UNL professor secures information with codes Crypti^aph^ computer science keeps mathematician in high demand By Josh Funk Staff Reporter Secret codes, encryption and se cure lines may seem like something out of a James Bond movie, but some UNL professors are working to create and break codes every day. Spyros Magliveras, cryptographer and computer science professor, writes the codes that keep information se cure. Magliveras has been working in computer science since before it was an established discipline. A mathema tician and engineer by degree, Magliveras has worked with comput ers and codes for the past 20 years. “The first computer I ever built was an 80/88 PC with a wooden keyboard and makeshift keys,” Magliveras said, jokingly. One of Magliveras’ colleagues, Doug Stinson, also is a well-recog nized UNL cryptography expert. Stinson is on the editorial board of many scientific publications and has written a book on cryptography, the science of secret or hidden things. In 1977 Magliveras made a break through for his profession by discov ering a cryptographic function in com mon permutation groups that behaves randomly and does not repeat. Sound cryptic? It means that Magliveras developed a function, like an algebraic equation, that generates a different result each time random variables are plugged into it. It makes sense as a code because it doesn t make sense. It’s random, chaotic and stumps people trying to break it. Magliveras sent his code off to a group of cryptanalysists, people who specialize in breaking codes. He said they told him they could break it in a week. That was in 1988, Magliveras said, and they haven’t figured out his func tion yet. Magliveras used this function to write an encryption program called Permutation Group Mapping, which was invented to protect data transmis sions. Now, public and private organiza tions use Magliveras’ invention. The National Security Agency uses PGM, and within the past few years, Magliveras received a grant from US West to fund PGM development there. PGM can encode data, video or voice transmissions in a matter of sec onds. The data are then ready to be sent across any transmission line. When received, they can be decoded and read. There are versions of the PGM pro gram available commercially for DOS, and there will soon be a version avail able for Microsoft Windows so people can use a PGM coding to secure per sonal transmissions, too. Transmission traffic from comput ers, phones, faxes and even from au tomatic teller machines — which use phone lines — are “open to anyone who wants to listen,” Magliveras said. r a _ Mait Miller/DN SPYROS MAGUVERAS, a URL computer science professor, has been recognized as one of the world’s leading cryteleglsts. A code he developed In 1977 is now nsed by the National Security Agency. Cash transfers and important records are sent across transmission lines and need to be secured from pry ing eyes. But “all modem communications and electronic transfers are not secure yet,” Magliveras said. For some, the risk of someone breaking a code and gaining unautho rized access persuades them to keep doing things the old-fashioned way. The Securities and Commodities Commission uses an electronic system to keep track of the world’s stock mar kets, but for security it is still using a simple floppy disk, financial consult ant Robert Carver said. In the next few years as the coding and security improves, though, Ameri cans could be able to file their tax re turns using their home computers, Carver said. The electronic transfer of cash and other important information such as medical records necessitate the use of encryption, he said. “If there is a patient out in a small town without a doctor, his X-rays and records can be sent to a hospital and receive a diagnosis,” Magli veras said, “but that information needs to be pro tected.” Main St. Cafe draws attention from all ages CAFE from page 1 tin and tile. Lux, who was shooting pool dur ing his second visit Monday to the cafe, said the decor made him feel 40 years younger—another atypical ex perience for the 21-year-old. Lux’s age group represents only a portion of the diverse crowd drawn to the cafe’s environment, said waitress Holly Towns, a University of Ne braska-Lincoln sophomore secondary education major. Towns said the cafe’s patrons in clude students and professionals. While students flock to the Thurs day night $2 drink specials, business people tend to dine on the delicatessen’s 13 sandwiches and nine soups, kitchen manager Brian Diglia said. Bruce Miller, claims manager at United Fire and Casualty, said he had been a regular since the cafe’s Decem ber opening. Having no regular noon-time hang-out before, Miller now visits up to three times a week to dine on his usual pastrami sandwich. He said he enjoyed the cafe’s fast service and friendly employees. “And my coffee cup’s always full,” Miller added. Olson said he felt the cafe’s atmo sphere blurred the distinctions be tween food and drink establishments, attracting a diverse clientele many other restaurants and bars don’t at tract. “Everyone asks me ‘What kind of a bar is it?,” Olson said. “I don’t know. Serving food and drink just broadens the base of our patrons.” Lux said Main St. Cafe’s impor tance lies beyond its style and clien tele, though, even beyond the 23 ounce Budweisers the waitress was serving him Monday night. “Having a place like this in the ’90s is the reason Elvis still lives in all of us.” Liquor licensing takes time By Jim Goodwin Staff Reporter Getting a Nebraska liquor license isn’t as difficult as cajoling the bar tender for one more beer after last call, but likewise, it requires protocol. The three governor-appointed members of the Nebraska Liquor Con trol Commission ultimately decide who receives a license, said Frosty Chapman, the commission’s executive director. - The decision follows an investiga tion by the Nebraska State Patrol and recommendations by officials in the applicants’ communities. Tyler Olson, a co-owner of bars in Lincoln and Manhattan, Kan., is a veteran of both states’ procedures. Olson received his license for the Main St. Cafe, 1325 0 St., in Decem ber 1996. He said Nebraska’s process was more stringent than other states’ because of Nebraska’s intricate licens ing laws. Nebraska recognizes 17 classes of liquor licenses, which is about four times the number Kansas does, Olson said. Distinctions ire made between the sale of numerous on- and off-sale com binations of beer, wine and spirits. Restrictions concerning the location of restaurants, bars and package stores inside and outside city limits also ap ply. Additionally, manufacturers and wholesalers receive licenses different from retail establishments, according to the Nebraska Liquor Control Com mission. Specifically, state statute requires: ■ Applicants file as individuals, partnerships or corporations with the state commission at 301 Centennial Mall South. The process includes choosing the appropriate class and paying registration fees. Fees range from a $30 on-sale beer license to a $250 brewpub license. ■ The commission to give the names, addresses and other informa tion about applicants and their spouses to the Nebraska State Patrol, which fingerprints and does a national in vestigation on all names on the appli cations. In Lincoln, the City Council con ducts^ a public hearing in the appli cants’ presence, listening tb investi gation results from the Lincoln Police Department, said city clerk Paul Malzer. The council gives a recom mendation to the liquor commission. Other local considerations include the uniqueness and locations of the proposed businesses. Malzer said Lin coln allowed a lot of bars downtown because the district was designated as an entertainment center. Chapman said the entire process could take one to three months. Af terward, the state commission holds its own public hearing, considering local board recommendations, inves tigation results and various character related issues before deciding. Refused applicants may appeal the commission’s decision to Lancaster County District Court and can go to the Nebraska Supreme Court. Campus-crime study released CRIME from page 1 that in 1994,65 students out of every 100.00 were victims of violent crimes, or 6.5 students per 10,000 students. Using schools with on-campus housing, the study found that 11.3 stu dents per 10,000 were victims of vio lent crimes. UNL’s rate, according to a Daily Nebraskan study of FBI Uniform Crime Report statistics, is 2.44 stu dents per 10,000 in 1994, and 0.42 students per 10,000 in 1995. Among Big 12 schools, Nebraska ranked eighth in violent crimes per 10.000 people. Tops in the Big 12 was the Uni versity of Oklahoma in Norman ; which, in 1994, had 5.98 violent \ crimes per 10,000 students — still 5 below the national rate. Oklahoma was followed by the University of Kan sas in Lawrence, University of Mis souri in Columbia, Texas Tech Uni versity in Lubbock, Oklahoma State in Stillwater, Texas A&M in College Station, and the University of Colo rado in Boulder. In 1995, Nebraska had the lowest violent crime rate. (Kansas, Kansas State and Missouri did not report sta tistics to the FBI for that year.) Cauble said the FBI warns against making campus-to-campus compari sons using their uniform crime re ports. There are many factors that af fect campus crime rates in each city, including: ■ Ratio of males to females. ■ Demographics of the surround ing community. ■ Location of the school within the community. ■ Enrollment. i ■ Accessibility of the campus from the outside. ■ Number of police officers hired by the campus. Cauble, who said he had no prob lems with the Daily Nebraskan study, said nearly every campus did things diferently or had different circum stances. He said Baylor, a Big 12 school, is a private school with the smallest enrollment — only a little more than 12,000 students. That af fects its crime rate. The U.S. Department of Educa tion, with the number of schools re porting and the differences in those reports, cannot make an accurate prop erty crime report, Cauble said. “With the system as it is now ... it’s very difficult to compare rates,” ~ Cauble said. “There’s too many skews hat go into the Department of Edu cation to make it accurate.” Crime TlmctrQ Below are the rates of reported violent crimes per 10,000 people fofBig 12 schools as compared to the national average. Nebraska ranks as the fifth-tewest Big 12 school in violent crimes/^ CO a ■ .i 3 % * t|l c 0 1 s & 1 1:: •s i.... ——.. . . .— Ji'_ | Big 12 Schools ‘Statistics are based on data collected from 1994 ^__ | Source: US Deft, op Education ‘ Aaron Steckelberg/DN *