The Michigan Daily-Friday, September 10, 1982-Page 25 University to switch to bar coded ID cards By CHARLES THOMSON Before the year is over, University students will no longer have to complain that they feel like numbers. A change in identification cards will let them feel instead like bar codes - the kind already found on everything from cereal boxes to album covers. I ;A new University library computer system will use bar cddes instead of the holes punched in current ID cards to checking out materials. The switch has prompted a commit- to look at the possibility of adding photographs to the car- Malso. PEVE-RAL departments, including recreational sports and the'safety department, have been pressing for picture IDs, a&ording to members of the committee. Because the University has to modify the cards to work with the new library computer, explained chairman Samuel Plice, this may be a convenient time to add photos. Plice, University's director of administrative systems and firancial analysis, said the change is "not a foregoie con- clo!ion, by any means." Administrators will not decide; whether to use photos on the cards for at least a month, when the committee finishes its report. the main question about the cards, according to Plice, is 4 cost. "Obviously, it's more expensive to have an ID card with a picture than without," he said. JAMES THOMSON, a member of the committee and manager of the University's student data system, said early estimates indicate the cost of an individual card would triple fron roughly 50 cents to $1.50. The actual cost of the photograph for a card is somewhere between 50 and 60 cents, he said, but other costs would push the price un. Several University departments, including the Medical School, the Law School, and the Housing Division, already issue photo IDs. If all students had them, Thomson said, these areas would no longer face the expense of providing separate cards "Right now, one of the big games around is to steal studen- ts' identification cards and then use them to gain access to one of our facilities," said Recreational Sports Director Mike Stevenson. The impersonation game is unfair to students, he said, and is causing a "fairly large theft problem" within the University's recreation buildings. WALT STEVENS, director of the Safety Department, said a picture ID would also help fight trespassing by non- students in University buildings. Plice said his committee will present its findings to the University executive officers, who will decide whether to switch to a new card or simply to add a bar code sticker to the current card. Details will have to be worked out after his committee makes its report, he said. Plice discounted concerns that a picture ID might be an in- vasion of privacy. "I WOULD suppose there are some people who would like to remain anonymous," he said. "But there's a difference between privacy and anonymity. In a public institution, I don't know if you can have anonymity." Stevenson said he has had no complaints about photo ID cards already issued. "I've heard there's some question that this is an invasion of their civil liberties," he said. "Why they think that, I don't know. . . To my knowledge, we've never had a non-student refuse to purchase a user's pass (which requires a Recreational Sports photo ID card), and we've issued upwards of 25,000 of them." Doily Photo by BRIAN MASCK Speaker of the House Thomas (Tip) O'Neill is presented a T-shirt during his visit to an Ann Arbor high technology firm yesterday. O'Neill toured KMS Fusion along with a Congressional delegation and University President Harold Shapiro to explore the energy options fusion power offers. 'Workers suspect scam in store sale (Continued from Page 22) approved. The NLRB,-as its final authority, can force Apex to reinstate the union. If ap- pealed, one board lawyer said the case was important to reach the U.S. 'Supreme Court. THE UNITED Food and Commercial orkers Union Local 876 is pushing for the rehiring of all the fired Cun- ningham's employees, according to Union President Horace Brown. "We think it's an alter ego situation. One in the same (Cunningham's and Apex). It's a ,rose of a different. color, but it's still a rose," Brown said. To substantiate its claims, the union points to Cunningham's price tags on all products and the abundance of Cun- =gham's brand products on the stores Welves; a characteristic atypical of a change in ownership, said Gerry Om- stead, a union business representative. USUALLY, A new owner will attempt to sell all the previous owner's products in a quick sale in addition to remodeling the store for its own distinctive look, Omstead explained. So far business at the four Ann Arbor stores at Westgate, Georgetown, Symouth, and Arborland Malls has been sparce, union officials said. The pickets, Brown said, have scared away a lot of potential customers. Devine denied any adverse effects on business. SOME OF THE store's older customers complained about the new service at the Westgate Apex store, claiming that the sales help was inex- erienced and inefficient. Cunningham's paid a maximum wage of $6.00 per hour to its employees. Apex now pays its workers a $4.00 magimum per hour salary, according to Pat Armbruster, former employee at the Westgate store. Armbruster also said most Apex em- ployees only work 20. hours a week, making them cheap part-time em- Lloyees, while Cunningham's em- yees worked 40 hours a week for higher wages. Until the NLRB hands down its decision, the fired employees will con- tinue to receive unemployment com- pensation. A few non-union employees were rehired, but they received only part-time positions. 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