this was in todays east bay section of the "chronicle" (thur.feb 4, 1993) "YOUNG BERKELEY STUDENTS LEARN WHY COMPUTER HACKING IS ILLEGAL" "Students at a Berkeley elementary school have helped begin an innovative new educational program to discourage illegal computer hacking. Developed by LAWRENCE LIVERMORE NAT'L LABRATORY, the program premiered at Berkeley's Emerson Elementary School last month. 'Right now, there's a computer in every classroom,' said Lonnie Moore, Lawrence livermore's computer security manager. 'What we found was that nobody out there is teaching ethics and security.' In the future, the instruction will be offered on a limited basis in schools in other Bay Area communities as part of a pilot computer security outreach program run by the labs computer division. Donovan Merck, manager of the State Dept. of Education's education technology division, said that as far as he knows, the training is the first in the state for the young children. The new program involves a 30-minute long multimedia prsentation that includes puppets, a slide show, and proffesionally produced videos. Gail Warshawsky, the lab's computer security education coordinator, said the debut of the presentation at Emerson, a kindergarden-through-3rd-grade school near the University of California, was a success. 'It went extremely well' she said. 'even the kindergartners were able to understand it completely. They all got the message hat computer information is something that needs to be protected and that using somebody else's computer information without their permission is stealing' The program was put together after Gene Ulansky, a Berkeley man whose child attends Emerson, requested a program on computers and security from the lab's speakers bureau. Warshawsky said she saw Ulansky's request as an opportunity to start a pilot program designed for younger children that she had been working on for several years. Computer security education for the very young is important, she said, 'We live in a computer world, not a paper world. Children have to be aware of things like viruses. They have to be aware of the importance of protecting things like information.' Her presentation includes a slide-show and four short videos based on computer security scenarios. The videos were scripted by Warshawsky and produced by Images And Motion, a group of Sonoma County puppeteers that make commercial film and television programs. They star 'Chip' a puppet computer, 'Goosberry' an improperly trained computer programmer and 'Dirty Dan,' a hacker. One video discusses how a computer can be infected with a virus from bootlegging other programs. Another describes how eating or drinking near a computer can destroy the machine or damage its data. Others show why passwords should be safeguarded and how information can be stolen by somoone with unauthorized access to a computer. Warshawsky uses her own sock puppet, 'Goldie Sock,' to elaborate points raised in the slides and videos and to answer questions from the young audience. (artical written by Bill Wallace) I suddenly feel sick. /robin hack/