10 -The Michigan Daily - Monday, May 1, 2000 CLINTON The President's plan includes allowing con- Continued from Page I sumers to determine what information can be exchanged between two companies; banning the vacy is not jeopardized by technology in areas of use of medical records against individuals in cases individual financial and medical records. of health coverage, mortgages and credit; protect- "The same genetic code that offers hope for ing personal consumer information; and ensuring millions can also be used to deny health insur- access to records and correction of errors. ance. The same technology that links distant Among other issues concerning the President is places can also be used to track our every the widening gap between the rich and poor move online," Clinton said adding that "we because of limited access to technology. can't let breakthroughs in technology, break "Just as we had to close the industrial divide in the walls of privacy." 20th century, we must now close the digital divide in the 2 1st century," Clinton said, later adding that "we economy grow. Thankfully, in our digital cc have to make the Internet as common as telephone that is simply not true anymore. It is now pos usage" grow an economy and improve an environr The environment - particularly global warm- the same time," Clinton said. ing and greenhouse emissions poses another The President added that he is encos threat, said the President, as technology rapidly Congress to adopt legislation for research and advances into the 21st century. opment and to offer significant tax incent The President mentioned the negative conse- developers of products that emit less gree quences of depleting water levels, using the Great gases and to the people who buy them. Lakes as an example. "You can have all the computers and "Many people still believe that we must choose ... money in the world and if we squander God between preserving our environment and making the ronment it won't be worth very much," he s AAFD cites frat house for fire code violations ottomy sible to ment at uraging d devel- ives to nhouse all the 's envi- aid. YOU KNOW THAT FRIEND WHO ALWAYS SAYS, By Anna Clark Daily Staff Reporter Seven months after a fire raged through the basement of the Sigma Chi house on Washtenaw Street, causing more than S20000 in damages, the fra- ternity was again forced to vacate the building - this titne for multiple fire code violations. Removed fire doors, missing fire detectors, holes in walls and doors, empty fire extinguishers and electri- cal wiring in contact with water were among the violations, said Ann Arbor fire inspector Kevin Scarbrough. "The operating computer for the alarm system was also tampered. with - the building system wasn't in oper- ation at all. It was simply an unsafe place to be," Scarbrough said. About 35 residents of the house were asked to leave last Tuesday afternoon, but temporary repairs to the house allowed fraternity members to move back into the house by the following evening. Separate tickets were issued to both the Sigma Chi president and vice- president. Scarbrough said that although immediate repairs were a "temporary fix," students could stay safely in the house. "The situation was mostly reme- died," he said. "It was enough that they're able to stay there safely, although more thor- ough repairs will be done this sum- mer." Quick repairs included the patching of the holes in the building. The base- ment, the site of last fall's fire, had been re-exposed, but was closed up agatn. The AAFD was alerted to possible problems at the Sigma Chi house by the ABC Alarm Company, which services the fraternity. The alarm company told fire officials that the system in the house was not responding. Members of Sigma Chi could not be reached for comment, but Scarbrough said their reactions to the situation were "what you'd expect." "They weren't exactly pleased," he said. "We disrupted their residence at a Fraterneties have a higher risk of fire death, compared with other university iving environments, very inconvenient time. But we did- n't pick the time - we had to address the situation when we became aware of it" Last September's fire at Sigma Chi resulted from candles used for light in the basement. At the time, Ann Arbor Fire Marshall Scott Raynurn praised the fraternity for following fire safety codes. Be said the house was in "great shape, with only some very minor violations." In a report issued by the College Fire Safety Forum - a group of offi- cials examining fire safety at col- leges and universities - fraternities were highlighted as having a higher risk of fire death, compared with other university living environments including sororities and residence halls. This is due to "poor maintenance of housekeeping" and "more frequent risky behavior." Scarbrough said some departments in the AAFD are pushing for more fire education programs for the University in general and fraternities specifically. "The AAFD Fire Prevention Division has requested additional per- sonnel, for four years, to address these and other educational concerns," he said. "These requests have not been a city-wide priority up -to this fiscal year. Sigma Chi members have been liv- ing in the building while renovations are done to their own house on State Street. The building formerly housed the now-disbanded Phi Delta Theta fra- ternity. 0' 0