of a mounting,
equipped with two types of modular plug-in units. These are channel units
(CU) plug-ins and common unit plug-ins.

Channel Units

   The channel unit (CU) plug-ins provide the following functions for a
single circuit:

   1.  Analog transmission interface
       - the connecting analog circuit may be 2- or 4-wire

   2.  Analog signaling interface
       - The connecting analog circuit may use any of a number of sinagling
         modes
         (i.e. loop, E&M, simplex, etc.)

   3.  Sampling step of the A/D conversion

   4.  Provides a standard interface to the common plug-in units


   There is a variety of different channel units available to provide the
range of transmission and signaling interfaces that are required for the
various message, special service, program, and dataport applications. Each
type of channel unit is equipped cations. Typical options and controls
include:

   1.  Trunk and signaling options

   2.  Attenuation controls

   3.  Balance controls

   4.  Equalization controls


Common Units

The common plug-in units provide fuctions that are shared by all (or part) of
the channels in the digroup, and are generally independent of the types of
channel units used. The principle common functions include:

   1.  Time Division Multiplexing (and Demultiplexing)

   2.  Quantizing and Encoding (and Decoding)

   3.  Digital Transmission Line Interface

   4.  Timing and Synchronization

   5.  Performance Monitoring and Alarms

   6.  Power conversion and distribution


Typically, multiplexing is achieved by multiple wiring, rather than by a
plug-in unit.



                 Basic D5 Bank Architecture

                 ___________________________
                |                           |
                |    System Controller      | <---->  Input/Output
                |___________________________|         o Control
                      |    |  |  |     |  |           o Test Access
                      |    |  |  |     |  |           o Provisioning
                      |    |  |  |. . .|  |           o Alarms
                      |  \_|__|__|_____|__|__________
                      |                              |
  \            _______|___________                To Max of 20
   |----------|______|Up          |               D5 Chan. Banks
   |----------|______|            |------> /
   |----------|______|            | <------|
   |----------|______|            |        |
96 |----------|______|            |------->|
VF |          |  o   |  D5 Chan   |<-------|
   |          |  o   |   Bank     |        | To Digital
C  |          |______|            |------->| Transmission
h  |----------|______|            |<-------| System
a  |----------|______|            |        |
n  |----------|______|            |------->|
.  |----------|______|            |<-------|
   |----------|______|____________|        |
  /                                         \


   The D5 bank is a 96-channel bank equipped with a microprocessor for
centralizing and automating bank operations (provisioning, maintenance,
etc.). It is anticipated that 8 generic (multi-function) channel units will
provide the capabilities required for the majority of message and special
service applications. These CU's will be conditioned electronically, as
opposed to the manual setting of options with switches and plugs as is done
with today's channel banks.
   A fully-equipped D5 system with a single system controller and 20 channel
banks will accomodate 1920 circuits.




                   End-to-End Bank Compatibility


 ________            ___________________                    ________
|        |          |                   |                  |        |
| D1A    |----------|Transmission System|------------------|  D1A   |
|________|          |___________________|                  |________|
 ________            ___________________                    ________
|        |          |                   |                  |        |
| D1B    |----------|Transmission System|------------------|  D1B   |
|________|          |___________________|                  |________|
 ________            ___________________                    ________
|        |          |                   |                  |        |
| D1C    |----------|Transmission System|------------------|  D1C   |
|________|          |___________________|                  |________|
 ________            ___________________                    ________
|        |          |                   |                  |        |*
| D1D    |--> >--|--|Transmission System|---|----<  <------|  D1D   |
|________|       |  |___________________|   |              |________|
 ________        |                          |               ________
|        |       |                          |              |        |*
|   D2   |--> >--|                          |----<   <-----|   D2   |
|________|       |                          |              |________|
 ________        |                          |               ________
|        |       |                          |              |        |
|   D3   |--> >--|                          |----<   <-----|   D3   |
|________|       |                          |              |________|
 ________        |                          |               ________
|        |       |                          |              |        |
|   D4   |--> >--|                          |----<   <-----|   D4   |
|________|       |                          |              |________|
 ________        |                          |               ________
|        |       |                          |              |        |
|   D5   |--> >--|                          |----<   <-----|   D5   |
|________|                                                 |________|




    bank is optioned to use the channel sequence of the D1D or D2. While D1D
    and D2 banks are signal compatible, their end-to-end use is not
    recommended since their channel sequences are not the same.


Compatibility

There are three types of compatibility that may have to be considered.

   1.  Connecting Circuit Compatibility
       -  Compatibility of a channel unit with the connection VF Circuit

   2.  End-to-End Channel Unit Compatibility
       -  Compatibility of a channel units on either end of a digital
          facility

   3.  End-to-End channel Bank Compatibility
       -  Compatibility of the channel banks on either end of a digital
          facility


   Only end-to-end channel bank compatibility will be discussed here. In order
to be end-to-end compatible, channel banks must use the same coding, signaling,
and digital line format. With the exception of D1A, D1B, and D1C, all D-type
banks are end-to-end compatible. D1A banks may only be used with D1A banks, D1B
with D1B, and D1C with D1C. A D1A may be modified to a D1B. A D1A or D1B may be
modified to a D1D. Both conversions must be performed on an out-of-service
basis.

Application with An Analog Switch (Example:  #1/1A ESS)

                                             |
                                             |              ____
 ___________            _____________        |   _______   |    |_________
|           |   _____  |             |       |--|-------|->|CU 1|         |
|           |  |     | |  ________   |       |<-|-------|--|____|         |
|           |  |     | | |        |<-|-------|--|---*---|--|    |         |
|           |--|--*--|-|-| Trunk  |--|-------|--|---*---|->|CU 2|         |
|           |  |     | | |________|  |       |  |       |  |____|         |
|           |  |     | |     |       |       |  |       |  |    |         |
|           |  |     | |     |       |       |<-|---*---|->|CU 3|         |
|           |  |     | |  ___|____   |       |  |       |  |____|         |
|           |  |     | | |        |  |       |  |       |  |    |         |
|           |--|--*--|-|-| Trunk  |<-|-------|--|---*---|->|CU 4|         |
|           |  |     | | |________|  |       |  |       |  |____|  Common |
|  Trunk    |  |     | |      |      |       |  |       |  |    |         |->
|   Link    |  | TDF | |      |      |       |  |  DF   |  | o  |         |
|  Network  |  |     | |      |      |       |  |       |  | o  |         |<-
|           |  |     | |      |      |       |  |       |  | o  |         |
|           |  |     | |   ___|____  |       |  |       |  |____|         |
|           |  |     | |  |        | |       |  |       |  |    |   Units |
|           |--|--*--|-|--| Trunk  |-|-------|--|---*---|->|CU21|         |
|           |  |     | |  |________| |       |  |       |  |____|         |
|           |  |     | |      |      |       |--|---*---|->|    |         |
|           |  |     | |      |      |       |<-|---*---|--|CU22|         |
|           |  |     | |   ___|____  |       |  |       |  |____|         |
|           |  |     | |  |        | |       |  |       |  |    |         |
|           |--|--*--|-|--| Trunk  |-|-------|--|---*---|->|CU23|         |
|           |  |     | |  |________| |       |  |       |  |____|         |
|           |  |     | |      | ^    |       |  |       |  |    |         |
|___________|  |_____| |______|_|____|       |<-|---*---|->|CU24|         |
      ^  |                    | |            |  |_______|__|____|_________|
      |  |                    | |            |
      |  |   ______________   | |            |
      |  |__|              |__| |            |____To Facilities & Circuit Eq.
      |_____|    Central   |____|                 For Non-Switched Spec.Svcs.
            |    Control   | Scan Signal
            |______________|    Distr





   Typically, a D-type channel bank will be installed in the transmission
area of the Central Office (CO), with a universal lead set from each channel
cable to a Distibuting Frame (DF). Any channel may be used for either a
message trunk or to other circuit equipment, as required. Message channels
may be cross-connected at the TDF to a designated location on the Trunk Link
Network. Trunk scan and SD functions are provided over individual leads to
the central control processor.
   The principal advantage of this arrangement is the flexibility of using
any channel for any application and to use any channel with any trunk unit.
The DF provides a convenient interface between switchingand transmission
equipment and minimizes the coordination required in planning, engineering,
provisioning, and operations. But, this flexibility comes at a cost --
especially for message trunk applications. The cost is in floor space (for
the D-bank and trunk frame), frame space and cross-connects (terminations on
two frames), cabling (terminations on two frames, plus universal lead sets),
and the wide variety of channel units and trunks units required.



No. 1/1A ESS with DCT

                                                  DCT  Bank
               _______
 __________   |       |                    ______________________
|          |<-|---*---|------------------>|_TRK/CU___1|          |
|          |<-|---*---|------------------>|__________2|          |
|          |<-|---*---|------------------>|__________3|          |
|          |<-|---*---|------------------>|__________4|          |
|  Trunk   |  |       |                   |           |          |
|          |  |       |                   |   o       |  Common  |<-----
|  Link    |  |  TDF  |                   |   o       |          |
|          |  |       |                   |   o       |  Units   |----->
|  Network |  |       |                   |___________|          |
|          |<-|---*---|------------------>|_________21|=====\    |
|          |<-|---*---|------------------>|_________22|    ||    |
|          |<-|---*---|------------------>|_________23|   D C U  |
|          |<-|---*---|------------------>|_________24|____||____|
|__________|  |_______|                                    ||
    |  |                                                   ||
 ___|__|_____                                        ______||______
|            |--------------------------------------|              |
|  Central   |              PUB                     |     PUC      |
|  Control   |--------------------------------------|______________|
|____________|


   An alternative for terminating digital trunks on an analog #1/1A ESS
switch is the Digital Carrier Trunk (DCT). With this alternative, the DCT
bank (DCTB) replaces the conventional D bank and eliminates the need for a
separate trunk frame.
   In place of conventional channel units, the DCTB is equipped with Combined
Channel Units (CCU) which perform the ESS trunk circuit functions and channel
units functions in a sigle plug-in unit. The CCU is designed to replace most,
but not all, of the 2-wire #1/1A ESS trunk/channel combinations . Only one
type of CCU is currently used in the DCTB.
   The VF side of each channel position is cabled directly to the Trunk
Distributing Frame (TDF). Since all combinations are 2-wire trunks with
network signaling, only two leads per channel (T&R) need to be cabled to the
TDF.
  Trunks control and many of the routine call processing functions are
provided by the Peripheral Unit Controler (PUC), which is a part of the DCT
frame. The PUC interfaces the Central Control Processor (via Peripheral Unit
Bus leads) and the DCTB channels (via the Digroup Control Unit in the DCTB).
The PUB not only relieves the Central Control Processor of routine call
processing function, but also eliminates the need for individual trunk scan
and scan Distribution leads. The PUC also provides frame diagnostics and
reports frame and facility alarms to the Central Control Processor.
   Normally, the DCT frame is installed in the switching area of the office, due
to PUB lead length restrictions and ESS office grounding requirements.

Advantages of DCT

   The following factors contribute to the economic advantages that DCT may
provide over conventional D bank/trunk frame arrangements.

1.  Floor Space Saving (eliminate trunk frame)

2.  Frame Space & Cross-connect Savings (fewer terminations)

3.  Cabling Saving (fewer leads to cable)

4.  Eliminates Individual Scan & SD Leads

5.  Fewer Types of Trunks & Channel Units to be Stocked

6.  Simplifies Trunk Design

7.  Two-way Trunking (without additional hardware expense)


Considerations in Use of DCT

   DCT can only be used for message trunk applications. DCT cannot be used
for special services since all channels are cabled to the TDF with an
abbreviated lead set. Separate digital facilities are required for special
services. Existing facilities may require grooming or segregation.
   A DCT frame must be dedicated to one switch. In multiswitch offices, a
single DCT frame can be used only for trunks into one switch, due to the link
between the PUC and the Central Control Processor. This may require more
digital facilities and result in lower system fills.
  Use of DCT alters operations and methods. In the conventional
configuration, prior to DCT, the distributing frame between the D bank and
the trunk frame provideed a flexible switch/transmission interface. With DCT,
this well-defined interface no longer exists. The DCT bank ios physically
located in the switching area. Bank and facility alarmes are now reported to
the switching maintenance venters. This change responsibilities, as well as
methods, in various engineering and maintenance groups. Ohter operations
groups, such as circuit provisioning and switch administration, will also be
affected by the elimination of the switch/transmission interface.
   The Digital Carrier Trunk Frame is a 3-bay configuration, 7 ft. high and 6.5
ft. wide. It consists of:

        1  Peripheral Unit Controller (Fully Duplicated)
       10  DCT Banks
        1  DCT Maintenance Bank

   A fully equipped DCT Frame will provide 480 trunks for a single #1 or #1A ESS
switch. It will normally be installed in the switching area of the office,
unually in the area reserved for trunk frames.


Digital Carrier Trunk Bank

                            Channel Units
             ______________________________________________
            /                                              \
 ___________________________________________________________
|PCL|QIU|TPU|   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |  \
|   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |
|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|   | Digroup
|RU|*|A &|TU|   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |    B
|  | |   |  |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |
|__|_|___|__|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|  /
|RU|*|A &|TU|   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |  \
|  | |   |  |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |
|__|_|___|__|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|   |  Digroup
|           |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |    A
|   PQU     |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |
|___________|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|   /



Digital Carrier Trunk Bank

 The DCT bank is a 48-channel bank comprised of an A and B digroup. It uses the
same physical mounting as the D4 bank. Each bank consists of 4 shelves, with 12
channel positions per shelf. The bottom 2 shelves make up the A digroup, the top
2 shelves make up the B digroup.
   Except for the Alarm & Digroup Control Unit (A&DCU) or the Digroup Control
Unit (if used), all common unit plug-ins are identical to those used in the D4
bank. DCT can be equipped for the same operational modes as D4, which will be
discussed in the next file. Currently, only type of channel unit, the Combined
Channel Unit (CCU) is used in the DCT bank.


Analog-To-Digital Facility Connection

       ________________            __________           _________________
      |        |       |----*---->|    SF    |----*--->|        |        |
      |        |  CU   |<---*-----|   SIG    |<---*----|  CU    |        |
      |        |1______|          |__________|<---*--->|_______1|        | P
      |        |       |----*---->|    SF    |----*--->|        |        | C
      |        |  CU   |<---*-----|   SIG    |<---*----|  CU    |        | M
60-108|        |2______|          |__________|<---*--->|_______2|        |
  KHz | A-Bank |       |                               |        |        |-->
 <----|        |   o   |               o               |   o    |        |
      |        |   o   |               o               |   o    |        |<--
 ---->|        |   o   |               o               |   o    |        | B
      |        |_______|           __________          |________|        | i
      |        |       |----*---->|    SF    |----*--->|        |        | p
      |        |  CU   |<---*-----|   SIG    |<---*----|  CU    |        | o
      |________|12_____|    ^     |__________|<---*--->|______12| D-Banks| l
                            |                          |        |        | a
                            |                          |  CU    |        | r
                         Optional                      |______13|        |
                                                       |        |        |
                                                       |  CU    |        |
                                                       |______14|        |
                                                       |        |        |
                                                       |  CU    |        |
                                                       |________|        |
                                                       |        |        |
                                                       |  CU    |        |
                                                       |______24|________|



   So far in this file I have talked about converting 24 voice frequncy
channels
into a PCM bit stream. But on many occasions today we have the need to convert
an analog carrier signal (frequency division multiplex) into a PCM bit stream.
For example, L-Carrier or L-Multiplex (LMX) facilities may need to be switch. Or
we may have the need to take ciruits from an analog microwave radio facility and
put them on a digital transmission facility.
   Initially the only way we could convert an L-Carrier (or LMX) group signal to
a PCM bit stream was to use back-to-back channel banks. The L-Carrier group
signal was terminated in A-Ttpe channel bank and demodulated into 12 VF
channels. Each VF channel signal was then taken through a single frequency
signaling set to recover the signaling information. Then the VF and signaling
information could be cross-connected to a D bank channel - to be converted to
PCM and time division multiplexed with 23 other channels.
   This got the job done - but it was expensive. Especially when there were
large numbers of facilities to be connected.


                   LT-1/LT-1B   Facility Connector

             ___________________________________________________
            |        |          |         |          |          |
            |        |   CU     |         |          |          |
            |        |_________1|         |          |          |
            |        |          |         |          |          |
            |        |   CU     |         |          |          |
            |  C/S   |_________2|         |          |          |
            |        |          |         |          |          |
 ---------->|        |    o     |         |          |          |
 60-108 KHz |        |    o     |   TU    |          |          |
 <----------|        |    o     |         |          |          |
            |  GRP 1 |__________|         |          |          |
            |        |          |         |          |          |
            |        |   CU     |         |          |          |
            |        |________11|         |          |          |
            |        |          |         |          |          |----------->
            |        |   CU     |         |          |          |
            |________|________12|_________|          |          | 1.544 Mb/s
            |        |          |         |   LIU    |  DAU     |    PCM
            |        |   CU     |         |          |          |
            |        |________13|         |          |          |<-----------
            |        |          |         |          |          |
            |        |   CU     |         |          |          |
            |  C/S   |________14|         |          |          |
            |        |          |         |          |          |
 ---------->|        |    o     |         |          |          |
 60-108 KHz |        |    o     |   TU    |          |          |
 <----------|        |    o     |         |          |          |
            |  GRP 2 |__________|         |          |          |
            |        |          |         |          |          |
            |        |   CU     |         |          |          |
            |        |________23|         |          |          |
            |        |          |         |          |          |
            |        |   CU     |         |          |          |
            |________|________24|_________|__________|__________|



   To minimize the cost of analog-to-digital facility connections, the LT-1 and
LT-1B facility connectors were developed. The LT-1 (or LT-1B) provides the
A-to-D and D-to-A conversions between two 12-Channel 1.544Mb/s PCM signal.
   The incoming L-Carrier group signals (60-108 KHz) are terminated on a
Combiner and Splitter (C/S) unit. The splitter connects the group signal to a
bus shared by 12 channel units. Each channel unit selects the appropriate 4 KHz
band, demodulates the signal to VF, and extracts the SF signaling information.
The VF and signaling information is then sampled before leaving the channel
unit. PAM signals from the 24 channels are time division multiplexed and sent to
the Transmit Unit (TU). The TU quantizes and encodes each PAM signal, inserts
framing ans signaling bits, and sends the signal to the Line Interface Unit
(LIU). The LIU converts the signal to bipolar and sends it to the Digital Access
Unit (DAU). The DAU provides cable equalization and test access to the PCM
signal. The D-to0A conversion.

Per channel options and controls are provided in the channel units to:

1.  Provide insertion loss between the analog and digital channels.

2.  Select signaling options.

3.  Select trunk conditioning options (CGA).



LT-1/LT-1B Facility Connector

 ________________________________________________________________________
|   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |                                    |
|   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |                                    |
|   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |                                    |
|   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |                                    |
|<----------Group 1 --------------->|<-------------Group 2-------------->|  1
|   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |                                    |
|   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |                                    |
|   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |   |                                    |
|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|____________________________________| __
|   DAU   | LIU |SU|TU|ACU|RU|C & S|C & S|TU|ACU|RU|C & S|C & S|   |  PU |
|         |     |  |  |   |  | GR 1| GR 2|  |   |  | GR 1| GR 2|   |     |
|         |     |  |  |   |  |     |     |  |   |  |     |     |   |     |
|         |     |  |<----Digroup A------>|<-----Digroup B----->|   |     |  2
|         |     |  |  |   |  |     |     |  |   |  |     |     |   |     |
|_________|_____|__|__|___|__|_____|_____|__|___|__|_____|_____|___|_____| __
|                                   |                                    |
|                                   |                                    |
|                                   |                                    |
|<----------Group 1 --------------->|<-------------Group 2-------------->|  3
|                                   |                                    |
|                                   |                                    |
|___________________________________|____________________________________|

                                                                            ^
                                                                            |
                                 ___________________________________________|
                                |
                   _____________|__________________
                  |                                |
                  | 1 =  Digroup B Channel Units   |
                  | 2 =  Common Equipment          |
                  | 3 =  Digroup Channel Units     |
                  |________________________________|



 The principal difference between an LT-1 and LT-1B facility connector is that
the LT-1B offers broader signaling and CGA (Carrier Group Alarm) features. The
LT-1 was designed for message channelapplications - specifically for terminating
L-Carrier (or LMX) message group on the No. 4ESS digital toll switch. The LT-1B
was designed as a general purpose facility connector - where either message or
special service circuits could be carried on the group.
    The physical equipment configuration is essentially the same for both the
LT-1 and LT-1B. Each bank involves a 3-shelf double digroupunit which is 13-1/2"
high and 22" wide. The channel units for digroup A are mounted (by groups) on
the bottom shelf, and the channel units for digroup B are mounted in the top
shelf. The middle shelf contains common plug-in units that are either associated
with digroup A or B,

    e.g.  TU  - Transmit Unit
          RU  - Receive Unit
          ACU - Alarm Control Unit
          C&S - Combiner and Splitter (per group)

or are shared by both digroups,

    e.g.  DAU - Digital Access Unit
          LIU - Line Interface Unit
          SU  - Syndes Unit (SYNchronizer-DESynchronizer)
          PU  - Power Unit

General Trade manufacturers offer similar L-to-T facility connectors, for
example:

LTM-1 Transmultiplexer (ITT)

      -  Which is similar to the LT-1B in both function
         and equipment configuration.

TransMuxtm TM 7400  (Graner)

      -  Similar in function to the LT-1B, but dose not
         involve demodulating to voice frequency. Only
         uses 10 plug-in cards per digroup. Signaling and
         CGA functions are programmable though the use of
         a hand-held unit.

  The LT-2 Transmultiplexer (AT&T) will replace both the LT-1 and LT-1B, and
will bilaterally convert between L-Carrier group signals and PCM signals
without demodulating to voice frequency. Level control, insertion of test
tones, measurement of test tones - as well as options for echo control,
signaling, and trunk processing - will be programmable from a local maintenance
access panel, or remotely from TTY terminal.

=============================================================================
                                 Gatsby
                              619-457-1836
=============================================================================

=============================================================================
                   N.A.S.T.Y. JOURNAL RELEASE 3 - PART 04
=============================================================================


                ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
                ~             The W.D.I.A. Network           ~
                ~            An Investigators Tool           ~
                ~                                            ~
                ~   Date: 08/23/91     Written By: /<ludge   ~
                ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

                 "The ONLINE National Information Network That
                        Gives You The Information Edge."

PREFACE:
~~~~~~~~

I am currently taking private investigation classes.  The
information gathered for this textfile is from 2 sources.  The first
being directly from the company.  I have obtained the information as I
am currently in the position to resell accounts on the network.  The
second source is my personal experiences thus far in my private
investigations & from PI's who I have spoken with throughout my coarses
& inquiries.

The W.D.I.A. Network consists of over 1000 databases.  W.D.I.A. is
not actually a network, but rather a gateway.  The databases consist of
sources that retain information on credit, DMV, criminal history,
workman's compensation, address forwarding, social security numbers,
aircraft & aircraft licensing, and cross directories.

The National Credit Network is a division of the W.D.I.A
Corporation, an Ohio Corporation having National Headquarters based in
Cincinnati.


THE SYSTEM:
~~~~~~~~~~~

The system is a VAX.  Users may connect to it via an 800 phone
number.  The system supports it's own menu's so you can connect to it
with a regular terminal program. It supports 300-2400 BPS.  Its
connections consist of both leased lines, and switched lines (depending
on what database is being resourced).  Most transactions take
approximately 60 seconds (some take longer, transfer time will be
elaborated on further in this documentation).  They're currently using
AT&T as their long distance carrier.


THE INFORMATION:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

This will contain information on the major databases used for
transactions concerning personal/business records.  There are several
other services also accessed (such as Easylink), but I will not include
it, as it has hardly an impact on the professional side of the gateway.


THE WRITER:
~~~~~~~~~~~

I thought I would include a little about myself, as I plan on writing
several more articles in the future dealing with investigations, and
skip-tracing.  I am currently a student of a Private Investigation
coarse.  Currently I have done work for a few private citizens.  The
jobs consisted of financial and personal outlines of the subjects.  I
have also done third-party skip-tracing for the FHA/HUD (Federal Housing
Administration/Housing & Urban Developement).  I am in a position to
sell this network if I choose to, although I hate sales so I have
declined thus far.  There are several other networks/gateways that I
have come across in my marketing research.  I am planning on releasing
further documentation on them all.  Well, enough about my self, on with
the documentation.



Here is what the search request menu looks like:

S E A R C H    R E Q U E S T    M E N U

CMD  REQUEST DESCRIPTION
---  --------------------------------------------------------------
ADD- Address/Identifier Update via Consumer Credit Report
ALP- Alpha Search - Motor Vehicles Owned - Searched by Name/State
COM- Commercial Credit  (Reports on Businesses Only)
CRE- Consumer Credit    (Reports on Individuals Only)
DLD- Drivers License Records via ENTERING ONLY -  Name and Date Of Birth
GRA- Grantor Name/Phone from Credit Reports
CRI- Criminal History Searches
DRI- Drivers License Histories
DEA- Death Record Search via SSN
EMP- Employment Purpose Credit Reports
KRI- Kris-Cross Plus - 92 Million - Names and Addresses and Telephone Numbers
LIC- License Plates Searches
POS- Nci Change Of Address (NCOA)
SSN- Ssn Tracing -  SS#-Locate
VIN- Vehicle Identification Number Search (VIN)
WOR- Workers Compensation Prior Claims
ZIP- Zip+4 - Nine Digit Zip reference

    A couple of the services are on the same topic (such as motor
vehicles), thus demos will be reduced to the commands in grouping to
reduce redundancy.


ADD: Address/Identifier Update via Consumer Credit Report
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

National Address/Identier Update has 2 different sources.  Clients may
choose Source #1 -OR- Source #2 -OR- Both Sources at a savings over the
individual pricing.  National Address/Identifier Update can provide
subject and spouse's names, addresses, social security numbers, marital
status, number of dependents, and employers that are found in credit
files.  No inquiries are listed on the consumer's credit report and no
permissible purpose is required by the Fair Credit Reporting Act.


ALP: Alpha Search - Motor Vehicles Owned - Searched by Name/State
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If you do not know a subject's license plate or VIN# (Vehicle
Identification Number), you can enter just their name, last known
address, date of birth and/or SS# and NCI can tell you all the vehicles
registered to them in a particular state plus any additional addresses
they may have which are listed with the State Department of Motor
Vehicles.
         

COM: Commercial Credit  (Reports on Businesses Only)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The INITIAL SEARCH CHARGE when entering a business name, city and ZIP code,
for a business credit report is only $5.00

There is NO INITIAL SEARCH CHARGE for a search WHEN USING A <FILE NUMBER>,
which was contained within a list of possibles. 

If a report containing 1 -OR- 2 TRADE LINES is returned an
additional report fee of $26.93 will be invoiced. 

If a report containing 3 -OR- MORE TRADE LINES is returned an
additional report fee of $34.93 will be invoiced. 



Would you like a Commercial Credit Report on a business?  Y/N/Help > y
HOT KEYS are  {CTRL D} - speedy return to main menu  {CTRL P} - finished entry
Macintosh users press and hold the Option Key and Cmd Key to substitute for CTRL
  1. Company Name -OR- File Number >
  2.                      ZIP Code >

TRW BUSINESS PROFILE                 517155;;DEMO;000653969;


PAGE   RPT DATE     TIME     PORT    TYPE
  1      DEMO       DEMO     T140    TRAINING                030
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CROCKER INDUSTRIES                       TRW FILE NUMBER:   000653969
100 MAIN ST                              FILE ESTABLISHED PRIOR JAN. 1977
PHOENIX AZ 85026     
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                      * A C C O U N T   S T A T U S *
P BUSINESS  DATE  DATE  PAYMENT   RECENT            DAYS BEYOND TERMS   COMMENTS
R CATEGORY  REPD  LAST   TERMS     HIGH   ACCOUNT CUR 1-  31- 61-
O                 SALE            CREDIT  BALANCE     30  60  90  91+
F                                    $       $     %   %   %   %   %
 *** TRADE PAYMENT INFORMATION ***
 ---------------------------------
 TRADE DATA
 ----------
-CHEMICALS  11-87       N30         4000     1800  67  22  11         SOLD 10 YR
+ELEC EQUIP 01-88       2/10PRX    13500     5900 100
+FAB METALS 09-87       DISC        3500     3500 100
-FACTOR     11-87       2/10N30     2500      600  55   9  18   9   9 SOLD  1 YR
+FACTOR     11-87       N30         8500     8300  85  12   1   1   1
+MACHINERY  01-88       2/10N30    10000     6100 100                 COLLECT
+MACHINERY  09-87                   5500     <100 100                 SECURED
+PREC INSTR 01-88       VARIED     40000    34600  92   4   1   1   2
=PREC INSTR 11-87       NET      +100000    30800  59  39   2         PAYS-SLO
+RUBR&PLAST 01-88       NET         4100     3300 100                 ADS    7
                                      * A C C O U N T   S T A T U S *
P BUSINESS  DATE  DATE  PAYMENT   RECENT            DAYS BEYOND TERMS   COMMENTS
R CATEGORY  REPD  LAST   TERMS     HIGH   ACCOUNT CUR 1-  31- 61-
O                 SALE            CREDIT  BALANCE     30  60  90  91+
F                                    $       $     %   %   %   %   %

 ALL TRADE LINE TOTAL:      10 ACCOUNTS     94600  81  16   1   1   1
 ---------------------
 PAYMENT TRENDS:
 ---------------
  30 DAYS AGO TOTALS WERE:   8 ACCOUNTS     91100  80  17   1   1   1
  60 DAYS AGO               10              94600  81  16   1   1   1
  90 DAYS AGO               10              94600  81  16   1   1   1
 120 DAYS AGO               10              93500  83  16   1
 150 DAYS AGO               10              94300  81  16   1   1   1
 180 DAYS AGO                8              90700  80  17   1   1   1
 TRW QUARTERLY CREDIT PATTERN
 ----------------------------
 4-Q-87 (OCT-DEC)            8 ACCOUNTS     91100  80  17   1   1   1
 3-Q-87 (JUL-SEP)           10              94300  81  16   1   1   1
 2-Q-87 (APR-JUN)            4              49900  93   3   2   1   1
 1-Q-87 (JAN-MAR)            8              90200  81  17   1       1
 4-Q-86 (OCT-DEC)            8              91100  80  17   1   1   1
 TRW CURRENT PAYMENT GUIDE:   ===> F1S <===
 --------------------------
 ACCOUNT BALANCE RANGE      :      F = $75,000 - $99,999   
 COMPANY PAYMENT PERFORMANCE:      1 = FASTER THAN INDUSTRY
 PAYMENT TREND INDICATOR    :      S = STABLE


TRW BUSINESS PROFILE

PAGE   RPT DATE     TIME     PORT    TYPE
  2      DEMO       DEMO     T140    TRAINING                030
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CROCKER INDUSTRIES                       TRW FILE NUMBER:   000653969
100 MAIN ST                              FILE ESTABLISHED PRIOR JAN. 1977
PHOENIX AZ 85026     
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

---------------------------
INDUS SUPL 10-87 INQUIRY
AUTO PARTS 11-87 INQUIRY
ELEC SUPLR 11-87 INQUIRY
BANK       01-88 INQUIRY
COMMUN EQP 01-88 INQUIRY
SERVICES   01-88 INQUIRY

---------------------------------
 UCC PROFILE
 -----------
 UCC-FILED:   07-02-84 J37969
 SECURED PTY: THE BENJ FRANKLIN LEASING CO INC, OR 97201
 ASSIGNEE:    FIRST INTERSTATE BK, BX 3438, PTLD, OR 97208
 COLLATERAL:  CERT DESCR COMPUTER EQUIP, PRODUCTS

 UCC-FILED:   07-19-84 J40849
 SECURED PTY: THE BENJ FRANKLIN LEASING CO INC, OR 97201
 ASSIGNEE:    FIRST INTERSTATE BK, BX 3438, PTLD, OR 97208
 COLLATERAL:  EQUIP, PRODUCTS

 UCC-ASSIGN:  08-13-85 J55461A
 ORIG FILING: 10-17-84 J55461
 SECURED PTY: FIRST INTERSTATE BK, BX 3438, PTLD, OR 97201
 ASSIGNEE:    THE BENJ FRANKLIN LEASING CO INC, OR 97201
 COLLATERAL:  MACHINERY, PRODUCTS
 *** STANDARD AND POOR'S INFORMATION ***
 --------------------------------------
     BALANCE SHEET FOR FISCAL YEAR ENDING DEC 31
     DATA CURRENT THROUGH 01-20-88  ($THOUSANDS)
                                        1986        1985        1984
CASH AND EQUIVALENT                       39          32         114
RECEIVABLES - NET                        548       2,090         981
INVENTORY                                740       2,112       1,237
OTHER CURRENT ASSETS                      52         144       1,106
TOTAL CURRENT ASSETS                   1,379       4,378       3,438
FIXED ASSETS - NET                     1,068       2,610       1,408
INVESTMENTS                              258         105         211
OTHER ASSETS                             102         330         158
TOTAL ASSETS                           2,807       7,423       5,215
DEBT DUE IN 1 YEAR                       272         246         475
NOTES PAYABLE                            340       2,273       1,331
ACCOUNTS PAYABLE                         706       1,313         929
TAXES PAYABLE                              0           0           4
OTHER CURRENT LIABILITIES                196         472         223
TOTAL CURRENT LIABILITIES              1,514       4,304       2,962
LONG TERM DEBT                           693       1,837         833
OTHER LIABILITIES                          0           0          29
NET WORTH                                600       1,282       1,391
TOTAL LIAB AND NET WORTH               2,807       7,423       5,215


TRW BUSINESS PROFILE

PAGE   RPT DATE     TIME     PORT    TYPE
  3      DEMO       DEMO     T140    TRAINING                030
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CROCKER INDUSTRIES                       TRW FILE NUMBER:   000653969
100 MAIN ST                              FILE ESTABLISHED PRIOR JAN. 1977
PHOENIX AZ 85026     
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  OPERATING STATEMENT FOR FISCAL YEAR ENDING DEC 31 ($THOUSANDS)
  DATA CURRENT THROUGH 01-20-88                     1986        1985        1984
NET SALES                                          3,414      30,439       4,424
COST OF GOODS SOLD                                 2,698      27,415       3,084
GROSS INCOME ON SALES                                716       3,024       1,340
EXPENSES                                           2,582       3,167       1,531
PRE-TAX INCOME                                    -1,866        -143        -191
TAXES                                               -402         -35         -81
AFTER TAX INCOME                                  -1,464        -108        -110
EXTRAORD INC & DISCNT'D OPS                          781           0           0
NET INCOME                                          -683        -108        -110
  CRITICAL DATA AND RATIOS FOR FISCAL YEAR ENDING DEC 31 ($THOUSANDS)
   DATA CURRENT THROUGH 01-20-88     INDUSTRY       1986        1985        1984
TANGIBLE NET WORTH                  AVERAGES         600       1,282       1,391
NET WORKING CAPITAL                 SIC 2400        -135          74         476
CURRENT RATIO(TIMES)                     2.2          .9         1.0         1.2
% TOTAL DEBT TO TANG NW                237.6       367.8       479.0       274.9
% CURRENT DEBT TO TANG NW              142.6       252.3       335.7       212.9
% AFTER TAX INC TO TANG NW             -23.1      -244.0        -8.4        -7.9
% AFTER TAX INC TO NET SALES            -3.8       -42.9       -  .4        -2.5
NET SALES TO INVENTORY (TIMES)           6.8         4.6        14.4         3.6
CGS TO INVENTORY (TIMES)                 5.1         3.6        13.0         2.5
AVG DAYS SALES OUTSTNDNG(DAYS)          49.3        58.6        25.1        80.9
AUDITOR OPINION                                QUALIFIED   QUALIFIED   QUALIFIED
FTNOTE:84,85,86-DATA REFLECTS A RECLASSIFICATION OF CERTAIN ITEMS
FTNOTE:84,85,86-COST OF GOODS SOLD REDUCED BY NON-ALLOCATED DEPRECIATION
INDUSTRY AVERAGES ARE BASED ON 20 COMPANIES
 *** KEY FACTS INFORMATION ***
 -----------------------------

FURTHER EXPLANATION AVAILABLE IN S&P REFERENCE GUIDE.
PRODUCT/SERVICE:  HOLDING CO.; BOWLING CTR., LUMBER & VENEER,
   ELECTRONIC EQUIP.; SIC NOS.:  6719, 2436, 3679, 5031, 7933
EMPLOYEES: 150             YRS. IN BUS.:  31          TEL:  503-293-0224
OWNERSHIP:  PUBLIC
ACCOUNTANT:   MOSS ADAMS  PHOENIX,AZ
PRIMARY BANK: U. S. NATIONAL BANK OF OREGON  PHOENIX,AZ
OFFICERS:     PRES - B. L. ENGEL   SECY - T. E. ENGEL
TEL: 602-555-1100
 *** BANK INFORMATION ***
 ------------------------
BANK-BORROWER-LARCHMONT NAT'L BANK,1130 7TH STREET,PHOENIX,AZ
     (602)555-8231
BANK-NAT'L BANK OF SAN MARINO,3471 LOS COYOTE PASS,SAN MARINO,AZ
     (602)555-3726

THE INFORMATION HEREIN IS FURNISHED IN CONFIDENCE FOR YOUR EXCLUSIVE USE
FOR LEGITIMATE BUSINESS PURPOSES AND SHALL NOT BE REPRODUCED. NEITHER
TRW INC., NOR ITS SOURCES OR DISTRIBUTORS WARRANT SUCH INFORMATION NOR
SHALL THEY BE LIABLE FOR YOUR USE OR RELIANCE UPON IT.
                                               COPYRIGHT(C) 1988 TRW INC.


CRE: Consumer Credit    (Reports on Individuals Only)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~






Below are listed some of the permissible purposes for obtaining and
utilizing consumer credit reports.




A. In response to the order of a court having jurisdiction to issue
   such an order.

B. In accordance with the written instructions of the consumer to whom it
   relates.

C. I intend to use the information in connection with a credit transaction
   involving the consumer on whom the information is to be furnished.

D. I intend to use the information in connection with the extension of
   credit to the consumer.

E. I intend to use the information in connection with the review or
   collection of an account of the consumer.

F. I intend to use the information for employment purposes.

G. I intend to use the information in connection with the underwriting of
   insurance involving the consumer.

H. I intend to use the information in connection with a determination of
   the consumer's eligibilty for a license or other benefit granted by a
   governmental instrumentality required by law to consider an applicant's
   financial responsibility or status.


The sources of consumer credit for the Sd, California are listed below

Local Consumer Credit Report Selections Available

Select   Rating   Source           Cost        Group Rate Savings
------  --------  ------           ----        ------------------
A. - -  Best      Node 4           $ 8.63
B. - -  2nd Best  Node 5           $ 9.13
C. - -  3rd Best  Node 1           $ 9.08
D. - 2 searches   Both A. AND B.   $17.26         Save $0.50
E. - 2 searches   Both B. AND C.   $17.71         Save $0.50
F. - 2 searches   Both A. AND C.   $17.21         Save $0.50
G. - 3 searches   All 3 searches   $25.84         Save $1.00
H. - *** End This Search






MARKET AREA...5        3 LETTER EXTENSION...(TOL)       SUB CODE AREA...TL 
RPT ON                                           SSN         DOB
CONSUMER, FRED M                               291-24-7209
                                                                  TEL#
CURR ADD                                             RPTD
309 VINE ST., CINCINNATI OH. 45202                   2/90
FRMR ADD
214 WROE AV., DAYTON OH. 45406                      10/86R    11/86R
1111 SR, BETHEL OH.,133 45106                                     10/86R
CURR EMP & ADD                                   PSTN/INCM     EMPDTE  RPTD
DUNBAR MECH                                                            8/89R
FRMR EMP & ADD
LOCAL 50 PIPEFITTING                        PIPE WELDER               12/86R




TRD=7 NEG=2 PUB=0 COL=0 INQS=6 BAL=$29.0K HC-CL=$0-0


SUBSCRIBER NAME / #      OPND  HICR  UPDATED   BAL   PASTDUE   PAYMENT   MOP
ACCOUNT#                 TERM  LMT   CLOSED          MAX.DEL   HISTORY
ECOA / COLLATERAL              REMARKS
-------------------      ----  -------------   ---   -------   -------   ---
UCB COLLECTI Y 7510      6/88   $168 10/88A     $0     $0                I9B
1035739                               6/88F
I                            *PLACED FOR COLLECTION      /

MASTER CD      B719     11/84   $5000  7/86F    $0    $0                 I09
275684265                    ST          50M                             TRF
I

SHILITOS       Z2223    12/85   $2629 12/85F $2438          111111112311 I09
2275684265                   ST $3000                  03   25  2 1 0    PRL
I

FORD MOTOR CR   T223    12/85   $9578 12/85F $1463                       I09
1275684265     85 MUSTANG    AU       48x275                             PRL
I
                                                           
ASSOCIATES     B188407   5/85   $4000 12/85F $4000  $379    XXX111111111 I09
139752155953                       $0 109M54                10  0 0 0    STU
I                                                  

WRIGHT ST UNIV QDY1674   1/85    $407  5/85F  $407  $407                 O9B
SIPP                                                                     CLA
I


   TOTAL NUMBER OF INQUIRIES =   6
   DATE   ECOA SUBCRIBER CODE  SUBSCRIBER NAME
   ----   ---- --------------  ---------------
  2/14/90   I  RCI6012         WDIA CORP
  9/20/89   I  BTL600(TOL)     CITZ SVG PEM
  8/30/89   I  ZTL5252(TOL)    CONSUM DISCL
  8/26/89   I  BEC10036(TOL)   HOME BANKING
  8/24/89   I  FEC10020(TOL)   FOST AREA CU
        NCB0000290(ILM)-6/5/89I







SOURCE  COURT DATE   LIAB TYPE ASSETS PAID  DOCKET NUM. PLAINTIFF/ATTORNEY
------  ----------   ---- ---- ------ ----  ----------- ------------------
Z4      CC     3/84R $5078 PF I        1/86 00000000803
PAID FEDERAL TAX LIEN

Z4      CC     3/84R $5078 FT I             803         19674/105548949
FEDERAL TAX LIEN

MISC SEE FILE ON FRED PUBLIC

CONSUMER STATEMENT: PAYMENTS MADE TO FORD MOTOR COMPANY WERE NOT ACCOUNTED FOR


REPORT SERVICED BY: 
NATIONAL CREDIT INFORMATION NETWORK
NCI BUILDING
7721 HAMILTON AVENUE
POST OFFICE BOX 31221
CINCINNATI, OHIO  45231-0221
CONSUMER INQUIRIES/INTERVIEWS SHOULD BE DIRECTED TO THE ABOVE ADDRESS
-OR- TO CALL (513) 522-3832  MON-FRI 9AM-4PM EST



Searching for a report on Fred Consumer





 3-87 FRED CONSUMER                                          SS# 291-24-7209
      309 VINE
      CINCINNATI, OH  45202


P / N SUBSCRIBER NAME        SUBR # ASSN           ACCOUNT #        MONTHS PRIOR
       STATUS     STATUS DATE TYPE  TERM AMT  BAL  BALANCE  AMOUNT  TO BAL DATE
       COMMENT     DATE  OPEN                       DATE   PAST DUE 123456789012

A     MARYLAND BANK N A      1230206 1             523787175119
       CURR ACCT   9-87 12-85  CRC  REV$10000 $9311  9-30-87        CCCCCCCCCCCC

  A   BENEFICIAL NATIONAL BAN1232146 1             612672506652
       PD WAS 90   8-85 12-82  CRC  REV $2500

A     DILLARDS DEPT STORE    1398334 1             95623652
       CURR ACCT   8-87  9-79  CRC  REV  UNKN    $0  8-07-87        CCCCCCC-CCC-

A     DILLARDS DEPT STORE    1398334 1             95226256
       CURR ACCT   8-87  3-82  CRC  REV  UNKN    $0  8-07-87        CCCCCCC-CCC-

A     DILLARDS DEPT STORE    1398334 1             91514515
       CURR ACCT   8-87  1-83  CRC  REV  UNKN    $0  8-07-87        CCCCCCC-CCC-

A     UNITED BANKCARD ASSOC  3240177 4             1451345614634651
       CURR ACCT   9-87  2-84  CRC  REV $3200 $2320  9-30-87        CCCCCCCC

A     UNITED BANKCARD ASSOC  3240177 1             4257562356234435
       CURR ACCT   9-87 11-79  CRC  REV $5000 $4645  9-30-87        CCCCCCCC

A     CITICORP ACCEPTANCE CO 3572641 1             5676573686538383 
       CURR ACCT   7-87 11-85  ISC   48$21600$13076  7-24-87        CC

A     TINKER CREDIT UNION    3768410 2             1456763745846854
       CURR ACCT  10-87 12-85  UNK   20$20000 $9025 10-01-87        -CCCCCC

  M   P & L INVESTMENT       7660156
       INQUIRY     8-14-87

------*ATTN* FILE VARIATION: STREET INIT IS 5
 8-86 FRED CONSUMER
      798 WILSON
      OKLAHOMA CITY OK 73115


A     DILLARDS DEPT STORE    1398334 3             32197250
       CURR ACCT   8-87  1-80  CRC  REV  UNKN    $0  8-07-87        CCCCCCC-CCC-


------END





 SUBCODE  SUBSCRIBER              TELEPHONE      ADDRESS       CITY     ST ZIP
 -------  ----------              ---------      -------       ----     -- ---
 1230206 MARYLAND BANK N A        (800)441-9977 P O BOX 15023  WILMINGT DE 19850
 1232146 BENEFICIAL NATIONAL BANK (302)792-4000 P O BOX 911    WILMINGT DE 19899
 1398334 DILLARDS DEPT STORE      (501)376-5380 P O BOX 486    LITTLE R AR 77203
 1398334 DILLARDS DEPT STORE      (501)376-5380 P O BOX 486    LITTLE R AR 77203
 1398334 DILLARDS DEPT STORE      (501)376-5380 P O BOX 486    LITTLE R AR 77203
 3240177 UNITED BANKCARD ASSOC    (405)672-0606 P O BOX 55555  DEL CITY OK 73155
 3240177 UNITED BANKCARD ASSOC    (405)672-0606 P O BOX 55555  DEL CITY OK 73155
 3572641 CITICORP ACCEPTANCE CO   (918)663-6100 PO BOX 470708  TULSA    OK 74147
 3768410 TINKER CREDIT UNION      (405)732-0324 6501 TINKER DI MIDWEST  OK 73110
 7660156 P & L INVESTMENT         (801)268-9275 4541 SOUTH 700 SALT LAK UT 84107
 1398334 DILLARDS DEPT STORE      (501)376-5380 P O BOX 486    LITTLE R AR 77203



  

Searching for a report on Fred Consumer







 8974,CROSLEY,,DETROIT,MI,48239,TAPE RPTD 05/87
 SEX-M,MAR-M, Date of Birth = 05/06/33,SS Number = 287-34-0002



 CURRENT EMPLOYMENT
01 ES-DRIVER,COMM CARRIERS,MIAMI,FL

 FORMER EMPLOYMENT
02 EF-TRUCK DRIVER,OVER SEAS TRANSPORT CO,MIAM,FL,,VER 09/68

INQUIRY ALERT - SUBJECT SHOWS  4 INQUIRIES SINCE 11/89







01 02/86 LIEN 168VQ25,167260 DETROIT MI JNT WITH SHIRLEY,$3400,VF
02 01/84 LIEN 168VQ25,59918A REDFORD TWP MI STATE,$,VS
03 04/87 LIEN 168VQ25,151545 DETROIT MI JNT WITH SHIRLEY,$5480,VF
04 06/87 LIEN 168VQ25,175500 CO RECORDER DETROIT MI,$2413,VF





FIRM / IDENT CODE     CS  RPTD   LIMIT  HICR  BAL $   DLA MR (30-60-90) MAX/DEL
ECOA/ACCOUNT NUMBER       OPND   P/DUE  TERM          24 MONTH HISTORY         
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DISCOVR CD*905ON1497  R1 01/90   2100    ---      0 08/89 31                   
I/601100258002           03/87    ---    ---                                   
   
SEARS     *906DC29    R1 01/90    ---    502      0 01/90 24                   
I/8653-6481488287000     08/83    ---    ---                                   

    REVOLVING TOTALS             2100    502     74
                                  ---     20       
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
LAZARUS   *906DC789   O1 08/86    ---      0      0 06/85 09                   
I/7837577841             11/62    ---    ---                                   
   
    OPEN TOTALS                   ---    ---    ---
                                  ---    ---       
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INDIANA MG*906FM7119  I1 01/90    ---  41000  40250 12/89 17                   
J/3290730017             03/87    ---    341                                   
   
FMC       *905FA3526  I1 12/89    ---  12181   5261 12/89 36 (01-00-00)        
I/ABV2153433             11/86    ---    203                                   
   
INDEPENDEN*168FM28    I1 08/88    ---  41000      0 06/88 16                   
J/5441219952             03/87    ---    483                                   
   ACCOUNT TRANSFERRED
   
FMC       *905FA3559  I1 03/88    ---   3317      0 01/85 48                   
I/AEA1359BY8             03/84    ---    138                                   
   
FMC       *905FA3526  I1 03/88    ---  13356      0 12/86 39                   
I/ABA215KKF7             12/84    ---    278                                   
   
    INSTALLMENT TOTALS            ---  53181  45511
                                  ---    544       
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    GRAND TOTALS                  ---  53683  45511
                                  ---    544       
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------




      CHRYS 1ST  491FP23281 11/20/89     CHRYSLER1S 491FM23845 11/01/89     
      HECHINGER  491LZ29805 08/05/89     ORSMN CHEV 491AN10573 09/30/88     
      ORSMN CHEV 491AN10573 08/01/88     




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

  906DC29     SEARS       201-7090100      906BB115    CITIBANK    800-8430777 
  496DC319    STERN'S     513-5732109      906DC151    LORD & TAY  212-8275204 
  906CG68     LERNERS     614-7559944      426DC33     A&S         718-8757200 





DLD: Drivers License Records via ENTERING ONLY -  Name and Date Of Birth
DRI: Drivers License Histories
LIC: License Plate Searches
VIN: Vehicle Identification Number Search
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

NOTE: The NCI Network has 2 different and unique ways by which you can
      search for Drivers License Numbers and/or Drivers License Records.
      The Menu CMD Code for these searches is  DLD 
      This unique service allows you to enter merely the
      NAME, DATE OF BIRTH, and STATE TO SEARCH and the search will
      be able to produce either the DL# only or the complete driving
      record history.
      The above  DLD  method of searching is more expensive
      than obtaining a driving record when you have much more
      identification information to provide such as the DL#,
      and address  etc. but if you are short on information,
      TRY IT, YOU'LL LIKE IT!


MVR REPORTS  HOT KEYS are  {CTRL D} - speedy return to main menu  {CTRL P} - finished entry
Macintosh users press and hold the Option Key and Cmd Key to substitute for CTRL
  1.         Last Name >
  2.        First Name >
  3.       Middle Name >
  4. State Abbreviation >
  5.    Drivers License Number >
  6.    Drivers Gender ...  M)ale or F)emale   >
  7.    Date of Birth     >

The cost for this MVR Report from California will be $7.66
The typical WORKING DAY/WEEK turnaround time for reports from California
is approximately 24 HOURS

The state of California requires that requests be submitted before
15:30 hrs E.S.T. in order to be considered as requested today. 
The current date and time is Tuesday,  June 25th 1991  ... 16:53 hrs E.S.T. 

    MVR REQUEST FROM: KANSAS
INFORMATION REPORTED: 05/23/88


    FRED CONSUMER
    658 S FRONT
    SALINA, KS  


 SEX  HEIGHT   WEIGHT  EYES  HAIR       ALAIS NAME/PREVIOUS LICENSE NO.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 M    5'6"     145     BRWN        


 DRIVERS LICENSE NO.    DATE OF BIRTH  ISSUED DATE    EXPIRE DATE      SSN
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
V5D6Q1                      08/12/63                               467-54-1234


 LICENSE TYPE/CLASS       STATUS              RESTRICTIONS
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CLASS CD                                                          


VIOL VIOL/SUS CON/REIN                                              VIOLATION
TYPE   DATE     DATE     VIOLATION DESCRIPTION                        CODE   PTS
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CONV 03/01/85          SPEED IN EXCESS OF POSTED MAXIMUM            SP3      2
CONV 10/09/85          SPEED IN EXCESS OF POSTED MAXIMUM            SP3      2
CONV 11/01/85          SPEED IN EXCESS OF POSTED MAXIMUM            SP3      2
CONV 05/14/86          FAIL TO OBEY TRAFFIC INSTRUCTIONS,OR DEVICES SC1      2
CONV 07/12/86          DRIVING WRONG WAY OR IMP LANE CHANGE         WW1       
INFO 10/09/86          ATTENDED DRIVER IMPROVEMENT CLINIC           AA5      -2
CONV 03/11/87          SPEED IN EXCESS OF POSTED MAXIMUM            SP3      2
CONV 06/26/87          SPEED IN EXCESS OF POSTED MAXIMUM            SP3      2

END OF MVR REPORT
Would you like to request another MVR Report?   Y/N/P)ricelist  > p
                                   MVR Price Sheet

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
This MVR Price Sheet is based on ... 
Requesting the MVR information on-line at 1200 baud and
SUBMISSION NOW would qualify for the WEEKDAY 1200 BAUD SUBMISSION RATES. 
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++


-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
WEEKDAY RATES ARE IN EFFECT              Monday thru Friday 8AM to 5PM E.S.T
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
EVENING RATES ARE IN EFFECT              Monday thru Friday 5PM to 11PM E.S.T
                                         Sunday 5PM to 11PM E.S.T
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
WEEKEND/LATENIGHT RATES ARE IN EFFECT    Everyday  11PM to 8AM E.S.T. 
                                         All Day Saturday
                                         Sunday   Midnight to 5PM E.S.T. 
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Current Date and Time is TUESDAY, JUNE 25th 1991  16:54 E.S.T. 
Submission of your requests during periods in which other time or baud rates
are in effect will cause the below costs to be different. 
----------------------------------------------------------------------------



State                Cost       Turn-around Time        Submission Cutoff Time

North Dakota         7.66       48 HOURS                      12:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Arizona              6.66       24 HOURS                      12:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Utah                 8.66       24 HOURS                      12:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Missouri             6.91       24 HOURS                      12:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Hawaii               7.66       6-10 WEEKS                    12:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Wyoming              6.66       3 DAYS                        12:30 hrs E.S.T. 
North Carolina       9.66       24 HOURS                      10:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Colorado             7.66       24 HOURS                      12:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Kentucky             8.56       24 HOURS                      10:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Minnesota            7.66       SAME DAY / 24 HOURS           12:30 hrs E.S.T. 
New Jersey           6.66       24 HOURS                      10:30 hrs E.S.T. 
New York             7.66       SAME DAY / 24 HOURS           10:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Iowa                 10.66      24 HOURS                      12:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Puerto Rico          10.66      10-20 DAYS                    12:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Alabama              11.41      SAME DAY / 24 HOURS           12:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Indiana              9.01       24 HOURS                      10:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Kansas               6.66       24 HOURS                      12:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Montana              7.66       24 HOURS                      12:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Texas                8.16       24 HOURS                      12:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Virginia             7.66       24 HOURS                      10:30 hrs E.S.T. 
South Dakota         9.66       24 HOURS                      12:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Connecticut          10.66      SAME DAY / 24 HOURS           10:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Florida              7.66       24 HOURS                      10:30 hrs E.S.T. 
District of Columbia 7.66       5 DAYS                        10:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Mississippi          12.66      24 HOURS                      12:30 hrs E.S.T. 
New Hampshire        10.66      24 HOURS                      10:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Maine                9.66       24 HOURS                      10:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Idaho                8.36       24 HOURS                      12:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Oklahoma             10.66      24 HOURS                      12:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Nevada               8.66       24 HOURS                      14:30 hrs E.S.T. 
South Carolina       9.66       72 HOURS                      10:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Tennessee            10.66      24 HOURS                      10:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Alaska               10.66      6-10 WEEKS                    14:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Vermont              9.66       SAME DAY / 24 HOURS           10:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Maryland             7.66       24 HOURS                      10:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Washington           10.16      24 HOURS                      14:30 hrs E.S.T. 
West Virginia        10.66      10-20 DAYS                    10:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Illinois             7.66       24 HOURS                      12:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Wisconsin            7.66       24 HOURS                      12:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Georgia              8.66       24 HOURS                      09:30 hrs E.S.T. 
New Mexico           6.66       24 HOURS                      12:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Delaware             9.66       48 HOURS                      10:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Nebraska             7.41       24 HOURS                      12:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Ohio                 7.66       SAME DAY / 24 HOURS           10:30 hrs E.S.T. 
California           7.66       24 HOURS                      15:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Pennsylvania         10.66      24 HOURS                      09:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Louisiana            11.66      24 HOURS                      12:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Michigan             12.21      24 HOURS                      10:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Rhode Island         15.66      48 HOURS                      10:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Oregon               7.66       24 HOURS                      14:30 hrs E.S.T. 
Arkansas             12.66      24 HOURS                      12:30 hrs E.S.T. 


GRA: Grantor Name/Phone from Credit Reports
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

This research should be able to provide you with names, addresses,
and/or phone numbers of these Inquiring Members.

Cost for this ID#/Lookup is $1.00

A sample of the type of output this could provide is below . . .

TRANS UNION CODE: RCI8457(DAY) WDIA CORP
WDIA CORPORATION
P O BOX 31221
CINCINNATI OH 45231
513-522-3832



CRI: Criminal History Searches
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

SUB MENU         Search  Type                                         Cost
                 ------------                                         ----
          0-Return to Main Menu
          1-Criminal History Search - county records  . . . . . . .  $34.09
          2-Criminal History Search - county & certified copy . . .  $42.23
          3-Criminal History Search - state records only  . . . . .  $44.09
          4-Criminal History Search - state & certified copy  . . .  $54.09
          5-Criminal History Search - federal records only  . . . .  $49.09
          6-Criminal History Search - federal & certified copy  . .  $59.09
          7-Workers Compensation Claims History Search  . . . . . .  $28.59
          8-Display online RELEASE Of Information Forms
          9-ONLINE HELP INFORMATION ON SEARCHS 1 THRU 7

NOTE:                 A SIGNED RELEASE BY THE SUBJECT
                                     -OR-
                  A INDEMNITY RELEASE SIGNED BY YOUR COMPANY
    IS REQUIRED BEFORE A CRIMINAL HISTORY OR WORKER COMPENSATION REPORT
                   IS RELEASED TO YOUR ELECTRONIC MAILBOX

Blank release forms can be printed by pressing  8  then  [ENTER]

        HELP SCREEN FOR CRIMINAL RECORD SEARCHES AND WORKER COMP CLAIMS
 
Information provided to NCI clients on criminal record searches and worker comp
claims reports will require a release from the subject you are requesting infor-
mation on. Each report request cannot be sent back to you without a release 
signed by the subject. The following is a standard release form we accept. If
you already have release forms signed by your employees or prospective employees 
and wish to use your own release form, you may send a copy for approval by 
fax. Although all report requests are to be loaded and picked-up online, all re-
leases must be faxed to the following number: 1-800-637-7348. You may choose to
forward the release by regular or overnight mail, but this will delay your re-
port being returned. If there is any doubt that your release is not adequate,
please use the following release:



                           RELEASE OF INFORMATION
                                   FOR
              CRIMINAL HISTORY REPORTS AND WORKER COMP CLAIMS                  
 
Name:{Last}________________________{First}________________{Middle}_____________
 
Date of Birth:________________     SOCIAL SECURITY # : ________________________
 
I hereby authorize your company or any agent of your company, to contact any of
my previous employers or to contact schools, companies, credit bureaus, corpora-
tions, law enforcement agencies, persons and educational institutions to supply
any information concerning my background. I also hereby release any of the above
from any liability and responsibility arising from their doing so. This research
may be performed for information dating back for the past ten years.
 
 
I hereby also give my permission, as a condition of employment or apart of
my duties relating to employment, for the release of all appropriate
background information regarding my credit history, criminal record history,
driving record history or other sources of information which is permissable by
all governing laws pertaining to employment, insurance or credit history.
I believe to the best of my knowledge that all information I have provided
is accurate, true and correct and that I fully understand the terms of this
release.
 
 
Signature:___________________________   Date:_____________________________
 
 
Current Address:__________________________________________________________
 
Previous Address:_________________________________________________________
      
Phone:___________________
 



                               ENTRY FORMAT
The following information must be included in your report request for accurate 
searches to be performed. If informational items are missing, the request will 
be sent for processing but the results may not be satisfactory to your needs. 
Once the request has been sent by you, you will be charged since NCI automatic-
ally begins the computerized search for the record.
 
 
Name, Address, City, State, Zip, Social Security Number, Date of Birth or Age

 
                             REPORT LANGUAGE
The report response for the criminal record search will contain the following 
types of information.
 
EXAMPLE RESPONSE WITH RECORD
----------------------------
Our investigation was conducted through the Gasha county clerk's office.
The clerks's office showed a John Smith with a date of birth of 11/11/43
residing at 14 Hill street in city of Bedford, NY. He was convicted of narcotics
possession on 8/10/89 and received a 90 day suspended sentence.
 
EXAMPLE RESPONSE WITHOUT RECORD
-------------------------------
Our investigation was conducted through the Hamilton county clerk's office.
Checking back as far as available to our source, we found no record of 
any convictions on Jo consumer with the information provided.
 
The report response for the worker comp claims searches will contain the 
following types of information.
 
EXAMPLE RESPONSE WITH A WORKERS COMPENSATION CLAIM
--------------------------------------------------
Jo Consumer suffered injury to right hand 11/12/85. Employer was R&L Packaging.
Number of days missed 12. Amount of claim $530.00.
 
EXAMPLE RESPONSE WITHOUT A WORKERS COMPENSATION CLAIM
-----------------------------------------------------
Worker comp claims filed by a Jo Consumer in the state of Ohio were non- 
existant. No filed claims were reported according as far back as available
to our source.

 


                          CERTIFIED COPIES OF RECORDS

  NCI clients can request a certified copy of reports that are returned online 
with actual claims, convictions or charges. Certified copies from the 
appropriate state/county or federal court are forwarded by regular mail within
7 to 10 days of request by client. There is an additional charge for this ser-
vice and certified copies cannot be requested by electronic mail after the
search has been performed. If a search is requested without requesting
certified and then later a certified or audit trail is desired the search must
be ran and again as a certified type of search and is billable as such in
full. No credit is given for the original search which was not requested for
certified. (NOTE: see disclaimer)
  Not all states can provide certified copies of statewide criminal histories.
States which do not have EVERY county reporting to the state on a centralized
basis cannot provide a written certified statement that all of the state was
searched for criminal history. 
  The states which will provide a certified
copy are Arkansas, Colorado, District of Columbia, Florida, Idaho,
Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota (notarized release required), Missouri,
Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, South
Carolina, and Wisconsin. 
  Most of states which can not provide certified copies on a state wide
search level can provide a certified copies of an individual county by
county request.

                      *********************************
  **************************       DISCLAIMER     ***************************
                      *********************************

  No record, set of records, or report supplied by W.D.I.A. Corporation or
  a supplier of W.D.I.A. Corporation is acceptable for use as an exhibit or
  as evidence. The reports supplied by W.D.I.A. Corporation are supplied
  for informational research only. 
  
  It is the sole responsibility of the recipient of any information, to
  obtainable evidential verification of all information provided if the
  recipient is in need of information which is of evidential quality.
  
  Information is obtained from a multitude databases, record keeping
  systems, and other sources over which W.D.I.A. Corporation and/or its
  suppliers have no control. These are fallible electronic and human
  sources and there can be absolutely no warranty expressed or implied as
  to the accuracy, completeness, timeliness, or availibility of the
  records listed, nor to the fitness for the purpose of the recipient of
  such records or reports.
  
  Information provided may indeed be limited or may not be totally
  current. There can be absolutely no guarantee the information pertains
  to, or pertains exclusively to, the search criteria information which
  was submitted by the requesting party. None of the above disclaimers are
  meant to supercede any governing laws and/or pertinent regulations.




 
                              ORIGIN OF REPORTS

  All worker comp claim reports are generated from the state of origin and is a 
statewide search.
  Criminal history reports can be searched in three ways: by county, statewide 
or at the federal court level for a particular state. Criminal record convictions 
and charges will list felonies and criminal misdemeanors. There are separate 
fee charges for each level of search.



                PROJECTED TURNAROUND CRIMINAL HISTORY REPORTS 
All of the above named reports will be returned by E-Mail on the average of 
3 to 5 business days. Certified copies will be returned by mail within 
10-14 business days of request.



                                REPORT COVERAGE
 
States where state-wide criminal checks are or are not not available: 
        
ALABAMA..SW NOT AVAILABLE.
ALASKA...SW NOT AVAILABLE.
ARIZONA..SW NOT AVAILABLE
ARKANSAS.SW AVAILABLE.
CALIFORNIA..SW NOT AVAILABLE.
COLORADO.SW AVAILABLE.
CONNECTICUT.SW NOT AVAILABLE.
DELAWARE....SW AVAILABLE.
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA...SW AVAILABLE.
FLORIDA.....SW AVAILABLE..TURN-AROUND TIME MINIMUM TWO WEEKS
GEORGIA.....SW NOT AVAILABLE.
HAWAII......SW NOT AVAILABLE.
IDAHO.......SW NOT AVAILABLE.
ILLINOIS....SW NOT AVAILABLE.
INDIANA.....SW AVAILABLE, HT, WT, PLACE OF BIRTH & DMV#
                          NOW REQUIRED FOR SUCCESSFUL COMPLETION.
IOWA........SW NOT AVAILABLE.
KANSAS......SW AVAILABLE.
KENTUCKY....SW AVAILABLE 2-3 WEEKS TURN AROUND
LOUISIANA...SW AVAILABLE.
MAINE.......SW AVAILABLE 2-3 WEEKS TURN AROUND THOSE WITH RECORDS
MARYLAND....SW NOT AVAILABLE, MAYBE AVAILABLE IN THE FUTURE.
MASSACHUSETTS..SW NOT AVAILABLE
MICHIGAN....SW AVAILABLE
MINNESOTA..SW AVAILABLE WITH NOTARIZED RELEASE
MISSISSIPPI..SW NOT AVAILABLE
MISSOURI....SW AVAILABLE
MONTANA.....SW AVAILABLE
NEBRASKA....SW AVAILABLE, 2 WEEKS TURN AROUND
NEVADA......SW NOT AVAILABLE
NEW HAMPSHIRE..SW NOT AVAILABLE
NEW JERSEY.....SW NOT AVAILABLE
NEW MEXICO.....SW AVAILABLE
NEW YORK.......SW NOT AVAILABLE
NORTH CAROLINA..SW NOT AVAILABLE
NORTH DAKOTA....SW AVAILABLE
OHIO............SW AVAILABLE ONLY WITH FINGERPRINTS
OKLAHOMA........SW AVAILABLE
OREGON..........SW AVAILABLE, 2 WEEKS TURN-AROUND TIME FOR THOSE WITH RECORDS
PENNSYLVANIA...SW AVAILABLE
RHODE ISLAND...SW NOT AVAILABLE
SOUTH DAKOTA...SW AVAILABLE ONLY WITH FINGERPRINTS
SOUTH CAROLINA..SW NOT AVAILABLE
TENNESSEE...SW NOT AVAILABLE
TEXAS.......SW NOT AVAILABLE
UTAH........SW NOT AVAILABLE
VERMONT.....SW NOT AVAILABLE
VIRGINIA....SW AVAILABLE WITH NOTARIZED RELEASE ONLY!
WASHINGTON..SW AVAILABLE WITH FINGERPRINTS ONLY
W VIRGINIA..SW AVAILABLE
WISCONSIN...SW AVAILABLE
WYOMING.....SW NOT AVAILABLE.
 
 
PLEASE BE ADVISED THAT THIS LIST IS UPDATED FREQUENTLY.  THESE
REQUIREMENTS, SHOULD, AT THE EARLIEST, BE IN EFFECT BY APRIL 22, 1991.  
PLEASE....ALSO REMEMBER THAT THE LIST AND INFORMATION ABOVE IS SUBJECT TO
CHANGE, AND IS AVAILABLE ONLINE FOR YOUR FUTURE USE.
   


court in any given state are available in all 50 states.


DEA: Death Record Search via SSN
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Death Record Database Search via SSN     Cost = $8.24
Would you like a Death Record Database Search?  Y/N  > y
Do you need an explanation on how to enter the social?  Y/N  > y
ENTER the following command string, instead of a normal credit request

S/123-45-6789
       or
S/123-45-6789/222-33-4444/333-44-5555/444-55-6666/555-66-7777
       then press [RETURN]
{You may search for 1 to 5 social security numbers during a single pass}
For a FREE DEMONSTRATION enter   S/123-45-6789  then press [RETURN]

                              ****  DEATH RECORD HIT  ****

                 Social Security Number ... 123-45-6789

This Social Security Number was listed as deceased as of 10/72



EMP: Employment Purpose Credit Reports
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The Main Menu option you have just selected will allow you to obtain
consumer credit reports on individuals.
Your purpose for obtaining information while in this mode,
must be for employment purposes. 

The consumers for whom reports are returned, will be notified
by the NCI Network that a report has been rendered to your company
and that the report is to used for employment purposes. 

You will be asked to enter the company for which the employment report
is being requested, if the subject is not applying to work for your
company, please enter the name of the company with whom the consumer applied.
This will cut down on the number of consumer inquiries because of confusion.

The Fair Credit Reporting Act requires NCI to contact and notify the
that a consumer credit was pulled for employment purposes.
All consumer credit report PRICES QUOTED below, when used for employment
purposes INCLUDE A $3.50 employment compliance surcharge,
to cover the cost of federal compliance.



KRI: Kris-Cross Plus - 92 Million - Names and Addresses and Telephone Numbers
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

National Kris-Cross Plus allows a user to enter a name/address -OR-
phone number -OR- name/address/phone number.

The database has over 92 million names/address/phone records
and delivers

   - Name, address, and phone number verification
   - Nine Digit ZipCode Information
   - NCI Change of Address Files  (doesn't include USPS info)
   - Dwelling unit type and size  (single or Multifamily 10 unit)
   - Names, Addresses, Phone Numbers, and dwelling unit size of up to
     Nine Neighbors who reside nearby.

Fast skip-tracing for collection
   Locate delinquent accounts with instant searches on their former
   neighborhoods, with on-line, nine neighbor skip-tracing.
         *   Saves days on collection
         *   Nine-neighbor search
         *   Access to the most up-to-date change-of-address file available


NCI provides the ability to batch up to 20 requests before sending the
requests to the databases necessary for retrieval of the information.
This greatly decreases the response time on multiple requests.

Included in the system sources are unlisted phone numbers.  However, not
ever unlisted number is included in the database.  KRIS-CROSS PLUS
accesses over 92 million files taken from sources such as: criss-cross
directories, voter registration records, diver registration records,
magazine subscriptions and the U.S. Postal Service change of address
files.  Records are updated as new information becomes available.

POS: Nci Change Of Address (NCOA)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

If htis option is chosen, the system will attempt to search for a
possible change in address for the individual requested in the search
information section.  This search follows the license rules of the
National Change of Address (NCOA) system of the U.S. Postal Service.

Note:  At least the last name is required for this type of search but
the full name is best.  The format of the name line is first name, or
first name last name.

The output of the CHANGE OF ADDRESS appears in the lower portion of the
requested data section showing the name/address, move type and move
effective date.  Move type can be individual, family, or firm.  the move
eff date is the date the change of address becomes/became effective.


                                                                 
SSN: Ssn Tracing -  SS#-Locate
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

1. SSN tracking ... cost is $5.93 for a 1ST SOURCE search per ssn
2. SSN tracking ... cost is $5.93 for a 2ND SOURCE search per ssn
3. SSN tracking ... cost is $5.93 for a 3RD SOURCE search per ssn
4. SSN tracking ... cost is $10.81 for BOTH 1ST and 2ND SOURCE searches per ssn
                               \== $avings of $1.05 over individual pricing
5. SSN tracking ... cost is $10.81 for BOTH 2ND and 3RD SOURCE searches per ssn
                               \== $avings of $1.05 over individual pricing
6. SSN tracking ... cost is $10.81 for BOTH 1ST and 3RD SOURCE searches per ssn
                               \== $avings of $1.05 over individual pricing
7. SSN tracking ... cost is $14.81 for 1ST, 2ND and 3RD SOURCE searches per ssn
                               \== $avings of $2.98 over individual pricing
8. ABORT SSN tracking ... no charge

Scanning ... Source #1 FOR ... 123-45-6789

                 DATE: 11/06/87  TIME: 13:20


      NAME/SPOUSE                                            SSN OWNER
      ADDRESS                                              ADDR RPT DATE

      1. CONSUMER, JOHN D                                       SUBJECT
         3142 TAG DR., KANSAS CITY. KANSAS 66102                09/84

      2. CONSUMER, JOHN D                                       SUBJECT
         178 COLDSPRING LN., DALLAS, TX 75228                   10/87



WOR: Workers Compensation Prior Claims
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

NCI provides access to worker's Compensation claims histories, providing
any claims made against employer's Worker's Compensation funds by the
subject.

Information provided to NCI clients on Worker's Complensation claims
history will require a release from the subject you are requestion
information on.  Each report request cannot be sent back without a
release signed by the subject.  If you already have release forms signed
by your employees or prospective employees and wish to use your own
release form you may send it in for approval.

Example Report:

Joe Consumer suffered injury to the right hand 11/12/85.  Employer was
R&L Packaging.  Number of days missed 12.  Amount of claim $530.00

ZIP: Zip+4 - Nine Digit Zip reference
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

This option will provide address standardization and output of hte
4-digit add-on code with the current, correct 5-digit zip code.  This
option may be selected as the only option desired or in a combination
with other options.  If an address is not found on the Name/Address file
and the ZIP+4 option is selected, the system will return a stardardized
address with ZIP+4 code in place of the record that may have been
displayed in the REQUESTED DATA section.

The more specific the information supplied, the more accurate the
returned ZIP+4 code will be.  This means you should include the
apartment number or suite number if available.

Addresses returned without an add-on code designates "NO DELIVERY".

A message of "MULTIPLE RESPONSES" indicates that the search information
provided requires some additional information to distinguish between the
possible responses.  The address in the search information may need a
direction suffix (e.g. ST, AVE, RD) or a zipcode.  If you add this
informatio nand re-submit the requestion there will be another billable
request.


CONCLUSION:
~~~~~~~~~~~

Well, that will conclude my textfile on NCI/W.D.I.A Network.  Hopefully
it has been interesting, and if nothing else informative as to what type
of information sources are currently available to people in the position
to use them.  This network is probably the best I know of for
skip-tracing.  There is another network called CDB INFOTEK which is very
similar to this network except it also contains public information.  I
am planning on releasing documetation on that network as well in the
near future.

If you have any questions or comments for me, you can leave me mail at
kludge@hale.uucp or to kludge@isis.cs.du.edu (it would be most likely be
read faster from hale.uucp).  I would also like anyone who has knowledge
about similar networks to leave me mail, stating the name of the
service, what it provides, and a place the business can be contacted at
if at all possible.

                                                /<ludge
                                        Scantronics Publications

"Public information is in the best interest of the citizens of our nation!"



=============================================================================
                  N.A.S.T.Y. JOURNAL RELEASE 3 - PART 05
=============================================================================


                     ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
                     ~           N.A.S.T.Y.          ~
                     ~           Presents:           ~   
                     ~          Trans Union          ~
                     ~     Credit Information Co.    ~
                     ~                               ~
                     ~ Date Written:     Written By: ~
                     ~  04/19/91             /<ludge ~
                     ~                               ~
                     ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


     Well, here is another information guide to a credit bureau for
everyone.  Again, I have recieved this information straight from the
company, so it is current.  I have recieved information on all the
services that Trans Union provides, and have enclosed them. Enuf
bullshit, and on with the phile.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
     First, let me give you a general overview of what the system has to
provide.  Trans Union does reporting on individual credit.  To give you
an idea of the price structure:

           INDIVIDUAL CREDIT REPORTS

Owned Bureaus
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Automated Access............................$1.75
Written Report...............................2.15
  Requested by Phone.........................2.75
Verbal Report Summary........................8.00



Annual Membership Fee.......................$185.00
Minimum Montly Billing....................... 60.00



                     TRACE

Automated SSN Search........................$1.30
Verbal Report................................2.30
Written Report...............................1.75
No Hits...................................... .50


               Employment Reports

Verbal Reports..............................$6.50+Tolls
Automated PEER(tm)...........................3.50


             Fraud Detection Services

Trans-Alert.................................No Charge
HAWK
   Contributor.............................$3.00 per hit
   Non-Hawk Contributor.....................6.00 per hit


               Other Services

EMPIRICA(tm) & DELPHI(tm)
  Deliquent & Bankruptch Predictors

ATLAS(tm) Automated Address Telephone Lookup Access System
Prescreened Promotions

EDGE(tm) Credit usage information by zip code

WEB(tm) Account monitoring and tracking

LOOK(tm) automated decoding

     Now to highlight the major services provided.

                              -----
                              TRACE
                              -----

     Trace is an address information and verification service of Trans
Union Credit Information Co.  Weather you need thousands of correct
addresses for a mass mailing or to skip-trace delinquent accounts, TRACE
provides easy access for obtaining the information quickly and
economically.

     *  Makes Credit checking easier
     *  Improves the quality of loans
     *  Increases the response ratio of
        promotional mailings
     *  Saves the cost of a full-time skip tracer

     When you subscribe to TRACE, you are given access to Trans Union's
vast Social Security Index File.  To locate a current address, simply
input the TRACE keywork (TRCE) and the subject's social security number.
You can access the system by remote terminal, tape-to-tape,
computer-to-computer, or by PASSPORT(tm) PC Software program.

     Based on social security number input, you will recieve a list of
up to six possible names and addresses.  If additional files exist, a
message will appear on the TRACE report with instrunctions to contact
your local bureau for a complete listing.

     Trace users who are subscribers to Trans Union's HAWK will also
have their reports automatically checked against the nation's largest
database of consumer credit fraud information.  HAWK Alert messages will
apprear whenever a listed social security number has been used
previously in fraudulent activities.  By matching an individual's social
security number against the Social Security Admininstration's Death
Master File, HAWK will also identify individuals who are using the
social security number of a deceased person.

                              ----------
                              TRACE-Plus
                              ----------

     Now, stores, banks, utilities, oil companies, government agencies
and other  subscribers that have a legally permissable purpose for
obtaining credit information, can review a new, value-added TRACE report
that does more than provide name and address information.

     TRACE-Plus includes all the basic data contained in the original
TRACE report PLUS age, salary and employment informaiton.

     The addition of this input adds a new dimension to TRACE.
Subscribers can now determine the age of the person the're checking or
seeking. (Age often corresponds with a person's mobility.)  They'll also
learn if the individual is currently employeed and, if so, where.  If
the information is available, subscribers will also find out about the
individual's financial wherewithal, based on their position and salary.

     All this translates into a more comprehensive search system,
improved collections, better quality loans, more qualified response to
direct marketing promotions, and fewer "adress unknown" returns.

     You can use TRACE-Plus with confidence, assured that Trans Alert
will automatically scrutinize every input of social security numbers.
You'll also have the option of utilizing HAWK to spotlight previous
fraudulent activity and invalid social securty numbers of deceased
people.

     TRACE-Plus is available on-line or in batch following the same
simple procedure as TRACE.  The special subscriber code used to sign
into the system will identify you as a TRACE or TRACE-Plus user and
provide you with the appropriate informaiton.

                                  --------
                                  Re-Trace
                                  --------


     Social security numbers are a vital element in the credit and
search process.  But often this critical information is not available.

     RE-TRACE is a special search system that matches names and
addresses against Trans Union's national database of social security
numbers.  For example, if you're a company with 100,000 files that have
no social security numbers, you can now match your customers names
against the database, and append it with social security numbers.

     In view of the government's recent clause reguarding "Due
Dilligence," RE_TRACE is especially relevant.  It enables insurance
companies, banks, and other financial institutions to demonstrate that
they have excercised ever possible means, including the search of
traceable social security numbers, to help locate missing heirs, policy
holders, lock box holders, etc.

     RE-TRACE performs this quickly and easily.  Just provide us with
names and addresses and we'll give you the corresponding social security
numbers.  It's as simple as that.

                                 _____
               ----------------- ATLAS --------------
               Address Telephone Lookup Access System
               --------------------------------------

ATLAS Report One-  Subjects Verification and Neighbors
   This report provides the most current address and phone number for an
   individual plus the names, addresses and phone numbers of five people
   living near the current address.

Example:

1l SMITH, JOHN* 1573,,MAPLE,,SOUTH HOLLAND,IL,60743*
NEW ADDRESS
1. Smith, John, E,                   (312) 335-8749
          6128, S, Kostner, AV, Chicago, IL, 60636
NEIGHBORS
1. HOLLICH, GEORGE, F,               (312) 335-0958
          6130, S, Kostner, AV, Chicago, IL, 60636
2. MARQUARDT, EDWARD                 (312) 339-2308
          6130, S, Kostner, AV, Chicago, IL, 60636
3. NELSON, EDWARD,,                  (312) 339-4205
          6130, S, Kostner, AV, Chicago, IL, 60636
4. HAMILTON, GEORGE,,                (312) 339-3013
          6130, S, Kostner, AV, Chicago, IL, 60636
5. KALBER, FREDRICK, F,              (312) 339-3543
          6130, S, Kostner, AV, Chicago, IL, 60636
END OF ATLAS REPORT

ATLAS Report Two- Address Verification and Neighbors
 EG: 2i SMITH, JOHN* 1574,,MAPLE,,SOUTH HOLLAND, IL,60743*
     This report searches by the address, and provides the occupants at
     that address.  It will stop searching once the address match has
     been found, and will never attempt chance of address searches, even
     if the data base indicates the subject has moved.  If ATLAS locates
     the street but cannot find the actual house number, in most cases
     the infomration on the neightbers will still be returned.

ATLAS Report Three- Subject Verification
 EG: 3i SMITH, JOHN* 1574,,MAPLE,,SOUTH HOLLAND, IL,60743*
     This provides the most current address and phone number for an
     individual.  The primary objective of this report is to verify the
     address or phone for an individual

ATLAS Report Four- Phone Verification
     Provides the name and address listed for an input telephone number.


IMPORTANT POINTS TO REMEMBER

1.  ATLAS does not contain post office boxes.  Input of a post office
    box alone will result in a no hit.  ATLAS contains rural routes.  If
    an address has a rural route and a post office box, do not enter the
    post office box.

2.  Directions (N, S, E & W) and street types (ST, DR, ETC.) are
    critical to the match process and most be entered whever possible.

3.  Numbered streets must be entered with the appropriate two character
    suffix (ST, ND, RD & TH) Examples: 1st, 2nd, 103rd, 198th.

4.  All requests should be individual, joint inquiries are not valid.

5.  If ATLAS returns ",,G" as the name and "(000)000-0000" as the phone
    number, you found a ghost- a valid residential address for which the
    occupant is unknown.


     Ok, that is the basics of what their system has to offer.  Now I
guess we shall venture to the meat of this phile.  Once again in this
report, we have obtained reports from the company with full information
as to the lines of the report and have enclosed all information that had
been disclosed to us.  This information is on the credit form 2000 which
is the standard for Trans Union.

For                                      mrktsub rptd  date    time
B0504353                                  12 LA  3/72  7/5/90  19:26

Report on                                        B-day
CONSUMER, John, A.,JR.                           8/50

                                   soc.sec. #    Phone#
AKA Jim                            712-21-0001   555-1234
#### Address                                           RPTD     Spouse
1561 E. Orangethorpe Ave., Fullerton CA. 92631         8/74R    Barbra

Previous Address                                                Spouse SS#
1400 N. Harbor BV., Fullerton CA., 200 92635           3/72     562-96-8274
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| B0504353-  Trans Union Subscriber inquiry code Number.                      |
| 12 LA   -  Market and Submarket area in which the credit file resides. An   |
|            * will indicate that some additional identifying information has |
|            been added to the file.  This asterisk will remain approximately |
|            14 days from the time the information was added.                 |
| 3/72    -  How long the consumer has been in the creit bureau files.        |
| 7/5/90 19:26-  The Date and time the report was requested.                  |
| Consumers last, first, and middle name or initial, also alias if any.       |
| Consumer's social security number.  An * next to the social security number |
|   indicated the social retured on the credit report was an echo back from   |
|   your input, or the social has been changed recently or added.             |
| Consumer's date of birth or estimated year of birth (E-XX)                  |
| Consumer's complete current, previous, and second previous addresses.  The  |
|   date reported for the current and first previous address also appear.     |
| Consumer's home phone number.                                               |
| The spouse's name and social security number.                               |
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
                                                       EMPL
Employer                                Status         DATE      RPTD
WILLIAMS IRON WORKS                     WELDER         7/85H     2/87R

Employment Address                      Pay
123 Beverly DR., Santa Monica, CA.      1500M

Previous Employment
THOMAS SHEET METAL                      WELDER         2/73H     2/85R
434 Sepulveda VB, Los Angeles, CA       1200M


Spouse's Employment
ABC Company
22666 Colorado BL., Pasadena, CA        SECRETARY                3/81R


TRD=3 NEG=2 PUB=1 COL=1 INQ=8 BAL=1,402 HC-CL=408-500
+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Consumer's current employer and address                                      |
| Current position & income (M-ontly, Y-early, H-ourly, W-eekly,S-emimonthly   |
| D-aily).                                                                     |
| 2/73H  Date (H-ired, R-eported, T-erminated, V-erfied by bureau.             |
| Spouse's coplete employment, company name and address.                       |
| Alert status-shows any alert that is found, (reports at the end of the report|
| Trades, Negative Trades, Public Records, Collections & Inquiries, Balance of |
|   the tradelines, high credit vs. credit limit.                              |
+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
                                                                                                                                                                                                                  OF
Sub Name       Sub. Code      OPND High Verif.   BAL Owed   Payment Patt.  MOP
BROADWAY       D 1103998      6/77 $408 10/88A    $100      PN5543211111   R9P

Account #                          Limit Closed
9941234567                         $500  9/88F

ECOA
U
                                                        PST
                                                        DUE
BANK OF USA    B 504353       5/84 $8932 10/88A   $1302 $372    33222111321 I03
35312345678                 48X186                5/87  $558 04 1XXX43211X1 R01
C           1983 NISSAN                           AUTOMOBILE    23 6 4  2
CITICORP SVG   P 8455113      3/72       10/88P   $0    $0      11111111111 R01
411855131286                       $2500                        11XX1111111
P                                  CLOSED 3/88C
+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Name of credit grantor with whom consumer has an account.                    |
| Credit Grantor's Trans Union subscriber code number.                         |
| Date the account was opened.                                                 |
| The high credit on the account. (The highest amount ever owed.)              |
| The date verified column has a date and one of the indicators listed in the  |
|   codes section of this article.                                             |
| Balance owing as of date verified or closed column                           |
| Amount past due as of the date verified to closed.                           |
| Payment pattern gives you the actual manner of payment ratings for a maximum |
| of 24 months.  It reas from left to right, witht the most current verified   |
| entry on the left of the first line.                                         |
| Type of account: R-evolving, I-nstallment, O-pen, C-heck limit,              |
|                  M-ortgague, and ACB manner of payment.                      |
| The account number of the consumer for a particular grantor.                 |
| Terms of sale are: Number of payments, payment frequency and dollar amount   |
|    due each payment.  The codes are: X-unspecified, M-ontly, P-ayroll Deduct.|
|    S-emiannual, Q-uarterly, Y-early, W-eekly, & B-iweekly.                   |
| Credit Limit-The maximum amount of credit approved by the grantor.           |
| Date closed-has a date and one of the indicators from the codes section.     |
| Responsibility for repaying debt. See ECOA INQUIRY & ACCOUNT DESIGNATORS.    |
| The collateral for an installment loan.                                      |
| Type of installment loan: automobile, boat, personal, etc.                   |
| The remarks column is used if the account is in some type of dispute or      |
|    inquriesan explanation of the credit condition of the account.            |
| Maximum delinquency occured on a particular account, the dollar amount       |
|    involved and the rating at the time of the delinquency.                   |
| The historical status field displays in four columms:                        |
|   1-number of months grantor has been reviewing the account.                 |
| 2-4-30/60/90 day late terms respectively.                                    |
+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+



INQR 8    DATE      ECOA      SUBSCODE       SUBNAME        TYPE/AMT
          7/5/89     P        BLA504353      BANK OF USA
          6/14/89    I        BLA5001234     LA SHERIFFS    EMPLOYMENT
          5/4/89     P        DLA1132001     MAY CO
          4/25/89    I        DLA1111521     ROBINSONS
DLA 1209001-9/16/88P,ZLA4451-8/29/88P,NDE 12255(CNM)-8/25/88I,FLA5300016-8/15/88I
MISC SEE FILE ON JIM CONSUMER
Consumer Statement:8/88 Consumer Experienced Financial Hardship- Auto Accident
COLLECTION
AGENCY      AMOUNT         STATUS    RPTD    Paid Creditor
YLA21111       $75    I      UP      2/87R   ST John HOSP  CUR BAL $75
PUBLIC RECORD
SOURCE    COURT   DATE    LIAB    TYPE    ASSETS  PAID POCKET NUM PLAINTIFF/ATTY
ZLA1201001 SC     4/83R   $343    CJ                    12345     ACME/SMITH
CIVAL JUDGEMENT

+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| This position shows the inquiries made on a consumer's credit file. The     |
| inquiry filed shows the date of the inquiry, the ECOA designator, Trans     |
| Union subscriber inquiry code and subscriber shorty name.  The loan type    |
| and the loan amount (if applicable) are given after the short name.  Notice |
| that inquiries made over 6 monts prior to your accessing the file will not  |
| display the subscriber short name.                                          |
|                                                                             |
| Public record information will also be listed on the credit file.  Public   |
| record information will be maintained on a consumer's file in compliance    |
| with the Fair Credit Reporting Act, the court type, the date reported to    |
| the bureau, the ECOA designator, and liabilities or assets and the type     |
| of public record.  Also listed will be the date paid, the docket number,    |
| the plaintiff and the attorney involved in the case.                        |
| Miscelaneous information may also appear.                                   |
| A consumer statement may appear here.                                       |
| Up to five TRANS-ALERT messages may appear here if current input address    |
|   does not match any address on all returned files, if the first five       |
|   digits of the input SS# do not match Trans Union's table of government-   |
|   provided valid SSN#'s, if input surname does not match returned file's    |
|   surname.                                                                  |
| Hawk Alert Messages                                                         |
| Indicates the last of the last page of the credit report.                   |
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+


    Does it still look a little kryptic?  With the information I have
provided thus far, I would have to say that you still do need something
to completely understand what is on the reports.  SO, what have I
included for your viewing & archiving pleasure?  How about the...

                            FOCUS FORM 2000 CODES


ECOA Inquiry and Account Designators
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A  Authorized user of shared account
C  Joint contractual liability
I  Individual account for sole use of applicant
M  Co-signer primarily liable for account
N  Non-applicant spouse inquiry
P  Participant in shared account which cannot be distinguished as A or C
S  Co-signer, no spousal relationship
T  Relationship with account terminated
U  Undersignated

Type of Account
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
O  Open Accout (30,60,90 days)
R  Revolving or Option
I  Installment
M  Mortgage
C  Check credit (line of credit)

Date Indicators
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A  Automated
C  Clused
D  Declined
F  Repossessed/Written Off/Collection
H  Hired
I  Indirect
M  Manually Frozen
N  No Record
P  Paid Out
R  Reported but not verified
S  Slow Answering
T  Terminated or Temporarily frozen
U  Never/Not used account
V  Verified
X  No reply

Collection Status Codes
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
BK  Bankrupt
BL  Discharged in Bankruptcy
CC  Consumer Conseling
CD  Dispute after resolution
DM  Dismissed
DP  Disputed
MP  Making Payments
PD  Paid
SK  Skip
UL  Unknown
UP  Unpaid
WE  Wage earner bankruptch

Kinds of business classification
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A  Automotive
B  Banks
C  Clothing
D  Department and Variety
F  Finance
G  Groceries
H  Home Furnishings
I  Insurance
J  Jewelry and Cameras
K  Contractors
L  Lumber, Building Material, Hardware
M  Medical and Related Health
N  National Credit Card
O  Oil and National Credit Card Companies
P  Personal Services Other Than Medical
Q  Mail Order Houses
R  Real Estate and Public Accomodations
S  Sporting Goods
T  Farm and Garden Supplies
U  Utilities and Fuel
V  Government
W  Wholesale
X  Advertising
Y  Collection Services
Z  Miscellaneous

Public Record Types
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
BD  Bankruptcy Dismissed
BR  Bankruptcy
CJ  Cival Judgement
DC  Discharged Bankruptcy
DE  Deed and Mortgage
DM  Deeds and Mortgage (NY-PHIL)
DP  Judgement Paid, Dismissed
DS  Dismissal of Court Suit
DT  Chapter 13 Dismissed
FT  Federal Tax Lien
JD  Judgement by Default
JM  Dismissed Judgement
PC  Paid Civil Judgement
PF  Paid Federal Tax Lien
PL  Paid Tax Lien
PV  Judgement Paid, Vacated
RL  Release Tax Lien
SL  State Tax Lien
ST  Chatper 13 Sucessful
TD  Trust Deed
TL  Tax Lien Other
WA  Wage Assignment
11  Chapter 11 Bankruptcy
13  Chapter 13 Bankruptcy

Court Codes
~~~~~~~~~~~
AS  Associate Court
CA  County Auditor
CC  County Clerk's Office
CH  Chancery Court
CI  Circuit Court
CL  County Court at Law
CN  Concilation Court
CP  Common Pleas
CT  County Court
CY  City Court
DC  District Court
DO  Domestic Court
DS  District Judge System
FE  Federal District Court
GS  General Session
IC  Inferior Court
JU  Justice of the Peace
MA  Magistrate Court
MU  Municipal Court
M1  1st Magisterial Court
M2  2nd Magisterial Court
M3  3rd Magisterial Court
M4  Quartly Court
PC  Parish Court
PR  Probate Court
RD  Recorder of Deeds
SC  Small Claims
ST  State Court
SU  Superior Court

Title Abbreviations
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
DR  Doctor
SS  Sister
RV  Revreend
SR  Senior
JR  Junior
II  Second
3   Third
IV  Fourth
V   Fifth
ML  Military

MOP Current Manner Of Payment
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
00  Not rated, too new to rate, or approved but not used
01  Pays within 30 days of payment due date, or  over 1 payment past due
02  pays in more than 30 daysf from payment due date, but not more than 60
    days, or 2 payments past due.
03  Pays in more than 60 days of payment due date,not more than 90 or 3 payments
04  Pays in more than 90 days from due date, but not more than 120 days late
05  Pays in 120 days or more than 4 payments past due date
07  Making regular payments under wage earner plan or similar arrangement
08  Repossession
8A  Voluntary Reposession
8D  Legal Reposession
8P  Payment to a Reposession Account
8R  Reposession redeemed
09  Bad Debt;charged-off account
UR  Unrated
UC  Unclassified
RJ  Rejected
X   Subscriber did not report


    Now that ought to give you enough information to understand everything
on the report.  I will show you one more thing before I end this file though.

Example of Payment Pattern Logic
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

                Date Verified   Current Past    Current Payment
Activity        Closed or Paid  Balance Due       MOP   Pattern
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Account has        1/88A        $50     $50       05    543211111111
been open for                                           111111111111
some time

Following          2/88A        $50     $50       05    554321111111
Month                                                   111111111111

Account is         3/88A        $50     $50       09    N55432111111
Charged Off        3/88F                                111111111111

A payment is       4/88A        $40     $50       9P    PN5543211111
Recieved or        3/88F                                111111111111
Balance Reduced

No Payment is      5/88A        $40     $40       9P    NPN554321111
Recieved or no     3/88F                                111111111111
Reduction in
Balance

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    Well, that ought to about do it for this file.  I hope you have found
the information contained useful if you currently are using Trans Union, or
not, then I hope that it has given you some insight as to what their reports
are, what they have to offer, and how the records are kept.

    I still have not written on NCI yet.  It should come out in later files.
After I have done research on the other databases and investigative nets
I plan on releasing one on NCI.  I have the complete book for it, and just
as some preamble to my NCI file, Trans Union is just 1 of the databases that
NCI is connected to.  TRW Commercial & Individual Credit, Equifax/CBI, and
several others I plan to release documentation on.

                                                   Scantronics Editor
                                                   ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
                                                      /< L U D G E


=============================================================================
                  N.A.S.T.Y. JOURNAL RELEASE 3 - PART 06
=============================================================================


Some of the following Information was taken from The Teleputing Hotline
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

WILL U.S. BELLS BECOME INFORMATION MONOPOLIES? 

Judge Harold Greene lifted the regional Bell companies from their ban on 
providing information services. The Bell companies loved it, the competition 
hated it. Greene was forced to move by higher courts, who upheld a higher, 
unmeetable standard on the ban. 

There will be appeals, and Congress could overturn the order in a new law. 
But the Bush Administration wants the Bells to be let into the field, and 
will veto the bill. FCC Chairman Alfred Sikes hopes the Bells will get 
into the cable TV business and forestall re-regulation there. 

=============================================================================

NY TELEPHONE proposed a restructuring plan to head-off New York 
moves to force its divestment from parent NYNEX. 
=============================================================================

NEW PRODUCT HELPS DETECT TOLL-FRAUD 

Account-A-Call launched the Toll Fraud Monitoring Service, which 
can monitor lines going out of a large business PBX to detect 
calling patterns that suggest hacking or potential toll fraud. 
Account-A-Call requires a piece of hardware which links to the 
PBX and its phone lines and is programmed. Then the line is 
monitored by AAC staff, who sound alerts at anything suspicious. 
It all costs about $250 per month, writes Linda Rohrbough of 
Newsbytes. 
=============================================================================

A SMART SOVIET DEBIT CARD 

Comparator Systems of the U.S. signed a deal with the Central 
Bank of the Russian Federation and the Russian Export Co. to 
install over 2,000 debit card terminal systems across Russia. The 
machines will employ Smart Cards, using chips which log all 
transactions and other data -- Western systems use magnetic-strip 
cards which can store only account numbers. Smart cards will 
reduce the need for telecommunications and enhance security with 
fingerprints stored on the chips, writes Kirill Tchashchin of 
Newsbytes. 
=============================================================================

U.S. HOUSE COMMITTEE PASSES PHONE PRIVACY MEASURES 

A U.S. House Committee approved measures to provide protection 
from junk phone calls and restrict Caller ID services. The 
proposals, from Rep. Edward Markey of Massachusetts, chair of the 
telecomm subcommittee, require per-call blocking of Caller ID 
numbers, and create a national databank listing people who don't 
want to hear from phone salesmen. The latter bill, similar to a 
Florida law, would also require that calls placed by computers 
hang-up on consumer demand. A pending Senate bill would ban all 
commercial solicitations to non-business phones. 
=============================================================================

TELESPHERE MAY BE UNDER IN SEPTEMBER

The #4 U.S. company offering caller-paid 900 number lines may be 
about to go under. Telesphere will lose $9.9 million for the quarter 
ending in June, mainly because 900 revenues declined. It's is 
trying to get customers to finance it, offering to give them 
stock instead of cash for funds it owes.  

Telesphere owes the money to 900-number service providers like 
Softguard Systems. Softguard now says it faces "an imminent 
financial crisis" because Telesphere, which provides it with 
billing and collection services, "has failed to remit amounts now 
past due and has indicated that payment is unlikely to be 
forthcoming in the foreseeable future." Softguard says unless it 
gets financing to tide it over it will go under. 
=============================================================================

SPRINT cut its prices 15% under the U.S. government phone 
contract, but still lost the Navy to AT&T, which had complained 
a 60-40 revenue split in its favor had not been carried out. 
=============================================================================

AT&T A BIG WINNER FROM GULF WAR 

AT&T is a big winner in the Gulf War. It's shipped 2 digital 
switches for international and domestic calls, and won $11 
milllion in PBX business. AT&T also rebuilt Kuwaiti Air Force 
communications. Now it's signed with Alghanim Industries to 
distribute at least $3 million in corded and cordless phones, 
digital PBXs, business telecomm systems and answering machines. 
European companies dominated the market before the Gulf War.  
=============================================================================

FCC CAN'T HANDLE PHONE COMPLAINTS 

Allnet, a small U.S. long distance company, says the Federal 
Communications Commission is so far behind in handling complaints 
against local telephone companies that cases begun now will 
still be pending in 1995. Lack of staff was blamed for the 
delays, which looked at FCC data on 1,419 complaints filed 
between 1984 and 1991. The complaints, mainly against local Bell 
companies, include high rates and other anti-competitive 
activities. They're supposed to be settled within 15 months under 
U.S. law. Allnet also said the FCC is biased in favor of AT&T on 
settlements. AT&T says it's just willing to settle. 
=============================================================================

MINITEL SERVICES ANNOUNCES PC CONNECT 

Minitel Services announced PC Connect, a networking service which 
will compete most closely with NVN. NVN is a U.S. service on AT&T 
Accunet's system which covers NAPLPS, Minitel, and ASCII text. PC 
Connect offers connections to 23 countries, credit-card billing 
in local currency, and connections via Infonet. The new venture 
will support ASCII text and the Teletel protocol, which is 
popular in Europe but has had a great deal of difficulty finding 
a foothold in the U.S. market. Separately, the company will link 
to the US West Community Link gateway due to open in Minneapolis 
this fall. 
=============================================================================

INFONET EXTENDS NETWORK TO BRAZIL 

With Brazil prepared to finally scrap an informatics `domestic 
content' law, enacted in 1987, the rush is on to get back into 
the market. Infonet, owned by MCI along with European and Asian 
phone authorities, will extend its packet network to the country 
through a facility in San Paulo run by the EMBRATEL long-
distance monopoly. That center will link to Brazil's RENPAC 
public data network, giving people in 50 cities local access to 
Infonet services. 
=============================================================================

THE MOST POWERFUL COMPUTERS IN THE WORLD 

Arguments continue over what is the world's most powerful 
computer. We think it's the one put to the most powerful purpose. 
While celebrating the failure of the Soviet coup, Americans 
should consider which computers hold the most power over them. 

Those are the mainframes owned by credit agencies. Two firms lead 
the market -- Equifax and TRW. They prepare credit reports, which 
are used by banks in determining whether you'll get a car, a 
home, a job, or a credit card. The two have taken separate tacks 
toward the same goal. TRW is claiming in state courts it has 
every right to sell mailing lists based on data collected for 
credit purposes. Equifax is trying glasnost, getting out of the 
mailing list business, opening a customer service center, and 
waging a PR campaign which claims the industry can police itself. 

Equifax has already taken some steps which should be mandated for 
its competitors. Citizens must have free access to their credit 
reports, including toll-free calls to ask for copies, and they 
should have the right to question anything in them. There should 
be independent adjudication of disputes between grantors and 
grantees of credit. As it is now a credit grantor's word is 
law. And the credit agencies must be prohibited from re-selling 
information to anyone for purposes other than checking credit. 
=============================================================================

MCI announces MCI MAIL TRADING PARTNER PROGRAM--It is a way for e-mail 
subscribers to create a network among their business associates.
=============================================================================

There have been, and are, such things as "responsible" 900 numbers--at places 
such as The National Space Institute, educational tv, and colleges and 
universities.
=============================================================================

MCI has 14 percent of L-D market share according to USA TODAY chart; AT&T 70, 
US SPRINT 10, AND OTHER FIRMS 6
=============================================================================

Supreme court rules that phone directory white pages are not under U.S. 
copyright.
     --decision should make it easier for direct marketers and info services 
industry to get consumers' phone numbers, addresses
=============================================================================

AT&T:
     --ends the no-fee feature on its Universal Card; starting today, new card 
applicants will be charged a $20 annual fee.

     --introduces AT&T Customnet, a small business service for customers who 
spend $50-$200 monthly on L-D and want to combine their service costs on one 
bill for discounts.

     --Maryland computer hacker pleads guilty in AT&T case.

     --fresh technological advances are leading to new Caller ID controversies;
it's possible now to identify callers by name, display unlisted numbers.
=============================================================================

     --900 numbers offer "hot lists" of business and employment opportunities 
at exorbitant charges
     --actually, Kuwait is so devastated that it will take some time before 
meaningful opportunities develop.
=============================================================================

     --AT&T strongly criticizes Senate bill that would permit the Bells to 
manufacture equipment for the first time.
=============================================================================

SNET plans to increase it's phone rates for the first time in decades.
=============================================================================


=============================================================================
                  N.A.S.T.Y. JOURNAL RELEASE 3 - PART 07
=============================================================================


                      ===============================
                      =   NETWORKS ON THE INTERNET  =
                      ===============================



   Here is a list of all the networks that make up the Internet and their
Internet addresses. This list can be thought of as a kind of  DNIC list for 
the Internet, of course it is not, in fact it has nothing to do with DNIC, 
that is just  to give you an idea of what this list is.
   This list of networks on the Internet was found by Haywire, but the list 
was in such poor shape I though I would "fix" it up and ended up editing the
whole thing by hand. I hope it helps you out as much as it has helped me on 
the Internet. 
   If you have any feedback  you would like to give me, please feel free to
write me at:

            UUCP      ucsd!serene!pnet12!gatsby
            INET      gatsby@pnet12.rfengr.com
          EasyLink    BAC330604
           
                         -OR-

     Contact NASTY, in care of 'THE GATSBY'.                  

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    This is a combined Stanford/NIC host table. The format of this file is
 documented in RFC 952, "DoD Internet Host Table Specification", which is
 available online at host NIC.DDN.MIL as the file  RFC:RFC952.TXT



  |~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
  |  Internet Addr: NetName:       |  Internet Addr: NetName:             |
  |                                |                                      |
  |~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
  |  4.0.0.0        SATNet         |  6.0.0.0        YPG-Net              |
  |  7.0.0.0        EDN-TEMP       |  8.0.0.0        BBNCCNet             |
  |  9.0.0.0        IBM            |  10.0.0.0       ARPANet              |
  |  12.0.0.0       ATT            |  13.0.0.0       XEROX-Net            |
  |  14.0.0.0       PDN            |  15.0.0.0       HP-INTERNet          |
  |  16.0.0.0       DEC-INTERNet   |  18.0.0.0       MIT-TEMP             |
  |  21.0.0.0       DDN-RVN        |  23.0.0.0       DDN-TC-Net           |
  |  24.0.0.0       MINet          |  25.0.0.0       RSRE-EXP             |
  |  26.0.0.0       MILNet         |  27.0.0.0       NOSC-LCCN-TEMP       |
  |  28.0.0.0       WIDEBAND       |  29.0.0.0       MILX25-TEMP          |
  |  30.0.0.0       ARPAX25-TEMP   |  31.0.0.0       UCDLA-Net            |
  |  35.0.0.0       MERIT          |  36.0.0.0       SU-Net-TEMP          |
  |  41.0.0.0       BBN-TEST-A     |  42.0.0.0       CAN-INet             |
  |  44.0.0.0       AMPRNet        |  46.0.0.0       BBNet                |
  |  47.0.0.0       BNR            |  128.1.0.0      BBN-TEST-B           |
  |  128.2.0.0      CMU-Net        |  128.3.0.0      LBL-IP-Net1          |
  |  128.4.0.0      DCNet          |  128.5.0.0      FORDNet              |
  |  128.6.0.0      RUTGERS        |  128.7.0.0      KRAUTNet             |
  |  128.8.0.0      UMDNet         |  128.9.0.0      ISI-Net              |
  |  128.10.0.0     PURDUE-CS-EN   |  128.11.0.0     BBN-CRONUS           |
  |  128.12.0.0     SU-Net         |  128.13.0.0     MATNet               |
  |  128.14.0.0     BBN-SAT-TEST   |  128.15.0.0     S1Net                |
  |  128.16.0.0     UCL-CS-ETHER   |  128.17.0.0     MATNet-ALT           |
  |  128.18.0.0     SRINet         |  128.19.0.0     EDN                  |
  |  128.20.0.0     BRLNet         |  128.21.0.0     SRI-PR-1             |
  |  128.22.0.0     SRI-PR-2       |  128.24.0.0     ROCKWELL-PR          |
  |  128.25.0.0     BRAGG-PR       |  128.26.0.0     SAPE-AIRNet          |
  |  128.27.0.0     DEMO-PR-1      |  128.28.0.0     C3-PR-TEMP           |
  |  128.29.0.0     MITRE          |  128.30.0.0     MIT-Net              |
  |  128.31.0.0     MIT-RES        |  128.32.0.0     UCB-ETHER            |
  |  128.33.0.0     BBN-Net        |  128.34.0.0     NOSC-LCCN            |
  |  128.35.0.0     BULLUSANet     |  128.36.0.0     YALE-Net             |
  |  128.37.0.0     YUMA           |  128.38.0.0     NSWC-Net             |
  |  128.39.0.0     NTANet         |  128.40.0.0     UCL-ETHERNet         |
  |  128.41.0.0     UCL-CS-SERVICE |  128.42.0.0     RICE-Net             |
  |  128.43.0.0     DRENet         |  128.44.0.0     WSMR-Net1            |
  |  128.45.0.0     DEC-WRL-Net    |  128.46.0.0     PURDUE-Net           |
  |  128.47.0.0     TACTNet        |  128.48.0.0     UCDLA-Net-B          |
  |  128.49.0.0     NOSC-ETHER     |  128.50.0.0     COINS                |
  |  128.51.0.0     COINSTNet      |  128.52.0.0     MIT-AI-Net           |
  |  128.53.0.0     SAC-PR-2       |  128.54.0.0     UCSD                 |
  |  128.55.0.0     NMFECC         |  128.56.0.0     USNA-Net             |
  |  128.57.0.0     DEMO-PR-2      |  128.58.0.0     SLCS                 |
  |  128.59.0.0     CU-Net         |  128.60.0.0     NRL-ETHER            |
  |  128.61.0.0     GATECH         |  128.62.0.0     MCC-Net              |
  |  128.63.0.0     BRL-SUBNet     |  128.80.0.0     CECOMNet             |
  |  128.81.0.0     SYMBOLICS      |  128.82.0.0     ODU                  |
  |  128.83.0.0     UTAUSTIN       |  128.84.0.0     CORNELL-Net          |
  |  128.86.0.0     JANet          |  128.87.0.0     HIRST                |
  |  128.89.0.0     BBN-ENet       |  128.91.0.0     UPENN                |
  |  128.92.0.0     INTELLINet     |  128.93.0.0     INRIA-Net            |
  |  128.95.0.0     WASHINGTON     |  128.96.0.0     BELLCORE-Net         |
  |  128.97.0.0     UCLANet        |  128.98.0.0     RSRE-EN2             |
  |  128.99.0.0     NORTHROP-Net   |  128.100.0.0    TORONTO              |
  |  128.101.0.0    UMN-Net        |  128.102.0.0    AMES-Net             |
  |  128.103.0.0    HARV-FIBER     |  128.104.0.0    WISC-HERD            |
  |  128.105.0.0    WISC           |  128.106.0.0    SRI-PSON-1           |
  |  128.107.0.0    LEWIS-PRNet1   |  128.108.0.0    LEWIS-PRNet2         |
  |  128.109.0.0    Net-CONCERT    |  128.110.0.0    UTAH-Net             |
  |  128.111.0.0    UCSB           |  128.112.0.0    PRINCETON            |
  |  128.113.0.0    RPINet         |  128.114.0.0    UCSC                 |
  |  128.115.0.0    LLNL-LABNet    |  128.116.0.0    USAN                 |
  |  128.117.0.0    UCAR           |  128.118.0.0    PENN-STATE           |
  |  128.119.0.0    UMASS-Net      |  128.120.0.0    UCDAVIS              |
  |  128.121.0.0    JVNC-Net       |  128.122.0.0    NYU-Net              |
  |  128.123.0.0    NMSU           |  128.124.0.0    NTA-TEMP             |
  |  128.125.0.0    USCNet         |  128.126.0.0    UNISYS-PRC           |
  |  128.127.0.0    FTP-SOFTWARE   |  128.128.0.0    WHOINet              |
  |  128.132.0.0    LNX-ETHER3     |  128.133.0.0    AFSC-LONS            |
  |  128.134.0.0    SDN            |  128.135.0.0    U-CHICAGO            |
  |  128.136.0.0    TEK-ALLNet     |  128.138.0.0    COLORADO             |
  |  128.139.0.0    ILAN           |  128.140.0.0    EMORY-INet           |
  |  128.143.0.0    VIRGINIA       |  128.144.0.0    ARNet                |
  |  128.145.0.0    NYSERNet       |  128.146.0.0    OHIO-STATE           |
  |  128.147.0.0    U-PGH-Net      |  128.148.0.0    BROWN-UNIV           |
  |  128.149.0.0    JPL-Net        |  128.150.0.0    NSF-LAN              |
  |  128.151.0.0    UR-Net         |  128.152.0.0    HAC-ENet             |
  |  128.153.0.0    CLARKSON       |  128.154.0.0    WFF-Net              |
  |  128.155.0.0    LARC-Net       |  128.156.0.0    LERC-Net             |
  |  128.157.0.0    JSC-Net        |  128.158.0.0    MSFC-Net             |
  |  128.159.0.0    KSC-Net        |  128.160.0.0    SSCNet               |
  |  128.161.0.0    NSN-Net        |  128.162.0.0    CRAY-Net             |
  |  128.163.0.0    UKY            |  128.164.0.0    GWU-GATE             |
  |  128.165.0.0    LANL-INet      |  128.167.0.0    SURA                 |
  |  128.168.0.0    GOLDHILL       |  128.169.0.0    UTK                  |
  |  128.170.0.0    UNISYS-CAM     |  128.171.0.0    HAWAII               |
  |  128.172.0.0    VCU-LAN        |  128.173.0.0    VA-TECH              |
  |  128.174.0.0    UIUC-CAMPUS-B  |  128.175.0.0    UDELNet              |
  |  128.178.0.0    EPFL-EPNet     |  128.180.0.0    LEHIGH               |
  |  128.181.0.0    TEKTRONIX      |  128.182.0.0    PSCNet               |
  |  128.183.0.0    GSFC           |  128.184.0.0    DEAKINet             |
  |  128.185.0.0    PROTEON-Net    |  128.186.0.0    FS                   |
  |  128.187.0.0    BYU-Net        |  128.188.0.0    M2CNet               |
  |  128.189.0.0    BCNet          |  128.190.0.0    BELVOIR-Net          |
  |  128.192.0.0    UGA            |  128.193.0.0    ORST                 |
  |  128.194.0.0    TAMU-Net       |  128.195.0.0    UCIICS-Net           |
  |  128.196.0.0    UNIV-ARIZ      |  128.197.0.0    BU-Net               |
  |  128.198.0.0    CU-COLOSPGS    |  128.200.0.0    UCI-Net              |
  |  128.202.0.0    CSOCNet        |  128.204.0.0    ALBNYNet             |
  |  128.205.0.0    UBUFFALONet    |  128.206.0.0    MONet                |
  |  128.208.0.0    WASH-NSF       |  128.209.0.0    NYNEXSTNet           |
  |  128.210.0.0    PURDUE-CCNet   |  128.211.0.0    PURDUE-CS-CYP        |
  |  128.212.0.0    ISCNet         |  128.213.0.0    RPICSNet             |
  |  128.214.0.0    FUNet          |  128.215.0.0    INTEL                |
  |  128.216.0.0    CC-PRNet       |  128.217.0.0    NASA-KSC-OIS         |
  |  128.218.0.0    UCSF-Net       |  128.219.0.0    ORNL-NetB1           |
  |  128.220.0.0    JHU            |  128.221.0.0    DGPN1                |
  |  128.222.0.0    DGPN2          |  128.223.0.0    UONet                |
  |  128.226.0.0    BINGHAMTON     |  128.227.0.0    UFNet                |
  |  128.228.0.0    CUNY           |  128.229.0.0    ADSNet               |
  |  128.230.0.0    SYR-UNIV-Net   |  128.231.0.0    NIH-Net              |
  |  128.235.0.0    NJIT           |  128.236.0.0    USAFA-Net            |
  |  128.237.0.0    CMU-SEI-Net    |  128.238.0.0    POLY-U-Net           |
  |  128.239.0.0    WM-Net         |  128.241.0.0    SESQUINet            |
  |  128.242.0.0    MIDNet         |  128.244.0.0    APL-Net              |
  |  128.245.0.0    SRA-CT-Net     |  128.247.0.0    TI                   |
  |  128.248.0.0    UIC-Net        |  128.249.0.0    TMC-Net              |
  |  128.250.0.0    UNIMELB        |  128.251.0.0    ROCKW-TELEDA         |
  |  128.252.0.0    WASHINGTON-U   |  128.253.0.0    CCS-Net              |
  |  128.255.0.0    UIOWA          |  129.1.0.0      BGSU                 |
  |  129.2.0.0      UMD-BOGON-Net  |  129.3.0.0      SUNY-OSWEGO-Net      |
  |  129.4.0.0      TRW            |  129.5.0.0      HGCNet               |
  |  129.6.0.0      NIST           |  129.7.0.0      UH-Net               |
  |  129.8.0.0      CSUFRESNO      |  129.10.0.0     NORTHEASTERN-Net     |
  |  129.13.0.0     LINK           |  129.15.0.0     UOKNOR               |
  |  129.16.0.0     CTH-Net        |  129.18.0.0     NEXT-Net             |
  |  129.19.0.0     WESTNet        |  129.20.0.0     VERDUR               |
  |  129.21.0.0     RIT            |  129.22.0.0     CWRUNet              |
  |  129.23.0.0     SDIO-INTERNet  |  129.24.0.0     UNM-CDCN             |
  |  129.25.0.0     DREXEL         |  129.26.0.0     GMD-DE               |
  |  129.29.0.0     USMANet        |  129.30.0.0     HONEYWELL            |
  |  129.32.0.0     TEMPLE         |  129.33.0.0     IBM-ALMADEN          |
  |  129.34.0.0     IBM-WATSON     |  129.36.0.0     IBM-ROCH             |
  |  129.40.0.0     IBM-KINGSTON   |  129.43.0.0     NCI-FCRF             |
  |  129.46.0.0     QUALNet        |  129.48.0.0     WPAFB-CDS-Net        |
  |  129.49.0.0     SUNY-SB        |  129.51.0.0     ESMC-LONS            |
  |  129.52.0.0     WPAFB-LONS     |  129.53.0.0     HANSCOM              |
  |  129.54.0.0     WSMC-LONS      |  129.55.0.0     LINCOLN-MI           |
  |  129.57.0.0     CEBAF          |  129.59.0.0     VANDERBILT           |
  |  129.60.0.0     NTT-INet       |  129.61.0.0     ECONet               |
  |  129.62.0.0     BAYLOR         |  129.63.0.0     ULOWELL              |
  |  129.64.0.0     BRANDEIS       |  129.65.0.0     CALPOLY              |
  |  129.66.0.0     ASN-Net        |  129.69.0.0     RUS-Net              |
  |  129.71.0.0     WVNet          |  129.72.0.0     UWYO                 |
  |  129.73.0.0     SIEMENS        |  129.74.0.0     NOTRE-DAME           |
  |  129.75.0.0     CCUR-DOM       |  129.77.0.0     OXFORD-TP            |
  |  129.78.0.0     SYDNet         |  129.79.0.0     INDIANA-Net          |
  |  129.81.0.0     TULANE-Net     |  129.82.0.0     CSUNet               |
  |  129.83.0.0     MITRE-B-NetB   |  129.84.0.0     TWG-Net              |
  |  129.85.0.0     ROCK           |  129.87.0.0     SLBSDRNet            |
  |  129.88.0.0     IMAG           |  129.89.0.0     MILW-IPNet           |
  |  129.91.0.0     ENCORE         |  129.92.0.0     AFIT                 |
  |  129.93.0.0     HUSKERNet      |  129.94.0.0     UNSW                 |
  |  129.95.0.0     OREGRADNet     |  129.96.0.0     FLINDERS-UNI         |
  |  129.97.0.0     UWNet          |  129.99.0.0     NAS-Net              |
  |  129.100.0.0    UWO-Net        |  129.101.0.0    IDAHO-ENGR           |
  |  129.104.0.0    POLY           |  129.105.0.0    NWUNet               |
  |  129.106.0.0    UTHOUSTON      |  129.107.0.0    UTARLINGTON          |
  |  129.108.0.0    OTS-129-108    |  129.109.0.0    UTGALVESTON          |
  |  129.110.0.0    UTDALLAS       |  129.111.0.0    UTHSCSA              |
  |  129.112.0.0    UTSWMED        |  129.113.0.0    OTS-129-113          |
  |  129.114.0.0    UTCCSPRD       |  129.115.0.0    OTS-129-115          |
  |  129.116.0.0    CHPCHYPERHOSE  |  129.117.0.0    THENetMN             |
  |  129.118.0.0    TTUNet         |  129.119.0.0    SOUTHMETHUNIV        |
  |  129.120.0.0    UNTEXAS        |  129.121.0.0    NMTECHNet            |
  |  129.122.0.0    PRIME          |  129.123.0.0    USU                  |
  |  129.124.0.0    GMRLNet        |  129.125.0.0    RUGNet               |
  |  129.126.0.0    KODAK          |  129.127.0.0    ADELAIDE-UNI         |
  |  129.128.0.0    U-ALBERTA      |  129.129.0.0    PSI-ETHER            |
  |  129.130.0.0    KSUNet         |  129.131.0.0    NWCNet               |
  |  129.132.0.0    ETH-ETHER      |  129.133.0.0    WESNet               |
  |  129.137.0.0    UN-OF-CINCI    |  129.138.0.0    NMTECH               |
  |  129.139.0.0    PICANet        |  129.140.0.0    NSFNet-BB            |
  |  129.141.0.0    GAFSNet        |  129.142.0.0    DENet                |
  |  129.162.0.0    SWRI-Net       |  129.170.0.0    DART-ETHER           |
  |  129.171.0.0    MIAMI          |  129.172.0.0    ROK                  |
  |  129.174.0.0    MASONet        |  129.175.0.0    PARIS-SUD            |
  |  129.176.0.0    MAYO           |  129.177.0.0    BERGEN-Net           |
  |  129.178.0.0    NORWAY-TWO     |  129.179.0.0    CDC-Net              |
  |  129.180.0.0    UNE-CAMPUS     |  129.186.0.0    CYCLONENet           |
  |  129.188.0.0    MOTOROLA       |  129.189.0.0    ICONet-ORC           |
  |  129.190.0.0    ASECC          |  129.191.0.0    NSCO                 |
  |  129.192.0.0    ACC-Net        |  129.193.0.0    TRW-ED-Net           |
  |  129.194.0.0    UNIGE-CENTER   |  129.195.0.0    UNIGE-HOP            |
  |  129.198.0.0    ELAN           |  129.199.0.0    ENS-Net              |
  |  129.200.0.0    DAC-BACK-Net   |  129.206.0.0    HD-Net               |
  |  129.207.0.0    PVAMU-Net      |  129.209.0.0    BRLNetS              |
  |  129.213.0.0    COM-COM-COM    |  129.216.0.0    NRC-Net              |
  |  129.217.0.0    UNIDO-LAN      |  129.219.0.0    ASU-Net              |
  |  129.229.0.0    USA-CECER      |  129.233.0.0    FHG-STUTTGART        |
  |  129.235.0.0    SRCNet         |  129.236.0.0    LDGO-Net             |
  |  129.237.0.0    JAYHAWKNet     |  129.238.0.0    AFWL-Net             |
  |  129.239.0.0    HI-CFSG        |  129.240.0.0    UIONet               |
  |  129.241.0.0    UNITNet        |  129.242.0.0    UIBNet               |
  |  129.243.0.0    MMCNet         |  129.244.0.0    KEHNet               |
  |  129.246.0.0    IDA            |  129.247.0.0    DFVRL-Net            |
  |  129.248.0.0    APOLLO         |  129.250.0.0    PRPNet               |
  |  129.251.0.0    SLAN-BSN       |  129.252.0.0    SCAROLINA            |
  |  130.11.0.0     GEORES         |  130.13.0.0     USWEST               |
  |  130.14.0.0     NLM-ETHER      |  130.15.0.0     QUEENSU              |
  |  130.16.0.0     BCN            |  130.17.0.0     CSUSTAN              |
  |  130.18.0.0     MSSTATE        |  130.20.0.0     PNLNet               |
  |  130.22.0.0     DCA-RESTON     |  130.33.0.0     SARNOFF              |
  |  130.37.0.0     VU-Net         |  130.38.0.0     MDC-Net              |
  |  130.39.0.0     TIGERLAN       |  130.41.0.0     ATD-Net              |
  |  130.42.0.0     BOERESNet      |  130.43.0.0     APPLE-Net            |
  |  130.44.0.0     AMS            |  130.46.0.0     DTRC-B1-Net          |
  |  130.49.0.0     U-PITT         |  130.50.0.0     RISC-Net             |
  |  130.53.0.0     AFOTECPCNet    |  130.54.0.0     KUINS                |
  |  130.56.0.0     ANUNet         |  130.57.0.0     EXCELAN              |
  |  130.58.0.0     SWARTHMORE     |  130.59.0.0     SWITCH-LAN           |
  |  130.60.0.0     UNIZH          |  130.62.0.0     MIPSNet              |
  |  130.63.0.0     YORKU          |  130.68.0.0     MSCNet               |
  |  130.69.0.0     UTOKYO-Net     |  130.70.0.0     USL                  |
  |  130.71.0.0     STOLAF         |  130.74.0.0     OLEMISS              |
  |  130.81.0.0     NYTEL-BB-1     |  130.82.0.0     UNISG                |
  |  130.84.0.0     CIRCE          |  130.85.0.0     UMBCNet              |
  |  130.86.0.0     CSUSAC         |  130.87.0.0     JP-HEPNet            |
  |  130.89.0.0     UTNet          |  130.90.0.0     MATHERAFBNet         |
  |  130.91.0.0     UPENN-SUBNet   |  130.92.0.0     UNIBE                |
  |  130.93.0.0     FERNWOODNet2   |  130.94.0.0     JVNCNet              |
  |  130.95.0.0     UWA-Net        |  130.99.0.0     Net-3M               |
  |  130.101.0.0    UAKRON         |  130.102.0.0    UQNet                |
  |  130.105.0.0    OSF            |  130.107.0.0    SRI-CSL-Net-2        |
  |  130.108.0.0    WRIGHT-STATE   |  130.109.0.0    NCSC-Net             |
  |  130.111.0.0    UMAINE-SYS     |  130.113.0.0    MCMASTER             |
  |  130.114.0.0    APGNet         |  130.116.0.0    CSIRO-DMT            |
  |  130.117.0.0    NYSER2         |  130.118.0.0    GEOMEN               |
  |  130.123.0.0    MASSEY         |  130.124.0.0    HI-DSG               |
  |  130.125.0.0    UNINE          |  130.126.0.0    UIUC-NCSA            |
  |  130.127.0.0    CLEMSONU       |  130.128.0.0    SHOWNetB             |
  |  130.130.0.0    UOWNet         |  130.132.0.0    YALE-SPINE           |
  |  130.134.0.0    DFRF-Net       |  130.136.0.0    BOLOGNA-MATH-CS      |
  |  130.137.0.0    DATAPOINT      |  130.144.0.0    PHILIPS              |
  |  130.150.0.0    CSUNet-IP      |  130.151.0.0    ROK2                 |
  |  130.152.0.0    LOS-NetTOS     |  130.154.0.0    RAND-NetB            |
  |  130.155.0.0    DMS-SYD        |  130.157.0.0    SONOMA-STATE         |
  |  130.160.0.0    UANet          |  130.161.0.0    DUT-LAN              |
  |  130.163.0.0    CENTERNet      |  130.165.0.0    CESPKED-Net          |
  |  130.166.0.0    CSUN           |  130.167.0.0    STSCI-Net            |
  |  130.168.0.0    CONVEX         |  130.180.0.0    DEC-ZK-Net           |
  |  130.181.0.0    HONWEL-CLWTR   |  130.182.0.0    CSULANet             |
  |  130.184.0.0    UARKNet        |  130.185.0.0    ONet                 |
  |  130.186.0.0    CINECA-Net     |  130.187.0.0    ES-Net               |
  |  130.188.0.0    VTTNet         |  130.189.0.0    DART-HITCH           |
  |  130.191.0.0    SDSU-Net       |  130.192.0.0    TORINO-IT-LAN        |
  |  130.194.0.0    MONASH-Net     |  130.195.0.0    VUW                  |
  |  130.198.0.0    PRISMA-ETHER   |  130.199.0.0    YAPNet               |
  |  130.201.0.0    AOGC           |  130.202.0.0    ARGONNE              |
  |  130.203.0.0    PSU-COMPSC     |  130.204.0.0    INTERLAN             |
  |  130.207.0.0    GIT            |  130.208.0.0    ISNet                |
  |  130.210.0.0    LINKNet        |  130.212.0.0    FOGNet               |
  |  130.215.0.0    WPI            |  130.216.0.0    AUKUNI-Net           |
  |  130.217.0.0    WAIKATO-LAN-1  |  130.219.0.0    UMDNJ                |
  |  130.220.0.0    SAITEN         |  130.221.0.0    AERO-Net             |
  |  130.222.0.0    PRCNE-Net      |  130.223.0.0    LUNet-ETHER1         |
  |  130.225.0.0    DENet-1        |  130.230.0.0    TAMNet               |
  |  130.232.0.0    TURBO          |  130.233.0.0    HUTNet               |
  |  130.235.0.0    LUNet          |  130.236.0.0    LIUNet               |
  |  130.237.0.0    KTH-LAN        |  130.238.0.0    UU-Net               |
  |  130.239.0.0    UMUNet         |  130.240.0.0    LUTHNet              |
  |  130.241.0.0    GU-Net         |  130.245.0.0    SUNYSB-CS            |
  |  130.251.0.0    UG-Net         |  130.252.0.0    TANDEM-Net           |
  |  130.253.0.0    DENVERU-Net    |  131.1.0.0      ICONet               |
  |  131.2.0.0      GAFB-Net       |  131.3.0.0      MATHERAFB            |
  |  131.4.0.0      WPAFB-Net      |  131.5.0.0      GRIFFISS-Net         |
  |  131.6.0.0      LANGLEY-Net    |  131.7.0.0      OFFUTT-Net           |
  |  131.8.0.0      HQUSAF-Net     |  131.9.0.0      SCOTTAFB-Net         |
  |  131.10.0.0     BARKSDALE      |  131.11.0.0     BOLLING-Net          |
  |  131.12.0.0     BROOKS-Net     |  131.13.0.0     KELLY-Net            |
  |  131.14.0.0     LOWRYAFB-Net   |  131.15.0.0     PETERSON-Net         |
  |  131.16.0.0     RAMSTEINNet    |  131.17.0.0     SHEPARD              |
  |  131.18.0.0     TINKERCCSO     |  131.19.0.0     BITBURGNet           |
  |  131.20.0.0     EGLIN-Net      |  131.21.0.0     HAHNNet              |
  |  131.22.0.0     KEESLER-Net    |  131.23.0.0     KIRTLAND-Net         |
  |  131.24.0.0     MACDILL-Net    |  131.25.0.0     PATRICK-Net          |
  |  131.26.0.0     USAFACAD-Net   |  131.27.0.0     HILLAFB-Net          |
  |  131.28.0.0     WPAFB-Net2     |  131.29.0.0     LAAFB-Net            |
  |  131.30.0.0     MCCHORDNet     |  131.31.0.0     MCCLELLANNet         |
  |  131.32.0.0     LACKLANDNet    |  131.33.0.0     EDWARDS-Net          |
  |  131.34.0.0     MARCH-Net      |  131.35.0.0     FAIRCHILD            |
  |  131.36.0.0     YOKOTA-Net     |  131.37.0.0     ELMENDORF            |
  |  131.38.0.0     HICKAM-Net     |  131.39.0.0     EIELSON              |
  |  131.40.0.0     BERGSTROM      |  131.41.0.0     ANDREWS-Net          |
  |  131.42.0.0     HANSCOM-Net    |  131.43.0.0     HOMESTEAD            |
  |  131.44.0.0     RANDOLPH-Net   |  131.45.0.0     ROBINS-Net           |
  |  131.46.0.0     SHAW           |  131.47.0.0     ANDERSEN-Net         |
  |  131.48.0.0     AVIANO-Net     |  131.49.0.0     CLARK-Net            |
  |  131.50.0.0     DAVIS-MONTHAN  |  131.51.0.0     LAKENHEATH           |
  |  131.52.0.0     LUKE-Net       |  131.53.0.0     MALMSTROM            |
  |  131.56.0.0     UPPER-HEYFORD  |  131.57.0.0     TAEGU                |
  |  131.58.0.0     ALCONBURY      |  131.59.0.0     DYESS                |
  |  131.60.0.0     ENGLAND        |  131.61.0.0     MCCONNELL            |
  |  131.62.0.0     NORTON         |  131.64.0.0     HQ-DLA               |
  |  131.65.0.0     DCRA           |  131.66.0.0     DCRB                 |
  |  131.67.0.0     DCRI           |  131.68.0.0     DCRL                 |
  |  131.69.0.0     DCRN           |  131.70.0.0     DCRO                 |
  |  131.71.0.0     DCRP           |  131.72.0.0     DCRS                 |
  |  131.73.0.0     DCRT           |  131.74.0.0     DCSC                 |
  |  131.75.0.0     DDMP           |  131.76.0.0     DDMT                 |
  |  131.77.0.0     DDOU           |  131.78.0.0     DSAC                 |
  |  131.79.0.0     DDTC           |  131.80.0.0     DESC                 |
  |  131.81.0.0     DGSC           |  131.82.0.0     DISC                 |
  |  131.83.0.0     EUROPE-DRMS    |  131.84.0.0     DTIC-Net             |
  |  131.85.0.0     DFSC           |  131.86.0.0     DPSC                 |
  |  131.87.0.0     DRMS           |  131.88.0.0     PACIFIC-DRMS         |
  |  131.91.0.0     FAU            |  131.92.0.0     APGEA-SUBNet         |
  |  131.93.0.0     SJC-Net        |  131.94.0.0     FIU                  |
  |  131.95.0.0     USM            |  131.103.0.0    CICNet               |
  |  131.104.0.0    UOGUELPH       |  131.105.0.0    SM-ALC               |
  |  131.106.0.0    MTXINU-Net     |  131.108.0.0    CISCO-System         |
  |  131.109.0.0    BROWN-CFM-CS   |  131.112.0.0    TITECH-Net           |
  |  131.113.0.0    KEIO-Net       |  131.114.0.0    PISA-Net             |
  |  131.118.0.0    MINCNet        |  131.119.0.0    BARRNet              |
  |  131.120.0.0    NPSNet         |  131.121.0.0    NADN                 |
  |  131.122.0.0    NADN2          |  131.123.0.0    Kent-State           |
  |  131.125.0.0    KEAN           |  131.128.0.0    URI                  |
  |  131.131.0.0    CONTEL-WTP     |  131.132.0.0    DREVNet              |
  |  131.133.0.0    DREANet        |  131.142.0.0    CFA-Net              |
  |  131.143.0.0    CMC            |  131.145.0.0    MERIT-TECH           |
  |  131.146.0.0    MDC-SJ-Net     |  131.151.0.0    MORNetR              |
  |  131.152.0.0    UNIBAS         |  131.153.0.0    SEMATECH             |
  |  131.155.0.0    TUENet1        |  131.156.0.0    NIU-Net              |
  |  131.158.0.0    USUHSNet       |  131.161.0.0    WEB-Net              |
  |  131.167.0.0    BMINet         |  131.170.0.0    RMIT                 |
  |  131.171.0.0    UMUC           |  131.172.0.0    LATROBE              |
  |  131.174.0.0    NUNet          |  131.175.0.0    CILEA                |
  |  131.177.0.0    PTT-TELE       |  131.178.0.0    ITESM                |
  |  131.179.0.0    UCLA-CS        |  131.181.0.0    QUT                  |
  |  131.182.0.0    NASA-HQ-Net    |  131.183.0.0    UTOLEDO-Net          |
  |  131.185.0.0    DSTO           |  131.186.0.0    WB-TEST              |
  |  131.187.0.0    OARNet         |  131.188.0.0    REVUE                |
  |  131.192.0.0    NEARNet        |  131.193.0.0    UIC-ISN-Net          |
  |  131.195.0.0    HYDRO-QUEBEC   |  131.196.0.0    CNUSC                |
  |  131.198.0.0    ROK3           |  131.199.0.0    ROK4                 |
  |  131.200.0.0    ROK5           |  131.203.0.0    DSIR                 |
  |  131.204.0.0    AU-Net         |  131.210.0.0    UW-PARKSIDE          |
  |  131.211.0.0    RUU            |  131.212.0.0    UMNDULNet            |
  |  131.214.0.0    ROMENet        |  131.215.0.0    CALTECH-Net          |
  |  131.216.0.0    NEVADA         |  131.217.0.0    TASUNI-Net           |
  |  131.218.0.0    ALADDIN        |  131.225.0.0    FERMILAB             |
  |  131.226.0.0    MEMORY-ALPHA   |  131.228.0.0    NOKIA                |
  |  131.230.0.0    SIU-Net        |  131.235.0.0    ALCIDE               |
  |  131.236.0.0    ADFA-Net       |  131.239.0.0    THINK-Net            |
  |  131.240.0.0    CC             |  131.242.0.0    CITEC                |
  |  131.243.0.0    LBL-IP-Net2    |  131.244.0.0    BOND-UN1             |
  |  131.245.0.0    BOND-RP        |  131.246.0.0    RHRK-LAN             |
  |  131.247.0.0    USF            |  131.249.0.0    FCCC                 |
  |  131.250.0.0    OCNR-ETHER     |  131.254.0.0    IRISA-Net            |
  |  132.1.0.0      VANDENBERG     |  132.2.0.0      WESTOVER             |
  |  132.3.0.0      Net-WILLIAMS   |  132.4.0.0      WURTSMITH            |
  |  132.5.0.0      HOLLOMAN       |  132.6.0.0      ANKARA               |
  |  132.7.0.0      SANVITO        |  132.8.0.0      DOBBINS-Net          |
  |  132.9.0.0      ELLSWORTH      |  132.10.0.0     GRAND-FORKS          |
  |  132.11.0.0     HELLENIKON     |  132.12.0.0     MYRTLE-BEACH         |
  |  132.13.0.0     BENTWATERS     |  132.15.0.0     KADENA               |
  |  132.16.0.0     KUNSAN         |  132.17.0.0     LINDSEY              |
  |  132.18.0.0     MCGUIRE        |  132.19.0.0     MILDENHALL           |
  |  132.20.0.0     MISAWA         |  132.21.0.0     PLATTSBURGH          |
  |  132.22.0.0     POPE           |  132.23.0.0     SEYMOUR-JOHN         |
  |  132.25.0.0     FAIRFORD       |  132.27.0.0     INCIRLIK-Net         |
  |  132.29.0.0     IZMIR          |  132.30.0.0     LAJES                |
  |  132.31.0.0     LORING-Net     |  132.32.0.0     MINOT                |
  |  132.33.0.0     TRAVIS         |  132.34.0.0     CANNON               |
  |  132.35.0.0     ALTUS          |  132.36.0.0     EAKER                |
  |  132.37.0.0     CARSWELL       |  132.39.0.0     KISAWYER             |
  |  132.40.0.0     MOODY-Net      |  132.42.0.0     SPANGDAHLEM          |
  |  132.43.0.0     ZWEIBRUCHEN    |  132.44.0.0     GRISSOM              |
  |  132.45.0.0     CHANUTE        |  132.46.0.0     COLUMBUS             |
  |  132.47.0.0     FEWARREN       |  132.48.0.0     LAUGHLIN-Net         |
  |  132.49.0.0     MTNHOME        |  132.50.0.0     REESE                |
  |  132.52.0.0     VANCE          |  132.54.0.0     ZARAGOZA             |
  |  132.55.0.0     TORREJON       |  132.56.0.0     BEALE                |
  |  132.57.0.0     CASTLE         |  132.58.0.0     NELLIS               |
  |  132.59.0.0     HOWARD         |  132.60.0.0     MAXWELL-Net          |
  |  132.61.0.0     OSAN-Net       |  132.62.0.0     KIRTLAND2            |
  |  132.63.0.0     RANDOLPHMPC    |  132.64.0.0     ILAN-HUJI-1          |
  |  132.65.0.0     ILAN-HUJI-2    |  132.66.0.0     ILAN-TAU-1           |
  |  132.67.0.0     ILAN-TAU-2     |  132.68.0.0     ILAN-TECHNION-1      |
  |  132.69.0.0     ILAN-TECHNION-2|  132.70.0.0     ILAN-BIU-1           |
  |  132.71.0.0     ILAN-BIU-2     |  132.72.0.0     ILAN-BGU-1           |
  |  132.73.0.0     ILAN-BGU-2     |  132.74.0.0     ILAN-HAIFA-1         |
  |  132.75.0.0     ILAN-HAIFA-2   |  132.76.0.0     ILAN-WIS-1           |
  |  132.77.0.0     ILAN-WIS-2     |  132.78.0.0     ILAN-RESRV           |
  |  132.144.0.0    RIA-2          |  132.151.0.0    NRI-Net              |
  |  132.154.0.0    ROCKWELL-AI    |  132.158.0.0    HARRIS-SEMI          |
  |  132.159.0.0    FTLEENet       |  132.160.0.0    PACCOM               |
  |  132.162.0.0    OBERLIN        |  132.163.0.0    BLDRDOC              |
  |  132.170.0.0    UCF            |  132.174.0.0    OCLC                 |
  |  132.175.0.0    SNLA-Net       |  132.176.0.0    FERNUNI-Net          |
  |  132.177.0.0    UNH            |  132.178.0.0    IDBSU                |
  |  132.181.0.0    CANTERBURY     |  132.183.0.0    MGH-ETHER            |
  |  132.186.0.0    PYRAMIDOZ      |  132.192.0.0    UTMEM-Net            |
  |  132.193.0.0    ARO-Net        |  132.194.0.0    CUDENVER             |
  |  132.197.0.0    GTEL           |  132.198.0.0    UVM-Net              |
  |  132.201.0.0    SBC            |  132.202.0.0    RISQ                 |
  |  132.203.0.0    ULAVAL         |  132.204.0.0    UMONTREAL            |
  |  132.205.0.0    CONCORDIA      |  132.206.0.0    MCGILL-CA            |
  |  132.207.0.0    POLYTECHCA     |  132.208.0.0    UQAM                 |
  |  132.226.0.0    ALCOA-Net      |  132.227.0.0    IBP-Net              |
  |  132.228.0.0    GRUMMAN        |  132.230.0.0    FDN                  |
  |  132.234.0.0    GUNet          |  132.235.0.0    OHIOU-Net            |
  |  132.236.0.0    NYSAES         |  132.238.0.0    FDUNet               |
  |  132.239.0.0    UCSD-SUBNets   |  132.241.0.0    CSUCHICO             |
  |  132.243.0.0    NCRWIN         |  132.245.0.0    XYLOGICS             |
  |  132.246.0.0    NRC            |  132.247.0.0    RAM                  |
  |  132.248.0.0    REDUNAM        |  132.249.0.0    SDSCLAN              |
  |  132.250.0.0    NRL-Nets       |  132.251.0.0    ISTS                 |
  |  132.254.0.0    ITESM-MEXICO   |  133.1.0.0      OSAKAU-Net           |
  |  133.2.0.0      AGUNet         |  133.4.0.0      WIDE-BB              |
  |  133.5.0.0      KITE           |  133.6.0.0      NICE                 |
  |  133.11.0.0     UTSNet         |  133.18.0.0     JAPAN-INet 7         |
  |  133.137.0.0    Japan-INet     |  133.138.0.0    Japan                |
  |  133.139.0.0    JAPAN-INet 8   |  134.2.0.0      TUENet               |
  |  134.3.0.0      SSCLAB         |  134.4.0.0      IPAC-Net             |
  |  134.9.0.0      OCF-Net        |  134.11.0.0     PENTNet              |
  |  134.12.0.0     RIACS-B-Net    |  134.17.0.0     BAY-PR-Net           |
  |  134.18.0.0     BHP-IP-Net     |  134.20.0.0     INEL                 |
  |  134.21.0.0     UNIFR-ETHER1   |  134.22.0.0     GANDALF-Net          |
  |  134.24.0.0     CERFNet        |  134.29.0.0     MSUS-Net             |
  |  134.34.0.0     KISS           |  134.48.0.0     MARQUENet            |
  |  134.50.0.0     ISU-Net        |  134.53.0.0     MUOHIO               |
  |  134.55.0.0     ESNet          |  134.57.0.0     ROCKWELL-RKD         |
  |  134.60.0.0     UDN            |  134.62.0.0     TEKTRONIX1           |
  |  134.63.0.0     TEKTRONIX2     |  134.64.0.0     TEKTRONIX3           |
  |  134.68.0.0     IUPUI-Net      |  134.69.0.0     OXY-Net              |
  |  134.71.0.0     CSUPOM         |  134.74.0.0     CITYCOLLEGE          |
  |  134.78.0.0     AVTROS-Net     |  134.79.0.0     SU-SLAC              |
  |  134.80.0.0     MONMOUTH-1     |  134.87.0.0     BC| -2               |
  |  134.89.0.0     MBARI          |  134.95.0.0     UNI-KOELN            |
  |  134.111.0.0    STRATUS-Net    |  134.112.0.0    STRATUS-TSTB         |
  |  134.114.0.0    NAU-Net        |  134.115.0.0    MURDOCH-UNIV         |
  |  134.116.0.0    MMLAB          |  134.117.0.0    CARLETON1            |
  |  134.118.0.0    JSCFMNet       |  134.121.0.0    WSUNet               |
  |  134.124.0.0    MORNet S       |  134.125.0.0    TWDB                 |
  |  134.126.0.0    JMU            |  134.129.0.0    NODAK                |
  |  134.131.0.0    WPAFB-AVLAB    |  134.132.0.0    LGC-Net              |
  |  134.135.0.0    GDSS-Net       |  134.136.0.0    WPAFB-ASD-Net        |
  |  134.139.0.0    CSULB-IP       |  134.140.0.0    SIMMONS              |
  |  134.141.0.0    CABLETRON      |  134.148.0.0    UNINEWCASTLE         |
  |  134.149.0.0    APPLE-CAMB     |  134.152.0.0    OSD-Net              |
  |  134.154.0.0    CSUHAYWARD     |  134.155.0.0    RUMEL                |
  |  134.159.0.0    OTC            |  134.160.0.0    RIKEN-Net            |
  |  134.161.0.0    UNI-Net        |  134.164.0.0    USAEWESNet           |
  |  134.165.0.0    SRIEXPRIGB1    |  134.172.0.0    IGNet                |
  |  134.173.0.0    CLAREMONT      |  134.174.0.0    LMANet               |
  |  134.177.0.0    SYNOPT-Net     |  134.178.0.0    MET-AUST-Net         |
  |  134.185.0.0    KODAK-BTC      |  134.186.0.0    TDCNet               |
  |  134.192.0.0    UMAB-Net       |  134.193.0.0    UMKC                 |
  |  134.194.0.0    CSTANet        |  134.195.0.0    CRAYCOS              |
  |  134.197.0.0    UNR-DOM        |  134.198.0.0    UOFSCRANTON          |
  |  134.202.0.0    UPRRNet        |  134.205.0.0    HQUSAF-LAN           |
  |  134.207.0.0    NRL-EXP        |  134.211.0.0    BULL                 |
  |  134.218.0.0    SNL-Net A      |  134.223.0.0    GRUMMANLAN           |
  |  134.228.0.0    SSA-Net        |  134.229.0.0    CONCGY-PENS1         |
  |  134.230.0.0    CONCGY-PENS2   |  134.231.0.0    GALLAUDET            |
  |  134.235.0.0    WORMS-GW1      |  134.236.0.0    LAKE-IPNet           |
  |  134.240.0.0    USMANet -DDN   |  134.250.0.0    SUSCNet              |
  |  134.252.0.0    SNL-Net C      |  134.253.0.0    SNL-Net B            |
  |  134.254.0.0    CONCGWAY-NOLA1 |  136.142.0.0    PITT-SUBNet          |
  |  136.144.0.0    MILLIKIN-Net   |  136.145.0.0    CUN                  |
  |  136.149.0.0    AFMPC-LAN      |  136.159.0.0    U-CALGARY            |
  |  136.160.0.0    COMBNet        |  136.161.0.0    PSINet 1             |
  |  136.167.0.0    BC-Net         |  136.168.0.0    CSUBNet -IP          |
  |  136.169.0.0    SACAENet       |  136.176.0.0    BRADLEY-Net          |
  |  136.177.0.0    GEO            |  136.178.0.0    NASA-RIG-Net         |
  |  136.180.0.0    MOT-CELL-Net   |  136.200.0.0    DWR-Net              |
  |  136.205.0.0    REDSTONE-Net   |  136.207.0.0    WUERZBURG-GW1        |
  |  136.208.0.0    ASCHAFFENBR-GW1|  136.209.0.0    ANSBACH-GW1          |
  |  136.210.0.0    AUGSBURG-GW1   |  136.211.0.0    BURTONWOOD-GW1       |
  |  136.212.0.0    GEOPPINGEN-GW1 |  136.213.0.0    GRAFENWOEHR-GW1      |
  |  136.214.0.0    HEIDELBERG-GW1 |  136.215.0.0    HEILBRONN-GW1        |
  |  136.216.0.0    KARLSRUHE-GW1  |  136.217.0.0    MUNICH-GW1           |
  |  136.218.0.0    NUERNBERG-GW1  |  136.219.0.0    ULM-GW1              |
  |  136.220.0.0    SCHWEINFURT-GW1|  136.221.0.0    STUTTGART-GW1        |
  |  136.222.0.0    BAMBERG-GW1    |  136.227.0.0    WITTENBERG           |
  |  136.229.0.0    MMM-GOVT       |  136.242.0.0    CUAS                 |
  |  136.246.0.0    UCINet         |  136.247.0.0    MCO                  |
  |  137.1.0.0      WHITEMAN       |  137.2.0.0      GEORGE               |
  |  137.2.30.0     CATNet         |  137.3.0.0      LITTLEROCK           |
  |  137.4.0.0      CHARLESTON     |  137.22.0.0     CARLETONS            |
  |  137.23.0.0     MOT-COMM-Net   |  137.24.0.0     NSWSES-Net           |
  |  137.28.0.0     UWEC           |  137.29.0.0     BRAGG-MAN            |
  |  137.39.0.0     UUNet -WAN     |  137.41.0.0     MMCSUBNet S          |
  |  137.45.0.0     RU-Net         |  137.46.0.0     ISC-INTEL            |
  |  137.48.0.0     UNOMAHA        |  137.49.0.0     HARTFORD             |
  |  137.52.0.0     NOVANet        |  137.54.0.0     VERNet               |
  |  137.65.0.0     NOVELL-Net     |  137.66.0.0     MN-SUPER-Net         |
  |  137.67.0.0     CORONA-GW      |  137.68.0.0     PAGODA               |
  |  137.75.0.0     NOAA-FSL       |  137.77.0.0     RECNet               |
  |  137.80.0.0     USACEC-Net     |  137.81.0.0     SUPER-Net            |
  |  137.82.0.0     UBC            |  137.83.0.0     GENCORP              |
  |  137.84.0.0     WHECN-CC       |  137.85.0.0     WHECN-CWC            |
  |  137.86.0.0     WHECN-EWC      |  137.87.0.0     WHECN-LCCC           |
  |  137.88.0.0     WHECN-NWC      |  137.89.0.0     WHECN-SC             |
  |  137.90.0.0     WHECN-WWC      |  137.95.0.0     PATCH-Net            |
  |  137.99.0.0     UCONN-Net      |  137.103.0.0    PROSPECT             |
  |  137.104.0.0    UWPLATT        |  137.109.0.0    LABTAM-Net           |
  |  137.110.0.0    UCSDMC         |  137.111.0.0    MACQUARIE            |
  |  137.113.0.0    WLU            |  137.127.0.0    USACAA               |
  |  137.128.0.0    TACOM-RDE      |  137.130.0.0    JDSSC                |
  |  137.131.0.0    SCRIPPSNet-BIG |  137.145.0.0    CALINet              |
  |  137.146.0.0    COLBY          |  137.148.0.0    CSUOHIO              |
  |  137.150.0.0    HSUNet         |  137.151.0.0    FULNet               |
  |  137.152.0.0    GCU            |  137.157.0.0    ATOM                 |
  |  137.160.0.0    HI-DASD        |  137.162.0.0    MOT-GEG-Net          |
  |  137.164.0.0    CALREN         |  137.165.0.0    WILLIAMS-Net         |
  |  137.175.0.0    MSTAR-Net      |  137.187.0.0    NIH-Net S            |
  |  137.190.0.0    WEBER-Net      |  137.192.0.0    MRNet 1              |
  |  137.197.0.0    UNMC           |  137.198.0.0    HUNet                |
  |  137.203.0.0    HRINet         |  137.209.0.0    SUMNet 1             |
  |  137.210.0.0    SUMNet 2       |  137.211.0.0    SUMNet 3             |
  |  137.212.0.0    SUMNet         |  137.216.0.0    SDSTATE              |
  |  137.225.0.0    DFRRS-ECAC     |  137.228.0.0    SFOCLAN              |
  |  137.229.0.0    ALAKANet       |  137.231.0.0    ZWEIBKN-GW1          |
  |  137.232.0.0    DIMNet 1       |  137.233.0.0    DIMNet 2             |
  |  137.234.0.0    DIMNet 3       |  137.235.0.0    DIMNet 4             |
  |  137.237.0.0    HARRISNet      |  137.240.0.0    SMALC-1              |
  |  137.241.0.0    OOALC-1        |  137.242.0.0    SAALC-1              |
  |  137.243.0.0    WRALC-1        |  137.244.0.0    OCALC-1              |
  |  137.245.0.0    WPAFB-1        |  137.246.0.0    SEBAT                |
  |  137.247.0.0    CSSNet         |  137.249.0.0    FAC-COM              |
  |  137.250.0.0    AUX            |  137.252.0.0    POLANet              |
  |  137.254.0.0    ORACLE-BBONet  |  138.1.0.0      OACLE-CHIC           |
  |  138.2.0.0      ORACLE-BETH    |  138.3.0.0      ORACLE-UK            |
  |  138.9.0.0      UOP            |  138.13.0.0     SSD-Net              |
  |  138.15.0.0     NEC            |  138.16.0.0     BROWN-UNIV-2         |
  |  138.17.0.0     ASNet-Net S    |  138.18.0.0     ASNet-Net            |
  |  138.23.0.0     UCRNet         |  138.25.0.0     UTSNet S             |
  |  138.26.0.0     UAB            |  138.27.0.0     HUACHUCA-Net         |
  |  138.28.0.0     KENYOUN        |  138.29.0.0     USCGA                |
  |  138.30.0.0     HQ             |  138.45.0.0     CACNet               |
  |  138.49.0.0     UWLAX          |  138.50.0.0     WIESBADN-GW1         |
  |  138.61.0.0     MAINZ-GW1      |  138.65.0.0     FRANKFRT-GW1         |
  |  139.70.0.0     VIMS-Net       |  139.77.0.0     CONCGWY-NEWP1        |
  |  139.78.0.0     OKSTATE        |  139.84.0.0     LASALLE              |
  |  139.88.0.0     LERC-OFFCAMPUS |  192.0.1.0      BBN-TEST-C           |
  |  192.1.2.0      BBN-FIBER-Net  |  192.1.3.0      BBN-APOLLO-Net       |
  |  192.1.4.0      BBN-FIBER-TEST |  192.1.5.0      BBN-SD-ENet          |
  |  192.1.6.0      BBN-DGI-ENet   |  192.1.7.0      BBN-WASH-ENet        |
  |  192.1.8.0      BBN-SCOTLND-Net|  192.1.9.0      BBN-DGI-APOLLO       |
  |  192.1.10.0     BBN-NEWPORT-Net|  192.1.11.0     BBN-TEST-Net         |
  |  192.1.12.0     BBN-TEST2-Net  |  192.1.13.0     BBN-TEST3-Net        |
  |  192.1.14.0     BBN-TEST4-Net  |  192.1.15.0     BBNCC-HARDWARE       |
  |  192.1.16.0     BBNCC-APOLLO   |  192.1.17.0     BBNCC-COLUMBIA       |
  |  192.1.18.0     BBNCC-PRO-Net  |  192.1.19.0     BBNCC-BILLERICA      |
  |  192.1.20.0     BBNACI-MT-VIEW |  192.1.21.0     BBN-DGI-ENet 2       |
  |  192.1.22.0     BBN-FORT-KNOX  |  192.1.23.0     BBN-NEW-LONDON       |
  |  192.1.25.0     BBN-PCNet SIM  |  192.4.13.0     MRE-MERLOT           |
  |  192.4.14.0     MRE-BIRDNet    |  192.4.18.0     MRE-FRAGGLE          |
  |  192.4.32.0     NVC-SHARP      |  192.4.34.0     NVC-BB               |
  |  192.4.35.0     NVC-ASPEN      |  192.4.37.0     LCC-APOLLO           |
  |  192.4.38.0     PYA-FACS       |  192.5.1.0      CISLHYPERNet         |
  |  192.5.3.0      HP-DESIGN-AIDS |  192.5.4.0      HP-TCG-UNIX          |
  |  192.5.5.0      DEC-MRNet      |  192.5.6.0      DEC-MRRAD            |
  |  192.5.7.0      ASRI           |  192.5.8.0      CSEICNet             |
  |  192.5.9.0      AERONet        |  192.5.10.0     ECLNet               |
  |  192.5.11.0     CSS-RING       |  192.5.12.0     UTAH-Net-C           |
  |  192.5.13.0     GSWDNet        |  192.5.14.0     RAND-Net             |
  |  192.5.16.0     LANLLAND       |  192.5.17.0     NRL-Net              |
  |  192.5.18.0     IPTO-Net       |  192.5.19.0     UCIICS               |
  |  192.5.20.0     CISLTTYNet     |  192.5.21.0     BRLNet 1             |
  |  192.5.22.0     BRLNet 2       |  192.5.23.0     BRLNet 3             |
  |  192.5.24.0     BRLNet 4       |  192.5.25.0     BRLNet 5             |
  |  192.5.27.0     DTNSRDC-Net    |  192.5.28.0     RSRE-NULL            |
  |  192.5.29.0     RSRE-ACC       |  192.5.30.0     RSRE-PR              |
  |  192.5.32.0     CISLTESTNet 2  |  192.5.33.0     CISLTESTNet 3        |
  |  192.5.34.0     CISLTESTNet 4  |  192.5.37.0     UR-CS-Net            |
  |  192.5.38.0     SRI-C3ETHER    |  192.5.39.0     USS                  |
  |  192.5.40.0     PUCC-Net -A    |  192.5.41.0     USNO                 |
  |  192.5.42.0     HYPER-1ISG     |  192.5.43.0     CUCSNet              |
  |  192.5.44.0     FARBER-PC-Net  |  192.5.46.0     NTA-RING             |
  |  192.5.47.0     NSRDC          |  192.5.48.0     PURDUE-CS-Net        |
  |  192.5.49.0     TISW-Net       |  192.5.50.0     CTH-CS-Net           |
  |  192.5.52.0     NLM-ETHER-TEMP |  192.5.53.0     UR-CS-ETHER          |
  |  192.5.54.0     AERO-A3        |  192.5.55.0     UCLA-CECS            |
  |  192.5.56.0     TARTAN-Net     |  192.5.57.0     UDEL-CC              |
  |  192.5.58.0     CSNet -PDN     |  192.5.59.0     INRIA-A-RING         |
  |  192.5.60.0     INRIA-SOPHIA   |  192.5.64.0     AMES-NAS-Net         |
  |  192.5.65.0     NPRDC-ETHER    |  192.5.66.0     HARV-Net             |
  |  192.5.67.0     CECOM-ETHER    |  192.5.69.0     UIUC-Net             |
  |  192.5.70.0     CELAN          |  192.5.82.0     FSUSTAT              |
  |  192.5.88.0     YALE-EE-Net    |  192.5.89.0     HARV-APOLLO          |
  |  192.5.91.0     PURDUE-ECN1    |  192.5.92.0     BRAGG-ETHER          |
  |  192.5.93.0     SRI-DEMO       |  192.5.99.0     SPACENet             |
  |  192.5.100.0    HCSC-Net       |  192.5.101.0    PUCC-Net-B           |
  |  192.5.102.0    PUCC-RHF-Net   |  192.5.104.0    THINK-INet           |
  |  192.5.105.0    XAIT-POND      |  192.5.109.0    CWRUNet-C0           |
  |  192.5.110.0    CWRUNet-C1     |  192.5.111.0    CWRUNet-C2           |
  |  192.5.112.0    CWRUNet-C3     |  192.5.113.0    CWRUNet-C4           |
  |  192.5.116.0    BRAGGNet-1     |  192.5.117.0    BRAGGNet-2           |
  |  192.5.118.0    BRAGGNet-3     |  192.5.119.0    BRAGGNet-4           |
  |  192.5.120.0    BRAGGNet-5     |  192.5.121.0    BRAGGNet-6           |
  |  192.5.122.0    BRAGGNet-7     |  192.5.123.0    BRAGGNet-8           |
  |  192.5.124.0    BRAGGNet-9     |  192.5.125.0    BRAGGNet-10          |
  |  192.5.126.0    BRAGGNet-11    |  192.5.127.0    BRAGGNet-12          |
  |  192.5.128.0    BRAGGNet-13    |  192.5.129.0    BRAGGNet-14          |
  |  192.5.130.0    BRAGGNet-15    |  192.5.131.0    BRAGGNet-16          |
  |  192.5.132.0    BRAGGNet-17    |  192.5.135.0    LL-SPEECH-Net        |
  |  192.5.136.0    LL43-LEX-BACK  |  192.5.137.0    LL43-LEX-SUNA        |
  |  192.5.138.0    LL43-LEX-SUNB  |  192.5.139.0    LL43-LEX-APO         |
  |  192.5.140.0    LL43-TB-BACK   |  192.5.141.0    LL43-TB-APO          |
  |  192.5.143.0    NWU            |  192.5.144.0    CRC-ENet             |
  |  192.5.145.0    ECRC-SL        |  192.5.146.0    CPW-PSC              |
  |  192.5.147.0    ALV-ETHER      |  192.5.148.0    DISE                 |
  |  192.5.149.0    RDL-ETHER      |  192.5.151.0    PENN-STATE-1         |
  |  192.5.152.0    PENN-STATE-2   |  192.5.153.0    PENN-STATE-3         |
  |  192.5.154.0    PENN-STATE-4   |  192.5.155.0    PENN-STATE-5         |
  |  192.5.156.0    PENN-STATE-6   |  192.5.157.0    PENN-STATE-7         |
  |  192.5.158.0    PENN-STATE-8   |  192.5.159.0    PENN-STATE-9         |
  |  192.5.160.0    PENN-STATE-10  |  192.5.161.0    PENN-STATE-11        |
  |  192.5.162.0    PENN-STATE-12  |  192.5.164.0    GTEECN               |
  |  192.5.165.0    UNISYS-CAM-1   |  192.5.166.0    GAT-Net              |
  |  192.5.167.0    MCC-ACA6       |  192.5.168.0    MCC-CAD2             |
  |  192.5.169.0    MCC-CAD3       |  192.5.170.0    ANLNet 1             |
  |  192.5.171.0    ANLNet 2       |  192.5.172.0    ANLNet 3             |
  |  192.5.173.0    ANLNet 4       |  192.5.174.0    ANLNet 5             |
  |  192.5.175.0    ANLNet 6       |  192.5.176.0    ANLNet 7             |
  |  192.5.177.0    ANLNet 8       |  192.5.178.0    ANLNet 9             |
  |  192.5.179.0    ANLNet 10      |  192.5.180.0    ANLNet 11            |
  |  192.5.181.0    ANLNet 12      |  192.5.182.0    ANLNet 13            |
  |  192.5.183.0    ANLNet 14      |  192.5.184.0    ANLNet 15            |
  |  192.5.185.0    ANLNet 16      |  192.5.186.0    ANLNet 17            |
  |  192.5.187.0    ANLNet 18      |  192.5.188.0    ANLNet 19            |
  |  192.5.189.0    ANLNet 20      |  192.5.190.0    ANLNet 21            |
  |  192.5.191.0    ANLNet 22      |  192.5.192.0    ANLNet 23            |
  |  192.5.193.0    ANLNet 24      |  192.5.194.0    ANLNet 25            |
  |  192.5.195.0    ANLNet 26      |  192.5.196.0    ANLNet 27            |
  |  192.5.197.0    ANLNet 28      |  192.5.198.0    ANLNet 29            |
  |  192.5.199.0    ANLNet 30      |  192.5.200.0    ANLNet 31            |
  |  192.5.201.0    ANLNet 32      |  192.5.202.0    FMC-CTC              |
  |  192.5.204.0    SKL-ENet       |  192.5.205.0    ARNet 2              |
  |  192.5.206.0    BU-MATHNet     |  192.5.207.0    BU-CHEMNet           |
  |  192.5.208.0    BU-CLANet      |  192.5.209.0    SSDF-CDCNet          |
  |  192.5.210.0    ECSNet         |  192.5.211.0    INTEL-IWARP          |
  |  192.5.213.0    HARRIS         |  192.5.214.0    DECUACNet            |
  |  192.5.215.0    MASONNet       |  192.5.216.0    NTT-Net              |
  |  192.5.218.0    ARINC-GW-Net   |  192.5.219.0    CLEMSON              |
  |  192.5.220.0    SCCNet         |  192.5.221.0    CSC-LONS             |
  |  192.5.222.0    CSC-OIS        |  192.5.237.0    SMITHKLINE           |
  |  192.5.238.0    KES-Net        |  192.5.241.0    USC-CYPRESS          |
  |  192.5.242.0    MOT-242        |  192.5.243.0    MOT-243              |
  |  192.5.244.0    MOT-244        |  192.5.245.0    MOT-245              |
  |  192.5.246.0    MOT-246        |  192.5.247.0    MOT-247              |
  |  192.5.248.0    MOT-248        |  192.5.249.0    MOT-249              |
  |  192.5.250.0    MOT-250        |  192.5.251.0    MOT-251              |
  |  192.5.252.0    MOT-252        |  192.5.253.0    MOT-253              |
  |  192.6.201.0    UTSANANTONIO   |  192.9.9.0      SUN-BARRNet          |
  |  192.11.52.0    ATT-Net        |  192.12.5.0     AIC-LISPMS           |
  |  192.12.6.0     NPS-C2         |  192.12.7.0     SSSD-Net             |
  |  192.12.8.0     PICANet 1      |  192.12.9.0     YALE-EE2-Net         |
  |  192.12.10.0    THENet DFW     |  192.12.11.0    MIT-TEST             |
  |  192.12.12.0    SANTAFE        |  192.12.13.0    JHU-Net 1            |
  |  192.12.14.0    JHU-Net 2      |  192.12.15.0    BROOKNet             |
  |  192.12.16.0    PRMNet         |  192.12.17.0    LLL-TIS-Net          |
  |  192.12.18.0    CIT-CS-10Net   |  192.12.19.0    CIT-Net              |
  |  192.12.20.0    CIT-SUN-Net    |  192.12.21.0    CIT-PHYSCOMP         |
  |  192.12.22.0    UTCSRES        |  192.12.23.0    UTCSTTY              |
  |  192.12.24.0    MICANet        |  192.12.25.0    CSS-GRAMINAE         |
  |  192.12.27.0    UR-ESM         |  192.12.29.0    RF-EVANS             |
  |  192.12.30.0    RF-HEX-A       |  192.12.31.0    USNA-ENet            |
  |  192.12.33.0    SRI-CSL-Net    |  192.12.44.0    NRTC-Net             |
  |  192.12.45.0    ACC-SB-IMP-Net |  192.12.46.0    ACC-SB-ETHER         |
  |  192.12.48.0    AMES-ED-EXPNet |  192.12.49.0    AMES-ED-Net          |
  |  192.12.50.0    AMES-HY-Net    |  192.12.51.0    THINK-CHAOS          |
  |  192.12.55.0    HAZ-LPR-BETA   |  192.12.56.0    UTAH-AP-Net          |
  |  192.12.57.0    MCC-CAD1       |  192.12.58.0    MCC-ACA7             |
  |  192.12.59.0    MCC-ACA8       |  192.12.60.0    MCC-ACA9             |
  |  192.12.61.0    MCC-SW-Net     |  192.12.62.0    DREA-ENet            |
  |  192.12.63.0    CYPRESS        |  192.12.64.0    LOGNet               |
  |  192.12.65.0    HELNet 1       |  192.12.66.0    HELNet 2             |
  |  192.12.67.0    HELNet 3       |  192.12.68.0    ORNL-MSRNet          |
  |  192.12.69.0    UA-CS-Net      |  192.12.70.0    NPRDC-IPD            |
  |  192.12.71.0    NPRDC-ISG      |  192.12.72.0    ULCC                 |
  |  192.12.73.0    BTRL           |  192.12.74.0    APPLE-ETHER          |
  |  192.12.76.0    UQ-Net         |  192.12.80.0    CAEN                 |
  |  192.12.82.0    CU-CC-Net      |  192.12.83.0    UCDLA-EXNet          |
  |  192.12.84.0    UCDLA-PCNet    |  192.12.85.0    UCDLA-OPNet          |
  |  192.12.86.0    UCDLA-RADNet   |  192.12.87.0    UCDLA-CSLNet         |
  |  192.12.89.0    SBCS-CSDEPT-1  |  192.12.90.0    SBCS-CSDEPT-2        |
  |  192.12.91.0    RPICSNet 0     |  192.12.92.0    RPICSNet 1           |
  |  192.12.94.0    ROCKWEL-AI-TEMP|  192.12.97.0    MCRC                 |
  |  192.12.98.0    SHIRBAY-ENet   |  192.12.100.0   OOG1                 |
  |  192.12.102.0   AMES-NAS-HY    |  192.12.103.0   CSU-USC-ETHER        |
  |  192.12.104.0   CSU-NREL-ETHER |  192.12.119.0   XYPLEX               |
  |  192.12.120.0   MITRE-B-Net    |  192.12.121.0   FSUCS                |
  |  192.12.122.0   FSUCS2         |  192.12.123.0   AMES-CCF-Net         |
  |  192.12.124.0   ETL-LAN        |  192.12.125.0   CRDEC-Net 1          |
  |  192.12.126.0   CRDEC-Net 2    |  192.12.127.0   ILL-MI-Net           |
  |  192.12.128.0   BRADLEY        |  192.12.131.0   SAC-ADMIN            |
  |  192.12.132.0   LLNL-MON       |  192.12.133.0   LLNL-TUES            |
  |  192.12.134.0   LLNL-WED       |  192.12.135.0   LLNL-THU             |
  |  192.12.136.0   LLNL-OUTNet    |  192.12.137.0   LLNL-SAT             |
  |  192.12.138.0   LLNL-SUN       |  192.12.139.0   JTELS-BEN-GW         |
  |  192.12.141.0   CSS-ETHER      |  192.12.144.0   ECRCNet              |
  |  192.12.145.0   SMVL-THICK     |  192.12.150.0   SMVL-THIN            |
  |  192.12.152.0   SMVL-APOLLO    |  192.12.153.0   SMVL-153             |
  |  192.12.171.0   PICANet 2      |  192.12.172.0   ROCKWELLENet         |
  |  192.12.173.0   LBL-EE-Net 1   |  192.12.184.0   DSPO-Net             |
  |  192.12.185.0   BOSTONU-Net    |  192.12.186.0   BU-ACCNet            |
  |  192.12.187.0   BU-BROADB      |  192.12.188.0   BU-SCINet            |
  |  192.12.189.0   BU-ENGNet      |  192.12.190.0   BU-DSGNet            |
  |  192.12.191.0   BU-MEDNet      |  192.12.192.0   ITALY-EXTNet         |
  |  192.12.193.0   ITALY-INTNet   |  192.12.194.0   CNUCE-LAN3           |
  |  192.12.195.0   UNISYS-ISF-7   |  192.12.197.0   ACATT-ETHER1         |
  |  192.12.198.0   ACATT-ETHER2   |  192.12.199.0   LEWIS-ETHER1         |
  |  192.12.200.0   SRI-PSON-10    |  192.12.201.0   SRI-PSON-11          |
  |  192.12.202.0   SRI-PSON-12    |  192.12.203.0   SRI-PSON-13          |
  |  192.12.204.0   SRI-PSON-14    |  192.12.205.0   OHIO-STATE1          |
  |  192.12.206.0   INDIANA        |  192.12.207.0   SUPERCOMP            |
  |  192.12.209.0   NSF            |  192.12.210.0   FSTC                 |
  |  192.12.211.0   JVNC           |  192.12.212.0   RAND-Net 2           |
  |  192.12.213.0   RAND-Net 3     |  192.12.215.0   XDRENet              |
  |  192.12.216.0   STEVENS-TECH   |  192.12.220.0   WISC-FERD            |
  |  192.12.223.0   WISC-OZNet     |  192.12.224.0   WISC-OZES            |
  |  192.12.236.0   CITNet         |  192.12.237.0   HCSC-APOLLO          |
  |  192.12.248.0   ATD1           |  192.12.249.0   ATD2                 |
  |  192.12.250.0   MRNet          |  192.16.13.0    LANL-SERIAL          |
  |  192.16.16.0    S3-ETHER1-Net  |  192.16.72.0    THENet               |
  |  192.16.74.0    OTSTOKEN       |  192.16.123.0   SICSNet              |
  |  192.16.124.0   SICS-APOLLORING|  192.16.126.0   KTH-ETHER            |
  |  192.16.130.0   ICU-Net        |  192.16.138.0   LU-SLIP-Net          |
  |  192.16.140.0   KTH-SICSLINK   |  192.16.141.0   NEXUS-Net            |
  |  192.16.142.0   LOG-EHTER      |  192.16.146.0   IMNet                |
  |  192.16.147.0   IDEONLUND      |  192.16.152.0   TVTF-ETHER           |
  |  192.16.168.0   PICANet 3      |  192.16.169.0   NRL-HUBNet           |
  |  192.16.171.0   MACOM          |  192.16.173.0   NCAD-LAN1            |
  |  192.16.174.0   LL-MICRO-Net   |  192.16.175.0   GUACC                |
  |  192.16.176.0   LSUNet         |  192.16.181.0   LL-DSN-Net           |
  |  192.16.184.0   CWI-ETHER      |  192.16.188.0   NKIS                 |
  |  192.16.191.0   WCW            |  192.16.201.0   WCWS                 |
  |  192.16.202.0   CWI-EUNet      |  192.16.203.0   HCSC-SUN             |
  |  192.16.204.0   IASNet         |  192.16.205.0   DREA-ENet 2          |
  |  192.16.206.0   DREA-ENet 3    |  192.16.207.0   DCIEM-CSS            |
  |  192.16.208.0   DCIEM-HFD      |  192.20.225.0   MH-INTER-Net         |
  |  192.20.239.0   ATT-MD-Net     |  192.26.1.0     MCC-ACA10            |
  |  192.26.2.0     MCC-ACA11      |  192.26.3.0     MCC-ACA12            |
  |  192.26.4.0     MCC-ACA13      |  192.26.5.0     MCC-ACA14            |
  |  192.26.6.0     MCC-ACA15      |  192.26.7.0     SPAWAR               |
  |  192.26.8.0     SAIC-CPVB      |  192.26.10.0    GALLAUDET-TEMP       |
  |  192.26.11.0    NRL-HUBNet 1   |  192.26.12.0    NRL-HUBNet 2         |
  |  192.26.13.0    NRL-HUBNet 3   |  192.26.14.0    NRL-HUBNet 4         |
  |  192.26.15.0    NRL-HUBNet 5   |  192.26.16.0    NRL-HUBNet 6         |
  |  192.26.17.0    NRL-HUBNet 7   |  192.26.18.0    NRL-HUBNet 8         |
  |  192.26.19.0    NRL-HUBNet 9   |  192.26.20.0    NSYPTSMH-LAN         |
  |  192.26.21.0    UNISYS-ISF-8   |  192.26.22.0    UNISYS-ISF-9         |
  |  192.26.23.0    UNISYS-ISF-10  |  192.26.24.0    UNISYS-ISF-11        |
  |  192.26.25.0    LUCID          |  192.26.26.0    NRL-FIBER            |
  |  192.26.27.0    ICON-ETHER     |  192.26.49.0    OTS-192-26-49        |
  |  192.26.83.0    CSM-Net        |  192.26.84.0    NPRDC-FTC            |
  |  192.26.85.0    NUSAN          |  192.26.86.0    PHYSICS-SAC          |
  |  192.26.87.0    MS-SAC         |  192.26.88.0    YALE-ENG-Net         |
  |  192.26.89.0    JTELS-BEN1-GW  |  192.26.91.0    KDD                  |
  |  192.26.93.0    AECL-Net       |  192.26.95.0    LL-VLSI-Net          |
  |  192.26.99.0    FAI            |  192.26.100.0   PROTEON-EXP1         |
  |  192.26.101.0   PROTEON-EXP2   |  192.26.102.0   PROTEON-EXP3         |
  |  192.26.103.0   EXNet          |  192.26.136.0   WASHINGTON-TEMP      |
  |  192.26.147.0   WLV-ETHER      |  192.26.148.0   UMDNJ-NRAC           |
  |  192.26.149.0   LL43-LEX-SUNC  |  192.26.150.0   LL43-TB-SUNA         |
  |  192.26.152.0   FERNWOODNet 1  |  192.26.200.0   FRB-WS               |
  |  192.26.210.0   CRIM-Net       |  192.26.240.0   BRAGGNet-18          |
  |  192.26.241.0   BRAGGNet-19    |  192.26.242.0   BRAGGNet-20          |
  |  192.26.243.0   BRAGGNet-21    |  192.26.244.0   BRAGGNet-22          |
  |  192.26.245.0   BRAGGNet-23    |  192.26.246.0   BRAGGNet-24          |
  |  192.26.247.0   BRAGGNet-25    |  192.26.248.0   BRAGGNet-26          |
  |  192.26.249.0   BRAGGNet-27    |  192.31.0.0     PURDUE-GEOSC         |
  |  192.31.2.0     YCC-SYS-LT     |  192.31.3.0     ALCOA-Net-TEMP       |
  |  192.31.5.0     BOEING-ATC     |  192.31.6.0     SQ-ETHER             |
  |  192.31.7.0     CISCO-Net      |  192.31.8.0     USNA-CADNet          |
  |  192.31.10.0    UTACC-ETHER1   |  192.31.11.0    UTACC-ETHER2         |
  |  192.31.12.0    UTACC-ETHER3   |  192.31.13.0    UTACC-ETHER4         |
  |  192.31.16.0    CC1-ENet       |  192.31.17.0    CENTCOM-UNCLAS       |
  |  192.31.18.0    CC3-ENet       |  192.31.19.0    CC4-ENet             |
  |  192.31.20.0    CC5-ENet       |  192.31.21.0    SDSC-APOLLO          |
  |  192.31.21.0    SDSC-APOLLO    |  192.31.24.0    ALBM-Net             |
  |  192.31.27.0    ALTAIR-Net     |  192.31.28.0    STEWARD-OBS          |
  |  192.31.30.0    ADS-DC-Net     |  192.31.39.0    UTAH-NSS             |
  |  192.31.43.0    CNSNet         |  192.31.44.0    MRC-Net              |
  |  192.31.45.0    WILLIAMS       |  192.31.63.0    SCUBED-BBONE         |
  |  192.31.64.0    S3-RESEARCH    |  192.31.65.0    S3-FIBER-Net         |
  |  192.31.66.0    S3-ABQNet      |  192.31.67.0    S3-SLIP-Net          |
  |  192.31.68.0    S3-THIN-Net    |  192.31.69.0    S3-BBONE2-Net        |
  |  192.31.70.0    S3-ETHER2-Net  |  192.31.71.0    S3-ETHER3-Net        |
  |  192.31.72.0    S3-ETHER4-Net  |  192.31.75.0    HQDA-AI              |
  |  192.31.76.0    CSTLNet        |  192.31.82.0    HQEIS                |
  |  192.31.83.0    OSUNet         |  192.31.85.0    CLINet               |
  |  192.31.87.0    HARC-Net       |  192.31.88.0    BCMTECH-Net          |
  |  192.31.90.0    MORAVIAN       |  192.31.93.0    CIT-SRLNet           |
  |  192.31.96.0    ORNL-OSTINet   |  192.31.97.0    KSU-Net              |
  |  192.31.98.0    PBAS-BEN2-GW   |  192.31.99.0    UTENNK-RES           |
  |  192.31.100.0   GUNTER-LAN-1   |  192.31.101.0   TSU-Net              |
  |  192.31.103.0   CSNet-Net      |  192.31.104.0   CSNet-ECC            |
  |  192.31.106.0   NSWSES-NAVY    |  192.31.111.0   AIRMICS              |
  |  192.31.112.0   TRINCOLL       |  192.31.113.0   ODYSSEY              |
  |  192.31.145.0   SIGNet         |  192.31.146.0   UCR                  |
  |  192.31.147.0   NUWESNet       |  192.31.152.0   ROSENet              |
  |  192.31.153.0   SALKNet        |  192.31.154.0   UNMHC-DEV            |
  |  192.31.155.0   GEOLOGY-NWU    |  192.31.157.0   RTNet                |
  |  192.31.159.0   NYTGCYLAB      |  192.31.160.0   NUWES-C-Net          |
  |  192.31.161.0   UCB-UCSC-Net   |  192.31.163.0   C3P-Net              |
  |  192.31.164.0   MO-Net         |  192.31.165.0   NOAO-TUCSON          |
  |  192.31.172.0   IH-POE-GW      |  192.31.173.0   NORTHWESTNet         |
  |  192.31.174.0   CORONA-GW-TEMP |  192.31.177.0   THINK-INet-1         |
  |  192.31.178.0   THINK-INet-2   |  192.31.179.0   THINK-INet-3         |
  |  192.31.180.0   THINK-INet-4   |  192.31.181.0   THINK-INet-5         |
  |  192.31.182.0   THINK-INet-6   |  192.31.183.0   THINK-INet-7         |
  |  192.31.184.0   THINK-INet-8   |  192.31.185.0   THINK-INet-9         |
  |  192.31.186.0   THINK-INet-10  |  192.31.187.0   THINK-INet-11        |
  |  192.31.188.0   THINK-INet-12  |  192.31.189.0   THINK-INet-13        |
  |  192.31.190.0   THINK-INet-14  |  192.31.191.0   THINK-INet-15        |
  |  192.31.192.0   SUPER          |  192.31.193.0   CUA                  |
  |  192.31.197.0   ETLNet         |  192.31.207.0   HCSC-SUN2            |
  |  192.31.208.0   CENTERNet-TEMP |  192.31.210.0   STSCI-C-Net          |
  |  192.31.211.0   EMSE-INet      |  192.31.214.0   ALASKANet            |
  |  192.31.215.0   MONTANANet     |  192.31.216.0   WSUNet-TEMP          |
  |  192.31.217.0   MCC-ACA1       |  192.31.218.0   MCC-ACA2             |
  |  192.31.219.0   MCC-ACA3       |  192.31.220.0   MCC-ACA4             |
  |  192.31.221.0   MCC-ACA5       |  192.31.222.0   CAYMAN-IP            |
  |  192.31.223.0   UNO-Net        |  192.31.225.0   MINSY-POE            |
  |  192.31.226.0   LOGAIRCOMNet   |  192.31.230.0   INCSYS               |
  |  192.31.231.0   VUCS-AMS       |  192.31.235.0   SCA-Net              |
  |  192.31.236.0   YALE-CS-Net    |  192.31.238.0   NCP-LAN              |
  |  192.31.239.0   SEACOMNet      |  192.31.241.0   MSFC-DR-Net          |
  |  192.31.242.0   DIALUP-IP      |  192.31.245.0   BITS-Net             |
  |  192.31.246.0   MARBLE-Net     |  192.31.253.0   CQE-Net              |
  |  192.31.254.0   ALFRED-Net     |  192.33.3.0     DDN-OFFICE           |
  |  192.33.4.0     NYSERLAN       |  192.33.5.0     CAC-CEN1             |
  |  192.33.6.0     CAC-CEN2       |  192.33.7.0     CAC-CEN3             |
  |  192.33.8.0     CAC-CEN4       |  192.33.9.0     CAC-CEN5             |
  |  192.33.10.0    NOAO-KPNO      |  192.33.11.0    NOAO-ORION           |
  |  192.33.13.0    BRL-CDCNet     |  192.33.14.0    CIT-WAG-Net          |
  |  192.33.15.0    CHORUS-OPERA   |  192.33.17.0    CALTECH-AMA          |
  |  192.33.19.0    SERI           |  192.33.21.0    RISC-ANAHEIM         |
  |  192.33.23.0    ROUTETEST0     |  192.33.24.0    ROUTETEST1           |
  |  192.33.25.0    ROUTETEST2     |  192.33.26.0    ROUTETEST3           |
  |  192.33.27.0    ROUTETEST4     |  192.33.28.0    ROUTETEST5           |
  |  192.33.29.0    ROUTETEST6     |  192.33.30.0    ROUTETEST7           |
  |  192.33.31.0    ROUTETEST8     |  192.33.32.0    ROUTETEST9           |
  |  192.33.33.0    NISCNet        |  192.33.36.0    VUPHYS-AMS           |
  |  192.33.112.0   TISNet         |  192.33.115.0   NRAO-CV              |
  |  192.33.116.0   NRAO-GB        |  192.33.128.0   BNL-AGS              |
  |  192.33.136.0   KUBNet         |  192.33.140.0   SAONet               |
  |  192.33.141.0   SAO1Net        |  192.33.142.0   SAO2Net              |
  |  192.33.144.0   FNet-CERISI    |  192.33.145.0   FNet-LIFO            |
  |  192.33.146.0   FNet-LAAS      |  192.33.148.0   FNet-GRECO           |
  |  192.33.149.0   FNet-CMA       |  192.33.153.0   FNet-ENS-LYON        |
  |  192.33.156.0   UNIV-PARIS8    |  192.33.159.0   FNet-CNAM            |
  |  192.33.166.0   GISPI          |  192.33.167.0   FNet-CRIN            |
  |  192.33.168.0   INRIA-LORR     |  192.33.170.0   INRIA-FRANCE         |
  |  192.33.178.0   CNet-PARIS     |  192.33.179.0   FNet-EXPO            |
  |  192.33.180.0   FNet-DEMO      |  192.33.181.0   FNet-IBP             |
  |  192.33.182.0   UNIV-PARIS13   |  192.33.183.0   SAPE-MOBILE          |
  |  192.33.184.0   SAPE-PRNODE    |  192.33.185.0   SAAD-ARPA            |
  |  192.33.186.0   USACECNet-TEMP |  192.33.189.0   FXNet                |
  |  192.33.212.0   C-212          |  192.33.213.0   C-213                |
  |  192.33.214.0   C-214          |  192.33.215.0   C-215                |
  |  192.33.216.0   C-216          |  192.33.217.0   C-217                |
  |  192.33.218.0   C-218          |  192.33.219.0   C-219                |
  |  192.33.252.0   CLEMSON-CSD    |  192.35.44.0    GECRD-ISONet         |
  |  192.35.48.0    VIRGINIA-T1    |  192.35.49.0    VIRGINIA-T2          |
  |  192.35.52.0    LACHMANNet     |  192.35.53.0    LAI-TCP              |
  |  192.35.54.0    LAI-MAC        |  192.35.55.0    LAI-ISDN             |
  |  192.35.56.0    LAI-SLIP       |  192.35.57.0    LAI-STG              |
  |  192.35.59.0    AAII           |  192.35.62.0    NOSL-POE             |
  |  192.35.74.0    FOTLANHS       |  192.35.75.0    FOTLANMS             |
  |  192.35.76.0    FOTLANLS       |  192.35.78.0    IRIS-RING            |
  |  192.35.79.0    CCFNet         |  192.35.80.0    NUSC-V702M-1         |
  |  192.35.81.0    UWP-IPNet      |  192.35.82.0    CORNELL-DMZ          |
  |  192.35.86.0    UMN-MORRISNet  |  192.35.88.0    ADEL02Net            |
  |  192.35.89.0    YCC-SYS-TR     |  192.35.95.0    HCSC-APPLE           |
  |  192.35.96.0    UOKECNA        |  192.35.97.0    UOKECNB              |
  |  192.35.98.0    UOKECNC        |  192.35.99.0    WSMRNet3             |
  |  192.35.100.0   SHI-ETHER      |  192.35.101.0   KEYSTONENet          |
  |  192.35.129.0   WWBNet         |  192.35.140.0   WWUNet               |
  |  192.35.142.0   YKTNPOE-GW     |  192.35.144.0   DREV-ENet            |
  |  192.35.147.0   WVA-1          |  192.35.148.0   SIMASTLNet           |
  |  192.35.154.0   RIA-2Net       |  192.35.156.0   QUALNet2             |
  |  192.35.159.0   TACTICS-INTA   |  192.35.160.0   TACTICS-GRAT         |
  |  192.35.161.0   NBB1           |  192.35.162.0   NBB2                 |
  |  192.35.163.0   NBB3           |  192.35.164.0   NBB4                 |
  |  192.35.165.0   NBB5           |  192.35.166.0   NBB6                 |
  |  192.35.167.0   NBB7           |  192.35.168.0   NBB8                 |
  |  192.35.169.0   NBB9           |  192.35.170.0   NBB10                |
  |  192.35.171.0   MIDNET-Net2    |  192.35.173.0   MCC-CAD4             |
  |  192.35.174.0   MCC-CAD5       |  192.35.175.0   MCC-CAD6             |
  |  192.35.176.0   MCC-CAD7       |  192.35.177.0   MCC-CAD8             |
  |  192.35.178.0   MCC-CAD9       |  192.35.179.0   MCC-CAD10            |
  |  192.35.180.0   NMNet3         |  192.35.195.0   ARIZONA-CMI          |
  |  192.35.196.0   NARDACNet      |  192.35.200.0   NOAO-SUNSPOT         |
  |  192.35.201.0   HAWAII-HIG     |  192.35.202.0   HAWAII-RIFT          |
  |  192.35.203.0   ECE-ARIZ       |  192.35.208.0   LM-HN-MCC            |
  |  192.35.209.0   UCOP-K3RDNet   |  192.35.213.0   UCOP-K8THNet         |
  |  192.35.226.0   UCDLA-DINet    |  192.35.229.0   RWTH-INFO            |
  |  192.36.23.0    IBMCTPNet      |  192.36.111.0   CTH-STENet           |
  |  192.6.112.0    UMDACNet       |  192.36.113.0   TDBNet               |
  |  192.36.114.0   UMUNet1        |  192.36.120.0   CTH-DTEKNet          |
  |  192.36.121.0   LU-TDENet      |  192.36.122.0   LU-REGLERNet         |
  |  192.36.123.0   LU-SLIP2       |  192.36.124.0   LU-EFD2Net           |
  |  192.36.125.0   SUNet-BACKBONE |  192.36.133.0   LU-QUARKNet          |
  |  192.36.134.0   LU-LDCNet      |  192.36.136.0   SISUNet              |
  |  192.36.143.0   STOCKHOLM-BONE |  192.36.148.0   NORDUNet-BACKBONE    |
  |  192.36.150.0   LUTHNet        |  192.36.151.0   LUTH1Net             |
  |  192.36.155.0   MECE1Net       |  192.36.168.0   UU1Net               |
  |  192.36.185.0   CTH-EKONet     |  192.36.224.0   GBG-XXNet            |
  |  192.36.225.0   CTH-CTKTNet    |  192.39.11.0    UNISYS-RES1          |
  |  192.39.12.0    UNISYS-RES2    |  192.40.51.0    PMS312Net            |
  |  192.41.140.0   STC-LAN        |  192.41.146.0   CSISRING             |
  |  192.41.171.0   JVNCNet-TEST   |  192.41.173.0   PENNLNK              |
  |  192.41.174.0   AMBLER         |  192.41.175.0   TYLER                |
  |  192.41.176.0   TEMPLE-RC      |  192.41.177.0   SURA-NOC             |
  |  192.41.192.0   JUNet-JSFNet   |  192.41.197.0   CCUTRDNet            |
  |  192.41.200.0   NIEHS          |  192.41.202.0   LBNS-POE-GW          |
  |  192.41.203.0   SOFTWAYNet     |  192.41.204.0   EROSNet              |
  |  192.41.207.0   NESEANet       |  192.41.208.0   CIT-SSDP             |
  |  192.41.211.0   APO-GALILEO    |  192.41.213.0   GEODEN               |
  |  192.41.216.0   KUBNet-A       |  192.41.217.0   DSS                  |
  |  192.41.225.0   AMES-FEINet    |  192.41.228.0   TGVNet               |
  |  192.41.229.0   NBB11          |  192.41.230.0   NBB12                |
  |  192.41.231.0   NBB13          |  192.41.232.0   NBB14                |
  |  192.41.233.0   NBB15          |  192.41.234.0   NBB16                |
  |  192.41.235.0   NBB17          |  192.41.236.0   NBB18                |
  |  192.41.237.0   NBB19          |  192.41.238.0   NBB20                |
  |  192.41.245.0   IITNet         |  192.41.246.0   ASIFICS              |
  |  192.41.249.0   WR-HN-MCC      |  192.42.2.0     CSCSAVNet            |
  |  192.42.3.0     CLEMSON-ENG    |  192.42.4.0     MSCDPA               |
  |  192.42.5.0     MACPHYS        |  192.42.6.0     MACENG               |
  |  192.42.7.0     MONTANACOE     |  192.42.8.0     TELEOSNet            |
  |  192.42.41.0    PUGET-POENet   |  192.42.48.0    CHPCSUNS             |
  |  192.42.49.0    CHPCAPOLLOS    |  192.42.50.0    CHPCXMPFEI           |
  |  192.42.51.0    CHPCXMPOPR     |  192.42.56.0    RANDNet4             |
  |  192.42.57.0    RANDNet5       |  192.42.58.0    RANDNet6             |
  |  192.42.59.0    RANDNet7       |  192.42.60.0    DMS-MELB             |
  |  192.42.61.0    DMS-CANB       |  192.42.62.0    DMS-PERTH            |
  |  192.42.66.0    WWB-APOLLONet  |  192.42.68.0    DREOEWD-ENet         |
  |  192.42.70.0    GISSNet        |  192.42.75.0    LARC-SNS             |
  |  192.42.76.0    LARCNet2       |  192.42.77.0    LARCNet3             |
  |  192.42.78.0    LARCNet4       |  192.42.79.0    LARCNet5             |
  |  192.42.80.0    SA-HN-MCC      |  192.42.81.0    OC-HN-MCC            |
  |  192.42.82.0    SCRIPPSNet     |  192.42.88.0    SHAFTERNet           |
  |  192.42.91.0    FB04           |  192.42.95.0    PSC                  |
  |  192.42.97.0    SOFTWARE       |  192.42.108.0   UMCNet               |
  |  192.42.109.0   INCSYS2        |  192.42.110.0   SU-ASSOCNet          |
  |  192.42.114.0   NKI            |  192.42.142.0   ICASENet             |
  |  192.42.144.0   UW-ADPNet      |  192.42.145.0   UW-ACSNet            |
  |  192.42.151.0   IPSRADSPACE    |  192.42.152.0   UMN-CCNet            |
  |  192.42.153.0   MALONE         |  192.42.155.0   RSRE-BBN-SAT         |
  |  192.42.156.0   ESD-H3         |  192.42.178.0   MICRONet             |
  |  192.42.179.0   WSMRNet2       |  192.42.239.0   FIT                  |
  |  192.42.241.0   TRZDOR         |  192.42.244.0   OBL-LINK-LAN         |
  |  192.42.245.0   CPO-LINK-LAN   |  192.42.246.0   LON-LINK-LAN         |
  |  192.42.247.0   RDM-LINK-LAN   |  192.42.248.0   SM-HN-MCC            |
  |  192.42.249.0   APPLE          |  192.42.251.0   LIGONet              |
  |  192.43.151.0   Net-ARDA       |  192.43.152.0   RADC-LAN             |
  |  192.43.172.0   PHOTONet       |  192.43.185.0   BBYMELB              |
  |  192.43.186.0   BBYSYD         |  192.43.188.0   SDIO-LAN             |
  |  192.43.190.0   BETHEL         |  192.43.197.0   GUNTER-LAN-2         |
  |  192.43.198.0   CXNet          |  192.43.199.0   ETSU                 |
  |  192.43.203.0   NRAO-CCC       |  192.43.204.0   NRAO-AOC             |
  |  192.43.205.0   MCD-UDC-2      |  192.43.207.0   UNIMELB-CS-A         |
  |  192.43.208.0   UNIMELB-CS-B   |  192.43.209.0   UNIMELB-CS-C         |
  |  192.43.216.0   LHASA          |  192.43.217.0   NOAASELNet           |
  |  192.43.226.0   UAENG01        |  192.43.227.0   UAENG02              |
  |  192.43.228.0   UAENG03        |  192.43.229.0   UACOMSCI             |
  |  192.43.239.0   RSES-TRING     |  192.43.240.0   GSFC2                |
  |  192.43.243.0   HUNKNet        |  192.43.244.0   NCAR-NSS             |
  |  192.43.245.0   MITRE-CGNet    |  192.43.249.0   JAXLAB               |
  |  192.43.250.0   TELEMATICS     |  192.43.252.0   CHUBNet              |
  |  192.43.253.0   AFMPCNet       |  192.43.254.0   RADFORDU             |
  |  192.44.1.0     FraunhoferNet  |  192.44.82.0    UniErlangen          |
  |  192.44.83.0    UniErlangenNet |  192.44.84.0    UniNetwork           |
  |  192.44.85.0    Uni-ErlNet     |  192.44.216.0   VVNet1               |
  |  192.44.217.0   VVNet2         |  192.44.218.0   VVNet3               |
  |  192.44.219.0   VVNet4         |  192.44.220.0   VVNet5               |
  |  192.44.221.0   VVNet6         |  192.44.222.0   VVNet7               |
  |  192.44.223.0   VVNet8         |  192.44.224.0   VVNet9               |
  |  192.44.225.0   VVNet10        |  192.44.226.0   VVNet11              |
  |  192.44.227.0   VVNet12        |  192.44.228.0   VVNet13              |
  |  192.44.229.0   VVNet14        |  192.44.230.0   VVNet15              |
  |  192.44.231.0   VVNet16        |  192.44.232.0   VVNet17              |
  |  192.44.233.0   VVNet18        |  192.44.234.0   VVNet19              |
  |  192.44.235.0   VVNet20        |  192.44.236.0   VVNet21              |
  |  192.44.237.0   VVNet22        |  192.44.238.0   VVNet23              |
  |  192.44.239.0   VVNet24        |  192.44.253.0   NTSC-IELN            |
  |  192.44.254.0   JVNC-SATNet    |  192.47.242.0   IE-INFERNO           |
  |  192.47.243.0   SRI-GECNet     |  192.48.33.0    HAC-GATENet          |
  |  192.48.78.0    TSBNet         |  192.48.80.0    SRI-WDC              |
  |  192.48.96.0    UUNet-ETHER    |  192.48.100.0   AAAI                 |
  |  192.48.105.0   NMSU-ISI-NUL   |  192.48.109.0   BOND-3090            |
  |  192.48.110.0   BOND-USLINK    |  192.48.111.0   SPARTA-Net           |
  |  192.48.114.0   IE-PURGATORIO  |  192.48.115.0   IE-PARADISO          |
  |  192.48.116.0   IE-COMMUNE     |  192.48.118.0   INTERSIL             |
  |  192.48.119.0   INTERSIL-APOLO |  192.48.120.0   INTERSIL-SINGAPORE   |
  |  192.48.125.0   SERI-2         |  192.48.134.0   ARLUTANet0           |
  |  192.48.135.0   ARLUTANet1     |  192.48.139.0   SQUIBB-Net           |
  |  192.48.143.0   CONTEL-SPFLD   |  192.48.153.0   SGI-Net              |
  |  192.48.212.0   NARDAC-Net1    |  192.48.213.0   NARDAC-Net2          |
  |  192.48.214.0   NARDAC-Net3    |  192.48.215.0   NARDAC-Net4          |
  |  192.48.216.0   NARDAC-Net5    |  192.48.217.0   OACIS-Net            |
  |  192.48.218.0   ISTO-Net       |  192.48.219.0   DARPA-1555-Net       |
  |  192.48.220.0   DARPA-T1-Net   |  192.48.224.0   NetCS-Net            |
  |  192.48.233.0   VILLANOVA      |  192.51.0.0     ND-Company-Network   |
  |  192.52.61.0    HAYSTACK-1     |  192.52.62.0    HAYSTACK-2           |
  |  192.52.63.0    HAYSTACK-3     |  192.52.64.0    HAYSTACK-4           |
  |  192.52.65.0    HAYSTACK-5     |  192.52.66.0    HAYSTACK-6           |
  |  192.52.70.0    MEEDIV         |  192.52.71.0    BBN-EXT-Net          |
  |  192.52.96.0    JESTSTI        |  192.52.97.0    JESTSTJ              |
  |  192.52.98.0    JESTSTE        |  192.52.99.0    JESTSTK              |
  |  192.52.100.0   JESTSTL        |  192.52.101.0   JESTSTG              |
  |  192.52.102.0   JESTSTF        |  192.52.103.0   JESTSTM              |
  |  192.52.104.0   JESTSTH        |  192.52.105.0   JESTSTN              |
  |  192.52.106.0   NCAR-HYPER     |  192.52.107.0   SIMPACT-Net          |
  |  192.52.111.0   LNX-ETHER1     |  192.52.112.0   LNX-ETHER2           |
  |  192.52.117.0   BELVOIR-Net2   |  192.52.154.0   ESL                  |
  |  192.52.155.0   UOFH1-Net      |  192.52.156.0   UOFH2-Net            |
  |  192.52.159.0   HDN1           |  192.52.160.0   HDN2                 |
  |  192.52.162.0   NEURONet       |  192.52.163.0   NEURONet-1           |
  |  192.52.164.0   NEURONet-2     |  192.52.165.0   NEURONet-3           |
  |  192.52.166.0   NEURONet-4     |  192.52.167.0   NEURONet-5           |
  |  192.52.168.0   NEURONet-6     |  192.52.169.0   NEURONet-7           |
  |  192.52.179.0   EDUCOM         |  192.52.180.0   NYSERWest            |
  |  192.52.182.0   SKIDMORE       |  192.52.190.0   NSFTRANSIT1          |
  |  192.52.191.0   NSFTRANSIT2    |  192.52.192.0   NSFTRANSIT3          |
  |  192.52.193.0   NSFTRANSIT4    |  192.52.194.0   FEBA-EAST            |
  |  192.52.195.0   FEBA-WEST      |  192.52.198.0   JSCNetC1             |
  |  192.52.199.0   JSCNetC2       |  192.52.200.0   JSCNetC3             |
  |  192.52.201.0   JSCNetC4       |  192.52.202.0   JSCNetC5             |
  |  192.52.203.0   JSCNetC6       |  192.52.204.0   JSCNetC7             |
  |  192.52.205.0   JSCNetC8       |  192.52.206.0   JSCNetC9             |
  |  192.52.207.0   JSCNetC10      |  192.52.208.0   JSCNetC11            |
  |  192.52.209.0   JSCNetC12      |  192.52.210.0   JSCNetC13            |
  |  192.52.211.0   JSCNetC14      |  192.52.212.0   JSCNetC15            |
  |  192.52.213.0   JSCNetC16      |  192.52.214.0   JSCNetC17            |
  |  192.52.215.0   JSCNetC18      |  192.52.216.0   JSCNetC19            |
  |  192.52.217.0   JSCNetC20      |  192.52.218.0   UNIONCOLLEGE         |
  |  192.52.219.0   SBU-LAN        |  192.52.220.0   SUNYCT               |
  |  192.52.227.0   SCI-PROC       |  192.52.232.0   CNUCE-DARPA          |
  |  192.52.233.0   HARRISNet-1    |  192.52.234.0   HARRISNet-2          |
  |  192.52.235.0   HARRISNet-3    |  192.52.236.0   HARRISNet-4          |
  |  192.52.238.0   CNSYD-POE      |  192.52.245.0   SAMSUNG-Net          |
  |  192.52.247.0   STRATUS-C1     |  192.52.248.0   STRATUS-C4           |
  |  192.52.249.0   STRATUS-C3     |  192.54.33.0    TA-Net               |
  |  192.54.81.0    CARL-Net       |  192.54.82.0    MOT-82               |
  |  192.54.83.0    MOT-83         |  192.54.84.0    MOT-84               |
  |  192.54.85.0    MOT-85         |  192.54.86.0    MOT-86               |
  |  192.54.87.0    MOT-87         |  192.54.88.0    MOT-88               |
  |  192.54.89.0    MOT-89         |  192.54.90.0    MOT-90               |
  |  192.54.91.0    MOT-91         |  192.54.92.0    GACNet               |
  |  192.54.93.0    CSNet-CYP      |  192.54.104.0   XLINK                |
  |  192.54.105.0   WR-CANB        |  192.54.106.0   WR-PERTH             |
  |  192.54.109.0   ISR-HAWAII     |  192.54.111.0   ARC-HSP-Net          |
  |                                                                       |
   ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Call this bulletin boards:

 The Crypt           -   [ 619/457+1836 ]   -
 The Maiden Spectrum -   [ 619/566+4165 ]   -
 Apocalypse NOW      -   [ 2o6/838+6435 ]   -
 
=============================================================================
                   N.A.S.T.Y. JOURNAL RELEASE 3 - PART 08
=============================================================================

        
                    ====================================
                    =    N.A.S.T.Y. NEWS AND RUMORS    =
                    ====================================

It has just come to our attention, that Damaged Sectorz was never busted, it
was a rumor fabricated by him. He is currently running around using the
handle Mind Rape. He has started a group called NSA (National Security 
Anarchists). Oh- Why do you say that the basis of creation is plagerism??
Pretty stupid slogan for your group.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Three LOD members have started a Computer Security Company called COMSEC 
running out of Huston TX. These three are: Erik Bloodaxe, Malefactor, and 
Doc Holiday. Contrary to the rumors COMSEC is not out to bust hackers. I 
quote Erik Bloodaxe as saying: 'COMSEC is not out to get hackers, hell the 
only hackers that we would ever turn in are those dicks from MOD'. 
    -To each his own! 
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

A group called NHA (Network Hackers Alliance) that has released approximately 
five files, they name their group 'president' as being Code Of Honor, the
funny part is, that he wasn't made aware of this.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

N.A.S.T.Y. Has recently aquired a new member, POINT OF PRESENCE. Hopefully 
his talent for writing and telco knowledge can be put to good use.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Word has it that Technician of SSWC (Secret Society of World Class-hackers)
is a flaming fag. He admitted being a homosexual. (He was in love with a guy
in the Midwest).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

The FCC has ordered pay phone owners to let customers use the Long Distance
carriers of their choice. If this is so, then why do  COCOTS (Customer Owned
 Coin Operated TelephoneS) still say invalid number when I punch in 10288? 
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

The grape vine has reported that Blue Adept has been raided.  The raid
is supposively due to altering telnet source code.  The information has
thus far not been verified.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------