Try searching under a-6 intruder.
http://www.planenuts.com/posters_ea6b.html
Also
http://www.aerospaceweb.org/aircraft/recon/ea6b/
http://www.geocities.com/Pentagon/Quart ... 6_ea6.html
The EA-6B Prowler is largely based on the A-6, but designed for an entirely different mission. Prowlers are Electronic Warfare aircraft. Their main mission is to jam enemy radars and communications. They performed this task very effectively during the Gulf War. Prowlers are also able to carry High-speed Anti-Radar Missiles (HARM) to destroy enemy radars. Anything they don't jam, they can destroy.
In the photo above, the large bulge on top of the vertical stabilizer (tail) is evident. This fairing houses the sensors that tell the jamming equipment operators what wavelengths (frequencies) are being transmitted by the enemy radar/communications gear. The actual jamming pods are mounted under the wings. The aft cockpit for the extra two crewmembers is also plainly visible.
The US Air Force used to have its own ECM aircraft, the EF-111, but they have all been retired. This leaves the EA-6B as the only aircraft in the US inventory which is capable of carrying out this vital mission. Navy Prowlers will be flying with Air Force aircraft as well as with Navy aircraft. These will be some very busy planes and crews!
The Prowler carries a crew of 4, with 2 in front, as in the Intruder, but with 2 more crewmembers behind them. The right front and both rear crewmembers are the Electronic Countermeasures Officers (ECMO's). The basic airframe of the Intruder was stretched some 7 feet to accommodate the extra crewmembers and associated electronics. For more info on the Prowler, go to NAS
Stephen Coonts, Flight of the intruder, also made in to a film