All of this is to the good. I would like to add something else. I was a university professor and since I wasn't at a large research university, didn't get paid a lot. But I wasn't "in it" for the money. And that's the point I'd like to add.
Notre Dame doesn't [of course] only give you earnings power, it gives you something far deeper which in the end of life's " balance sheet" pays off in ways at least as valuable.
Notre Dame encouraged in me, and I think most ND attenders, the understanding that Life isn't all about me, it is about duty and it is about team. I can't emphasize enough the impact that this has upon not only one's soul, but on one's productivity, perceived value [by one's colleagues and bosses], and happiness in the workplace.
The point in the end is: Notre Dame may be ranked in the top ten for earnings pay-offs in the long run of life [and deservedly so], but the ADDED component just mentioned is so FAR beyond that given commonly by other schools to their average students that it places Notre Dame FAR higher up on the rating scale than any of those institutions.
Notre Dame gives you THE BEST chance for the combination of earnings, on-the-job respect and happiness, production, peace-of-mind, a feeling of living a life worth living at the end of each day [if one makes any effort at all at reflection], and a robustness of the spirit.
There's a reason why "Notre Dame Man" carries a special aura about it. As long as we don't talk too much about our football team, most people are glad to see us coming.