The Michigan Daily - Orientation Edition 2002- 23 Q: WHAT WAS THE LAST MOVIE YOU SAW? A: It's been so long. I tell you a movie I_ want to go see and it just kills me that I haven't gotten there, it's "Monsoon Wedding." But it has been so long, I can't even remember what the last movie was I've seen. ..(couple of questions later)... Oh! The most recent one I prob- ably saw was when I was visiting my son, in Denver, about Shackleton (a true Q: WHAT DO YOU DO IN YOUR SPARE TIME? A: I like to read. I like to spend time with my family -I have a new daughter- in-law of about three weeks. Q: Who did you most admire when you were our age. A: That was bac in the early 1960s and it was a fabulous, reat time. It was when fohn Kennedy was first elect- ed and there was a great optimism in the country. It was such a fabulous time. We had to confront, while I was in college, his death and that was very tough. That was a very unsettled time. Initiative - stretch out and reach not just those in medicine or research, but undergraduates and other departments, including those dealing with ethics and society. "I think these are going to be very exciting for the University, and I am very excited to get involved," she said. Initiatives are a way to expand, Coleman added, addressing the fear some have raised that the University will become too focused on the LSI, especially since a bulk of Cole- man's career has been studying the life sci- ences - she spent 15 years, from 1983 to 1990, at the University of Kentucky as a bio- chemistry professor and three years as a bio- chemistry and biophysics professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill before beginning her administrative work. She said new initiatives should not overpower older initiatives or departments, but rather blend in with them. "I think it is very possible for universities to embark on new initiatives but still remain strong in many areas," she said. "There are many, many areas across (the University), and all of those will be nurtured and attended to." She also said the role of undergraduates at any university, whether research institutions or not, is "crucial" and called undergraduate eduction "the centerpiece of what we do" "My information about the undergraduate experience at Michigan is that it is excellent," she said. "I still believe that we always need to be searching for improvements and ways to improve." On the issue of the Ed Martin indictment and conviction, Coleman said she thinks the Universi- ty has done what it can, "given the limitations of its investigations" but plans to pursue the truth of the situation. "The University has to get to the truth and expose the truth and make sure it never hap- 'pens again," she said, adding that she does not know what should be done if the truth is something that may end up harming the Uni- versity. "You can't forecast the future until you know, and so I am dedicated to finding the truth, but precisely what that truth will be, I cannot predict. I don't know." As far as her view on the University's admis- sions policies, Coleman said she believes Michi- gan "has tried to find a principle stand" and that "they have defended themselves on the basis of principle." She said Iowa does not have the same pressures facing their admissions system as the University of Michigan because the circumstances are differ- "I still believe that we always need to be searching for improvements and ways to improve." ent - Iowa draws from a different pool of in- state candidates than the University of Michigan. African-Americans make up 14.2 percent of the state of Michigan's population while they make up 2.1 percent of the state of Iowa's resi- dents, according to U.S. Census Bureau 2000 reports. The percentages of Hispanics and American Indians in Michigan are also higher than the per- centages of Hispanics and American Indians in Iowa. Coleman said she was pleased that the Univer- sity is pursuing the lawsuit "because the lawsuit is going to be very, very important to the whole country." "I am very happy in working with the regents in defending their lawsuits," she said. She would not comment whether she believes race should be a factor in admissions. - Mary Sue Coleman University President-elect She said she is still in the process of educating herself about "everything at the University," including the University's Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities, formerly known as the Code of Student Conduct, which undergoes revisions every other academic year. The president has the sole authority to amend the statement. After the last time amendment to the Code, under former President Bollinger, some students were angered because they said the statement retained troubling judicial procedures, including the admission of hearsay evidence and the prohi- bition on legal counsel speaking on students' behalf. "I just look forward very much to being at the University. I have enormous respect for the Uni- versity and its history, and I am very excited about the opportunity of joining it," she said.