8A - Thursday, November 12, 2009 The Michigan Daily michigandaily.com Coleman: Michigan has stayed competitive with coaches' pay From Page 1A established guidelines. "We have a compensation phi- losophy at the University that actually goes across the institu- tion that we want to be competi- tive in our salaries," she said. "We often try and be in the upper quartile," she contin- ued, "because we know that in that arena, you want to get the best people to your institution, whether it's the dean, or a vice president, or a football coach, then you're going to have to pay what the market looks like." With regards to Rodriguez's salary, Coleman said she thought it was reasonable. "I think (Athletic Director Bill Martin has) done an extremely good job of being rational, being reasonable, looking at the mar- ket - we're not by any means the highest, but we're competitive," she said. Coleman said that while many athletic departments across the country are seeing increasing costs, the University of Michi- gan's Athletic Department has posted surpluses over the last several years and does not receive money from the academic side of University. "The Michigan Athletic Department is in an enviable position," Coleman said. "There are only a handful of programs in the country that are completely self-supporting in athletics." "I feel really comfortable about it," Coleman added about the overall state of athletic adminis- tration at the University. USA Today's study followed another by the Knight Commis- sion, which looked at Division IA presidents' feelings about athlet- ic department budgets. Most presidents said that while they thought something needed to be done about spending on ath- letics at their university, a major- ity of them said that they did not feel like they were in a position to create that change. In an interview last month, Coleman stressed that she was confident in her control over the University's Athletic Depart- ment, citing a good working relationship with Athletic Director Bill Martin and effec- tive procedures in place that give Coleman and the Board of Regents oversight over the Ath- letic Department. - Daily News Editor Kyle Swanson contributed to this report. APPLICATION From Page 1A Jamett said. "But now, if I'm using the Com- mon Application, if I have it filled out and as long as my parents have the money putoutforthe application fee then there is really no downside to me hittingsend'to the University of Michigan in addition to all those other schools," she added. Though the University will now share an application with many other schools, Spencer said that officials here could still design a supplemental application that will be a part of the Common Applica- tion and include those things that are unique to the University. In fact, SpencersaidtheUniversi- ty's current application includes fea- turesofthe CommonApplication. In an interview yesterday, University President Mary Sue Coleman said she supported the transition to the new applica- tion process after she found out it would still allow admissions offi- cers to conduct a holisticreview of potential students. "When I realized that we could in fact customize the common application for what we needed and that we weren't going to lose our ability to still do the holistic review, for me it became a matter of why wouldn't we want to make it easier for students to apply- to Michigan?" Coleman said. "I wouldn't want to give that up at all because I think that has been a huge strength of our admissions process that we are much more than just about your grades and test scores," Coleman said. "We wantto get a sense of what you will bring to the university and also the ways that we think we can enrich a student's experience." Patrick O'Connor, director of college counseling at the Roeper School in Bloomfield Hills, Mich., said that this switch would allow his students to focus on important parts of their application and still be able to focus ontheir schoolwork. "I can say beyond a shadow of doubt, that if Michigan decides to make this switch, this is going to be a tremendous benefit to my students and I think all students who apply to six to eight colleges," O'Connor said. "It's going to be less paperwork, it's going to give them a chance to focus on the quality of their essays and actually give them a chance to devote more time to their senior year classes." While the application will make it easier for students to apply, area counselors didn't believe that it would increase the number of their students' applications to Michigan. "So many of our students apply to the University of Michigan," Jamett said. "And for those stu- dents, they would apply to the University of Michigan whether Michigan had its own application, whether Michiganwaslisted in the Common Application, or if Michi- gan made its application more complex, they would still be apply- ing to the University of Michigan. It's a bigdrawfor our kids." Larry Fisher, director of guid- ance at East Grand Rapids High School, pointed out that the switch to the Common Applica- tion could help area college coun- selors "do more with less" because the time spent by counselors writ- ing recommendations for multiple schools could be cut in half. Spencer said that with the econ- omy the way that it is, any way to get more information out to stu- dents who are interested in apply- ing is important. "If the Common Application can broaden our base and broaden our application reach in order for us to get students interested in the Uni- versity of Michigan and keep our application numbers to the point where we can still enroll great stu- dents,"Spencersaid,"thenIthinkits probably the best way forus aswe go into some of these next few years of uncertainty with the economy." 0 HEAR THE STORY BEHIND THE STORIES Listen to Michigan Daily Radio on WCBN-FM-Ann Arbor 88.3 FM Tuesdays and Thursdays 6 to 6:30 p.m. *0