Source: Oregonian, The Contact: http://www.oregonlive.com/ Pubdate: 25 Aug 1998 Author: Romel Hernandez of The Oregonian staff STUDENT SURVEY NAMES REED TOP U.S. SCHOOL IN ACADEMICS * The Princeton Review also lists the school among those with the least religious students and most "reefer madness" No thanks to divine intervention, Reed College was named the country's top academic school for undergraduates this year by The Princeton Review. The private liberal arts college in Southeast Portland got top marks for academics and professor quality -- and for least religious students -- in a national survey of 56,000 students conducted by the company. Reed, known as an intellectually intense school that produces many future Ph.Ds, also placed third in the survey's "reefer madness" category for marijuana use -- a testament, perhaps, to its famously laissez-faire lifestyle. The Princeton Review publishes various college guides and runs test preparation programs but is not affiliated with Princeton University. Students rate only their own schools; Reed's ranking means its respondents were nearly unanimous in their self-analysis, at least in those areas. The results appear in the company's new "The Best Colleges" book. Such popular college rankings often play an influential role in forming high school students' opinions about schools and where they should apply. But Reed officials are ambivalent, at best, about turning up at the top of the latest such hits list. The school isn't trumpeting how well it performed in the survey. The college has received national notice for opposing such surveys, especially the U.S. News & World Report's annual college rankings. That list, released last week, uses a complicated equation of admissions selectivity, graduation rate and other factors to rate schools. "We're still committed to the principle that rankings aren't important," Reed Vice President Larry Large said. "We hope that when people look at these sorts of things that they look beyond the rankings, even though we're in first place on some key issues. It might pique interest in our school." Reed also ranked in the top 10 in the areas of least diverse campus, politically left-leaning students and number of student study hours. Large said Reed's ranking for marijuana use reflects increasing use of the drug among young people nationwide, not any problem at Reed. "That's nothing anyone here celebrates," he said. Reed is also pushing to recruit more minority students, Large said. The school's student body is 15 percent minority. Asian Americans make up 8 percent. African Americans and Native Americans represent about 1 percent each. Lewis & Clark College in Portland joined Reed in the top 10 in the least religious and marijuana categories. The University of Oregon ranked third for bad dorms and No. 14 overall among party schools. Willamette University made The Princeton Review list of top schools but didn't place in the top 20 in any category. - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski