I Page 16/The Battalion/Monday, January 14, 1985 AUTUMN HEIGHTS 4-PLEXES During the Month of January • Vi mo. FREE RENT w/signed lease • On site manager • Quiet neighborhood • 2 bdrm., 2 bath • Water, Cable pd. • W/D Connection • On Shuttle Bus Route $350 846-0506 1114 A Autumn Circle College Station, Tx. Inexpensive, High-Quality Copies We Specialize In REPORTS and DISSERTATIONS Also: Self-service copying, offset printing, typing, re ductions and enlargements, binding, resume writ ing, editing, business cards, wedding invitations, sta tionery and many other slices. One-stop service for reports and dissertations. ON THE DOUBLE 331 University 846-3755 HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 7 a.fn.-IO p.m. Sat. 9 a.m -6 p.m. LATE BASKETBALL ENTRIES BEING ACCEPTED IN THE IM- REC SPORTS OFFICE, 159 EAST KYLE. RECREATIONAL SPORTS OUTDOOR ENTRIES ARE DUE WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 16th AT 6 p.m. IN THE IM-REC SPORTS OFFICE, 159 EAST KYLE. To design and develop today's most Software, Lasers and Electro-optics, Composite technologically advanced defense products. Structures, VLSI, Non-linear Structural Analysis, General Dynamics requires the talents of many Robotics and CAD/CAM. highly motivated Engineering and Scientific At Genera! Dynamics, you will work with our graduates. innovative professionals in applying these This year, nearly half of our 1,500 technical technologies toward a wide variety of aerospace, hires will be in Electrical!Electronic Engineering computer systems, electronics, shipbuilding and and Computer Science — goal-oriented, high- military land vehicle programs. Plus, you can stay performance students who will graduate in the current in your field and make the most of your top half of their classes. career through our corporate-wide training and If you are one of these top performers, explore lifelong education programs, the wide range of opportunities available in the Don't settle for less than state of the art in your following technologies: Aeronautics, Advanced career. See your Placement Office for a campus Signal Processing, Radar Systems, Embedded interview with General Dynamics. Computer wiz kid deciphers code Unit United Press International A 15-year-old “hacker” who once broke into a bank’s computer has eased his conscience by helping Min neapolis police to crack a computer code that led to evidence sought in a child sex abuse investigation. Police were trying to break com puter security measures keeping them f rom what they suspected were a 37-year-old suspect's accounts of sex with young hoys. Peter Lippik was called in Saturday to try to get to the accounts, recorded on the com puter’s software. It took Lippik just 45 minutes to unravel what police had puzzled over for nearly a month. “Well, I’ve been doing it all my life so I think I’m used to it,” Lippik said of his accomplishment. “But it does have a certain sense of power.” Lippik had a run-in with the po lice about a year ago when his software was confiscated after he tapped into a bank computer. “About a year ago, 1 was getting my computer looking for other com puters, and it happened to call up a bank’s computer, and they traced the call and complained to the police about it,” Lippik said. "But since I didn’t do anything to their com puter, they couldn’t prosecute me." Lippik figured he owed police a favor for the trouble he caused and lice believed Patton had listed: names of other victims on hist puter discs. But investigators could not prof their theory because the compui| files were protected by a secrete which could not be broken by! Jim Martin, the department’s: dent computer expert. Because the suspect is alsoacn puter expert, the task was niu complicated than Lippikexpeaedl “I went through the manualsa I tried every command that little bit of hope in it,” he said. “A eventually I ran across the comet command, which did the trick." As police expected, the discst tained page after page of grap narrative about sexual involvemei WASH! Reagan w morning c gural for time aroui man said! ' But whi fice for th place his I of the Bib as he did ceremony " The Re for Camp tin Mourn up for a i with four ties indue monies. For bol in the Wh and the| day on tli Nancy R which ha with juvenile Ixiys. T he files i:| eluded first names and general I tions around the Twin Cities. Martin said the accounts app to f>e confessionals of sorts. Buii said lie didn't know whether, would lie useful as evidence would lead police to any of the ul tints. “I need to Ik* able to identifyi kids now, and talk to them, ands statements f rom them and thatl needed him. ever of thing to make more crimii cases," M, art in said. offer Martin said it will Ik? weeks beF their police can sort through all theca com- puter dis< :s. a t process that willbei with terrupted I whil le Lippik takes his x. Po- nals next week Kennedy cancels speech United Press International SOWETO, South Africa — A dis appointed Sen. Edward Kennedy, dogged by radical black demonstra tors throughout his tour of white- ruled South Africa, was forced by chanting protesters to cancel a major address in the nation’s largest black ghetto Sunday. The cancellation — made to avoid violence — marked the latest setback in Kennedy’s eight-day visit to South Africa. Kennedy, D-Mass., said he regretted he was unable to deliver “a message of hope from the over whelming majority of Americans.” Earlier in his eight-day stay in South Africa, Kennedy was denied government permission to visit the nation’s most well-known black na tionalist leader. Nelson Mandela, who is serving his 23rd year in prison for treason and sabotage. Kennedy left South Africa for a seven-hour stopover in Lusaka, Zambia, where he planned to meet with Oliver Tambo, leader of the Af rican National Congress, and Zam bian President Kenneth Kaunda. Before departing, Kennedy had planned to deliver a speech in a Ro man Catholic church in Soweto, South Africa’s largest blacks-only slum outside Johannesburg and the scene of deadly riots in the 1970s. About 100 members of the Aza- nian Peoples Organization waved placards and chanted “Kennedy Go Home” outside the church. Once inside, they repeatedly dis rupted attempts by Kennedy’s host, Nobel Peace Prize winner Bishop Desmond Tutu, to restore order among the crowd of 4,000, most of whom cheered for the senator. Members of AZAPO, as t* whites, have demonstrated agau Kennedy’s visit, claiming it was to boost his own presidential ad tions. Kennedy said South Africanstti rity fMilice, his own aides and Ti advised him against going intotli church “because of the dangertoii nocent citizens and civilians." It stead, he went to Tutu’s home ini weto and then left for the airport. Tutu said he was pleased Ket nedy had seen firsthand conditio! in South Africa, whose white nr nonty government practices a n tem of racial discrimination knon as apartheid. “Don’t go away from here ing that you have been rejected.W love you,” he said. In the canceled speech, which* distributed to journalists, Kenned said even the most fervent govern ment supporters “must know tlu time is running out. Inexorably,tli sands of apartheid are runninj through the hour glass.” He called on the governmentE free Mandela and all other black m tionalists in prison and predicted tin U.S. anti-apartheid demonstration would continue until the systemw eliminated. Secretary of State George Shulu expressed reservations about Kelt nedy’s trip when asked on NBCs “Meet the Press” Sunday whethtt the visit was helping to situation. “It’s hard to see that it is,” SI said, “and he’s run into a lot of stall from the blacks in South Africa, far as I can see from the reports," Clinic bombings discussed 1 United Press International WASHINGTON — T he head of the National Abortion Federation said she is now satisfied the FBI is doing all it can fp solve the bombings of abortion clinics across the coun try. Barbara Radford, executive direc tor of the National Abortion Feder ation, said she met recently with FBI Director William Webster. Radford said the director and his staff ex plained the steps the FBI is taking to solve the problem.” “We know where they have agents,” Radford said in an inter view Friday. “We know they are lending personnel and expertise. They are active members of the in vestigation. At this point in time we feel confident about federal law en forcement intervention in these in vestigations. Webster met with representatives of a number of pro-abortion groups, including the federation, after Presi dent Reagan issued a statement Jan. 3 condemning the attacks on clinics. Since 1982 there have been 30 bombings or arson attacks against abortion clinics nationwide, 24 of them last year. The NAF’s Washing ton headquarters and six Washng- ton-area abortion clincis have been bombed since early 1984. Four people were arrested this month for the bombing of a clinic in Pensacola, Fla. Some critics had said Webster and the FBI had not done enough to solve the attacks and should take a more active role instead of delegat ing the investigation to the smaller Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. “We had asked for further in volvement by the FBI,” said Rad ford, whose federation represents 285 abortion clinics, physicians’ of' Ikes and hospitals that pertoru abortions in the 50 states and the District of Columbia. “We thought (the attacks) weren’t particularly a priority of the bureau.” Radford also had praise for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, saying they were “wonder ful to work with.” Recently, forex- ample, the bureau hand-delivered to Radford’s group a notice warning abortion clinics to take extra precau tions against violence from Jan. 20, Reagan’s inauguration, though Jan 22, the 12th anniversary of the Su preme Court decision legalizing abortions. An FBI Spokesman was pleased to learn of Radford's remarks. “The director has expressed his concern,” said the spokesman, Lane Bonner. “He has called for an end to the bombings and he’s indicated that the FBI has offered all assistance that we can render to the BATF.” Webster said the Bureau of Alco hol, Tobacco and Firearms has had as many as 500 agents working to solve the attacks, more than the FBI has in its entire terrorism unit. The controversy was first stirred up last Dec. 4, when Webster said the FBI did not consider the attacks on abortion clinics to be “terrorism. He said that for the purposes of in tervention by the special FBI uniton terrorism, attacks must be orches trated by a group. There was no evidence, he said, that the bombings were being planned by people other than iso lated invididuals. Under those con ditions, the Bureau of Alcohol, To bacco and Firearms was designated as the lead agency. I Tr« Ill's