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2037 lines
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()---------------------------------------------------------------------------()
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P/HUN Newsletter #1
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Contents 13 articles + Introduction
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Released : September 30th 1988
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Phile 1.1 of 1.14
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/------------------------------------------------\
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| Phreakers Hackers Underground Network |
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| Newsletter #1 |
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\------------------------------------------------/
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Welcome to the P/HUN newsletter #1.P/HUN is a free newsletter dedicated to
|
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inform on subjects as Defeating computer security / Various aspects of
|
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Telecommunication/Cable/Radio/and offcourse Pyromania
|
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P/HUN will come out at approximately every three months.Our next issue will
|
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be out somewhere in December.Anyone can write for our newsletter
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We will not be held responsible for any articles that are printed.If
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you have questions and/or comments on any particular article(s) please
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contact the appropriate writer.
|
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If you have anything to sell (Phreak/Hack/Cable related ONLY!!) upload
|
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your ad and it will be printed in the next issue.
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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IF YOU ARE INTRESTED IN SUBMITTING AN ARTICLE CALL:
|
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Hackers Den88
|
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"P/HUN Newsletter Headquarters"
|
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(718)358/9209
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Open 24 hrs
|
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Upload your article there and it'll be printed in the forecoming issue if
|
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acceptable.
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** Note **
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In the next issue we would like to see some good articles on Pyro and Cable.
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Your Submittions will be highly appreciated.
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----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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We wish to thank everyone who has submitted their article to
|
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make this issue possible and a special thanks to all members P/HUN
|
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If anyone would like to see an article on any specific subject please
|
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leave us your feedback at the Hackers Den-88
|
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Please distribute this article freely.
|
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|
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We are proud to say that we have recently opened a P/HUN oriented BBS
|
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Call...
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Ojai
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(415)341-7564
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1200/2400
|
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Open 24 hrs
|
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|
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Also give these fine Hack/Phreak related boards a call:
|
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Phoenix Project - (512)7548182 * Eyes Only BBS - (516)9797312
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The Junkyard BBS - (516)9327394 * Genesis Project- (212)9311428/ 6pm-10am
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Phun Phone Co. - (718)6459158 * The Edge - (718)6318135
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Pacific Alliance - (818)2805710 * The Alternate Universe - (718)3260720
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Rougues Gallery - (516)3619846 * The Central Office - (914)2343260
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Phantoms Quarters (718)9617233 * Phantoms Quarters ][ - (718)9397538
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Iron Curtain - (301)8435052 * AT-TEL 16 Bit - (812)4462881
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In the next issue we plan to have a list of all Phreak/Hack related Boards
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around the country.If you want your board to be added to the list ,please
|
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contact us at the Hackers Den88.
|
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Editor & President
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Red Knight
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Hackers Den-88
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(718)358/9209
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SysOps may use this newsletter so long as it has "not" been altered in anyway
|
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=========================ntents:
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--------
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1.1 - Introduction --> By: Red Knight
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1.2 - Fundamentels on UNIX Passwords --> By: Mr. Slippery
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1.3 - Electronic funds transfer systems --> By: The Line Breaker
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1.4 - Dialups --> By: Cyfer
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1.5 - Telenet Access Numbers --> By: DareDevil
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1.6 - Hacker menace and electronic bulletin boards --> By: Code Cracker
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1.7 - Federal Black Pages --> By: The Line Breaker
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1.8 - Red & Green Boxes revived --> By: The Pink Panther
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1.9 - A Notice to all Phreakers --> By: The Jedi
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1.10 - An introduction to Diverters --> By: Larry P.
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1.11 - The Mf2 U.K Signalling System --> By: The Key
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1.12 - List of Dutch & Belgium BBS'es --> By: The Key
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1.13 - The Paper Clip Method --> By: Master Mind
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1.14 - The SL-1ST PABX --> By: Red Knight
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==============================================================================
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Phile 1.2 of 1.14
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Fundamentals of UNIX passwords
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------------------------------
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By: Mr. Slippery
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I will answer the following questions:
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What are good passwords? What are bad passwords? Why does UNIX
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system V require 6 character passwords with funny characters?
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How long would it take to break ANY 6 character password.
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In 1981, Rober Morris and Ken Thompson wrote up their findings about
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passwords. The document is called "Password Security - A Case History"
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and is present in the documentation for some versions of UNIX.
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They did a survey of various systems ands found that out of 3,289
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passwords 15 were a single character, 72 were 2 characters long,
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464 were 3 chars, 477 where 4 alphanumeric, 706 were 5 letters,
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605 were 6 letters, all lower case and 492 appeared in various
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dictionaries. 86% of the passwords were thus easily breakable if
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you have a password hacker and access to the password file. This
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is why UNIX V requires a minimum 6 characters some of which must
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not be letters.
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The article also said that some "good" things to try are dictionary
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entries with the words spelled backwards, list of first names, last
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names, street names, city names, (try with an inital upper case
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letter as well), valid license plate numbers in your state, room
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numbers, telephone numbers and the like.
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Some others have suggested that people use woman's names (with a
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trailing digit), their logins repeated or massaged (login abc,
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password abcabc, cbacba), anything in the "GECOS" (comment) field of
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the password file and anything significant that you know about the
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person (their kid's name).
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But what about trying every possible password? How long would it take?
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The article had some numbers based on a PDP 11/70. It showed that 6
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character passwords were too hard to break by exhaustive search if
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someone was forced to use more than just letters and numbers. Using
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all 95 printable characters, it would take a PDP 11/70 about 33 years
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to try all of them. BUT TIMES ARE CHANGING. One fine weekend I tried
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the same experiement with a modern 25MHz computer. From 33 have access to a mainframe or cray, it could
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be a matter of days or weeks to break a password.
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Of course, this is not something that would go unnoticed. Using up all
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the resources of a CRAY would show up but over a long weekend, who
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knows? If people are paying attention to the system activity (sar)
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they will notice that you've used up all the system resources and
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start asking potentially embarresing questions.
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If you have a bunch of friends to help and divide up the job,
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it could be a lot faster. Naturally though, it has to be worth your
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time and effort. Someone running Xenix or MINIX on a PC is hardly
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worth the effort.
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And if the person was using 7 or 8 character passwords it would take
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just too long.
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If you examine the password encryptation method that UNIX uses, you
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will notice that a 'salt' is used. This can have 4K (4,096 for the
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uninitiated) values so generating every possible password IN ADVANCE
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would take 4K times whatever the time required so its not worth the
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attempt either.
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How long will the 'door' be open? This fact that people are getting
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better and better at guessing passwords in not lost on all concerned.
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AT&T has put something called "password shadowing" in their latest
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release (V.3.2). Basically what they did is to make the password file
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unreadable by anyone but root. This stops people from taking the
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password file to another machine and working on it at leasure. SUN and
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IBM are doing similar things (hang around USENIX/Uniforum when the
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shows come to your town to see what they are up to).
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Well, what is this all leading up to? Are people going to give up
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their hobby? Just between you and me, I kind of doubt it. Password
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'shadowing' is optional, after all. People will still choose bad
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passwords or even no passwords. Many people will not load the lastest
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operating systems.
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On the other hand, its not only UNIX systems that people choose bad
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passwords for. I assume that I could break many hackers and phreaks
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passwords on various boards but that would be unfriendly and get me
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into trouble, so I won't try :-) (for the novice, this is a smiley
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face and means that I'm joking :-( is a frown). Those out there who
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are sysops might want to see what people choose for passwords since
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I assume we're almost as lazy as other people. Me, I don't use
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anything that you could guess except on one board that had trouble
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with a special characters!
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Writing a password cracker: On UNIX, at least, this is simple assuming
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you have access to the 'domestic' version. The 'international' version
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has the crypt function deleted. I don't know why they bothered since
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all the KGB has to do is visit any one of 10,000 sites with UNIX
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source code but I guess the government likes to play "lets pretend".
|
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By the way, in case you are waiting for a nice cheap FAST DES chip to
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come out, the UNIX people did not exactly use DES. They diddled it a
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bit to stop hardware from making the job too fast.
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I assume that the principles I've talked about here apply to other
|
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operating systems. Some are a LOT easier. The earlier versions of the
|
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Pick opthe passwords. All you had
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to do was to 'dump' the right 'frame' of disk to see them! I think
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that some of the mainframe packages such as RACF or ACF2 don't encrypt
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but I'm not 100% sure.
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A final thought: one thing to look for in general are assumptions made
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a number of years ago that people have not reexamined. Exhaustive
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searches of 6 character passwords is just one example. I'm sure there
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are others.
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=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
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Phile 1.3 of 1.14
|
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|
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ELECTRONIC FUNDS TRANSFER SYSTEMS
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---------------------------------
|
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WRITTEN BY: THE LINE BREAKER & CODE CRACKER
|
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|
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|
|||
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As a respond from The Master Hacker we have written this g-phile
|
|||
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for those of you are either new or have no knowledge of carding.
|
|||
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This is a 5-part g-phile covering all areas of using a credit
|
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card for carding. Part 1 is mainly a explaintion of how credit
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cards go through clearing houses and to the customers statement.
|
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|
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ELECTRONIC FUNDS TRANSFER SYSTEMS
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--------------------------------->
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|
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|
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EFTS can broadly be described as computer data collection and relecommunication
|
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techniques that electronically transport information about the movement of
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funds between accounts managed by financial institutions.
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|
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THE IMPETUS FOR EFT SERVICES
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---------------------------->
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|
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With the adoption of the MICR (Magnetic Ink Character recognition) stand in
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I Think about 1959, the banking industry took the first step toward
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facilitating computerized handling of the growing number of checks used
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in America. By the 70's paper check processing had reached a level where
|
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more than 37 billion individual pieces of paper moved through the banking
|
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system annually. In 1983 at the present rate of growth, it was anticipated
|
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that this number would reach 55 billion.
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|
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Two general approaches are being follwoed in an effort to reduce the
|
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burden of check processing: the elimination of or supplant of check
|
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transactions by electronic messages and the reduction of the physical
|
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transport of paper.
|
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|
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REPLACEMENT OF CHECK TRANSACTIONS BY ELECTRONIC MESSAGES
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-------------------------------------------------------->
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|
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Examples are the installation of automated teller machines (ATMs) by
|
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|
financial institutions to provide on-line computerized banking
|
|||
|
services, the development of automated clearinghouse services (such
|
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|
as checkless payroll deposits) and telephone bill-paying services
|
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|
which allow customers to enter bill paying information directly in
|
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electronic form to a bank's computer through Touchtone telephones.
|
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|
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Automated teller machines are unattended computer terminal-type devices
|
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that offer most of the services avaiable from a teller. They
|
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are actived by a customer through the combined use of a plastic card
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with a magnetic strip bearing machine readable account
|
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information, and a special secret number known only by the
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|
customer (termed a PIN or personal Identification number).
|
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|
Among the services offered through these machines are cash
|
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withdrawls, transfers of fbalance inquiry. Although early development of these machines
|
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was restricted to providing off-line cash despensing, almost all
|
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|
new ATM installations are on-line to the financial institution's
|
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|
account database.
|
|||
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|
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Automated clearinghouses (ACHs) are regional computer centers
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|
fun for the most part by the federal reserve system and
|
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concentrating thier activities on the processing of
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pre-authorized electronic deposits or withdrawls from checking
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|
accounts maintained by financial institutions.
|
|||
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|
|||
|
Typical volume in the early 80's was over 11 million electronic
|
|||
|
items per month submitted to the ACHs primarily on magnetic tape
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|
for sorting and redistribution. The predominant types of
|
|||
|
electronic items processed by the 32 ACHs were military payroll
|
|||
|
and social security electronic deposits. Other types of
|
|||
|
transactions include withdrawl of funds to pay bills
|
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|
pre-authorized by the customer for payment. Electronic deposits
|
|||
|
or withdrawls destined for a F.I. not served by a specific
|
|||
|
regional ACH are transmitted via telecommunications links to the
|
|||
|
appropriate regional ACH for local redistribution.
|
|||
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|
|||
|
Bill paying by telephone is another popular EFT service designed
|
|||
|
to elimate paper check mailing and processing. In its most
|
|||
|
basic form, the service involves customer-direct input by a
|
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|
touchtone telephone to a computer of the data necessaty to
|
|||
|
generate electronic withdrawls from a account maintained by the
|
|||
|
cusotmer and an electronic deposit to an account maintained by
|
|||
|
the billing company. Deposits destined for a company that does
|
|||
|
not maintain an account with the customer's bank can be routed
|
|||
|
through the local ACH for delivery to an appropriate bank.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
REDUCTION OF PAPER FLOW
|
|||
|
----------------------->
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Truncation of the physical transport of paper bearing
|
|||
|
instructions for the movement of funds between accounts is
|
|||
|
another EFT application. For example, efforts to truncate the
|
|||
|
flow of checks through the use of image processing techniques
|
|||
|
are under development. The thrust of this effort is to create
|
|||
|
electronic images of checks at the point of first deposit and to
|
|||
|
transmit only these images to the customer or customers's bank.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The national credit card clearing and settlement system are
|
|||
|
other examples of such truncation systems. When a customer uses
|
|||
|
Visa or Mastercard to make a purchase, he or she normally is not
|
|||
|
dealing with a merchant who has an account with the financial
|
|||
|
institution that has issued the card. As a result, the evidence
|
|||
|
of the completed sale in the past was physically forwarded to
|
|||
|
the merchant's contracting bank for credit to the merchant's
|
|||
|
account and then on to the card-issuing banl for posting to the
|
|||
|
customer's statement. In 1978, national systems were installed
|
|||
|
by the two competing bankcard organizations which truncated the
|
|||
|
flow of this paper at the merchant's bank of deposit and
|
|||
|
forwared only an electronic message to the card issurer for
|
|||
|
posting to the cardholders statement. These systems were later
|
|||
|
expanded to include worldwide bankcard sales. The system that
|
|||
|
supports this electronic transmission fpr Visa cards processes per month during the latter
|
|||
|
part of 1985, or approximately 60% of all Visa card sales worldwide.
|
|||
|
The Visa system transmits this sales data overnight in a form
|
|||
|
which can be directly posted to a customer's descriptive billing
|
|||
|
statement through a network linking together 250 Visa bank
|
|||
|
processing centers in Europe, Canada, and the U.S. Magnetic
|
|||
|
tapes are sent to the balance of Visa banks operating in more
|
|||
|
than 125 countries throughout the rest of the world.
|
|||
|
As a result of the implemention of these two systems, both
|
|||
|
national systems have uniformly adopted cardholder billing
|
|||
|
statements which simply list a description of the sale without
|
|||
|
including a copy of the sales receipt.
|
|||
|
telephone numbers and password format. Gaining access to the
|
|||
|
ACH will give to all the information about credit cards needed.
|
|||
|
From Person names to expiration dates to issuing banks. We hope
|
|||
|
you have found this article intresting.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Phile 1.4 of 1.14
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*****Dialups*****
|
|||
|
Presented By:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Cyfer
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This List of Dialups is for a small portion of the 800 and 950 dialups in
|
|||
|
U.S. They were tested on the East coast so you people on the West may not
|
|||
|
be able to reach all of these....They code templates listed along with the
|
|||
|
Dialups are 70% correct.....It is sometime hard to tell whether you dial a 1
|
|||
|
or a 0 or 9 to get an outside line for a particular company so you may have to
|
|||
|
experiment with a few of them....The ones with the * beside them mean that that
|
|||
|
code template is 100% correct....We know so because we have found valid codes
|
|||
|
from them...In future issues we will expand our list....It is very small now
|
|||
|
due to the lack of time we have had to find more....So look out for the next
|
|||
|
Issue!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Cyfer
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Number Company Code template
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1.(800)221-2480 PBX N/A
|
|||
|
2.(800)221-8190 RCA Datel 1111, 6 digit code, then who knows
|
|||
|
3. 950-0488 ITT N/A
|
|||
|
4.(800)327-9488 ITT (800) N/A
|
|||
|
5.(800)221-9600 PBX N/A
|
|||
|
6.(800)238-1740 N/A N/A
|
|||
|
7.(800)251-1435 PBX N/A
|
|||
|
8.(800)321-6902 PBX N/A
|
|||
|
9.(800)368-5963 N/A 6 digit Code, 0, #
|
|||
|
10.(800)437-7010 GCI 8 digit code, 1, #
|
|||
|
11.(800)441-0647 PBX 4 digit code, 9, #
|
|||
|
12.(800)541-2255 MicroTel N/A
|
|||
|
13.(800)547-1784 American Network 6 digit Code, 1, #
|
|||
|
14.(800)548-0003 N/A *6 Digit Code, 0, #
|
|||
|
15.(800)558-1000 N/A N/A They give a Fake Carrier!
|
|||
|
16.(800)877-8000 Sprint 7 digit Code, 1, #
|
|||
|
17. 950-1033 Sprint *7 digit Code, 1, # Be Careful!!
|
|||
|
18. 950-0537 N/A *6 Digit Code, 1, #
|
|||
|
19. 950-, #, 14 Digit Code!! tough one.
|
|||
|
20.(800)858-4193 Metro-Fone *7 Digit Code, #
|
|||
|
21.(800)843-0698 Allnet??? N/A
|
|||
|
22.(800)882-2255 Americall 6 Digit Code, 1, # Fake Carrier
|
|||
|
23. 950-0370 N/A 7 Digit Code, 1, #
|
|||
|
24. 950-0393 American Pioneer 6 Digit Code, 1, #
|
|||
|
25. 950-1088 N/A 6 Digit Code, 1, #
|
|||
|
26. 950-1044 Allnet (Regional) *6 Digit Code, 1, #
|
|||
|
27. 950-1444 Allnet (National) *9 Digit Code, 1, #
|
|||
|
28.(800)237-0384 Tec-Net 5 Digit Code, Then I am lost!
|
|||
|
29. 950-0658 N/A 6 Digit Code, 1, #
|
|||
|
30. 950-0760 N/A 6 Digit Code, 1, #
|
|||
|
31. 950-0835 N/A 6 Digit Code, 1, #
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Well That's All for now.....I know they're are alot more 800's out there...
|
|||
|
Guess we'll Put them in the next issue! Sorry about All the N/A's Listed....
|
|||
|
But some of those templates are hard to get right.....So have Fun...Until Next
|
|||
|
Time!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Phile 1.5 of 1.14
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Telenet Access Numbers
|
|||
|
----------------------
|
|||
|
By: DAREDEVIL
|
|||
|
P/HUN
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I HOPE THESE NUMBERS COME IN HANDY.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
USAGE: ONE CAN ALSO USE THESE AS MULTIPLE TARGETS WITH 'CODE THIEF '
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
300/1200 2400
|
|||
|
ST AC CITY BPS BPS CLASS
|
|||
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AL 205 ANNISTON 236-9711 B
|
|||
|
AL 205 BIRMINGHAM 328-2310 251-1885 B
|
|||
|
AL 205 DECATUR 355-0206 B
|
|||
|
AL 205 DOTHAN 793-5034 B
|
|||
|
AL 205 FLORENCE 767-7960 B
|
|||
|
AL 205 HUNTSVILLE 539-2281 B
|
|||
|
AL 205 MOBILE 432-1680 438-6881 B
|
|||
|
AL 205 MONTGOMERY 269-0090 832-4314 B
|
|||
|
AL*205 TUSCALOOSA 752-1472 C
|
|||
|
AK 907 ANCHORAGE 258-7222 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 BARROW 852-2425 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 BETHEL 543-2411 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 COLD BAY 532-2371 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 CORDOVA 424-3744 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 DEADHORSE 659-2777 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 DELTA JUNCTION 895-5070 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 DILLINGHAM 842-2688 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 FAIRBANKS 456-3282 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 GLENNALLEN 822-5231 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 HOMER 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 ILIAMNA 571-1364 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 JUNEAU 789-7009 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 KETCHIKAN 225-1871 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 KING SALMON 246-3049 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 KODIAK 486-4061 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 KOTZEBUE 442-2602 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 MCGRATH 524-3256 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 NOME 443-2256 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 NORTHWAY 778-2301 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 PALMER 745-0200 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 PRUDHOE BAY 659-2777 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 ST PAUL 546-2320 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 SEWARD 224-3126 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 SITKA 747-5887 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 SOLDOTNA 262-1990 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 TALKEETNA 733-2227 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 TANANA 366-7167 (300 BPS ONLY) 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 VALDEZ 835-4987 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 WHITTIER 472-2467 1
|
|||
|
AK 907 YAKUTAT 784-3453 1
|
|||
|
AR 501 FT SMITH 782-2852 C
|
|||
|
AR 501 LITTLE ROCK 372-4616 374-2861 B
|
|||
|
AZ 602 PHOENIX 254-0244 256-6955 A
|
|||
|
AZ 602 TUCSON 747-0107 747-9395 B
|
|||
|
CA 805 BAKERSFIELD 327-8146 B
|
|||
|
CA 916 CHICO 894-6882 B
|
|||
|
CA 714 COLTON 824-9000 824-8976 B
|
|||
|
CA 213 COMPTON 516-1007 C
|
|||
|
CA 415 CONCORD 827-3960 674-0127 C
|
|||
|
CA 619 ESCONDIDO 741-7756 B
|
|||
|
CA 707 EUREKA 444-3091 B
|
|||
|
CA 209 FRESNO 233-0961 441-1861 B
|
|||
|
CA 714 GARDEN GROVE 898-9820 895-1207 B
|
|||
|
CA 818 GLENDALE 507-0909 246-3886 B
|
|||
|
CA 415 HAYWARD 881-1382 B
|
|||
|
CA 213 LOS ANGELES 624-2251 622-1138 A
|
|||
|
CA 213 LOS ANGELES 937-3580 622-1138 A
|
|||
|
CA 213 MARINA DEL REY 306-2984 306-4922 B
|
|||
|
CA 209 MERCED 383-2557 B
|
|||
|
CA 209 MODESTO 576-2852 B
|
|||
|
CA 408 MONTEREY 646-9092 C
|
|||
|
CA 213 NORWALK 404-2237 C
|
|||
|
CA 415 OAKLAND 836-4911 834-3194 13 C
|
|||
|
CA 415 PALO ALTO 856-9995 856-0484 B
|
|||
|
CA 714 POMONA 626-1284 C
|
|||
|
CA 916 SACRAMENTO 448-6262 443-7434 B
|
|||
|
CA 408 SALINAS 443-4940 B
|
|||
|
CA 415 SAN CARLOS 591-0726 595-8870 B
|
|||
|
CA 619 SAN DIEGO 233-0233 231-1703 B
|
|||
|
CA 415 SAN FRANCISCO 956-5777 788-0825 A
|
|||
|
CA 408 SAN JOSE 294-9119 286-6340 B
|
|||
|
CA 213 SAN PEDRO 548-6141 514-1590 B
|
|||
|
CA 415 SAN RAFAEL 472-5360 C
|
|||
|
CA 415 SAN RAMON 829-6705 B
|
|||
|
CA 714 SANTA ANA 558-7078 550-4625 B
|
|||
|
CA 805 SANTA BARBARA 682-5361 B
|
|||
|
CA 408 SANTA CRUZ 429-6937 C
|
|||
|
CA 707 SANTA ROSA 578-4447 C
|
|||
|
CA 209 STOCKTON 957-7610 C
|
|||
|
CA*805 THOUSAND OAKS 495-3693 B
|
|||
|
CA*415 VALLEJO 724-4200 C
|
|||
|
CA 805 VENTURA 656-6760 B
|
|||
|
CA 209 VISALIA 627-1201 B
|
|||
|
CA 818 WEST COVINA 915-5151 C
|
|||
|
CA 818 WOODLAND HILLS 887-3160 348-7141 B
|
|||
|
CO*719 COLORADO SPRINGS 635-5361 578-0950 B
|
|||
|
CO 303 DENVER 337-6060 696-0159 A
|
|||
|
CO 303 FT COLLINS 493-9131 B
|
|||
|
CO 303 GRAND JUNCTION 241-3004 C
|
|||
|
CO 303 GREELEY 352-8563 B
|
|||
|
CO*719 PUEBLO 542-4053 C
|
|||
|
CT 203 BRIDGEPORT 335-5055 367-9130 B
|
|||
|
CT 203 DANBURY 794-9075 B
|
|||
|
CT 203 HARTFORD 247-9479 724-9396 B
|
|||
|
CT 203 MIDDLETOWN 344-8217 B
|
|||
|
CT 203 NEW BRITAIN 225-7027 B
|
|||
|
CT 203 NEW HAVEN 624-5954 773-3569 B
|
|||
|
CT*203 NEW LONDON 447-8455 B
|
|||
|
CT 203 NORWALK 866-7404 B
|
|||
|
CT 203 STAMFORD 348-0787 359-9404 B
|
|||
|
CT 203 WATERBURY 753-4512 C
|
|||
|
DC 202 WASHINGTON 429-7896 429-0956 A
|
|||
|
DC 202 WASHINGTON 429-7800 429-0956 A
|
|||
|
DE 302 DOVER 678-8328 B
|
|||
|
DE 302 NEWARK 454-7710 737-4340 B
|
|||
|
FL*407 BOCA RATON 338-3701 ORAL 275-7924 C
|
|||
|
FL*407 COCOA BEACH 267-0800 B
|
|||
|
FL 904 DAYTONA BEACH 255-2629 C
|
|||
|
FL 305 FT LAUDERDALE 764-4505 524-5304 B
|
|||
|
FL*904 GAINESVILLE 338-0220 B
|
|||
|
FL*904 GAINESVILLE 371-6990 (SEE FOOTNOTE 2) B
|
|||
|
FL 904 JACKSONVILLE 353-1818 791-9201 B
|
|||
|
FL*813 LAKELAND 683-5461 C
|
|||
|
FL*407 MELBOURNE 242-8247 C
|
|||
|
FL 305 MIAMI 372-0230 372-1355 A
|
|||
|
FL 813 NAPLES 263-3033 C
|
|||
|
FL 904 OCALA 351-3790 C
|
|||
|
FL*407 ORLANDO 422-4088 422-8858 B
|
|||
|
FL 904 PENSACOLA 432-1335 C
|
|||
|
FL 305 POMPANO BEACH 941-5445 C
|
|||
|
FL 813 ST PETERSBURG 323-4026 327-1163 B
|
|||
|
FL 813 SARASOTA 923-4563 C
|
|||
|
FL 904 TALLAHASSEE 681-1902 B
|
|||
|
FL 813 TAMPA 224-9920 223-5859 B
|
|||
|
FL*407 WEST PALM BEACH 833-6691 655-2993 B
|
|||
|
GA 912 ALBANY 888-3011 C
|
|||
|
GA*404 ATHENS 548-5590 B
|
|||
|
GA*404 ATHENS 354-0614 (SEE FOOTNOTE 2) B
|
|||
|
GA 404 ATLANTA 523-0834 584-0212 A
|
|||
|
GA*404 ATLANTA 261-4633 (SEE FOOTNOTE 2) B
|
|||
|
GA*404 AUGUSTA 724-2752 724-4494 B
|
|||
|
GA*404 COLUMBUS 571-0556 B
|
|||
|
GA*404 COLUMBUS 324-5771 (SEE FOOTNOTE 2) B
|
|||
|
GA 912 MACON 743-8844 C
|
|||
|
GA 404 ROME 234-1428 B
|
|||
|
GA 912 SAVANNAH 236-2605 B
|
|||
|
HI 808 OAHU 528-0200 3
|
|||
|
HI 800 OTHER ISLANDS 272-5299 3
|
|||
|
IA 515 AMES 233-6300 C
|
|||
|
IA 319 CEDAR RAPIDS 364-0911 362-2764 B
|
|||
|
IA 319 DAVENPORT 324-2445 C
|
|||
|
IA 515 DES MOINES 288-4403 288-6206 B
|
|||
|
IA 319 DUBUQUE 556-0783 C
|
|||
|
IA 319 IOWA CITY 351-1421 C
|
|||
|
IA 712 SIOUX CITY 255-1545 C
|
|||
|
IA*319 WATERLOO 232-5441 B
|
|||
|
ID 208 BOISE 343-0611 B
|
|||
|
ID 208 LEWISTON 743-0099 C
|
|||
|
IL*312 AURORA 896-062 B
|
|||
|
IL 309 BLOOMINGTON 827-7000 B
|
|||
|
IL 312 CHICAGO 938-0600 938-8725 A
|
|||
|
IL 217 DECATUR 429-0235 C
|
|||
|
IL*815 DEKALB 758-2623 B
|
|||
|
IL 815 JOLIET 726-0070 C
|
|||
|
IL 309 PEORIA 637-8570 637-8582 B
|
|||
|
IL 815 ROCKFORD 965-0400 965-0696 B
|
|||
|
IL 217 SPRINGFIELD 753-1373 B
|
|||
|
IL 217 URBANA 384-6428 328-0317 B
|
|||
|
IN 812 BLOOMINGTON 332-1344 C
|
|||
|
IN 812 EVANSVILLE 424-7693 428-2522 B
|
|||
|
IN 219 FT WAYNE 426-2268 422-3431 B
|
|||
|
IN 219 GARY 882-8800 B
|
|||
|
IN 317 INDIANAPOLIS 299-0024 299-6766 B
|
|||
|
IN 317 KOKOMO 455-2460 C
|
|||
|
IN 317 LAFAYETTE 742-6000 C
|
|||
|
IN*317 MUNCIE 282-6418 C
|
|||
|
IN 219 SOUTH BEND 233-7104 233-4031 B
|
|||
|
IN 812 TERRE HAUTE 232-5329 C
|
|||
|
KS 913 LAWRENCE 843-8124 B
|
|||
|
KS 913 MANHATTAN 537-0948 B
|
|||
|
KS 913 SALINA 825-7900 B
|
|||
|
KS*913 TOPEKA 233-9880 233-4660 B
|
|||
|
KS 316 WICHITA 262-5669 262-7961 B
|
|||
|
KY 502 BOWLING GREEN 782-7941 B
|
|||
|
KY 502 FRANKFORT 875-4654 B
|
|||
|
KY 606 LEXINGTON 233-0312 233-7217 B
|
|||
|
KY 502 LOUISVILLE 589-5580 583-1006 B
|
|||
|
KY 502 OWENSBORO 686-8107 B
|
|||
|
LA 318 ALEXANDRIA 445-1053 B
|
|||
|
LA 504 BATON ROUGE 343-0753 343-0771 A
|
|||
|
LA*318 LAFAYETTE 233-0002 234-8451 B
|
|||
|
LA 318 LAKE CHARLES 436-0518 C
|
|||
|
LA 318 MONROE 387-6330 B
|
|||
|
LA 504 NEW ORLEANS 524-4094 522-3967 A
|
|||
|
LA 318 SHREVEPORT 221-5833 B
|
|||
|
ME 207 AUGUSTA 622-3123 B
|
|||
|
ME 207 BREWER 989-3081 C
|
|||
|
ME 207 LEWISTON 784-0105 C
|
|||
|
ME 207 PORTLAND 761-4000 C
|
|||
|
MD 301 ANNAPOLIS 224-8550 B
|
|||
|
MD 301 BALTIMORE 727-6060 752-5555 A
|
|||
|
MD 301 FREDERICK 293-9596 B
|
|||
|
MA 617 BOSTON 574-9244 A
|
|||
|
MA*508 BROCKTON 580-0721 B
|
|||
|
MA*508 FALL RIVER 677-4477 B
|
|||
|
MA*508 FRAMINGHAM 879-6798 B
|
|||
|
MA*508 LAWRENCE 975-2273 B
|
|||
|
MA 617 LEXINGTON 863-1550 863-1745 B
|
|||
|
MA*508 LOWELL 937-5214 B
|
|||
|
MA*508 NEW BEDFORD 999-2915 B
|
|||
|
MA 413 NORTHAMPTON 586-0510 C
|
|||
|
MA 413 PITTSFIELD 499-7741 B
|
|||
|
MA*508 SALEM 744-1559 B
|
|||
|
MA 413 SPRINGFIELD 781-3811 B
|
|||
|
MA*508 WOODS HOLE 540-7500 C
|
|||
|
MA*508 WORCESTER 755-4740 B
|
|||
|
MI 313 ANN ARBOR 996-5995 665-2900 A
|
|||
|
MI 616 BATTLE CREEK 968-0929 B
|
|||
|
MI 313 DETROIT 964-2988 963-2274 A
|
|||
|
MI 313 FLINT 235-8517 B
|
|||
|
MI 616 GRAND RAPIDS 774-0966 B
|
|||
|
MI 517 JACKSON 782-8111 C
|
|||
|
MI 616 KALAMAZOO 345-3088 345-3122 B
|
|||
|
MI 517 LANSING 484-0062 484-6301 B
|
|||
|
MI*517 MIDLAND 832-7068 B
|
|||
|
MI 616 MUSKEGON 726-5723 C
|
|||
|
MI*313 PONTIAC 332-5120 B
|
|||
|
MI 313 PORT HURON 982-8364 B
|
|||
|
MI 517 SAGINAW 790-5166 799-3190 B
|
|||
|
MI*313 SOUTHFIELD 827-4710 B
|
|||
|
MI 616 TRAVERSE CITY 946-2121 C
|
|||
|
MI 313 WARREN 575-9152 B
|
|||
|
MN 218 DULUTH 722-1719 B
|
|||
|
MN*507 MANKATO 388-3780 B
|
|||
|
MN 612 MINNEAPOLIS 341-2459 338-1661 A
|
|||
|
MN 507 ROCHESTER 282-5917 C
|
|||
|
MN 612 ST CLOUD 253-2064 C
|
|||
|
MO 314 COLUMBIA 449-4404 B
|
|||
|
MO 314 JEFFERSON CITY 634-5178 C
|
|||
|
MO 816 KANSAS CITY 221-9900 472-1430 A
|
|||
|
MO 816 ST JOSEPH 279-4797 C
|
|||
|
MO 314 ST LOUIS 421-4990 421-0381 A
|
|||
|
MO 417 SPRINGFIELD 864-4814 B
|
|||
|
MS 601 GULFPORT 863-0024 B
|
|||
|
MS 601 JACKSON 969-0036 B
|
|||
|
MS 601 MERIDIAN 482-2210 5 B
|
|||
|
MT 406 BILLINGS 245-7649 C
|
|||
|
MT 406 GREAT FALLS 771-0067 B
|
|||
|
MT 406 HELENA 443-0000 B
|
|||
|
MT 406 MISSOULA 721-5900 C
|
|||
|
NE 402 LINCOLN 475-4964 475-3839 B
|
|||
|
NE 402 OMAHA 341-7733 346-6419 B
|
|||
|
NH 603 CONCORD 224-1024 B
|
|||
|
NH 603 DURHAM 868-2924 B
|
|||
|
NH*603 MANCHESTER 627-8725 625-8088 B
|
|||
|
NH 603 NASHUA 880-6241 C
|
|||
|
NH 603 PORTSMOUTH 431-2302 B
|
|||
|
NV 702 LAS VEGAS 737-6861 737-5466 B
|
|||
|
NV 702 RENO 827-6900 827-5290 B
|
|||
|
NJ 609 ATLANTIC CITY 348-0561 B
|
|||
|
NJ 201 FREEHOLD 780-5030 B
|
|||
|
NJ 201 HACKENSACK 488-6567 488-2063 B
|
|||
|
NJ 609 MARLTON 596-1500 596-8659 B
|
|||
|
NJ 609 MERCHANTVILLE 663-9297 665-6860 B
|
|||
|
NJ 201 MORRISTOWN 455-0275 644-4745 B
|
|||
|
NJ 201 NEW BRUNSWICK 745-2900 745-7010 B
|
|||
|
NJ 201 NEWARK 623-0469 623-7122 A
|
|||
|
NJ 201 PASSAIC 778-5600 773-3674 B
|
|||
|
NJ 201 PATERSON 684-7560 742-4415 B
|
|||
|
NJ 609 PRINCETON 799-5587 A
|
|||
|
NJ 201 RAHWAY 815-1885 B
|
|||
|
NJ 201 REDBANK 571-0003 B
|
|||
|
NJ 201 ROSELAND 227-5277 227-6722 B
|
|||
|
NJ 201 SAYREVILLE 525-9507 B
|
|||
|
NJ 609 TRENTON 989-8847 B
|
|||
|
NM 505 ALBUQUERQUE 243-4479 242-1742 B
|
|||
|
NM 505 LAS CRUCES 526-9191 B
|
|||
|
NM 505 SANTA FE 473-3403 C
|
|||
|
NY 518 ALBANY 465-8444 465-8632 B
|
|||
|
NY 607 BINGHAMTON 772-6642 B
|
|||
|
NY 716 BUFFALO 847-1440 847-1825 B
|
|||
|
NY 516 DEER PARK 667-5566 243-1105 B
|
|||
|
NY 516 HEMPSTEAD 292-3800 485-3380 B
|
|||
|
NY 607 ITHACA 277-2142 C
|
|||
|
NY 212 NEW YORK CITY 741-8100 645-0560 A
|
|||
|
NY 212 NEW YORK CITY 741-4950 645-0560 A
|
|||
|
NY 212 NEW YORK CITY 620-6000 645-0560 A
|
|||
|
NY 716 NIAGARA FALLS 282-1462 C
|
|||
|
NY 518 PLATTSBURGH 562-1890 KEEPSIE 473-2240 473-3200 B
|
|||
|
NY 716 ROCHESTER 454-1020 454-5730 B
|
|||
|
NY 315 SYRACUSE 472-5583 479-5445 B
|
|||
|
NY 315 UTICA 797-0920 B
|
|||
|
NY 914 WHITE PLAINS 328-9199 682-3505 B
|
|||
|
NC 704 ASHEVILLE 252-9134 B
|
|||
|
NC 704 CHARLOTTE 332-3131 333-6204 A
|
|||
|
NC 919 FAYETTEVILLE 323-8165 C
|
|||
|
NC 704 GASTONIA 865-4708 B
|
|||
|
NC 919 GREENSBORO 273-2851 275-1251 B
|
|||
|
NC 919 HIGH POINT 889-7494 B
|
|||
|
NC 919 NORTH WILKESBORO 838-9034 C
|
|||
|
NC*919 RALEIGH 834-8254 834-8254 B
|
|||
|
NC 919 RES TRI PARK 549-8139 541-9096 B
|
|||
|
NC 919 TARBORO 823-0578 C
|
|||
|
NC 919 WILMINGTON 763-8313 C
|
|||
|
NC 919 WINSTON-SALEM 725-2126 777-0312 B
|
|||
|
ND 701 FARGO 235-7717 C
|
|||
|
ND*701 GRAND FORKS 775-7813 B
|
|||
|
ND 701 MANDAN 663-2256 B
|
|||
|
OH 216 CANTON 452-0903 B
|
|||
|
OH 513 CINCINNATI 579-0390 241-8008 A
|
|||
|
OH 216 CLEVELAND 575-1658 771-6480 A
|
|||
|
OH 614 COLUMBUS 463-9340 461-9044 A
|
|||
|
OH 513 DAYTON 461-5254 461-0755 B
|
|||
|
OH 216 ELYRIA 323-5059 C
|
|||
|
OH 513 HAMILTON 863-4116 B
|
|||
|
OH 216 KENT 678-5115 678-5043 A
|
|||
|
OH 216 LORAIN 960-1771 C
|
|||
|
OH 419 MANSFIELD 526-0686 C
|
|||
|
OH 419 SANDUSKY 627-0050 B
|
|||
|
OH 513 SPRINGFIELD 324-1520 C
|
|||
|
OH 419 TOLEDO 255-7881 255-1906 B
|
|||
|
OH 216 WARREN 394-0041 C
|
|||
|
OH 216 YOUNGSTOWN 743-1296 743-6843 B
|
|||
|
OK*918 BARTLESVILLE 336-3675 B
|
|||
|
OK 405 LAWTON 353-0333 B
|
|||
|
OK 405 OKLAHOMA CITY 232-4546 232-9513 B
|
|||
|
OK 405 STILLWATER 624-1112 B
|
|||
|
OK 918 TULSA 584-3247 587-2774 B
|
|||
|
OR 503 CORVALLIS 754-9273 C
|
|||
|
OR 503 EUGENE 683-1460 C
|
|||
|
OR 503 HOOD RIVER 386-4405 C
|
|||
|
OR 503 MEDFORD 779-63 B
|
|||
|
OR 503 PORTLAND 295-3028 241-0496 A
|
|||
|
OR 503 SALEM 378-7712 B
|
|||
|
PA 215 ALLENTOWN 435-3330 770-1405 B
|
|||
|
PA*814 ALTOONA 949-0310 B
|
|||
|
PA 717 CARLISLE 249-9311 C
|
|||
|
PA 717 DANVILLE 271-0102 C
|
|||
|
PA 814 ERIE 899-2241 B
|
|||
|
PA 717 HARRISBURG 236-6882 236-2007 B
|
|||
|
PA 814 JOHNSTOWN 535-7576 B
|
|||
|
PA 215 KING OF PRUSSIA 337-4300 337-2850 B
|
|||
|
PA 717 LANCASTER 295-5405 C
|
|||
|
PA 215 PHILADELPHIA 574-9462 574-0990 A
|
|||
|
PA 412 PITTSBURGH 288-9950 471-6430 A
|
|||
|
PA 412 PITTSBURGH 288-9974 471-6430 A
|
|||
|
PA 215 READING 376-8750 C
|
|||
|
PA 717 SCRANTON 961-5321 B
|
|||
|
PA 814 SDA |