Contents Table of Contents Page Foreword I Boston College - A Brief History . 3 Boston College Profile . 5 Administration and Faculty Trustees of Boston College, December, 1972 - September, 1988 .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Chart of Administration ., . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Board of Trustee Membership Board of Trustee Chairmen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 9 " 10 Trustee Associate Membership . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 10 Officers of the University II Academic Deans 12 Department Chairmen and Chairwomen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 12 University Administrators " 13 Professional, Administrative and Support Staff Personnel .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 14 Faculty: by School and Rank . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 15 Full-Time Equivalent by School 15 by School and Tenure Status 16 by School and Sex 16 by Highest Earned Degree and Rank . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 17 by Highest Earned Degree and Sex 17 by Rank and Sex 17 Full-Time Faculty, Teaching Assistants, Teaching Fellows: by School and Department 18 Average Faculty Compensation: byRank,AAUPCategory 1,1986-1987 Boston College Faculty - '" '" For the Ten Years Ended May 31, 1987 19 19 Students Freshmen Enrollment by Year and Sex (Full-Time) 22 Freshmen Enrollees - SAT Averages by Class 22 Freshmen Applications, Acceptances and Enrollment (Full-Time) 22 Class of 1991 Applications and Enrollees - Geographic Distribution 23 Undergraduate Transfer Students: Applications, Acceptances and Enrollment (Full-Time) 24 by Type of Previous Institution and Sex 24 Enrollment: . Graduate and Undergraduate, Full- and Part-Time Undergraduate, Day and Evening, and Graduate Undergraduate, by School Graduate, by School 25 25 " 26 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 26 Graduate, by Degree Program and Discipline 27 Undergraduate and Graduate, by Sex 28 Full-Time Equivalent 29 Contents Page Summer Session ....................................................................................... 29 Evening College . 30 . 31 Geographic Distribution of Students International Students and Scholars, 1986-1987: by School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 32 by Class or Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 32 by Sex and Program 32 by Country 33 Minority Enrollment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Veteran Enrollment , 34 Undergraduate Degrees Conferred: by Degree and Number of Majors 35 by Major 36 by School and by Major 37 Undergraduate and Graduate Degrees Conferred by Degree and Sex 38 Undergraduate and Graduate Financial Aid: Dollars 39 Number of Awards 39 Health Services 40 University Counseling Services: Number of Students, Faculty-Staff Served Services Provided to Undergraduate and Graduate Students 41 , 41 Alumni Boston College Alumni Clubs 44 Alumni Association Board of Directors, 1987-1988 44 Alumni Awards 44 Comparative Regional Analysis 45 Geographic Analysis by State 45 Living Alumni by Primary School, Sex and Class 46 Alumni Donors by Primary School and Class 48 Gifts to the University 50 Individual Donors by Giving Club . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 50 Physical Plant Buildings Related to Boston College Operation 54 Boston College Properties 56 Facility Capacities 57 Dining Facilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 58 Offices Classrooms Summary of Building Use Residence Hall Capacities 58 59 . 59 . 60 Contents Page Finance Highlights of Financial Operations 64 Tuition Restated in 1967 Dollars 64 Tuition and Fees - For the Ten Years Ending May 31,1988 65 Summary, Contract and Grant Awards 66 Contracts and Grants, Source and Application 67 Selected Contract and Grant Awards 68 Libraries Boston College Libraries 72 Expenditures for Library Materials 72 Holdings by Individual Libraries 72 Circulation Statistics 72 Special Library Services 73 Special Collections 74 University Archives Language Laboratory 76 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 76 Athletics The Year in Review: A Year of Champions 80 SpOTtS Participation Levels Intercollegiate Athletics 81 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 82 Varsity Sports Records 83 Varsity Football Schedules, 1987-1990 84 Varsity Hockey Schedule, 1987-1988 85 Varsity Basketball Schedule, 1987-1988 85 General Information Founder and Presidents ............................................................. " Honorary Degrees Awarded, 1952-1987 Types of Degrees Conferred Honorary Degrees Association Memberships Accrediting Agencies Academic Department Locations Academic Calendar Sources Index Campus Maps 88 . 88 . 91 . 91 . 92 . 92 . 93 . 94 94 . 95 . 96 Foreword Foreword The Boston College Fact Book is a summary of signifi­ cant statistics gathered from various sources through­ out the University. Once again, we wish to extend sin­ cere thanks and appreciation for the excellent cooperation and assistance received from these many sources. The purpose of the Fact Book is to produce a single­ source publication and reference document touching upon and integrating all aspects of the institution's people and its operations. We do wish to point out to all users that the information presented herein was compiled at a specific time - September-October, 1987 - to reflect the Academic Year 1986-1987, as well as the most current enrollment statistics for 1987-1988. The majority of the information is extracted from management reports produced on a regular basis by the various source offices. When reviewing the figures presented we advise you to always note the time frame referenced in the individual tables, and to contact re­ sponsible offices should you have further questions. With this 16th edition, we continue our efforts to pro­ duce a Fact Book that integrates the latest information with an historical overview. We welcome suggestions for additional data and improvements. Ivy R. Dodge, Editor Office of the Financial Vice President and Treasurer December, 1987 " .. ~.~:.;:: Y' , · , '. i· . ," ,.' A Brief History 3 Boston College A Brief History Boston College was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863, and is one of twenty-eight Jesuit collegt;s and universities in the United States. With three teachers and twenty-two students, the school opened its doors on September 5, 1864. While it remained a small lib­ eral arts college, the faculty was predominantly Jesuit, but today's full-time faculty is comprised of 39 Jesuits and 524 laymen and women. Part-time faculty posi­ tions are held by 20 Jesuits, in addition to 20 Jesuit members of the university administration. Originally located on Harrison Avenue in the South End of Boston, where it shared quarters with the Bos­ ton College High School, the College outgrew its ur­ ban setting toward the end of its first fifty years. A new location was selected in Chestnut Hill, then al­ most rural, and four parcels of land were acquired in 1907. A design competition for the development of the campus was won by the firm of Maginnis and Walsh, and ground was broken on June 19, 1909, for the construction of Gasson Hall. It is located on the site of the Lawrence farmhouse, in the center of the original tract of land purchased by Father Gasson, and is built largely of stone taken from a quarry which oc­ cupied part of the sites of Devlin, Higgins, and Cush­ ing Halls. The foundations were blasted out of solid ledge. Because of its historic value, Gasson was com­ pletely restored in 1976 in order to preserve its famil­ iar Gothic spires for future generations of students and alumni. Later purchases doubled the size of the property, with the addition of the upper campus in 1941, and the lower campus with the purchase of the Lawrence Basin and adjoining land in 1949. In ]974 Boston College acquired Newton College of the Sacred Heart, a mile-and-a-half from the main campus. With fifteen handsome Georgian buildings standing in a park-like estate of forty acres, it is now the site of the Boston College Law School, as well as several academic de­ partments, and dormitories housing over 800 stu­ dents, primarily freshmen. Though incorporated as a University since its begin­ ning, it was not until its second half-century that Bos­ ton College began to fill out the dimensions of its Uni­ versity charter. The Summer Session was inaugurated in 1924; the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences in 1925; the Law School, ]929; the Evening College, 1929; the Graduate School of Social Work, 1936; the College of Business Administration, ] 938. The latter, along with its Graduate School established in 1957, is now known as the School of Management. The Schools of Nursing and Education were founded in ]947 and 1952, respectively. Weston Observatory, founded in 1928, was accepted as a Department of Boston College in ] 947, offering courses in geophysics and geology to graduate students. In 1927 Boston College conferred one earned bache­ lor's degree and fifteen master's degrees on women through the Extension Division, the precursor of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the Evening College, and the Summer Session. Today's women stu­ dents comprise 57 percent of the University's enroll­ ment, and 43 percent of a total alumni body of over 91,000. Now the fourth largest private university in New Eng­ land, with full- and part-time enrollment of over 14,000, Boston College consists of eleven schools, col­ leges, and institutes offering thirteen degree programs and one certification program. 8 Administration & Faculty Trustees of Boston College December, 1972 through September, 1988 Joseph F. Abell', Jr. Raymond C. Baumhart, S.J. Raymond P. Bertrand, S.J.* Geoffrey T. Boisi Milton C. Borenstein Joseph G. Brennan William L. Brown Wayne A. Budd Robert F. Byrnes Raymond J. Callahan, S.J. Donald R. Campion, S.J. Denis H. Carroll Wallace E. Carroll John M. Cataldo James F. Cleary Richard T. Cleary, S.J. William F. Connell John M. Connors. Jr. John M. Corcoran Joseph F. Cotter James E. Coughlin, S.J. John F. Cunningham Mary Lou DeLong George L. Drury, S.J. Francis Dubreuil Joseph P. Duffy, S.J. Christopher Duncan* Joseph R. Fahey, S.J. Michael A. Fahey, S.J. John T. Fallon Yen-Tsai Feng Charles D. Ferris Joseph A. Fitzmyer, S.J. Stephen E. Fix Thomas J. Flanagan Thomas J. Flatley Maureen Foley Jean Ford, R.S.C.J. Thomas J. Galligan, Jr. Samuel J. Gerson Thomas J. Gibbons, S.J. Avram J. Goldberg Eli Goldston* Patricia A. Goler Roberta L. Hazard John J. Higgins, S.J. George W. Hunt, S.J. Denise Latson Janey Anne P. Jones William J. Kenealy, S.J.* Edward M. Kennedv Mary 1\,1. Lai ' *Deceased Source: President's Office 1975-83, 1985-89 1972-73 1985-86 1981-89 1979-87 1972-73 1973-81, 1983-91 1980-88 1972-73 1983-91 1980-87 1985-89 J(l72-74 1978-86 1972-80, 1982-90 1987-91 1974-86 1979-91 1986-90 1972-79 1972-75 1982-90 1984-88 1977-85 1972-73 1982-90 1972-73 1972-79, 1981-82 1987-91 1972-78 1985-89 1987-91 1972-73 1976-80 1979-87 1978-90 1973-77 1974-77 1972-80 1986-90 1975-83 1972-78 1972-74 1972-80 1984-88 1983-91 1985-89 1987-91 1977-85 1972-74 1976-91 1972-79 T. Vincent Learson S. Joseph Loscocco* John Lowell Joseph S. MacDonnell, S.J. Francis C. ft.tackin, S.J. Joseph E. McCormick, S.J. John G. McElwee Leo J. McGovern, S.J. * James T. McGuire John J. McMullen John A. McNeice, Jr. William W. Meissner, S.J. Robert A. Mitchell, S.J. J. Donald Monan, S.J. Thomas 1\1. Moran Diane J. Morash Robert J. Morrissey Giles E. Mosher, J r. Emma Jeanne Mudd Michael E. Murphy Da vid S. Nelson Walter J. Nepp1 Francis Nicholson, S.]. Edward M. O'Flaherty, S.J. William J. O'Halioran, S..J. Joseph A. O'Hare, S.J. Robert J. O'Keefe Adrian O'Keeffe* Thomas D. O'Malley James P. O'Neill Thomas P. O'Neill, Jr. Cornelius W. Owens John W. Padberg, S.J. John P. Reboli, S.J. E. Paul Robsham Walter T. Rossi Clare A. Schoenfeld Joseph L. Shea, S.J. Daniel J. Shine, S.J. Marianne D. Short Helen M. Stanton Robert J. Starratl, S.J. Robert L. Sulliyan Sandra J. Thomson Joseph F. Turley Thomas A. Vanderslice \Villiam J. Voute ~..Iichael P. Walsh, S.J.* An Wang Thomas J. \Vallion, II I Thomas J. \Vhite Blenda J. Wilson Vincent C. Ziegler* 1974-76 1972-77 1972-79 197:J-81 1972-78, 1980-88 1977-85 1978-86 1974-77 1982-90 1978-86 1986-90 1979-87 1972-80, 1982-90 19721980-88 1977-81 1980-88 1972-78 1981-87 1980-88 1972-78, 1979-91 1981-85 1972-76 1986-90 1972-78 1973-81 1974-82 1972-73 1985-89· 19B-85 1972-88 1972-80 1975-83 1972-75 1985-89 1986-90 1980-84 1972-77 1976-82 1985-89 1977-85 1978-86 1983-91 1977-85 1981-89 1978-90 1987-91 1972-80 1978-82 1973-76 1972-76 1983-91 1972-78 ,. I I Board " Trustees President J.D. Monan, S,J University Chaplain University Se<:relllry J. Dinn....n, S.J Exe-culive Vice President F. Campanella ____________________________ ~------_,___-----____,_------__,_----- V~ President Assistant To Prnident M·Dwver Senior Vice President J. Mcintyre v_ POl.idem University Relations Vice President Student Affairs P. leComte K. Outty '" Direaor Community Atfai.. Director De\lelopment Dire<:tOf Communications M. Franco J. McKeiglle Director AHANA Student Programs Directol Athletics W. Flynn 0, Brown Executive Director Alumni Associlrtion J. Wissler ""'0 Studant M, Morgen Director Counseling Services Developmenl Director liea!th Services W, Jenks R. Sherwood A. Malur Director Leaming Res. for Student Athletn Director Housing Managing Direetor Theater Arts Center K.lyons R. Capalbo H. Enoch Director S,." Planning and Utiiization J. Saunders Financial Vice President Adminillration ..d Academic Vice President and Dean of Faculties Treasurer W. Naenan, S,J. J. Driscoll J. Smith Director Information Technology Okec1or Human Resources Director Dining Services Director Buildings and Grounds B. Gleason L Sullivan M. Cunningham A. Pennino Director M.I.S. J. Harrington DirectOr N_' "'_ C. Jeffers Director Computer Center Cam~us A. Faak K. Walson Director Informlltion Processing Support B. Feeney Boston College Chart of Administration 1987 ~ Vice President ". Director Career Centar _ _---l...-_--:..- Police Chief Bookstore Manager J. Durkin A$s.ociate Treasurer Director eudgets P. Haran M. Caltnan Director Internal Audil Finencial &. Business Counsel W. Chadwick D. Yeselonia, S.J. Controller M. Driscoll Director Financial &. Business Policy &. Admin. F.B,Mills Director Risk Management & Insurance Direetor Finallcing Resources Federal and Slate J. Dunnet F. F. Mills Associate Dean of Faculties Associate Dean of Faculties D.While R. NlIWton Director Financa Director Resl:lllrcl1 Administration C.Briel C. Flaheny Directof Purchasing J, Beckwith Director lnst.ol ReI. Ed. and Pastoral Min. R.lmbelli Director Spece Dala Analysis lab L PoWftr Director Audio Visual Services Y. Sailo Acting Dean Graduate School of Ans & Sciences Arts & Sciences D,White M. McHugh Assislllnt "',' J.O·Naili Director Social Welfare Research Ins!. Supervisor University WorkshOp Diractor Weslvn Observatory P. Schervish L. O'Shea J. Skehan, S,J. .. School of Nuraing M. Infante School Dean School of Education Dean Summer Session School of Management D. Coquillene J, WOOds. S.J. D. Pullin J. Woods, S.J. J. Neuhauser 0"0 ""0 low .. !\ssistant Om Associate Associate Associate De.o Associate Dean J. Burns P. Messer, S.J. C. Green P. Deleauw B. lulch R. Smith !\ssociate Department Chairmen (I) AHANA.,-- Afro-American, Hispanic, Asian, and Native American (2) Includes Graduate Programs in Education and Nursing Source: Office of Human Resources "' DirlH:tor Honors Program J. Appleyard, S.J. ""0 .. "' Evening College 0,"0 "'.0 College of "' Assistant ""0 L. Diluna Chief Librarian law library S. Hamby Assistant Dean for Students Associate ""0 Director Center for Testing Eval. &. Ed. Policy G. Madaus Division Chairman Director Campus School J. Mooney Dean Graduate School of Social Work Dean Enrollment Management J. Hopps Associate Dean lUI Associate Deen (G) Assistant Dean J. Cronin J. Waters A. Hanwall Depanment Chairmen Director Management Center J. McKiernan Director Financial Aid Okedor Undergraduate Admissions H, Reynolds C, Nolan Director Enrollm.mt Managemenl Research University Registrar A. Delaney L. Lonabocker University librarian M. Cronin Administration & Faculty Board of Trustee Membershipt 1987-1988 Charles D. Ferris, Esq., '54, J.D. '61, LL.D. '78 (Hon.) Senior Partner Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo, P.c. *Joseph F. Abely, Jr., '50 Chairman (Retired) Sea-Land Corporation Thomas J. Flatley President The Flatley Company *Geoffrey T. Boisi, '69 General Partner Goldman Sachs & Company Samuel J. Gerson, '63 Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Filene's Basement Stores William L. Brown Chairman of the Board First National Bank of Boston Roberta L. Hazard, USN, '56, M.Ed. '57 Director of Manpower and Personnel Joint Chiefs of Staff Wayne A. Budd, Esq., '63 President Budd, Wiley & Richlin, P.C. John J. Higgins, S.J., '59, M.A. '60, S.T.L. '67 Executive Assistant to the President Fairfield University Raymond J. Callahan, S.J., M.A. '64, B.D. '69 President Boston College High School George W. Hunt, S.J. Editor-in-Chief America Magazine Denis H. Carroll, '64 President American Couplings Company Denise Latson Janey, '75 (Newton College) Account Systems Engineer IBM Corporation *James F. Cleary, '50 Managing Director Paine Webber, Inc. Richard T. Cleary, S.J., '58, S.T.L. '67 Administrator/Rector Campion Center *John M. Connors, Jr., '63 President Hill, Holliday, Connors, Cosmopulos, Inc. John M. Corcoran, '48 President John M. Corcoran & Company John F. Cunningham, '64 Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer Computer Consoles, Inc. Mary Lou DeLong, '71 (Newton College) Director of Major Gifts Harvard Medical School Joseph P. Duffy, S.J., '50, M.A. '51 Rector of the Jesuit Community Boston College Michael A. Fahey, S.J., '57, L.Th. '65 Dean, Theology Faculty University of St. Michael's College Yen-Tsai Feng Roy E. Larsen Librarian Harvard College Library Hon. Edward M. Kennedy, LL.D. '66 (Hon.) United States Senator *Francis C. Mackin, S.J., M.A. '53 Pastor Church of Saint Ignatius of Loyola James T. McGuire, '39 Vice Chairman Canteen Corporation John A. McNeice, Jr., '54 Chairman and Chief Executive Officer The Colonial Group, Inc. Robert A. Mitchell, S.J. President University of Detroit *J. Donald Monan, S.J. President Boston College Thomas M. Moran, '48 President T.M. Moran Company, Inc. Robert J. Morrissey, Esq., '60 Partner Withington, Cross, Park & Groden Michael E. Murphy, '58 Executive Vice President and Chief Financial and Administrative Officer Sara Lee Corporation 9 10 Administration & Faculty *Hon. David S. Nelson, '57, J.D. '60, LL.D. '79 (Hon.) United States District Judge Edward M. O'Flaherty, S.J., '59, Th.M. '66 President Weston School of Theology Trustee Associate Membershipt 1987-1988 Milton C. Borenstein, Esq., '35 Partner Concorde Associates Thomas D. O'Malley Chairman Argus Energy, Inc. Hon. Thomas P. O'Neill, Jr., '36, LL.D. '73 (Hon.) Speaker of the House of Representatives (Retired) E. Paul Robsham, M.Ed. '83 President Robsham Industries, Inc. John M. Cataldo, '44 President National Freight Traffic Service William F. Connell, '59 Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Connell Limited Partnership Joseph F. Cotter, '49 Executive Vice President (Retired) The Sheraton Corporation Walter T. Rossi, '64 President and Chief Executive Officer Mervyn's Marianne D. Short, Esq., '72 (Newton College), J.D. '76 Partner Dorsey & Whitney *Robert L. Sullivan, '50, M.A. '52 International Practice Director, Management Consulting (Retired) Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Company George L. Drury, S.l., '45, M.A. '46, M.S. '49, M.S. '58 Campion Renewal Center John T. FaHon Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer R.M. Bradley, Inc. Thomas J. Flanagan, '42 Vice President Arthur D. Little Program Systems Management Company Joseph F. Turley President and Chief Operating Officer The Gillette Company Thomas J. Galligan, Jr., '41, D.B.A. '75 (Hon.) Chairman (Retired) Boston Edison Company *Thomas A. Vanderslice, '53 Chairman of the Board Apollo Computer, Inc. Thomas J. Gibbons, S.J., '53, M.A. '54, S.T.L. '61 Assistant to the Provincial for Secondary Education William]. Voute Vice Chairman Salomon Brothers, Inc. Avram J. Goldberg Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer The Stop & Shop Companies, Inc. Blenda J. Wilson, Ph.D. '79 Executive Director Colorado Commission on Higher Education Patricia A. Goler, M.A. '51, Ph.D. '57 Dean of the College of Liberal Arts (Retired) University of Lowell Anne P. Jones, '58, J.D. '61 Partner Sutherland, Asbill and Brennan tOnly Boston College degrees listed. *Executive Committee Member Source: President's Office Mary M. Lai Treasurer Long Island University John LoweH Welch & Forbes Board of Trustee Chairmen Cornelius W. Owens Thomas J. Galligan, Jr. James P. O'Neill William F. Connell David S. Nelson Thomas A. Vanderslice 1972-1975 1975-1978 1978-1981 1981-1984 1984-1987 1987-1988 Joseph E. McCormick, S.]., M.A. '46 Director for Vocations Society of Jesus of New England John G. McElwee, J.D. '50, LL.D. '87 (Hon.) Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (Retired) John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company Administration & Faculty John J. McMullen Chairman John J. McMullen Associates, Inc. Officers of the University Fall 1987 Giles E. Mosher, Jr., '55 Chairman of the Board and President Baybank Middlesex President J. Donald Monan, S.J. Emma Jeanne Mudd Boston College Parent Executive Vice President Frank B. Campanella Walter J. Nepp] Vice Chairman of the Board (Retired) J. C. Penney Company, Inc. Vice President of Student Affairs Kevin P. Duffy Robert J. O'Keefe, '51 Senior Vice President American Security Bank N.A. Vice President, Assistant to the President Margaret A. Dwyer James P. O'Neill, '42 Partner Regional Financial Enterprises Academic Vice President and Dean of Faculties William B. Neenan, S.J. Vice President for University Relations Paul H. LeComte Cornelius W. Owens, '36, LL.D. '68 (Hon.) Executive Vice President (Retired) American Telephone & Telegraph Company Secretary of the University Clare A. Schoenfeld, '72 Chief of the Information Support Unit United Nations Development Programme Senior Vice President James P. McIntyre Helen M. Stanton, M.S.W. '43 Boston College Alumna Sandra J. Thomson, '58 (Newton College) Department of Orthopaedic Surgery The Children's Hospital Medical Center tOnly Boston College degrees listed. Source: President's Office Financial Vice President and Treasurer John R. Smith Vice President for Administration John T. Driscoll I1 12 Administration & Faculty Academic Deans Fall 1987 Faculties Robert R. Newton, Associate Dean Donald]. White, Associate Dean The College of Arts and Sciences Marie M. McHugh, Acting Dean Joseph]. Burns, Associate Dean Carol Hurd Green, Associate Dean Patricia De Leeuw, Associate Dean Paul Messer, S.]., Assistant Dean The Evening College of Arts, Sciences and Business Administration James A. Woods, S.]., Dean The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Donald]. White, Dean James M. O'Neill, Assistant Dean The School of Education Diana C. Pullin, Dean The Law School Daniel R. Coquillette, Dean Robert H. Smith, Associate Dean Brian P. Lutch, Associate Dean Lisa DiLuna, Assistant Dean The School of Management John]. Neuhauser, Dean Justin C. Cronin, Associate Dean James A. Waters, Associate Dean The School of Nursing Mary Sue Infante, Dean The Graduate School of Social Work June G. Hopps, Dean Albert F. Hanwell, Assistant Dean The Summer Session James A. Woods, S.J., Dean Source: Office of Human Resources Note: Administrative positions listed are lim­ ited to those reflected on the Chart of Ad­ ministration. Department Chairmen and Chairwomen Fall 1987 Accounting Administrative Sciences Biology Chemistry Classical Studies Computer Sciences Economics English Finance Fine Arts Geology and Geophysics Germanic Studies History Law Marketing Mathematics Music Organizational Studies Philosophy Physics Political Science Psychology Romance Languages and Literatures Slavic and Eastern Languages Sociology Speech Communication and Theater Theology Ronald Pawliczek Walter H. Klein R. Douglas Powers Jeong-Long Lin Dia M. L. Philippides Harvey M. Deitel Harold A. Petersen Paul C. Doherty Hassan Tehranian Kenneth M. Craig John C. Hepburn Christoph Eykman Paul G. Spagnoli Alfred E. Sutherland Richard P. Nielsen Robert J. Bond Olga Stone Judith R. Gordon Joseph F.X. Flanagan, S.J. Rein A. Uritam Robert K. Faulkner Randolph Easton Betty T. Rahv Lawrence G. Jones John B. Williamson Dorman Picklesimer, Jr. Robert J. Daly, S.J. Source: Office of the Academic Vice President Administration & Faculty University Administrators Fall 1987 Undergraduate Admissions Charles S. Nolan, Director AHANA, Student Programs Donald Brown, Director Alumni Association John F. Wissler, Executive Director Athletics William]. Flynn, Director University Audio-Visual Services Yoshio Saito, Director Bookstore John G. Durkin, Manager University Budgets Michael T. Callnan, Director Buildings and Grounds Alfred G. Pennino, Director Dean for Enrollment Management University Registrar Louise M. Lonabocker Enrollment Management Research Anne Marie Delaney, Director Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry Robert P. Imbelli, Director Finance Catherine H. Briel, Director Financial Aid Helen Reynolds, Director Financial and Business Counsel Dennis]. Yesalonia, S.]. Financial and Business Policy and Administration Fred B. Mills, Director Financing Resources, Federal and State Francis F. Mills, Director Health Services Arnold F. Mazur, M.D., Director Campus Police Kenneth L. Watson, Chief Honors Program, College of Arts & Sciences Joseph A. Appleyard, S.]., Director Campus School Jean F. Mooney, Director Housing Robert F. Capalbo, Director Career Center Marilyn S. Morgan, Director Human Resources Leo V. Sullivan, Director University Chaplain John A. Dinneen, S.J. Information Technology Bernard W. Gleason, Jr., Director Communications Michael R. Franco, Director Internal Audit William E. Chadwick, Director Computer Center Rodney]. Feak, Director Learning Resources for Student Athletes Kevin M. Lyons, Director Controller Michael J. Driscoll University Counseling Services Weston M. Jenks, Jr., Director Community Affairs Jean S. McKeigue, Director Development Dining Services Michael]. Cunningham, Director Law School Library Sharon Hamby, Chief Librarian University Librarian Mary J. Cronin Management Center John McKiernan, Director Purchasing John D. Beckwith, Director 13 Research Administration Charles F. Flaherty, Director Risk Management and Insurance John Dunnet, Director Social Welfare Research Institute Paul G. Schervish, Director Space Data Analysis Laboratory Leo F. Power, Jr., Director Space Planning and Utilization Joyce C. Saunders, Director Dean for Student Development Robert A. Sherwood Center for Testing Evaluation and Educational Policy George F. Madaus, Director Theater Arts Center Howard Enoch, Managing Director Associate Treasurer Paul P. Haran Weston Observatory James W. Skehan, S.]., Director University Workshop Leo O'Shea, Supervisor Source: Office of Human Resources 14 Administration & Faculty Professional, Administrative and Support Staff Personnel As of Fall, 1987 Male Full-Time Positions Female Open Total Male Part-Time Positions Female Open Total Total Positions Professional, Administrative President's, Executive Vice President's Offices* Dean of Faculties** Financial and Business Affairs Administration Student Affairs University Relations Total 48 31 6 54 86 13 12 22 45 4 3 7 101 12 51 49 3 3 - 6 91 13 - 6 - 2 21 174 - - - - - 27 20 18 28 76 166 85 153 28 76 19 22 -­ 9 - ­ 50 1 - 3 233 218 42 493 44 32 23 22 307 47 376 1 44 -­ - - 3 - 65 7 -­ 57 99 592 10 55 431 2 2 14 11 82 8 57 74 - 128 83 Secretarial, Clerical, Technical Secretarial, Clerical Library Assistants Technical, other Total 22 41 8 71 1 8 34 -­ 8 7 49 4 78 356 62 496 6 -­ 2 54 86 76 28 14 128 - - 2 4 5 - - 1 83 44 - 13 - 2 15 59 9 59 -­ 8 26 - 17 4 26 107 7 2 9 9 22 3 6 22 129 269 68 42 379 22 11 13 46 425 580 642 146 1,368 72 97 50 219 1,587 -­ - -­ 570 Buildings & Grounds, Plant Services Housekeeping Grounds & Trades Gate Attendants, Campus Police Mailroom, Switchboard Dining Total Total Positions 39 - -­ *Includes Chaplain's Office. Also includes Human Resources positions previously included in Finance and Business. **Includes Libraries Note: The above figures represent all positions funded by the University as of September 1, 1987. Sponsored research positions are not included. Positions funded partially by the University and partially by outside contracts or grants are counted above as part-time University positions. Source: Office of Human Resources Administration & Faculty 15 Faculty by School and Rank 1986-1987 School Arts & Sciences Education Management Nursing Law Social Work Total Professor No. % 96 16 8 4 18 4 146 29 36 10 7 45 27 26 Associate No. % 162 18 29 21 9 8 247 49 41 39 38 23 53 44 Assistant No. % Instructor No. % 65 10 29 17 8 3 132 10 19 23 39 30 20 20 23 Total 3 - 9 14 5 -- 38 12 25 12 - 7 No. % 333 44 75 56 40 15 563 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 Source: Office of the Academic Vice President Full-Time Equivalent Faculty by School* 1986-1987 Full-Time School No. % Arts & Sciences Education 333 44 75 56 40 15 563 59 8 13 10 7 3 100 Management Nursing Law Social Work Total FTE of Part-Time No. % 85.58 15.03 9.95 4.88 6.83 20.92 143.19 60 10 7 3 5 15 100 Total FTE Faculty No. % 418.58 59.03 84.95 60.88 46.83 35.92 706.19 59 8 12 9 7 5 100 *Method of computation: three courses equals one full-time faculty member. Source: Office of the Academic Vice President NOTE: Figures representing full-time faculty do not include the following: full-time academic administrators or directors, teaching fellows, special contracts; part-time academic administrators or staff. Graduate faculty of the Departments of Education and Nursing of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences are included in tables with their respective schools. 16 Administration & Faculty b~ Faculty School and Tenure Status 1986-198 Non-Tenured Faculty No. % Tenured Faculty School No. % Arts & Sciences 260 34 34 24 24 10 386 78 Education Management Nursing Law Social Work Total 73 10 41 32 16 5 177 77 45 43 60 67 69 22 23 55 57 40 33 31 Total No. 'Ii 333 44 75 56 40 15 563 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 Source: Office of the Academic Vice President Faculty b~ School and Sex 1986-198 Men Women School No. Arts & Sciences 70 Education 11 Management 11 Nursing Law Social Work Total 55 12 7 166 Source: Office of the Academic Vice President % % No. % 42 7 7 33 7 4 100 263 33 64 1 28 8 397 67 8 16 - 7 2 100 Total No. Women Men 333 44 75 56 40 15 563 21 25 15 98 30 47 29 79 75 85 2 70 53 71 Administration & Faculty Faculty b~ 17 Highest Earned Degree and Rank 1986-198 Degree Doctorate Professor No. % Associate No. % Assistant No. % Instructor No. % 145 234 13 107 20 5 132 7 29 2 38 26 - Masters First Professional* Total - 1 146 - 42 2 - - 26 44 247 19 4 1 24 *Including STB, PhL, and STL. Source; Office of the Academic Vice President Faculty by Highest Earned Degree and Sex 1986-1987 Men Women Degree Doctorate Masters First Professional* Total Total No. % No. % No. % 124 42 75 25 369 20 8 397 93 5 2 100 493 62 8 563 88 11 1 100 - - 166 100 *Including STB, PhL, and STL. Source: Office of the Academic Vice President Faculty b~ Rank and Sex 1986-198 Women Rank No. Professor 22 70 47 27 166 Associate Assistant Instructor Total Total Men % No. % No. % 13 42 28 17 100 124 177 85 11 397 31 45 21 3 100 146 247 132 38 563 26 44 23 7 100 Source: Office of the Academic Vice President 1 5 - 6 Total No. % 493 62 8 563 88 11 1 100 18 Administration & Faculty Full-Time Faculty, Teaching Assistants, Teaching Fellows By School and Departments, 1986-1987 Full·Time Faculty Teaching Assistants Teaching Fellows Arts & Sciences Management Nursing 18 18 5 22 37 9 10 4 33 22 2 23 9 18 19 14 3 19 11 37 333 44 40 75 56 Religious Education Social work Total 15 563 Biology Chemistry Classics Economics English Fine Arts* Geology German* History Mathematics Music* Philosophy Physics Political Science Psychology Romance Languages Slavic/Eastern Sociology Speech* Theology Arts & Sciences Total Education Law 34 31 3 17 20 - 17 17 - 11 - 24 19 11 10 29 - 4 18 4 164 52 10 115 7 - - 216 122 - *No graduate program. Sources: Office of the Academic Vice President; Dean of Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Administration & Faculty Average Compensation by Rank* AAUP Category I (9-Month Equivalent) 1986-1987 Rank Boston College All Combined Category Church-Related Professor $65,700 48,800 40,200 34,900 $61,130 44,350 37,070 27,130 $62,440 46,200 36,790 31,260 Associate Assistant Instructor *Includes salary and fringe benefits. Sources: Office of the Academic Vice President; Academe, March-April 1987. Boston College Faculty Average Compensation by Rank* Year Professor Associate Assistant Instructor 1977-78 31,500 24,500 19,700 16,500 1978-79 34,100 26,000 20,700 15,900 1979-80 37,000 27,800 22,000 18,000 1980-81 40,700 30,500 24,500 19,400 1981-82 44,500 33,400 25,900 20,700 1982-83 50,900 37,900 30,100 23,600 1983-84 52,600 39,700 32,100 27,000 1984-85 57,000 43,000 37,380 29,380 1985-86 61,990 46,120 38,300 32,380 1986-87 65,700 48,800 40,200 34,900 *Includes salary and fringe benefits. Source: Office of the Academic Vice President 19 22 Students Full-Time Freshmen Enrollment By Year and Sex Freshmen Enrollees SAT Averages by Class Fall Men Women Total Class Verbal Mathematical Total 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 901 856 927 796 946 981 1,030 984 997 1,022 1,176 1,186 1,244 1,148 1,242 1,357 1,276 1,393 1,198 1,259 2,077 2,042 2,171 1,944 2,188 2,338 2,306 2,377 2,195 2,281 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 509 516 512 507 506 509 519 526 527 527 544 552 555 555 549 557 567 573 577 578 1,053 1,068 1,067 1,062 1,055 1,066 1,086 1,099 1,104 1,105 Source: Office of Undergraduate Admissions Source: Office of Undergraduate Admissions Freshmen Applications, Acceptances and Enrollment Full-Time Enrollment Enrollment Total Enrollment % of Acceptances % of Applications 2,077 2,042 2,171 1,944 2,188 2,338 2,306 2,377 2,195 2,281 43 45 49 46 42 48 45 48 44 45 17 16 17 15 18 19 16 15 15 15 Acceptances Fall Applications Acceptances % of Applications 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 12,411 12,505 12,640 12,748 12,110 12,414 14,398 16,163 14,986 15,593 4,821 4,514 4,389 4,227 5,233 4,890 5,100 4,938 4,960 5,029 39 36 35 33 43 39 35 31 33 32 Source: Office of Undergraduate Admissions NOTE: Freshmen enrollments as reported herein are actual deposits received, on or before the deadline set by the Committee on Admissions, from students accepting the offer of admission extended by the University. Withdrawals may occur during the summer and the first two weeks in September. Acceptance and enrollment figures reported are based on deposits received as of July 16, 1987. Students 23 Class of 1991 Applications, Acceptances and Enrollees Geographic Distribution State Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticu t Delaware District of Columbia Florida Georgia Guam Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Applications 17 8 36 8 557 98 1,388 43 54 436 101 5 36 II 444 61 19 37 42 63 188 372 3,758 196 144 4 120 12 41 Source: Office of Undergraduate Admissions Acceptances 3 15 2 0 7 I I 135 31 341 14 18 127 27 2 15 5 99 19 7 15 15 26 68 104 1,809 50 46 2 42 8 19 52 9 161 8 7 52 13 I State Enrollees I 7 2 35 8 3 3 5 II 42 48 855 25 23 I Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Puerto Rico Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Virgin Islands Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Foreign Applications 12 266 1,652 12 2,531 63 I 345 18 31 764 139 354 27 3 48 180 14 70 241 6 69 23 105 4 316 Acceptances Enrollees 3 80 361 6 663 13 0 103 10 5 184 56 115 6 3 38 159 3 259 4 0 42 6 0 87 31 71 I 0 5 28 I 17 67 6 27 56 0 15 9 41 2 119 74 5,029 2,281 I 15 9 0 5 2 19 I 22 I 14 Total 15,593 24 Students Undergraduate Transfer Student Applications, Acceptances and Enrollment Full-Time Acceptances % of Fall* Applications Acceptances Applications Total Enrollment 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1,731 1,953 1,742 1,557 1,584 544 491 165 436 455 31 25 9 28 29 305 306 84 252 286 Enrollment Enrollment % of Acceptances % of Applications 56 62 51 58 63 18 16 5 16 18 Source: Office of Undergraduate Admissions Undergraduate Transfer Student Enrollment By Type of Previous Institution and Sex Fall* 2·Year Public 2·Year Private 4·Year Public 4·Year Private Total Men Women Total 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 15 25 4 19 6 21 22 12 9 17 55 55 20 49 73 214 204 48 175 190 305 306 84 252 286 97 112 20 100 114 208 194 64 152 172 305 306 84 252 286 *Transfer enrollment typically increases 75-125 students second semester. Source: Office of Undergraduate Admissions Students 25 Graduate and Undergraduate Enrollment Full- and Part-Time Year FT.* 1978-79 1979-80 1980-81 1981-82 1982-83 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86 1986-87 1987-88 8,846 8,842 9,090 8,980 8,877 8,928 8,923 9,015 8,771 9,014 Undergraduate P.T. 1,339 1,480 1,677 1,667 1,652 1,576 1,660 1,617 1,460 1,444 Total FT. Graduate PT. Total Total 10,185 10,322 10,767 10,647 10,529 10,504 10,583 10,632 10,231 10,458 1,911 1,845 1,919 1,921 1,878 1,796 1,748 1,799 1,664 1,730 1,817 1,810 1,759 1,598 1,662 1,759 1,879 2,045 2,098 2,122 3,728 3,655 3,678 3,519 3,540 3,555 3,627 3,844 3,762 3,852 13,913 13,977 14,445 14,166 14,069 14,059 14,210 14,476 13,993 14,310 *Includes full-time students in Evening College. Source: Registrar Undergraduate Day and Evening and Graduate Enrollment Year Day 1978-79 1979-80 1980-81 1981-82 1982-83 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86 1986-87 1987-88 8,483 8,474 8,729 8,589 8,516 8,628 8,601 8,691 8,445 8,656 Undergraduate Evening 1,702 1,848 2,038 2,058 2,013 1,876 1,982 1,941 1,786 1,802 Total Graduate/ Professional Total 10,185 10,322 10,767 10,647 10,529 10,504 10,583 10,632 10,231 10,458 3,728 3,655 3,678 3,519 3,540 3,555 3,627 3,844 3,762 3,852 13,913 13,977 14,445 14,166 14,069 14,059 14,210 14,476 13,993 14,310 NOTE: All enrollment statistics are as of the sixth week of the first semester. Enrollment figures fluctuate throughout the year as a result of withdrawals, transfers, and mid-year graduations. Source: Registrar 26 Students Undergraduate Enrollment By School Year A&S SOM 1978-79 1979-80 1980-81 1981-82 1982-83 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86 1986-87 1987-88 4,826 4,839 5,022 5,024 5,049 5,172 5,138 5,281 5,192 5,413 2,076 2,159 2,261 2,191 2,203 2,240 2,243 2,198 2,108 2,152 Education 812 753 765 728 641 628 623 671 683 706 Nursing Evening Total 769 723 681 646 623 588 597 541 462 385 1,702 1,848 2,038 2,058 2,013 1,876 1,982 1,941 1,786 1,802 10,185 10,322 10,767 10,647 10,529 10,504 10,583 10,632 10,231 10,458 Source: Registrar Graduate Enrollment By School Year A&S· SOM Social Work Law Total 1978-79 1979-80 1980-81 1981-82 1982-83 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86 1986-87 1987-88 2,157 2,129 2,124 1,915 1,848 1,854 1,882 2,095 2,037 2,040 503 489 496 483 484 513 552 580 587 664 271 252 280 329 363 358 362 376 359 378 797 785 778 792 845 830 831 793 779 770 3,728 3,655 3,678 3,519 3,540 3,555 3,627 3,844 3,762 3,852 *Includes Graduate Education and Nursing. Source: Registrar Students 27 Graduate Enrollment* By Degree Program and Discipline, Full- and Part-Time 1982-83 American Studies A&S Unspecified Biology Chemistry Economics Education English Geology Geology-Geophysics Geophysics History Interdisci plinary Latin & Greek Law Linguistics Management Mathematics Nursing Philosophy Physics Political Science Psychology Romance Languages Religious Education Russian Slavic Social Work Sociology Theology Total 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86 1986-87 Masters Ph.D. Masters Ph.D. Masters Ph.D. Masters 9 2 34 22 8 612 49 11 39 5 28 5 3 865 1 2 13 30 63 444 23 8 1 37 30 6 618 52 14 56 2 35 3 3 847 1 1 16 35 64 443 23 20 2 41 26 2 677 70 11 54 1 32 1 18 - 26 16 33 71 447 26 40 69 4 651 92 9 51 2 39 21 35 69 476 21 35 33 7 618 94 11 50 1 50 2 4 806 2 729 15 146 42 6 56 1 40 191 2 - - 29 9 - - - - 599 12 90 32 6 32 3 42 126 4 2 382 29 28 -­ - - 51 37 613 16 83 37 6 48 2 39 127 3 3 383 27 35 -­ 3,079 849 3,134 - 48 21 31 26 17 4 - - - 27 8 - 30 10 58 32 664 12 100 38 5 47 1 25 129 4 2 380 25 32 -­ - 65 34 858 3,253 882 3,407 - - 853 - - - 51 25 32 19 17 6 - - - 56 25 32 13 16 7 - - *Figures include students who attended for just one semester, as well as those who attended a full year. Source: Registrar - 38 5 - 4 809 1 698 15 121 37 2 47 5 33 198 3 1 396 25 37 -­ - Ph.D. - - 56 30 33 13 16 7 - Masters Ph.D. 22 36 61 435 26 35 5 54 31 34 14 19 9 63 39 397 23 40 -­ - 922 3,427 876 - - 52 43 28 Students Undergraduate and Graduate Enrollment By Sex Undergraduate Year Men 1978-79 1979-80 1980-81 1981-82 1982-83 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86 1986-87 1987-88 4,625 4,556 4,603 4,471 4,397 4,418 4,515 4,477 4,316 4,544 Source: Registrar Graduate Professional Total Women Men Women Men Women Total Enrollment 5,560 5,766 6,164 6,1 76 6,132 6,086 6,068 6,155 5,915 5,914 1,783 1,701 1,642 1,542 1,540 1,577 1,559 1,650 1,562 1,601 1,945 1,954 2,036 1,977 2,000 1,978 2,068 2,194 2,200 2,251 6,408 6,257 6,245 6,013 5,937 5,995 6,074 6,127 5,878 6,145 7,505 7,720 8,200 8,153 8,132 8,064 8,136 8,349 8,115 8,165 13,913 13,977 14,445 14,166 14,069 14,059 14,210 14,476 13,993 14,310 Students 29 Full-Time Equivalent Enrollment* Undergraduate Year Day Evening Total Graduate/ Professional 1978-79 1979-80 1980-81 1981-82 1982-83 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86 1986-87 1987-88 8,483 8,474 8,729 8,589 8,500 8,616 8,579 8,674 8,429 8,646 809 861 920 947 928 837 897 880 829 850 9,292 9,335 9,649 9,536 9,428 9,453 9,476 9,554 9,258 9,496 2,516 2,448 2,505 2,454 2,432 2,382 2,374 2,481 2,363 2,437 *Method of computation: three part-time students equal one full-time equivalent student. Source: Registrar Summer Session Enrollment Summer Undergraduate Graduate/ Professional" Total 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 924 1,068 1,122 1,136 1,349 1,948 1,840 1,978 1,980 2,101 1,679 1,590 1,700 1,759 1,784 1,473 1,589 1,899 1,699 1,805 2,603 2,658 2,822 2,895 3,133 3,421 3,429 3,877 3,679 3,906 *Includes students registered through the Institute of Religious Education, and the Graduate School of Management. Source: Summer Session Office Total 11,808 11,783 12,154 11,990 11,860 11,835 11,850 12,035 11,621 11,933 30 Students Evening College Enrollment Part·Time Full·Time Total Year Men Women Men Women Men Women Total Fall 1980-81 Spring 1980-81 Fall 1981-82 Spring 1981-82 Fall 1982-83 Spring 1982-83 Fall 1983-84 Spring 1983-84 Fall 1984-85 Spring 1984-85 Fall 1985-86 Spring 1985-86 Fall 1986-87 Spring 1986-87 Fall 1987-88 200 154 189 153 174 118 161 155 201 169 174 154 157 138 187 161 142 202 164 211 184 157 147 154 160 175 152 193 176 187 587 494 616 480 598 537 578 550 649 535 628 492 541 477 581 1,090 788 1,051 843 1,030 839 980 804 978 835 964 776 895 747 847 787 648 805 633 772 655 739 705 850 704 802 646 698 615 768 1,251 930 1,253 1,007 1,241 1,023 1,137 951 1,132 995 1,139 928 1,088 923 1,034 2,038 1,578 2,058 1,640 2,013 1,678 1,876 1,656 1,982 1,699 1,941 1,574 1,786 1,538 1,802 Source: Registrar Students 31 Geographic Distribution of Students* Fall 1987 Undergraduate Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut D.C. Delaware Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Puerto Rico Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Virgin Islands Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Foreign Total 5 0 17 2 151 30 669 28 23 207 36 18 I 168 18 10 13 9 23 133 152 3623** 67 58 2 63 5 24 4 136 646 4 10lO 12 0 136 8 3 318 85 281 6 I 20 69 I 47 52 2 20 3 53 2 182 --­ 8656 Evening Graduate A&S 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 14 II 18 0 0 3 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 2 3 2 1714 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 8 6 0 19 0 0 3 0 I 7 0 9 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 2 I 0 0 2 -­ 1802 Social Work I I 2 6 2 0 5 I I 4 2 3 25 5 1653 7 2 0 I 0 0 0 62 14 I I 0 I I I 3 I 591 2 0 0 0 I 0 2 4 0 6 8 0 6 0 2 0 66 -­ - 2040 378 I 16 36 4 89 I 0 9 0 I 0 0 3 I 17 5 22 0 0 I 3 0 0 0 0 0 I I 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 16 I 0 0 0 0 I 2 0 3 0 0 I I 45 3 0 8 0 0 15 3 40 I 2 8 lO 429 0 0 8 3 0 10 0 0 0 5 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 I I 0 0 0 17 3 33 4 0 16 5 2 0 12 0 0 0 0 2 0 5 3 0 0 2 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 33 0 309 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 Law School 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 5 0 0 I I Graduate SOM - 664 I 2 0 3 3 0 0 0 Total 7 0 18 2 189 34 741 36 25 233 44 22 I 189 20 II 18 13 31 205 170 8319 77 63 2 67 6 24 5 240 706 9 1178 16 0 159 8 5 360 94 361 7 I 23 77 I 0 lO 58 66 2 29 4 56 2 276 770 14,310 I - *Figures are based on the state which the student lists as a permanent address, which may not necessarily reflect the true "home" state or country. **Within Massachusetts, 1522 undergraduate students (approximately 42%) are from the Greater Boston Area surrounding the University (de­ fined by a zip code beginning with 021). Source: Registrar 32 Students International Student and Scholar Statistics International Student and Scholar Statistics By School, 1986-1987 By Class or Program, 1986-1987 70 76 College of Arts & Sciences School of Management School of Education School of Nursing Evening College Graduate School of Arts & Sciences Graduate School of Social Work Graduate School of Management Law School Sub-total Practical Training (Field Work) 4 I I 164 2 34 38 42 Juniors Seniors Total Undergraduate Graduate/Professional: Masters Ph.D. 34 J.D. 8 360 8 Faculty and Postdoctoral Research Scholars Total Freshmen Sophomores 27 395 Source: Office of the Dean for Student Development Undergraduate Graduate Practical Training Faculty and Research Scholars Total 91 124 7 24 -­ 246 Source: Office of the Dean for Student Development 61 84 1 3 -­ 149 8 4 Practical Training Faculty and Research Scholars Total 27 395 International Student and Scholar Statistics Women 107 89 208 By Sex and Program, 1986-1987 Men 152 Special Programs Total Graduate/Professional Source: Office of the Dean for Student Development Program 38 Total 152 208 8 27 -­ 395 8 Students International Students by Country Undergraduate and Graduate, 1986-1987 Antigua Argentina Australia Bahamas Bahrain Bangladesh Bermuda Bolivia Brazil Canada Chile Colombia Costa Rica Cyprus Denmark Dominican Republic Ecuador Egypt EI Salvador France West Germany Greece Guatamala Guyana Haiti Honduras Hong Kong India Indonesia Iran Ireland Italy 1 3 17 4 1 1 4 2 2 21 2 10 1 4 1 1 6 6 3 7 10 4 1 1 1 1 9 12 4 Korea Kuwait Lebanon Libya Malaysia Mauritius Mexico Morocco 11 Netherlands Nicaragua 8 4 2 7 32 3 Panama People's Republic of China Peru Philippines Poland Portugal Saudi Arabia 3 1 1 4 11 Taiwan Thailand Trinidad & Tobago Turkey United Arab Emirates United Kingdom 6 3 4 9 1 10 1 14 2 Yugoslavia Total 4 1 Spain Sweden Switzerland 10 Japan Jordan 11 Sierre Leone South Africa Uruguay Venezuela 4 5 1 2 1 6 2 Nigeria 9 14 Jamaica 2 2 1 - 360 8 Countries Represented Source: Office of the Dean for Student Development 67 33 34 Students Undergraduate and Graduate Minority Enrollment 1985·86 1984·85 Undergraduate Black American Indian Oriental Hispanic Other Total Graduate Black American Indian Oriental Hispanic Other Total Total Graduate and Undergraduate 1987·88 Men Women Total Men Women Total Men 107 9 193 211 73 - 198 15 304 356 142 96 8 125 145 50 - 123 10 205 226 67 - 219 18 330 371 117 -­ 103 8 135 149 53 - 132 235 19 377 384 112 -­ 132 8 167 159 55 154 15 281 259 62 286 23 448 418 117 422 593 1,015 424 631 1,055 448 679 1,127 521 771 1,292 35 2 52 36 37 162 45 4 55 41 46 191 80 6 107 77 83 -­ 353 31 4 54 49 44 182 57 7 60 48 39 211 88 36 II I 114 97 83 -­ 393 64 40 42 183 58 5 71 53 33 220 94 6 135 93 75 -­ 403 41 2 73 43 42 201 59 4 78 53 35 229 100 6 151 96 77 -­ 430 584 784 1,368 606 842 1,448 631 899 1,530 722 1,000 1,722 91 6 III 145 69 Women 1986·87 Total Men II 242 235 59 Women Total Source: Registrar Veterans Enrolled at Boston College 1987-1988 Full· School Men Women Arts and Sciences Education Evening College Nursing Management Graduate School of A&S Graduate SOM Law School Social Work 4 0 9 0 0 7 5 5 0 30 0 0 1 4 0 2 I I 0 0 0 0 2 I 6 0 16 Total Source: Registrar 0 3 - Time I Part· Time 0 0 8 0 0 5 4 0 0 17 Total 4 0 10 I 0 7 5 6 0 33 Students 35 Undergraduate Degrees Conferred* By Degree and Number of Majors Arts and Sciences A.B. Single Major Double Major Triple Major B.S. Single Major Double Major Triple Major Total A&S School of Education-A.B. Single Major Double Major Triple Major School of Management-B.S. Single Major Double Major Triple Major School of Nursing-B.S. Subtotal-Undergraduate Degrees Evening College A.B. B.S. Total Undergraduate Degrees Conferred *September-January-May Source: Registrar 1982-83 1983-84 1984-85 816 212 1 -­ 1,029 912 222 1 -­ 1,135 782 208 1 -­ 991 921 184 1,005 144 1,105 1,149 175 32 170 152 19 109 15 145 4 -­ 207 1,236 207 1,342 -­ 171 1,162 -­ 124 1,229 -­ 154 17 120 16 141 10 142 - -­ 171 136 151 153 84 57 1 -­ 142 410 130 1 -­ 541 186 2,134 391 135 1 -­ 527 142 2,147 464 123 482 109 -­ - 587 155 2,055 591 160 2,133 464 106 1 -­ 571 141 2,152 123 126 129 140 144 126 2,273 129 2,184 37 11 -­ 1986-87 149 1,298 -­ -­ 123 2,257 1985-86 140 2,273 144 2,296 36 Students Undergraduate Degrees Conferred By Major* 1982-83 Accounting American Studies Art History Biochemistry Biology Chemistry Classics Computer Science Early Childhood Education Early Childhood & Special Education Early Childhood Special Needs Economics Elementary Education English Finance French General Management Geology Geophysics German History Human Development Independent Italian Linguistics Management Marketing Mathematics Middle School Education Moderate Special Needs Nursing Operations Management Organizational Studies/Human Resources Management Philosophy Physics Political Science Psychology Quantitative Analysis Romance Languages Russian Secondary Education Severe Special Needs Slavic Studies Sociology Spanish Special Education/Alternative Environments Special Education/Elementary Education** Speech Communication Speech Theater Studio Art Theology Total*** *Double and Triple majors counted by first major. **Elementary Education majors with concentration in Special Education. ***Evening College majors are not included in this total. Source: Registrar 1983-84 1984-85 178 1 7 179 132 - - - - 154 31 2 96 7 161 26 3 - 10 162 35 205 97 16 23 13 3 2 54 49 1 1 3 12 III 10 7 208 26 212 115 18 21 11 2 3 87 48 3 2 - - - 132 84 122 66 - 186 3 13 28 7 165 112 224 31 162 108 15 - 11 3 1 77 46 3 1 1 16 182 45 - - - 142 155 7 43 7 151 116 13 24 4 133 110 - 6 4 5 5 8 1 123 29 1 161 7 4 7 4 13 6 - 15 6 1985-86 108 1 6 8 86 16 1 87 13 218 42 202 170 12 - 4 1986-87 144 9 21 104 12 3 34 20 238 59 192 192 20 2 6 2 50 71 41 5 4 15 201 9 186 81 8 77 77 2 22 160 141 10 45 4 140 130 5 2 4 52 6 155 130 3 6 10 4 1 30 7 - - - - 48 18 11 49 95 1 10 2 39 15 3 23 91 4 9 14 27 13 - 26 15 1 42 106 1 10 6 136 7 9 9 143 4 3 6 2,134 2,147 2,057 2,133 2,152 Students 37 Undergraduate Degrees Conferred By School and by Major 1985 A&S --­ B.S. A.B. Accounting American Studies Art History - Biochemistry Biology Chemistry - I - 123 29 Classics Com pu tel' Science Early Childhood Education Early Childhood & Special Education Economics Elementary Education English Finance French General Management Geology Geophysics German History Sociology Spanish Special Education/Alternative Environlnents Special Education/Elementary Education Speech Communication Speech Theater Studio An Theology Total' - 4 - 210 - - 14 31 - - - - - 15 - 108 11 I - - - - 24 - 4 133 110 - 27 13 - - I - 988 171 - - 8 86 16 I 34 - - 4 224 - Nur5. B.S. - 108 - 108 6 9 - - 8 86 16 - 21 104 12 1 87 13 3 13 - - 20 - 218 225 - 59 192 - 42 202 170 12 20 - 53 13 209 - 31 162 108 195 15 II - - I 8 42 6 - - 170 I I 4 II Tolal A.B. B.S. SOM ll.S Nun., 144 - - - 9 - - 21 104 12 - - Tolal B.S 144 I - - - 21 - 3 34 20 13 23S - 59 192 192 - - (j - - 20 2 (; - 41 - 41 192 - 4 - 2 75 1 - - 46 3 1 5 - 16 182 - 1 16 182 - 45 - - - - - - 155 155 - - - - 13 - 13 24 - - - 42 4 133 110 - 4 140 127 - - - - - - - - I - - - - - - 15 201 - 76 1 - - 2 22 - - - I - - 27 13 26 12 42 106 1 132 6 - 10 - 6 9 7 151 592 155 2,057 1,116 - - 2 I 2 - 5 2 3 6 - - - 2 I 4 118 2 77 71 50 - 5 4 15 201 - 77 2 22 160 81 - - 10 45 5~ - - 4 14ll 130 155 130 - 5 2 - 3 6 - 26 15 30 7 - 136 7 143 4 - I - 9 9 3 I 6 - 158 581 160 2,133 1,149 149 I 9 186 8 - 81 S - 141 141 - 4 - - - I - 186 6 - 9 71 - - 160 10 2 - - - *Evening College majors are not included in this total. Source: Registrar I 50 15 6 10 6 6 - - Ed. A.B. SOM B.S. - 46 42 106 8 I 15 6 - I I 77 1 - - 161 7 45 - 132 A&S Ed. A.B. 3 - 3 B.S. - 3 - A.B. 123 29 I 77 Tolal - - 7 162 A&S I 127 --­ Secondary Education Severe Special Needs Slavic Studies - - I Quantitative Analysis Romance Languages Russian - - - Linguistics Management Marketing Physics Political Science Psychology 132 - I - Operations Management OI~anizationaJ Studies/Human esources Management Philosophy Nurs. B.S. 8 34 1987 1986 SOM B.S. - Human Development Independent Italian Mathematics Middle School Education Moderate Special Needs Nursing Ed. A.B. 10 4 4 52 - (; - 155 130 - III - - - - - 142 571 4 1 30 - 143 4 3 (; 141 2,152 38 Students Undergraduate and Graduate Degrees Conferred'" By Degree and by Sex Men Undergraduate College of Arts & Sciences A.B. B.S. Total Arts & Sciences School of Education-A.B. School of Nursing-B.S. School of Management-B.S. Subtotal Undergraduate Evening College-A.B. Total Undergraduate Degrees Conferred Graduate Ph.D. D.Ed. M.A. M.S. M.Ed. MAT. M.S.T. J.D. M.B.A. M.S.W. D.S.W. C.A.E.S. C.A.G.S. Total Graduate Degrees Conferred Total Undergraduate and Graduate Degrees *September-January-May Source: Registrar 1983-84 Women Total Men 1984-85 Women Total Men 1985-86 Women 568 84 -­ 652 137 150 281 1,220 79 -­ 991 171 1,162 151 155 589 2,057 129 -­ 493 79 572 10 3 329 1,014 51 -­ 612 45 657 -­ 143 157 262 1,219 89 -­ Total Men 1986-87 Women 1,105 124 1,229 153 160 591 2,133 140 -­ 495 90 585 -­ 5 2 302 894 58 -­ 654 59 713 -­ 137 139 269 1,258 86 -­ 1,149 149 -­ 1,298 142 141 571 2,152 144 Total 505 130 635 -­ 17 4 268 924 45 -­ 630 77 707 -­ 119 138 259 -­ 1,223 81 1,135 207 -­ 1,342 423 87 -­ 5/0 -­ -­ 136 142 527 2,147 126 14 5 308 837 50 969 1,304 2,273 887 1,299 2,186 965 1,308 2,273 952 1,344 2,296 50 3 58 15 18 36 4 103 83 82 4 31 5 58 22 34 3 164 107 22 2 6 43 127 63 87 4 74 5 185 85 121 7 137 65 80 14 301 172 102 2 20 -­ 41 2 123 75 /06 13 9 142 55 102 II I 17 275 134 127 5 19 -­ 2 9 - 36 3 62 18 21 5 2 133 79 25 4 2 77 5 185 93 127 18 I 37 5 129 68 98 6 4 100 58 67 10 185 81 126 I 30 5 56 13 28 5 2 143 83 26 - 2 132 78 19 4 -­ 10 - -­ 86 7 161 98 100 5 3 261 140 129 14 - 380 624 1,004 454 621 1,075 403 627 1,030 390 686 1,076 1,349 1,928 3,277 1,341 1,920 3,261 1,368 1,935 3,303 1,342 2,030 3,372 I I 129 62 I/O - - III II 6 243 141 137 2 20 I II I Students 39 Undergraduate and Graduate Financial Aid, 1982-1987 Thousands of Dollars Type of Aid - 1982-83 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86 1986-87 $ 7,694 1,331 1,743 836 1,936 2,509 $16,049 $ 9,715 1,812 $12,425 2,530 1,366 1,209 2,048 2,417 $21,994 $12,968 1,868 1,630 1,073 1,832 2,504 $18,566 $10,863 2,368 1,355 1,251 1,781 2,397 $20,015 $21,413 354 308 400 403 488 $16,891 570 $19,444 349 595 933 $20,959 713 $23,107 $22,749 1982-83 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86 1986-87 3,636 1,714 1,374 3,328 1,912 3,266 1,845 1,049 1,044 1,628 3,468 1,286 Undergraduate University Scholarships and Grants l State Scholarships 2 Pell Grants 3 Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants 4 Work-Study National Direct Student Loans 5 Undergraduate Total6 Type of Aid - Graduate Work-Study 5 National Direct Student Loans Total Undergraduate and Graduate 946 1,352 1,799 2,480 Number of Awards Type of Aid - Undergraduate University Scholarships and Grants l State Scholarshi ps 2 3,504 1,751 Pell Grants 3 Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants Work-Study National Direct Student Loans 5 Undergraduate Total 6 Type of Aid - Graduate Work-Study National Direct Student Loans 5 Total Undergraduate and Graduate ! I i 4 732 1,633 1,647 1,415 2,770 12,720 1,513 1,449 1,098 1,221 1,603 2,191 11,877 2,190 11,352 2,250 11,082 2,003 9,962 225 337 13,282 194 340 12,411 269 334 11,955 260 373 11,715 244 437 10,643 972 1,501 IThis statistic includes regular university scholarships and grants (through the operating budget), faculty kin tuition remission, minority scholar­ ships, athletic grants, Jesuit Reduction, Alumni Association Scholarships, and endowed monies for scholarships. "State scholarship funds to students from Massachusetts, Vermont, Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Maryland, Maine, New Hampshire. 'Students who are enrolled at least half-time in an undergraduate degree program are eligible to apply for these grants. Formerly Basic Educa­ tional Opportunity Grants, Pell Grants are awarded to students with need, and eligibility is determined directly by the Federal Government. 'Available to students enrolled at least half-time in an undergraduate degree program. These grants are awarded to students with exceptional need and are termed "last resort." ;Available to undergraduates and graduates enrolled at least half-time. These loan funds are obtained by Federal Government contributions, Boston College contributions and collections of previous loans awarded. The loans have up to a 10-year repayment period with an interest rate of 5% per year on the unpaid balance. 6This is a duplicated total since some students receive more than one type of aid. NOTE: In an effort to minimize statistical detail, the above data does not include Boston College graduate student assistance (approximately $3,715,291 in 1986-87) administered by the various schools and departments. Also excluded are the Nursing Loan Program ($97,100 in 1986-87), a variety of government fellowships or scholarships from fraternal organizations and clubs ($1,484,674 in 1986-87), and Higher Education Loans processed by the hnancial Aid Office and disbursed by banks ($14,336,558 in 1986-87), all of which are open to both undergraduate and graduate students. (In addition, the University processed parental loans totaling $3,018,837 from banks and the Massachusetts Education Loan Authority.) Source: Financial Aid Office. 40 Students Health Services Number of Students Served 1982·83 1983·84 1984·85 1985·86 1986-87 19,506 19,840 17,474 19,841 Total Visits to Nurse Practitioner 1,889 2,596 4,980 19,108 2,539 Total Visits to R.N. 7,594 7,693 7,182 8,385 7,887 Grand Totals Total Visits to M.D. 2,850 652 601 710 693 -­ --­ 100 1,442 219 1,118 -­ 247 1,106 29,406 30,781 31,779 32,079 32,624 283 273 266 243 251 -389 ­ -­ 424 350 - 396 ­ - 347 ­ 672 1,576 7.3 2.3 216 697 1,542 7.2 2.2 215 616 1,373 6.3 2.2 216 639 1,407 6.4 2.5 218 598 1,401 5.7 2.2 217 Total Visits to Non-Professionals for First Aid 417 Total Visits to Nutritionist Total Visits to Physical Therapist Total -_. - Infirmary* Admissions: Men Women Total Total Patient Days Average Daily Census Average Length of Stay (days) Number of Days in Full Operation "Included in Grand TOlals Source: Health Services Office 44 Alumni Boston College Alumni Clubs Albany Arizona Cape Cod Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Dallas Denver Fairfield County Georgia Hartford Houston Los Angeles Maine Merrimack Valley Miami/Ft. Lauderdale Mid-Hudson Minnesota New Haven New Jersey New York North Shore Northern California (San Francisco) Palm Beach Philadelphia Puerto Rico Rhode Island Rochester Saint Louis San Diego Seattle Syracuse Tampa/St. Petersburg Vermont Washington, D.C. Western Massachusetts Western Pennsylvania Wisconsin Worcester Source: Alumni Association Alumni Association Board of Directors With Committee Assignments 1987-1988 Marie J. Kelleher, '55, G '69 President John J. O'Connell, D.D.S., '55 Vice President/President-elect, Awards William J. Sullivan, Jr., '60 Treasurer, Communications/Public Relations Kathleen Brennan McMenimen, '66 Secretary, Classes Alison Mitchell McKee, '81 Clubs Carole Ward McNamara, NC '60 Women Maura L. Noone, '85 Young Alumni Charles A. Polachi, Jr., MBA '82 Graduate School of Management Alumni Association Leon R. Stamps, '75 Career Services Boston College Alumni Association Frances Anhut, NC '75 Social Activities, Nominations 1987 Awards Ceremony William E. Bennett HI, '64 Admissions The William V. McKenney Award Charles F. Donovan, S.]., '33 Craig D. Carlson, '77 Career Services, Communications/Public Relations Awards of Excellence Arts & Humanities Rev. Carney E. Gavin, '59 John P. Connor, Jr., Esq., '65, L '68 Nominations, Annual Fund George A. Downey, '61 Spiritual/Charitable Religion Rabbi Kenneth B. Block, '68 Science Dr. Robert L. Anstey H, '65, M.A. '67, Ph.D. '70 J. Public Service Margaret G. Deveney, M.S.W. '46 J. Commerce Dr. James T. Vanderslice, '62 Barry Driscoll, '52 Nominations Russell Gannon, EC '82 Evening College Alumni Association Michael R. Gee, '76 Clubs James A. Hardeman, MSW '73 AHANA Richard T. Horan, '53 Nominations, Athletics, Communications/Public Relations, Priests Program Katherine Kasper, '82 Young Alumni Ellen C. Kearns, Esq., L '76 Law School Alumni Association Edward C. Lambert, '43 Continuing Education Suzanne M. Lavin, '87 Student Alumni Council Robert C. Mahoney, '57, MSW '60 School of Social Work Alumni Association Education Dr. Morris E. Blitz, '37 Young Alumni Achievement Award Robert B. Goldsmith, '77 Alumni Alumni Comparative Regional Analysis Alumni Geographic Analysis by State Fall 1987 Fall 1987 Massachusetts Metropolitan Boston: Alabama 82 59 Alaska Arizona 262 Arkansas 25 Califomia* 2,821 Colorado 332 Connecticu t 4,919 Delaware 145 District of Columbia 586 Florida 1,558 Georgia 405 Guam 3 Hawaii 141 Idaho 22 1,172 lllinois Indiana 186 Iowa 64 71 Kansas III Kentucky 156 Louisiana 1,074 Maine 1,521 Maryland 48,592 Massachusetts 519 Michigan 259 Minnesota 28 Mississippi 274 Missouri Montana 27 61 Nebraska Postal Areas 01701-02009 02101-02215 Outside Metropolitan Boston Total Massachusetts Alumni New England Connecticut Maine New Hampshire Rhode Island Vermont Total New England Outside Massachusetts Massachusetts Total New England Total Outside New England Total Alumni Source: Information Services, University Relations 11,929 22,620 14,043 48,592 4,919 1,074 2,242 2,041 409 10,685 --­ 48,592 59,277 --­ 32,017 91,294 Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York* North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Puerto Rico Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Virgin Islands Washington* West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Total U.S. Foreign Nations Other Total Alumni 45 44 2,242 3,403 88 6,911 337 10 877 76 108 1,590 221 2,041 105 15 141 755 41 409 1,481 27 282 39 248 15 --­ 86,981 1,313 3,000 --­ 91,294 *Califomia, New York and Washington include APO addresses. NOTE: Also included are individuals who attended Boston College for at least one year without graduating. These alumni are referred to as "EX Alumni" (see pages 46-49). Double- and triple-degreed alumni are counted by their primary (or first-received) degree only. Source: Information Services, University Relations 46 Alumni Living Alumni By Primary School, Fall 1987 Class A.&S. 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 S.O.M. - 1901 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 Ed. - - - S.O.N. Evening College - - - - Newlon College Grad. A.&S. - - - - 3 1916 1917 1918 1919 6 3 5 3 1920 1921 1922 1923 9 12 17 21 1924 1925 1926 1927 21 31 63 63 1928 1929 1930 1931 71 78 82 110 1932 1933 1934 1935 109 132 150 164 1936 1937 1938 1939 142 164 171 208 1940 1941 1942 1943 228 187 190 204 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 44 43 - - - - - - 2 8 I - 12 10 - II - 13 1 - - - 2 10 7 10 14 17 22 15 15 27 31 24 36 30 22 - - - - - - - - - - - - - 10 23 29 22 - - - - 16 18 14 28 - 23 17 26 11 - - - - - - - - - Tolal - - - - Women Men Tolal - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1904 1905 1906 1907 - 1908 1909 1910 1911 - - - - - - - - 2 2 5 3 8 5 10 6 - - 18 15 22 17 5 6 10 7 - Class - - 1901 1902 1903 3 3 1912 1913 1914 1915 4 3 8 4 6 3 8 5 10 6 1916 1917 1918 1919 27 28 40 38 9 8 16 12 18 20 24 26 27 28 40 38 1920 1921 1922 1923 18 26 29 32 44 63 105 110 17 15 19 32 27 48 86 78 44 63 105 110 1924 1925 1926 1927 9 6 5 12 31 38 51 56 124 134 159 198 31 38 58 54 93 96 101 144 124 134 159 198 1928 1929 1930 1931 50 58 68 57 192 251 290 286 41 65 76 70 151 186 214 216 192 251 290 286 1932 1933 1934 1935 - 3 I - 5 10 15 - II 8 14 11 10 11 6 18 21 18 27 7 3 1 2 46 66 53 76 244 287 295 378 48 48 54 80 196 239 241 298 244 287 295 378 1936 1937 1938 1939 9 15 10 12 27 22 12 17 2 2 2 1 67 46 65 70 380 325 379 380 63 64 73 60 317 261 306 320 380 325 379 380 1940 1941 1942 1943 - EX Alumni - - - - Weelon Thea. - - - 1 - - Law - - I - Social Work - - - Grad. S.O.M. Alumni 47 Living Alumni By Primary School, (Continued) Class A.&S. 1944 1945 1946 1947 163 102 15 132 1948 1949 1950 1951 160 395 792 751 1952 1953 1954 1955 465 396 341 289 1956 1957 1958 1959 299 321 368 358 1960 1961 1962 1963 S.O.M. Ed. - 49 21 2 22 S.O.N. - Evening College 11 14 25 19 Newton College - Grad. A.&S. 4 8 20 29 25 37 41 18 34 21 50 33 28 30 52 66 89 - 296 254 225 196 70 75 112 121 54 51 61 73 29 39 20 37 57 114 133 113 137 97 130 121 283 255 350 344 119 128 168 150 72 60 62 77 36 50 57 75 327 284 322 475 130 93 128 167 343 287 242 331 203 154 187 168 129 72 91 61 1964 1965 1966 1967 479 424 442 453 185 181 182 198 356 358 344 380 134 146 217 181 1968 1969 1970 1971 552 543 531 533 280 234 233 285 418 399 354 385 1972 1973 1974 1975 615 610 963 926 283 252 323 298 1976 1977 1978 1979 1156 1032 1213 1108 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 - 75 91 305 339 Grad. S.O.M. - Social Work Law Weslon Theo. EX Alumni Tolal Women Men Tolal Class 10 9 15 21 6 5 12 23 1 1 1 3 68 159 38 47 312 319 128 . 296 33 36 48 58 279 283 80 238 312 319 128 296 1944 1945 1946 1947 24 25 25 27 41 73 81 97 2 1 5 5 15 37 63 87 365 733 1428 1514 62 127 174 204 303 606 1254 1310 365 733 1428 1514 1948 1949 1950 1951 I 24 34 28 26 80 61 53 47 1 2 3 48 41 67 35 1124 1066 1042 940 183 239 275 282 941 827 767 658 1124 1066 1042 940 1952 1953 1954 1955 117 100 132 120 - 28 27 24 30 58 62 58 71 5 4 3 17 81 80 130 107 1235 1184 1482 1470 390 347 470 439 845 837 1012 1031 1235 1184 1482 1470 1956 1957 1958 1959 96 102 123 139 197 158 105 251 2 8 26 30 33 33 40 32 60 79· 91 76 18 38 22 29 45 28 47 44 1583 1336 1424 1803 580 469 548 651 1003 867 876 1152 1583 1336 1424 1803 1960 1961 1962 1963 75 78 74 83 186 132 158 150 216 232 258 413 25 34 42 53 46 50 49 57 80 106 112 92 34 41 36 32 61 51 43 48 1877 1833 1957 2140 677 612 746 796 1200 1221 1211 1344 1877 1833 1957 2140 1964 1965 1966 1967 142 118 146 161 64 85 93 67 183 188 208 174 371 513 475 520 49 45 98 75 51 51 59 85 116 135 115 146 28 36 48 67 53 55 2302 2414 2365 2486 824 909 973 1013 1478 1505 1392 1473 2302 2414 2365 2486 1968 1969 1970 1971 395 317 383 331 137 152 153 207 78 71 79 108 253 244 200 210 567 505 409 546 59 60 66 71 88 79 98 111 173 198 200 175 22 60 49 41 11 2730 2537 2915 2994 1126 1098 1364 1604 1604 1439 1551 1390 2730 2537 2915 2994 1972 1973 1974 1975 365 291 256 221 491 452 454 503 227 162 169 195 86 74 94 107 5 - 584 418 483 457 73 71 78 108 101 104 92 112 204 219 193 220 - 4 1 2 3 3296 2824 3034 3034 1709 1539 1554 1672 1587 1285 1480 1362 3296 2824 3034 3034 1976 1977 1978 1979 1185 1178 1242 1266 171 208 196 165 470 560 559 561 201 173 177 181 95 91 109 142 482 500 519 420 115 128 122 120 120 90 98 131 228 236 210 228 1 3068 3165 3236 3215 1709 1767 1873 1956 1359 1398 1363 1259 3068 3165 3236 3215 1980 1981 1982 1983 1365 1162 1248 1249 146 143 149 141 548 578 582 557 139 144 149 133 126 136 137 117 - 366 424 419 246 126 133 134 104 118 95 128 113 235 263 221 218 - - 3172 3082 3167 2878 1821 1839 1863 1724 1351 1243 1304 1154 3172 3082 3167 2878 1984 1985 1986 1987 TOTAL 30,877 6,389 15,132 5,702 3,608 3,155 12,533 2,055 2,704 5,660 514 2,965 91,294 39,442 51,852 91,294 Source: Information Services, University Relations - - - I 4 1 3 4 TOTAL 48 Alumni Alumni Donors By Primary School and Class, 1986-1987 Class A.&S. Ed. - 1919 1920 1921 1922 5 2 5 3 7 1923 1924 1925 1926 7 13 8 32 1927 1928 1929 1930 33 40 33 43 1931 1932 1933 1934 66 51 64 78 1935 1936 1937 1938 79 62 1915 1916 1917 1918 S.O.M. S.O.N. - Evening College - Newton College Grad. A.&S. - - - I - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - III - 79 - - 1939 1940 1941 1942 108 119 90 103 - - 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949 1950 - - - I - 2 - 2 2 I I - 5 - 6 6 - - - I - 16 - 4 90 73 55 5 - 25 26 10 - 45 67 161 284 - II - 35 32 136 - I - 3 3 4 8 10 2 5 8 4 - - - - - - - - - - 2 - - - I 3 7 - - 4 - 4 4 2 5 3 - 4 - I 3 I 2 3 2 6 - I I - 3 - 4 7 9 II Law - - 2 13 - Social Work - - - Grad. S.O.M. Weston Theo. - EX Alumni I I - - - - - Total Alumni Donors I 6 2 Class 1915 1916 1917 1918 - 2 - - I I I 7 4 9 8 14 12 33 - - 2 6 4 3 35 46 39 47 1927 1928 1929 1930 2 - I - 6 7 10 13 76 62 80 103 1931 1932 1933 1934 6 5 18 5 92 76 142 100 1935 1936 1937 1938 12 10 6 8 139 149 110 149 1939 1940 1941 1942 132 121 93 28 1943 1944 1945 1946 81 131 258 505 1947 1948 1949 1950 - 4 I 6 9 6 - I I I 4 7 8 6 9 - 2 6 2 4 5 - - 5 - 8 12 21 6 8 6 9 5 6 - 5 3 .8 I - I II 28 34 1919 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 Alumni 49 Alumni Donors By Primary School and Class, (Continued) Class A.&S. Evening College Newton College Grad. A.&S. Grad. S.O.M. Social Work Weston Theo. Ed. S.O.M. S.O.N. 12 17 21 35 10 21 12 19 6 6 7 3 24 7 18 30 - 5 9 8 2 37 29 22 18 - Law EX Alumni Total Alumni Donors Class 1951 1952 1953 1954 1951 1952 1953 1954 314 180 143 118 - 116 123 91 83 10 539 395 327 318 1955 1956 1957 1958 113 119 118 126 37 21 34 59 96 82 104 34 32 40 41 16 18 19 14 7 6 20 12 18 18 16 22 - 3 4 3 6 15 21 21 23 - 5 16 6 5 270 367 346 387 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 110 118 83 119 34 45 21 48 110 122 92 105 40 64 48 76 22 22 15 25 26 28 18 48 12 28 27 14 2 3 9 8 12 8 5 26 22 26 40 2 2 - 3 8 6 3 393 472 349 492 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 145 176 157 153 57 51 51 46 105 124 139 141 56 31 29 54 21 15 21 21 26 49 28 24 24 23 24 33 6 8 5 16 6 13 10 9 35 28 39 44 2 6 I I I I 4 489 520 508 543 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 185 200 186 193 65 71 54 64 159 153 139 133 58 37 25 31 26 15 19 27 46 38 34 40 62 53 65 55 23 18 17 25 10 9 10 10 50 54 63 50 4 3 4 5 5 6 - I 693 656 622 629 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 191 189 172 282 70 76 61 72 155 141 126 136 34 41 36 35 16 20 15 29 41 32 29 30 69 61 53 43 23 18 18 20 II - 13 9 7 57 76 84 72 4 6 3 2 671 674 606 728 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 204 269 312 290 59 66 60 47 94 163 188 145 44 53 43 49 30 14 22 15 46 - 45 63 45 54 16 22 15 26 10 8 6 2 80 55 94 75 - - 628 713 785 703 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 283 270 274 291 38 34 41 37 155 154 190 169 40 37 41 30 19 17 31 39 - 41 50 43 49 36 40 35 36 9 9 4 8 75 63 85 65 - - 696 675 744 724 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 226 217 159 161 29 18 12 29 25 16 17 49 28 23 30 - 39 33 23 16 36 38 36 33 II 5 2 - 59 53 61 39 - II 149 148 121 87 - - 628 565 454 394 1983 1984 1985 1986 8,867 1,430 4,889 1,369 835 1,378 580 324 1,905 25 328 22,593 TOTAL Source: Information Services, University Relations - 663 I I - I 15 3 5 I I I TOTAL 50 Alumni Gifts to the University* Total Volunteer Giving, 1984-1987 Source Alumni Parents Friends Corporations Matching Gifts Foundations Planned Giving Associations Total Gifts Gifts Gifts 1984-1985 1985-1986 1986-1987 $4,060,853 $ 4,131,164 1,100,176 711,112 1,789,915 624,515 1,165,383 1,072,127 502,193 $11,096,585 $ 7,258,561 1,095,528 772,397 768,351 598,997 405,758 -** 330,541 $11,230,133 1,187,481 485,097 569,268 511,681 488,939 540,499 502,193 $8,346,011 *Gifts represent cash received as of 5/31/87 **As of 1986-1987, Planned Giving is no longer reported as a separate category. These gifts are now re­ ported within those categories appropriate to the type of donor. Source: Office of Development Individual Donors* By Giving Club Giving Club Level of Gift President's Circle Gasson Society FIDES $5,000 + $2,500-$4,999 $1,000-$2,499** Tower Builders John Bapst Associates McElroy Associates Other Annual Fund Total Individual Donors 1982-83 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86 1986-87 135 167 217 249 64 - - - $500-$999 866 359 764 3764 14,953 1109 441 961 1102 457 $250-$499 $100-$249 $1-$99 941 415 1093 287 93 1171 459 1182 1139 5401 12,294 20,311 4466 14,998 5148 14,708 22,192 22,910 5032 17,262 25,443 *Includes only alumni, parents and friends. **Prior to 1985-86, gift levels for Fides were $1,000-$4,999. Source: Office of Development 20,841 54 Physical Plant Buildings Related to Boston College Operations Location and Primary Use Fall 1987 Name Alumni Stadium Bapst Library Barat House Barry Fine Arts Pavilion Bea Housel Botolph House Bourneuf House Brock House Campion HalF Canisius Housel Carney Hall Cheverus Hall Claver Hall Connolly Faculty Center Cottage and Garage Cushing Hall Cushing House Daly House' Devlin Hall Donaldson House Duchesne East Duchesne West Edmond's Hall Faber House Fenwick Hall Fitzpatrick Hall William J. Flynn Student Recreation Complex Fulton Hall Gasson Hall Gonzaga Hall Greycliff Hall Gym (Newton) Haley House Hancock House Hardey House Higgins Hall Hillside A Hillside B Hillside C (Renamed Ru benstein Hall) Hillside D Hopkins House Hovey House Kenny-Cottle Library Keyes North Keyes South Kostka Hall Primary Use Date Constructed or Acquired Lower Campus Middle Campus 885 Centre Street 885 Centre Street 176 Commonwealth Avenue 18 Old Colony Road 84 College Road 78 College Road Middle Campus 67 Lee Road Middle Campus 127 Hammond Street 40 Tudor Road 300 Hammond Street 885 Centre Street Middle Campus 885 Centre Street 262 Beacon Street Middle Campus 90 College Road 885 Centre Street 885 Centre Street 200 St. Thomas More Drive 102 College Road 46 Tudor Road 137 Hammond Street Sports Library Jesuit Residence & Administrative Academic & Administrative Jesuit Residence Administrative Administrative Administrative Academic & Administrative Jesuit Residence Academic & Administrative Student Residence Student Residence Academic Residence Academic & Administrative Student Residence Jesuit Residence Academic & Administrative Administrative Student Residence Student Residence Student Residence Academic Student Residence Student Residence 1957 1928 1974 1974 1965 1967 1985 1972 1955 1966 1962 1960 1955 1975 1974 1960 1974 1981 1924 1975 1974 1974 1975 1938 1960 1960 Lower Campus Middle Campus Middle Campus 149 Hammond Street 2051 Commonwealth Avenue 885 Centre Street 314 Hammond Street 223 Beacon Street 885 Centre Street Middle Campus 100 Commonwealth Avenue 100 Commonwealth Avenue Sports & Administrative Academic & Administrative Academic & Administrative Student Residence Student Residence Gymnasium Academic Academic Student Residence Academic & Administrative Student Residence Student Residence 1972 1948 1913 1958 1969 1974 1969 1907 1974 1966 1973 1973 90 Commonwealth Avenue 116 College Road 258 Hammond Street 885 Centre Street 885 Centre Street 885 Centre Street 149 Hammond Street Student Residence Administrative Academic & Administrative Library Student Residence Student Residence Student Residence 1973 1968 1971 1974 1974 1974 1957 Location Physical Plant 55 Buildings Related to Boston College Operations (Continued) Name Lawrence House Loyola Hall Lyons Hall McElroy Commons 2 McGuinn Hall Medeiros Townhouses Mill Street Cottage Modular Apartments Murray House O'Connell Hall Thomas P. O'Neill, Jr. Library Parking Garage Putnam Center Rahner House Roberts Center Robsham Theater Arts Center Roncalli Hall Rubenstein Hall Service Building Shaw House Commander Shea Field Southwell Hall St. Mary's HalP St. Mary's House St. Thomas More Hall James W. Smith Wing Stuart House (Law School) Trinity Chapel (Newton) Michael P. Walsh Hall Welch Hall Weston Observatory 4 Williams Hall Xavier Hall Location 122 College Road 42 Tudor Road Middle Campus Middle Campus Middle Campus 60 Tudor Road 29 Mill Street Lower Campus 292 Hammond Street 185 Hammond Street Middle Campus 2599 Beacon Street 885 Centre Street 96 College Road Middle Campus Lower Campus 182 Hammond Street 90 Commonwealth Avenue Middle Campus 377 Beacon Street Lower Campus 38 Commonwealth Avenue Middle Campus 885 Centre Street St. Thomas More Drive 885 Centre Street 885 Centre Street 885 Centre Street 150 St. Thomas More Drive 200 Hammond Street Weston, MA 143 Hammond Street 44 Tudor Road 36 College Road 72 College Road 66 Commonwealth Avenues 31 Lawrence Avenue 55 Lee Road Primary Use Date Constructed or Acquired Administrative Student Residence Academic & Administrative Student Services & Administrative Academic & Administrative Student Residence Residence Student Residence Commuter Center Student Union Central Research Library General Use Parking Facility Administrative Administrative Academic, Administrative & Gym Student Services & Academic Student Residence Student Residence Administrative & Trade Shops Student Residence Baseball Diamond Administrative Jesuit Residence Academic & Administrative Administrative Academic & Administrative Academic & Administrative Chapel Student Residence & Dining Facility Student Residence Research & Administrative Student Residence Student Residence Administrative Administrative Student Residence Academic Residence 1968 1955 1951 1960 1968 1971 1974 1970 1967 1938 1984 1979 1974 1952 1958 1981 1965 1973 1948 1962 1960 1937 1917 1974 1955 1974 1974 1974 1980 1965 1948 1965 1955 1974 1970 1985 1979 1978 'Rented to Jesuit Community of Boston College. 'Student Services in McElroy Commons include bookstore, dining halls, mail room, U.S. Post Office. 'Owned by the Jesuit Community of Boston College. 'Land rented from the New England Province of the Society of Jesus. Building owned by Boston College. "Leased from Baptist Home of Massachusetts. Source: Space Planning and Utilization 56 Physical Plant Boston College Properties Fall 1987 Square Feet Upper Campus Roncalli, Welch, and Williams O'Connell and Upper Campus Dormitories -- Acres 137,446 472,838 3.1 10.9 610,284 14.0 Middle Campus Area bounded by Beacon Street, Lower Campus Road, College Road, and Commonwealth Avenue-including Hillside & Southwell 18 Old Colony Road (Botolph) 122 College Road (Lawrence) 116 College Road (Hopkins) 102 College Road (Faber) 96 College Road (Rahner) 90 College Road (Donaldson) 84 College Road (Bourneuf) 78 College Road (Brock) 72 College Road 36 College Road 176 Commonwealth (Bea) 1,677,845 17,346 9,579 7,349 7,191 6,463 7,960 7,460 6,308 7,100 9,126 18,184 38.5 0.4 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.4 Total Middle Campus 1,781,911 40.9 2,279,266 52.3 156,575 -3.6 ­ 55.9 -­ 110.8 Total Upper Campus Lower Campus Area bounded by Lower Campus Road, Beacon Street, anr1 St. Thomas More Drive (excluding MDC property) 2150 Commonwealth Avenue (St. Thomas More Hall) Total Lower Campus 2,435,841 Total Upper, Middle and Lower Campuses 4,828,036 Newton Campus 1,751,112 Total Chestnut Hill and Newton Campuses 6,579,148 Outlying Properties Newton 262 Beacon Street (Daly) 258 Hammond Street (Hovey) 292 Hammond Street (Murray) 300 Hammond Street (Connolly) 314 Hammond Street (Haley) 31 Lawrence Avenue 67 Lee Road (Canisius) 55 Lee Road 19,793 178,390 50,554 70,767 55,710 13,109 10,436 16,032 414,791 Boston 2051 Commonwealth (Greycliff) Total Properties Owned by Boston College 40.2 -­ 151.0 0.5 4.1 1.2 1.6 1.3 0.3 0.2 0.4 -­ 9.6 4,623 0.1 6,998,562 160.7 NOTE: The above statistics do not include rented properties used in University operations. Source: Buildings and Grounds Physical Plant 57 Facility Capacities Fall 1987 Facility Athletics Alumni Stadium: Sporting Events Field Seating William J. Flynn Student Recreation Complex Roberts Center: Sporting Events Floor Seating Auditoriums Barry Fine Arts Pavilion 223 Cushing Hall 001 Devlin Hall 008 Fulton Hall 412 Gasson Hall 305 Higgins Hall 304 Higgins Hall 307 McGuinn Hall 121 Robsham Theater Arts Center Stuart Hall 411 Stuart Hall 315 Conference Rooms Murray Conference Room Roberts Lounge Trustees' Board Room Dining Halls· Eagle's Nest Faculty Dining Room Lyons Cafeteria McElroy Dining Hall Newton Campus Cafeteria Newton Campus Snack Bar Walsh Hall Dining Facilities: Dining Room Golden Lantern Function Rooms Houses Barat House Haley House Hovey House O'Connell Hall Lounges Devlin 103 McGuinn 3rd Floor Lounge McGuinn 5th Floor Lounge MUlti-Purpose Campion Gym Gasson T-100 Newton Chapel Robsham Theater Location Lecture Seating Dinner Seating Receptionl Standing 32,000 3,000 4,000 2,500 4,000 4,000 800 550 Lower Campus Lower Campus Middle Campus Newton Campus Middle Campus Middle Campus Middle Campus Middle Campus Middle Campus Middle Campus Middle Campus Lower Campus Newton Campus Newton Campus 322 224 104 160 160 266 591 130 178 McElroy Commons St. Thomas More Hall McElroy Commons 100 30 40 330 177 McElroy Commons McElroy Commons Lyons Hall McElroy Commons Stuart House Stuart House Michael P. Walsh Hall Newton Campus 314 Hammond Street 258 Hammond Street 185 Hammond Street 200 75 40 450 125 500 900 250 200 518 (360) (108) ( 50) 50 25 25 12 20 100 200 Middle Campus Middle Campus Middle Campus 300 Middle Campus Middle Campus Newton Campus Kresge Room & Lobby 300 300 500 200 50 50 300 75 75 200 400 200 *Capacities shown for dining facilities are those used for function seating, and therefore differ from capacities for student dining. Note: University facilities are available for function purposes through the Bureau of Conferences and/or the primary user responsible for the facility. All facilities are not available to all groups. The capacity figures are those used by the Bureau of Conferences in determining appropriate space needs for functions being scheduled. Source: Bureau of Conferences 58 Physical Plant Dining Facilities Fall 1987 Location Name Capacity The Club Eagle's Nest Snack Bar O'Connell House McElroy Commons Faculty Dining Room Lyons Cafeteria McElroy Commons 56 450 146 365 625 Lyons Hall McElroy Commons McElroy Commons· Stuart House McElroy Dining Hall McElroy Cafe Newton Campus Cafeteria Newton Campus Snack Bar Trustees' Board Room Walsh Hall Dining Facilities 96 360 185 40 500 Stuart House McElroy Commons Michael P. Walsh Hall Total Capacity 2,823 Source: Dining Department Offices Fall 1987 Building Offices Building Offices Building Offices Fulton Hall Gasson Hall Higgins Hall Offices Newton Campus Chestnut Hill Campus Botolph House Bourneuf House Brock House Campion Hall Carney Hall Cushing Hall Devlin Hall Donaldson House Building 10 9 7 56 234 67 40 7 110 30 54 Hillside B Hillside D Hovey House Hopkins House Lawrence House Lyons Hall McElroy Commons 3 7 10 11 11 99 McGuinn Hall 32 188 Murray House 3 O'Neill Library Rahner 45 6 *In addition to 17 offices, Weston Observatory houses 12 laboratories. Source: Space Planning and Utilization Roberts Center 24 12 26 26 8 Barat House Barry Fine Arts Pavilion Kenny-Cottle Library James W. Smith Wing Stuart House St. Mary's House 9 Subtotal Rubenstein Hall Service Building Southwell Hall St. Thomas More Hall ll5 31 Lawrence Avenue 8 72 College Road 84 College Road -­ Subtotal 1,267 7 25 II 21 65 - ­3 132 Weston Observatory* -­ Total Offices 1,416 17 Physical Plant 59 Classrooms Summary of Building Use Fall 1987 Fall 1987 Building Number of Classrooms Stations Building Use 5 13 25 11 2 13 18 6 1 7 12 9 14 2 490 567 1,107 712 373 945 883 549 125 316 512 444 798 606 -- Student Residences l Administrative 138 8,427 Barry Campion Carney Cushing Devlin Fulton Gasson Higgins Kenny-Cottle Library Lyons McGuinn O'Neill Library Stuart Theater Arts Center Total Source: Space Planning and Utilization - Number of Buildings Academic and Administrative 2 24 13 20 Jesuit Residence Miscellaneous Uses 17 Total 79 'Keyes North and South = 1, Duchesne East and West A&B = 1, Hillside C&D = 1, Modulars = 1 2Includes Weston Observatory. 3Includes gymnasiums, libraries, student union, etc. Source: Space Planning and Utilization 5 = 1, Hillside 60 Physical Plant Residence Hall Capacities 1987-1988 I J I Residence Hall Address living Units Students Staff" } Total \1 Chestnut Hill Campus l I Upper Campus Cheverus Claver Fenwick Fitzpatrick Gonzaga Kostka Loyola Medeiros Townhouses Roncalli Shaw Welch Williams Xavier f 127 Hammond Street 40 Tudor Road 46 Tudor Road 137 Hammond Street 149 Hammond Street 149 Hammond Street 42 Tudor Road 60 Tudor Road 182 Hammond Street 377 Beacon Street 200 Hammond Street 142 Hammond Street 44 Tudor Road 67 40 73 73 78 80 51 50 69 7 77 72 40 -­ 777 133 76 139 141 151 156 96 98 134 19 153 141 76 -­ 1,513 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 2 3 1 3 3 3 -­ 36 136 79 142 144 154 159 99 100 137 20 156 144 79 1,549 Newton Campus Cushing Duchesne East Duchesne West Hardey Keyes North Keyes South Total ..Assistant Directors not included. Source: Housing Office :[ ,l ) II I; !I ,\ i;: 'r '! " l II ]! \. !i 1 ! I, j il i,l. Lower Campus Greycliff Edmond's Hall Hillside A Hillside B Hillside D Modulars Michael P. Walsh Hall Rubenstein Hall 66 Commonwealth Avenue f,1 2051 Commonwealth Avenue 200 St. Thomas More Drive 100 Commonwealth Avenue 100 Commonwealth Avenue 90 Commonwealth Avenue St. Thomas More Drive 150 St. Thomas More Drive 90 Commonwealth Avenue 66 Commonwealth Avenue 27 205 36 29 36 86 139 30 124 712 38 788 210 152 188 498 783 174 140 -­ 2,971 2 9 3 2 2 9 16 3 4 -­ 50 40 797 213 154 190 507 799 177 144 -­ 3,021 65 65 72 96 76 57 -­ 431 119 132 131 172 143 105 802 4 4 4 4 5 3 -­ 24 123 136 135 176 148 108 826 1,920 5,286 110 5,396 I\' :\ II III 1 1 H :1 ,~ ~ l ,1 885 885 885 885 885 885 Centre Centre Centre Centre Centre Centre Street Street Street Street Street Street .' ~ 64 Finance Highlights of Financial Operations For the Five Years Ending May 31, 1987 (Dollars in Millions) 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 $ 69.4 12.6 13.2 24.4 $1l9.6 $ 79.4 11.8 13.4 28.6 --$133.2 $ 86.9 12.4 17.9 33.9 $151.1 $ 96.2 12.8 21.4 33.4 $163.8 $104.9 13.6 22.0 36.8 $177.3 $ 39.3 4.4 3.8 4.8 8.8 11.2 12.8 23.0 11.3 $1l9.4 $ 42.0 4.7 3.5 4.7 9.3 12.5 15.0 24.1 17.2 $133.0 $ 45.9 6.6 3.6 5.9 10.4 14.9 15.9 29.6 18.1 $150.9 $ 48.7 7.2 3.5 5.9 9.5 17.3 18.2 31.5 21.1 --$162.9 $ 53.0 8.0 3.8 6.7 10.2 20.4 18.8 35.1 19.8 $175.8 Revenues Tuition and Fees Contracts and Grants Gifts, Investments and Other* Auxiliary Enterprises** Total Revenue Expenditures and Transfers Instruction Libraries Sponsored Research Student Services Plant Maintenance General Administration Student Aid/Loans Auxiliary Enterprises** Other Transfers (Net)* Total Expenditures and Transfers * Gifts and Other Transfers include gifts restricted to Endowments and Plant Funds. ** Auxiliary enterprises have been restated to include Organized Activities for the years 1983-1987. Source: Office of the Controller Boston College Tuition Restated in 1967 Dollars Academic Year Consumer Price Index' 1978-79 1979-80 1980-81 1981-82 1982-83 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86 1986-87 1987-88 202.9 229.9 258.4 281.5 292.4 303.5 317.0 327.4 334.0 347.0** * CPI Tuition in Absolute Dollars 3,645 3,980 4,530 5,180 6,000 6,800 7,475 8,200 9,120 9,920 measured at December 31st of academic year. ** Estimate Source: Department of Commerce Economic Indicators, July 1987. Office of the Controller Tuition In 1967 Dollars 1,796 1,731 1,753 1,840 2,052 2,240 2,358 2,505 2,731 2,859** I I Finance 65 I ~ II ~ fi·r~ .:t ' :r il,ff i l~ ! :1 'f Tuition and Fees For the Ten Years Ending May 31, 1988 1979 Graduate Schools Arts & Sciences (per credit hour) l~ W Room Charge Per Student tf' 1982 1981 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 Undergraduate Schools Arts & Sciences, Education, Management, Nursing Evening College (per course) Summer Session (per credit hour) Law School Management (per credit hour) Social Work MSW part-time (per credit hour) DSW part-time (per credit hour) n ~ 1980 Upper Campus, South Street* Modulars Hillside-3 bedroom Hillside-2 bedroom Edmond's Hall (Reservoir) Newton 66 Commonwealth Avenue Pine Manor, St. Gabriel's Walsh Hall Board Per Student $3,645 $3,980 $4,530 $5,180 $6,000 $6,800 $7,475 $8,200 $9,120 $ 9,920 230 240 250 275 305 335 355 412 380 442 88 80 96 106 120 134 143 155 168 180 113 3,810 113 3,645 - 130 4,200 130 3,980 110 130 150 4,900 150 4,600 130 150 170 5,625 180 5,260 150 170 194 6,575 210 5,900 170 190 218 7,450 240 6,540 185 210 238 8,200 265 7,135 200 228 258 8,920 288 7,730 214 245 280 9,820 318 8,350 230 265 300 10,560 342 8,975 240 280 950 1,150 1,150 1,200 1,200 950 1,050 1,250 1,250 1,300 1,300 1,050 1,190 1,450 1,450 1,490 1,490 1,190 1,350 1,640 1,640 1,680 1,680 1,350 1;510 1,850 1,840 1,880 1,880 1,510 1,645 2,015 2,005 2,050 2,050 1,645 1,775 2,180 2,160 2,200 2,200 1,775 - - - - - - 1,940 2,400 2,360 2,400 2,400 1,940 1,940 2,300 2,820 2,750 2,820 2,820 2,300 2,500 2,450 3,000 2,930 3,000 3,000 2,450 2,660 - 1,330 1,500 1,680 1,830 1,960 2,150 2,520 2,680 875 1,025 1,236 1,434 1,600 1,725 1,840 1,950 2,070 2,200 100 24 5 70 32 100 24 5 80 35 120 24 7 91 45 130 30 7 97 52 144 30 7 112 60 154 32 10 120 65 220 32 10 130 65 230 32 12 140 70 240 32 12 150 76 250 39 12 166 85 - 950 1,050 - Representative Fees Laboratory (Science) Undergraduate Government Graduate Student Association Health/Infirmary Recreation * South Street properties sold in 1981. Source: Office of the Financial Vice President and Treasurer 66 Finance Summary of Contract and Grant Awards 1986-1987 Number of Awards Biology Chemistry Geology and Geophysics Philosophy Physics Psychology Social Welfare Research Institute Sociology Space Data Analysis Laboratory School of Education: Special Education Campus School Center for Testing School of Management School of Nursing School of Social Work Theology Other GRAND TOTAL 4 13 4 Award Total $ 3 305,876 1,057,119 1,125,793 173,068 160,452 198,197 71,758 95,808 2,642,436 255,281 715,018 873,595 326,738 315,030 342,631 135,124 176,208 159,140 77 $9,129,272 I 3 3 1 2 4 5 10 6 6 2 3 3 4 ! [ I I (, jJ \ f iI' ! 1 f I f ! I Source: Office of Research Administration " \ t \ ! 'l :1 I :1 'I ! I l I Finance 67 Contracts and Grants· Source and Application of Funding (Thousands of Dollars) 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 Government: Federal State Local Non-Government $10,680 661 616 669 $ 9,440 946 870 557 $ 9,735 1,360 951 Total $12,626 $11,813 $ 9,953 1,438 920 544 $12,855 $ 9,799 2,083 976 704 $13,562 5,222 2,522 4,734 5,049 5,418 2,681 5,463 $13,562 Source 492 $12,538 Application Sponsored Research Other Sponsored Programs Student Aid Total * The amounts represent actual accounted for that year. Source: Office of the Controller 4,882 $12,626 2,192 4,887 $11,813 5,007 2,206 5,325 $12,538 2,323 5,483 $12,855 expenditures for the referenced fiscal year. They are not reflective of awards made to the University 68 Finance Selected Contract and Grant Awards· 1986-1987 Title Source of Funding Amount I: Biology Department National Institutes of Health $ 88,664 Chiral Lewis Acids and Chemotherapy The Molecular Basis of Cellular Control Mechanisms National Institutes of Health National Institutes of Health 169,038 135,698 Geology & Geophysics Scientific Investigations: Research, Analysis and Definition of the Ground Motion Environment U.S. Air Force 994,952 Ganglioside Studies in Mutant Mouse Embryos f ~ Chemistry Department f 1\ Philosophy Ethical Dimension of the Psychotherapeutic Process Ira W. DeCamp Foundation 173,068 Physics Greenland Imaging Experiments National Science Foundation 105,000 Psychology Sonar Sensory Substitution: Spatial Behavior in the Blind National Institutes of Health 99,757 Space Data Analysis Laboratory SPIRIT II Utah State University 926,554 U.S. Department of Education Thomas J. Watson Foundation City of Boston 175,479 105,728 218,920 Nurses' Diagnostic and Ethical Reasoning National Institutes of Health 164,892 Other Special Services Program "Learning to Learn" U.S. Department of Education 106,640 I Ii School of Education Pre-Service Programs for Low Incidence & Special Target Population A Study of Former Fellows of the Foundation District B Collaborative School of Nursing *Selected awards are greater than $80,000 Source: Office of Research Administration i } 1 I I. I I I I l 1 72 Libraries ,~ 'i ! :.~ (: I Boston College Libraries i! Law Library Kenny-Cottle Library Newton Campus Bapst Library Middle Campus The John J. Burns Library of Rare Books and Special Collections Burns Library Middle Campus Geophysics Library Weston Observatory Weston, MA [i J, it {\ O'Neill Library Central Library, Middle Campus !n:t School of Social Work Library McGuinn Hall, Basement I 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86 1986-87 Law O'Neill* Social Work $ 294,722 $ 345,095 $ 387,501 $ 425,158 $ 456,738 1,074,443 28,035 1,211,789 24,035 1,277,824 26,013 1,330,680 25,517 Total $1,397,200 $1,580,919 $1,691,338 $1,781,355 : I ~ I I' i 1,443,148 33,253 ,{ ," \, I' $1,933,139 , Volumes Serial Subscriptions Microform Units 126 50,033 157,896 779,791 31,093 6,993 1,025,932 8 2,101 7,591 436 60 --10,196 200 516,325 985,030 3,229 2,192 1,506,976 Government Document Volumes Media Units - 5,000 118,199 4,733 9,157 167 122,932 14,324 Source: University Librarian Circulation Statistics, 1986-1987 Library Monographs Reserves O'Neill and Newton Study Center Social Work Weston Geophysics 218 181,663 5,413 356 15,935 50,637 31,572 Total 187,650 98,144 Source: University Librarian f! f! Holdings by Individual Libraries, 1986-1987 Law :1 t "'Includes Special Collections and other general expenditures recorded as "University Librarian." Source: Office of the Controller O'Neill and Newton Study Center Social Work Weston Geophysics Total ,f" f: 1982-83 Bapst Burns Special Collections Law 1 11 : Expenditures for Library Materials Library 1\~ ,',f' ;. Source: University Librarian Library n p Newton Study Center (Undergraduate) Chapel Basement Newton Campus - Microforms Government Documents Media - - - 35,746 965 - - 6,488 66 --- - - -- 35,746 965 6,554 - Interlibrary Loans 501 10,870 305 38 11,714 Libraries Special Library Services Computer Search Service In 1974, the Boston College Nursing Library became the first nursing library in the United States to receive a contract from the National Library of Medicine for the MEDLINE database. Since then the Boston Col­ lege Libraries have added computerized databases for the humanities, social sciences, education, medicine and health sciences, business and economics, pure and applied sciences, and engineering. These include among others: BRS Inc., DIALOG, SDC (System De­ velopment Corporation), NLM (National Library of Medicine), Dow-Jones Retrieval Service, VU-TEXT, Mead Data Central (for NEXIS only on Chestnut Hill campus), Pergamon-Infoline, H. W. Wilson Company (WILSONLINE), and STN International. There are also available in the libraries many multidisciplinary databases which cover specific types of publications (e.g., dissertations, government publications, patents). The Law School Library has access to LEXIS and WESTLAW as well as NEXIS and DIALOG. Access to some of these files may be limited by contract to mem­ bers of the Law School community. Since September 1985, the Libraries have offered ac­ cess to BRS After Dark, a system designed for use by individuals who have little or no system or database experience. In 1986, the Libraries added access to sev­ eral databases on CD-ROM, which utilizes optical stor­ age. Other end-user systems will be added. Contact the appropriate reference librarian or service desk for more information or to arrange for small group discussions or demonstrations, presentations to classes, or to department meetings. Automated Catalog The Boston College Libraries have an automated on­ line catalog which provides access to a half-million bib­ liographical records. The catalog may be searched by author, title, subject, call-number, or keyword in sub­ ject headings and titles. Interlibrary Loan The Interlibrary Loan Service is offered to students, faculty, administrators, and staff to facilitate obtaining materials not available in the Boston College Libraries. Books, photocopies of journal articles, microfilm, theses, and government documents may be borrowed from other libraries. Except for unusual items, the waiting period is from one to four weeks; for anyone 73 willing to use the material at the holding library, a computerized system at the reference desk will pro­ vide locations. Request forms and further information are available from the Interlibrary Loan staff in each library. Boston Library Consortium The library is a member of the Boston Library Con­ sortium, a group of area libraries which includes Brandeis, Boston University, Tufts, Wellesley, North­ eastern, MIT, Massachusetts State Library, Boston Public Library, and University of Massachusetts. Fac­ ulty and graduate students may apply for a Consor­ tium borrower's card at the reference department in O'Neill. The Consortium maintains a central office at the Boston Public Library. Further information may be found in the User Guide and the Consortium Handbook, available in all libraries. United States Government Publications In 1964, Boston College was designated as one of the Federal Depository Libraries for this congressional dis­ trict. This status entitles the O'Neill Library to receive, on a selective basis, United States government publica­ tions at no cost with the stipulation that they be made available to the general public. Most of the material circulates in the same manner as books. Inquiries re­ lated to the use of government documents should be directed to the Government Documents Department on the first floor of the O'Neill Library. Media Services The Media Services Department in O'Neill Library houses information in many formats -- videocassettes, 16mm films, audiocassettes, 35mm slides, phonograph records, filmstrips, and computer disks. All materials are used in the library in small group rooms or indi­ vidually with headsets. The Department collects mate­ rials in all subject areas within the university's teaching and research interests. New England Library Information Network! OCLC Through membership in the New England Library In­ formation Network (NELl NET), our users have on­ line access to publishing, cataloging, and interlibrary loan location information from the data bank of OCLC, Inc. which contains over 16 million biblio­ graphic records from the Library of Congress and from 2,900 other libraries in North America. Source: University Librarian 74 Libraries Special Collections Rare and valuable books, manuscripts, and archives form Special Collections. Access is controlled because of their scarcity, value, or fragile nature. Outstanding collections are listed below. Contact Special Collections for further information. Hilaire Belloc Collection and Archives, 1870­ 1953 The world's most complete assemblage of materials dealing with this versatile British Catholic critic, histo­ rian, essayist, journalist, novelist, poet, and politician. Includes his personal library, all published works, and most of his correspondence and manuscripts. Banking Archives Archives of several banks, including the Hibernia Sav­ ings Bank, the Union Warren, The Provident Institu­ tion for Savings, and the Yankee Bank for Finance and Savings. Also included is the Savings Banks Asso­ ciation of Massachusetts. British Catholic Authors (see also Belloc; Chesterton) Books, archives, letters, etc. of prominent nineteenth and twentieth century writers: Maurice Baring, George Barker, Robert Hugh Benson, Pamela Frankau, Graham Greene, Ronald Knox, Peter Levi, Cardinal Newman, James Spencer Northcote, Evelyn Waugh, and many others. Nixon, the war in Viet Nam, and the termination of the House Committee on Un-American activities. Fine Print Collection Representative collections from modern limited press editions: Foulis Press, Golden Cockerel, Nonesuch, Oriole Press (lshill), Peppercannister, St. Dominic's, and Stanbrook Abbey. Irish Collection Formed by Helen Landreth, the eminent scholar of Robert Emmet and the Irish Rebellion, the collection richly represents the periods 1790-1810 and 1850­ 1885. Included also are samplings of the Irish literary renaissance poets and playwrights, such as Seamus Heaney, and writers and private presses of Ireland today. Jesuitana Collection, 1543-1773 Includes rare works dealing with missionary letters written from the Far East in the sixteenth and seven­ teenth centuries, works of science, and works on Bibli­ cal exegesis and classical scholarship. An original holo­ graph letter from St. Francis Xavier to John III, King of Portugal, dated 31 January 1552 crowns this excep­ tional body of unusual works. Rita Kelleher Collection In recognition of her twenty-five years of service to the School of Nursing, including twenty years as Dean, this collection contains archival, historical, re­ search, and other significant materials in nursing. Gilbert Keith Chesterton Collection, 1874-1936 Extensive collection of this British writer's books, re­ views, drawings, and correspondence. Chesterton, like Belloc, was a man of many talents -- essayist, critic, poet, and novelist. A convert to Catholicism, he is perhaps best-known for his Father Brown detective stories. CityWide Coordinating Council Archives, 1975­ 1978 Complete records of the council formed to desegre­ gate the Boston school system as ordered by Judge Arthur Garrity. The Rev. Robert F. Drinan, S.J. Papers The collection represents an extensive record of Fr. Drinan's service in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1970 to 1980. As the first Roman Catholic priest ever elected to Congress, Fr. Drinan was a unique fig­ ure in American politics. The collection includes im­ portant material on the impeachment of Richard Liturgy and Life, 1825-1975 Formed by William J. Leonard, SJ., this ever-growing collection of books, ephemera, and the personal pa­ pers of the twentieth century pioneer liturgists docu­ ments the life of the Church in America in the pre­ Vatican II era. Highlights include books on pastoral and devotional literature and liturgical theory and commentary, and thousands of devotional items. Meynell Family Collection The Meynell Family Collection is both an adjunct to the Francis Thompson Collection and important in its own right. Includes correspondence, first editions, and works about the poet Alice Meynell, her publisher husband Wilfred, and their children Francis, the pro­ prietor of the Nonesuch Press, and Viola. Thomas P. O'Neill, Jr. Papers Includes the papers and memorabilia of the former Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives dating Libraries 75 from his election to Congress in 1952 to his retire­ ment from politics in 1986. The collection contains ex­ tensive correspondence on the American military buildup in Southeast Asia and provides an excellent overview of Democratic party politics over three decades. Rex Stout Collection and Archives, 1886-1975 Famed creator of the Nero Wolfe mysteries, Stout is here represented by the best collection in existence of his personal manuscripts, correspondence, editions, and secondary sources, together with his own library. Francis Thompson Collection, 1859-1907 The most complete body of original material by Fran­ cis Thompson, one of the foremost poets of the Brit­ ish Catholic literary renaissance. Includes autographed manuscripts, 1500 frames of microfilm of hitherto un­ known manuscripts, and first editions. There is also material by and about Coventry Patmore. Typography and Design Collection of books, woodblocks, prints, etc. from such artists as Eric Gill, David Jones, Bruce Rogers, and George F. Trenholm. Nicholas M. Williams Collection A collection assembled by Joseph Williams, S.J. in honor of his father. The emphasis on Jamaica and its black culture is supplemented by West African roots and South American parallelisms. Includes the Anansi Folktale Archives. Other collections include: Maurice Baring Collection, 1874-1945 Bookbuilders of Boston Archives, 1938­ Burns, Oates and Washbourne Collection, 1847-1954 Annie Christitch (Christic) Papers, 1885-1977 Charlotte Louisa Hawkins Dempster Collection, 1835-1913 Eleanor Early Papers, 1895-1969 Eire Society of Boston Archives Fatherless Children of France Memorial Volume Records, 1915-1921 Eric Gill Collection David Goldstein Papers, 1870-1958 Graham Greene Collection, 1904­ Peter Levi Collection and Papers, 1931­ Joseph McCarthy Papers, 1915-1980 Thomas Merton Collection, 1915-1968 Morrisey Collection of Japanese Prints, 18th-19th centuries Music Manuscripts of American Popular Songs, 1900-1940 Nonesuch Press Collection James Spencer Northcote Collection, 1821-1907 Bruce Rogers Collection Salem, Massachusetts, First Church of Christ Library, (Including the library of John Prince, 1751-1836) Joseph Coolidge Shaw Collection, 1821-1851 Edith Sitwell Collection, 1887-1964 McNiff Collection of the Stanbrook Abbey Press Playbill Collection George Francis Trenholm Papers, 1886-1958 Evelyn Waugh Collection, 1903-1966 Special Nursing Collections O'Neill Library The Boston College Guild of St. Luke of Boston Health Ethics Collection Initiated in 1974, this contains books, pamphlets, peri­ odicals, reprints, and audio-visual materials which con­ cern the ethics of medicine, nursing, and health care. National Health Planning Information Center O'Neill Library is one of the twenty-six United States and European depositories for NHPIC non-copy­ righted materials in microfiche format. These cover a variety of topics relevant to health planning and re­ sources with a strong nursing component. Consult ref­ erence librarians for additional information in regard to the scope and use of this collection. Source: University Librarian 76 Libraries University Archives The Language Laboratory Archives are the official non-current papers and rec­ ords of an institution that are deemed worthy of per­ manent preservation for their legal, fiscal, or historical values. The University Archives contain the office rec­ ords and documents of the various University offices, academic and otherwise, copies of all University publi­ cations, including student publications, movie footage of Boston College football, some audio-visual materi­ als, and tape recordings of the University Lecture Se­ ries and other significant events. A significant collec­ tion of photographs documents the pictorial history of Boston College. Alumni, faculty, and Jesuit records are also preserved. In addition, the Archives are the repository for the documents of Newton College of the Sacred Heart (1946-1975); The Jesuit Education Association (1934-1970); the Catholic International Education Office (1952-1976); and the documents of the Jesuit Community at Boston College (1863). Location-The Burns Library The Language Laboratory serves all of the language departments, and provides English for Foreign Stu­ dents. In addition to its 70 state-of-the-art listening/ recording stations and dual-teacher console, the facil­ ity includes video and film viewing rooms and three audio-interfaced microcomputers. The Laboratory's audio and videotape collection, computer software, and other audio-visual learning aids directly support and/or supplement the curriculum requirements in foreign language, literature, and music. Source: University Librarian Source: Language Laboratory. 80 Athletics THE YEAR IN REVIEW 1986-1987 A YEAR OF CHAMPIONS ... The 1986-1987 athletic year at Boston College mir­ rored most recent campaigns and seasons at the Heights: there was a generous measure of success gained on the playing fields, rinks, and courts; a rec­ ord level of student participation in all levels of ath­ letic competition and activity; and, topping the year, there were several major accomplishments which brought the spotlight of the athletic world favorably on those student-athletes and coaches who wear the University'S Maroon and Gold. The 1986 football campaign got off to a bleak start. After the season's first four games, Coach Jack Bick­ nell's Eagles had managed but one victory, and alumni and fans wondered, sometimes quite vocally, if Boston College's recent gridiron success was but a darting flash. An October 11 visit to the University of Maryland made the doubters quickly change their ways, how­ ever. Eagle quarterback Shawn Halloran passed the revived Eagles to an impressive 30-25 victory over the nationally-ranked Terrapins, and Bicknell's crew would not lose for the remainder of the season, reel­ ing off eight straight wins in the process. The final regular season game found Boston Col­ lege handing long-time Jesuit rival Holy Cross a defin­ itive 56-26 thrashing at muddy Fitton Field in Worces­ ter. (The traditional rivalry begun in 1893 between these two New England teams was to end this day, however. That muddy game in Worcester was the last ever football meeting between the two rivals as Holy Cross abruptly ended the series at that point.) Follow­ ing the game, the Eagles were invited to participate in the Hall of Fame Bowl in Tampa, Florida. It was the fourth time in the past five years that a Jack Bicknell­ led Eagle team had earned a post-season appearance. In Tampa, it was Halloran - at one time the target of some fans' early disappointment - who fired the winning touchdown pass to Kelvin Martin with just seconds left on the clock to send the football Eagles home to Boston as champions. The 1986 Eagles distinguished themselves in the classroom as well as on the field. Defensive tackle Mike Degnan, a student in the Graduate School of Management, was named First Team Academic AIl­ America - BC's first such honor in a decade. * * * * * Another shining milestone was reached in hockey competition - long a successful sport in the Boston College athletic tradition. On February 9, 1987, Coach Len Ceglarski recorded his 556th career victory with a 7-6 overtime win over cross-town rival Harvard. That made the 1951 graduate the winningest coach in the history of this collegiate sport. Ceglarski went on to lead the Eagles to a school rec­ ord 31 victories, the HOCKEY EAST championship, and a fourth straight bid to participate in the NCAA championship playoffs. This winter, four members of that 1986-1987 Bos­ ton College team (Brian Leetch '90, Craig Janney '89, Greg Brown '89, and Kevin Stevens '87) have been se­ lected to play on the United States team in 1988 Olympic competition. Athletics * * * * * The wide range of accomplishments of Boston Col­ lege's student-athletes is reflected in the five seniors who were selected to receive the Nathaniel J. Hasen­ fus Award, presented annually to the University's best athletic performers. Those selected in 1986-1987 were: Steve Trapilo '86, an All-America offensive lineman in football, who was a co-captain of the Hall of Fame Bowl champion­ ship team ... Tara McKenna '87, a swimmer who set New Eng­ land records in five different events, won eight BIG EAST championships, and 10 Eastern championships. She has qualified for the U.S. Olympic Trials in 1988 ... 81 Katie Molumphy '87 won three BIG EAST Confer­ ence tennis championships in her four varsity seasons as she won 29 of 30 league matches ... she was one of the few players in the history of college tennis to have won 100 career matches and she was the first Boston College player ever to earn an invitation to the NCAA Division I tennis championships ... John Schwegman '86 was captain of the Boston Col­ lege baseball team ... a strong defensive catcher, ex­ cellent base-runner, and lifetime .300 hitter ... he was named to several regional All-Star teams ... Sports Participation Levels Sport Men's - Women's Varsity Ray Hawkins '87 is the Greater Boston, New Eng­ land and BIG EAST champion in both the long jump and triple jump track and field competitions ... he also holds the school record in both of the events ... Baseball Basketball 30 14 Cross Country Fencing 25 8 8 - 22 Field Hockey Football Golf 104 13 29 28 15 11 26 Ice Hockey Lacrosse Sailing Skiing Soccer Softball Swimming/Diving Tennis Track ­ Track ­ 19 15 6 22 18 30 14 40 26 10 30 30 Volleyball - Waterpolo Wrestling Total 21 11 - 423 40 14 273 18 - Rugby Volleyball Waterpolo 24 12 Total 36 Source: Sports Information Office 6 - Indoor Outdoor Club Sports Ice Hockey 11 - - 23 41 82 Athletics Intercollegiate Athletic Accomplishments Football Team playoff title as well invited to NCAA champion­ ship tournament Brian Leetch selected HOCKEY EAST Player of the Year and Freshman of the Year ... both Leetch and Craig Janney named first team All­ Americas. With only one win in their first four games, the Eagles rebounded under the guidance of Quarterback Shawn Halloran to finish the season with a 9-3 record ... this earned the team an invitation to the Hall of Fame Bowl in Tampa, Florida, where they defeated Georgia 27-24 ... Troy Stradford became BC's all-time lead­ ing rusher and scorer ... Kelvin Martin became the school's all-time leading pass receiver. Eagles finished their winning 6-5 season with four consecutive victories ... including a 10-9 upset over the nation's fourth-ranked team, Northwestern. Men's Baseball The team's successful season included winning the University of Massachusetts Slalom Competition ... second in the Eastern Regionals ... seventh in the Nationals Giant Slalom. Final record 13-21 ... Tom OUo selected All-BIG EAST ... three players selected Greater Boston League All-Stars ... 30th season for Eddie Pellagrini as BC head coach - the longest tenure of any active coach in the BC Athletic Department. Men's Basketball Women's Lacrosse Men's Skiing Women's Skiing Fifth in the Nationals four team members earned All-Conference Honors second in the US Colle­ giate Skiing Championships... won the Osborne Divi­ sion title in New England competition. Former BC standout Jim O'Brien took over as head coach of the Eagles ... Dana Barros selected to the second team All-BIG EAST ... 11-18 final record, but Eagles were very competitive throughout the sea­ son, losing by five points or less in five regular season BIG EAST contests ... biggest win of the year came against eventual Final Four participant Providence, 67-66. 8-8-5 record ... Eagles qualified for the BIG EAST championship tournament ... beat perennial national power Connecticut for first time ever in regular sea­ son play ... Dave Sullivan and Eric Brown named All-BIG EAST. Women's Basketball Women's Soccer 17-12 record ... Eagles went all the way to the finals of the BIG EAST tournament - best showing ever for a BC women's team in league competition ... Kathy Sweet awarded Scholar Athlete Award in the BIG EAST ... Pam Thornton scored 1000th career point. With 11-6-2 record, Eagles went on to become 1986 ECAC champions ... Maria Montouri, Betsy Ready, and Chris Garibaldi were selected All-America players. Women's Field Hockey Shannon Murphy and Maura Sullivan selected for the US National Field Hockey Team (under 21) ... final record 7-11-2. Men's Soccer Women's Softball Eagles held BC's first invitational to the University of Connecticut 16-17. finished second final record Men's Swimming Coach Ed Carroll's team was the 1986 Northern New England Qualifying Round Champions. Record 10-2 ... scored most wins ever in one season by a BC swimming team fifth in New England, fourth in the BIG EAST Aaron Thompson first BC swimmer to qualify for Senior Nationals ... Jim Sieve placed second in New England Championships. Men's Hockey Men's Tennis 31-8 record, the most victories ever by any athletic team in the history of Boston College ... Len Ceglar­ ski became winningest coach in the history of college hockey ... first time BC won regular season HOCKEY EAST championship and followed with the Eagles won BIG EAST tennis championships for the sixth time in seven years ... Brian Bortnick selected to receive a BIG EAST Conference post-graduate scholarship in recognition of his achievements in ath­ letics and in the classroom. Men's Golf Athletics 83 Women's Tennis Women's Track/Cross Country 10-3 record ... In her four-year career, tri-captain Katie Molumphy had over 100 wins ~ a rare accom­ Eagles recaptured the New England indoor champion­ ship previously held in 1984-85 ... the ou tdoor track team won its first New England championship, mark­ ing the first time ever that a men's and a women's team from the same school captured the regional crowns ... New England Cross Country Champions for the fifth time ... Karen Keith named NCAA Dis­ trict I Coach of the Year. plishment for any collegiate tennis player ... Molum­ phy also named recipient of a BIG EAST post-gradu­ ate scholarship in recognition of her accomplishments on the courts and in the classroom ... Eagles won the BIG EAST championship. Men's Track/Cross Country Men's Wrestling Both indoor and outdoor track teams captured New England championships ... Ray Hawkins won New England long jump championship ... Joe Rocha had an outstanding season and became cross country's 1986 National Catholic Champion ... Jack McDonald selected NCAA District I Coach of the Year. 8-0 record ... Rod Buttry named head coach ... John Merklinger became New England heavy weight champion and qualified for the NCAA championships. Varsity Sports Records 1982·83 W·L·T 1983·84 W·L·T 1984·85 W·L·T 1985-86 W·L·T 1986·87 W·L·T Football Basketball 8-2-1 9-2 10-2 4-8 9-3 25-7 18-12 20-11 13-15 11-18 Ice Hockey Wrestling Soccer Lacrosse Tennis Baseball Swimming Golf 15-13-2 26-13 28-15-2 26-13-3 31-8 Men's Records 9-6 9-6 8-8 8-12 8-7 14-3-5 9-9-2 7-8-3 8-9-3 8-8-5 6-10 6-8 6-8 2-14 3-10 17-3 13-2 11-3 14-2 -* 13-21 11-9 7-17 12-22 14-23 6-3 7-2 8-3 8-3 10-2 12-6 9-8 8-6 8-4 -* 17-9 11-16 19-9 16-13 17-12 Field Hockey Swimming Tennis 5-10-1 9-8-2 13-4-1 10-5-5 7-11-2 7-2 7-2 7-4 8-2 9-3 10-4 12-3 13-4 10-3 10-3 Volleyball Lacrosse Soccer Softball 12-18 7-20 4-33 11-27 11-22 5-8-1 7-8 7-8 6-7 6-5 10-2 15-5 12-6-1 13-5-1 11-6-2 - 5-6 19-11 17-16 16-17 Women's Records Basketball * Due to the increased number of tournaments the members of the men's tennis and golf teams participate in, it is no longer feasible to keep track of their records on a team basis. Source: Sports Information Office 84 Athletics Varsity Football Schedules 1989 -­ 1987 September 5 September 12 September 19 September 26 October 3 October 10 October 17 October 24 October 31 November 7 November 14 at TCU Temple at USC Penn State at Pittsburgh Army at Rutgers West Virginia Tennessee at Notre Dame at Syracuse 1988 September 3 September 10 September 17 September 24 October 1 October 15 October 22 November 5 November 12 November 19 November 26 September 9 September 16 September 23 September 30 October 14 October 21 October 28 November 4 November 11 November 18 Pittsburgh at Rutgers at Penn State at Ohio State Temple Navy West Virginia at Syracuse at Army Louisville - 1990 -­ at at at at USC Cincinnati Penn State TCU Pittsburgh Rutgers West Virginia Tennessee Syracuse Army (Dublin, Ireland) at Temple September 8 September 15 September 29 October 6 October 13 October 20 October 27 November 3 November 10 November 17 November 24 at Pittsburgh Ohio State at Navy Rutgers Army Penn State at West Virginia Syracuse at Louisville at Miami Temple Source: SPOrts Information Office Athletics Varsity Hockey Schedule* 1987-1988 October 25 October 28 October 31 November 4 November 7 November 13 November 14 November 20 November 27 November 30 December 4 December 5 December 9 December 27­ December 28 January 2 January 3 January 8 January 14 January 17 January 20 January 23 January 26 January 29 February I February 5 February 8 February 13 February 16 February 19 February 20 February 24 February 27 at PROVIDENCE COLLEGE U.S. Olympic Team (at Boston University) UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE (at Boston University) NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY (at Boston University) at BOSTON UNIVERSITY at NORTHERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY at MICHIGAN POLYTECHNIC UNIVERSITY OF LOWELL (at Boston University) UNIVERSITY OF DENVER (at Boston University) COLORADO COLLEGE (at Northeastern University) at University of Michigan at University of Michigan BOSTON UNIVERSITY (at Northeastern University) Long Island Classic - Nassau County Coliseum (Minnesota-Duluth, Harvard, Illinois­ Chicago) at UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA­ DULUTH at UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA at NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY OF NORTH DAKOTA (at Harvard University) UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN (at Boston University) at UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE UNIVERSITY OF MAINE (at Harvard University) PROVIDENCE COLLEGE (at Harvard University) at UNIVERSITY OF LOWELL Beanpot Tournament vs. Northeastern University (at Boston Garden) UNIVERSITY OF LOWELL (at Northeastern University) Beanpot Tournament (at Boston Garden) at UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY (at Boston University) at UNIVERSITY OF MAINE at UNIVERSITY OF MAINE PROVIDENCE COLLEGE (at Boston University) at BOSTON UNIVERSITY *Hockey EastfWCHA games in caps Home games in bold Source: Sports Information Office 85 Varsity Basketball Schedule* 1987-1988 November 9 November 28 December I December 3 December December December December 7 10 12 20 December 22 December 28 ­ December 29 January 3 January 5 January 9 January 12 January 16 January 18 January 23 January 27 January 30 February 2 February 6 February February February February 8 15 20 23 February 27 February 29 March 10 ­ March 13 Canadian National Team· exhibition (at Roberts Center) Coastal Carolina College (at Roberts Center) at Harvard University University of New Hampshire (at Roberts Center) University of Maine (at Roberts Center) at PROVIDENCE COLLEGE Holy Cross College (at Roberts Center) at University of North Carolina­ Wilmington Florida Institute of Technology (at Roberts Center) at Sun Bowl Tournament - El Paso, Texas (UTEP, Alabama-Birmingham, California) Dartmouth College (at Roberts Center) SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY (at Boston Garden) at VILLANOVA UNIVERSITY SETON HALL UNIVERSITY (at Boston Garden) GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY (at Boston Garden) at SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY PROVIDENCE COLLEGE (at Boston Garden) at GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH (at Boston Garden) Fairfield University (at Roberts Center) VILLANOVA UNIVERSITY (at Boston Garden) at ST. JOHN'S UNIVERSITY at UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT at SETON HALL UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT (at Boston Garden) ST. JOHN'S UNIVERSITY (at Boston Garden) at UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH at BIG EAST TOURNAMENT ­ Madison Square Garden *Big East games in caps Home games in bold Source: Sports Information Office 88 General Information Founder of Boston College Rev. John McElroy, S.j. Pastor, Immaculate Conception Parish, Boston 1861-1863 Presidents of Boston College 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. John Bapst, S.]. Robert W. Brady, S.]. Robert Fulton, S.j. Jeremiah O'Connor, S.J. Edward V. Boursaud, S.]. Thomas H. Stack, S.]. Nicholas Russo, S.]. Robert Fulton, S.J. Edward I. Devitt, S.J. Timothy Brosnahan, S.]. W. G. Read Mullan, S.]. William F. Gannon, S.]. Thomas I. Gasson, S.]. Charles W. Lyons, S.J. William Devlin, S.]. James H. Dolan, S.]. Louis J. Gallagher, S.J. William]. McGarry, S.]. William]. Murphy, S.]. William L. Keleher, S.]. Joseph R. N. Maxwell, S.]. Michael P. Walsh, S.j. W. Seavey Joyce, S.J. J. Donald Monan, S.J. Source: President's Office 1863-1869 1869-1870 1870-1880 1880-1884 1884-1887 1887 1887-1888 1888-1891 1891-1894 1894-1898 1898-1903 1903-1907 1907-1914 1914-1919 1919-1925 1925-1932 1932-1937 1937-1939 1939-1945 1945-1951 1951-1958 1958-1968 1968-1972 1972­ Honorary Degrees Awarded by Boston College 1952-1987 1952 Gregory Peter XV Cardinal Agagianian, LL.D. (january 14, 1952) James B. Connolly, Lilt.D. James M. O'Neill, LL.D. Most Rev. Thomas F. Markham, LL.D.* Rt. Rev. Thomas J. Riley, LL.D. James J. Ronan, LL.D. 1953 Dorothy L. Book, LL.D. Most Rev. James L. Connolly, LL.D. Clifford J. Laube, LL.D. Francis J. O'Halloran, A.M. Most Rev. Leonard J. Raymond, LL.D. * Alex Ross, A.M. John C. H. Wu, LL.D. 1954 Edward H. Chamberlin, LL.D. John J. Hearne, LL.D.* James W. Manary, Sc.D. Thomas A. Printon, LL.D. Ven. Bro. William Sheehan, C.F.X., LL.D. Most Rev. Christopher J. Weldon, LL.D. Louis de Wohl, Litt.D. William J. O'Keefe, LL.D. (November 21, 1954) 1955 Fred J. Driscoll, LL.D. Christian A. Herter, LL.D. Edward A. Hogan, Jr., LL.D.* Rear Adm. Bartholomew W. Hogan, Sc.D. John B. Hynes, LL.D. His Beatitude Maximos IV, LL.D. (August 23, 1955) Valerian Cardinal Gracias, LL.D. Russel Kirk, Litt. D. Edward A. Sullivan, LL.D. 1956 Bartholomew A. Brickley, LL.D. Peter J. w. Debye, Sc.D. Most Rev. Frederick A. Donaghy, LL.D. John F. Kennedy, LL.D.* John W. King, LL.D. Charles Munch, D.Mus. Edward F. Williams, LL.D. *Commencement Speaker General Information 89 1957 1962 1966 Wallace E. Carroll, LL.D. Arthur]. Kelly, LL.D. Augustus C. Long, LL.D.* Adrian O'Keeffe, LL.D. Very Rev. Msgr. Patrick W. Skehan, LL.D. Nils Y. Wessell, LL.D. Detlev W. Bronk, D.Se.* Ralph]. Bunche, LL.D. Christopher]. Duncan, M.D., LL.D. Sir Alec Guinness, D.F.A. Rt. Rev. Francis j. Lally, Litt.D. Ralph Lowell, LL.D. Phyliss McGinley, Lin.D. Perry G. Miller, Litt.D. Most Rev. john W. Comber, M.M., L.H.D. Edward F. Gilday, L.H.D. Edward M. Kennedy, LL.D. Francis Keppel, LL.D.* Mother Eleanor M. O'Byrne, R.S.C.j., LL.D. Stephen P. Mugar, LL.D. Abram L. Sachar, L.H.D. Rene Wellek, Litt.D. George Wells Beadle, D.Se. (November 12, 1966) William Bosworth Castle, M.D., L.H.D. (November 12, 1966) Donald Frederick Hornig, LL.D. (November 12,1966) james Alfred Van Allen, D.Se. (November 12, 1966) 1958 Most Rev. Amleto G. Cicognani, LL.D. (April 21,1958) Carl]. Gilbert, LL.D. Paul Horgan, Litt.D. Barnaby C. Keeney, LL.D.* Henry M. Leen, LL.D. jacques Maritain, LL.D. Raissa Maritain, LL.D. Harold Marston Morse, D.Se. Rev. john B. Sheerin, C.S.P., LL.D. Francis Cardinal Spellman, LL.D. (December 8,1958) 1959 His Excellency Sean T. O'Kelly, LL.D. (March 22, 1959) Emest Henderson, LL.D. Rev. john LaFarge, S.J., LL.D. Henry Cabor Lodge, LL.D. George Meany, LL.D. Carlos P. Romulo, LL.D.* Helen C. White, Litt.D. 1960 Marian Anderson, D.Mus. ]. Peter Grace, LL.D. Caryl P. Haskins, LL.D. Robert F. Kennedy, LL.D. Charles Malik, LL.D.* Most Rev. Russell J. McVinney, LL.D. Samuel Eliot Morison, LL.D. Rt. Rev. Matthew P. Stapleton, LL.D. Rev. Henry M. Brock, S..J., D.Se. (October 12. 1960) 1961 Allen W. Dulles, LL.D. Anthony julian, LL.D. Robert D. Murphy, LL.D.* Louis R. Perini, LL.D. Abraham Ribicoff, LL.D. Rt. Rev. Robert]. Sennott, LL.D. Edward Teller, LL.D. *Commencement Speaker 1963 Augustin Cardinal Bea, S.]., ].V.D. (March 26, 1963) Rev. Edward B. Bunn, S.]., LL.D. (April 20, 1963) Lady Barbara Ward jackson, Litt.D. (April 20, 1963) Nathan Marsh Pusey, L.H.D. (April 20, 1963) Bruce Catton, LitLD. Anthony joseph Celebrezze, LL.D." Arthur joseph Goldberg, LL.D. john jay McCloy, LL.D. james Barrett Reston, LL.D. Rt. Rev. john joseph Ryan, L.H.D. jose Luis Sert, Litt.D. joseph Leo Sweeney, LL.D. Robert Clifton Weaver, LL.D. james Edwin Webb, D.Se. 1967 Sarah Caldwell, Litt.D. Richard Palmer Chapman, LL.D. Very Rev. john Francis Fitzgerald, C.S.P., L.H.D. john Kenneth Galbraith, LL.D. john William Gardner, LL.D." Everett Cherrington Hughes, LL.D. john Anthony Volpe, LL.D. 1968 1964 john Coleman Bennett, LL.D. Henri Maurice Peyre, LL.D. Most Rev. Ernest john Primeau, LL.D. Sidney R. Rabb, L.H.D. Paul Anthony Samuelson, LL.D. Rev. joseph L. Shea, S.]., LL.D. Robert Sargent Shriver, jr., LL.D.* Mary Sullivan Stanton, LL.D. Kingman Brewster, jr., LL.D.* Rev. Henri de Lubac, S.]., L.H.D. Erwin N. Griswold, LL.D. Rita P. Kelleher, D.Se. Most Rev. john]. McEleney, S.]., LL.D. Cornelius W. Owens, LL.D. james J. Shea, Sr., LL.D. Roger j. Traynor, LL.D. 1969 1965 john P. Birmingham, LL.D. Robert McAffee Brown, LL.D. ]. N. Douglas Bush, Litt.D. Victor L. Butterfield, L.H.D. john T. Connor, LL.D. Edith Green, LL.D. Rev. john Courtney Murray, S.]., L.H.D.* Rt. Rev. Lawrence]. Riley, LL.D. Alan T. Waterman, D.Se. R. Buckminster Fuller, D.F.A." Katharine Graham, D.Journ. Philip J. McNiff, L.H.D. Talcott Parsons, D.S.S. A. Philip Randolph, LL.D. Henry Lee Shattuck, D.C.S. Terence Cardinal Cooke, LL.D. 1970 james Edward Allen, jr., D.Sc.Ed. RL Rev. john Melville Burgess, LL.D. joan Ganz Cooney, D.Se.Ed. Sterling Dow, L.H.D. Hartford Nelson Gunn, jr., L.H.D. Rev. Bernard joseph Francis Lonergan, S.]., HisLPhil.D. Elliot Norton, L.H.D. Perry Townsend Rathbone, D.F.A. Earl Warren, D.Sc.L." [I I'; 1\ 90 General Information II, \~ 1\ 1971 Walter Jackson Bate, H.D. Andrew Felton Brimmer, S.S.D. Rev. Msgr. George William Casey, LitLD. Mircea Eliade, R.D. Eli Goldston, LL.D. Elma Lewis, D.F.A. Michael Joseph Mansfield, LL.D.* William James McGill, S.S.D. Most Rev. Humberto Sousa Medeiros, S.T.D. Walter George Muelder, D.Se.T. Leverett Saltonstall, LL.D. 1972 Mary Ingraham Bunting, D.Sc. Arthur Fiedler, D.Mus. Northrop Frye, L.H.D. John James Griffin, D.C.S. Sir William Arthur Lewis, L.H.D. Louis Martin Lyons, D.]ourn. Rev. John Anthony McCarthy, S.]. LitLD. Hildegarde Elizabeth Peplau, D.N.S. Adlai Ewing Stevenson, III, LL.D.* Walter Edward Washington, LL.D. 1973 A. ]. Antoon, L.H.D. Harold Bloom, L.H.D. Fred J. Borch, D.B.A. Vernon E. Jordan, Jr., LL.D. John George Kemeny, D.Sc.* Rev. Daniel Linehan, S.]., D.Sc. Thomas Philip O'Neill, Jr., LL.D. 1974 Soia Mentschikoff, LL.D. * Thomas L. Phillips, D.B.A. Carl Thomas Rowan, L.H.D. Thomas Paul Salmon, LL.D. Sir Ronald Syme, L.H.D. Henry Bradford Washburn, Jr., L.H.D. 1975 Melnea A. Cass, L.H.D. Silvio O. Conte, LL.D. John Thomas Dunlop, LL.D. Rev. Francis]. Gilday, S.]., L.H.D. Edward Lewis Hirsh, L.H.D. Paul Ricoeur, L.H.D.* Vincent Charles Ziegler, D.B.A. *Commencement Speaker Bicentennial Convocation Sept. 28, 1975 Thomas Joseph Galligan, Jr., D.B.A. Oscar Handlin, L.H.D. William]. Harrington, M.D. D.Se. Edward Hirsh Levi, LL.D. Rev. Michael Patrick Walsh, S.]., L.H.D. Mary Lou Williams, D.A. 1976 Abram Thurlow Collier, D.B.A. John Hope Franklin, L.H.D. Rev. Martin Patrick Harney, S.]., H.D. Mildred Fay Jefferson, M.D., D.Sc. Asa Smallidge Knowles, D.Sc.Ed. Joseph Francis Maguire, LL.D. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, LL.D.* 1981 Tomas Cardinal 6 Fiaich, LitLD. (October, 1981) Rev. Joseph Delphis Gauthier, S.]., L.H.D. Margaret M. Heckler, LL.D. Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy, L.H.D. Donald F. McHenry, LL.D. Joseph Harry Silverstein, D.A. Paul Donovan Sullivan, D.S.S. Thomas P. O'Neill, Jr., The Ignatius Medal* 1982 Rev. Robert 1. Burns, S.]., L.H.D. George Bush, LL.D.* Robert A. Charpie, D.Se. Josephine L. Taylor, D.Se.Ed. 1977 Rev. Raymond Edward Brown, LitLD.* Gerhard D. Bleicken, LL.D. Alice Bourneuf, D.Sc. James F. McDonough, M.D., D.Sc. Maria Tallchief Paschen, D.A. Michael Joseph Walsh, LitLD. 1983 Maya Angelou, L.H.D. Virginia A. Henderson, D.N.S. Joseph McKenney, D.Ed. Vincent T. O'Keefe, S.]., L.H.D. (March, 1983) Bruce]. Ritter, O.F.M., D.S.S.* An Wang, LL.D. 1978 Bruno Bettelheim, LitLD. Rev. Charles F. Donovan, S.]., L.H.D. Charles D. Ferris, LL.D.* Marvin E. Frankel, LL.D. John William McDevitt, LL.D. Leo Perlis, D.S.S. 1984 Leon Higginbotham, LL.D. Richard Hill, D.B.A. Most Rev. Bernard F. Law, S.T.D.* Robert Merrifield, D.Se. Muriel Sutherland Snowden, D.S.S. Otto Phillip Snowden, D.S.S. 1979 Dorothy Baker, D.S.S. Edward Patrick Boland, LL.D. George P. Donaldson, LL.D. Richard Ellmann, L.H.D. Robben W. Fleming, L.H.D. Walter F. Mondale, LL.D.* David S. Nelson, LL.D.* 1985 Rev. Frederick Joseph Adelmann, S.]., L.H.D. Lena Frances Edwards, D.Se. Rev.]. Bryan Hehir, LL.D. Agnes Mongan, D.F.A. Anthony John Francis O'Reilly, D.B.A. (March,1985) Andrew]. Young, LL.D.* Edward Zigler, L.H.D. 1980 Germaine Bree, LitLD. * Albert M. Folkard, L.H.D. Edward]. King, D. Pub. Admn. Joseph Cardinal Malula, LL.D. Bernard]. O'Keefe, D.E.Sc. Kevin H. White, LL.D. it j! t ,! I. H ! i ( I I~,\.! . :., jf ~, i ~ 'i~-: General Information 1986 Corazon C. Aquino, The Ignatius Medal (September, 1986) Guido Calabresi, LL.D. Jacques d'Ambrose, D.F.A. Annie Dillard, L.H.D. Lionel B. Richie, Jr.. D.Mus. Francis C. Rooney, Jr., D.B.A. Jaime Cardinal Sin, S.T.D.* 1987 Josephine A. Dolan, D.N.S. Garret FitzGerald, LL.D. Walter E. Massey, D.Sc. John G. McElwee, LL.D. Rev. Francis W. Sweeney, S.J., L.H.D. Vernon A. Walters, LL.D.* *Commencement Speaker Source: President's Office 91 Types of Degrees Conferred at Boston College Bachelor of Arts (A.B.) Bachelor of Science (B.S.) Master of Arts (M.A.) Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) Master of Business Administration (M.B.A.) Master of Education (M.Ed.) Master of Science (M.S.) Master of Science in Teaching (M.S.T.) Master of Social Work (M.S.W.) Certificate of Advanced Educational Specialization (C.A.E.S.) Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) Doctor of Law (J.D.) Doctor of Education (D.Ed.) Doctor of Social Work (D.S.W.) Honorary Degrees Granted by Boston College D.A. D.B.A. D.C.S. D.E.Sc. D.F.A. D.Journ. D.Mus. D.N.S. D.Pub.Adm. D.Se. D.Sc.Ed. D.Sc.L. D.Se.T. D.S.S. H.D. Hist.PhiI.D. J.V.D. L.H.D. LL.D. Litt.D. R.D. S.T.D. Se.D. Doctor Doctor Doctor Doctor Doctor Doctor Doctor Doctor Doctor Doctor Doctor Doctor Doctor Doctor Doctor Doctor Doctor Doctor Doctor Doctor Doctor Doctor Doctor of Arts of Business Administration of Commercial Science of Engineering Science of Fine Arts of Journalism of Music of Nursing Science of Public Administration of Science of Science in Education of the Science of Law of the Science of Theology of Social Science of History of History in Philosophy of Civil and Canon Laws of Humane Letters of Laws of Letters, Doctor of Literature of Religion of Sacred Theology of Science Source: Commencement Programs, 1952-1987 92 Generallnformation Association Memberships* American Association of Colleges of Nursing American Association of College Registrars and Admissions Officers American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education American Association of Comparative Law American Association for Higher Education American Association of University Women American Council on Education American Educational Research Association American Public Welfare Association Association of American Colleges Association of Catholic Colleges and Universities Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning Association for Continuing Higher Education Association of Independent Colleges and Universities in Massachusetts Association for Institutional Research Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities Association of Urban Universities Boston Library Consortium Boston Theological Institute The College Board ­ Council for Advancement and Support of Education Council for Exceptional Children Council of Graduate Schools in the United States International Association of Schools of Social Work International Association of Universities International Federation of Catholic Universities Jesuit Student Personnel Association National Association of Catholic Charities National Association of College Admissions Counselors National Association of College and University Business Officers National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators National Association of Student Personnel Administrators National Conference of Deans and Directors of Schools of Social Work National Conference of Social Welfare National League for Nursing New England Educational Research Organization New England Organization for Nursing North American Association of Summer Sessions Northeastern Association of Graduate Schools Alpha Sigma Nu** Order of the Coif** Phi Beta Kappa** *The above listing is meant only to be representative of the major types of memberships to which the University belongs. **A complete listing of honor societies to which the University be­ longs may be found in the University Student Guide. Source: Deans' Offices Accrediting Agencies American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Business American Bar Association American Chemical Society American Psychological Association Association of American Law Schools Council on Social Work Education Interstate Certification Compact National Council of Accreditation of Teacher Education National League for Nursing New England Association of Schools and Colleges General Information Academic Department Locations Fulton 400 Accounting Department Fulton 214 Administrative Sciences Department Gasson 103 Arts and Sciences Higgins 321 Biology Department Devlin 223 Chemistry Department Carney 122 Classical Studies Department Fulton 423 Computer Sciences Department McGuinn 304 Counseling Psychology Counselors: Gasson 108 Arts and Sciences Campion 301 Education Fulton 201 Management Campion 301 Nursing Economics Department Carney 131 Campion 103-1 04A Education Campion 200 Educational Foundations Program English Department Carney 445 Fulton 314 Evening College Fulton 310 Finance Department Fine Arts Department Barry Pavilion 216, Newton Campus Fulton 306 General Management Program Geology and Geophysics Department Devlin 209 Germanic Studies Department Carney 325 Graduate Arts and Sciences McGuinn 221 History Department Carney 115 Honors Program: Arts and Sciences Gasson III Education Campion 104A Management Fulton 301 Instructional Leadership and Administrator Program McGuinn 600 LlIlguage Laboratory Lyons 313 Law School Stuart Hall, Newton Campus Law Department Fulton 403 Management Center Fulton 202 Marketing Department Fulton 301 Mathematics Department Carney 318 Music Program St. Mary's House, Newton Campus Nursing Cushing 202 Organizational Studies Program Fulton 214 Philosophy Department Carney 251 Physics Department Higgins 355 Political Science Department McGuinn 201 Psychology Department McGuinn 301 Religious Education and Pastoral Minisu'y, Institute of 31 Lawrence Avenue Romance Languages and Literatures Department Lyons 304 Slavic and Eastern Languages Department Carney 235 Social Work Graduate School McGuinn 131 Sociology Department McGuinn 426 Special Education and Rehabilitation Program McGuinn B29 Speech Communication and Theater Lyons L215 Summer Session Fulton 314 Theology Department Carney 418 Source; Registrar 93 94 General Information 1987-1988 Academic Calendar First semester August 29­ September I September I September 2 September 2 September 7 October 12 November II November 25-27 December 10 and II December 12-19 Second Semester January 17-18 January 18 January 19 February 15 February 29-March 4 April 1-4 April 18 May 3-4 May 5-12 May 23 Saturday-Tuesday: Freshman and Transfer Orientation and Advisement Tuesday: Registration for students not pre­ registered Wednesday: Classes begin Wednesday: Faculty Convocation Monday: Labor Day - No classes Monday: Columbus Day - No classes Wednesday: Veterans Day - No classes Wednesday-Friday: Thanksgiving holidays Thursday and Friday: Study Days - No classes for undergraduate day students Saturday-Saturday noon: Term examinations Sunday-Monday: Freshman and Transfer Orientation and Advisement Monday: Registration for students not pre­ registered Tuesday: Classes begin Monday: Celebration of Washington's Birthday - No classes Monday-Friday: Spring vacation Good Friday-Easter Monday: Easter Recess Monday: Celebration of Patriot's Day - No classes _ Tuesday and Wednesday: Study Days - No classes for undergraduate day students Thursday-Thursday noon: Term Examinations Monday: Commencement 1988-1989 First Semester September 3-6 September 6 September 7 September 7 October 10 November II November 23-25 December 12-13 December 14-21 Second Semester January 16-17 January 17 January 18 February 20 February 27-March 3 March 24-27 April 17 May 2-3 May 4-11 May 22 Saturday-Tuesday: Freshman and Transfer Orientation and Advisement Tuesday: Registration for students not pre­ registered Wednesday: Classes begin Wednesday: Faculty Convocation Monday: Celebration of Columbus Day - No Classes Friday: Veterans Day - No Classes Wednesday-Friday: Thanksgiving holidays Monday and Tuesday: Study Days - No classes for underg.aduate day students Wednesday-Wednesday noon: Term examinations Monday and Tuesday: Freshman and Transfer Orientation and Advisement Tuesday: Registration for students not pre­ registered Wednesday: Classes begin Monday: Celebration of Washington's Birthday - No Classes Monday-Friday: Spring vacation Good Friday-Easter Monday: Easter Recess Monday: Celebration of Patriot's Day - No Classes Tuesday and Wednesday: Study Days - No classes for undergraduate day students Thursday-Thursday noon: Term Examinations Monday: Commencement Source: Office of the Academic Vice President Sources Academic Vice President Admissions Alumni Association Buildings and Grounds Bureau of Conferences Controller's Office Deans' Offices Development Office Dining Department Financial Aid Office Office of Financial Vice President and Treasurer Health Services Office Housing Office Human Resources Office Language Laboratory President's Office Registrar Research Administration Space Planning and Utilization Sports Information Office Office of the Dean for Student Development Summer Session Office University Counseling Services University Librarian Information Services, University Relations N.B. Sources are responsible for the accuracy and completeness of data submitted for publication. Photos by Lee Pellegrini, except where noted Index Fact Book Index Academic Calendars, 94 Academic Deans, 12 Academic Department Locations, 93 Accrediting Agencies, 92 Administration and Faculty, 7-19 Administrators, University, 13 Alumni, 43-50 Alumni Association Board of Directors, 44 Alumni Awards, 44 Alumni by Primary School, Sex and Class, 46-47 Alumni Clubs, 44 Alumni Donors by Primary School and Class, 48-49 Alumni, Comparative Regional Analysis, 45 Alumni, Geographic Analysis by State, 45 Applications, Acceptances and Enrollment, Freshmen, 22 Applications, Acceptances and Enrollment, Transfer Students, 24 Archives, 76 Association Memberships, 92 Athletics, 79-85 Board of Trustee Membership, 9 Boston College Profile, 5 BOston College Properties, 56 Boston College, A Brief History, 3 Building Use, Summary, 59 Buildings, Boston College, 54-55 Buildings and Grounds (See Physical Plant) Campus Maps, 96-97 Chairmen and Chairwomen, Department, 12 Chart of Administration, 8 Classrooms, 59 Contract and Grant Awards, 66-68 Counseling Services, 41 Deans, Academic, 12 Degrees Conferred at Boston College, Types, 91 Degrees Conferred, Undergraduate, 35-37 Degrees Conferred, Undergraduate and Graduate, 38 Department Chairmen and Chairwomen, 1~ Development Office Annual Report, 50 Dining Facilities, 58 Donors by Giving Club, 50 Dormitories (See Residence Halls) Enrollment, Evening College, 30 Enrollment, Full-Time Equivalent, 29 Enrollment, Full-Time Freshmen by Year and Sex, 22 Enrollment, Graduate and Undergraduate, Full- and Part-Time, 25 Enrollment, Graduate by School, 26 Enrollment, Graduate, by Degree Program and Discipline, 27 Enrollment, Minority Students, 34 Enrollment, Summer Session, 29 Enrollment, Transfer Students, 24 Enrollment, Transfer Students by Previous Institution and Sex, 24 Enrollment, Undergraduate and Graduate by Sex, 28 Enrollment, Undergraduate by School, 26 Enrollment, Undergraduate Day and Eve­ ning and Graduate, 25 Enrollment, Veterans, 34 Evening College Enrollment, 30 Facility Capacities, 57 Faculty, Administration and, 7-19 Faculty, Average Compensation by Rank, 19 Faculty, by Highest Earned Degree and Rank, 17 Faculty, by Highest Earned Degree and Sex, 17 Faculty, by Rank and Sex, 17 Faculty, by School and Rank, 15 Faculty, by School and Sex, 16 Faculty, by School and Tenure Status, 16 Faculty, Full-Time Equivalent by School, 15 Faculty, Full-Time, Teaching Assistants, Teaching Fellows, 18 Finance, 63-69 Financial Aid, Undergraduate and Graduate, 39 Financial Operations, Highlights, 64 Foreign Student and Scholar Statistics, 32-33 Foreword, 1 Founder of Boston College, 88 Freshmen Applications, Acceptances and Enrollment, 22 Freshmen Enrollees, SAT Averages by Class, 22 Freshmen, Full-Time, Enrollment by Year and Sex, 22 Freshmen, Geographic Distribution, 23 Full-Time Equivalent Enrollment, 29 General Information, 87-94 Geographic Distribution of Students, Gradu­ ate and Undergraduate, 31 Geographic Distribution, Freshmen, 23 Gifts to the University, 50 Graduate Enrollment by Degree Program and Discipline, 27 Graduate Enrollment by School, 26 Graduate Enrollment by Sex, 28 Graduate Enrollment, Full- and Part-Time, 25 95 Libraries, 71-76 Library Circulation Statistics, 72 Library Expenditures, 72 Library Holdings, 72 Library Special Collections, 74 Maps, Campus, 96-97 Minority Student Enrollment, 34 Officers of the University, II Offices, 58 Organization Chart, Administration, 8 Personnel, Professional, Administrative and Support Staff, 14 Physical Plant, 53-61 Presidents of Boston College, 88 Professional, Administrative, and Support Staff Personnel, 14 Profile, Boston College, 5 Properties, Boston College, 56 Residence Hall Capacities, 60 SAT Averages by Class, Freshmen Enrollees, 22 Sources of Fact Book Information, 94 Special Collections, 74 Sports Participation Levels, 81 Sports Records, 83 Sports Schedules, 84-85 Students, 21-41 Summer Session Enrollment, 29 Teaching Fellows, Full-Time Faculty, Teach­ ing Assistants, 18 Transfer Students, Applications, Acceptances and Enrollment, 24 Transfer Students, Enrollment by Previous Institution and Sex, 24 Trustee Associate Membership, 10 Trustee Membership, Board of, 9 Trustees of Boston College, 8 Tuition and Fees, 65 Infirmary, 40 International Student and Scholar Statistics, 32-33 Undergraduate and Graduate Degrees Con­ ferred,38 Undergraduate and Graduate Financial Aid, 39 Undergraduate Degrees Conferred, 35-37 Undergraduate Enrollment by School, 26 Undergraduate Enrollment by Sex, 28 Undergraduate Enrollment, Full- and Part- time, 25 University Administrators, 13 University Archives, 76 University Counseling Services, 41 Language Laboratory, 76 Veterans Enrolled at Boston College, 34 Health Services, 40 History, Boston College, 3 Honorary Degrees Awarded, 88-91 Honorary Degrees Granted, 91 @ BOSTON COLLEGE ~, CHESTNUT HILL CAMPUS ~,~ • ~ 0 C'-ellel.A,tv.o ~... . ~ A C/~C'-e CITY OF NEWTON / - =-=-=cirvOFBoSiON::::....:­ ~ SHEA FIELD RESERVOIR I/~~D" o I -""""rOBosrON COMMONWEALTH AVE (RTE 30\ 500 I I I I I FEET SEPTEMBER 1987 @ BOSTON COLLEGE NEWTON CAMPUS o I 300 I I ! @ BOSTON COLLEGE WESTON OBSERVATORY FEET I o 100 I , FEET , C 1~DC o MAGNETICS LAB ELECTRONICS LAB ~ o O --- COMPUTER CENTER MAIN BUILDING )~I 'u~ -=:-. i!Uo ~ ( ~8G.YM ~ (I::> cY TO ATE 12B­ June 1985 · · · .~;·~j f· .. ' .. RTE 117 ~ TO WESTON CENTER BOYLsml'l61 t ~ June 1985