You have insulted me! (Slap, slap). I challenge you to a duel.
CapnVegetto said:
Any statistical analysis anywhere will say so.
I said I was done but I beg to differ good sir.
Please, PLEASE, please enlighten us. Academically, I found the US NEWS 85/104 report but no others. Another moral victory perhaps?
Here's an interesting website.
http://www.ordoludus.com/index.html
I found it odd that the Barn wasn't even included in the list of 126 schools. Of course the disclaimer explains it:
About 90 of the colleges and universities chosen were included in the survey for the obvious reasons. They're always included because they are the dominant schools in the country. http://www.ordoludus.com/8.html
Endowments: A major measure of the strength of a university and the success of its alumni can be found in the level of its endowment. In a recent issue (1/27/06) of The Chronicle of Higher Education, endowment rankings for the nation’s colleges and universities were released in its annual survey. The University of Alabama's endowment faired well, ranking 76th among all colleges and universities in the nation (#33 among all Public institutions). Among SEC member institutions, Vanderbilt University ranked 1st with ($2.6 billion), followed by The University of Florida ($836 million), The University of Alabama ($765 million), The University of Tennessee ($715 million), The University of Arkansas ($692 million), The University of Kentucky ($577 million), The University of Georgia ($517 million), Louisiana State University ($505 million), The University of Mississippi ($398 million), The University of South Carolina ($330 million), Auburn University ($316 million), and Mississippi State University ($211 million).
Within the state of Alabama, The University of Alabama ($765 million) ranked 1st, followed by Auburn University ($316 million), The University of South Alabama ($266 million), Samford University ($255 million), Birmingham-Southern College ($114 million), and Troy University ($18 million).
http://chronicle.com/weekly/v52/i21/21a00101.htm
-The 2004 edition of The
Top American Research Universities, which ranks top research universities based on how many times a university is ranked in the "top 25" nationally over 10 categories (total research expenditures, federal research expenditures, endowment assets, annual giving, National Academy members, faculty awards, doctorates awarded, post-doc appointees, median SAT scores, and National Merit and Achievement scholars).
Once again, The University of Alabama and UAB were the ONLY universities from the state to be ranked in the "top 25" in any of the 10 categories.
http://thecenter.ufl.edu/research_data.html
-With five students (of 84 total students nationwide) selected to the 2005 USA Today All-USA College Academic Team, The University of Alabama ranked 1st in the Nation in the number of students on the team. Yale University finished second with three students on this year’s team. For the last three years, UA has been battling Harvard University for the top spot on the list. This year, Harvard University finished with only two students on the team. In the last three years, The University of Alabama has placed a total of 14 students on the team, by far, leading the rest of the Nation.
With 31 students making the team, since its inception in 1991, The University of Alabama has had more than double the number of the rest of the state’s colleges and universities, COMBINED!!!
- Six Bama students named to 2006 USA Today All-USA College Academic Team...again the most in the nation!
http://uanews.ua.edu/anews2006/feb06/aateam021506.htm
-The 2005 edition of U.S. News and World Report’s “America’s Best Colleges” has
ranked The University of Alabama the top university in the state and one of the “top 40” Public Universities in the Nation. The University of Alabama is the ONLY college or university in the state to be ranked in the “top 40”. UA ranks #39, finishing 1st in the state in the academic reputation score (3.14), freshmen retention rate, faculty resources rank, class size (highest percent of classes under 20 students and lowest percent of classes over 50 students), and alumni giving rate. UA ranks in the second tier of National Universities (Public and Private). Two SEC schools made the first tier (1-51), Vanderbilt University and The University of Florida. Seven SEC schools made the second tier (52-129), The University of Alabama, The University of Georgia, The University of South Carolina, The University of Tennessee, The University of Arkansas, Auburn University, and The University of Kentucky. The undergraduate business school at UA continues to be ranked in the top tier of business schools, ranking #57 in America (#37 among Public Universities). Also, the undergraduate engineering school is ranked #92 in this year’s edition (#56 among Public Universities).
- The 2005 edition of The Princeton Review’s “Best 357 Colleges in America” has
ranked The University of Alabama as the top academic university in the state with the highest score in its academics rating.
http://www.princetonreview.com/college/research/bestvalue/default.asp
- The “2005 Fiske’s Guide to Colleges”, 21st edition, has
rated The University of Alabama as the top university in the state in their academics rating. Taken from an Arkansas website but proof nonetheless:
http://dailyheadlines.uark.edu/5098.htm
Alabama quick facts:
http://quickfacts.ua.edu/know.html
Auburn quick facts:
http://oira.auburn.edu/ http://home.hiwaay.net/~pcasteel/aubfamily.html
I'll let you do the ATHLETICS research. I can hardly wait for those numbers. I'll get you started. How about last season's final football rankings?
http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/rankingsindex
I know, I know...fear the thumb.

Congrats on four in a row. I was there and we were beaten soundly in all facets of the game. Roll Tide in 2006!
