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4 hours ago, MarkInAustin said:

Aside from having the largest endowment of any public university by a wide margin Texas has had the benefit of wonderful wealthy donors.  There are generally considered to be eight elite state flagships plus one elite public tech, and Texas is one of the elite flagships.  It is one of two flagships in which all departments are ranked in the top thirty in America.  And Forbes just called out Texas as one of 20 institutions, public or private, that are properly preparing graduating talent for the changing job market (The New Ivies, April 8).

The resulting flip side is how competitive the school has become since my day.  While the overall admit rate is about 27%, Cockrell is at 11%, McCombs is at 9%, and the architecture and honors programs are comparably squeezed. 

I have twin granddaughters who are both in the top 5% of their junior classes in HS - one is number 1 - who legitimately fear they will be accepted into UT but not into business and engineering, respectively. And God forbid one should fall down to top 6% and be looking down the road to The College That Got One Per Cent Smarter when Texas changed auto admits from the top 6% to the top 5% last year.

 

The most competitive school at Texas is nursing with a 3% acceptance rate!!  I was shocked to read that because you don’t hear about as much as the Business and Engineering schools. 

  • Thanks 1
Posted

Screenshot2026-04-21at7_59_15PM.thumb.png.40cbd4d331dc91a6ee3087d2cbae3b86.png

 

Dear Longhorn Nation,

There are moments in our University’s history when Longhorns have changed the course of our future. Today is one of those moments. We are taking a bold step forward.

 

Earlier this afternoon, sitting alongside Susan and Michael Dell, Governor Greg Abbott, Board of Regents Chairman Kevin Eltife, Senior Vice President and Dean Claudia Lucchinetti, and UT MD Anderson President Peter Pisters, we announced a historic philanthropic commitment that will transform The University of Texas — and our city and state — and accelerate our leadership in health and life sciences innovation.

 

Today, we announced that Susan and Michael Dell have committed $1 billion to The University of Texas at Austin. In honor of Susan and Michael’s lifetime of giving, we are establishing the UT Dell Campus for Advanced Research and the UT Dell Medical Center, which will be the campus’s anchor tenant.

 

Located on University-owned land in North Austin just a short drive from the Forty Acres, the new UT Dell Campus for Advanced Research will combine the full force of the best research university in the world with the renowned excellence of UT MD Anderson cancer care. When it opens in 2030, the UT Dell Medical Center will be the first of its kind — built for the AI era — enabling earlier diagnoses, delivering more precise treatments, and providing truly integrated, personalized care.

 

In addition to their historic investment in health and life sciences innovation, Susan and Michael Dells’ gift strengthens the Texas Advanced Computing Center, supports student housing, and expands scholarships and opportunities for students to live and learn on the Forty Acres.

 

Susan and Michael Dell are Longhorns who have a vision to change the world, a will to act on that vision, and a deep commitment to make it real. From a UT dorm‑room startup to a lifetime of service and impact, they have helped shape our University’s future and elevated our role in serving Texas and the world. We are deeply grateful for their enduring partnership.

 

At The University of Texas, and throughout our state, we always think big. What we are building, right here in Austin, has never been built before. And with the extraordinary support of Susan and Michael Dell — and the alignment of our state, city, and UT System leaders — there has never been a better time for this great University to change the world.

 

Hook 'em!

Jim Davis

  • Hook 'Em 1
Posted

image.png.dd1a24e16356e25a0de51d8cdcbb7c59.pngComponent 

Value

Total Value of Donation to UT

$750,000,000

Total Tax Savings (Income + Capital Gains + Estate)

($741,000,000)

Net Long-Term Cost to Dell Family

$9,000,000

 

Not a bad investment

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