5427 lines
233 KiB
Plaintext
5427 lines
233 KiB
Plaintext
Listing of Contents to TAP Magazine Online #1
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Tap 1.01 Intro to Tap Online
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Tap 1.02 Subscription to Tap Magazine Information
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Tap 1.03 Department of Defense Network
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Tap 1.04 TAC Access Control System by Argonaut
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Tap 1.05 Department of Defense Host Listing
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Tap 1.06 Letters to Tap Magazine
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Tap 1.07 Hacking Answering Machines by Predat0r
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Tap 1.08 NASA Space Shuttle Press Kit
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Tap 1.09 Ringback in the 502 NPA by Predat0r
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Tap 1.10 Tymcard Challenge by Techno-Cowboy
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Tap 1.11 Abbreviation List by Predat0r
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Tap 1.12 California Bbs Listing
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Tap 1.13 Nynex by Nightcrawler
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Tap 1.14 Red Phone Bbs Buffer
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Tap 1.15 Guide to school lockers by Cablecast Operator & Silver Sphere
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Tap 1.16 How to contact TAP via the WWIVnet with Wwivnet listing
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Welcome to the first issue of TAP Magazine Online. Publishing an electronic
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newsletter is somewhat easier then the hardcopy TAP, but i think i can
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continue to do this with some regularity, while still publishing TAP Magazine.
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It feels i am jumping on the band wagon since now days it seems everyone
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is publishing their own newsletter just to be famous or well known. I salute
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the true pioneers who have stuck it out and to those who have been inspirations
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to us all. The freedom of information shall never die as long as a few
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dedicated people continue to fight for our given rights.
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I have no set format yet, and don't plan on making anything fancy. I have just
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collected a few text files and thrown them together for those out there to
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read. If you want to get something included in TAP you can send it to me.
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If you want to get TAP Online issues first call the following boards.
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Blitzkrieg 502-499-8933 home to TAP and myself.
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Amerika's Most Wanted Bbs 502-491-2749
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Hall of Injustice 502-241-9304
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All these systems have been up for at least six months and are 24 hours.
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I would like to have other boards in different area codes distribute for
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me also, so if you want to do this contact me.
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I would now like to greet my fellow friends whom i have met in the computer
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underground. If i leave anyone out i am sorry.
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The Last Mafioso & The West Coast Phone Phreaks of Anarchist Express.
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Where the hell did you all disappear to?
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Iron Feather Journal, Phantasy, Phrack, Computer Underground Digest,
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Activist Times Inc and Ground Zero & TCC Crew, Network Information Access,
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and any other group which sends their files to my bbs regularly.
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Greets goto Aristotle who helped restart TAP then decided he wanted out. So
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now what are you going to do write for 2600? I hope not, sellout!
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and now sit back and enjoy the show.....
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Predat0r / Editor & Publisher of TAP Magazine.
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Subscription Information
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============ ===========
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$10.00 for 10 issues USA rate.
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$15.00 for 10 issues in Canada.
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$20.00 for 10 issues Overseas.
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TAP Magazine will take CASH, Money Orders, Checks, or Postal Money Orders.
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Send to the following:
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TAP Magazine
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Post Office Box 20264
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Louisville, Kentucky 40250-0264
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Predat0r / Editor & Publisher of TAP Magazine.
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Subscription Information
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============ ===========
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$10.00 for 10 issues USA rate.
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$15.00 for 10 issues in Canada.
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$20.00 for 10 issues Overseas.
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TAP Magazine will take CASH, Money Orders, Checks, or Postal Money Orders.
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Send to the following:
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TAP Magazine
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Post Office Box 20264
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Louisville, Kentucky 40250-0264
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Greetings fellow CyberNauts:
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This gem was downloaded from the DDN on the InterNet. It is a good
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guide for learning to hack the Net. If you like what you see leave
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note for Argonaut at Rivendell BBS (816) 563-4845. This is my Home
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of Port and a small but growing hack/phreak node.
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The Argonaut
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===========================================================================
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FEATURES OF THE TAC ACCESS CONTROL SYSTEM (TACACS)
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To log in to the network via a MILNET TAC, you MUST have a unique ID
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and Access Code (TAC Access Card). These cards are issued by the DDN
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Network Information Center (NIC) only after a user has been authorized
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by the Host Administrator of the host on which the user has his
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primary mailbox or account.
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IF YOU HAVE NOT RECEIVED YOUR TAC ACCESS CARD, AND HAVE A LEGITIMATE
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REQUIREMENT TO ACCESS THE NETWORK VIA A MILNET TAC, CONTACT YOUR HOST
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ADMINISTRATOR! (DO NOT CONTACT THE NIC FOR AUTHORIZATION).
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If you do not know who your Host Administrator is, you may find out by
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using the "WHOIS" command on the NIC.DDN.MIL host. Instructions on
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using "WHOIS" are as follows: When you finish reading this message,
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type "quit" as instructed. After the connection to NIC.DDN.MIL is closed,
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type "@n" again. You will be told how to find your Host Administrator.
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When finished, type "logout<RETURN>" at the prompt and you will be
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returned to the TAC.
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
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TACACS, the access control system for MILNET TACs, requires you to log
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in before a connection to a host may be completed. The login process
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is automatically started with the first @open (@o) command you issue.
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There is a @close (@c) command to close the TAC connection and also a
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@logout (@l) command to logout. Otherwise, the functioning of the TAC
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is essentially unaffected by the access control system.
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Here is a sample of the login dialogue:
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First, the command to get the TAC's attention is Control-Q.
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(a) PVC-TAC 111 #: 01 This is the last line of the TAC
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herald, which the TAC uses to
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identify itself. When you see the
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herald, the TAC is ready for your
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command.
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(b) @o 26.2.0.8<RETURN> The user inputs the command to
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------------------- open a connection plus the
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internet address of the host to
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which he wishes to connect,
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followed by a Carriage Return.
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(c) TAC Userid: SAMPLE.LOGIN<RETURN> Here the TAC prompts the user for
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-------------------- his Userid. The user enters his
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ID exactly as shown as shown on
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his TAC Access Card, followed by
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a Carriage Return.
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(d) Access Code: 22bgx4467<RETURN> Again the TAC prompts the user,
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----------------- who responds by entering his
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Access Code as shown on his TAC
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Access Card, followed by a
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Carriage Return.
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(e) Login OK The TAC validates the ID/Access
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TCP trying...Open code and proceeds to open the
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requested connection.
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HELPFUL INFORMATION:
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When entering your TAC Userid and Access Code:
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- A carriage return terminates each input line and causes the next
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prompt to appear.
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- As you type in your TAC Userid and Access Code, it does not matter
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whether you enter an alphabetic character in upper or lower case.
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All lower case alphabetic characters echo as upper case for the
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Userid.
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- The Access Code is not echoed in full-duplex mode. An effort is
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made to obscure the Access Code printed on hardcopy terminals in
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half-duplex mode.
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- You may edit what you type in by using the backspace (Control-H)
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key to delete a single character.
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- You may delete the entire line and restart by typing Control-U.
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A new prompt will appear.
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- While entering either the TAC Userid or Access Code, you may type
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Control-C to abort the login process and return to the TAC command
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mode. You must interrupt or complete the login process in order to
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issue any TAC command.
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- The @reset (@r) command resets the TAC and returns you to the TAC
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welcome banner.
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IF YOU HAVE A PROBLEM WITH TAC LOGIN:
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Should the login sequence fail (as indicated by the response "Bad
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login"), examine your Access Card carefully to ensure that you are
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entering the ID and Access Code correctly. Note that Access Codes
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never contain a zero, a one, a "Q" or a "Z", as each of these
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characters may be mistaken for another character. If you see what
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appears to be one of these characters in your access code, it is
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really the letter "O" (oh), or "G" (gee), the letter "L" (el), or the
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number "2" (two).
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If you have followed all of the above steps as indicated, and if you
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are sure you are entering your ID and Access Code correctly, and you
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still cannot log in, call the Network Information Center at (415)
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859-3695 or (800) 235-3155 for help.
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AFTER LOGGING IN:
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Your TAC port will remain logged in as long as you have an open
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connection. If you close the connection, you will have ten minutes in
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which to reopen a connection without having to log in again. If you do
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not reopen a connection within ten minutes, the TAC will attempt to
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hang up your port, and will automatically log you out.
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WHEN YOU ARE FINISHED:
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Always close the connection using "@c" then log out using the "@l" command.
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Typing "@r" (reset) has no effect on your logged-in status.
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If you now wish to log in to the TAC, leave the TACNEWS program by
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typing "quit" at the next prompt. This will return you to the TAC,
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and you may then begin the login sequence with the @o command to the
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TAC.
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Another InterNet gem from the treasure chest of the Argonaut
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For more InterNet info call:
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RIVENDELL BBS: (816) 563-4845
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# DoD Internet Host Table
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InterNet
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node address
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6.1.0.1 yuma-emh1.army.mil yuma.arpa yuma1.army.mil
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7.8.0.2 protolaba.dca.mil protolaba.arpa
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7.0.0.3 edn-vax.dca.mil edn-vax.arpa
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8.0.0.2 ccs.bbn.com
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8.1.0.2 cci.bbn.com bbncci.arpa
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8.3.0.2 ccd.bbn.com bbnccd.arpa
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8.5.0.2 cck.bbn.com
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8.0.0.5 cd2.bbn.com
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8.2.0.5 cc1-tac.bbn.com
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8.3.0.9 bbnnet2-arpanet-gw.arpa bbnnet2-arpanet-gw.bbn.com
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8.7.0.9 egonoc.bbn.com
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8.0.0.10 cc4-tac.bbn.com
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8.3.0.10 jsnach.bbn.com jsnach.arpa
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8.1.0.12 noc3.bbn.com
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8.5.0.14 dev.cs.net
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128.89.0.94 dev.cs.net
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8.1.0.16 rvax.bbn.com
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128.89.0.132 rvax.bbn.com
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8.1.0.18 cc2.bbn.com
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8.7.0.18 cca.bbn.com bbncca.arpa
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8.6.0.19 cc3-tac.bbn.com
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8.9.0.19 ccny.bbn.com
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8.2.0.24 ccu.bbn.com bbnccu.arpa
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8.3.0.24 cco.bbn.com
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8.0.0.26 ccp.bbn.com
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8.1.0.26 ccq.bbn.com bbnccq.arpa
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8.3.0.26 hnoc.bbn.com
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8.5.0.26 z.bbn.com bbnz.arpa
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8.7.0.26 ccx.bbn.com bbnccx.arpa
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8.8.0.26 ccy.bbn.com bbnccy.arpa
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8.16.0.33 cce.bbn.com bbncce.arpa
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8.1.0.35 col.bbn.com bbncc-columbia.arpa
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8.2.0.37 cc-vm.bbn.com
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8.0.0.58 idnoc.bbn.com
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8.0.0.97 noc4.bbn.com
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10.4.0.5 gw-1.cs.net
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192.31.103.1 gw-1.cs.net
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192.5.58.1 gw-1.cs.net
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10.7.0.5 lpr-netman.arpa lpr-netman.bbn.com
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10.2.0.7 rand-arpa-tac.arpa
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10.2.0.11 su-arpa-tac.arpa
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10.3.1.11 stanford.arpa
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10.5.0.14 white.incsys.com incremental.arpa
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192.31.230.1 white.incsys.com incremental.arpa
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10.6.0.14 cadre.dsl.pitt.edu cadre.arpa cadre.dsl.pittsburgh.edu
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128.147.128.1 cadre.dsl.pitt.edu cadre.arpa cadre.dsl.pittsburgh.edu
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128.147.1.1 cadre.dsl.pitt.edu cadre.arpa cadre.dsl.pittsburgh.edu
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130.49.128.1 cadre.dsl.pitt.edu cadre.arpa cadre.dsl.pittsburgh.edu
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10.8.0.14 gateway.sei.cmu.edu
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128.237.254.254 gateway.sei.cmu.edu
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128.2.237.251 gateway.sei.cmu.edu
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10.4.0.17 tis.com tis.arpa
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10.2.0.20 dcec-arpa-tac.arpa
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10.3.0.20 edn-unix.dca.mil edn-unix.arpa
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10.5.0.20 dcec-psat.arpa
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10.11.0.20 sccgate.scc.com sccgate.arpa
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10.1.21.27 mcon.isi.edu
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10.0.21.22 mcon.isi.edu
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10.1.22.27 speech11.isi.edu
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10.1.23.27 wbc11.isi.edu isi-wbc11.arpa
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10.0.23.22 wbc11.isi.edu isi-wbc11.arpa
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10.1.89.27 setting.isi.edu isi-setting.arpa
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10.1.91.27 pallas-athene.isi.edu isi-pallas-athene.arpa
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10.1.97.27 aikane.isi.edu isi-aikane.arpa
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10.1.98.27 czar.isi.edu isi-czar.arpa
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10.1.99.27 mycroft.isi.edu isi-mycroftxxx.arpa
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10.1.124.27 cmr.isi.edu isi-cmr.arpa
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10.1.156.27 png11.isi.edu
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10.1.254.27 echo.isi.edu isi-echo.arpa
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10.0.0.28 arpa3-tac.arpa
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10.1.0.31 amc.xait.xerox.com cca-vms.arpa
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10.4.0.31 xait-arp-tac.arpa cca-arp-tac.arpa
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10.0.0.46 collins-pr.arpa
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10.1.0.46 collins-gw.arpa
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192.12.172.11 collins-gw.arpa
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10.7.0.51 a-lhi-sri-03.arpa
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10.3.1.54 jpl-robotics.arpa
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10.1.0.63 bbn-arpa-tac.arpa
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10.2.0.77 mit-arpa-tac.arpa
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10.3.0.77 umass-gw.cs.umass.edu unix1.cs.umass.edu
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128.119.40.12 umass-gw.cs.umass.edu unix1.cs.umass.edu
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10.0.0.82 tacac.arpa
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10.1.0.82 a-lhi-bbn-01.arpa
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10.5.0.82 arpa-mc.arpa arpanet-mc.arpa
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10.5.0.96 prc-gw.prc.unisys.com
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10.2.0.99 vax-x25.arpa
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10.3.0.99 bbn-x25-test3.arpa
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10.4.0.99 bbn-x25-test4.arpa
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10.5.0.99 test-host5-x25.arpa
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10.0.0.115 anoc1.arpa
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10.0.0.126 tycho.ncsc.mil tycho.arpa
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10.1.0.126 afterlife.ncsc.mil afterlife.arpa
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13.2.16.8 parcvax.xerox.com vaxc.xerox.com
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13.1.100.206 arisia.xerox.com
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13.0.12.232 xerox.com xerox.arpa
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14.0.0.4 vtest.cs.ucl.ac.uk ucl-vtest.arpa
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14.0.0.5 ess-tun.cs.ucl.ac.uk
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14.0.0.9 tunnel.cs.ucl.ac.uk
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15.255.152.2 sde.hp.com
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15.255.16.7 hplabs.hp.com hplabs.arpa
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16.1.0.1 decwrl.dec.com wrl.dec.com
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16.10.0.1 vixie.sf.ca.us
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16.1.0.2 gatekeeper.dec.com
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16.1.0.3 cerberus.pa.dec.com
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16.1.0.8 src.dec.com decsrc.dec.com
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16.1.0.9 wsl.dec.com
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18.72.2.1 mit.edu
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18.77.0.2 mitlns.mit.edu
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18.85.0.2 media-lab.media.mit.edu
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18.87.0.2 euler.mit.edu
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18.92.0.2 coventry.mit.edu
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18.72.0.3 bitsy.mit.edu
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18.79.0.3 lids.mit.edu
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18.85.0.3 atrp.media.mit.edu
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18.87.0.3 cauchy.mit.edu
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18.92.0.3 mitvma.mit.edu
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18.71.0.4 orpheus.mit.edu
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18.86.0.4 xv.mit.edu
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18.87.0.4 abel.mit.edu
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18.79.0.5 lmpvax.mit.edu
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18.86.0.5 dolphin.mit.edu
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18.87.0.5 stokes.mit.edu
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18.10.0.6 sludge.lcs.mit.edu mit-sludge.arpa
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18.26.0.134 sludge.lcs.mit.edu mit-sludge.arpa
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128.127.25.101 sludge.lcs.mit.edu mit-sludge.arpa
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18.62.0.6 eddie.mit.edu mit-eddie.mit.edu
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18.72.0.6 priam.mit.edu
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18.85.0.6 ems.media.mit.edu
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18.86.0.6 sloan.mit.edu
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18.87.0.6 banach.mit.edu
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18.71.0.7 jason.mit.edu
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18.87.0.7 fermat.mit.edu
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18.72.0.8 achilles.mit.edu
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18.87.0.8 bourbaki.mit.edu math.mit.edu
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18.10.0.9 gross.ai.mit.edu mit-gross.arpa
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128.52.22.9 gross.ai.mit.edu mit-gross.arpa
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128.52.14.1 gross.ai.mit.edu mit-gross.arpa
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128.52.32.1 gross.ai.mit.edu mit-gross.arpa
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18.87.0.9 archimedes.mit.edu
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18.75.0.10 space.mit.edu
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18.87.0.10 fourier.mit.edu
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18.87.0.11 newton.mit.edu
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18.71.0.12 paris.mit.edu
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18.87.0.12 noether.mit.edu
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18.80.0.13 charon.mit.edu
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18.87.0.13 zermelo.mit.edu
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18.72.1.14 eagle.mit.edu
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18.80.0.14 prometheus.mit.edu
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18.87.0.14 borel.mit.edu
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18.87.0.15 poisson.mit.edu
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18.87.0.16 schubert.mit.edu
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18.62.0.17 dspvax.mit.edu mit-bugs-bunny.arpa
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18.80.0.17 bloom-beacon.mit.edu
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18.87.0.17 boole.mit.edu
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18.27.0.18 fft.mit.edu
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18.87.0.18 galois.mit.edu
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18.27.0.19 dft.mit.edu
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18.87.0.19 laplace.mit.edu
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18.27.0.20 porky.mit.edu
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18.87.0.20 ramanujan.mit.edu
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18.92.0.20 po.mit.edu
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18.27.0.21 sam.mit.edu
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18.87.0.21 turing.mit.edu
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18.87.0.22 russell.mit.edu
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18.87.0.23 hypatia.mit.edu emma.mit.edu
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18.87.0.24 laurent.mit.edu
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18.87.0.25 bessel.mit.edu
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18.87.0.26 cantor.mit.edu
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18.87.0.27 fibonacci.mit.edu
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18.87.0.28 lebesgue.mit.edu
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18.87.0.29 pythagoras.mit.edu
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18.85.0.30 hq.media.mit.edu
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18.87.0.30 von-neumann.mit.edu
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18.87.0.31 polya.mit.edu
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18.87.0.32 pascal.mit.edu
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18.87.0.33 euclid.mit.edu
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18.87.0.34 bernoulli.mit.edu
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18.30.0.35 cls.lcs.mit.edu mit-cls.arpa
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18.87.0.35 hausdorff.mit.edu
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18.26.0.36 xx.lcs.mit.edu lcs.mit.edu mit-xx.arpa
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18.87.0.36 dedekind.mit.edu
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18.87.0.37 jacobi.mit.edu
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18.71.0.38 prep.ai.mit.edu
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18.87.0.38 hermite.mit.edu
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18.72.0.39 athena.mit.edu mit-athena.arpa
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18.87.0.39 tarski.mit.edu
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18.87.0.40 markov.mit.edu
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18.87.0.41 godel.mit.edu goedel.mit.edu
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18.88.0.55 cogito.mit.edu
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18.27.0.56 goldilocks.lcs.mit.edu mit-goldilocks.arpa
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18.10.0.71 pm-prj.lcs.mit.edu mit-prj.arpa
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18.26.0.80 melange.lcs.mit.edu grape-nehi.lcs.mit.edu
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18.88.0.80 hstbme.mit.edu
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18.88.0.82 infoods.mit.edu
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18.88.0.85 psyche.mit.edu
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18.52.0.92 theory.lcs.mit.edu mit-theory.arpa
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18.88.0.92 erl.mit.edu
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18.26.0.94 thyme.lcs.mit.edu jhereg.lcs.mit.edu toadkiller-dog.lcs.mit.edu
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18.26.0.95 larch.lcs.mit.edu mit-larch.arpa
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18.26.0.98 rinso.lcs.mit.edu mit-rinso.arpa
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18.26.0.106 tide.lcs.mit.edu mit-tide.arpa mit-tide tide
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18.26.0.107 dash.lcs.mit.edu mit-dash.arpa mit-dash dash
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18.26.0.114 hq.lcs.mit.edu
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18.82.0.114 mgm.mit.edu
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18.26.0.115 allspice.lcs.mit.edu ptt.lcs.mit.edu
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18.26.0.121 lithium.lcs.mit.edu
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18.72.0.122 ra.mit.edu
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18.72.0.142 arktouros.mit.edu
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18.71.0.151 mit-strawb.arpa strawb.mit.edu
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18.70.0.160 w20ns.mit.edu
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18.26.0.176 zurich.ai.mit.edu
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18.80.0.191 delphi.mit.edu
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18.30.0.192 vx.lcs.mit.edu mit-vax.arpa mit-vx.arpa mit-vax.lcs.mit.edu
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18.10.0.195 big-blue.lcs.mit.edu mit-big-blue.arpa
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18.48.0.195 live-oak.lcs.mit.edu oak.lcs.mit.edu
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18.72.0.205 garp.mit.edu
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18.30.0.206 zermatt.lcs.mit.edu
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18.30.0.212 expo.lcs.mit.edu
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18.48.0.216 wild-blue-yonder.lcs.mit.edu wild-blue.lcs.mit.edu
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18.86.0.216 diamond.mit.edu
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18.62.0.232 caf.mit.edu mit-caf.arpa
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26.3.0.1 rhe-eds.af.mil rhe-eds.arpa
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26.2.0.3 logicon.arpa
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26.4.0.3 mcdn-cpt.arpa
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26.5.0.3 sdcsvax.ucsd.edu
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128.54.20.1 sdcsvax.ucsd.edu
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26.6.0.3 navelex.arpa
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192.31.63.10 scubed.com scubed.arpa scubed.scubed.com
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192.16.16.70 scubed.com scubed.arpa scubed.scubed.com
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26.7.0.6 schinnen-emh1.army.mil
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26.5.0.8 nardacwash-001.arpa
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26.8.0.8 sds-cda1.arpa sds-cda1.navy.mil
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26.9.0.8 navelexnet-ward.arpa
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26.11.3.8 wnyosi4.arpa
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26.17.0.8 ibm4381.navy.mil
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128.60.1.1 nfe.nrl.navy.mil nrl-nfe.arpa
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192.26.26.1 nfe.nrl.navy.mil nrl-nfe.arpa
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26.21.0.8 arctan.nrl.navy.mil nrl-arctan.arpa
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26.1.0.9 sigonella.mt.ddn.mil sigonella-mil-tac.arpa
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26.4.0.9 san-eds.af.mil san-eds.arpa
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26.6.0.9 sig-ncpds.arpa
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26.7.0.9 mtf-comiso.af.mil
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26.10.0.9 comiso-piv.af.mil
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26.1.0.10 rota.mt.ddn.mil rota-mil-tac.arpa
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26.2.0.10 mtf-rota.arpa mtf-rota.af.mil
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26.6.0.10 rota-ncpds.arpa
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26.0.0.11 corona.mt.ddn.mil corona-mil-tac.arpa
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26.4.0.11 fltac-poe.arpa
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26.6.0.11 santaana-dmins.dla.mil
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26.7.0.11 c.navy.mil dgoa.arpa
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26.8.0.11 fltac-sperry.arpa
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26.10.0.11 afsc-bsd.af.mil afsc-bmo.af.mil afsc-bmo.arpa
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26.12.0.11 norton-piv-2.af.mil norton-piv-2.arpa
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26.13.0.11 afisc-01.af.mil afisc-01.arpa
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26.15.0.11 corona-po.arpa
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192.31.174.2 corona-po.arpa
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26.4.0.12 vca-asims.arpa vic-asims.army.mil
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26.5.0.12 cpo-vic-eur.arpa vic-cpo.army.mil
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26.6.0.12 afrts-vic.arpa vic-afrts.army.mil
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26.10.0.12 jacs6335.arpa vic-hacs.army.mil
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26.11.0.12 pcc-vice.arpa vic-pcc.army.mil
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26.12.0.12 vicenza-emh1.army.mil email-vicenza.army.mil
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26.0.0.13 gunter.mt.ddn.mil gunter-mil-tac.arpa
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26.1.0.13 gunter-adam.af.mil gunter-adam.arpa
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26.5.0.13 gunterp4.af.mil gunterp4.arpa
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131.2.16.1 gunterp4.af.mil gunterp4.arpa
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26.6.0.13 rucker-perddims.army.mil perddims06.arpa
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26.7.0.13 bcgunt.af.mil bcgunt.arpa
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26.11.0.13 jackson-perddims.army.mil perddims07.arpa
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26.12.0.13 hrc-iris.af.mil hrc-iris.arpa
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129.141.11.1 hrc-iris.af.mil hrc-iris.arpa
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26.13.0.13 mtf-gunter.af.mil mtf-gunter.arpa
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26.14.0.13 gu-eds.af.mil gu-eds.arpa
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26.15.0.13 camnet-maxwell-r01.af.mil camnet-maxwell-r01.arpa
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26.18.0.13 maxwell-am1.af.mil maxwell-am1.arpa camnet-maxw-r03.arpa
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26.5.0.14 zweibrucke-asims.army.mil asims-zweibrucken.arpa
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26.8.0.14 dmaoe.dma.mil dmaodsdoe.arpa
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26.13.0.14 cpo-prm-eur.arpa pms-cpo.army.mil
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26.14.0.14 cpo-zwi-eur.arpa zbn-cpo.army.mil
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26.1.0.15 ramstein.mt.ddn.mil ramstein-mil-tac.arpa
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26.5.0.15 van-eds.af.mil van-eds.arpa
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26.8.0.15 camnettwo-ramstein.af.mil camnettwo-ramstein.arpa
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26.16.0.15 erf-nah.arpa zbn-erfnah.army.mil
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26.0.0.16 moffett.mt.ddn.mil moffett-mil-tac.arpa
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26.1.0.16 arc-psn.arc.nasa.gov
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129.99.20.1 amelia.nas.nasa.gov ames-nas.arpa ames-nas.nas.nasa.gov
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26.3.0.16 nas-psn.nas.nasa.gov ames-nasb.arpa
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128.102.32.5 nas-psn.nas.nasa.gov ames-nasb.arpa
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26.4.0.16 mofnaf.navy.mil mofnaf.arpa
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26.13.0.128 mofnaf.navy.mil mofnaf.arpa
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26.6.0.16 sac-misc6.af.mil sac-misc6.arpa
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26.8.0.16 gtewd.af.mil gtewd.arpa
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26.0.0.17 mclean2.mt.ddn.mil mclean2-mil-tac.arpa
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26.2.0.17 mclean.mt.ddn.mil mitre-mil-tac.arpa
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26.3.0.17 mitre.arpa mwunix.mitre.org
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128.29.104.0 mitre.arpa mwunix.mitre.org
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26.6.0.17 his-fsd6.arpa
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26.10.0.17 ncpds-arlington.arpa
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26.11.0.17 ddn-wms.arpa ddn-wms.dca.mil
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26.12.0.17 fstc-chville.arpa
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26.13.0.17 mclean-unisys.army.mil
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26.14.0.17 cnrc.arpa
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26.16.0.17 dulles-ignet.army.mil ignet-prc.arpa
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26.18.0.17 osi-2-gw.dca.mil
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26.17.0.17 osi-2-gw.dca.mil
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26.19.0.17 beast.ddn.mil
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192.33.3.2 beast.ddn.mil
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26.5.0.18 lonex.radc.af.mil radc-lonex.arpa
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26.8.0.18 lons.radc.af.mil
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26.9.0.18 coins.cs.umass.edu cs-umass.edu
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26.10.0.18 softvax.radc.af.mil radc-softvax.arpa
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26.13.0.18 ftdrum-meprs.army.mil
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26.17.0.18 electra.cs.buffalo.edu buffalo-cs.arpa
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128.205.34.9 electra.cs.buffalo.edu buffalo-cs.arpa
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192.12.100.3 oodis01.af.mil oodis01.arpa
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26.7.0.21 oms-nws.navy.mil
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26.7.0.78 navmeducabremerton.arpa
|
|
26.8.0.78 navmeducaoakharbor.arpa
|
|
26.15.0.78 lewis-asims.army.mil asims-020.arpa
|
|
26.0.0.79 benning.mt.ddn.mil benning-mil-tac.arpa
|
|
26.4.0.79 benning-ato.arpa
|
|
26.6.0.79 benning.army.mil
|
|
26.7.0.79 benning-tcaccis.army.mil
|
|
26.10.0.79 mcdn-alb.arpa
|
|
26.11.0.79 mtf-maxwell.af.mil mtf-maxwell.arpa
|
|
26.13.0.79 benning-jacs5074.army.mil jacs5074.arpa
|
|
26.14.0.79 columbus-am1.af.mil columbus-am1.arpa
|
|
26.15.0.79 camnet-columbus-r02.af.mil camnet-columbus-r02.arpa
|
|
26.16.0.79 gunter-am1.af.mil gunter-am1.arpa camnet-gunt-r01.arpa
|
|
26.18.0.79 benning-perddims.army.mil perddims33.arpa
|
|
26.19.0.79 benning-meprs.army.mil
|
|
26.24.0.79 ftgillem-darms.army.mil
|
|
26.25.0.79 ftmcphsn-jacs5073.army.mil
|
|
26.31.0.79 benning-asims.army.mil asims-034.arpa
|
|
26.0.0.80 bragg.mt.ddn.mil bragg-mil-tac.arpa
|
|
26.4.0.80 tecnet-clemson.arpa tecnet-clemson.jcte.jcs.mil
|
|
26.5.0.80 nardac-cherrypt.arpa
|
|
26.6.0.80 chrnsc.arpa
|
|
26.9.0.80 chrnsc.arpa
|
|
26.7.0.80 ed-mb.af.mil ed-mb.arpa
|
|
26.8.0.80 netpmsa-charl3.arpa
|
|
26.10.0.80 ftbragg-asatms.army.mil bragg-asatms.army.mil
|
|
26.11.0.80 navmeducacharleston.arpa
|
|
26.12.0.80 mcdn-clb3.arpa
|
|
26.13.0.80 bragg-asims.army.mil
|
|
26.14.0.80 jackson-jacs5056.army.mil jackson-jacs.army.mil
|
|
26.15.0.80 cptmas.arpa
|
|
26.16.0.80 navmeducalejeune.arpa
|
|
26.17.0.80 navmeducacherrypt.arpa
|
|
26.18.0.80 bragg-jacs5072.army.mil bragg-jacs.army.mil
|
|
26.19.0.80 ftbragg-ignet.army.mil bragg-ignet.army.mil
|
|
26.24.0.80 pope-piv-1.af.mil pope-piv-1.arpa
|
|
26.25.0.80 ftbragg-ignet2.army.mil bragg-ignet2.army.mil
|
|
26.26.0.80 ftbragg-ignet3.army.mil bragg-ignet3.army.mil
|
|
26.30.0.80 bragg-emh1.army.mil bragg.arpa
|
|
26.31.0.80 bragg-perddims.army.mil perddims10.arpa
|
|
26.0.0.81 carderock.mt.ddn.mil david-mil-tac.arpa
|
|
26.3.0.81 dtrc.dt.navy.mil dtrc.arpa
|
|
130.46.1.3 dtrc.dt.navy.mil dtrc.arpa
|
|
26.6.0.81 dmacsc.dma.mil dmaodshost.arpa
|
|
26.9.0.81 hqaaa.army.mil hqaaa.arpa
|
|
26.11.0.81 nardacdc002.arpa dcmail.arpa
|
|
26.20.0.81 wrair-emh1.army.mil ilcn-wreed.arpa wrair.arpa
|
|
26.2.0.82 buckner.mt.ddn.mil buckner-mil-tac.arpa
|
|
26.5.0.82 navmeducaokinawa.arpa
|
|
26.6.0.82 ncpds-butler.arpa
|
|
26.7.0.82 kadena-piv-1.af.mil kadena-piv-1.arpa
|
|
26.8.0.82 kadena-c01.af.mil kadena-c01.arpa
|
|
26.9.0.82 kadena-c02.af.mil kadena-c02.arpa
|
|
26.10.0.82 mtf-kadena.af.mil mtf-kadena.arpa
|
|
26.12.0.82 kadena-am2.af.mil kadena-am2.arpa
|
|
26.13.0.82 sac-misc3.af.mil sac-misc3.arpa
|
|
26.18.0.82 buckner-emh1.army.mil
|
|
26.0.0.83 robins2.mt.ddn.mil robins2-mil-tac.arpa
|
|
26.5.0.83 wr1.af.mil wr1.arpa
|
|
26.6.0.83 wrdis01.af.mil
|
|
26.7.0.83 edcars-wr.af.mil edcars-wr.arpa
|
|
26.8.0.83 aflc-wr-aisg1.af.mil aflc-wr-aisg1.arpa
|
|
26.9.0.83 dmmis-wr.af.mil dmmis-wr.arpa
|
|
26.10.0.83 robins-am1.af.mil robins-am1.arpa
|
|
26.11.0.83 kngtrf.navy.mil kngtrf.arpa
|
|
26.15.0.205 kngtrf.navy.mil kngtrf.arpa
|
|
26.12.0.83 moody-am1.af.mil moody-am1.arpa
|
|
26.13.0.83 robins-piv-2.af.mil
|
|
26.15.0.83 robins-pc3.af.mil robins-pc3.arpa
|
|
26.16.0.83 remis-wr.af.mil
|
|
26.2.0.84 dahlgren.mt.ddn.mil nswc-mil-tac.arpa
|
|
26.3.0.84 oas.nswc.navy.mil nswc-oas.arpa
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Letters to TAP Magazine
|
|
TAP Magazine Issue #101 December 1st 1990
|
|
|
|
|
|
In this issue we will try and answer some questions and the
|
|
ones we can't we hope that our readers can. So enjoy.
|
|
|
|
Dear TAP,
|
|
|
|
I got TAP #97 last week and GREATLY enjoyed reading it.
|
|
Highly informative. I wouldn't consider myself a hacker, but
|
|
your article "A beginners guide to hacking" makes it very
|
|
alluring (however, my hardware consists of a commodore 64
|
|
with a VIC-20 modem and cassette tape software). Is there any
|
|
hope? Should i change modems? The other articles were also
|
|
informative; I've already succeeded with the "Redneck Penny."
|
|
|
|
Austin, TX
|
|
|
|
Dear Austin,
|
|
|
|
Issue 97 was our first attempt at the digest size issue and
|
|
we liked it a lot better also. To answer your questions about
|
|
a commodore. The modem that has the most hacking and
|
|
phreaking software written for it is the c1670 modem. It is
|
|
made by commodore. They range in price from 50-80 dollars. It
|
|
depends on if you buy it locally or mail order. You would
|
|
also want to get a 1541 disk drive, many programs won't work
|
|
with a cassette tape. That should get you headed in the right
|
|
direction. I also think you will find "Phoneman" a very good
|
|
terminal program. It has many different tone emulators for
|
|
colored boxes.
|
|
|
|
Dear TAP,
|
|
|
|
I was wondering if it's possible to make a universal garage
|
|
door opener. Like the TV remotes that are universal and work
|
|
on any TV. This would allow you to open someones garage
|
|
without having a certain opener.
|
|
|
|
Dayton, OH
|
|
|
|
Dear Dayton,
|
|
|
|
I don't know the exact frequencies that garage door openers
|
|
run on, but i would assume that once found you could make an
|
|
adjustable one with a knob of some kind to increase or
|
|
decrease the range. If any reader can help please send the
|
|
range the frequencies run in, or help on how this could be
|
|
done.
|
|
|
|
Dear TAP,
|
|
|
|
I would like to know if it's possible to copy or pirate
|
|
nintendo games?
|
|
TAP Reply,
|
|
|
|
I have heard that nintendo games use a means of copy
|
|
protection. They have different eproms on about every 1,000
|
|
cartridges made. Thus making each lot different from all the
|
|
others. If you had a way to copy the eproms and burn them
|
|
into a blank one i guess it would work. But if they have copy
|
|
protection built in you would have to find a way to bypass
|
|
it.
|
|
|
|
Dear TAP,
|
|
|
|
Why don't you all put out an online type magazine like Phrack
|
|
or ATI does?
|
|
|
|
TAP Reply,
|
|
|
|
We have been thinking about doing this for a few months now.
|
|
As soon as all the staff has a computer and a modem we might
|
|
attempt something. It would have to be different from all the
|
|
rest though.
|
|
|
|
Dear TAP,
|
|
|
|
Was that really a picture of you guys on the cover of issue
|
|
99?
|
|
|
|
TAP Reply,
|
|
|
|
Nope, we found that picture on a telephone poll, but thought
|
|
what the hell, it would make a fancy cover.
|
|
|
|
Dear TAP,
|
|
|
|
How come 2600 never mentions you as being another hacker
|
|
publication in their mag?
|
|
|
|
TAP Reply,
|
|
|
|
I guess they have something against us. Maybe they don't know
|
|
we exist. Ask Eric Corley i don't know...
|
|
|
|
Dear TAP,
|
|
|
|
How can you publish this stuff without the PHeds arresting
|
|
you for doing it?
|
|
|
|
TAP Reply,
|
|
|
|
We gave them some donuts filled with brainwashing grape jelly
|
|
and they don't know we exist.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dear TAP,
|
|
|
|
How can you guys publish for free? I like the mag and enjoy
|
|
reading it but wonder how you guys do it?
|
|
|
|
Arizona
|
|
|
|
Dear Arizona,
|
|
|
|
Well as you might have seen, TAP is no longer free. It was jst to expensive
|
|
to keep giving it away. Subscriptions are just $10.00 for 10 issues. USA
|
|
price. Other rates have not been decided yet. Write for info.
|
|
|
|
Dear TAP,
|
|
|
|
I have written many articles how do i get them published in
|
|
TAP magazine?
|
|
|
|
Milwaukee, WI
|
|
|
|
Dear Milwaukee,
|
|
|
|
We would like to get many article from our readers. We can't
|
|
print them all, some might not fit our format or be up to par
|
|
with what we would use, but feel free to send us anything you
|
|
think we might like reading. Newspaper clippings can also be
|
|
useful to let us know whats going on in your area.
|
|
|
|
Dear TAP,
|
|
With all the stuff about Operation Sundevil why didn't you
|
|
have any info on it?
|
|
|
|
Dallas, TX
|
|
|
|
Dear Dallas,
|
|
|
|
We thought since it was in and on most everything else we
|
|
would save you from the effort of reading it all over again.
|
|
We cannot take a stand unless we know both sides of the story
|
|
and with the federal cover ups and changing stories every
|
|
week we just see it as another massive scare tactic. If for
|
|
some reason you have been on an island or in a cave you can
|
|
find info on Sundevil in CUD, 2600, Phrack, newspapers and
|
|
just about every online service out there.
|
|
|
|
Well that about wraps up the questions for now. Our next
|
|
issue will be back to regular stories and columns. Until then
|
|
may the feds be confused on the way to your door.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*
|
|
Hacking Answering Machines 1990
|
|
*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*/*
|
|
by: Predat0r of Blitzkrieg Bbs 502/499-8933
|
|
|
|
|
|
AT&T reports that in the year 1990, 11 million people
|
|
will buy an answering machine for their home use. In 1989, 10
|
|
million machines were sold. Everyone has called up a person
|
|
at one time or another and got the old "leave your name at
|
|
the beep" message. With this increase in homes using these
|
|
machines there is also a new form of hacking developing. One
|
|
of hacking an answering machine.
|
|
|
|
Why would anyone even want to hack an answering machine
|
|
and for what purpose? There are many reasons and things you
|
|
can do once you have control of someone elses machine. If for
|
|
some reason you need to spy on a business or person you can
|
|
hack their machine and take control using the information for
|
|
your own personal use. There is also the old "change the
|
|
message" secret to make it say something to the effect of
|
|
this line accepts all toll charges so you can bill third
|
|
party calls to that number. You can also use an answering
|
|
machine for your own personal use, as in making it your own
|
|
voice mail type system for people to call. Only do this if
|
|
you know someone is out of town. If they come home from
|
|
shopping and find their machine changed it might cause
|
|
problems. With these basic ideas in mind you can see hacking
|
|
an answering machine could be very useful to certain
|
|
individuals.
|
|
|
|
How can a person hack an answering machine? Well most
|
|
answering machines built now have remote access features
|
|
which allow the owner, or anyone to call in and press a
|
|
security code to play their messages. This is where the fun
|
|
begins. Some older models don't have remote access so you
|
|
cannot do anything to them. Also if you know someone has a
|
|
machine but you call and it doesn't answer, let the phone
|
|
ring about 15 times. This will tell the machine to turn
|
|
itself on, so you can hack it. The actual number varies
|
|
between machines.
|
|
|
|
To practice hacking some machines i will show you how to
|
|
get remote access on a few models. Just look and see what
|
|
kind your friend has and hack it for starters.
|
|
|
|
Record a Call- Model 2120
|
|
-------------------------
|
|
Call in and during the message or after the beep tone to
|
|
leave a message enter the 3 digit security code. Which you
|
|
must find yourself. This will rewind the tape and play all
|
|
new messages. Press 2 to backspace and repeat the last
|
|
message. Press 3 to fast foward the tape.
|
|
|
|
Changing your message from remote. Call your phone and enter
|
|
the secret code. After several rapid beeps enter your secret
|
|
code again. After a short delay you will hear a long tone.
|
|
After the tone ends begin speaking your message which may be
|
|
17 seconds in length. When finished press the second digit of
|
|
your secret code to end. The machine will then save your
|
|
message and play it back. To turn the unit on from remote let
|
|
it ring 11 times then hangup. Or stay on and it will answer
|
|
so you can access the machine. For express calls or frequent
|
|
calls hit the second digit for two seconds to skip the out
|
|
going message announcement.
|
|
|
|
Goldstar- Models 6000/6100
|
|
--------------------------
|
|
Call and enter your 1 digit secret code after you hear the
|
|
out going message announcement. The machine will then play
|
|
back new messages. Hangup to save messages or after all
|
|
messages have been played the machine will give a double
|
|
beeptone, you may enter your code to erase all messages.
|
|
You cannot change the out going message on this unit.
|
|
|
|
Cobra- Model AN-8521
|
|
--------------------
|
|
For this machine there are 2 codes. Both are one digit in
|
|
length. The first one is the play code. The second is to
|
|
erase messages from remote. After the outgoing message and
|
|
beeptone press the play code for 2 seconds to play messages.
|
|
After each message ends there will be a single beep. At the
|
|
end of all message it will beep twice. You may then do the
|
|
following. Replay by pressing the play code again. Erase
|
|
messages by pressing the erase code. Hang-up and save
|
|
messages and continue to take additional calls. To turn this
|
|
unit on from remote you must let it ring 16 times before it
|
|
will activate. If it rings 10 times then you hear 3 beeps it
|
|
is full and messages need to be erased.
|
|
|
|
Uniden- Model AM 464
|
|
--------------------
|
|
This model is one of the more advanced when it comes to
|
|
remote capabilities. The factory preset security code is 747.
|
|
This can be changed to as many as five digits of your choice.
|
|
To gain access from remote type your security code while the
|
|
outgoing message is playing. Press 1 after hearing the tone
|
|
and the machine will rewind and play your messages. To fast
|
|
foward press 7, to resume normal playback press 8. To stop
|
|
the messages from playing press 8 again. Press 8 to restart
|
|
the messages or 1 to start from the beginning again. Press 9
|
|
to rewind and 8 to resume playing. If you rewind all the way
|
|
it will beep twice. You need to press 1 to play messages.To
|
|
save messages press 4. To erase press 6. To turn the machine
|
|
off from remote press 5 after all messages have been played
|
|
and the machine beeps twice. To turn the machine on from
|
|
remote let the phone ring 12 to 14 times. The machine will
|
|
beep and then you enter your remote code. This will then turn
|
|
your machine to answer mode. This machine also has room
|
|
monitor options. This allows you to listen to what is going
|
|
on in the room of the machine. To do this call the machine
|
|
enter your security code after the beep press 0. The monitor
|
|
stays on for 60 seconds. You will be warned with 2 beeps at
|
|
45 seconds. To continue press 0 again.To change the outgoing
|
|
message from remote erase all the messages. Then call back
|
|
and enter your code after the tone press 3. It will beep
|
|
again and you may then leave your new message. Press 3 when
|
|
finished. To change the security code from remote after the
|
|
beep press # then 1 after the next beep enter your new code
|
|
followed by the # again. There is also a call break through
|
|
where you enter 256 while the outgoing message is playing.
|
|
This will alarm the persons in the house someone is calling
|
|
with a series of loud beeps. Press the * key to stop.
|
|
|
|
Code-a-phone Model 930
|
|
----------------------
|
|
To access from remote call and enter your security code after
|
|
the announcement and tone. Press your code for 3 full
|
|
seconds. After the new messages have been played you will
|
|
hear 2 tones. You may then save messages by pressing your
|
|
code then hanging up. repeat by entering code wait for 4
|
|
tones then enter code again. To erase message hangup when the
|
|
tape is done playing. To turn the machine on from remote call
|
|
and let ring ten times. When the system answers it will have
|
|
a two second tone. Press your security code. You will hear
|
|
three double tones to let you know the system is on.
|
|
|
|
Unisonic- Model 8720
|
|
--------------------
|
|
One digit code entered after the outgoing message and tone
|
|
will allow you to hear messages. To change message wait till
|
|
all new messages have been played 2 beep tones will be heard.
|
|
Press code for four seconds. Two beeps will be heard then the
|
|
tape will rewind and beep again. Now leave the new message.
|
|
Press your code when finished to save new outgoing message.
|
|
New message will play for you to hear.
|
|
|
|
Panasonic- Model KX-T2427
|
|
-------------------------
|
|
Call and enter the three digit code during the outgoing
|
|
message. Machine will beep once, then beep amount of times
|
|
equal to messages. Then rewind and play messages. There will
|
|
be three beeps after the last message. Six beeps means the
|
|
tape is full. Press 2 to foward. Press 1 to rewind. Press 3
|
|
to reset machine and erase messages. To monitor the room
|
|
press 5 after the beeps indicating the number of messages the
|
|
machine has. Press 7 to change the outgoing message, it will
|
|
beep a few quick times rewind then a long beep will be heard.
|
|
Leave new message press 9 when finished. Press 0 right after
|
|
the beep tones to shut the machine off. To turn the machine
|
|
on let it ring 15 times then hangup after machine turns on.
|
|
|
|
Panasonic- Model KX-T2385d
|
|
--------------------------
|
|
During the outgoing message enter the 1 digit code. This will
|
|
playback messages. Press the code again to rewind. After the
|
|
messages have played the machine will beep three times. Press
|
|
your code again and it will reset the machine. For remote
|
|
turn on let phone ring 15 times. Then after the outgoing
|
|
message hangup.
|
|
|
|
AT&T- Model 1504
|
|
----------------
|
|
Enter 2 digit code before or after announcement. System will
|
|
beep after each message and five times when messages are
|
|
done. Press the # key anytime to pause. Hanging up will save
|
|
messages. Press 7 and it will rewind and play messages again.
|
|
Press 5 to fast foward. Press 2 to rewind. Press 33 after all
|
|
messages have been played to reset without saving messages.
|
|
To record onto the tape press * after the system answers.
|
|
This will then beep and you may leave a four minute message
|
|
on the tape. Press # when done. This is not an outgoing
|
|
message announcement, only a memo. To turn on from remote let
|
|
ring ten times press 0 when system answers. To turn the
|
|
system off dial and enter your code. Press 88 and it will
|
|
shut the machine down.
|
|
|
|
Phonemate- Model 4050
|
|
---------------------
|
|
Enter your 3 digit code during the outgoing message. Pressing
|
|
* or # will allow you to scan through the messages. When
|
|
finished pressing 1 will replay the messages. Pressing 2 will
|
|
erase them. To turn on from remote let ring for 15 times.
|
|
Then proceed with remote operations.
|
|
|
|
Phonemate- Model 7200
|
|
---------------------
|
|
Enter 1 digit code during of after the outgoing message. A
|
|
voice will tell you how many messages you have, then play
|
|
them back for you. To rewind press your code and hold it for
|
|
however long you want to rewind. Let go and it will resume
|
|
playing. After the last message a voice will prompt you with
|
|
a list of options. You have five seconds to respond or it
|
|
will proceed to the next option. These are as follows. The
|
|
first is hanging up to save messages. Next is enter code to
|
|
replay messages. Next enter code to erase messages. Last is
|
|
enter code to change greeting. Follow the voice and it will
|
|
give you complete directions on exact steps to follow. To
|
|
turn on from remote let ring ten times then hang up. If tape
|
|
is full it will say sorry tape is full, enter code and erase
|
|
messages.
|
|
|
|
Spectra Phone- Model ITD300
|
|
---------------------------
|
|
Enter your 1 digit code after the greeting. Messages will
|
|
play back. Hanging up will save them. Or wait for four beeps
|
|
and press your code to replay them. To erase press your code
|
|
after 2 beeps. To turn the machine on from remote let it ring
|
|
10 times.
|
|
|
|
Notes: Outgoing message and greeting is what you hear when
|
|
you first call. Code is your personal security code.
|
|
|
|
Hacking answering machines can be very easy. It can also help
|
|
you obtain valuable information. If you have a targeted
|
|
machine you can try going to a store and saying you just
|
|
bought one and it didn't have instructions in the box. They
|
|
will usually give you a set or make copies for you. This
|
|
basic guide is just to introduce you to answering machine
|
|
hacking and changing the outgoing message and listening to
|
|
messages left by callers. To keep your own machine safe
|
|
purchase one with a changeable security code of 3 or more
|
|
digits. Most home machines are of the 1 digit type and are
|
|
easy to hack. I have no knwoledge of the laws concerning
|
|
hacking into someones answering machine. I am sure once it
|
|
becomes more common we will find out. Of course this article
|
|
is for informational purposes only so you would never have to
|
|
find out the actual laws.
|
|
|
|
Taken from TAP Magazine Issue #100
|
|
|
|
NASA
|
|
REVISED
|
|
SPACE SHUTTLE MISSION STS-35
|
|
PRESS KIT
|
|
|
|
DECEMBER 1990
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
PUBLIC AFFAIRS CONTACTS
|
|
|
|
Mark Hess/Ed Campion
|
|
Office of Space Flight
|
|
NASA Headquarters, Washington, D.C.
|
|
(Phone: 202/453-8536)
|
|
|
|
Paula Cleggett-Haleim/Michael Braukus
|
|
Office of Space Science and Applications
|
|
NASA Headquarters, Washington, D.C.
|
|
(Phone: 202/453-1548)
|
|
|
|
Terri Sindelar
|
|
Educational Affairs
|
|
NASA Headquarters, Washington, D.C.
|
|
(Phone: 202/453-8400)
|
|
|
|
Nancy Lovato
|
|
Ames-Dryden Flight Research Facility, Edwards, Calif.
|
|
(Phone: 805/258-3448)
|
|
Randee Exler
|
|
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
|
|
(Phone: 301/286-7277)
|
|
|
|
James Hartsfield
|
|
Johnson Space Center, Houston
|
|
(Phone: 713/483-5111)
|
|
|
|
Lisa Malone/Pat Phillips
|
|
Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
|
|
(Phone: 407/867-2468)
|
|
|
|
Jean Drummond Clough
|
|
Langley Research Center, Hampton, Va.
|
|
(Phone: 804/864-6122)
|
|
|
|
David Drachlis/Jerry Berg
|
|
Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala.
|
|
(Phone: 205/544-0034)
|
|
|
|
# # # #
|
|
|
|
CONTENTS
|
|
|
|
GENERAL RELEASE 1
|
|
|
|
SUMMARY OF MAJOR ACTIVITIES 2
|
|
|
|
STS-35 CARGO CONFIGURATION 3
|
|
|
|
STS-35 QUICK LOOK FACTS 4
|
|
|
|
GENERAL INFORMATION 5
|
|
|
|
TRAJECTORY SEQUENCE OF EVENTS 6
|
|
|
|
SPACE SHUTTLE ABORT MODES 6
|
|
|
|
PAYLOAD AND VEHICLE WEIGHTS 7
|
|
|
|
STS-35 PRELAUNCH PROCESSING 7
|
|
|
|
ASTRO-1 MISSION 8
|
|
|
|
ASTRO-1 OBSERVATORY 12
|
|
Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope 12
|
|
Wisconsin Ultraviolet Photo-Polarimeter Experiment 15
|
|
Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope 17
|
|
|
|
|
|
BROAD BAND X-RAY TELESCOPE 19
|
|
|
|
ASTRO CARRIER SYSTEMS 22
|
|
|
|
ASTRO OPERATIONS 25
|
|
|
|
ASTRO GROUND CONTROL 27
|
|
|
|
ASTRO-1 HISTORY 29
|
|
|
|
SHUTTLE AMATEUR RADIO EXPERIMENT (SAREX) 30
|
|
|
|
STS-35 COLUMBIA SAREX FREQUENCIES 32
|
|
|
|
"SPACE CLASSROOM, ASSIGNMENT: THE STARS" 32
|
|
|
|
ORBITER EXPERIMENTS PROGRAM 33
|
|
|
|
STS-35 CREW BIOGRAPHIES 36
|
|
|
|
STS-35 MISSION MANAGEMENT 38
|
|
|
|
UPCOMING SPACE SHUTTLE FLIGHTS 40
|
|
|
|
PREVIOUS SPACE SHUTTLE FLIGHTS 41
|
|
|
|
# # # #
|
|
|
|
GENERAL RELEASE
|
|
|
|
RELEASE: 90-63
|
|
|
|
COLUMBIA TO FLY ASTRONOMY MISSION
|
|
|
|
Highlighting mission STS-35, the 38th flight of the Space Shuttle
|
|
and 10th mission of orbiter Columbia, will be around-the-clock
|
|
observations by the seven-member crew using the ultraviolet astronomy
|
|
observatory (Astro) and the Broad Band X-Ray Telescope (BBXRT). Both
|
|
instruments are located in Columbia's payload bay and will be operated
|
|
during 12-hour shifts by the crew.
|
|
|
|
Above Earth's atmospheric interference, Astro-1 will observe and
|
|
measure ultraviolet radiation from celestial objects. Astro-1 is the first in
|
|
a series of missions that will make precise measurements of objects such
|
|
as planets, stars and galaxies in relatively small fields of view.
|
|
|
|
Liftoff of the 10th flight of Columbia is scheduled for the week of
|
|
Dec. 2, 1990 from launch pad 39B at the Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
|
|
Columbia will be placed into a 218 statute (190 nautical) mile circular
|
|
orbit, inclined 28.5 degrees to the equator. Nominal mission duration is
|
|
expected to be 9 days 21 hours 57 minutes. Landing will take place at
|
|
Edwards Air Force Base, Calif.
|
|
|
|
Astro-1 uses a Spacelab pallet system with an instrument pointing
|
|
system and a cruciform structure for bearing the three ultraviolet
|
|
instruments mounted in parallel configuration. The three instruments
|
|
are the Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope (HUT), the Wisconsin Ultraviolet
|
|
Photo-polarimeter Experiment (WUPPE) and the Ultraviolet Imaging
|
|
Telescope (UIT). The star tracker, which supports the instrument
|
|
pointing system, also is mounted on the cruciform.
|
|
|
|
HUT will study faint astronomical objects such as quasars, active
|
|
galactic nuclei and supernova remnants in the little-explored ultraviolet
|
|
range below 1200 Angstroms. It consists of a mirror that focuses on an
|
|
aperture of a prime focus spectrograph. Observations of the outer planets
|
|
of the solar system will be made to investigate aurorae and gain insight
|
|
into the interaction of each planet's magnetosphere with the solar wind.
|
|
|
|
WUPPE will measure the polarization of ultraviolet light from
|
|
celestial objects such as hot stars, galactic nuclei and quasars. It uses
|
|
two-mirror telescope optics in conjunction with a spectropolarimeter.
|
|
This instrument will measure the polarization by splitting a beam of light
|
|
into two mutually-perpendicular planes of polarization, passing the beams
|
|
through a spectrometer and focusing the beams on two separate array
|
|
detectors.
|
|
|
|
UIT consists of a telescope and two image intensifiers with 70 mm
|
|
film transports (1000 frames each). It will acquire images of faint objects
|
|
in broad ultraviolet bands in the wavelength range of 1200 to 3200
|
|
Angstroms. This experiment also will investigate the present stellar
|
|
content and history of star formation in galaxies, the nature of spiral
|
|
structure and non-thermal sources in galaxies.
|
|
|
|
Also in the payload bay is the Broad Band X-Ray Telescope which
|
|
has two co-aligned imaging telescopes with cryogenically cooled lithium-
|
|
drifted silicon detectors at each focus. Accurate pointing of the
|
|
instrument is achieved by a two-axis pointing system (TAPS).
|
|
|
|
BBXRT will study various targets, including active galaxies, clusters
|
|
of galaxies, supernova remnants and stars. BBXRT will directly measure
|
|
the amount of energy in electron volts of each X-ray detected.
|
|
|
|
Astro observations will begin about 23 hours after Columbia has
|
|
completed its maneuvering burn to circularize its orbit at 190 nautical
|
|
miles. BBXRT will be activated approximately 13 hours after orbital
|
|
insertion. Astro will be deactivated 12 hours before deorbit and BBXRT
|
|
deactivation will be 4 hours before the deorbit burn.
|
|
|
|
Columbia's middeck will carry the Shuttle Amateur Radio
|
|
Experiment (SAREX) to communicate with amateur radio stations within
|
|
line-of-sight of the orbiter in voice mode or data mode. This experiment
|
|
has previously flown on STS-9 and STS-51F. Also on this mission,
|
|
Columbia will function as the subject for ground sensor operations as part
|
|
of the Air Force Maui Optical Site (AMOS) calibration test.
|
|
|
|
Commander of the seven-member crew is Vance Brand. Pilot is
|
|
Guy Gardner. STS-35 is Brand's fourth trip to space. He previously flew
|
|
on the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project mission in 1975. He also commanded
|
|
Shuttle missions STS-5 in November 1982 and STS-41B in February
|
|
1984. Gardner previously piloted STS-27 in December 1988.
|
|
|
|
Mission Specialists are Mike Lounge, Jeffrey Hoffman and Robert
|
|
Parker. Lounge previously flew on STS-51I in August 1985 and STS-26
|
|
in September 1988. Hoffman flew as a Mission Specialist on STS-51D in
|
|
April 1985. Parker's previous spaceflight experience was STS-9 in
|
|
November 1983.
|
|
|
|
Payload Specialists Ronald Parise and Samuel Durrance round out
|
|
the STS-35 crew. Both are making their first space flights.
|
|
|
|
|
|
# # # #
|
|
|
|
|
|
SUMMARY OF MAJOR ACTIVITIES
|
|
|
|
Day One
|
|
Ascent
|
|
Post-insertion
|
|
Unstow Cabin
|
|
Astro/BBXRT Activation
|
|
SAREX Setup
|
|
DSO
|
|
|
|
Day Two
|
|
Astro/BBXRT Observations
|
|
SAREX
|
|
|
|
Day Three
|
|
Astro/BBXRT Observations
|
|
SAREX
|
|
|
|
Day Four
|
|
AMOS
|
|
Astro/BBXRT Observations
|
|
SAREX
|
|
|
|
Day FIVE
|
|
AMOS
|
|
Astro/BBXRT Observations
|
|
SAREX
|
|
Space Classroom
|
|
|
|
Day Six
|
|
Astro/BBXRT Observations
|
|
SAREX
|
|
|
|
Day Seven
|
|
Astro/BBXRT Observations
|
|
RCS Hotfire
|
|
|
|
Day Eight
|
|
Astro/BBXRT Observations
|
|
SAREX
|
|
DTO
|
|
FCS Checkout
|
|
|
|
Day Nine
|
|
Astro/BBXRT Observations
|
|
SAREX
|
|
SAREX Stow
|
|
Astro/BBXRT Deactivation
|
|
Cabin Stow
|
|
Deorbit Burn
|
|
Landing at Edwards AFB
|
|
|
|
# # # #
|
|
|
|
STS-35 QUICK LOOK
|
|
|
|
Launch Date: December 2, 1990
|
|
Launch Window: 1:24 a.m. - 3:54 a.m. EST
|
|
Launch Site: Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
|
|
Launch Complex 39-B
|
|
Orbiter: Columbia (OV-102)
|
|
Altitude: 218 statute miles (190 nm)
|
|
Inclination: 28.45
|
|
Duration: 9 days, 21 hours, 57 minutes
|
|
Landing Date/Time: Dec. 11, 1990, 8:21 p.m. PST
|
|
|
|
|
|
Primary Landing Site: Edwards Air Force Base, Calif.
|
|
|
|
Abort Landing Sites: Return to Launch Site -- Kennedy Space
|
|
Center, Fla.
|
|
Trans-Atlantic Abort -- Banjul, The Gambia
|
|
Abort Once Around -- Edwards AFB, Calif.
|
|
|
|
Crew Vance D. Brand - Commander - Red/Blue Team
|
|
Guy S. Gardner - Pilot - Red Team
|
|
Jeffrey A. Hoffman - Mission Specialist 1/EV1 - Blue Team
|
|
John M. "Mike" Lounge - Mission Specialist 2/EV2 - Blue Team
|
|
Robert A.R. Parker - Mission Specialist 3 - Red Team
|
|
Samuel T. Durrance - Payload Specialist 1 - Blue Team
|
|
Ronald A. Parise - Payload Specialist 2 - Red Team
|
|
|
|
Red Team shift is approximately 10:30 p.m. -- 10:30 a.m. EST
|
|
Blue Team shift is approximately 10:30 a.m. -- 10:30 p.m. EST
|
|
|
|
Cargo Bay Payloads: Ultraviolet Astronomy Telescope (Astro)
|
|
Broad Band X-Ray Telescope (BBXRT)
|
|
|
|
Middeck Payloads: Air Force Maui Optical Site (AMOS)
|
|
Shuttle Amateur Radio Experiment (SAREX)
|
|
|
|
# # # #
|
|
|
|
GENERAL INFORMATION
|
|
|
|
|
|
NASA Select Television Transmission
|
|
|
|
NASA Select television is available on Satcom F-2R, Transponder 13,
|
|
C-band located at 72 degrees west longitude, frequency 3960.0 MHz,
|
|
vertical polarization, audio monaural 6.8 MHz.
|
|
|
|
The schedule for tv transmissions from the orbiter and for the
|
|
change-of-shift briefings from Johnson Space Center, Houston, will be
|
|
available during the mission at Kennedy Space Center, Fla.; Marshall
|
|
Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala.; Johnson Space Center; Goddard
|
|
Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. and NASA Headquarters,
|
|
Washington, D.C. The schedule will be updated daily to reflect changes
|
|
dictated by mission operations.
|
|
|
|
TV schedules also may be obtained by calling COMSTOR, 713/483-
|
|
5817. COMSTOR is a computer data base service requiring the use of a
|
|
telephone modem. Voice updates of the TV schedule may be obtained by
|
|
dialing 202/755-1788. This service is updated daily at noon EDT.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Status Reports
|
|
|
|
Status reports on countdown and mission progress, on-orbit activities
|
|
and landing operations will be produced by the appropriate NASA news
|
|
center.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Briefings
|
|
|
|
An STS-35 mission press briefing schedule will be issued prior to
|
|
launch. During the mission, flight control personnel will be on 8-hour
|
|
shifts. Change-of-shift briefings by the off-going flight director will occur
|
|
at approximately 8-hour intervals.
|
|
|
|
TRAJECTORY SEQUENCE OF EVENTS
|
|
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
RELATIVE
|
|
EVENT MET VELOCITY MACH ALTITUDE
|
|
(d:h:m:s) (fps)
|
|
(ft)
|
|
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Launch 00/00:00:00
|
|
|
|
Begin Roll Maneuver 00/00:00:09 162 .14 613
|
|
|
|
End Roll Maneuver 00/00:00:16 340 .30 2,505
|
|
|
|
SSME Throttle Down to 70% 00/00:00:26 608 .54 6,759
|
|
|
|
Max. Dyn. Pressure (Max Q) 00/00:00:54 1,229 1.17 28,976
|
|
|
|
SSME Throttle Up to 104% 00/00:01:03 1,473 1.46 39,394
|
|
|
|
SRB Staging 00/00:02:05 4,203 3.87 150,267
|
|
|
|
Negative Return 00/00:03:58 6,940 7.58 309,526
|
|
|
|
Main Engine Cutoff (MECO) 00/00:08:31 24,439 22.99 360,922
|
|
|
|
Zero Thrust 00/00:08:37 24,556 22.73 363,937
|
|
|
|
ET Separation 00/00:08:49
|
|
|
|
OMS 2 Burn 00/00:40:22
|
|
|
|
Landing 09/21:57
|
|
|
|
Apogee, Perigee at MECO: 185 x 33
|
|
Apogee, Perigee post-OMS 2: 190 x 190
|
|
|
|
# # # #
|
|
|
|
SPACE SHUTTLE ABORT MODES
|
|
|
|
Space Shuttle launch abort philosophy aims toward safe and intact
|
|
recovery of the flight crew, orbiter and its payload.
|
|
|
|
Abort modes include:
|
|
|
|
* Abort-To-Orbit (ATO) -- Partial loss of main engine thrust late enough
|
|
to permit reaching a minimal 105-nautical mile orbit with orbital
|
|
maneuvering system engines.
|
|
|
|
* Abort-Once-Around (AOA) -- Earlier main engine shutdown with the
|
|
capability to allow one orbit around before landing at Edwards Air
|
|
Force Base, Calif.; White Sands Space Harbor (Northrup Strip), N.M.;
|
|
or the Shuttle Landing Facility (SLF) at Kennedy Space Center, Fla..
|
|
|
|
* Trans-Atlantic Abort Landing (TAL) -- Loss of two main engines midway
|
|
through powered flight would force a landing at Banjul, The Gambia;
|
|
Ben Guerir, Morocco; or Moron, Spain.
|
|
|
|
* Return-To-Launch-Site (RTLS) -- Early shutdown of one or more engines
|
|
and without enough energy to reach Banjul would result in a pitch
|
|
around and thrust back toward KSC until within gliding distance of the
|
|
SLF.
|
|
|
|
STS-35 contingency landing sites are Edwards AFB, White Sands,
|
|
Kennedy Space Center, Banjul and Ben Guerir, Moron.
|
|
|
|
# # # #
|
|
|
|
PAYLOAD AND VEHICLE WEIGHTS
|
|
|
|
Vehicle/Payload Weight (lbs)
|
|
|
|
Orbiter Columbia empty 158,905
|
|
|
|
Ultraviolet Astronomy Telescope (Astro) 17,276
|
|
(IPS, igloo and 2 pallets)
|
|
|
|
Astro Support Equipment 404
|
|
(middeck equipment)
|
|
|
|
Broad Band X-Ray Telescope ((BBXRT) 8,650
|
|
(including TAPS and support equipment)
|
|
|
|
Detailed Test Objectives (DTO) 274
|
|
|
|
Shuttle Amateur Radio Experiment (SAREX) 61
|
|
|
|
Total vehicle at SRB ignition 4,523,199
|
|
|
|
Orbiter and cargo at main engine cutoff 267,513
|
|
|
|
Orbiter landing weight 225,886
|
|
|
|
# # # #
|
|
|
|
STS-35 PRELAUNCH PROCESSING
|
|
Columbia's first launch attempt on May 29 was scrubbed because of
|
|
higher than allowable concentrations of hydrogen near the 17-inch
|
|
disconnect and in the aft compartment. Since that time, there have been
|
|
several launch attempts and two tanking tests.
|
|
|
|
After the first tanking test on June 6, officials decided to replace the
|
|
17-inch disconnect assemblies on both the orbiter and its external tank.
|
|
Columbia was rolled back to the Vehicle Assembly Building June 11,
|
|
demated from the external tank and transferred to the Orbiter
|
|
Processing Facility. A new disconnect from the shuttle Endeavour was
|
|
installed on Columbia and the orbiter and tank were remated.
|
|
|
|
Columbia was rolled out to Pad 39-A on Aug. 9 for launch.
|
|
|
|
The countdown began and launch was postponed on Aug. 30 to allow
|
|
the replacement of an electronic box for the Broad Band X-Ray
|
|
Telescope. Launch was scrubbed on Sept. 5 because of higher than
|
|
allowable concentrations of hydrogen in the aft compartment.
|
|
|
|
Another attempted launch occurred on Sept. 17, but again hydrogen
|
|
was detected in the aft compartment.
|
|
|
|
A board was appointed to find the cause of the leak. At the board's
|
|
direction, several main propulsion system seals were replaced, many leak
|
|
tests using gaseous helium were performed and various joints were
|
|
retorqued. In addition, the team completed a thorough analysis of data
|
|
collected from the tanking tests and reviewed all work performed on the
|
|
orbiter's propulsion system since Columbia's last flight.
|
|
|
|
The STS-35 vehicle was moved from Pad 39-A to 39-B on Oct. 8,
|
|
following the successful launch of Discovery on Mission STS-41. The
|
|
next day, Columbia was transferred back to the Vehicle Assembly
|
|
Building because adverse weather prevented productive work in the aft
|
|
compartment. On Oct. 14, the vehicle was rolled out to Pad 39-B, and
|
|
specially outfitted for the successful tank ing test conducted Oct. 30.
|
|
|
|
The successful tanking test paved the way for routine launch
|
|
preparations leading up to Columbia's planned liftoff.
|
|
|
|
# # # #
|
|
|
|
THE ASTRO-1 MISSION
|
|
|
|
Since the earliest days of astronomy, humankind has used the light
|
|
from the stars to test their understanding of the universe. Now, an array
|
|
of telescopes to be flown on the first Spacelab mission since 1985, will
|
|
extend scientists' vision beyond the visible light to view some of the most
|
|
energetic events in the universe.
|
|
|
|
Astro-1 is the first Spacelab mission devoted to a single scientific
|
|
discipline -- astrophysics. The observatory will operate from within the
|
|
cargo bay of Space Shuttle Columbia on the STS-35 mission. Together,
|
|
four telescopes will dissect ultraviolet light and X-rays from stars and
|
|
galaxies, revealing the secrets of processes that emitted the radiation
|
|
from thousands to even billions of years ago. Wherever it points, Astro
|
|
promises to reveal an array of information.
|
|
|
|
The Astro-1 Spacelab project is managed by NASA's Marshall Space
|
|
Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Seeing the Universe
|
|
Astronomy from the ground always has been hampered by the
|
|
Earth's atmosphere. Even visible light is distorted and blurred by the
|
|
motion of air masse, and visible light is just a small part of the radiation
|
|
that virtually all objects in the sky emit. Other forms of radiation -- like
|
|
cooler, low-energy infrared light and hotter, high-energy ultraviolet light
|
|
and X-rays -- are largely absorbed by the atmosphere and never reach the
|
|
ground.
|
|
|
|
Seeing celestial objects in visible light alone is like looking at a
|
|
painting in only one color. To appreciate fully the meaning of the
|
|
painting, viewers must see it in all of its colors.
|
|
|
|
The Astro-1 telescopes were constructed to add some of these
|
|
"colors" to scientists' view of stars and galaxies. The telescopes' perch
|
|
above the veil of Earth's atmosphere in Columbia's cargo bay will allow
|
|
scientists to view radiation that is invisible on the ground.
|
|
|
|
Three of Astro-1's telescopes will operate in the ultraviolet portion
|
|
of the spectrum and one in the X-ray portion. One will take photographs;
|
|
two will analyze the chemical composition, density and temperature of
|
|
objects with a spectrograph; and the other will study the relative
|
|
brightness and polarization (the study of light wavelength orientation) of
|
|
celestial objects. Some sources will be among the faintest known, as faint
|
|
as the glow of sunlight reflected back from interplanetary dust.
|
|
|
|
By studying ultraviolet and X-rays, astronomers can see emissions
|
|
from extremely hot gases, intense magnetic fields and other high-energy
|
|
phenomena that are much fainter in visible and infrared light or in radio
|
|
waves -- and which are crucial to a deeper understanding of the universe.
|
|
|
|
Several space telescopes -- notably the Orbiting Astronomical
|
|
Observatory-3 (Copernicus) launched in 1972, the International
|
|
Ultraviolet Explorer launched in 1978 and the second High Energy
|
|
Astronomy Observatory launched in 1979 -- opened the window in these
|
|
exciting parts of the spectrum. The combined observations by Astro, the
|
|
Hubble Space Telescope and ground-based observatories will provide
|
|
astronomers with a more comprehensive view of the cosmos than ever
|
|
before.
|
|
|
|
|
|
What Astro-1 Will "See"
|
|
|
|
The universe viewed by Astro will look strikingly different from the
|
|
familiar night sky. Most stars will fade from view, too cool to emit
|
|
significant ultraviolet radiation or X-rays. Yet, very young massive stars,
|
|
very old stars, glowing nebulae, active galaxies and quasars will gleam
|
|
brightly.
|
|
|
|
Astro will make observations in this solar system. Astro will examine
|
|
the chemistry of planetary atmospheres and the interactions of their
|
|
magnetic fields. The Astro observatory will study comets as they interact
|
|
with light and particles from the sun to produce bright, streaming tails.
|
|
|
|
Stars
|
|
|
|
Astro will peer far beyond this solar system to study many types of
|
|
stars. The sun is only one of an estimated several hundred billion stars in
|
|
the galaxy. Stars like the sun are the most common type: fiery spheres of
|
|
gas, about 1 million times larger in volume than Earth, with nuclear
|
|
furnaces that reach temperatures of millions of degrees.
|
|
|
|
Today, current evidence indicates that the sun is a stable, middle-
|
|
aged star, but some 5 billion years hence it will swell and swallow the
|
|
inner planets including Earth. As a red giant, it may eject a shell of dust
|
|
and gas, a planetary nebula. As the sun fades, it will collapse to an object
|
|
no bigger than Earth, a dense, hot ember, a white dwarf. Astronomers
|
|
predict that most stars may end their lives as white dwarfs, so it is
|
|
important to study these stellar remains. White dwarfs emit most of their
|
|
radiation in the ultraviolet, and one of Astro-1's main goals is to locate
|
|
and examine white dwarfs in detail.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Supernova
|
|
|
|
Astro-1 instruments will locate hot, massive stars of all ages so that
|
|
astronomers can study all phases of stellar evolution. Stars with 10 to 100
|
|
times more mass than the sun burn hydrogen rapidly until their cores
|
|
collapse and they explode as supernovas, among the most powerful events
|
|
in the universe. These stars are initially are very hot and emit mostly
|
|
ultraviolet radiation.
|
|
|
|
Astro will view the recent explosion, Supernova 1987A, which
|
|
spewed stellar debris into space. Supernovas forge new elements, most
|
|
of which are swept away in expanding shells of gas and debris heated by
|
|
the shock waves from the blast. Astro-1 will look for supernova remnants
|
|
which remain visible for thousands of years after a stellar death. Astro-1's
|
|
ultraviolet and X-ray telescopes will provide information on element
|
|
abundances, the physical conditions in the expanding gas and the
|
|
structure of the interstellar medium.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Neutron Stars, Pulsars, Black Holes
|
|
|
|
After a supernova explosion, the stellar core sometimes collapses
|
|
into a neutron star, the densest and tiniest of known stars, with mass
|
|
comparable to the sun compacted into an area the size of a large city.
|
|
Matter can become so dense that a sugar cube of neutron star material
|
|
would weigh 100 million tons.
|
|
|
|
Sometimes neutron stars are pulsars that emit beacons of radiation
|
|
and appear to blink on and off as many as hundreds of times per second
|
|
because they spin so rapidly. Scientists have theorized that some stars
|
|
may collapse so far that they become black holes, objects so dense and
|
|
gravitationally strong that neither matter nor light escape. Astro will look
|
|
for the ultraviolet radiation and X-rays thought to be produced when hot,
|
|
whirling matter is drawn into a black hole.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Star Systems
|
|
|
|
Few stars live in isolation; most are found in pairs or groups. Some
|
|
stellar companions orbit each other and often pass so close that mass is
|
|
transferred from one star to the other, producing large amounts of
|
|
ultraviolet and X-ray radiation which Astro-1's four telescopes are
|
|
designed to study. These binary star systems may consist of various
|
|
combinations of objects including white dwarfs, neutron stars, and black
|
|
holes.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Star Clusters
|
|
|
|
Stars may congregate in star clusters with anywhere from a few to
|
|
millions of members. Often, there are so many stars in the core of a
|
|
cluster, it is impossible to distinguish the visible light from individual
|
|
stars. Because they shine brightly in the ultraviolet, Astro-1 can isolate
|
|
the hot stars within clusters.
|
|
|
|
The clusters are excellent laboratories for studying stellar evolution
|
|
because the stars residing there formed from the same material at nearly
|
|
the same time. However, within a single cluster, stars of different masses
|
|
evolve at different rates.
|
|
|
|
Stellar evolution can be studied by looking at clusters of different
|
|
ages. Each cluster of a given age provides a snapshot of what is
|
|
happening as a function of stellar mass. By examining young clusters (less
|
|
than 1 million years old) and comparing them to old clusters (1 billion
|
|
years old), scientists can piece together what happens over a long time.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Interstellar Medium
|
|
|
|
The space between stars is filled with dust and gas, some of which
|
|
will condense to become future stars and planets. This interstellar
|
|
medium is composed chiefly of hydrogen with traces of heavier elements
|
|
and has a typical density of one atom per thimbleful of space. Astro-1 will
|
|
be able to measure the properties of this material more accurately by
|
|
studying how it affects the light from distant stars.
|
|
|
|
For the most part, the interstellar medium is relatively cool, but it
|
|
includes pockets of hot matter as well. Dense clouds of dust that
|
|
surround stars and scatter and reflect light are called reflection nebulae.
|
|
These are often illuminated by hot, young stars in stellar nurseries
|
|
hidden within the clouds. Ultraviolet observations will reveal the features
|
|
of stars hidden by the dust as well as the size and composition of the dust
|
|
grains.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other Galaxies
|
|
|
|
Beyond the Milky Way are at least a hundred billion more galaxies,
|
|
many with hundreds of billions of stars. They contain most of the visible
|
|
matter in the universe and are often found in clusters of galaxies that
|
|
have tens to thousands of members. X-ray and ultraviolet emission will
|
|
allow scientists to study the hottest, most active regions of these galaxies
|
|
as well as the intergalactic medium, the hot gas between the galaxies in a
|
|
cluster.
|
|
|
|
Galaxies have a variety of shapes and sizes: gigantic spirals like the
|
|
Milky Way, egg-shaped elliptical and irregular shapes with no preferred
|
|
form. Astro will survey the different types of galaxies and study their
|
|
evolution. The nearby galaxies will appear as they were millions of years
|
|
ago, and Astro will see the most distant ones as they were billions of years
|
|
ago. By comparing these galaxies, scientists can trace the history of the
|
|
universe.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Quasars
|
|
|
|
Some galaxies are in the process of violent change. Such active
|
|
galaxies have central regions (nuclei) that emit huge amounts of energy;
|
|
their ultraviolet and X-ray emission may help us identify their source of
|
|
power. Astro-1's ultraviolet and X-ray telescopes will detect quasars, very
|
|
distant compact objects that radiate more energy than 100 normal
|
|
galaxies.
|
|
|
|
Quasars may be the nuclei of ancient active galaxies. Strong X-ray
|
|
and ultraviolet radiation arising in the central cores of these powerful
|
|
objects may help scientists discover what these objects really are.
|
|
This overview is the known universe today, but many of these ideas
|
|
are only predictions based on theory and a few observations. Scientists
|
|
still lack the definitive observations needed to confirm or refute many of
|
|
these theories. Scientists do not know the exact size of the universe or
|
|
its age. Scientists have never definitely seen a black hole, and they
|
|
continue to question the nature of quasars.
|
|
|
|
To understand these mysteries, scientists need to see the universe
|
|
in all its splendor. Astro is part of NASA's strategy to study the universe
|
|
across the electromagnetic spectrum, in all wavelengths.
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE ASTRO-1 OBSERVATORY
|
|
|
|
The Astro-1 observatory is a compliment of four telescopes.
|
|
Though each instrument is uniquely designed to address specific
|
|
questions in ultraviolet and X-ray astronomy, when used in concert, the
|
|
capability of each is enhanced. The synergistic use of Astro-1's
|
|
instruments for joint observations serves to make Astro-1 an
|
|
exceptionally powerful facility. The Astro-1 observatory has three
|
|
ultraviolet-sensitive instruments:
|
|
|
|
o Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope (HUT) uses a spectrograph to examine
|
|
faint astronomical objects such as quasars, active galactic nuclei and
|
|
normal galaxies in the far ultraviolet.
|
|
|
|
o Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (UIT) will take wide-field-of-view
|
|
photographs of objects such as hot stars and galaxies in broad
|
|
ultraviolet wavelength bands.
|
|
|
|
o Wisconsin Ultraviolet Photo-Polarimeter Experiment (WUPPE) will study
|
|
the ultraviolet polarization of hot stars, galactic nuclei and
|
|
quasars.
|
|
|
|
These instruments working together will make 200 to 300
|
|
observations during the STS-35 mission. The Astro ultraviolet telescopes
|
|
are mounted on a common pointing system in the cargo bay of the Space
|
|
Shuttle. The grouped telescopes will be pointed in the same direction at
|
|
the same time, so simultaneous photographs, spectra and polarization
|
|
studies will be available for each object observed. The telescopes will be
|
|
operated by Columbia's crew.
|
|
|
|
A fourth Astro instrument, the Broad Band X-Ray Telescope
|
|
(BBXRT), will view high-energy objects such as active galaxies, quasars
|
|
and supernovas. This telescope is mounted on a separate pointing system
|
|
secured by a support structure in the cargo bay.
|
|
|
|
For joint observations, BBXRT can be aligned with the ultraviolet
|
|
telescopes to see the same objects, but it also can be pointed
|
|
independently to view other X-ray sources. BBXRT will be operated
|
|
remotely by ground controllers. Since the ultraviolet telescopes and the
|
|
X-ray telescope are mounted on different support structures, they can be
|
|
reflown together or separately.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope
|
|
|
|
The Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope is the first major telescope
|
|
capable of studying far ultraviolet (FUV) and extreme ultraviolet (EUV)
|
|
radiation from a wide variety of objects in space. HUT's observations will
|
|
provide new information on the evolution of galaxies and quasars, the
|
|
physical properties of extremely hot stars and the characteristics of
|
|
accretion disks (hot, swirling matter transferred from one star to
|
|
another) around white dwarfs, neutron stars and black holes.
|
|
|
|
HUT will make the first observations of a wide variety of
|
|
astronomical objects in the far ultraviolet region below 1,200 Angstroms
|
|
(A) and will pioneer the detailed study of stars in the extreme ultraviolet
|
|
band. Ultraviolet radiation at wavelengths shorter than 912 A is absorbed
|
|
by hydrogen, the most abundant element in the universe. HUT will allow
|
|
astronomers, in some instances along unobserved lines of sight, to see
|
|
beyond this cutoff, called the Lyman limit, because the radiation from the
|
|
most distant and rapidly receding objects, such as very bright quasars, is
|
|
shifted toward longer wavelengths.
|
|
|
|
HUT was designed and built by the Center for Astrophysical
|
|
Sciences and the Applied Physics Laboratory of The Johns Hopkins
|
|
University in Baltimore, Md. Its 36-inch mirror is coated with the rare
|
|
element iridium, a member of the platinum family, capable of reflecting
|
|
far and extreme ultraviolet light. The mirror, located at the aft end of the
|
|
telescope, focuses incoming light from a celestial source back to a
|
|
spectrograph mounted behind the telescope.
|
|
|
|
A grating within the spectrograph separates the light, like a
|
|
rainbow, into its component wavelengths. The strengths of those
|
|
wavelengths tell scientists how much of certain elements are present.
|
|
The ratio of the spectral lines reveal a source's temperature and density.
|
|
The shape of the spectrum shows the physical processes occurring in a
|
|
source.
|
|
|
|
The spectrograph is equipped with a variety of light-admitting slits
|
|
or apertures. The science team will use different apertures to
|
|
accomplish different goals in their observation. The longest slit has a
|
|
field of view of 2 arc minutes, about 1/15th the apparent diameter of the
|
|
moon. HUT is fitted with an electronic detector system. Its data
|
|
recordings are processed by an onboard computer system and relayed to
|
|
the ground for later analysis.
|
|
|
|
Johns Hopkins scientists conceived HUT to take ultraviolet
|
|
astronomy beyond the brief studies previously conducted with rocket-
|
|
borne telescopes. A typical rocket flight might gather 300 seconds of
|
|
data on a single object. HUT will collect more than 300,000 seconds of
|
|
data on nearly 200 objects during the Astro-1 mission, ranging from
|
|
objects in the solar system to quasars billions of light-years distant.
|
|
|
|
|
|
HUT Vital Statistics
|
|
|
|
Sponsoring Institution: The Johns Hopkins University,
|
|
Baltimore, Md.
|
|
Principal Investigator: Dr. Arthur F. Davidsen
|
|
Telescope Optics: 36 in. aperture, f/2 focal ratio,
|
|
iridium-coated paraboloid mirror
|
|
Instrument: Prime Focus Rowland Circle Spectrograph
|
|
with microchannel plate intensifier and
|
|
electronic diode array detector
|
|
Field of View
|
|
of Guide TV: 10 arc minutes
|
|
Spectral Resolution: 3.0 A
|
|
Wavelength Range: 850 A to 1,850 A (First Order)
|
|
425 A to 925 A (Second Order)
|
|
Weight: 1,736 lb
|
|
Size: 44 inches in diameter
|
|
12.4 ft. in length
|
|
|
|
|
|
Wisconsin Ultraviolet Photo-Polarimeter Experiment
|
|
|
|
Any star, except for our sun, is so distant that it appears as only a
|
|
point of light and surface details cannot be seen. If the light from objects
|
|
is polarized, it can tell scientists something about the source's geometry,
|
|
the physical conditions at the source and the reflecting properties of tiny
|
|
particles in the interstellar medium along the radiation's path.
|
|
|
|
The Wisconsin Ultraviolet Photo-Polarimeter Experiment (WUPPE),
|
|
developed by the Space Astronomy Lab at the University of Wisconsin-
|
|
Madison, is designed to measure polarization and intensity of ultraviolet
|
|
radiation from celestial objects. WUPPE is a 20-inch telescope with a
|
|
5.5-arc-minute field of view.
|
|
|
|
WUPPE is fitted with a spectropolarimeter, an instrument that
|
|
records both the spectrum and the polarization of the ultraviolet light
|
|
gathered by the telescope. Light will pass through sophisticated filters,
|
|
akin to Polaroid sunglasses, before reaching the detector. Measurements
|
|
then will be transmitted electronically to the ground.
|
|
|
|
Photometry is the measurement of the intensity (brightness) of the
|
|
light, while polarization is the measurement of the orientation (direction)
|
|
of the oscillating light wave. Usually waves of light move randomly -- up,
|
|
down, back, forward and diagonally. When light is polarized, all the waves
|
|
oscillate in a single plane. Light that is scattered, like sunlight reflecting
|
|
off water, is often polarized. Astro-1 astronomers expect to learn about
|
|
ultraviolet light that is scattered by dust strewn among stars and galaxies.
|
|
They also can learn about the geometry of stars and other objects by
|
|
studying their polarization. To date, virtually no observations of
|
|
polarization of astronomical sources in the ultraviolet have been carried
|
|
out. WUPPE measures the polarization by splitting a beam of radiation
|
|
into two perpendicular planes of polarization, passing the beams through
|
|
a spectrometer and focusing the beams on two separate array detectors.
|
|
|
|
In the ultraviolet spectrum, both photometry and polarization are
|
|
extremely difficult measurements to achieve with the high degree of
|
|
precision required for astronomical studies. To develop an instrument
|
|
that could make these delicate measurements required an unusually
|
|
innovative and advanced technical effort. Thus, the WUPPE investigation
|
|
is a pioneering foray with a new technique.
|
|
|
|
The targets of WUPPE investigations are primarily in the Milky Way
|
|
galaxy and beyond, for which comparative data exist in other wavelengths.
|
|
Like the Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope, WUPPE also makes
|
|
spectroscopic observations of hot stars, galactic nuclei and quasars.
|
|
Operating at ultraviolet wavelengths that are mostly longer than those
|
|
observed by HUT (but with some useful overlap), WUPPE provides
|
|
chemical composition and physical information on celestial targets that
|
|
that give off a significant amount of radiation in the 1,400 to 3,200 A
|
|
range.
|
|
|
|
|
|
WUPPE Vital Statistics
|
|
|
|
Sponsoring Institution: University of Wisconsin, Madison
|
|
Principal Investigator: Dr. Arthur D. Code
|
|
Telescope Optics: Cassegrain (two-mirror) system, f/10
|
|
focal ratio
|
|
Instrument: Spectropolarimeter with dual electronic
|
|
diode array detectors
|
|
Primary Mirror Size: 20 in. diameter
|
|
279 sq.* in. area
|
|
Field of View: 3.3 x 4.4 arc minutes
|
|
Spectral Resolution: 6 Angstroms
|
|
Wavelength Range: 1,400 to 3,200 Angstroms
|
|
Magnitude Limit: 16
|
|
Weight: 981 lb
|
|
Size: 28 inches in diameter
|
|
12.4 ft. in length
|
|
|
|
* This and subsequent changes were made to avoid confusion since the
|
|
computer will not create exponents for cm2 or the circle over the A
|
|
for Angstrom.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Ultraviolet ImagingTelescope
|
|
|
|
In the 20 years that astronomical observations have been made
|
|
from space, no high-resolution ultraviolet photographs of objects other
|
|
than the sun have been made. Nonetheless, the brief glimpses of the
|
|
ultraviolet sky have led to important discoveries in spiral galaxies,
|
|
globular clusters, white dwarf stars and other areas.
|
|
|
|
Deep, wide-field imaging is a primary means by which
|
|
fundamentally new phenomena or important examples of known classes
|
|
of astrophysical objects will be recognized in the ultraviolet. The
|
|
Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (UIT), developed at NASA's Goddard Space
|
|
Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., is the key instrument for these
|
|
investigations.
|
|
|
|
UIT is a powerful combination of telescope, image intensifier and
|
|
camera. It is a 15.2-inch Ritchey Chretien telescope with two selectable
|
|
cameras mounted behind the primary mirror. Each camera has a six-
|
|
position filter wheel, a two-stage magnetically focused image tube and a
|
|
70-mm film transport, fiber optically coupled to each image tube. One
|
|
camera is designed to operate in the 1200 - 1700 Angstrom region and
|
|
the other in the 1250-3200 Angstrom region.
|
|
|
|
Unlike data from the other Astro instruments, which will be
|
|
electronically transmitted to the ground, UIT images will be recorded
|
|
directly onto a very sensitive astronomical film for later development
|
|
after Columbia lands. UIT has enough film to make 2,000 exposures. A
|
|
series of 11 different filters allows specific regions of the ultraviolet
|
|
spectrum to be isolated for energy-distribution studies. After
|
|
development, each image frame will be electronically digitized to form
|
|
2,048 x 2,048 picture elements, or pixels, then analyzed further with
|
|
computers.
|
|
|
|
UIT has a 15-inch diameter mirror with a 40-arc-minute field of
|
|
view -- about 25 percent wider than the apparent diameter of the full
|
|
moon. UIT has the largest field of view of any
|
|
|
|
sensitive UV imaging instrument planned for flight in the 1990s. It will
|
|
photograph nearby galaxies, large clusters of stars and distant clusters of
|
|
galaxies.
|
|
|
|
A 30-minute exposure (the length of one orbital night) will record a
|
|
blue star of 25th magnitude, a star about 100 million times fainter than
|
|
the faintest star visible to the naked eye on a dark, clear night. Since
|
|
UIT makes longer exposures than previous instruments, fainter objects
|
|
will be visible in the images.
|
|
|
|
The instrument favors the detection of hot objects which emit most
|
|
of their energy in the ultraviolet. Common examples span the
|
|
evolutionary history of stars -- massive stars and stars in the final stages of
|
|
stellar evolution (white dwarfs). Images of numerous relatively cool stars
|
|
that do not radiate much in the ultraviolet are suppressed, and UV
|
|
sources stand out clearly.
|
|
|
|
The UIT's field of view is wide enough to encompass entire
|
|
galaxies, star clusters and distant clusters of galaxies. This deep survey
|
|
mode will reveal many new, exciting objects to be studied further by
|
|
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope. Although the Hubble Space Telescope
|
|
will have a much higher magnification and record much fainter stars, the
|
|
UIT will photograph much larger regions all at once. In addition, the
|
|
UIT will suffer much less interference from visible light, since it is
|
|
provided with "solar blind" detectors. For certain classes of targets, such
|
|
as diffuse, ultraviolet-emitting or ultraviolet-scattering nebulae, UIT may
|
|
be a more sensitive imager.
|
|
|
|
A wide selection of astronomical objects will be studied in this first
|
|
deep survey of cosmic phenomena in the ultraviolet. The UIT is
|
|
expected to target hot stars in globular clusters to help explain how stars
|
|
evolve. Another experiment may help astronomers learn whether
|
|
properties and distribution of interstellar dust are the same in all
|
|
galaxies. High-priority objects are Supernova 1987A and vicinity, star
|
|
clusters, planetary nebulae and supernova remnants, spiral and "normal"
|
|
galaxies, the interstellar medium of other galaxies and clusters of
|
|
galaxies.
|
|
|
|
|
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UIT Vital Statistics
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Sponsoring Institution: NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
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(GSFC), Greenbelt, Md.
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Principal Investigator: Theodore P. Stecher (NASA GSFC)
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Telescope Optics: Ritchey-Chretien (variation of
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Cassegrain two-mirror system with
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correction over wide field of view)
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Aperture: 15 in.
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Focal Ratio: f/9
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Field of View: 40 arc minutes
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Angular Resolution: 2 arc seconds
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Wavelength Range: 1,200 A to 3,200 A
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Magnitude Limit: 25
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Filters: 2 filter wheels, 6 filters each
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Detectors: Two image intensifiers with 70-mm film,
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1,000 frames each; IIaO astronomical
|
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film
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Exposure Time: Up to 30 minutes
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Weight: 1,043 lb
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Size: 32 inches in diameter
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12.4 ft. in length
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THE BROAD BAND X-RAY TELESCOPE
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The Broad Band X-Ray Telescope (BBXRT) will provide astronomers
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with the first high-quality spectra of many of the X-ray sources discovered
|
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with the High Energy Astronomy Observatory 2, better known as the
|
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Einstein Observatory, launched in the late 1970s. BBXRT, developed at
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NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., uses mirrors and
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advanced solid-state detectors as spectrometers to measure the energy of
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individual X-ray photons. These energies produce a spectrum that
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reveals the chemistry, structure and dynamics of a source.
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BBXRT is actually two 8-inch telescopes each with a 17 arc-minute
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field of view (more than half the angular width of the moon). The two
|
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identical telescopes are used to focus X-rays onto solid-state
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spectrometers which measure photon energy in electron volts in the
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"soft" X-ray region, from 380 to 12,000 eV. The use of two telescopes
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doubles the number of photons that are detected and also provides
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redundancy in case of a failure.
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X-ray telescopes are difficult to construct because X-ray photons are
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so energetic that they penetrate mirrors and are absorbed. A mirror
|
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surface reflects X-rays only if it is very smooth and the photons strike it
|
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at a very shallow angle. Because such small grazing angles are needed,
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the reflectors must be very long to intercept many of the incident X-rays.
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Since even shallower angles are required to detect higher-energy X-rays,
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telescopes effective at high energies need very large reflecting surfaces.
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Traditionally, X-ray telescopes have used massive, finely polished
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reflectors that were expensive to construct and did not efficiently use the
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available aperture. The mirror technology developed for BBXRT consists
|
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of very thin pieces of gold-coated aluminum foil that require no polishing
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and can be nested very closely together to reflect a large fraction of the
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X-rays entering the telescope.
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Because its reflecting surfaces can be made so easily, BBXRT can
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afford to have mirrors using the very shallow grazing angles necessary to
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reflect high-energy photons. In fact, BBXRT is one of the first telescopes
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to observe astronomical targets that emit X-rays above approximately
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4,000 electron volts.
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The telescope will provide information on the chemistry,
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temperature and structure of some of the most unusual and interesting
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objects in the universe. BBXRT can see fainter and more energetic
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objects than any yet studied. It will look for signs of heavy elements such
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as iron, oxygen, silicon and calcium. These elements usually are formed
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in exploding stars and during mysterious events occurring at the core of
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galaxies and other exotic objects.
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BBXRT will be used to study a variety of sources, but a major goal is
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to increase our understanding of active galactic nuclei and quasars. Many
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astronomers believe that the two are very similar objects that contain an
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extremely luminous source at the nucleus of an otherwise relatively
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normal galaxy. The central source in quasars is so luminous that the host
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galaxy is difficult to detect. X-rays are expected to be emitted near the
|
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central engine of these objects, and astronomers will examine X-ray
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spectra and their variations to understand the phenomena at the heart of
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quasars.
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Investigators are interested in clusters of galaxies, congregations of
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tens or thousands of galaxies grouped together within a few million light-
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years of each other. When viewed in visible light, emissions from
|
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individual galaxies are dominant, but X-rays are emitted primarily from
|
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hot gas between the galaxies.
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In fact, theories and observations indicate that there should be
|
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about as much matter in the hot gas as in the galaxies, but all this
|
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material has not been seen yet. BBXRT observations will enable scientists
|
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to calculate the total mass of a cluster and deduce the amount of "dark"
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matter.
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A star's death, a supernova, heats the region of the galaxy near the
|
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explosion so that it glows in X-rays. Scientists believe that heavy
|
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elements such as iron are manufactured and dispersed into the
|
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interstellar medium by supernovas. The blast or shock wave may produce
|
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energetic cosmic ray particles that travel on endless journeys throughout
|
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the universe and instigate the formation of new stars. BBXRT detects
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young supernova remnants (less than 10,000 years old) which are still
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relatively hot. Elements will be identified, and the shock wave's
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movement and structure will be examined.
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BBXRT was not part of the originally selected ASTRO payload. It
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was added to the mission after the appearance of Supernova 1987A in
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February 1987, to obtain vital scientific information about the supernova.
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In addition, data gathered by BBXRT on other objects will enhance
|
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studies that would otherwise be limited to data gathered with the three
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ultraviolet
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telescopes.
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BBXRT Vital Statistics
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Sponsoring Institution: NASA Goddard Space Flight Center,
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Greenbelt, Md.
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Principal Investigator: Dr. Peter J. Serlemitsos
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Telescope Optics: Two co-aligned X-ray telescopes with
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cooled segmented lithium-drifted
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silicon solid-state detectors in the
|
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focal planes
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Focal Length: 12.5 ft. each, detection area 0.16 in.
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diameter pixel
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Focal Plane Scale: 0.9 arc minutes per mm
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Field of View: 4.5 arc minutes (central element); 17
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arc minutes (overall)
|
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Energy Band: 0.3 to 12 keV
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Effective Area: 765 cm2 at 1.5 keV, 300 cm2 at 7 keV
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Energy Resolution: 0.09 keV at 1 keV, 0.15 keV at 6 keV
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Weight: 1,500 lb (680.4 kg)
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Size: 40 inches in diameter
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166 inches in length
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ASTRO CARRIER SYSTEMS
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The Astro observatory is made up of three co-aligned ultraviolet
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telescopes carried by Spacelab and one X-ray telescope mounted on the
|
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Two-Axis Pointing System (TAPS) and a special structure.
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Each telescope was independently designed, but all work together
|
|
as elements of a single observatory. The carriers provide stable platforms
|
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and pointing systems that allow the ultraviolet and X-ray telescopes to
|
|
observe the same target. However, having two separate pointing systems
|
|
gives investigators the flexibility to point the ultraviolet telescopes at one
|
|
target while the X-ray telescope is aimed at another.
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Spacelab
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The three ultraviolet telescopes are supported by Spacelab
|
|
hardware. Spacelab is a set of modular components developed by the
|
|
European Space Agency and managed by the NASA Marshall Space Flight
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|
Center, Hunstville, Ala. For each Spacelab payload, specific standardized
|
|
parts are combined to create a unique design. Elements are anchored
|
|
within the cargo bay, transforming it into a short-term laboratory in
|
|
space.
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Spacelab elements used to support the Astro observatory include
|
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two pallets, a pressurized igloo to house subsystem equipment and the
|
|
Instrument Pointing System. The pressurized Spacelab laboratory
|
|
module will not be used for Astro. Rather, astronauts and payload
|
|
specialists will operate the payload from the aft flight deck of the orbiter
|
|
Columbia.
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Pallets
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The ultraviolet telescopes and the Instrument Pointing System are
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|
mounted on two Spacelab pallets -- large, uncovered, unpressurized
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|
platforms designed to support scientific instruments that require direct
|
|
exposure to space.
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Each individual pallet is 10 feet long and 13 feet wide. The basic
|
|
pallet structure is made up of five parallel U-shaped frames. Twenty-four
|
|
inner and 24 outer panels, made of aluminum alloy honeycomb, cover the
|
|
frame. The inner panels are equipped with threaded inserts so that
|
|
payload and subsystem equipment can be attached. Twenty-four standard
|
|
hard points, made of chromium-plated titanium casting, are provided for
|
|
payloads which exceed acceptable loading of the inner pallets.
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|
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|
Pallets are more than a platform for mounting instrumentation. With
|
|
an igloo attached, they also can cool equipment, provide electrical power
|
|
and furnish connections for commanding and acquiring data from
|
|
experiments. Cable ducts and cable support trays can be bolted to the
|
|
forward and aft frame of each pallet to support and route electrical cables
|
|
to and from the experiments and the subsystem equipment mounted on
|
|
the pallet. The ducts are made of aluminum alloy sheet metal. In
|
|
addition to basic utilities, some special accommodations are available for
|
|
pallet-mounted experiments.
|
|
|
|
For Astro-1, two pallets are connected together to form a single
|
|
rigid structure called a pallet train. Twelve joints are used to connect the
|
|
two pallets.
|
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|
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Igloo
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|
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Normally Spacelab subsystem equipment is housed in the core
|
|
segment of the pressurized laboratory module. However, in "pallet only"
|
|
configurations such as Astro, the subsystems are located in a supply
|
|
module called the igloo. It provides a pressurized compartment in which
|
|
Spacelab subsystem equipment can be mounted in a dry-air environment
|
|
at normal Earth atmospheric pressure, as required by their design. The
|
|
subsystems provide such services as cooling, electrical power and
|
|
connections for commanding and acquiring data from the instruments.
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|
|
|
The igloo is attached vertically to the forward end frame of the first
|
|
pallet. Its outer dimensions are approximately 7.9 feet in height and 3.6
|
|
feet in diameter. The igloo is a closed cylindrical shell made of aluminum
|
|
alloy and covered with multi-layer insulation. A removable cover allows
|
|
full access to the interior.
|
|
|
|
The igloo consists of two parts. The primary structure -- an
|
|
exterior cannister -- is a cylindrical, locally stiffened shell made of forged
|
|
aluminum alloy rings and closed at one end. The other end has a
|
|
mounting flange for the cover. A seal is inserted when the two structures
|
|
are joined together mechanically to form a pressure-tight assembly.
|
|
|
|
There are external fittings on the cannister for fastening it to the
|
|
pallet, handling and transportation on the ground, and thermal control
|
|
insulation. Two feed-through plates accommodate utility lines and a
|
|
pressure relief valve. Facilities on the inside of the cannister are
|
|
provided for mounting subsystem equipment and the interior igloo
|
|
structure. The cover is also a cylindrical shell, made of welded aluminum
|
|
alloy and closed at one end. The igloo has about 77.7 cubic feet of
|
|
interior space for subsystems.
|
|
|
|
Subsystem equipment is mounted on an interior or secondary
|
|
structure which also acts as a guide for the removal or replacement of the
|
|
cover. The secondary structure is hinge-fastened to the primary
|
|
structure, allowing access to the bottom of the secondary structure and to
|
|
equipment mounted within the primary structure.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Instrument Pointing System
|
|
|
|
Telescopes such as those aboard Astro-1 must be pointed with very
|
|
high accuracy and stability at the objects which they are to view. The
|
|
Spacelab Instrument Pointing System provides precision pointing for a
|
|
wide range of payloads, including large single instruments or clusters of
|
|
instruments. The pointing mechanism can accommodate instruments
|
|
weighing up to 15,432 pounds and can point them to within 2 arc
|
|
seconds and hold them on target to within 1.2 arc seconds. The
|
|
combined weight of the ultraviolet telescopes and the structure which
|
|
holds them together is 9,131 pounds.
|
|
|
|
The Instrument Pointing System consists of a three-axis gimbal
|
|
system mounted on a gimbal support structure connected to the pallet at
|
|
one end and the aft end of the payload at the other, a payload clamping
|
|
system for support of the mounted experiment during launch and landing
|
|
and a control system based on the inertial reference of a three-axis gyro
|
|
package and operated by a gimbal-mounted microcomputer.
|
|
|
|
Three bearing-drive units on the gimbal system allow the payload to
|
|
be pointed on three axes: elevation (back and forth), cross-elevation
|
|
(side to side) and azimuth (roll), allowing it to point in a 22-degree circle
|
|
around a its straight-up position. The pointing system may be
|
|
maneuvered at a rate of up to one degree per second, which is five times
|
|
as fast as the Shuttle orbiter's maneuvering rate. The operating modes of
|
|
the different scientific investigations vary considerably. Some require
|
|
manual control capability, others slow scan mapping, still others high
|
|
angular rates and accelerations. Performance in all these modes requires
|
|
flexibility achieved with computer software.
|
|
|
|
The Instrument Pointing System is controlled through the Spacelab
|
|
subsystem computer and a data-display unit and keyboard. It can be
|
|
operated either automatically or by the Spacelab crew from the module
|
|
(when used) and also from the payload station in the orbiter aft flight
|
|
deck.
|
|
|
|
In addition to the drive units, Instrument Pointing System
|
|
structural hardware includes a payload/gimbal separation mechanism,
|
|
replaceable extension column, emergency jettisoning device, support
|
|
structure and rails and a thermal control system. The gimbal structure
|
|
itself is minimal, consisting only of a yoke and inner and outer gimbals to
|
|
which the payload is attached by the payload-mounted integration ring.
|
|
|
|
An optical sensor package is used for attitude correction and also
|
|
for configuring the instrument for solar, stellar or Earth viewing. The
|
|
Astro-1 mission marks the first time the Instrument Pointing System has
|
|
been used for stellar astronomy. Three star trackers locate guide stars.
|
|
The boresite tracker is in the middle, and two other trackers are angled
|
|
12 degrees from each side of the boresite. By keeping stars of known
|
|
locations centered in each tracker, a stable position can be maintained.
|
|
|
|
The three ultraviolet telescopes are mounted and precisely co-
|
|
aligned on a common structure, called the cruciform, that is attached to
|
|
the pointing system.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Image Motion Compensation System
|
|
|
|
An image motion compensation system was developed by the
|
|
Marshall Space Flight Center to provide additional pointing stability for
|
|
two of the ultraviolet instruments.
|
|
|
|
When the Shuttle thrusters fire to control orbiter attitude, there is
|
|
a noticeable disturbance of the pointing system. The telescopes are also
|
|
affected by crew motion in the orbiter. A gyro stabilizer senses the
|
|
motion of the cruciform which could disrupt UIT and WUPPE pointing
|
|
stability. It sends information to the image motion compensation
|
|
electronics system where pointing commands are computed and sent to
|
|
the telescopes' secondary mirrors which make automatic adjustments to
|
|
improve stability to less than 1 arc second.
|
|
|
|
The Astro-1's star tracker, designed by the NASA Jet Propulsion
|
|
Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., fixes on bright stars with well-known and
|
|
sends this information to the electronics system which corrects errors
|
|
caused by gyro drift and sends new commands to the telescopes' mirrors.
|
|
The mirrors automatically adjust to keep pointed at the target.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Broad Band X-ray Telescope and the Two-Axis Pointing System (TAPS)
|
|
|
|
Developed at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, these
|
|
pointing systems were designed to be flown together on multiple
|
|
missions. This payload will be anchored in a support structure placed
|
|
just behind the ultraviolet telescopes in the Shuttle payload bay. BBXRT
|
|
is attached directly to the TAPS inner gimbal frame.
|
|
|
|
The TAPS will move BBXRT in a forward/aft direction (pitch)
|
|
relative to the cargo bay or from side to side (roll) relative to the cargo
|
|
bay. A star tracker uses bright stars as a reference to position the TAPS
|
|
for an observation, and gyros keep the TAPS on a target. As the gyros
|
|
drift, the star tracker periodically recalculates and resets the TAPS
|
|
position.
|
|
|
|
|
|
ASTRO OPERATIONS
|
|
|
|
Operation of the Astro-1 telescopes will be a cooperative effort
|
|
between the science crew in orbit and their colleagues in a control
|
|
facility at the Marshall Space Flight Center and a support control center
|
|
at Goddard Space Flight Center. Though the crew and the instrument
|
|
science teams will be separated by many miles, they will interact with
|
|
one another to evaluate observations and solve problems in much the
|
|
same way as they would when working side by side.
|
|
|
|
|
|
On-Orbit Science Crew Activities
|
|
|
|
The Astro science crew will operate the ultraviolet telescopes and
|
|
Instrument Pointing System from the Shuttle orbiter's aft flight deck,
|
|
located to the rear of the cockpit. Windows overlooking the cargo bay
|
|
allow the payload specialist and mission specialist to keep an eye on the
|
|
instruments as they command them into precise position. The aft flight
|
|
deck is equipped with two Spacelab keyboard and display units, one for
|
|
controlling the pointing system and the other for operating the scientific
|
|
instruments. To aid in target identification, this work area also includes
|
|
two closed-circuit television monitors. With the monitors, crew
|
|
members will be able to see the star fields being viewed by HUT and
|
|
WUPPE and monitor the data being transmitted from the instruments.
|
|
|
|
The Astro-1 crew will work around the clock to allow the maximum
|
|
number of observations to be made during their mission. The STS-35
|
|
commander will have a flexible schedule, while two teams of crew
|
|
members will work in 12-hour shifts. Each team consists of the pilot or
|
|
flight mission specialist, a science mission specialist and a payload
|
|
specialist. The crew and the ground controllers will follow an observation
|
|
schedule detailed in a carefully planned timeline.
|
|
|
|
In a typical Astro-1 ultraviolet observation, the flight crew member
|
|
on duty maneuvers the Shuttle to point the cargo bay in the general
|
|
direction of the astronomical object to be observed. The mission
|
|
specialist commands the pointing system to aim the telescopes toward
|
|
the target. He also locks on to guide stars to help the pointing system
|
|
remain stable despite orbiter thruster firings. The payload specialist sets
|
|
up each instrument for the upcoming observation, identifies the celestial
|
|
target on the guide television and provides any necessary pointing
|
|
corrections for placing the object precisely in the telescope's field of
|
|
view. He then starts the instrument observation sequences and monitors
|
|
the data being recorded. Because the many observations planned create a
|
|
heavy workload, the payload and mission specialists work together to
|
|
perform these complicated operations and evaluate the quality of
|
|
observations. Each observation will take between 10 minutes to a little
|
|
over an hour.
|
|
|
|
The X-ray telescope requires little attention from the crew. A crew
|
|
member will turn on the BBXRT and the TAPS at the beginning of
|
|
operations and then turn them off when the operations conclude. The
|
|
telescope is controlled from the ground. After the telescope is activated,
|
|
researchers at Goddard can "talk" to the telescope via computer. Before
|
|
science operations begin, stored commands are loaded into the BBXRT
|
|
computer system. Then, when the astronauts position the Shuttle in the
|
|
general direction of the source, the TAPS automatically points the BBXRT
|
|
at the object. Since the Shuttle can be oriented in only one direction at a
|
|
time, X-ray observations must be coordinated carefully with ultraviolet
|
|
observations.
|
|
|
|
|
|
GROUND CONTROL
|
|
|
|
Astro-1 science operations will be directed from a new Spacelab
|
|
Mission Operations Control facility at the Marshall Space Flight Center.
|
|
BBXRT will be controlled by commands from a supporting payload
|
|
operations control facility at Goddard.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Spacelab Mission Operations Control
|
|
|
|
Beginning with the Astro-1 flight, all Spacelab science activities will
|
|
be controlled from Marshall's Spacelab Mission Operations Control
|
|
Center. It will replace the payload operations control center at the
|
|
Johnson Space Center from which previous Spacelab missions have been
|
|
operated. The Spacelab Mission Operations Control team is under the
|
|
overall direction of the mission manager.
|
|
|
|
The Spacelab Mission Operations Control team will support the
|
|
science crew in much the same way that Houston Mission Control
|
|
supports the flight crew. Teams of controllers and researchers at the
|
|
Marshall facility will direct all NASA science operations, send commands
|
|
directly to the spacecraft, receive and analyze data from experiments
|
|
aboard the vehicle, adjust mission schedules to take advantage of
|
|
unexpected science opportunities or unexpected results, and work with
|
|
crew members to resolve problems with their experiments.
|
|
|
|
An air/ground communications channel, in addition to the one used
|
|
by the Mission Control Center in Houston, will be dedicated to
|
|
communications between the Alabama control facility and the science
|
|
crew aboard the Space Shuttle. "Huntsville" will be the call sign from
|
|
space that astronauts will use to address their control team at the
|
|
Marshall facility.
|
|
|
|
The Spacelab Mission Operations Control facility is located on two
|
|
floors of Building 4663 at the Marshall Space Flight Center. Most of the
|
|
activity occurs in two work areas: the payload control area on the upper
|
|
floor from which the overall payload is monitored and controlled; and the
|
|
science operations area on the ground level, where scientists for the
|
|
individual telescopes monitor their instruments and direct observations.
|
|
|
|
The payload control area is the hub of payload operations.
|
|
Communication with the crew, on-orbit and ground computer systems
|
|
monitoring, science activities, and even television camera operations are
|
|
marshalled from work stations in the control room. Console operators in
|
|
the area are referred to as the payload operations control center (POCC)
|
|
cadre. The cadre is made up of three teams under the leadership of the
|
|
payload operations director.
|
|
|
|
The operations control team is responsible for real-time payload
|
|
control. They make sure that the pre-planned observation schedule is
|
|
being followed and send commands to the instruments and instructions
|
|
to the crew. Designated team members stay in voice contact with the the
|
|
on-board science crew via an air-to-ground communications loop.
|
|
|
|
The data management team ensures that the science data needed
|
|
from the payload is scheduled and received properly. The
|
|
responsibilities range from telling the on-board computer when to send
|
|
down the information it has been storing to scheduling TV transmissions
|
|
from orbit.
|
|
|
|
The payload activities planning team is in charge of replanning the
|
|
payload crew activity schedule when anything from unexpected science
|
|
opportunities to equipment problems requires a change. After a science
|
|
operations planning group makes rescheduling decisions for upcoming
|
|
shifts, the planning team determines the many adjustments that will
|
|
allow those changes to be accomplished.
|
|
|
|
The POCC cadre also includes the mission scientist, who leads the
|
|
science operations planning group and acts as a liaison between the cadre
|
|
and the science investigator teams; the alternate payload specialist, a
|
|
backup crew member who helps with air-to-ground communications and
|
|
assists the mission scientist; and a public affairs commentator.
|
|
|
|
The science operations area on the ground floor of the Spacelab
|
|
Mission Operations Control facility is staffed by teams of scientists and
|
|
engineers who developed the Astro-1 telescopes. The principal
|
|
investigators and support groups for the Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope,
|
|
the Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope and the Wisconsin Photo-Polariameter
|
|
Experiment, along with the Broad Band X-ray telescope representatives
|
|
and a team monitoring the Marshall Space Flight Center's Image Motion
|
|
Compensation System share a large room in the science operations area.
|
|
|
|
The teams monitor the data flowing back from each instrument,
|
|
evaluate the instruments' performance, and assess and analyze the
|
|
science information revealed by the data. It is possible for the principal
|
|
investigator to talk directly with the crew member operating his
|
|
instrument if circumstances demand personal interaction.
|
|
|
|
Engineers on the science teams provide inputs on instrument
|
|
performance and if necessary recommend alternate methods to maintain
|
|
optimal performance. Scientists in each group evaluate the quality of data
|
|
given the scientific objectives. They also may do preliminary analysis of
|
|
their data, though a complete study may take months or even years.
|
|
|
|
Space astronomy is a fluid process because observations sometimes
|
|
produce unexpected results that demand more study than originally
|
|
planned during the mission. In addition, hardware contingencies may
|
|
demand that some activities be rescheduled. Any changes in the plan will
|
|
affect the observations of all four science teams. Therefore,
|
|
representatives from each team participate in the twice-daily, science-
|
|
operations planning group meetings. The science objectives and
|
|
viewpoints of the various teams are weighed; then the group agrees on
|
|
changes to the original activity plan.
|
|
|
|
|
|
BBXRT Payload Operations Control Center
|
|
|
|
A special team located at a remote payload operations control
|
|
center at the Goddard Space Flight Center will operate the Broad Band X-
|
|
Ray Telescope and its Two-Axis Pointing System. However, some
|
|
members of the BBXRT team will be stationed at the Marshall control
|
|
center to participate in science planning, and all commands issued to the
|
|
payload will be coordinated with the mission management team at
|
|
Marshall. The two payload operations control centers will be linked via
|
|
voice communication so that teams at both places can confer.
|
|
|
|
|
|
ASTRO-1 HISTORY
|
|
|
|
In February 1978, NASA issued an announcement of opportunity for
|
|
instruments that could travel aboard the Space Shuttle and utilize the
|
|
unique capabilities of Spacelab. Three telescopes -- HUT, UIT, and
|
|
WUPPE -- evolved as a payload manifested as OSS-3 through 7, and these
|
|
missions were assigned to the Goddard Space Flight Center. Because the
|
|
Instrument Pointing System and other Spacelab facilities were needed
|
|
for OSS-3, management was moved in 1982 to the Marshall Space Flight
|
|
Center. The payload was renamed Astro.
|
|
|
|
The Wide Field Camera was added to the payload in 1984 to make
|
|
detailed studies of Comet Halley, which was due to move through the
|
|
inner solar system in the spring of 1986.
|
|
|
|
The instruments were constructed, and the observatory had
|
|
completed Spacelab integration and testing by January 1986. Astro-1,
|
|
consisting of HUT, UIT, WUPPE and the Wide Field Camera, was ready
|
|
for orbiter installation when the Challenger accident occurred.
|
|
|
|
After the accident, the instruments were removed from Spacelab
|
|
and stored. Periodic checks were made during storage. However,
|
|
because of the the long interval, the decision was made to examine and
|
|
recertify all of the Astro instruments. As a part of this process, questions
|
|
arose in the summer of 1987 about the quality certifications of the bolts
|
|
used in the Astro-1 hardware. Support structures and instrument and
|
|
electronics attachments were inspected for possible faulty bolts. A total
|
|
of 298 bolts eventually were replaced.
|
|
|
|
HUT was kept at Kennedy Space Center, but its spectrograph was
|
|
returned to The Johns Hopkins University in October 1988. Although
|
|
protected from air and moisture by gaseous nitrogen, HUT's extremely
|
|
sensitive ultraviolet detector had degraded with time. The detector was
|
|
replaced but failed to pass an acceptance review, and a third detector was
|
|
installed in January 1989. An aging television camera was replaced in
|
|
May 1989.
|
|
|
|
WUPPE's precise instruments also required recalibration after their
|
|
storage period. Rather than ship the large, sensitive telescope back to
|
|
the University of Wisconsin where it was developed, astronomers there
|
|
built a portable vertical calibration facility and delivered it to the Kennedy
|
|
Space Center. Calibration was completed in April 1989.
|
|
|
|
WUPPE's power supplies for the spectrometer and for the zero order
|
|
detector were returned to the University of Wisconsin, where they were
|
|
modified to reduce output noise.
|
|
|
|
UIT also stayed at Kennedy, where the power supply for its image
|
|
intensifier was replaced in August 1989.
|
|
|
|
Because Comet Halley was no longer in position for detailed
|
|
observation, the Wide Field Camera was removed from the payload in the
|
|
spring of 1987. In March of 1988, BBXRT was added to the Astro-1
|
|
payload. Originally proposed in response to the 1978 announcement of
|
|
opportunity, BBXRT had been developed as one of three X-ray
|
|
instruments in a payload designated OSS-2. This was renamed the
|
|
Shuttle High-Energy Astrophysics Laboratory and proposed for flight in
|
|
1992. However, when Supernova 1987A occurred, BBXRT was
|
|
completed ahead of schedule and added to the Astro-1 payload. The
|
|
addition would allow study of the supernova and other objects in X-ray as
|
|
well as ultraviolet wavelengths.
|
|
|
|
The completed payload was tested at 6-month intervals. Level IV
|
|
testing, in which instruments and command software are operated apart
|
|
from Spacelab pallets, was completed in August 1989. The three
|
|
ultraviolet telescopes, the Instrument Pointing System and the igloo were
|
|
integrated with the Spacelab pallets for Level III testing, which
|
|
concluded in December 1989. The pallet-mounted ultraviolet telescopes
|
|
and pointing system, as well as the BBXRT and its Two-Axis Pointing
|
|
System, were moved to the Cargo Integration Test Equipment stand
|
|
where testing was completed at the end of February 1990.
|
|
|
|
Astro-1 was installed in Columbia's payload bay March 20, 1990.
|
|
Final integrated testing in the Orbiter Processing Facility between the
|
|
orbiter, payload, mission centers and satellite relays was completed
|
|
March 26-28. Payload pad activities included installation of Ultraviolet
|
|
Imaging Telescope (UIT) film, removal of telescope covers, final pallet
|
|
cleaning and BBXRT argon servicing.
|
|
|
|
|
|
SHUTTLE AMATEUR RADIO EXPERIMENT (SAREX)
|
|
|
|
Conducting shortwave radio transmissions between ground-based
|
|
amateur radio operators and a Shuttle-based amateur radio operator is
|
|
the basis for the Shuttle Amateur Radio Experiment (SAREX).
|
|
|
|
SAREX communicates with amateur stations in line-of-sight of the
|
|
orbiter in one of four transmission modes: voice, slow scan television
|
|
(SSTV), data or (uplink only) fast scan television (FSTV).
|
|
|
|
The voice mode is operated in the attended mode while SSTV, data
|
|
or FSTV can be operated in either attended or unattended modes.
|
|
|
|
During the mission, SAREX will be operated by Payload Specialist
|
|
Ron Parise, a licensed operator (WA4SIR), during periods when he is not
|
|
scheduled for orbiter or other payload activities. At least four
|
|
transmissions will be made to test each transmission mode.
|
|
|
|
The primary pair of frequencies intended for use during the
|
|
mission is 145.55 MHz as the downlink from Columbia, with 144.95 MHz
|
|
as the uplink. A spacing of 600 KHz was deliberately chosen for this
|
|
primary pair to accommodate those whose split frequency capability is
|
|
limited to the customary repeater offset.
|
|
|
|
SAREX crew-tended operating times will be dictated by the time of
|
|
launch. As a secondary payload, SAREX will be operated by Parise during
|
|
his pre- and post-sleep activities each day. This means that wherever the
|
|
Shuttle is above Earth during those operating windows, amateur stations
|
|
can communicate with Columbia. Currently, those windows provide
|
|
coverage for Australia, Japan, South America and South Africa.
|
|
|
|
The continental United States has little or no coverage except
|
|
through a network of ground stations in other parts of the world in
|
|
conjunction with relay links back to the United States.
|
|
|
|
Another part of the SAREX is the "robot," providing an automated
|
|
operation which can proceed with little human intervention. The robot
|
|
will generally be activated during one of the crew-tended windows and
|
|
deactivated during the next one. This gives approximately 12 hours on
|
|
and 12 hours off for the robot, with the operational period chosen to
|
|
cover all of the U.S. passes.
|
|
|
|
SAREX has previously flown on missions STS-9 and STS-51F in
|
|
different configurations, including the following hardware: a low-power
|
|
hand-held FM transceiver, a spare battery set, an interface (I/F) module,
|
|
a headset assembly, an equipment assembly cabinet, a television camera
|
|
and monitor, a payload general support computer (PGSC) and an antenna
|
|
which will be mounted in a forward flight window with a fast scan
|
|
television (FSTV) module added to the assembly.
|
|
|
|
Antenna location does not affect communications and therefore
|
|
does not require a specific orbiter attitude for operations. The
|
|
equipment is stowed in one middeck locker.
|
|
|
|
SAREX is a joint effort of NASA and the American Radio Relay
|
|
League (ARRL)/Amateur Radio Satellite Corporation (AMSAT)
|
|
|
|
|
|
STS-35 COLUMBIA SAREX FREQUENCIES
|
|
|
|
Shuttle Transmit Accompanying Shuttle
|
|
Frequency Receive Frequencies
|
|
|
|
Group 1 145.55 MHz 144.95 MHz
|
|
145.55 144.91
|
|
145.55 144.97
|
|
|
|
Group 2 145.51 144.91
|
|
145.51 144.93
|
|
145.51 144.99
|
|
|
|
Group 3 145.59 144.99
|
|
145.59 144.95
|
|
|
|
Group 4 145.55 144.95
|
|
145.55 144.70
|
|
145.55 144.75
|
|
145.55 144.80
|
|
145.55 144.85
|
|
|
|
Note: The 145.55/144.95 combination is in both Groups 1 and 4
|
|
because alternate uplink frequencies from Group 1 would
|
|
be used over North and South America while those from
|
|
Group 4 would be used generally in other parts of the
|
|
world.
|
|
|
|
|
|
"SPACE CLASSROOM, ASSIGNMENT: THE STARS"
|
|
|
|
"Space Classroom" is a new NASA educational effort designed to
|
|
involve students and teachers in the excitement of Space Shuttle science
|
|
missions. This new program joins more than 160 other educational
|
|
programs being conducted by NASA that use the agency's missions and
|
|
unique facilities to help educators prepare students to meet the nation's
|
|
growing need for a globally competitive work force of skilled scientists
|
|
and engineers.
|
|
|
|
The first Space Classroom project, called Assignment: The Stars,
|
|
will capitalize on the December 1990 flight of Astro-1, a Space Shuttle
|
|
astronomy mission. It is designed to spark the interest of middle school
|
|
students, encouraging them to pursue studies in mathematics, science
|
|
and technology. It will offer educators an alternative approach to
|
|
teaching their students about the electromagnetic spectrum -- a science
|
|
concept that is required instruction in many classrooms in the United
|
|
States.
|
|
|
|
Space Classroom, Assignment: The Stars, involves several
|
|
educational elements: a lesson on the electromagnetic spectrum to be
|
|
taught live by the Astro-1 crew from the cabin of the Space Shuttle
|
|
Columbia during the flight; a supporting lesson to be taught from the
|
|
Astro-1 control center in Huntsville, Ala.; an Astro-1 teachers guide; an
|
|
Astro-1 slide presentation; a NASA educational satellite video conference
|
|
next fall; and post-flight video products suitable for classroom use.
|
|
|
|
The major component of Assignment: The Stars will be a lesson
|
|
taught by members of the Astro-1 science crew from the Space Shuttle as
|
|
they orbit the Earth during the mission. This 15-20 minute presentation
|
|
will focus on the electromagnetic spectrum and its relationship to the
|
|
high-energy astronomy mission.
|
|
|
|
The crew presentation will be followed by demonstrations and
|
|
discussions of the concepts introduced by the crew from a classroom in
|
|
the Astro-1 control center at Marshall Space Flight Center.
|
|
|
|
The lesson will conclude with an opportunity for some students
|
|
participating in the lesson from Marshall and students at Goddard Space
|
|
Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., to ask questions of the crew in orbit.
|
|
Students at both centers will participate in additional workshops, tours
|
|
and laboratory sessions.
|
|
|
|
The lesson by the crew, the follow-up lesson from the Astro-1
|
|
control center and the question-answer session will be carried live on
|
|
NASA Select TV, Satcom satellite F2R, transponder 13, 3960 megahertz,
|
|
72 degrees West longitude. NASA Select will carry continuous
|
|
programming of all mission events as well. The lesson is tentatively
|
|
scheduled for the fifth day of the mission.
|
|
|
|
Beginning about 1 week before launch, Astro-1 Update, a recorded
|
|
bulletin on the status of the Astro-1 mission and Space Classroom, will be
|
|
available by dialing 205/544-8504.
|
|
|
|
In the fall of 1991, tapes of the lesson will available for a small fee
|
|
from NASA CORE, Lorain County Joint Vocational School, 15181 Route
|
|
58 South, Oberlin, Ohio, 44074 (phone: 216/ 774-1051).
|
|
|
|
|
|
ORBITER EXPERIMENTS PROGRAM
|
|
|
|
The advent of operations of the Space Shuttle orbiter provided an
|
|
opportunity for researchers to perform flight experiments on a full-scale,
|
|
lifting vehicle during atmospheric entry. In 1976, to take advantage of
|
|
this opportunity, NASA's Office of Aeronautics, Exploration and
|
|
Technology instituted the Orbiter Experiments (OEX) Program.
|
|
|
|
Since the program's inception, 13 experiments have been
|
|
developed for flight. Principal investigators for these experiments
|
|
represent NASA's Langley and Ames Research Centers, Johnson Space
|
|
Center and Goddard Space Flight Center.
|
|
|
|
Six OEX experiments will be flown on STS-35. Included among
|
|
this group will be five experiments which were intended to operate
|
|
together as a complementary set of entry research instrumentation. This
|
|
flight marks the first time since the September 1988 return-to-flight
|
|
that the Langley experiments will fly as a complementary set.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Shuttle Entry Air Data System (SEADS)
|
|
|
|
The SEADS nosecap on the orbiter Columbia contains 14
|
|
penetration assemblies, each containing a small hole through which the
|
|
surface air pressure is sensed. Measurement of the pressure levels and
|
|
distribution allows post-flight determination of vehicle attitude and
|
|
atmospheric density during entry. SEADS, which has flown on three
|
|
previous flights of Columbia, operates in an altitude range of 300,000 feet
|
|
to landing. Paul M. Siemers III, Langley, is the principal investigator.
|
|
Shuttle Upper Atmosphere Mass Spectrometer (SUMS)
|
|
|
|
The SUMS experiment complements SEADS by enabling
|
|
measurement of atmospheric density above 300,000 feet. SUMS samples
|
|
air through a small hole on the lower surface of the vehicle just aft of the
|
|
nosecap. It utilizes a mass spectrometer operating as a pressure sensing
|
|
device to measure atmospheric density in the high altitude, rarefied flow
|
|
regime where the pressure is too low for the use of ordinary pressure
|
|
sensors. The mass spectrometer incorporated in the SUMS experiment
|
|
was spare equipment originally developed for the Viking Mars Lander.
|
|
This is the first opportunity for SUMS to fly since STS-61C in January
|
|
1986. Robert C. Blanchard and Roy J. Duckett, Langley, are co-principal
|
|
investigators.
|
|
|
|
Both SEADS and SUMS provide entry atmospheric environmental
|
|
(density) information. These data, when combined with vehicle motion
|
|
data, allow determination of in-flight aerodynamic performance
|
|
characteristics of the orbiter.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Aerodynamic Coefficient Identification Package (ACIP)
|
|
|
|
The ACIP instrumentation includes triaxial sets of linear
|
|
accelerometers, angular accelerometers and angular rate gyros, which
|
|
sense the orbiter's motions during flight. ACIP provides the vehicle
|
|
motion data which is used in conjunction with the SEADS environmental
|
|
information for determination of aerodynamic characteristics below about
|
|
300,000 feet altitude.
|
|
|
|
The ACIP has flown on all flights of Challenger and Columbia. David
|
|
B. Kanipe, Johnson Space Center, is the ACIP principal investigator.
|
|
|
|
High Resolution Accelerometer Package (HiRAP)
|
|
|
|
This instrument is a triaxial, orthogonal set of highly sensitive
|
|
accelerometers which sense vehicle motions during the high altitude
|
|
portion (above 300,000 feet) of entry. This instrument provides the
|
|
companion vehicle motion data to be used with the SUMS results. HiRAP
|
|
has been flown on 11 previous missions of the orbiters Columbia and
|
|
Challenger. Robert C. Blanchard, Langley, is the HiRAP principal
|
|
investigator.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Shuttle Infrared Leeside Temperature Sensing (SILTS)
|
|
|
|
This experiment uses a scanning infrared radiometer located atop
|
|
the vertical tail to collect infrared images of the orbiter's leeside (upper)
|
|
surfaces during entry, for the purpose of measuring the temperature
|
|
distribution and thereby the aerodynamic heating environment. On two
|
|
previous missions, the experiment obtained images of the left wing. For
|
|
STS-35, the experiment has been reconfigured to obtain images of the
|
|
upper fuselage.
|
|
|
|
SILTS has flown on three Columbia flights. David A. Throckmorton
|
|
and E. Vincent Zoby, Langley, are co-principal investigators.
|
|
|
|
Aerothermal Instrumentation Package (AIP)
|
|
|
|
The AIP comprises some 125 measurements of aerodynamic
|
|
surface temperature and pressure at discrete locations on the upper
|
|
surface of the orbiter's left wing and fuselage, and vertical tail. These
|
|
sensors originally were part of the development flight instrumentation
|
|
system which flew aboard Columbia during its Orbital Flight Test missions
|
|
(STS-1 through 4). They have been reactivated through the use of an
|
|
AIP-unique data handling system. Among other applications, the AIP data
|
|
provide "ground-truth" information for the SILTS experiment.
|
|
|
|
The AIP has flown on two previous Columbia flights. David A.
|
|
Throckmorton, Langley, is principal investigator.
|
|
|
|
|
|
STS-35 CREW BIOGRAPHIES
|
|
|
|
Vance D. Brand, 58, will serve as Commander. Selected as an
|
|
astronaut in 1966, he considers Longmont, Colo., to be his
|
|
hometown. STS-35 will be Brand's fourth space flight.
|
|
|
|
Brand was Apollo Command Module Pilot on the Apollo-Soyuz Test
|
|
Project (ASTP) mission, launched on July 15, 1975. This flight resulted
|
|
in the historic meeting in space between American astronauts and Soviet
|
|
cosmonauts. The three-member U.S.crew spent 9 days in Earth orbit.
|
|
|
|
Brand's second flight was as Commander of STS-5 in November
|
|
1982, the first fully operational flight of the Shuttle Transportation
|
|
System and first mission with a four person crew. Brand next
|
|
commanded the 10th Space Shuttle mission aboard Challenger. STS-41B
|
|
with its crew of five was launched Feb. 3, 1984.
|
|
|
|
Prior to joining NASA, Brand was a commissioned officer and naval
|
|
aviator with the U.S. Marine Corps from 1953 to 1957. Following release
|
|
from active duty, he continued in Marine Corps Reserve and Air National
|
|
Guard jet fighter squadrons until 1964. Brand was employed as a civilian
|
|
by the Lockheed Aircraft Corporation from 1960 to 1966. He was an
|
|
experimental test pilot on Canadian and German F-104 programs and has
|
|
logged 8,777 flying hours, which includes 7,312 hours in jets, 391 hours
|
|
in helicopters, 531 hours in spacecraft and checkout in more than 30
|
|
types of military aircraft.
|
|
|
|
Guy S. Gardner, 42, Col. USAF, will serve as Pilot. Selected as an
|
|
astronaut in 1980, he considers Alexandria, Va., to be his hometown.
|
|
STS-35 will be his second Shuttle flight.
|
|
|
|
Gardner was Pilot for STS-27, a 4-day flight of Atlantis launched
|
|
Dec. 2, 1988. The mission carried a Department of Defense payload. The
|
|
crew completed their mission with a lakebed landing at Edwards on Dec.
|
|
6.
|
|
Gardner graduated from George Washington High School in
|
|
Alexandria in 1965. He received a bachelor of science degree in
|
|
engineering sciences, astronautics and mathematics from the USAF
|
|
Academy in 1969 and a master of science degree in astronautics from
|
|
Purdue University in 1970.
|
|
|
|
After completing pilot training, he flew 177 combat missions in
|
|
Southeast Asia in 1972 while stationed at Udorn, Thailand. In 1973, he
|
|
flew F-4's and in 1975 attended the USAF Test Pilot School at Edwards.
|
|
In 1977-78 he was an instructor pilot at the USAF Test Pilot School. He
|
|
has logged over 4,000 hours flying time and 105 hours in space.
|
|
|
|
Jeffrey A. Hoffman, 45, will serve as Mission Specialist 1 (MS1). Selected
|
|
as an astronaut in 1978, he was born in Brooklyn, N.Y. STS-35 will be his
|
|
second Shuttle flight.
|
|
|
|
Hoffman was a Mission Specialist aboard Discovery on STS-51D,
|
|
which launched from the Kennedy Space Center in April 1985. On this
|
|
mission, he made the first STS contingency spacewalk, in an attempted
|
|
rescue of the malfunctioning Syncom IV-3 satellite.
|
|
|
|
Hoffman graduated from Scarsdale High School, Scarsdale, N.Y.,
|
|
and received a bachelor of arts degree in astronomy from Amherst
|
|
College in 1966. He received a doctor of philosophy in astrophysics from
|
|
Harvard University in 1971 and a masters degree in materials science
|
|
from Rice University in 1988.
|
|
|
|
At NASA, Hoffman has worked as the astronaut office payload safety
|
|
representative. He also has worked on extravehicular activity (EVA),
|
|
including the development of a high-pressure space suit.
|
|
|
|
John M. "Mike" Lounge, 43, will be Mission Specialist 2 (MS2).
|
|
Selected as an astronaut in 1980, Lounge considers Burlington, Colo., to
|
|
be his hometown. He will be making his third Shuttle flight.
|
|
|
|
Lounge was a mission specialist on STS-51I conducted in August
|
|
1985. During that mission his duties included deployment of the
|
|
Australian AUSSAT communications satellite and operation of the remote
|
|
manipulator system (RMS) arm. The crew deployed two other
|
|
communications satellites and also performed a successful on-orbit
|
|
rendezvous and repair of the ailing SYNCOM IV-3 satellite. His second
|
|
flight was aboard Discovery on STS-26 in September 1988.
|
|
|
|
Lounge graduated from Burlington High School in 1964 and
|
|
received a bachelor of science degree in physics and mathematics from
|
|
the U.S. Naval Academy in 1969 and a master of science degree in
|
|
astrogeophysics from the University of Colorado in 1970. At NASA,
|
|
Lounge now serves as Chief of the Space Station Support Office which
|
|
works with design and operation of the Freedom space station.
|
|
Robert Allan Ridley Parker, 53, will serve as Mission Specialist 3
|
|
(MS3). Selected as an astronaut in 1967, he grew up in Shrewsbury,
|
|
Mass., and will be making his second Shuttle flight.
|
|
|
|
Parker was a member of the astronaut support crews for Apollo 15
|
|
and 17 missions. He served as a mission specialist on Columbia's sixth
|
|
space flight, STS-9, in November 1983 which was the first Spacelab
|
|
mission.
|
|
|
|
Parker attended primary and secondary schools in Shrewsbury,
|
|
Mass.; received a bachelor of arts degree in astronomy and physics from
|
|
Amherst College in 1958, and a doctorate in astronomy from the
|
|
California Institute of Technology in 1962.
|
|
|
|
Samuel T. Durrance, 46, will serve as a Payload Specialist.
|
|
Durrance is a research scientist in the Department of Physics and
|
|
Astronomy at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md. He considers
|
|
Tampa, Fla., his hometown.
|
|
|
|
Durrance has made International Ultraviolet Explorer satellite
|
|
observations of Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn and Uranus. He helped
|
|
develop special pointing techniques needed to observe solar system
|
|
objects with that satellite. His main astronomical interests are in the
|
|
origin and evolution of planets, both in this solar system and around other
|
|
stars.
|
|
|
|
Durrance received a bachelor of science degree and a master of
|
|
science degree in physics from California State University and a doctor of
|
|
philosophy degree in astrogeophysics from the University of Colorado.
|
|
|
|
Ronald A. Parise, 38, also will serve as a Payload Specialist. Parise
|
|
is a senior scientist in the Space Observatories Department, Computer
|
|
Science Corporation in Silver Spring, Md. He is a member of the
|
|
research team for the Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope, one of the
|
|
instruments scheduled for flight as part of the Astro payload. He is from
|
|
Warren, Ohio.
|
|
|
|
Parise has participated in flight hardware development, electronic
|
|
system design and mission planning activities for the Ultraviolet Imaging
|
|
Telescope project. He is pursuing his astronomical research interests
|
|
with the International Ultraviolet Explorer satellite under a NASA grant.
|
|
Parise also will conduct the Shuttle Amateur Radio Experiment (SAREX)
|
|
during the STS-35 mission.
|
|
|
|
He received a bachelor of science degree in physics, with minors in
|
|
mathematics, astronomy and geology from Youngstown State University,
|
|
Ohio, and a master of science degree and a doctor of philosophy degree
|
|
in astronomy from the University of Florida.
|
|
|
|
|
|
STS-35 MISSION MANAGEMENT
|
|
|
|
Office of Space Flight
|
|
|
|
Dr. William B. Lenoir - Associate Administrator
|
|
Joseph B. Mahon - Director, Flight Systems
|
|
Robert L. Crippen - Director, Space Shuttle
|
|
Leonard S. Nicholson - Deputy Director, Space Shuttle (Program)
|
|
Brewster Shaw - Deputy Director, Space Shuttle (Operations)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Office of Space Science and Applications
|
|
Dr. Lennard A. Fisk - Associate Administrator
|
|
Alphonso V. Diaz - Deputy Associate Administrator
|
|
Robert Benson - Director, Flight Systems Division
|
|
Dr. Charles Pellerin, Jr. - Director, Astrophysics Division
|
|
William Huddleston - Astro Program Manager
|
|
Dr. Edward Weiler - Astro Program Scientist
|
|
Dr. David Huenemoerder - Deputy Program Scientist
|
|
|
|
|
|
Office of Space Operations
|
|
|
|
Charles T. Force - Associate Administrator
|
|
Eugene Ferrick - Director, Tracking & Data Relay Satellite
|
|
Systems Division
|
|
Robert M. Hornstein - Director, Ground Networks Division
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ames Research Center
|
|
|
|
Dr. Dale L. Compton - Director
|
|
Victor L. Peterson - Deputy Director
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ames-Dryden Flight Research Facility
|
|
|
|
Kenneth J. Szalai - Site Manager
|
|
Theodore G. Ayers - Deputy Site Manager
|
|
Thomas C. McMurtry - Chief, Research Aircraft
|
|
Operations Division
|
|
Larry C. Barnett - Chief, Shuttle Support Office
|
|
|
|
|
|
Goddard Space Flight Center
|
|
|
|
Dr. John Klineberg - Director
|
|
Peter T. Burr - Director of Flight Projects
|
|
Dale L. Fahnestock - Director of Mission Operations and
|
|
Data Systems Directorate
|
|
Dr. Theodore Gull - Astro Mission Scientist
|
|
Frank Volpe - BBXRT Manager
|
|
Bruce Thoman - BBXRT Operations Manager
|
|
|
|
|
|
Johnson Space Center
|
|
|
|
Aaron Cohen - Director
|
|
Eugene F. Kranz - Director, Mission Operations
|
|
Franklin Brizzolara - Payload Integration Manager
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kennedy Space Center
|
|
|
|
Forrest S. McCartney - Director
|
|
Jay Honeycutt - Director, Shuttle Management & Operations
|
|
Robert B. Sieck - Launch Director
|
|
John T. Conway - Director, Payload Management & Operations
|
|
Joanne H. Morgan - Director, Payload Project Management
|
|
Robert Sturm - Astro-1 Launch Site Support Manager
|
|
|
|
|
|
Langley Research Center
|
|
|
|
Richard H. Petersen - Director
|
|
W. Ray Hook - Director for Space
|
|
James P. Arrington - Chief, Space System Division
|
|
|
|
|
|
Marshall Space Flight Center
|
|
|
|
T. Jack Lee - Director
|
|
Jack Jones - Astro Mission Manager
|
|
Stuart Clifton - Assistant Mission Manager
|
|
Dr. Eugene Urban - Deputy Mission Scientist
|
|
Thomas Rankin - Payload Operations Director
|
|
Fred Applegate - Payload Operations Director
|
|
Steven Noneman - Payload Operations Director
|
|
|
|
Using RINGBACK in the NPA (502) by Predat0r
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ringback is used by the phone company to test a line to make sure it is
|
|
working. Anyone can do it from their own home phone. The format is as
|
|
follows. NXX-XXXX. Where NXX is the ringback prefix, and XXXX is the last
|
|
four digits of the calling station. (your phone number) Some exceptions to
|
|
this are non Bell-Systems exchanges like (GTE, et al.)
|
|
|
|
The following are ringback prefixs listed in decreasing order of use.
|
|
958 - 959 - 750 - 350 - 270 - and 820
|
|
|
|
Examples: NPA-NXX-XXXX / 502-958-1234 You do not need the area code, just
|
|
use the format NXX-XXXX in example NXX = 958 ringback prefix and the
|
|
XXXX = the calling stations last four digits.
|
|
|
|
If the correct ringback code is dialed an ESS "dialtone" will be heard. At this
|
|
point a DTMF test is available if the calling line has touch tone
|
|
service. Press 1234567890 in a 15 second period and a double burst of a
|
|
single tone will interrupt the "dialtone" to indicate proper functioning. If
|
|
a wrong digit is hit the test will reset in 15 seconds with a single, single
|
|
tone burst.
|
|
|
|
To activate ringback: Flash the hookswitch like using call waiting and the
|
|
dialtone will be replaced with a single tone. Go on hook and the station will
|
|
ring. Pick up the phone and the single tone returns. Going on hook again or
|
|
pressing a key will terminate the procedure, but flashing again and hanging
|
|
up will allow the procedure to be repeated.
|
|
|
|
|
|
This text file is for informational purposes only. But everything works, and
|
|
Ma-Bell really can't do anything to you for using ringback so have fun.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
BREAK THE SYSTEM
|
|
WIN-$25,000
|
|
|
|
The TymCard
|
|
25,000 CHALLENGE
|
|
|
|
IQ, Inc., is about to release an anti-fraud "smart
|
|
card"called TymCard, to be used by long distance telephone
|
|
companies to help eliminate calling card fraud. We belive our
|
|
product to be unbeatable. To detect any possible flaws in our
|
|
system. IQ,Inc.,is offering a prize of $25,000 to the first person
|
|
who can demonstrate that he or she has been able to access the
|
|
system, at any time, by being able to generate a valid code at
|
|
will. Accessing the system DOES NOT mean "breaking" one or more
|
|
existing TymCards as that only allows temporary and insignificant
|
|
access to the system.
|
|
|
|
EXAMPLE: If you knew the numbers of one or more TELECO calling
|
|
cards, you would be able to make long distance calls that would be
|
|
charged to that card- until you were discovered- and that number
|
|
was deacivated. If,however, you had a "Blue box", you would be able
|
|
to make calls at any time. You were able to "break the system"
|
|
without need for any calling numbers. The only permanent solution,
|
|
as far as TELECO was concerned, was to change the system which, in
|
|
effect, "deactivated" the Blue box.
|
|
|
|
A condition of this challenge is that you supply to IQ,Inc., the
|
|
details on how you were able to "crack the system" and assist
|
|
IQ.Inc., to correct the flaw.
|
|
|
|
Each respondant to this challenge will be invited to a meeting
|
|
with members of our staff. At this meeting you will be given much
|
|
more technical information about TymCard as well as a decription of
|
|
the service.
|
|
|
|
Please note that there is absolutely and positivly no charge to
|
|
you to accept this challenge. If you desire to "borrow" an active
|
|
TymCard that will allow you to test the system at any time, we ask
|
|
for 50.00 cash deposit. This deposit will be returned to you, in
|
|
full, upon the TymCard being returned to IQ.,Inc, as agreed.
|
|
|
|
===============================================================
|
|
If you are interested, please call (818) 592-0423
|
|
for more information as to the time and location of the next meeting.
|
|
===============================================================
|
|
|
|
NOTE: If you are not located in the Los Angeles area please call
|
|
the number to arrang for complete information to be sent to you by
|
|
mail.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Typed by TECHNO-COWBOY
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Abbreviations for common computer hackers to know. Phile #1
|
|
|
|
[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][]
|
|
|
|
(c) Predat0r 1990
|
|
|
|
This file is to help explain what some of the more commonly used terms
|
|
are and what they actually mean. I will try and send out more of these
|
|
to inform the fellow beginning hackers out there. If you have questions
|
|
i can be reached at the following boards. Blitzkrieg 502-499-8933 and
|
|
AMW BBS 502-491-2749. This list is in no way complete, so look
|
|
for more to come.
|
|
|
|
|
|
AT&T - American Telephone and Telegraph Corporation
|
|
BBS - Bulletin Board System
|
|
CA - Certifying Authority
|
|
CCSEP - Commercial Communications Security Enhancement Program
|
|
DAC - Discretionary Access Control
|
|
DARPA - Defense Advanced Research Projects
|
|
DEC - Digital Equipment Corporation
|
|
DES - Data Encryption Standard
|
|
DMS - Defense Message System
|
|
DOD - Departemnt of Defense
|
|
DOE - Department of Energy
|
|
LAN - Local Area Network
|
|
LAVA - Los Alamos Vulnerability Assessment
|
|
MAC - Mandatory Access Control
|
|
MSP - Message Security Protocol
|
|
NCSC - National Computer Security Center
|
|
NSDD - National Security Decision Directive
|
|
ORNL - Oak Ridge National Laboratory
|
|
OSI - Open Systems Interconnection
|
|
RAND - Research and Development Corporation
|
|
SCOMP - Secure Communications Processor
|
|
TAP - Technological Assistance Program
|
|
TG - Technical Guide
|
|
TPDU - Transport Protocol Data Unit
|
|
TRUSIX - Trusted Unix
|
|
VMS - Virtual Memory System
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
This is a small list of boards in California...
|
|
|
|
213-324-0218 The world famous S.W.A.M.P.S. [2400] (AMPS)
|
|
213-634-8993 Target Range [2400] (XPST)
|
|
213-518-9524 Masatek BBS [14.4] (FORM)
|
|
213-543-5483 The Travelling BBS [2400] (UBBS)
|
|
213-327-2255 K & L Telecatalog [2400] (WWIV)
|
|
213-831-1471 The Anarchist Express [2400] (WWIV)
|
|
213-973-7216 SnowDog's Lair [2400] (XPRS)
|
|
213-498-8824 LBACE LINE! Supporting LBACE! Atari 8 & ST! [2400] (FORM)
|
|
213-438-6812 Gemini BBS Cool Atari/Amiga BBS [2400] (EXST)
|
|
213-921-0055 The Bookstore Lots of Atari 8 & ST Files! [2400] (EXPR)
|
|
213-860-0473 Half Moon BBS IBM, Atari ST, Amiga Support [2400] (WWIV)
|
|
213-869-4663 Programmers Network IBM/MAC/AMIGA/ATARI ST! [2400] (WWIV)
|
|
213-408-2950 The Pathway BBS GT Power BBS IBM 9600 HST [9600] (GTPW)
|
|
213-860-7270 Mt. Olympus! WWIV Supporting IBM/Amiga/Atari ST [2400] (WWIV)
|
|
213-860-9171 The Wine Cooler Running WWIV 4.11! [2400] (WWIV)
|
|
619-726-0357 Morrison's Hotel - Cool place for filez! 8-Bits!!! [2400] (UFP!)
|
|
213-655-0691 Lunatic Labratories [2400] (OTHR)
|
|
213-864-1772 The Joshua Tree BBS Atari and IBM [2400] (FORM)
|
|
213-562-0207 The Nightlight [2400] (EXPR)
|
|
213-644-8104 Ground Zero- GK is back at it- The Next Generation [2400] (WWIV)
|
|
213-782-2280 Devonshire Castle - ST and IBM. Great system. [2400] (WWIV)
|
|
213-376-5372 Hitchhiker's Guide BBS - 9pm to 5am only! [2400] (UBBS)
|
|
415-376-8060 Skeleton Crue, loads of text, phreak/anarchy [1200] (WWIV)
|
|
213-371-8321 Grid Point [2400] (CNET)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Taken from The Anarchist Express
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
NYNEX SERVICE COMPANY
|
|
Operations Services
|
|
COSMOS Transition
|
|
|
|
by: Nightcrawler
|
|
|
|
|
|
TO ALL COSMOS (NYNEX/NET/NYT) USERS:
|
|
|
|
functionality of TIRKS.
|
|
|
|
advances made in computing technology during that time frame.
|
|
|
|
fourth quarter of 1992.
|
|
|
|
survey..."
|
|
|
|
asynchronous pathways to SWITCH:]
|
|
|
|
SYNCHRONOUS USERS ===============================
|
|
(LAC, NAC, RSB, SPEC, SWAD) | SWITCH |
|
|
| | |
|
|
|-----------------> ===============================
|
|
|
|
|| * APP to APP || * APP to APP
|
|
==========================================================
|
|
|| FUSA || FOMS ||
|
|
|| inq, fce, mmc, tpu ||for, fwm, foi(like soi)||
|
|
|| rqf, ddo ||fol(like sol), ijr, ufo||
|
|
==========================================================
|
|
? | ASYNCHRONOUS USERS |
|
|
| (FRAME, RCMAC, CCRS) |
|
|
|
|
The following is a buffer from the Red Phone bbs / Former home to ATI!
|
|
|
|
Reread Previous
|
|
#4724 - BBS/Telecom
|
|
|
|
From: CHARLES GOLD (#55)
|
|
Date: 04/15/90 - 5:13 pm
|
|
Subj: 201.445.1528
|
|
|
|
Informative (And Sometimes Controversial) Discussions With Interesting People.
|
|
The Night Owl EBBS - 201-445-1528 2400/1200/300 24 Hrs./7 Days A Week.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Replies: #4728
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#4728 - BBS/Telecom
|
|
|
|
|
|
From: STAINLESS STEEL RAT (#58)
|
|
Date: 04/15/90 - 10:48 pm
|
|
Subj: (R)201.445.1528
|
|
|
|
After that call....
|
|
|
|
|
|
2
|
|
0
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
9
|
|
1
|
|
6
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
4
|
|
2
|
|
5
|
|
|
|
201 916 0425
|
|
|
|
|
|
~~~~~ Worshop Of
|
|
The
|
|
Telescopes
|
|
~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Sysop: Desdinova
|
|
|
|
Soon with 30 Megs!?!
|
|
MY GOD!!!
|
|
|
|
(...)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#4739 - BBS/Telecom
|
|
|
|
|
|
From: TI-MAN (#64)
|
|
Date: 04/16/90 - 7:08 pm
|
|
Subj: A (@@L BBS.
|
|
|
|
|
|
You thought it would be happening soon, but didn't know when,
|
|
|
|
TI-MAN'S ROOM BBS is going 24 hours at a NEW Number. When you have finished
|
|
calling here, call TI-MAN'S ROOM BBS at it's NEW NUMBER: (201)-338-3569.
|
|
We will be open 24 HOURS a day, 7 DAYS A WEEK, running PBBS V.3.20 AT 300/1200
|
|
AND 2400 Baud at 8/N/1.
|
|
|
|
Sysop-TI-MAN
|
|
Co's-ULTRA, UenturA, XYNAMAX
|
|
|
|
|
|
Remember: When you finish here, call TI-MAN'S ROOM at it's new #, (201)338-3569
|
|
.
|
|
|
|
Thank You,
|
|
|
|
Matt
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#4753 - BBS/Telecom
|
|
|
|
|
|
From: TRICLOPS (#52)
|
|
Date: 04/17/90 - 1:39 pm
|
|
Subj: Workshop
|
|
|
|
Anyone know why
|
|
The Workshop of the Telescopes
|
|
is down??? When you call the recording says the number has been temporarily
|
|
disconnected.
|
|
TrIcLoPs
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
::::
|
|
::::::::
|
|
: : : :
|
|
|
|
|
|
Replies: #4758 #4779 #4786
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#4758 - BBS/Telecom
|
|
|
|
|
|
From: GROUND ZERO (#2)
|
|
Date: 04/17/90 - 4:56 pm
|
|
Subj: (R)Workshop
|
|
|
|
I guess Des didn't pay his fone bill.. :(
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Replies: #4779 #4786
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#4779 - BBS/Telecom
|
|
|
|
|
|
From: STAINLESS STEEL RAT (#58)
|
|
Date: 04/19/90 - 5:15 pm
|
|
Subj: (R)Workshop
|
|
|
|
Des Cut His Phone Bill A Bit Close.
|
|
|
|
It sWill Be Up Shortly. With the 22 Megs Soon.....A Few Weeks Hopefully.
|
|
|
|
(...)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Replies: #4786
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#4786 - BBS/Telecom
|
|
|
|
|
|
From: TI-MAN (#64)
|
|
Date: 04/19/90 - 11:58 pm
|
|
Subj: (R)Workshop
|
|
|
|
Shame On you, Des. I can't wait 'till it goes up again, as I have to tell him
|
|
somethin'. I guess it can wait, tho.
|
|
|
|
TI-MAN
|
|
|
|
TI-MAN'S ROOM BBS- (201)-338-3569 24 Hours/7 Days, 300/1200/2400 Baud,
|
|
8/N/1.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#4742 - Upcoming Events
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#4709 - Telecom Fun
|
|
|
|
|
|
From: MAD SCIENTIST (#25)
|
|
Date: 04/14/90 - 12:56 am
|
|
Subj: (R)Aliance...
|
|
|
|
Ugh, warez here? I don't think it would be too great. I wouldnt mind
|
|
seeing some new filez like phrack and fun though...most warez for c64 suck
|
|
now..I run a bbs(which supposedly has 0-1 day warez..heh) although I have no
|
|
idea why..I hate commodore games..actually I hate all games now...I always
|
|
feel like im scapping when I dl stuff here...but I know were not really
|
|
supposed to ul stuff unless we ask..oh well..definitly put those filez up
|
|
though...
|
|
|
|
Mad Scientist
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Replies: #4714 #4741 #4743
|
|
|
|
|
|
#4714 - Telecom Fun
|
|
|
|
|
|
From: STAINLESS STEEL RAT (#58)
|
|
Date: 04/14/90 - 5:06 pm
|
|
Subj: (R)Aliance...
|
|
|
|
I amlost feel the same about the amiga. i like the word proccedor more than
|
|
the games. but i still..for some starnge reson. Get games. i dont even play
|
|
them. sheesh.
|
|
|
|
(...)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Replies: #4741 #4743
|
|
|
|
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#4741 - Telecom Fun
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|
|
From: DRUID OF ORANGE (#71)
|
|
Date: 04/16/90 - 9:53 pm
|
|
Subj: (R)Aliance...
|
|
|
|
I want into this outfit!
|
|
Who do I have to kill?
|
|
|
|
|
|
DRUID OF ORANGE
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
TCC WANNABE
|
|
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|
|
Replies: #4743
|
|
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#4743 - Telecom Fun
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|
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|
|
|
From: AIRBORNE (#60)
|
|
Date: 04/16/90 - 11:05 pm
|
|
Subj: (R)Aliance...
|
|
|
|
Yea, I think I would like to be in as well, GZ - Wanna let me join? If you
|
|
let me I could make my handle look /<00llike AIRBORNE/TCC or ->AIRBORNE<-
|
|
T-C-C or something to that effect!.. L8a
|
|
AIRBORNE
|
|
.s
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#4711 - Telecom Fun
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|
|
From: TRUE CHEX (#46)
|
|
Date: 04/14/90 - 1:49 am
|
|
Subj: (R)#99
|
|
|
|
TCC? Great! GZ, I didn't know you are a TCC member...
|
|
If you meet or phone Cursor/U
|
|
send him greetings from me and tell him to call me please
|
|
Bye
|
|
True Chex
|
|
|
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|
Replies: #4712 #4715 #4719 #4720 #4759
|
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#4712 - Telecom Fun
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|
From: DEMENTED PHREAK (#10)
|
|
Date: 04/14/90 - 2:26 am
|
|
Subj: (R)#99
|
|
|
|
The Criminal Connection Members are as follows:
|
|
|
|
Ground Zero (Founder)
|
|
Sk8 the Skinhead
|
|
Repro (Co-Founder?)
|
|
Cursor
|
|
The Flash
|
|
Demented Phreak (me)
|
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|
|
Replies: #4715 #4719 #4720 #4759
|
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#4715 - Telecom Fun
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|
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|
|
From: THE MASQUE (#27)
|
|
Date: 04/14/90 - 5:39 pm
|
|
Subj: (R)#99
|
|
|
|
Didnt sk8 get nailed? I thought he did...
|
|
<Then again maybee he didnt and I was trippin>
|
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|
|
Replies: #4719 #4720 #4759
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#4719 - Telecom Fun
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|
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From: DEMENTED PHREAK (#10)
|
|
Date: 04/15/90 - 3:54 am
|
|
Subj: (R)#99
|
|
|
|
Yes he did, but he's still in he group... Now for some interesting computer
|
|
info. Let's play name that system, here goes:
|
|
|
|
* * * * * Predicted * * * * *
|
|
Trunk outage results summary report
|
|
|
|
Current Period Local Toll Inter Aux Total
|
|
--------------- ------ ----- ------ ---- ------
|
|
Number of trunks 1267 1099 95 81 2542
|
|
|
|
There's more but I'll type it later if anyone really cares. Heres a nother:
|
|
|
|
Mechanized Screener
|
|
* MLT Summary Ver:NV CVER:
|
|
|
|
DC RES TR: TG: RG:
|
|
DC V TR: TG: RG:
|
|
AC RES TR: TG: RG:
|
|
|
|
* CABLE & ASSIGNMENT DATA OE:
|
|
NPA WC CABLE PAIR BP COLOR TERMINAL ADDRESS
|
|
|
|
|
|
Replies: #4720 #4759
|
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#4720 - Telecom Fun
|
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|
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|
|
From: DEMENTED PHREAK (#10)
|
|
Date: 04/15/90 - 4:02 am
|
|
Subj: (R)#99
|
|
|
|
Here's some more:
|
|
|
|
* REC CODE:D5 DIGS AS OUPLUSED:PRE-SUFF
|
|
DATA CALL ID: A INFO DIGITS:40 CONS NO:FF SUBGRP: 0 TRMTYPE:3
|
|
TRMID:044A0029AAA0 RTE INFO:0 DAY=089 TIME: HR=10 MIN=12 SEC=44
|
|
ELASPED TIME=000025 ORIG FC:0 TERM FC:0 CLD NO:PRE-SUFF
|
|
|
|
|
|
I know the first two (see if you do) But the second one has got me.....
|
|
later
|
|
DP_TCC
|
|
|
|
|
|
Replies: #4759
|
|
#4759 - Telecom Fun
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|
|
From: GROUND ZERO (#2)
|
|
Date: 04/17/90 - 4:58 pm
|
|
Subj: (R)#99
|
|
|
|
Please tell us what those systems are. They look like COSMOS, but I could be
|
|
wrong..
|
|
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|
#4721 - Telecom Fun
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|
|
|
|
|
From: THE MASQUE (#27)
|
|
Date: 04/15/90 - 11:27 am
|
|
Subj: Check out newswire
|
|
|
|
at @20242 on telenet...
|
|
choose term id 17(for commie vt52) I found that easiest to read... type:wire
|
|
then it will say good day welcome to wire... then will ask for resubmition if
|
|
identification... just type wire again...
|
|
|
|
later...
|
|
|
|
<some interesting storiez on there...>
|
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|
|
Replies: #4760 #4771
|
|
|
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|
|
#4760 - Telecom Fun
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|
|
From: GROUND ZERO (#2)
|
|
Date: 04/17/90 - 5:01 pm
|
|
Subj: (R)Check out newswire
|
|
|
|
Cool! I'll have to try it out!
|
|
|
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|
|
Replies: #4771
|
|
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|
|
#4771 - Telecom Fun
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|
|
From: HACKER (#118)
|
|
Date: 04/18/90 - 8:15 pm
|
|
Subj: (R)Check out newswire
|
|
|
|
I cheked out that Newswire thing..was kewl..had to play with the terminal
|
|
emulation ALOT to get it workin with the amiga.
|
|
|
|
#4763 - Telecom Fun
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|
|
|
|
From: DEMENTED PHREAK (#10)
|
|
Date: 04/18/90 - 2:32 am
|
|
Subj: sys's
|
|
|
|
The first one I'm pretty sure is a PREDICTOR, maybe not though. The second
|
|
is a front end LMOS (unless MLT has it's own database) and the last MAY BE a
|
|
DNR report, you'd hafta look at the whole thing to tell. I gotta go, bye
|
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|
|
Replies: #4764 #4781
|
|
|
|
#4764 - Telecom Fun
|
|
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|
|
From: ANDROID POPE (#53)
|
|
Date: 04/18/90 - 9:55 am
|
|
Subj: (R)sys's
|
|
|
|
Hmm, I think I missed something....
|
|
Anyhow, I don't know if I mentioned that the LOD d00dz are gonna be in
|
|
the next issue of NewsWeek. At least, that's what I heard. I picked
|
|
up the new one (with the simpsons on the front) and couldn't find it there,
|
|
so maybe next week....
|
|
|
|
Also, the latest newspaper article about LOD said that there will be
|
|
indictments (or whatever they're called) passed down within a month
|
|
for the Texas Members of LOD. And that D.A.'s from around the country
|
|
are getting together to make one big case against the entire group...
|
|
Uh, Oh. Looks like these guys aren't fooling around....
|
|
|
|
+-AP-+
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|
|
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|
|
Replies: #4781
|
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|
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#4781 - Telecom Fun
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|
|
From: URBAN LIVIDITY (#43)
|
|
Date: 04/19/90 - 9:25 pm
|
|
Subj: (R)sys's
|
|
|
|
Anyone get Telephony mag? the LOD incident was in there..
|
|
|
|
URban is back!.. Drop me some mail with some info.
|
|
|
|
URban Lividity
|
|
|
|
#4770 - Telecom Fun
|
|
|
|
From: NEUROMANCER (#110)
|
|
Date: 04/18/90 - 5:40 pm
|
|
Subj: (R)Phracks and other files.
|
|
|
|
Ya,ya....I'd be interested in seeing some more of Phrack,too.
|
|
|
|
Especially now that the ATI's are so widely spaced apart.
|
|
|
|
(Hint,hint...)
|
|
|
|
<:*:> Neuromancer <:*:>
|
|
|
|
#4772 - Telecom Fun
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|
|
|
|
From: SK8 THE SKINHEAD (#13)
|
|
Date: 04/19/90 - 9:31 am
|
|
Subj: Heywhat
|
|
|
|
Hey whats up...dudes..longtime....im at a friends house. Im sure we
|
|
all know that even thou i was busted im still as professional as ever the
|
|
catc is im almostpositive that a narc nared on me...heh ..ive decided that my
|
|
EITE megatime TRW file should be released..and sent everywhere on the bbs's
|
|
ill have Gz throw it up sometime soon..only a couple people got it..so
|
|
far..anfrom what they tell me they like it. well till the next 0700 etc
|
|
Sl8z....ifyou need to contact me notify the sysop thru feedback.
|
|
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|
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|
|
#4782 - Telecom Fun
|
|
|
|
|
|
From: URBAN LIVIDITY (#43)
|
|
Date: 04/19/90 - 9:27 pm
|
|
Subj: Paid hacking!
|
|
|
|
I do part-time contract hacking for this corp. in Reston, VA. They are
|
|
looking for Unix security experts/hacking to do contract work from home. They
|
|
reimburse you for ld calls made to systems and pay you on just what you find
|
|
out plus hourly. It's too true to believe. Send your resume and cover letter
|
|
to:
|
|
|
|
Washington Synectics International
|
|
Suite 310
|
|
11120 South Lakes Drive
|
|
Reston, VA 22091
|
|
Attn: Lucia R.
|
|
|
|
|
|
URban Lividity
|
|
|
|
*** END OF MESSAGES ***
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
+--------------------------+
|
|
! Locker Docs !
|
|
! !
|
|
! Complete documentaion to !
|
|
! your school locker !
|
|
! !
|
|
! The first in the series !
|
|
! "Vandalism: A Tutorial" !
|
|
! !
|
|
! By: Cablecast 0perator !
|
|
! and Silver Sphere !
|
|
+--------------------------+
|
|
|
|
Before we start, if you are friends with counselors that let you borrow
|
|
their keys, steal the master for all the lockers in your school. You may
|
|
now ignore the rest of this file.
|
|
|
|
:=> Waht You Need
|
|
3/8" Hex Driver
|
|
Adjustable Wrench(es)
|
|
Needlenose Pliers
|
|
Moby Pliers (Vise-Grips work REAL
|
|
well!)
|
|
6" Steel Rod or Small Crow Bar
|
|
Small Standard Screwdriver
|
|
Large Standard Screwdriver
|
|
Phillipshead Screwdriver
|
|
Moderate Size Claw Hammer
|
|
|
|
:=> Taking Over
|
|
At the beginning of each school year, there are a good deal of unused
|
|
lockers around the school. If one of these is near your next class, slap a
|
|
padlock on it; we'll get into putting a school lock on it later...
|
|
Every school has at least one designated "Garbage Locker". Find it
|
|
(them), they can be used to your advantage!
|
|
If a locker you want already has an owner, no problem! Read the next
|
|
section for more information...
|
|
If you have a large suppy of padlocks (which every locker
|
|
destroyer has!), be sure to put them on the ones that you want so you'll
|
|
have it later when we go to put a school-issued lock on it later.
|
|
|
|
:=> Getting In
|
|
Now the real challenge begins! The hardest part of all of this is
|
|
getting in the thing in the first place! But it's easy if you know the
|
|
tricks of the trade:
|
|
> Padlocks (Combination or Key)
|
|
Here's where we get to use the crow bar! Slip it between the lock and the
|
|
latch on the locker, while going between the two rods of the shank.
|
|
Apply serious downward force. This takes 'em off so disgustingly easily.
|
|
it's not fair! As a matter of fact, we can rip Master key locks off with
|
|
a crummy hex driver!
|
|
|
|
> Destroying the Thing
|
|
If you are so pissed as to rip the lock off and take over by force, be
|
|
sure this is your last resort! You leave little marks on the paint, but
|
|
a cheap can of canary yellow or what ever color you loker may be will take
|
|
care of that. Get the crowbar again. One end should fit between the dial
|
|
and the door. If not, pry it open a little with one of the screwdrivers.
|
|
Rip the dial off without mercy. The lock itself will fall inside the locker
|
|
after the bolts snap and will be free for opening! If you can get a
|
|
new dial for the lock you ripped off, try to get it on so you have another
|
|
usable lock.
|
|
|
|
> Going Through The Combination
|
|
Getting in this way is rare, but welcomed. Spend an afternoon
|
|
wandering the halls looking at the walls, ledges, doors, around a
|
|
lockers wherever a combination can be written without being easily seen. If
|
|
you find one, try it out-CAREFULLY! Once you get one that works, steal
|
|
it!
|
|
|
|
> Pennied Lockers
|
|
Now we're talking REALLY rare! But these are real easy to spot. Walk
|
|
around looking at the latch. If it is sticking up a mile higher than the
|
|
others, give it a tug. Some of them stick that high naturally or if the
|
|
locker is over-filled, so watch for those.
|
|
|
|
:=> Once You're In
|
|
All right, you FINALLY got the locker open and the lock is intact.
|
|
Look around. Steal anything of value. Now, let's get the lock, ok? See
|
|
those two nuts above and below the lock on the inside of the door? Get
|
|
the 3/8" hex driver and remove them. Now grab the dial and the lock and
|
|
pull free from the door. Try not to move the dial-it's a real pain in the
|
|
ass getting it back right! Refasten the nuts and take it to new location,
|
|
and re-install it on the new locker repeating the steps. If the dial does
|
|
not go in at first, frob with it awhile until it seats into the lock.
|
|
Congrats! You now have just taken over your first locker!
|
|
|
|
> Ripping Out The Walls!
|
|
If you are on the right side of a wall, you can remove it with little
|
|
difficulty and get into the locker next to yours. Use the same hex driver
|
|
and unfasten the nuts holding it in. Watch out for the shelf, though!
|
|
|
|
:=> Garbage Lockers
|
|
As mentioned above, garbage lockers can be very useful. These usually
|
|
evidant the first 2-3 months of school. They reach maturity in about 1-6
|
|
months depending on use. The custodians come and clean and
|
|
disinfect it thoroughly, killing wahtever new forms of life you may
|
|
have developed. They then will usually put a school-owned padlock on it.
|
|
Now, scince it's clean, and you know how to get padlocks off, we say it's
|
|
ripe for picking!
|
|
You previously have been opening lockers seeing if they are worth
|
|
conquering, and how come across a trash locker. Maybe you contributed
|
|
an unwanted apple, someone's homework, etc to it. You suddenly
|
|
notice one day that the janitors have taken it over. Immediately, you
|
|
snap the lock off and you have a nice clean locker.
|
|
|
|
:=> When To Do Your Vandalism
|
|
1. At lunch
|
|
2. Skip a period
|
|
3. After school
|
|
(1) Possibly hard to do. Either no one is allowed around school or
|
|
everyone is eating at their lockers.
|
|
(2) May cause difficulties. That is, unless you are already failing that
|
|
class.
|
|
(3) This is great. Join some stupid club and then leave early everyday.
|
|
Now you have enough time to swipe a few! You could also get a job
|
|
at school with the janitors or as a techie. Now you have lots of time
|
|
when the school is empty and you have access to MORE TOOLS!
|
|
|
|
:=> Rating Of Padlocks By Brand
|
|
> Combination
|
|
Guard- This is the cheapest piece of shit that we've ever run across!
|
|
The case is undoubtedly in two peices, and most often, there are cracks
|
|
around the edges. Now turn it over and look on the back. See those two rivets?
|
|
We took TWO of these off with a SNEAKER!
|
|
American- Okay. Getting a little harder to get off now. The shank is
|
|
'left-handed', and the dial is firmly secured.
|
|
Master- Supposedly 'top-of-the-line', but still can be removed with a little
|
|
pressure. LEAN ON THAT MOTHER!
|
|
|
|
> Key
|
|
Master- Several million of these, no reason to break one off as of yet.
|
|
Sears- One peice case, gave us a little trouble to take off with
|
|
our hex driver.
|
|
|
|
:=> Glossary Of Most-Used Terms
|
|
|
|
Padlock- any self-comtained removable lock characterized by a steel shank.
|
|
Usually requires key or combination to open.
|
|
|
|
Dial- Circular unit found on the outside of a school locker used to
|
|
dial the combination.
|
|
|
|
Lock- The unit mounted inside the locker that prevents the latch from
|
|
moving when the combination has not been dialed.
|
|
|
|
Shank- Steel semicircle on a padlock that will lock when pushed into the
|
|
case of a padlock.
|
|
|
|
Latch- What you push, pull or twist to get a locker open.
|
|
|
|
Door- Hinged wall on a locker. Most of the time, the only way into a
|
|
locker.
|
|
|
|
Locker- Aluminum cubicle used for dumping books, freshman, or gym
|
|
clothes in.
|
|
|
|
Master- Company know for making cheap locks that can be easily opened with
|
|
a dinky-ass screw driver or the key that opens a given set of locks.
|
|
|
|
Plate[1]- Metal sheet with a number stamped on it used for identifying
|
|
lockers.
|
|
|
|
Plate[2]- A peice of metal that covers the hole in the door where the dial
|
|
goes if one is not present.
|
|
|
|
Wall- Removable surface inside locker.
|
|
|
|
Shelf- A sheet of wood cut to the shape and dimensions so that it fits snug
|
|
inside a locker.
|
|
|
|
|
|
We would like to dedicate this article to those of us who got busted while
|
|
this was being compiled. For those of you to follow in our footsteps, BE
|
|
CAREFUL!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
How to contact TAP for the price of a local call!
|
|
|
|
Since Blitzkrieg is in the national WWIVnet you can simply contact
|
|
your local wwiv bbs and send mail across the net to users on the bbs.
|
|
If you wish to send in text files for publication this makes it easy.
|
|
They are limited in size to 20,000 bytes, if your sysop is cool he
|
|
can send 32k mail packets. So you might have to break the file into
|
|
smaller parts to send it all.
|
|
|
|
Here is what you do. Get an account from a bbs in the list below.
|
|
Once you are validated you can send mail to user 1 @ 5211. 5211 is
|
|
the node number for Blitzkrieg Bbs. You can either send regular mail
|
|
or you can type //upload from the main menu and then upload a file
|
|
using various protocols. Then your next email will contain the file
|
|
you just uploaded. Sound easy, well it is. So i expect some articles
|
|
headed my way for future issues.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Listing on boards in the WWIVnetwork.
|
|
|
|
|
|
@2450 ? *214-487-6483 #2400 "Late Night with the COLONEL"
|
|
@2451 *214-686-8421 #2400 "Radio K.A.O.S."
|
|
@2452 *214-368-2511 #19200 | "The Other Side"
|
|
@2455 *214-644-0366 #2400 "The O.K. Corral"
|
|
@2456 *214-374-7963 #2400 "Knights of Darkness by Lexam Systems"
|
|
@2457 *214-289-8524 #2400 "Knight Court"
|
|
@2458 *214-266-6165 #2400 "The Last Resort"
|
|
@2459 *214-324-3680 #1200 "Triple XXX Ecstasy"
|
|
@2460 *214-442-4333 #1200 "Dragon Magic"
|
|
@2461 *214-686-5424 #2400 "Venus on the Half-Shell"
|
|
@2462 *214-315-0792 #19200 "Alternate Realm"
|
|
@2463 *214-480-9369 #1200 "Space-Time Vortex"
|
|
@2464 *214-343-8771 #2400 "Grey Haven Holt"
|
|
@2465 *214-618-7414 #2400 "Gned's Magic Snails"
|
|
@2466 *214-361-5883 #2400 "Dragon Reach"
|
|
@2467 *214-934-2162 #2400 "The Portal"
|
|
@2468 *214-343-0777 #9600 < "Shadow Magic BBS"
|
|
@6550 ? *615-690-5467 #19200 <>! "Volunteer PC BBS"
|
|
@6551 *615-675-6269 #9600 > "USCC BBS"
|
|
@6552 *615-525-4934 #19200 > "Another BBS"
|
|
@6555 *615-926-8602 #2400 "Sector BBS BBS"
|
|
@6556 *615-938-7404 #2400 "The Metal Health BBS"
|
|
@6557 *615-521-2651 #2400 "KCIE"
|
|
@6560 *615-523-1618 #2400 "Graveyard BBS"
|
|
@6561 *615-397-4111 #2400 "Way-Back BBS"
|
|
@6563 *615-378-5087 #2400 "Starship Allandale"
|
|
@6564 *615-539-6208 #1200 "Thunder Mountain BBS"
|
|
@6565 *615-929-0596 #2400 "The Salimander Bingo Club"
|
|
@6566 *615-928-8022 #1200 "The Ultimate Fantasy Online"
|
|
@7352 ? *713-520-9463 #2400 "The Oak Grove"
|
|
@7354 *713-242-9766 #1200 "PC Nowhere"
|
|
@8601 *806-792-4778 #2400 "Absolute Anarchy"
|
|
@8603 ? *806-795-0509 #2400 "The Crystal Palace"
|
|
@8605 *806-742-3959 #2400 "LawLine BBS"
|
|
@8606 *806-798-2869 #2400 "The Comic Strip"
|
|
@8607 *806-762-5536 #2400 "Kaptain's Korner"
|
|
@8608 *806-637-9161 #2400 "The Electric Mailbox"
|
|
@8609 *806-793-5535 #2400 "The Dark Realm"
|
|
@8750 ? *817-691-0603 #19200 > "The Mist"
|
|
@8751 *817-766-3042 #19200 > "Enchanted Forest"
|
|
@8752 *817-855-3794 #2400 "Infinity Link"
|
|
@8754 *817-855-6754 #2400 "The Zone"
|
|
@8755 *817-766-0533 #2400 "InFlight"
|
|
@8756 *817-430-1722 #1200 "Dark Tower"
|
|
@8757 *817-696-0791 #2400 "The White House"
|
|
@8758 *817-855-0581 #2400 "The Kennel"
|
|
@8759 *817-429-0130 #2400 "The Shroud"
|
|
@8760 *817-855-4727 #2400 "The Dark Side"
|
|
@8761 *817-761-2960 #2400 "S.O.A.P."
|
|
@8762 *817-761-4820 #2400 "Lost Cause"
|
|
@8769 % *817-696-0930 #2400 "Eugene's"
|
|
@9550 *915-778-8734 #2400 "Resting Place for the Damned"
|
|
@607 *916-342-0560 #2400 "1:119/69 = =9655"
|
|
@609 *916-895-4243 #2400 "1:119/93= =9654"
|
|
@610 *916-893-9030 #2400 "1:119/6969= =9660"
|
|
@616 *916-865-8462 #2400 "1:119/357= =9656"
|
|
@644 *916-342-9239 #2400 "1:119/44.0= =9669"
|
|
@2900 ? *209-526-5899 #2400 "Maxie's Toy"
|
|
@2902 *209-544-9994 #2400 "Night Court"
|
|
@2905 *209-551-7570 #2400 "Wanderer's Haven"
|
|
@2907 *209-538-8454 #2400 "Mc Co. Online"
|
|
@2908 *209-521-7697 #2400 "The Midnight Sky"
|
|
@3300 ? *303-696-9084 #2400 "The Crypt"
|
|
@3301 *303-693-5061 #2400 "Berserker Board"
|
|
@3302 *303-830-8098 #2400 "Terra Main"
|
|
@3303 *303-652-2603 #2400 "ShiKahr [PIN]"
|
|
@3304 *303-680-7562 #2400 "Isle of the Winds"
|
|
@3306 *303-467-9071 #2400 "The Underground BBS"
|
|
@3307 *303-425-5347 #2400 "The Good Neighbor"
|
|
@3308 *303-467-0296 #2400 "Bare Cave BBS"
|
|
@3309 *303-788-1618 #2400 "S.C.C.O.R.E. B.B.S."
|
|
@4551 ? *415-229-3823 #2400 "GT Express"
|
|
@4552 *415-548-3519 #2400 "The Forest of Arden"
|
|
@4553 *415-934-7827 #1200 "The Silver Tower"
|
|
@4554 *415-937-2351 #2400 "Stainless Steel BBS"
|
|
@4555 *415-827-0265 #2400 "The Adventurer's Guild"
|
|
@4556 *415-676-5953 #2400 "Dead Rock Cafe"
|
|
@4557 *415-686-2439 #2400 "The P. R. C. BBS"
|
|
@7700 *707-823-3052 #2400 "Interface"
|
|
@7701 % *707-279-9601 #2400 "Data Xfer BBS"
|
|
@7702 ? *707-279-9730 #2400 "INNER CHORUS BBS"
|
|
@7703 *707-538-3675 #2400 "GrounD ZerO"
|
|
@7704 *707-829-3363 #2400 "Deep Thought"
|
|
@7705 *707-573-1829 #2400 "Vanishing Point"
|
|
@7706 *707-526-6378 #2400 "The Rose and the Sword"
|
|
@7707 *707-279-9646 #38400 <! "The Magic Flute"
|
|
@7708 *707-263-6612 #19200 < "Starbase Alpha"
|
|
@7709 *707-277-7969 #2400 "Golden Dawn BBS"
|
|
@7710 *707-571-1807 #2400 "The Spinach Patch"
|
|
@9651 *916-893-1750 #2400 "Logrus"
|
|
@9654 *916-895-4243 #2400 "Mesopotamia DEL (Mirage Works)"
|
|
@9655 ? *916-342-0560 #2400 "The Owl's Nest"
|
|
@9656 *916-865-7818 #2400 "Crosswinds"
|
|
@9658 *916-742-5114 #38400 <! "Shade of the Tree"
|
|
@9659 *916-649-1720 #19200 | "DMUG BBS"
|
|
@9660 *916-893-9030 #2400 "Xanadu"
|
|
@9661 *916-891-6617 #2400 "Camel in a Box"
|
|
@9662 *916-343-1954 #1200 "Outland"
|
|
@9663 *916-743-7661 #2400 "The Wood Shed"
|
|
@9664 *916-671-3846 #2400 "The Lighthouse BBS"
|
|
@9669 *916-342-9239 #2400 "Time Bender-Long"
|
|
@9677 *916-891-0312 #2400 "Unknown System"
|
|
@9690 *916-671-2340 #2400 "The Dog House"
|
|
@9696 *916-894-7053 #1200 "The Caddis Shack"
|
|
@606 *416-481-9455 #19200 < "1:250/486 = =4651"
|
|
@619 *801-269-8229 #2400 "1:311/3 = =8111"
|
|
@621 *801-538-0237 #2400 "1:311/2 = =8110"
|
|
@2602 ? *206-824-3356 #2400 "The Holodeck"
|
|
@2603 *206-698-8503 #2400 "The Unsinkable Titanic"
|
|
@2604 *206-479-4809 #2400 "Terra Tech BBS"
|
|
@2605 *206-337-0248 #38400 < "InterNet MultiSystem, Ltd, Port IV"
|
|
@2607 *206-348-5878 #2400 "Griswold's Private Reserve"
|
|
@2610 *206-337-0540 #2400 "InterNet MultiSystem, Ltd, Port I"
|
|
@2615 *206-355-4778 #2400 "InterNet MultiSystem, Ltd, Port V"
|
|
@2616 *206-867-5474 #2400 "In Your Face BBS"
|
|
@2618 *206-937-8992 #2400 "Jennifer's Jungle"
|
|
@2619 *206-365-3854 #19200 < "Escape Velocity"
|
|
@2620 *206-337-2530 #2400 "Griswold's Private Reserve II"
|
|
@2621 *206-735-2232 #2400 "The Hideaway"
|
|
@2622 *206-525-7863 #2400 "Nemesis"
|
|
@2623 *206-252-1568 #2400 "The Firehouse"
|
|
@2625 *206-455-4681 #2400 "InterNet MultiSystem, Ltd, Port VII"
|
|
@2626 *206-352-2782 #2400 "The Fireside"
|
|
@2800 *208-885-8749 #2400 "Maize BBS"
|
|
@4650 *416-538-7911 #2400 "Abacus BBS"
|
|
@4651 *416-481-9455 #19200 < "Threat BBS"
|
|
@5301 *503-772-0304 #2400 "Full Force"
|
|
@5302 *503-826-9138 #2400 "The West Wind"
|
|
@5303 *503-482-1393 #2400 "Warlock's Tower II"
|
|
@5304 *503-626-9697 #38400 <! "San Tropez"
|
|
@5305 *503-686-0951 #2400 "Anev BBS"
|
|
@5306 *503-646-0951 #2400 "NightMoves"
|
|
@5307 *503-772-1092 #2400 "User's Corner"
|
|
@5308 *503-244-6295 #2400 "Cyber Space"
|
|
@5309 *503-691-2044 #2400 "DefCon 1"
|
|
@5310 *503-776-8455 #19200 < "The Last Outpost"
|
|
@5311 ? *503-644-3537 #2400 "Milliway's"
|
|
@5312 *503-371-6566 #2400 "The Capital Connection"
|
|
@5315 *503-274-4510 #2400 "OMSI BBS"
|
|
@5317 *503-221-0726 #2400 "Ratt Sass Productions"
|
|
@5318 *503-482-9155 #2400 "The Warlock's Tower"
|
|
@5321 *503-772-6861 #2400 "The Realm of Imaginos"
|
|
@5322 *503-629-5611 #2400 "Prescient BBS"
|
|
@5323 *503-597-4437 #2400 "The Executive Branch"
|
|
@5324 *503-776-9040 #2400 "SRC Computer Services BBS"
|
|
@5900 % *509-483-7166 #19200 < "Wizard's Castle"
|
|
@5904 *509-586-3935 #2400 "TAB BBS"
|
|
@5911 *509-534-9586 #2400 "The Lost Saloon"
|
|
@5912 ? *509-483-0042 #19200 < "The Garage"
|
|
@5913 *509-326-7058 #2400 "The Magic Marque"
|
|
@5914 *509-588-6822 #2400 "TC-CUBED"
|
|
@5915 *509-334-9320 #2400 "Three Roses Inn"
|
|
@5916 *509-244-3421 #2400 "The Safehouse"
|
|
@5917 *509-662-7763 #1200 "Ice House"
|
|
@5918 *509-747-0592 #2400 "The Ol' Curiosity Shoppe"
|
|
@5919 *509-238-6992 #2400 "The Midnight Hour"
|
|
@5920 *509-783-3456 #2400 "The Master BBS"
|
|
@6900 *609-783-1975 #38400 <>!$ "Data Express"
|
|
@6901 *609-627-5307 #2400 "The Mother Ship"
|
|
@6902 *609-265-1144 #2400 "Bear Mountain RailRoad"
|
|
@6903 *609-386-6192 #2400 "DJ BBS"
|
|
@6904 *609-456-9011 #2400 "Haji's Palace"
|
|
@6905 ? *609-627-3291 #38400 <>!$ "Tech Line"
|
|
@6906 *609-488-5440 #2400 "The Land of Evil"
|
|
@6907 *609-663-8203 #2400 "The Master's Inn"
|
|
@6910 *609-764-7144 #2400 "The Promised Land"
|
|
@6914 *609-764-6358 #19200 < "Emerald City"
|
|
@6915 *609-581-0604 #2400 "Dixieland Sexpress"
|
|
@6917 *609-298-3096 #2400 "Tarkus"
|
|
@7650 ? *716-433-7904 #38400 <! "Nite Flight BBS"
|
|
@7651 *716-692-2698 #2400 "Stairway to Heaven"
|
|
@7652 *716-684-7939 #2400 "BoardWalk BBS"
|
|
@7654 *716-675-9384 #2400 "Berea BBS"
|
|
@7655 *716-433-3671 #2400 "Cerebrul Hemisphere"
|
|
@8100 *801-583-1843 #2400 "G 1:1/101= =8110"
|
|
@8110 ? *801-583-1843 #2400 "StoneWall BBS"
|
|
@8111 *801-269-8229 #2400 "The Motel West"
|
|
@8115 *801-272-1149 #2400 "Lost Galaxy"
|
|
@8116 *801-394-4766 #2400 "Slope Haven's Cathedral"
|
|
@8117 *801-269-9383 #2400 "XTC BBS"
|
|
@8119 *801-966-8914 #2400 "Shadowdale"
|
|
@8120 *801-393-5671 #2400 "Dark Lord's Domain"
|
|
@8863 *818-564-8428 #2400 "InterNet MultiSystem, Ltd, Port III"
|
|
@9700 *907-772-4873 #2400 "Tripple A Software"
|
|
@9702 *907-338-1612 #2400 "Someplace Else"
|
|
@612 *314-434-3470 #19200 < "1:100/325=bsbox.fidonet.org =3450"
|
|
@613 *618-624-6578 #2400 "1:2222/202= =6853"
|
|
@2555 *215-630-1259 #2400 "Devil's Dimension"
|
|
@2558 ? *215-493-7434 #38400 <!$ "Joe's Garage"
|
|
@2566 *215-398-2244 #2400 "Midnight Magic"
|
|
@2568 *215-974-1759 #2400 "Marvel Universe BBS"
|
|
@3352 *313-478-5836 #9600 > "007'S Afterburner"
|
|
@3353 ? *313-231-2366 #9600 < "Ufo Data Collection Center"
|
|
@3354 *313-548-0879 #2400 "The Un-Named BBS"
|
|
@3355 *313-694-7896 #2400 "The Cat's Meow"
|
|
@3357 *313-694-2608 #2400 "Vermilion"
|
|
@3450 *314-434-3470 #19200 < "B.S. Box"
|
|
@3451 *314-772-6112 #2400 "Birdhunter's Domain"
|
|
@3454 *314-741-2617 #2400 "The Power Source"
|
|
@3456 % *314-644-5777 #2400 "The Fellowship"
|
|
@3457 *314-878-8816 #2400 "Commodore Users Group of St. Louis"
|
|
@3458 *314-394-3096 #2400 "The Main Terminal"
|
|
@3459 ? *314-861-1820 #2400 "The M&M Factory"
|
|
@3460 *314-831-9039 #1200 "The Secret Society BBS"
|
|
@3461 *314-434-3373 #2400 "Mr. Ed's Barn"
|
|
@3462 *314-752-0065 #2400 "The Sand Castle"
|
|
@3463 *314-327-5837 #2400 "Time Warp"
|
|
@3464 *314-993-3689 #2400 "Master Control Program"
|
|
@3465 *314-355-5743 #2400 "The Forgotten Realms"
|
|
@3466 *314-644-6705 #9600 > "The Dark Side"
|
|
@3467 *314-595-4489 #2400 "Longships"
|
|
@3468 *314-861-1232 #2400 "The Pyramid BBS"
|
|
@3470 *314-845-0028 #2400 "The Wild West"
|
|
@3471 *314-921-8940 #19200 < "End of the Rainbow"
|
|
@3472 *314-821-1142 #19200 < "Electronic Forum II"
|
|
@3475 *314-272-8617 #2400 "//Darkside//"
|
|
@3477 *314-353-1096 #9600 < "SouthSide"
|
|
@3478 *314-296-5306 #2400 "Fred's Creative Cuisine"
|
|
@3499 *314-752-3991 #2400 "St. Louis WWIVNet Server"
|
|
@3502 ? *305-454-6285 #2400 "The Parrot Jungle"
|
|
@3506 *305-935-4136 #2400 "The Insight BBS"
|
|
@3507 *305-720-0240 #2400 "The Color Connection"
|
|
@3508 *305-485-6533 #2400 "Cypress Transfer BBS"
|
|
@3509 *305-961-2797 #2400 "The Arena of Pain"
|
|
@3514 *305-975-0064 #19200 < "Silent Morning BBS"
|
|
@3650 *316-524-8153 #2400 "The White Stone"
|
|
@3651 *316-685-2613 #9600 < "RiverCity BBS"
|
|
@3652 ? *316-221-2570 #2400 "Gringo City BBS"
|
|
@3653 *316-652-7734 #2400 "The Final Frontier"
|
|
@3654 *316-832-9556 #2400 "Fly By Night BBS"
|
|
@3655 *316-755-3119 #2400 "DOUBLE EXPOSURE"
|
|
@3656 *316-269-4614 #2400 "Libram Arcorum"
|
|
@3950 *319-296-1529 #2400 "HIT BBS"
|
|
@3951 *319-387-1767 #2400 "Utopia"
|
|
@4400 *404-377-1141 #2400 "IllumiNet BBS"
|
|
@4951 *419-885-1541 #2400 "The Listening Post"
|
|
@6851 ? *618-277-8502 #2400 "The nth Dimension"
|
|
@6852 *618-234-2631 #9600 ! "Snafu Software"
|
|
@6853 *618-624-6578 #2400 "USS Hexum"
|
|
@6854 *618-277-2002 #2400 "The Last Resort"
|
|
@6856 *618-235-5307 #2400 "The State Penitentiary"
|
|
@6857 *618-277-9856 #2400 "BFE"
|
|
@6858 *618-628-0035 #2400 "The Micro Alternatives Connection"
|
|
@6859 *618-235-6705 #9600 < "The Tower of Power"
|
|
@6860 *618-746-2006 #38400 <! "Midwest Connection CD-ROM"
|
|
@6862 *618-277-2448 #2400 "The Educated Guess"
|
|
@6863 *618-277-9511 #2400 "The Peanut Gallery"
|
|
@6864 *618-452-8456 #2400 "The Jet Shop"
|
|
@6866 *618-234-6892 #2400 "Downtown Tower"
|
|
@8350 ? *813-237-0152 #2400 "Ko Ro Ba"
|
|
@8352 *813-239-1339 #19200 < "AlleyKat's Alley"
|
|
@8353 *813-962-4061 #2400 "The Brainless Wonder BBS"
|
|
@8354 *813-840-9238 #2400 "V"
|
|
@8355 *813-286-1349 #2400 "Blackmoor Manor"
|
|
@8357 *813-689-3298 #2400 "The Outpost"
|
|
@8358 *813-989-2563 #2400 "Terror in the Aisles"
|
|
@8359 *813-645-0204 #2400 "Macross BBS"
|
|
@8360 *813-238-3120 #2400 "The Cookie Jar"
|
|
@8361 *813-654-7764 #2400 "SHOCKER BBS"
|
|
@8362 *813-645-2032 #2400 "The INNER DWELLINGS BBS"
|
|
@8363 *813-888-6925 #2400 "Gangster BBS"
|
|
@8364 *813-684-6005 #38400 < "Savage Curtain"
|
|
@9350 ? *913-722-6577 #2400 "Foxfire BBS"
|
|
@9354 *913-842-0300 #19200 < "Castle Ravenloft"
|
|
@9356 *913-897-6662 #19200 < "Kill Devil Hills"
|
|
@9358 *913-681-5998 #2400 "The Guild Hall"
|
|
@9359 *913-341-3306 #2400 "The KC Information Exchange"
|
|
@9850 ? *918-250-5963 #2400 "StarShip Enterprise BBS"
|
|
@9853 *918-663-0292 #2400 "The Inner Circle"
|
|
@9854 *918-250-5359 #2400 "High Voltage BBS"
|
|
@9855 *918-251-5579 #2400 "Rabid Grannies"
|
|
@18 *818-407-0419 #2400 "The Federation"
|
|
@810 *047-453-6654 #2400 "The Gourmet (UK)"
|
|
@811 *071-248-0854 #2400 "The Puppet Master (UK)"
|
|
@812 *093-224-7628 #2400 "InTransit BBS (UK)"
|
|
@4800 ? *408-296-6573 #2400 "The Corsair's Cove"
|
|
@4801 *408-662-2372 #2400 "The LooNEY.BIN"
|
|
@4802 *408-223-1738 #2400 "The Ozone BBS"
|
|
@8500 *805-255-2850 #2400 "Sherwood Forest"
|
|
@8501 *805-242-1733 #2400 "MetalStorm BBS"
|
|
@8502 *805-498-2817 #2400 "Encyclopedia Galactica"
|
|
@8850 *818-912-1471 #9600 < "EDGE OF SANITY"
|
|
@8851 *818-286-8391 #2400 "Unlimited Horizon"
|
|
@8852 *818-548-6091 #2400 "Bullfinch Computer Applications"
|
|
@8853 *818-448-0141 #9600 < "The Deacon's Corner"
|
|
@8854 % *818-566-9775 #2400 "The Octagon"
|
|
@8855 *818-338-3130 #9600 <! "Biker's BBS"
|
|
@8856 *818-566-7912 #2400 "Rambo-Scan BBS"
|
|
@8857 *818-715-9662 #2400 "Port Martinique."
|
|
@8858 *818-353-8589 #2400 "The Floating Asteroid"
|
|
@8859 ? *818-357-1253 #9600 <! "The Inner Sanctum"
|
|
@8860 *818-336-7678 #9600 <! "Andromeda Star Port"
|
|
@8861 *818-288-2165 #2400 "Moving Pictures ]["
|
|
@8862 *818-286-1205 #2400 "Circuit's Edge"
|
|
@8864 *818-965-3554 #2400 "Uncle Bob's BBS"
|
|
@8865 *818-441-8346 #2400 "Djuara's Fun Club"
|
|
@8866 *818-339-4244 #2400 "DarkSword"
|
|
@8868 *818-358-9633 #2400 "The Radio Control Model Plane BBS"
|
|
@8869 *818-284-3554 #9600 < "Alhambra Data Exchange"
|
|
@8871 *818-567-6349 #9600 < "The Paint Box"
|
|
@8872 *818-287-0408 #2400 "Brain Storm BBs"
|
|
@8874 *818-768-5168 #2400 "The Magic Macross BBS"
|
|
@8876 *818-905-0340 #2400 "The Ward"
|
|
@8877 *818-341-6941 #2400 "Beyond the Boundaries"
|
|
@8878 *818-352-8796 #2400 "The Heart Of Gold"
|
|
@8879 *818-446-4538 #2400 "Battle Zone"
|
|
@8880 *818-407-0000 #2400 "The Loop"
|
|
@8883 *818-247-4685 #2400 "THE CALL BOX"
|
|
@8888 *818-287-4570 #2400 "SCREAM BBS"
|
|
@614 *512-781-3506 #2400 "86:5120/101 = = 5267"
|
|
@615 *499-215-8748 #19200 < "2:509/4 = = 820"
|
|
@820 *499-215-8748 #19200 < "DATADRIVER (Germany)"
|
|
@821 *71-1226-1554 #19200 < "Schreiber - Box"
|
|
@822 *909-273-8046 #2400 "Night-Line BBS (Germany)"
|
|
@830 *100-622-7942 #2400 "CyberNet (Guadalajara, Mexico)"
|
|
@831 *100-056-4119 #2400 "Creaturas de la noche(Monterrey, Mex.)"
|
|
@833 *100-046-6974 #1200 "Tron (Monterrey, Mexico)"
|
|
@1040 *512-631-3062 #2400 "RGV WWIVnet Server"
|
|
@2510 *205-880-3775 #2400 "The Igmeister Zone"
|
|
@2512 ? *205-534-5193 #19200 / "Rocket City BBS"
|
|
@2513 *205-880-6976 #2400 "Charley's Place"
|
|
@2514 *205-880-2396 #2400 "The Bunny Patch"
|
|
@2515 *205-828-1719 #2400 "Stonehenge BBS"
|
|
@2524 *205-699-5811 #2400 "Myth Drannor"
|
|
@2530 *205-348-6686 #2400 "The Ragged Edge"
|
|
@2531 *205-679-8457 #2400 "Mobile Information Exchange"
|
|
@2532 *205-333-0087 #2400 "Speedway"
|
|
@2533 *205-556-5417 #2400 "Spectrum"
|
|
@2650 *216-297-2275 #19200 / "Freewheelin'"
|
|
@2651 *216-297-9328 #1200 "The Game Room"
|
|
@3700 *307-686-1508 #2400 "The Pentagon"
|
|
@4450 ? *414-459-8144 #38400 < "The Crystal Barrier BBS"
|
|
@4452 *414-458-1451 #2400 "Dragons Realm"
|
|
@4453 *414-778-1484 #19200 / "Thunderdome"
|
|
@4454 *414-547-0306 #2400 "The Crypt"
|
|
@4455 *414-541-6360 #2400 "Barts Bar & Grill"
|
|
@4456 *414-565-1327 #2400 "The Ultimate Immunity"
|
|
@4702 *407-788-7811 #2400 "The Dark Unknown"
|
|
@4703 *407-297-1180 #2400 "The Villa Straylight"
|
|
@4704 *407-434-0369 #2400 "Brahuma's Kingdom"
|
|
@4900 *409-853-2227 #19200 < "Plus BBS"
|
|
@4901 *409-637-7134 #2400 "Junker's Junkyard"
|
|
@5200 ? *502-426-9540 #19200 !$ "Homebrew USA"
|
|
@5203 *502-937-0709 #2400 "The Empyrean"
|
|
@5204 *502-776-7928 #2400 "ASK BBS"
|
|
@5206 *502-244-3439 #9600 > "The Realm BBS"
|
|
@5209 *502-634-0349 #2400 "Crimson Connection"
|
|
@5210 *502-241-9304 #2400 "Hall of Injustice"
|
|
@5211 *502-499-8933 #2400 "Blitzkrieg Bbs"
|
|
@5212 *502-452-2150 #2400 "Zimm's Zoo for Xenophobic Zombies"
|
|
@5213 *502-429-6192 #19200 <! "The Scratching Post"
|
|
@5214 *502-955-6955 #2400 "Fubar Elite"
|
|
@5215 *502-423-1368 #19200 <! "The Warehouse"
|
|
@5216 *502-456-3036 #2400 "The Knight's Tavern"
|
|
@5250 *512-353-0590 #2400 "The Bastille"
|
|
@5252 % *512-631-5841 #38400 <! "The Dragon's Den"
|
|
@5254 *512-631-3587 #2400 "Anilar's Cave"
|
|
@5255 *512-982-0610 #2400 "The Trauma Center"
|
|
@5256 *512-687-1221 #19200 < "Alpha 2010"
|
|
@5257 *512-383-6176 #1200 "Computer Police Dept."
|
|
@5258 *512-682-4530 #2400 "Rick's Cafe Americain"
|
|
@5259 *512-787-5617 #1200 "The Komic Shop"
|
|
@5260 *512-783-7473 #1200 "Valley of the Kings"
|
|
@5261 *512-383-9898 #19200 <! "Soft World BBS"
|
|
@5262 *512-464-8792 #9600 < "The EnterPrize"
|
|
@5263 *512-581-4791 #2400 "The DogHouse"
|
|
@5264 *512-682-1635 #2400 "The Heorot BBS"
|
|
@5265 *512-686-8896 #19200 / "RIA-BBS"
|
|
@5266 *512-682-9715 #2400 "The LockPick BBS"
|
|
@5267 *512-781-3506 #2400 "The STARGATE BBS"
|
|
@5268 *512-631-4714 #2400 "Morgan's Corner"
|
|
@5269 *512-542-8222 #2400 "The Crypt"
|
|
@5270 *512-423-4466 #2400 "Ground Zero"
|
|
@5271 *512-783-6785 #1200 "Dexter - 2 BBS"
|
|
@5272 *512-682-0828 #2400 "Bobcat's Wild Horse BBS"
|
|
@5273 *512-423-5482 #2400 "File Not Found"
|
|
@5274 *512-542-1105 #2400 "The Dragon's Realm"
|
|
@5275 *512-787-8974 #2400 "The Business Board"
|
|
@5281 *512-458-4096 #2400 "H.E.L.L."
|
|
@5282 *512-459-1088 #2400 "Klingon Empire"
|
|
@5283 *512-458-4969 #2400 "T-Dubbs"
|
|
@5284 *512-339-4584 #2400 "The Water Closet BBS"
|
|
@5285 *512-443-7379 #2400 "The Bamboo Gardens North"
|
|
@5286 ? *512-280-9018 #19200 < "The Party Line"
|
|
@5287 *512-338-5376 #2400 "Beyond Reality"
|
|
@5750 *517-790-7689 #2400 "The Undead Prong BBS"
|
|
@5751 *517-631-4231 #2400 "Tornado Alley"
|
|
@5950 ? *519-973-9841 #2400 "Southern Reaches BBS"
|
|
@5954 *519-948-2211 #19200 <! "A Private Cosmos"
|
|
@5957 *519-258-3111 #2400 "Middle Earth BBS"
|
|
@5958 *519-469-3719 #2400 "Microhelp On-Line"
|
|
@5959 *519-948-2211 #2400 "New Avalon Institute of Science"
|
|
@6203 *602-237-2451 #2400 "Celestial Woodlands"
|
|
@6204 ? *602-957-6436 #2400 "The Lair"
|
|
@6207 *602-497-1210 #2400 "The Funny Pages"
|
|
@6208 *602-285-5692 #2400 "The Warlock's Guild"
|
|
@6209 *602-483-7088 #2400 "Orion's Castle"
|
|
@6210 *602-451-8209 #19200 <$ "Late Night"
|
|
@6450 ? *614-488-2314 #2400 "Valhalla BBS"
|
|
@6453 *614-837-9622 #2400 "The Enterprise"
|
|
@6454 *614-237-0096 #2400 "Lace & Leather"
|
|
@6455 *614-231-5240 #2400 "Realm of the Dragon"
|
|
@6457 *614-837-7620 #2400 "Wizard's Tower"
|
|
@6458 *614-837-0775 #2400 "5th Dimension BBS"
|
|
@6459 *614-837-9732 #2400 "Caesar's Palace"
|
|
@6702 ? *607-257-5377 #2400 "The Alcoves of Amigorn"
|
|
@6705 *607-277-7979 #38400 <! "The Alchemist's Guild"
|
|
@6706 *607-272-0601 #2400 "The Rhythm of the NIGHT !!!"
|
|
@6707 *607-272-1251 #38400 < "The Other BBS"
|
|
@7100 *701-780-9297 #19200 < "Gamers! BBS"
|
|
@7101 *701-594-8311 #2400 "Tech BBS"
|
|
@7102 *701-772-2831 #2400 "The Enchanted Aardvark"
|
|
@7103 *701-594-6071 #2400 "Flier's BBS"
|
|
@7104 *701-594-8882 #1200 "Northern Lights"
|
|
@8260 ? *812-945-6790 #38400 >!$ "The Cove * Special Edition *"
|
|
@8261 *812-331-8421 #2400 "4th Dimension"
|
|
@8262 *812-944-3907 #2400 "MicroDot"
|
|
@8550 ? *815-439-1264 #19200 <!$ "The Trading Place"
|
|
@8551 *815-886-2049 #2400 "The Clone Zone"
|
|
@9400 *904-757-3578 #2400 "The Poolhall"
|
|
@9401 *904-739-1937 #2400 "Highway Star"
|
|
@9402 *904-278-9264 #2400 "Catacombs BBS"
|
|
@9404 *904-269-4734 #2400 "The Astral Plane"
|
|
@9406 *904-743-5928 #2400 "BAHADUR Project"
|
|
@9407 *904-272-0162 #2400 "Dream World"
|
|
@9409 *904-743-7052 #2400 "Da Rucci BBS"
|
|
@9411 *904-221-4135 #1200 "Jax After Hours"
|
|
@9412 *904-772-7157 #1200 "The Rock"
|
|
@9415 *904-282-7125 #2400 "The Wonderland Cafe"
|
|
@9416 *904-292-0406 #2400 "Windows of Opportunity"
|
|
@9417 *904-254-0636 #2400 "Barbarian"
|
|
@9420 *904-445-8070 #2400 "The Alternate Reality BBS"
|
|
@9500 *905-578-9194 #2400 "TeleLink"
|
|
@601 *704-554-1496 #38400 "1:379/15 = =7400"
|
|
@604 *919-451-8245 #2400 "1:3614/110 = =9990"
|
|
@608 *804-795-2112 #2400 "1:264/172= =8403"
|
|
@617 *704-847-8032 #2400 "1:379/13 = =7406"
|
|
@1052 *804-330-0527 #9600 > "VA WWIVnet Mail Server I"
|
|
@1053 *704-574-7400 #2400 "NC WWIVnet Mail Server III"
|
|
@3200 *302-378-1157 #2400 "The Guild"
|
|
@3850 *318-448-0411 #38400 < "MeltDown Mansion"
|
|
@6350 *613-747-0343 #2400 "Roxborough BBS"
|
|
@6652 ? *616-399-1337 #38400 < "Back Slash"
|
|
@6653 *616-399-5937 #38400 < "Top Floor"
|
|
@7400 ? *704-554-1496 #38400 < "The Funny Farm (East)"
|
|
@7401 *704-536-6747 #2400 "Tudor Nightmare Village"
|
|
@7402 *704-537-8032 #2400 "DarkMoon Tavern"
|
|
@7403 *704-455-1374 #2400 "Total Perspective Vortex BBS"
|
|
@7405 *704-875-3961 #2400 "CyberConnection"
|
|
@7406 *704-847-8032 #2400 "The Tower of High Sorcery at Palanthas"
|
|
@7407 *704-527-5668 #2400 "The Albanian Embassy"
|
|
@7408 *704-563-2586 #2400 "AirCrash Bureau"
|
|
@7409 *704-865-3997 #2400 "The Apotheosis BBS"
|
|
@7448 *704-554-1496 #2400 "The Funny Farm (East Too)"
|
|
@7753 *717-687-9705 #38400 < "The Ink and Paint Club"
|
|
@8200 ? *802-747-4702 #38400 < "Dormasintoria BBS"
|
|
@8201 *802-775-3216 #2400 "World Class Computers"
|
|
@8300 ? *803-393-7399 #2400 "Pee Dee Exchange"
|
|
@8301 *803-723-7254 #9600 < "The Thieves Market BBS"
|
|
@8302 *803-732-7340 #9600 > "The Far Star BBS"
|
|
@8303 *803-646-7749 #9600 <! "The Cosmedron BBS"
|
|
@8304 *803-553-8761 #9600 < "The Master Link BBS"
|
|
@8305 *803-788-4351 #2400 "Times Square BBS"
|
|
@8306 *803-544-1746 #2400 "The Gamecock BBS"
|
|
@8403 *804-795-9826 #2400 "Xanadu"
|
|
@8404 *804-330-0526 #2400 "The Computer Connection"
|
|
@8410 *804-342-9679 #2400 "The Virginia Historical Society"
|
|
@8411 *804-489-8659 #2400 "The Restaurant / End of the Universe"
|
|
@8412 *804-934-8589 #2400 "Pocket Universe"
|
|
@8413 *804-276-4798 #9600 < "Relative Reality"
|
|
@8414 *804-784-7014 #2400 "Whistlestop West"
|
|
@8415 *804-727-4458 #2400 "OPARC BBS"
|
|
@8416 ? *804-488-6907 #38400 <! "The CrossRoads"
|
|
@8417 *804-934-8355 #2400 "Fantasy Land"
|
|
@8418 *804-851-9138 #2400 "Ray's Workshop"
|
|
@8419 *804-275-8723 #2400 "The Lighthouse BBS"
|
|
@8420 *804-358-3286 #2400 "The Hegelian Solution, Inc."
|
|
@8421 *804-423-3127 #2400 "Electric Avenues"
|
|
@8422 *804-583-2411 #2400 "Swedish Nights"
|
|
@8423 *804-766-1366 #2400 "Suddenly BBS"
|
|
@8424 *804-275-6069 #2400 "Dragon's Rest"
|
|
@8425 *804-625-5861 #1200 "The Write Place"
|
|
@8426 *804-588-5172 #2400 "The Graveyard"
|
|
@8428 *804-226-0805 #2400 "The Tar Pits"
|
|
@8429 *804-330-4077 #2400 "Virginia Bulletin Board of Music (VBBM)"
|
|
@8430 *804-226-0805 #2400 "The Totally Hidden BBS"
|
|
@9250 *912-876-7333 #2400 "The Midnight Oil BBS"
|
|
@9251 *912-368-3393 #2400 "The Model-T BBS"
|
|
@9950 *919-782-3071 #38400 < "NC WWIVnet Mail Server I"
|
|
@9951 *919-477-0548 #2400 "The Raven's Lair"
|
|
@9952 *919-477-3845 #2400 "Micro-Net"
|
|
@9953 *919-848-2315 #2400 "Free Quarks"
|
|
@9954 % *919-831-2759 #38400 <! "Social Graces"
|
|
@9955 *919-876-7395 #2400 "Spectrum of Dreams"
|
|
@9956 *919-664-8060 #2400 "Murphy's Law"
|
|
@9957 *919-890-6201 #2400 "Baxter BBS"
|
|
@9958 *919-772-2684 #2400 "Panther Branch Annex/Right Triangle"
|
|
@9959 *919-523-1321 #19200 < "All Things Considered"
|
|
@9960 *919-544-6891 #2400 "The FOLLY"
|
|
@9961 *919-524-3311 #2400 "Grifton On-Line"
|
|
@9962 ? *919-469-4838 #2400 "Mac Tonight"
|
|
@9963 *919-724-0041 #9600 < "Computron Alliance"
|
|
@9964 *919-756-2939 #2400 "East Carolina Connection"
|
|
@9965 *919-787-6399 #2400 "The Carousel"
|
|
@9966 *919-828-1951 #2400 "The Avalon Slide"
|
|
@9967 *919-522-0639 #2400 "Starfleet Command"
|
|
@9968 *919-471-1935 #2400 "Another World BBS"
|
|
@9969 *919-443-2456 #2400 "Grafix Unlimited"
|
|
@9970 *919-846-7427 #38400 < "The Octopus's Garden"
|
|
@9971 *919-746-2517 #38400 < "The Enterprise"
|
|
@9972 *919-523-9642 #2400 "Silicon Nightmare"
|
|
@9973 *919-746-2858 #2400 "The Excelsior"
|
|
@9974 *919-758-9094 #2400 "The New BBS"
|
|
@9975 *919-864-5149 #2400 "Total Confussion"
|
|
@9980 *919-969-9198 #2400 "The Mystical Hermits BBS"
|
|
@9981 *919-659-8117 #2400 "Brain Drain"
|
|
@9982 *919-777-1763 #2400 "Computer & Software Architects"
|
|
@9990 *919-451-8245 #2400 "2d MarDiv Support BBS"
|
|
@9991 *919-338-0236 #2400 "Canal Bank BBS"
|
|
@9992 *919-430-0306 #2400 "Micromash BBS"
|
|
@9993 *919-623-8900 #38400 <! "The Guardian of Knowledge"
|
|
@9994 *919-577-5340 #2400 "Realistic BBS"
|
|
@9997 *919-732-7616 #38400 < "The Dark City of Erishkiegal"
|
|
@9998 *919-493-1058 #2400 "A Motley Excuse For a BBS"
|
|
@9999 *919-870-0756 #38400 < "NC WWIVnet Mail Server II"
|
|
@2101 *201-227-4338 #2400 "Tornado BBS"
|
|
@2102 ? *201-374-2730 #2400 "Mount Hozomeen"
|
|
@2103 *201-661-4327 #2400 "Windows' Maven Haven"
|
|
@2105 *201-226-6296 #2400 "Heel's Angels BBS"
|
|
@2106 *201-569-4491 #2400 "The War Zone"
|
|
@2107 *201-473-6972 #2400 "OPERATION: MINDCRIME"
|
|
@2108 *201-478-5683 #2400 "Cuda's Bar&Grill"
|
|
@2109 *201-509-9217 #2400 "NIte Hack"
|
|
@2110 *201-614-0733 #2400 "Satan's Realm"
|
|
@2112 *201-778-2228 #2400 "The Board Exceptional"
|
|
@2113 *201-226-3456 #2400 "Cybernet II"
|
|
@2118 *201-772-3528 #2400 "The Demilitarized Zone"
|
|
@2119 *201-423-5956 #2400 "The Wine Cellar"
|
|
@2120 *201-472-8312 #2400 "SSA BBS"
|
|
@2301 ? *203-236-3974 #2400 "Midnight Madness"
|
|
@2302 *203-456-3983 #1200 "The Starship Enterprise"
|
|
@2303 *203-349-2016 #2400 "The City Limits"
|
|
@2304 *203-635-1401 #2400 "The Village"
|
|
@2305 *203-224-6598 #9600 ! "Dave & Donna's Cafe"
|
|
@2306 *203-826-6249 #2400 "Cheers!"
|
|
@2307 *203-621-4916 #2400 "Reality Knocks Once"
|
|
@2308 *203-236-9279 #2400 "Undersea Castle"
|
|
@2309 *203-427-5602 #2400 "Interview"
|
|
@2700 *207-469-6732 #2400 "Pinnacle Club II"
|
|
@2701 *207-942-6575 #2400 "James Bond's Hideaway"
|
|
@2702 *207-990-2203 #2400 "Brian's Basement BBS"
|
|
@2703 *207-990-1914 #2400 "The Electronic Wasteland"
|
|
@9800 % *908-525-8295 #38400 <!$ "Maniac Mansion III"
|
|
@9801 ? *908-494-5417 #2400 "Club Med BBS"
|
|
@9802 *908-727-2008 #2400 "Maniac Mansion IV"
|
|
@9803 *908-873-2587 #2400 "Grand Elusion"
|
|
@9804 *908-238-4193 #9600 ! "King's Crown"
|
|
@9806 *908-613-0638 #38400 <! "The Corvette Club"
|
|
@9808 *908-246-1817 #2400 "Village Green Preservation Society"
|
|
@9810 *908-251-4175 #2400 "The Fox Hole"
|
|
@9811 *908-874-4104 #38400 < $ "The Logic Gate"
|
|
@9814 *908-390-5637 #2400 "The Dragon's Lair"
|
|
@9815 *908-257-0674 #38400 <!$ "The Late Night BBS with Dave Letterman"
|
|
@9817 *908-381-6463 #2400 "The Night Line"
|
|
@626 *301-666-9109 #2400 "1:261/1090= =3114"
|
|
@2200 % *202-363-0364 #9600 < "The Duke's Domain"
|
|
@2201 ? *202-686-0004 #38400 <$! "GUIS: OS/2 & Windows Tech Support BBS"
|
|
@3101 ? *301-675-2566 #14400 <$ "Jolly Roger"
|
|
@3102 *301-437-7017 #9600 < "Devil's Courier"
|
|
@3104 *301-907-4659 #2400 "The Afterlife BBS"
|
|
@3105 *301-761-6584 #2400 "Stonehenge"
|
|
@3106 *301-679-3736 #2400 "Bases Loaded"
|
|
@3107 *301-953-3945 #2400 "The Atavachron"
|
|
@3108 *301-244-8371 #2400 "La Villa Strangiato"
|
|
@3109 *301-665-9462 #2400 "Excalibur"
|
|
@3110 *301-356-5112 #2400 "Inner Limits"
|
|
@3111 *301-325-1027 #14400 <$ "Pizza's BBS"
|
|
@3112 *301-391-2563 #2400 "The Old Guard"
|
|
@3113 *301-788-8908 #2400 "Grimm's Hollow"
|
|
@3114 *301-666-9109 #2400 "Dark Side of the Moon"
|
|
@3115 *301-679-5809 #2400 "Joppa Computer Products BBS"
|
|
@3117 *301-987-3967 #2400 "Forum 216 BBS"
|
|
@3118 *301-667-4171 #9600 < "The American Exchange"
|
|
@3119 *301-876-4508 #2400 "The Northern Star"
|
|
@3120 *301-465-2656 #2400 "Clear and Present Danger"
|
|
@3122 *301-381-2193 #9600 ! "The ER Information Service"
|
|
@3124 *301-987-7562 #2400 "Gratefully Deadicated BBS"
|
|
@3125 *301-740-1292 #9600 > "DSR"
|
|
@3126 *301-461-3153 #2400 "Phoenix"
|
|
@3127 *301-521-1152 #2400 "Court of the Crimson King"
|
|
@3128 *301-728-1012 #2400 "The Colosseum BBS"
|
|
@3129 *301-532-3210 #2400 "The Fighting Quaker"
|
|
@3130 *301-762-3071 #2400 "Megazone 23"
|
|
@3135 *301-270-8268 #2400 "Entropy Effect"
|
|
@3140 *301-744-1363 #2400 "Iron Skull"
|
|
@3141 *301-720-0323 #2400 "The Dreaming City"
|
|
@7300 *703-369-6140 #19200 < "MrBill's Abode"
|
|
@7301 *703-594-3713 #2400 "Atx (Delta House)"
|
|
@7302 *703-754-0884 #19200 < "NoName's BBS"
|
|
@7303 *703-361-3691 #9600 >! "Late Night"
|
|
@7306 *703-765-1305 #2400 "Sprockets"
|
|
@7307 *703-441-0308 #38400 < "Vanishing Point #1"
|
|
@7308 *703-356-1370 #2400 "Dimension II"
|
|
@7309 *703-360-4973 #2400 "Lankhmar"
|
|
@7310 ? *703-931-0431 #2400 "Eldritch Boulevard"
|
|
@7311 *703-820-7356 #19200 < "Ultimate Warrior III"
|
|
@7312 *703-369-5225 #19200 < "The Twilight Zone"
|
|
@7313 *703-441-0112 #38400 < "Vanishing Point #2"
|
|
@7315 *703-369-6232 #38400 < "The 9th Plane"
|
|
@7316 *703-841-1859 #2400 "Split Infinity"
|
|
@7317 *703-461-7615 #2400 "Reality Check"
|
|
@7318 *703-590-8982 #38400 <>!$ "Killer's Law BBS"
|
|
@7319 *703-379-9611 #2400 "Kevin's Watch"
|
|
@7321 *703-455-0570 #9600 > "The Trempex Console"
|
|
@7322 *703-369-6624 #2400 "The Metaconcert BBS"
|
|
@7 ? *617-493-2726 #9600 < "Crest BBS"
|
|
@4250 *412-336-4807 #9600 < "Screamin Eagle"
|
|
@4251 *412-847-4752 #2400 "Private Line"
|
|
@4254 *412-898-1498 #2400 "Wild Wild West BBS"
|
|
@4255 *412-466-9380 #19200 <! "Jaxom's Holde"
|
|
@4351 ? *413-585-0803 #38400 <! "The Stormbringer BBS"
|
|
@4353 *413-772-2716 #1200 "Scalp Central"
|
|
@4354 *413-772-2667 #2400 "The Falcon's Lair"
|
|
@4355 *413-549-7342 #1200 "The Land Mine BBS"
|
|
@4357 *413-743-1828 #2400 "The Dragon's Weyr"
|
|
@4358 *413-586-2925 #2400 "Joe's Bar and Grill"
|
|
@4359 *413-498-5668 #2400 "The Pus Factory BBS"
|
|
@5350 ? *513-574-1747 #2400 "The World's End"
|
|
@5351 *513-661-8799 #2400 "The Brewery"
|
|
@5850 ? *518-479-4522 #2400 "Albedo Telecomm Central BBS"
|
|
@5852 *518-783-5762 #2400 "The Game Palace"
|
|
@5857 *518-482-4156 #2400 "Anchor's Aweigh"
|
|
@5859 *518-432-8782 #2400 "The Aerie"
|
|
@5860 *518-372-9549 #2400 "Joe's Bar & Grill"
|
|
@5861 *518-436-0581 #2400 "Minas Morgul"
|
|
@5864 *518-437-1610 #2400 "Telesphere"
|
|
@5801 *508-797-3236 #2400 "Zitas Warehouse"
|
|
@5802 *508-885-2466 #1200 "RUNESTAR PIN"
|
|
@5803 ? *508-663-6220 #1200 "Wonderland PIN II"
|
|
@5804 *508-960-2226 #2400 "W1FW"
|
|
@5805 *508-792-1999 #2400 "The Theta Connection"
|
|
@5806 *508-251-8827 #2400 "Reality"
|
|
@5807 *508-842-2472 #38400 "Rompus Room"
|
|
@5808 *508-842-5786 #2400 "Polyphemus's Den"
|
|
@5809 *508-251-9812 #2400 "Omega BBS"
|
|
@6300 % *603-382-3966 #9600 "==Info=Rail=="
|
|
@6301 *603-894-5169 #2400 "==Salem=Station=="
|
|
@6750 *617-734-2053 #1200 "Hyperbole BBS"
|
|
@6751 *617-899-7570 #2400 "Five's Tavern"
|
|
@3700 *307-686-1508 #2400 "The Pentagon"
|
|
@6702 ? *607-257-5377 #2400 "The Alcoves of Amigorn"
|
|
@6705 *607-277-7979 #38400 <! "The Alchemist's Guild"
|
|
@6706 *607-272-0601 #2400 "The Rhythm of the NIGHT !!!"
|
|
@6707 *607-272-1251 #38400 < "The Other BBS"
|
|
@1 &*213-208-6689 #38400 <!$ "Amber"
|
|
@2 *718-481-7210 #19200 <! "Best of Both Worlds"
|
|
@4 % *213-398-1224 #38400 <!$ "Caesar's Palace"
|
|
@9 *213-420-7622 #9600 <! "The Backroom BBS"
|
|
@15 ? *213-223-6088 #2400 "Wonderland PIN"
|
|
@602 *514-668-2479 #19200 < "1:167/119= =5459"
|
|
@603 *504-947-6761 #19200 <! "1:396/31 = =5405"
|
|
@622 *714-796-2537 #2400 "1:207/610 = =7480"
|
|
@2350 *213-375-3962 #1200 "Eyes of the World"
|
|
@2351 *213-428-2598 #2400 "Mr. Ed's Stable"
|
|
@2352 *213-375-2625 #2400 "Castle Kzin"
|
|
@2353 *213-547-5015 #2400 "The Altered Dimension"
|
|
@2354 *213-869-4663 #2400 "Programmer's Corner BBS"
|
|
@2356 *213-276-1691 #2400 "The Discordian Society"
|
|
@2357 *213-399-7368 #2400 "The Barber Shop"
|
|
@2358 *213-657-6461 #2400 "After Midnight"
|
|
@2359 *213-921-1850 #2400 "Trident BBS"
|
|
@2360 *213-938-0972 #2400 "The Screen Trade"
|
|
@2361 *213-730-0602 #2400 "Miracle Programmers Oasis"
|
|
@2362 *213-549-2118 #2400 "Hz Castle"
|
|
@2363 *213-782-2280 #2400 "Devonshire Castle"
|
|
@2364 *213-824-4859 #2400 "Frenchy Python's Flying Circuits"
|
|
@2365 *213-824-3780 #2400 "Medical Ed Support Board"
|
|
@2366 *213-782-1035 #2400 "The Horseshoe Club"
|
|
@2367 *213-376-1249 #2400 "Computhink"
|
|
@2369 *213-284-8055 #2400 "The Edge of Eternity"
|
|
@2370 *213-436-9790 #2400 "Chess Hotline"
|
|
@2371 *213-866-3539 #2400 "Willoughby"
|
|
@2372 *213-860-9171 #2400 "The Wine Cooler"
|
|
@2373 *213-640-1643 #2400 "Circus Maximus"
|
|
@2374 *213-498-3571 #2400 "Sister Talia's Connection"
|
|
@2376 *213-427-3118 #2400 "Blue Bird's Nest"
|
|
@2378 *213-516-1295 #9600 < "Enchanted World"
|
|
@2379 *213-421-0785 #2400 "Club Dave"
|
|
@2380 *213-470-6869 #2400 "Black Dragon Enterprises"
|
|
@2382 *213-413-3937 #2400 "Aphrodites Cave"
|
|
@2384 *213-459-4498 #2400 > "The Total Perspective Vortex"
|
|
@2385 *213-433-2946 #9600 < "Powders"
|
|
@2387 *213-475-8221 #19200 < "MicroChip"
|
|
@2391 *213-842-7537 #2400 "Blazer BBS"
|
|
@2392 *213-719-1887 #2400 "The Outpost"
|
|
@2396 *213-546-1861 #2400 "DAG BBS"
|
|
@2398 *213-928-5390 #2400 "EPOCH WWIV"
|
|
@2399 *213-379-9084 #2400 "The Raven's Loft"
|
|
@5400 ? *504-885-5364 #2400 "The Ravenloft"
|
|
@5401 *504-364-1207 #19200 < "The Funny Farm"
|
|
@5402 *504-832-0696 #2400 "Starlite"
|
|
@5403 *504-488-6908 #2400 "Freedom's Cradle"
|
|
@5404 *504-835-2861 #2400 "Metropolis BBS"
|
|
@5405 *504-947-6761 #19200 <! "The RedLight"
|
|
@5406 *504-392-9517 #19200 < "End of the World"
|
|
@5407 *504-738-3329 #2400 "Computer Automated BBS"
|
|
@5409 *504-837-7941 #2400 "New Orleans High Tech BBS"
|
|
@5410 *504-885-5364 #2400 "Net Research BBS"
|
|
@5413 *504-282-5187 #2400 "The 286 Express"
|
|
@5415 *504-282-8270 #2400 "The Guild"
|
|
@5416 *504-283-2451 #2400 "Cat's Cradle"
|
|
@5450 *514-253-6963 #2400 "Sex Forum BBS"
|
|
@5451 ? *514-253-6963 #2400 "Sex Forum BBS"
|
|
@5452 *514-684-6035 #2400 "Glasnost BBS"
|
|
@5453 *514-646-2056 #2400 "Le Reflet de la Rive-Sud"
|
|
@5454 *514-696-9695 #2400 "911 BBS"
|
|
@5455 *514-696-4209 #2400 "911 BBS (line 2)"
|
|
@5456 *514-251-3093 #2400 "Hydro Pro BBS"
|
|
@5459 *514-668-2479 #19200 < "The Sonic Orgasmatron"
|
|
@5460 *514-688-9586 #2400 "Le Curseur"
|
|
@5461 *514-744-8017 #2400 "The Temples Of Syrinx (c)"
|
|
@5462 *514-524-8199 #2400 "L'Autre Bord..."
|
|
@5463 *514-337-2778 #2400 "The Dark Side"
|
|
@5464 *514-488-3582 #2400 "The Light Side"
|
|
@5465 *514-462-9285 #2400 "JAVA BBS"
|
|
@5466 *514-621-4749 #1200 "InterCom BBS"
|
|
@5467 *514-656-7476 #2400 "Expert BBS"
|
|
@5468 *514-661-1416 #2400 "The Fortress of Shadow"
|
|
@5469 *514-659-6655 #2400 "Red Lobster BBS"
|
|
@5470 *514-729-3887 #2400 "Rebel BBS (Montreal)"
|
|
@5471 *514-589-7698 #2400 "Rebel BBS (L'Assomption)"
|
|
@5473 *514-687-5414 #2400 "The Dark Dungeons BBS"
|
|
@5475 *514-355-3048 #2400 "Datamate"
|
|
@5476 *514-367-0005 #2400 "Sexy's BBS"
|
|
@5477 *514-623-6454 #19200 < "Datamate II"
|
|
@6950 *619-452-2893 #2400 "The Torture Chamber"
|
|
@6951 *619-453-1819 #2400 "Enigma - TNG"
|
|
@6952 *619-755-3350 #2400 "The Dead Zone BBS"
|
|
@6953 *619-632-0718 #2400 "Say What?"
|
|
@6954 *619-725-5126 #2400 "RASC"
|
|
@6955 *619-270-8779 #19200 < "The Info Exchange 386"
|
|
@6956 *619-748-5761 #2400 "The Brewery"
|
|
@6957 *619-270-8037 #38400 <!$ "Aardvark BBS"
|
|
@6958 *619-755-3123 #2400 "The Serial Port BBS"
|
|
@6959 *619-433-9777 #2400 "Nassau Xpress"
|
|
@6960 *619-480-1883 #2400 "The Hunter"
|
|
@6961 ? *619-728-0541 #38400 <!$ "Clone Builder BBS"
|
|
@6962 *619-432-0787 #2400 "The Wild Zephyr BBS"
|
|
@6963 *619-726-1118 #2400 "Enchanted Voyage BBS"
|
|
@6964 *619-792-9937 #2400 "THE PUPPET PLAYHOUSE"
|
|
@6965 *619-484-5811 #2400 "CommuniCore"
|
|
@6966 *619-747-5130 #2400 "Atlantis"
|
|
@6967 *619-565-4424 #2400 "Dragon's Domain"
|
|
@6968 *619-721-7313 #2400 "The Graffiti Wall BBS"
|
|
@6969 *619-283-4998 #2400 "Sin City"
|
|
@6970 *619-446-1316 #2400 "THE CLINIC"
|
|
@6971 *619-630-8375 #38400 <!$ "ATTRON"
|
|
@6972 *619-439-5131 #2400 "Covey's Concepts BBS"
|
|
@6973 *619-695-3081 #2400 "Bubblebath"
|
|
@6974 *619-758-5920 #2400 "The Gangs of Vista"
|
|
@6975 *619-268-9625 #2400 "RADIO-Active BBS"
|
|
@6976 *619-565-2029 #2400 "Ashley's BBS"
|
|
@6978 *619-528-0322 #2400 "Erotic City"
|
|
@6979 *619-294-5888 #2400 "The PBW Annex"
|
|
@6980 *619-748-5264 #2400 "AnotherLoverHolenYoHead"
|
|
@6981 *619-756-9567 #2400 "VIKING"
|
|
@6982 *619-449-7052 #2400 "Dragon's Nest BBS"
|
|
@6983 *619-476-7733 #2400 "S.D. Fantasy"
|
|
@6985 *619-484-7283 #2400 "CommuniCore II"
|
|
@6986 *619-934-9695 #2400 "Private Events"
|
|
@6987 *619-598-4088 #2400 "Deadwood BBS"
|
|
@6988 *619-695-6949 #2400 "The Edge Elite BBS"
|
|
@6989 *619-225-1775 #2400 "Farstar BBS"
|
|
@6990 *619-441-0473 #2400 "POSTERGIRL'S BBS"
|
|
@7455 *714-621-2482 #2400 "Super Psionic"
|
|
@7458 *714-593-6144 #2400 "Gentle Rain Electronic Forum"
|
|
@7460 *714-528-1226 #2400 "Forbidden Sector 2019"
|
|
@7463 *714-373-5781 #2400 "World's Most Dangerous BBS"
|
|
@7464 *714-788-6434 #2400 "Apple Jacks BBS"
|
|
@7470 *714-529-4667 #2400 "West Berlin BBS"
|
|
@7484 *714-220-1678 #2400 "Afterhours BBS"
|
|
@7490 *714-782-8707 #2400 "Big Bang Burger Bar"
|