LinkQuote:
Middleton Library remains the poster child for crumbling infrastructure relating to academics. The state of Louisiana has slashed funding for higher education, and fund-raising for the university perennially lags behind that of the athletic department. A recent story reported that LSU's endowment of $16,180 per student ranked 13th out of 14 SEC schools.
is that bad?Quote:
ranks #140 in USN&WR
Wabs said:
Most, if not all, cajuns don't look at LSU as a school. They look at it as a football program. In short, they couldn't care less about academic facilities.
Quote:
Of the nine schools in the Southeastern Conference with separate foundations for athletics and academics, LSU is the only one where athletic fundraising outpaces academic fundraising, according to the newspaper's analysis of four years of tax documents.
"If you look at the buildings of LSU, all of the newest and most spectacular buildings belong to athletics," said Kevin Cope, president of the Faculty Senate. "Meanwhile, there are faculty, students and community members who work in buildings where the plumbing doesn't work, walls are falling down and the facilities are generally in a state of Third World disrepair."
Not only do LSU's peer schools take in more money for academics than for sports it isn't even close for most of them. The University of Florida, Mississippi State, the University of Georgia, Auburn and the University of South Carolina all raise more than twice as much money for the classroom as for the locker room.
TAMU bball fan said:Wabs said:
Most, if not all, cajuns don't look at LSU as a school. They look at it as a football program. In short, they couldn't care less about academic facilities.
Which made me apprehensive about A&M joining the SEC. It's not a cultural fit. I would rather associate with UCLA, Stanford, et al.
SCARakm91 said:
Wonder which school is #14? MSU?
SEC 2012 said:
A&M has more in common with UCLA than LSU. My goodness LSU is a community college with a football program. UCLA is a world class university.
Maybe, but there is more to this than simply academics. Culturally, we have zero in common with UCLA or anything Pac 12. Except for being human beings who live in this nation, I suppose. The SEC is full of folks who believe similarly (in a general sense), who do similar things (bbq, hunting, fishing, and sharing a love of college football). In the Pac 12 you have a lot of highly-rated schools, and yeah, we'd fit it with those schools from a purely academic standpoint, but we also fit in with the better academic schools in the SEC.SEC 2012 said:
A&M has more in common with UCLA than LSU. My goodness LSU is a community college with a football program. UCLA is a world class university.
wesnile said:SCARakm91 said:
Wonder which school is #14? MSU?
TAMU bball fan said:Wabs said:
Most, if not all, cajuns don't look at LSU as a school. They look at it as a football program. In short, they couldn't care less about academic facilities.
Which made me apprehensive about A&M joining the SEC. It's not a cultural fit. I would rather associate with UCLA, Stanford, et al.
4 said:SEC 2012 said:
A&M has more in common with UCLA than LSU. My goodness LSU is a community college with a football program. UCLA is a world class university.
Yeah, but A&M and Auburn were separated at birth. Couldn't be two schools more alike.
Huh? A&M and the SEC is a perfect cultural fit.TAMU bball fan said:Wabs said:
Most, if not all, cajuns don't look at LSU as a school. They look at it as a football program. In short, they couldn't care less about academic facilities.
Which made me apprehensive about A&M joining the SEC. It's not a cultural fit. I would rather associate with UCLA, Stanford, et al.
Yes, but our endowment is way over eleventy billion.Emilio Fantastico said:wesnile said:SCARakm91 said:
Wonder which school is #14? MSU?
I figured it would be us after Rick Perry got enrollment up to just under eleventy billion.