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LSU Hate Week and a 10,000th post
Posted on 11/7/13 at 1:59 pm
Posted on 11/7/13 at 1:59 pm
For my 10,000th post, which coincidentally has come up during LSU Hate week, I'd like to take this opportunity to say:
GO TO HELL Tennessee
Because of the ongoing decline (both academically and in football) at LSU; you don't even rate for Hate Week.
Sorry Rantards, I can't seem to get my "jimmies rustled" over LSU anything - you simply don't rate.
However, words can't begin to describe the disdain I have for the bare-foot, sister dating, ridge-running Inbreeders in Tennessee.
I hope Auburn goes into your Garbage Workers Convention looking stadium and whips your arse 99 to 3
UT
GO TO HELL Tennessee
Because of the ongoing decline (both academically and in football) at LSU; you don't even rate for Hate Week.

Sorry Rantards, I can't seem to get my "jimmies rustled" over LSU anything - you simply don't rate.
However, words can't begin to describe the disdain I have for the bare-foot, sister dating, ridge-running Inbreeders in Tennessee.
I hope Auburn goes into your Garbage Workers Convention looking stadium and whips your arse 99 to 3

Posted on 11/7/13 at 2:00 pm to stat19
Yeah it would be pretty hard to hate LSU when you can lose to them and just get a free bypass of the SECCG and make it to the BCS ship
Posted on 11/7/13 at 2:00 pm to stat19

I like how you have saved your best trolling material for your true rival

Posted on 11/7/13 at 2:01 pm to stat19
quote:
Because of the ongoing decline (both academically and in football) at LSU; you don't even rate for Hate Weak
1.7/10
Posted on 11/7/13 at 2:02 pm to AUCE05
quote:
I was hoping for titties.
Posted on 11/7/13 at 2:07 pm to dbt_Geaux_Tigers_196
quote:
I was hoping for something intelligent from a Bama fan, thus I am disappoint.
Posted on 11/7/13 at 2:12 pm to AUCE05
quote:
I was hoping for titties.
Posted on 11/7/13 at 2:14 pm to stat19
You are incorrect.
Where LSU stands
LSU President F. King Alexander says LSU matches up favorably with Alabama and several other schools that have a higher national profile.
In higher education circles, for example, research expenditures are considered one of the best measures of a university’s growth over time.
Money spent on research generally shows whether a university is growing academically. Academic growth on a university’s part translates to student achievement.
For example:
LSU’s Baton Rouge campus had about $150 million in research expenditures last year. Alabama spent roughly $55 million.
Furthermore, a recent survey says the mid-career earnings of LSU graduates rank 34th out of 167 public research universities. That means LSU graduates who have settled on a career generally make more than graduates of Ohio State University, the University of North Carolina and the University of Wisconsin —.
“We’re relatively underrated,” Alexander said. “Our grads are getting good jobs. We’re the only one in the state that increased enrollment. We have a lot more to brag about, we just need to play more offense. We’ve been reacting and recoiling, when we need to be more out there.”
Alexander concedes that even though enrollment has recently risen after several years of decline, LSU needs a stronger recruiting push. He said plans are in place to increase the number of recruiters from 12 to 20. LSU plans to hire one new recruiter immediately, then add a few more this spring, depending on their budget, until they eventually get to 20 in the next several years.
Alexander acknowledges Alabama’s success in winning over students in Texas, Georgia and Florida who don’t get into their first choice of schools in their states.
But Alexander said one arena in which LSU can separate itself from other Southeastern Conference schools is value — the balance of offering a rigorous academic curriculum without saddling students with excessive debt.
“If these things matter to students and their parents, I’m very pleased with where we look compared to any other SEC schools,” Alexander said.
Alexander added that it’s tough to make an apples-to-apples comparison between Alabama and LSU.
Alabama is known as that state’s liberal arts college, he said, while its in-state rival Auburn University is regarded as the school specializing in science and technology.
While LSU is regarded as the go-to public university in Louisiana for all of those areas of study plus veterinary medicine, agricultural science and engineering, Alexander said.
If Alabama has been focused on overall growth, Alexander said LSU is focused on growth in targeted areas, including business, engineering, health studies and foreign language.
He said LSU will never strive to enroll more than half of its students from out of state, nor will it look to grow to 50,000 or 60,000 students.
LSU is focused on recruiting faculty in high-demand fields, getting student-teacher ratios closer to 20-to-1 rather than the current 23-to-1; and attracting more international and ethnically diverse students to the campus.
“If you want a great degree of breadth in your fields of choice to study, LSU offers a great opportunity to go to a university that offers what Auburn and Alabama offer combined,” Alexander said. “They are both great universities, I am not disparaging either. What I’m saying is that their degree is not worth more than an LSU degree.”
Where LSU stands
LSU President F. King Alexander says LSU matches up favorably with Alabama and several other schools that have a higher national profile.
In higher education circles, for example, research expenditures are considered one of the best measures of a university’s growth over time.
Money spent on research generally shows whether a university is growing academically. Academic growth on a university’s part translates to student achievement.
For example:
LSU’s Baton Rouge campus had about $150 million in research expenditures last year. Alabama spent roughly $55 million.
Furthermore, a recent survey says the mid-career earnings of LSU graduates rank 34th out of 167 public research universities. That means LSU graduates who have settled on a career generally make more than graduates of Ohio State University, the University of North Carolina and the University of Wisconsin —.
“We’re relatively underrated,” Alexander said. “Our grads are getting good jobs. We’re the only one in the state that increased enrollment. We have a lot more to brag about, we just need to play more offense. We’ve been reacting and recoiling, when we need to be more out there.”
Alexander concedes that even though enrollment has recently risen after several years of decline, LSU needs a stronger recruiting push. He said plans are in place to increase the number of recruiters from 12 to 20. LSU plans to hire one new recruiter immediately, then add a few more this spring, depending on their budget, until they eventually get to 20 in the next several years.
Alexander acknowledges Alabama’s success in winning over students in Texas, Georgia and Florida who don’t get into their first choice of schools in their states.
But Alexander said one arena in which LSU can separate itself from other Southeastern Conference schools is value — the balance of offering a rigorous academic curriculum without saddling students with excessive debt.
“If these things matter to students and their parents, I’m very pleased with where we look compared to any other SEC schools,” Alexander said.
Alexander added that it’s tough to make an apples-to-apples comparison between Alabama and LSU.
Alabama is known as that state’s liberal arts college, he said, while its in-state rival Auburn University is regarded as the school specializing in science and technology.
While LSU is regarded as the go-to public university in Louisiana for all of those areas of study plus veterinary medicine, agricultural science and engineering, Alexander said.
If Alabama has been focused on overall growth, Alexander said LSU is focused on growth in targeted areas, including business, engineering, health studies and foreign language.
He said LSU will never strive to enroll more than half of its students from out of state, nor will it look to grow to 50,000 or 60,000 students.
LSU is focused on recruiting faculty in high-demand fields, getting student-teacher ratios closer to 20-to-1 rather than the current 23-to-1; and attracting more international and ethnically diverse students to the campus.
“If you want a great degree of breadth in your fields of choice to study, LSU offers a great opportunity to go to a university that offers what Auburn and Alabama offer combined,” Alexander said. “They are both great universities, I am not disparaging either. What I’m saying is that their degree is not worth more than an LSU degree.”
Posted on 11/7/13 at 2:18 pm to stat19
quote:This is quite interdasting being that you post more about LSU than almost any other tahd fan here.
Sorry Rantards, I can't seem to get my "jimmies rustled" over LSU anything - you simply don't rate.
Posted on 11/7/13 at 2:21 pm to MetryTyger
Wait, Alexander called the LSU curriculum "rigorous?"
Even as a proud alumnus, that's laughable.
Even as a proud alumnus, that's laughable.
Posted on 11/7/13 at 2:36 pm to Politiceaux
quote:
Politiceaux
Draco said I'd catch a few...
You were too easy. I'll have to throw you back as I'm already over my limit.
Thanks for playing

Posted on 11/7/13 at 2:38 pm to stat19
quote:How was that getting upset over a troll?
You were too easy.
Posted on 11/7/13 at 2:52 pm to Politiceaux
quote:
Politiceaux
Good luck to your CornDogs this weekend, may none of them be injured and may they all them remain upbeat about their impending trip as a 4 loss team to the Cotton Bowl.

Posted on 11/7/13 at 3:05 pm to PRK
quote:
PRK
LSU Hate Week and a 10,000th post
Wait, Alexander called the LSU curriculum "rigorous?"
Even as a proud alumnus, that's laughable.
Doesn't sound like you're proud to me. There is more than just "a" curriculum at LSU for Chrissake. And many of them are nationally ranked:
Petroleum Engineering, Architecture, Veterinary Medicine, Geophysics, Landscape Architecture, Civil Engineering, Chemical Engineering, Music & Dramatic Arts, Business, Law, Mass Communications, Agribusiness etc.
LSU is also one of the top research institutions on the planet, and boasts the Pennington Biomedical Research Center and the new LSU Medical Complex in downtown New Orleans, and has sustantially larger research programs than most schools in the SEC and nation.
Posted on 11/7/13 at 3:06 pm to stat19
quote:
stat19
Solid troll. Make sure Chicken doesn't catch you over your limit though.
Posted on 11/7/13 at 5:16 pm to stat19
10 fk'n thousand posts on a LSU site...

Posted on 11/7/13 at 5:18 pm to stat19
quote:
LSU Hate Week and a 10,000th post
edit OP and put some titties up. You get a lot of leeway for post 10k
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