NAMEBASE (formerly SPYBASE) NOW LEGALLY AVAILABLE FROM A-ALBIONIC RESEARCH! ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Namebase contains over 80,000 KEY ruling class/conspiracy groups and individuals with 173,000 citations in over 500 books and 1000's of pages of newspapers and magazines. Books cited include Tragedy and Hope and The AngloAmerican Establishment as well as many other right and left-wing classics. Most of the best JFK Assassination books are included! NameBase: A unique microcomputer name and country index with over 173,000 citations. "The sheer novelty and volume ... has won positive reviews from disparate sources." --Christian Science Monitor, July 31, 1989 "...[a] treasure trove of intelligence information." --Jeff Gerth, New York Times, October 6, 1987 "...a helpful and easily accessible resource for research into the world's diplomatic and intelligence communities." --Peter Grose, Executive Editor Foreign Affairs, Spring 1989 "...the closest popular equivalent to the CIA's own master computer." --Jonathan Marshall, Economics Editor San Francisco Chronicle "[The references I received] would have been invaluable during the early stages of my [research] project." --Steve Weinberg, Executive Director Investigative Reporters & Editors, Inc. The IRE Journal, Winter 1989 "The absolutely indispensable database for anyone seriously interested in global intelligence and espionage." --David Wise, author of Molehunt (1992) NameBase is published by: Public Information Research Registered Copies Available for $79.00 postpaid from: (Specify DOS or Mac and size disk desired--See Order Form) A-albionic Research PO Box 20273 Ferndale, MI 48220-0273 NameBase is used by hundreds of serious journalists and researchers. For anyone with an IBM-compatible or Macintosh microcomputer, it offers fast access to a database of 80,000 names of groups and individuals, compiled from over 500 investigative books published since 1962, and thousands of pages from periodicals since 1973. Areas covered include the international intelligence community, political elites from the Right and Left, the U.S. foreign policy establishment, assassination theory, Latin America, big business, and organized crime. Each name includes up to 150 sources for a total of over 173,000 citations. When the name has been located in or associated with a country other than the U.S. for a period of years (true of 28,000 names), this information is also displayed. Access time for a single name is about one second, and for all names associated with a country during a time frame is about thirty seconds. The program also graphs the distribution of entry-years for a country during the last sixty years, providing a picture of how well the data covers a particular period or event in its history. Name or country searches may be stacked 50 deep to save time, with the option of printing out the display or appending displayed names to the user's word-processing file. Leading letters and phonetic searches can be used to locate difficult or transliterated names, and the most common nicknames are cross-checked automatically. If a citation is of particular interest, it is possible to extract other names from the same source, or even cross one source with another. (For example, which members of the Council on Foreign Relations are also included in Forbes 400 richest Americans?) NameBase fits on 3 standard HD floppies, or takes about 3 megabytes on a hard disk. The program can be configured to prompt for the floppy it needs if a hard disk is not used. After purchasing an initial set of disks, update notices are sent out with a list of recent sources, along with our quarterly NameBase NewsLine, and the latest set of cumulative disks may be purchased at half price. The back issues of NewsLine may also be read or downloaded from the NameBase menu. Although only citations are shown for each name (author, title, date, and page number), almost all titles include a screen of annotation. All sources are filed at Public Information Research and a photocopy or fax service is available. NameBase specializes in sources that are ignored by expensive online search services. Many of the sources have never been indexed before anywhere, but now they are all indexed together. Apple Macintosh computers: The minimum system is a Mac Plus with a single 800K drive, System 4.1, and Finder 5.5 or later, 1M of RAM and 128K of ROM. The program is easier to use with dual floppy drives or a hard disk. Check for Macintosh disks: __3.5-inch, 800K (5 disks) __3.5-inch, 1.4M high-density (3 disks) DOS-compatible computers: The search program may be configured for a hard disk or for dual 360K or 720K floppy drives. It requires 120K of conventional program memory under DOS 2.1 or later, and works with any type of monitor. The program will also run on single-floppy laptops with no hard disk if the user first sets up a 360K virtual RAM disk. Check for DOS disks: __5.25-inch, 360K (10 disks) __5.25-inch, 1.2M high-density (3 disks) __3.5-inch, 720K (6 disks) __3.5-inch, 1.44M high-density (3 disks) Enclose a check or money order for $79 for the first box checked above, and $39 for each additional box (no credit cards and no checks drawn on foreign banks). Check if appropriate: __NameBase sounds okay, but I want to start my own database. Send information on MiniBase, a DOS data- base program by P.I.R. that costs $29. Name__________________________________________________ Address_______________________________________________ City, State, Zip______________________________________ Telephone (optional)__________________________________ Enclose check or money order in a snail mail envelope and mail to: A-albionic Research, PO Box 20273, Ferndale, MI 48220-0273 U.S.A. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Reply via email to