Even as flagships elsewhere, such as the University of Nebraska at Lincoln and West Virginia University, faced flat or declining enrollments and weighed or enacted academic-program cuts, almost all of the 15 public institutions of the Southeastern Conference have steadily added undergraduate enrollment over the past decade, most by double-digit percentages.
How did the South become the center of college-recruiting success? In a way, its success has been under construction for decades, built on its track record of teaching and research as well as a tradition of high-profile Division I athletics and high-spirited campus life. More recently, these institutions have benefited from new channels of media exposure and a strategy of more aggressively recruiting out-of-state students, in part to make up for flagging state support. And, some observers have argued, SEC flagships also might be beneficiaries of a shift in national politics. For some students, the thinking goes, sun, football, and a more conservative climate are potent attraction
An article well worth your time.