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FACT BOOK
1980 - 1981
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BOSTON COLLEGE FACT BOOK
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
I.
II.
Foreword
v
Boston College - A Brief History
vii
Boston College Profile . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. viii
ADMINISTRATION AND FACULTY
Chart of Administration
3
Board of Trustees
4
Officers of the University
6
Academic Deans
6
University Administrators
7
Department Chairmen and Chairwomen
8
Professional, Administrative and Support Staff Personnel
9
Faculty:
by School and Rank
10
Full-Time Equivalent by School
10
by School and Tenure Status
11
by School and Sex
_
11
by Highest Earned Degree and Rank
12
by Highest Earned Degree and Sex
12
by Rank and Sex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 12
Full-TIme Faculty, Graduate Assistants, Teaching Fellows:
- by School and Department
13
Average Faculty Compensation:
14
- by Rank, AAUP Category I, 1980-81
14
- Boston College Faculty - For Five Years Ended June 30, 1981
14
STUDENTS
Freshman Enrollment by Year and Sex (Full-TIme)
16
Freshman Enrollees - SAT Average by Class
16
Freshman Applications, Acceptances and Enrollment (Full-Time)
16
Class of 1985 Applications and Enrollees - Geographic Distribution
,
17
Enrollment 1980-81:
Undergraduate Transfer Students by Type of Previous Institution and Sex
17
Graduate and Undergraduate, Full- and Part-Time
18
Undergraduate, Day and Evening, and Graduate
18
Undergraduate, by School
19
Graduate, by School
19
Graduate, by Degree Program and Discipline
20
Undergraduate and Graduate, by Sex
21
Full-Time Equivalent
Evening College
Summer Session
Geographic Distribution of Students
International Students by School
International Students by Class or Program
International Students by Sex and Program
International Students by Country
Minority Enrollment
Veteran Enrollment
ii
21
22
22
23
24
24
24
25
26
26
I
I
Page
III.
Undergraduate Degrees Conferred:
by Degree and Number of Majors
- by Major
- by School and by Major
Undergraduate and Graduate Degrees Conferred, by Degree and Sex
Health Services
Undergraduate and Graduate Financial Aid:
- Number of Students
- Dollars
ALUMNI
IV.
Boston College Alumni Clubs
Board of Directors
Comparative Regional Analysis
Geographic Analysis by State
Living Alumni by Primary School, Sex and Class
Alumni Donors by Primary School and Class
New Heights Advancement Campaign
Individual Donors by Giving Club
PHYSICAL PLANT
FINANCE
VI.
Highlights of Financial Operations
H.E.F.A. Bond Issues
Tuition and Fees - For the Eight Years Ended June 30, 1982
Tuition Restated in 1967 Dollars
Contracts and Grants, Source and Application, 1980-81
Contract and Grant Awards 1980-81
;
Selected Contract and Grant Awards 1980-81
LIBRARIES
Libraries
Expenditures for Library Materials
Holdings by Individual Libraries
Circulation Statistics
Computer Searches
Special Collections
Special Library Services
,
37,
37
38
40
42
42
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
50
50
51
52
,
'"
'
,
32
33
36
36
Map - Chestnut Hill Campus
Map - Newton Campus
Map - Weston Observatory
Boston College Properties
Buildings Related to Boston College Operation
Summary of Building Use
Classrooms
Dining Facilities
Offices
'"
Facility Capacities
Residence Hall Statistics
V.
27
28
29
30
31
,,
'
,
54
54
55
56
56
57
58
62
62
62
62
63
65
66
iii
Page
,
VII.
ATHLETICS
Varsity Sports
Club Sports
Intramurals
Unstructured Recreation and Lessons ..........................................•......
Varsity Sports Records
Varsity Football Schedules 1981-84
Varsity Hockey Schedule - 1981-82
Varsity Basketball Schedule - 1981-82
VIII. GENERAL INFORMATION
Honorary Degrees
'.'
Honorary Degrees Awarded, 1952-81
Founder and Presidents
Types of Degrees Conferred
Accreditation and Memberships of the University
,
Academic Department Locations
Sources
Academic Calendar
iv
68
68
69
69
70
70
71
71
74
75
78
79
79
80
81
82
FOREWORD
The Boston College Fact Book is a summary of significant statistics gathered from various
sources throughout the University. We wish to extend sincere 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 - August-September, 1981 - to reflect the Academic Year
1980-1981. The majority of the information is extracted from management reports produced
on a regular basis by the various source offices. When interpreting the figures presented we
advise you to always note the time frame referenced in the individual tables.
We continue to revise our format and add new information in an effort to make the Fact
Book as current as possible, as well as an historical overview. Ideas for improvements and
suggestions for additional data are encouraged.
Office of the
Financial Vice President and Treasurer
November, 1981
v
The original arrangement of the buildings at the old Boston College.
Photographed sometime before 1875 by Oliver Wendell Holmes.
The Recitation Building (Gasson Hall) on the Lawrence reservoir, circa 1914.
vi
BOSTON COLLEGE
A Brief History
Boston College was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863, and is one of twenty-eight Jesuit colleges 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 liberal arts college, the faculty was predominantly Jesuit,
but today's full-time faculty is comprised of 44 Jesuits and over 500 lay men and women. Part-time faculty
positions are held by 22 Jesuits, in addition to 19 Jesuit members of the university administration.
i
I
I
I
Originally located on Harrison Avenue in the South End of Boston, where it shared quarters with the
Boston College High School, the College outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first fifty years. A
new location was selected in Chestnut Hill, then almost 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 occupied part of the sites of Devlin, Higgins, and Cushing
Halls. The foundations were blasted out of solid ledge. Because of its historic value, Gasson was completely restored in 1976 in order to preserve its familiar 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 1974 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 departments, and dormitories housing over 800 freshmen and
sophomores.
Though incorporated as a University since its beginning, it was not until its second half-century that Boston
College began to fill out the dimensions of its University charter. The Summer Session was inaugurated in
1924; the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences in 1925; the Law School, 1929; the Evening College, 1929;
the Graduate School of Social Work, 1936; the College of Business Administration, 1938. 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 1947 and 1952, respectively. Weston Observatory, founded in
1928, was accepted as a Department of Boston College in 1947, offering courses in geophysics and geology
to graduate students.
In 1927 Boston College conferred one earned bachelor'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 students comprise more than 57 percent of the University's enrollment, and 37 percent of a total alumni body of almost 75,000.
Now the fourth largest private university in New England, with full- and part-time enrollment of over 14,000,
Boston College consists of eleven schools, colleges, and institutes offering thirteen degree programs and
one certification program.
vii
BOSTON COLLEGE PROFILE
1980-81
ADMISSIONS
Applicants (Class of '85)
Enrollees (Class of '85)
Men
Women
Total Freshman Class
ENROLLMENT - (Full- and Part-Time)
Undergraduate
Graduate
Total Enrollment
PERSONNEL
Full-Time Faculty
Part-Time Faculty (FTE)
Teaching Fellows
Graduate Assistants
Total Administrative/Professional Staff
& Sponsored Research (Aug. '81)
Total Secretarial/Clerical
& Sponsored Research (Aug. '81)
Total Physical Plant Positions (Aug. '81)
General Service (Aug. '81)
DEGREES CONFERRED
Undergraduate
Graduate & Professional
Total Degrees Conferred
ALUMNI
LIBRARIES - (Total Holdings) - Volumes
PHYSICAL PLANT
Acres (owned properties)
Chestnut Hill Campus
Newton Campus
Other
Total Acres
Buildings (utilized properties)
Administrative/ Academic
Student Housing
Other
Total Buildings
FINANCE
Revenues
Expenditures and Transfers
viii
12,748
796
1,148
1,944
10,767
3,678
14,445
558
119
76
275
552
473
219
247
?,201
1,130
3,331
74,908
873,833
110.60
40.20
9.17
159.97
31
23
24
78
$97,200,000
$97,100,000
ADMINISTRATION & FACULTY
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NOTE: University administrators occupying the positions
reflected above are listed on pages 6 and 7.
T.lKornornuniationl
Source: Office of PtNsonneJ Relations
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Board
of
Tru5tees
President
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.nd
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Programs in Education
end Nursing
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Honors
P......m
BOSTON COLLEGE
CHART OF ADMINISTRATION, 1981
]
~
Doan.
Summer
Session
Oean,
O•• n,
School at
Education
Schoolot
Nursing
o..n,
Sehoolof
AbMgament
O..n,
Enning
Col.
r
AMoci.I,
OMnlGI
Aaoci...
CantUI
r
OiNCtor.
D;"~a..
Chairmen
c.n.... lor
TQtin,eul.
lit Ed. Policy
Dine_.
c.mPUI
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ONn af
Admlilions.
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D....
Gradu_te
SChool of
Soci.1 Work
"""""_
University
Lib,arilln
Financial Aid
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Finane'"
••
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Admitd_
Univen,ty
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:s
3
BOARD OF TRUSTEES MEMBERSHIPt
1981-82
I
I
Joseph F. Abaly, Jr., '50
Vice Chairmen of the Board
R.J. Reynolds Industries, Inc.
Joseph E. McCormick, S.J., M.A. '46
Director for Vocations
Campion Residence and Renewal Center
Geoffrey T. Boisi, '69
General Partner
Goldman Sachs
John G. McElwee, J.D. '50
President and Chief Operations Officer
John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co.
Milton C. Borenstein, '35
President
Sweetheart Paper Products Co.
John J. McMullen
Wayne A. Budd, '63
Partner
Budd, Reifly ft Wiley
William W. Meissner, S.J.
Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatry
Harvard Medical School
Donald R. Campion, S.J.
Secretary for Communication
Jesuit Conference
J. Donald Monan, S.J."
President
Boston College
John M. Cataldo, '44
President
National Freight Traffic Service
Thomas M. Moran, '48
Vice President
Charter Oil Company
William F. Connell", '59
Chairmen of the Board and President
Ogden Food Service Corporation
Robert J. Morrissey, '00
Partner
Withington, Cross, Park ft Groden
John M. Conno"" Jr., '63
President
Hili, Holliday, Connors, Cosmopulos, Inc.
Emma Jeanne Mudd
Boston College parent
George L. Drury, S.J., '45, M.A. '46, M.S. '49, M.S. '58
Director of Retreats
Eastern Point Retreat House
Joseph R. Fahey, S.J., '00, M.A. '61
Academic Dean (1971-1981 J
College of the Holy Cross
(Sabbatical Yearl
Thomas J. Flanagan, '42
President
Pan Am World Services, Inc.
Thomas J. Flatley
President
The Ratlay Company
Thomas J. Gibbons, S.J.", '63, M.A. '54.. S.T.L. '61
Principal
Boston College High School
Anne P. Jones", '58, J.D. '61
Commissioner
Federal Communications Commission
The Honorable Edward M. Kennedy, LL.D. '66 (Hon.)
United States Senator
Frencis C. Mackin, S.J.", M:A. '63
Vica President: Westchester
Fordham University
tOnly Boston College Degrees listed:
-Executive Committee Member
I
4
Chairman
John J. McMullen Associates, Inc.
Michael E. Murphy, '58 .
Executive Vice President and Chief Financial and
Administrative Officer
Consolidated Foods Corporation
The Honorable David S. Nelson", '57, J.D. '00,
LL.D. 79 (Hon.)
United States District Judge
Walter J. Neppl
Vice Chairman of the Board
J. C. Penney Co., Inc.
Robert J. O'Keefe, '51
Senior Vice President
American Security Bank N. A.
James P. O'Neill", '42
Executive Vice President
Xerox Corpo~tion
The Honorable Thomas P. O'Neill, Jr., '36, LL.D. 73 (Hon.)
Speaker of the House of Representatives
John W. Padberg, S.J.
President
Weston School of Theology
Clare A. Schoenfeld, 72
Manager of Information Systems Planning
American Express Company
I
Sandra J. Thomson, M.D., '58 (Newton Collegel
Daniel J. Shine, S.J. '44, M.A. '45
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery
Children's Hospital Medical Center
Rector of the Jesuit Community
Boston College
Helen M. Stanton, M.S.W. '43
Co-Chairman, Boston College Parents' Committee
Joseph F. Turley
President
The Gillette Company
Robert J. Starratt, S.J., '59, M.A. '60
Director
Thomas A. Vanderslice', '53
Commission on Research and Development
Jesuit Secondary Education Association
President and Chief Operating Officer
General Telephone & Electronics Corporation
An Wang
Chairman of the Board Bnd President
*Executive Committee Member
Source: President's Office
Wang Laboratories, Inc.
TRUSTEES OF BOSTON COLLEGE
DECEMBER, 1972 THROUGH SEPTEMBER, 1982
Joseph F. Abely, Jr.
Raymond C. 8aumhart, S.J.
Geoffrey T. 80isi
Milton C. Borenstein
Joseph G. Brennan
William L. Brown
Wayne A. Budd
Robert F. 8yrnes
Donald R. Campion, S.J.
Wallace E. Carroll
John M. Cataldo
James F. Cleary
William F. Connell
John M. Connors, Jr.
Joseph F. Cotter
James H. Coughlin, S.J.
George L. Drury, S.J.
Francis Dubreuil
Christopher Duncan
Joseph R. Fahey, S.J.
John T. Fallon
Joseph A. Fitzmyer, S.J.
Stephen E. Rx
Thomas J. Flanagan
Thomas J. Flatley
Maureen Foley
Jean Ford, R.S.C.J.
Thomas J. Galligan, Jr.
Thomas J. Gibbons, S.J.
Avram J. Goldberg
Eli Goldston
Patricia A. Goler
Anne P. Jones
William J. Kenealy, S.J.
Edward M. Kennedy
Mary M. Lai
T. Vincent Learson
S. Joseph Loscocco
John Lowell
Joseph F. MacDonnell, S.J.
1975-83
1972-73
1981-85
1979-83
1972-73
1973-81
1980-84
1972-73
1980-84
1972-74
1978-82
1972-80
1974-82
1979-83
1972-79
1972-75
1977-85
1972-73
1972-73
1972-79,
1981-85
1972-78
1972-73
1976-80
1979-83
1978-82
1973-77
1974-77
1972-80
1975-83
1972-78
1972-74
1972-80
19n-85
1972-74
1976-83
1972-79
1974-76
1972-77
1972-79
1973-81
Francis C. Mackin, S.J.
Joseph E. McCormick, S.J.
John G. McElwee
Leo J. McGovern, S.J.
John J. McMullen
William W. Meissner, S.J.
Robert A. Mitchell, S.J.
J. Donald Monan, S.J.
Thomas M. Moran
Diane J. Morash
Robert J. Morrissey
Giles E. Mosher, Jr.
Emma Jeanne Mudd
Michael E. Murphy
David S. Nelson
Walter J. Neppl
Francis Nicholson, S.J.
William J. O'Halloran, S.J.
Joseph A. O'Hare, S.J.
Robert J. O'Keefe
Adrian D'Keeffe
James P. O'Neill
Thomas P. O'Neill, Jr.
Cornelius W. Owens
John W. Padberg, S.J.
John P. Reboli, S.J.
Clare A. Schoenfeld
Joseph L. Shea, S.J.
Daniel J. Shine, S.J.
Helen M. Stanton
Robert J. Starratt, S.J.
Sandra J. Thomson.
Joseph F. Turley
Thomas A. Vanderslice
Michael P. Walsh, S.J.
An Wang
Thomas J. Watson, III
Thomas J. White
Vincent C. Ziegler
1972-78,
1980-84
1977-85
1978-82
1974-77
1978-82
1979-83
1972-80
1972- .
1980-84
1977-81
1980-84
1972-78
1981-85
1980-84
1972-78,
1979-83
1981-85
1972-76
1972-78
1973-81
1974-82
1972-73
1973-85
1972-84
1972·80
1975-83
1972-75
1980-84
1972-77
1976-84
1977-85
1978-82
1977-85
1981-85
1978-82
1972-80
1978-82
1973-76
1972-76
1972-78
,
Source: President's Office
5
OFFICERS OF THE UNIVERSITY
FALL 1981
President
Executive Vice President
Vice President of Student Affairs
Vice President, Assistant to the President
Secretary of the University
Vice President for University Relations
Academic Vice President and Dean of Faculties
Financial Vice President and Treasurer
J. Donald Monan, S.J.
Francis B. Campanella
Kevin P. Duffy
Margaret A. Dwyer
Leo J. McGovern, S.J.
James P. Mcintyre
Joseph A. Panuska, S.J.
John R. Smith
ACADEMIC-DEANS
FALL 1981
Admissions, Records and Financial Aid
John J. Maguire, Dean
Faculties
Robert R. Newton, Associate Dean
Donald J. White, Associate Dean
The College of Arts and Sciences
William B. Neenan, S.J., Dean
Carol Hurd Green, Associate Dean
Marie M. McHugh, Associate Dean
Henry J. McMahon, Associate Dean
The Evening College of Arts, Sciences and Business Administration
James A. Woods, S.J., Dean
The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
Donald J. White, Dean
George R. Fuir, S.J., Associate Dean
The School of Education
Mary D. Griffin, Dean
Edward B. Smith, Associate Dean
The Law School
Richard G. Huber, Dean
John M. Flackett,--Associate Dean
Noel J. Augustyn, Assistant Dean
The School of Management
John J. Neuhauser, Dean
Justin C. Cronin, Associate Dean
William B. Torbert, Associate Dean
The School of Nursing
Mary A. Dineen, Dean
The Graduate School of Social Work
June G. Hopps, Dean
The Summer Session
George R. Fuir, S.J., Dean
Source: Office of Personnel Relations
Note: Administrative positions listed on pages 6 and 7 are limited to those reflected on the Chart of Administration, page 3.
6
UNIVERSITY ADMINISTRATORS
!
:1
'I
i
FALL 1981
Director, Admissions
Charles S. Nolan
Director, Affirmative Action
Alice Jehgelian
Director, AHANA Student Programs
Donald Brown
Executive Director, Alumni Association
John F. Wissler
University Archivist
Paul A. FitzGerald, S.J.
Director, Athletics
William J. Flynn
Director, University Audio- Visual Services
Fred J. Pula
Director, University Budgets
James
P. Kennedy
Director, Honors Program, College of
Arts & Sciences
David H. Gill, S.J.
Director, Housing
Richard E. Collins
Director, Internal Audit
John Dunnet
University Librarian
Thomas F. O'Connell
Director, Management Center
John McKiernan
Director, Management Information Systems
Bernard W. Gleason, Jr.
Director, Personnel
Leo V. Sullivan
Director, Plant Services
Joseph F. MacSweeney
Dir,ector, Buildings and Grounds
Alfred G. Pennino
Director, University Policies and Procedures
Fred B. Mills, Jr.
Director, Campus School
John R. Eichom
Director, Purchasing
John D. Beckwith
Director, Career Planning and Placement
John E. Steele
University Registrar
University Chaplain
John A. Dinneen, S.J.
Director, Research Administration
Charles F. Flaherty
Director, Communications
Paul J. Hennessy
Director, Social Welfare Regional
Research Institute
Director, Computing Services
Donald S. Zitter
Controller
Catherine H. Briel
Director, University Counseling Services
Weston M. Jenks, Jr.
Director, Development
Karl M. Salathe
Director, Financial Aid
Paul C..Combe
Louise M. Lonabocker
Barry A. Bluestone
Director, Space Data Analysis Laboratory
Leo F. Power, Jr.
Director, Space Management
Roderick G. Wallick
Dean of Students
Edward J. Hanrahan, S.J.
Director, Student Programs and Resources
Carole L. Wegman
Director, Center for Testing Evaluation and
Director, Financial Information and Analysis
Michael T. Callnan
Educational Policy
Director, Financing Resources, Federal and State
Assistant Treasurer
Philip C. Thompson
Francis F. Mills
Director, Health Services
Arnold F. Mazur, M.D.
George F. Madaus
Director, Weston Observatory
James W. Skehan, S.J.
Source: Office of Personnel Relarions
7
DEPARTMENT CHAIRMEN AND CHAIRWOMEN
FALL 1981
Accounting
Administrative Sciences
Biology
Chemistry
Classical Studies
Computer Sciences
Economics
English
Finance
Fine Arts
Geology and Geophysics
Germanic Studies
History
law
Marketing
Mathematics
Organizational Studies
Philosophy
Physics
Political Science
Psychology
Romance languages and literatures
Slavic and Eastern languages
Sociology
Speech Communication and Theatre
Theology
Source: Office of the Academic Vice President
8
louis S. Corsini
David C. Murphy
Jonathan J. Goldthwaite
Jeong-long lin
Eugene W. Bushala
James Gips
Richard W. Tresch
Joseph A. Appleyard, S.J.
Jerry A. Viscione
Marianne W. Martin
John C. Hepburn
Christoph Eykman
Alan Rogers
Alfred E. Sutherland
Michael P. Peters
Paul R. Thie
James L. Bowditch
Joseph F.X. Flanagan, S.J.
Robert L. Carovillano
David Manwaring
Randolph Easton
Vera G. lee
Michael J. Connolly
lynda Holmstrom
Donald Fishman
Robert J. Daly, S.J.
r
Ii .
PROFESSIONAL, ADMINISTRATIVE AND SUPPORT STAFF PERSONNEL
AS OF JULY 1981
Full-Time
Women
Men
Open
Positions
Total
Positions
Part-Time
Women
Men
Open
Positions
Professional I Administrative
41
72
47
21
3
5
2
16
40
-207
-135
67
35
Dean of Faculties
Business/Finance
Student Affairs
University' Relations
President's Office
Chaplain's Office
Executive Vice President
Libraries
Subtotal Professional/
Administrative
Sponsored Research
Total Professional I
Administrative and
Sponsored Research
Secretary I Clerical
Libraries
Subtotal Secretary/Clerical
-
274
25
22
-47
30
30
7
3
4
6
6
87
108
9
-
77
2
30
26
1
-
6
9
2
37
-
-356
- 37
102
7
-
-
-
21
-
-
14
-
-
-
14
458
255
42
16
2
296
170
-297
-
Total Secretary/Clerical
and Sponsored Research
-
1
-
38
-15
-427
6
-
-
-
-
-
-
9
-
-19
16
44
35
-
39
1
--
-
15
552
5
340
--
-1
-47
---5
-
38
5
15
-
58
-62
-5
--
-
40
28
-57
--
-18
-400
-6
35
42
2
1
2
5
38
44
2
8
Physical Plant Personnel
Grounds
Tradespeople
Housekeeping
89
Mailroom
10
2
Switchboard
Total Physical Plant
Campus Police
Gate Attendants
Dining Department
General Service
-
14
2
5
1
108
12
8
Total General Service
TOTAL POSITIONS'
473
-
-
44
-
-
2
2
-
108
14
13
-5
-4
-
--
3
-
38
-
-
-
38
-
-
12
116
15
5
1
-
-
9
17
1
17
127
-
43
35
12
66
12
15
3
-
415
9
-23
-140
-649
-
75
-210
-178
-
34
16
3
-
General Service Sponsored
Research
125
-
-
-
10
325
-
105
110
125
32
6
9
2
3
1
13
1
66
-362
-18
Sponsored Research
(Includes Research
Assistants)
1
Total
Positions
7
-47
-565
-
-16
-57
22
-203
-1271
11
-
-
-
-
-
-17
-26
--1
72
127
21
219
22
-247
-1491
'"The totals represent all of the authorized and budgeted positions for the above classifications as of July 1981.
Source: Office of Personnel Relations
9
~~----~------------FACULTY
FACULTY BY SCHOOL AND RANK
1980-81
School
Arts & Sciences
Education
Management
Nursing
Law
Social Work
Total
Professor
%
No. Faculty
Associate
%
No. Faculty
Assistant
%
No. Faculty
78
19
13
2
16
4
132
142
16
105
12
15
15
9
2
158
--
23
36
21
3
52
22
24
43
30
23
38
34
21
2
9
6
50
-213
38
--
Instructor
%
No. Faculty
8
6
10
24
4
3
-55
31
23
25
24
29
11
28
3
11
16
39
13
17
10
Total
No.
%
100
100
61 100
62 100
31 100
18 100
558 100
333
53
--
Source: Office of the Academic Vice President
FULL-TIME EQUIVALENT FACULTY BY SCHOOL*
1980-81
Full-Time
School
No.
%
Arts & Sciences
Education
Management
Nursing
Law
Social Work
333
53
60
Total
61
62
31
18
-558
9
11
11
6
3
-100
FTE of Part-Time
No.
%
75
9
11
13
6
5
-119
63
8
9
11
5
4
-100
Total FTE Faculty
No.
%
408
62
72
75
37
23
-677
60
9
11
12
5
3
-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; parHime 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.
10
FACULTY BY SCHOOL AND
TENURE STATUS
1980-81
%
%
School
No.
Faculty
No.
Faculty
No.
%
Arts & Sciences
Education
Management
Nursing
Law
Social Work
237
36
71
96
68
56
21
17
13
34
55
72
17
27
41
14
5
200
333
53
34
29
32
44
66
100
100
100
100
100
100
-358
Total
)
Total
Non-Tenured
Tenured
--
64
61
62
31
18
45
28
-558
36
100
Source: Office of the Academic Vice President
I
I
FACULTY BY SCHOOL AND SEX
1980-81
School
Arts & Sciences
Education
Management
Nursing
Law
Social Work
Total
Women
No.
%
56
15
7
61
7
8
154
--
36
10
5
40
4
5
100
Men
No.
%
%
Total
Women
Men
69
9
333
53
17
83
38
28
54
1
24
10
13
1
6
2
61
11
72
89
62
98
31
18
23
44
277
-404
-100
-558
28
2
77
56
72
Source: Office of the Academic Vice President
11
FACULTY BY HIGHEST EARNED DEGREE AND RANK
1980-81
Degree
Doctorate
Masters
First Professional"
Total
Professor
No.
%
122
1
9
-132
Associate
No.
%
22
2
195
15
3
-213
-
24
35
3
-
-
38
Instructor
No,
%
Assistant
No.
%
125
26
7
-
22
5
1
-158
49
6
55
-
28
-
Total
No.
%
9
1
442
91
25
79
17
4
100
-558
10
-Including LLB, JO, STB, PhL, and STL
Source: Office of the Academic Vice President
FACULTY BY HIGHEST EARNED DEGREE AND SEX
1980-81
Degree
Doctorate
Masters
First Professional"
,."
Total
I'
Women
No,
%
88
59
7
-154
57
38
5
-100
Men
No.
%
Total
No.
%
354
32
18
442
91
-
404
88
8
4
-100
25
-558
79
17
4
-100
I
'"
I"I ~
!
"Including LLB, JD, STB, PhL, and STL.
!
Source: Office of the Academic Vice President
FACULTY BY RANK AND SEX
1980-81
!.
I
Rank
Professor
Associate
Assistant
Instructor
Total
I
13
54
9
35
56
36
31
20
-100
-154
Men
No.
%
Total
No.
%
119
159
102
24
132
213
158
55
-404
30
39
25
6
100
-558
24
38
28
10
-100
Source: Office of the Academic Vice President
'
~~I
Women
No.
%
(
12
---.
FULL·TIME FACULTY, GRADUATE ASSISTANTS, TEACHING FELLOWS
BY SCHOOL AND DEPARTMENT
1980-81
Arts & Sciences
Biology
Chemistry
Classics
Economics
English
Fine Arts
Geology
German
History
Mathematics
Music
Philosophy
Physics
Political Science
Psychology
Romance Languages
Siavic/ Eastern
Sociology
Speech
Theology
Arts & Sciences
Total
Education
Law
Management
Nursing
Social Work
Total
Full-Time
Faculty
Graduate
Asst's.
18
18
3
23
22
38
16
6
11
10
4
19
Teaching
Fellows
4
25
15
10
(No Graduate Dept.)
INo Graduate Dept.)
18
34
22
10
2
(No Graduate Dept.)
10
16
19
14
4
5
17
14
10
3
2
~
22
34
6
333
53
186
70
31
61
17
22
10
19
9
(No Graduate Dept.)
67
9
62
18
558
2
275
76
"School of Education Graduate Assistants include 15 in Audio·Visual Services and 4 with the Institute of Religious Education
and Pastoral Ministry.
Source: Office of the Academic Vice President; Dean of Graduate School of Ans and Sciences.
13
AVERAGE COMPENSATION BY RANK"
AAUP CATEGORY I
(9-MONTH EQUIVALENT)
1980-81
Rank
Boston College
All Combined Category
Church-Related
$40,700
30,500
24,500
19,400
$39,390
29,020
23,430
18,380
$36,460
27,880
22,570
18,370
Professor
Associate
Assistant
Instructor
·Includes salary and fringe benefits.
Sources: Office of the Academic Vice President; Academe, page 215, August, 1981.
BOSTON COLLEGE FACULTV
AVERAGE COMPENSATION BY RANK*
Year
Professor
Associate
Assistant
Instructor
1976-n
19n-78
1978-79
1979-80
1980-81
$29,800
31,500
34,100
37,000
40,700
$23,300
24,500
.26,000
27,800
30,500
$18,900
19,700
20,700
22,000
24,500
$16,300
16,500
15,900
18,000
19,400
·Includes salary and fringe benefits.
Source: Office of the Academic Vice President
,
I
14
STUDENTS
15
FULL·TIME FRESHMAN ENROLLMENT
BY YEAR AND SEX
Fall
I
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
,I
"
"
Ii
It
FRESHMAN ENROLLEES
SAT AVERAGES BY CLASS
Enrollment
Men Women
Total
Class
Verbal
Mathematical
1,024
1,253
913
1,144
962
1,041
1,028
901
856
927
796
1,749
2,229
1,787
2,152
2,031
2,132
2,205
2,077
2,042
2,171
1,944
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
530
528
518
515
504
511
496
509
516
512
507
554
552
554
548
544
725
976
874
1,008
1,069
1,091
1,177
1,176
1,186
1,244
1,148
550
538
544
552
555
555
Ii
I".,
Source: Admissions Office
IiI
Source: Admissions Office
,
!
:[
FRESHMAN APPLICATIONS, ACCEPTANCES AND ENROLLMENT
(FULL·TIME)
I,
I
Fall
Applications
Acceptances
Acceptances
%of
Applications
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
6,712
7,286
8,358
8,377
9,486
10,848
11,336
12,411
12,505
12,640
12,748
4,748
5,077
4,660
4,964
4,952
5,548
5,479
4,821
4,514
4,389
4,227
71
70
56
59
52
51
48
39
36
35
33
Total
Enrollment
Enrollment
%of
Acceptances
Enrollment
%of
Applications
1,749
2,229
1,787
2,152
2,031
2,132
2,205
2,077
2,042
2,171
1,944
37
44
38
43
41
38
37
43
45
49
46
26
31
21
26
21
20
18
17
16
17
15
Ii
Ii
Source: Admissions Office
I:
NOTE: Freshman 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.
I
Acceptance and enrollment figures reported are based on deposits received as of 5/27/81.
i:
Ii
I
LLL_
1'1'
16
r
,
CLASS OF 1985
APPLICATIONS. ACCEPTANCES AND ENROLLEES
GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION
Applications Acceptances Enrollees
State
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Massachusetts
Maryland
Maine
Michigan
Minnesota
Missouri
Mississippi
Nebraska
.
1
3
1
8
3
86
29
1,558
18
27
117
13
16
206
19
5
7
9
6
4,664
210
166
98
51
28
2
15
Applications Acceptances Enrollees
State
1
Nevada
-
-
New Hampshire
3
1
New Jersey
-
-
New Mexico
19
10
2
3
241
4
2
25
3
4
469
7
4
42
4
8
72
7
2
2
3
1
1,753
57
56
27
15
8
2
7
35
4
1
2
1
1
838
23
32
15
6
4
New York
North Carolina
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Puerto Rico
Rhode Island
South Carolina
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
2
212
1,319
1
2,245
8
124
6
5
418
138
429
6
7
27
1
56
71
9
7
5
2
67
363
1
35
167
-
-
663
2
241
-
36
15
2
-
110
58
175
1
3
6
45
28
87
2
4
-
4
8
1
Wisconsin
48
15
18
7
2
2
19
Wyoming
1
-
-
238
97
48
Vermont
Virginia
Virgin Islands
Washington
West Virginia
Foreign Nations
Total
2
--
--
12,748
4,227
8
-1,944
Source: Admissions Office
UNDERGRADUATE TRANSFER STUDENT
ENROLLMENT
BY TYPE OF PREVIOUS INSTITUTION AND sex
Fall
1976
19n
1978
1979
1980
1981
2-Year
Public
2-Year
Private
4·Year
Public
4-Year
Private
Total
Men
Women
Total
54
35
42
48
28
22
11
47
22
156
79
64
95
75
80
342
204
172
163
175
224
600
346
300
302
338
364
240
113
96
114
95
152
360
233
204
188
243
212
600
346
300
302
338
364
33
41
38
Source: Admissions Office
17
·Includes full-time students in Evening College.
Source: Registrar
UNDERGRADUATE DAY AND EVENING
AND
GRADUATE ENROLLMENT
Year
Day
1971-72
1972-73
1973-74
1974-75
1975-76
1976-n
19n-78
1978-79
1979-80
1980:81
6,640
7,313
7,543
8,024
8,463
8,486
8,705
8,483
8,474
8,729
Undergraduate
Evening
1,101
1,173
1,198
1,194
1,381
1,413
1,582
1,702
1,848
2,038
Total
Graduatel
Professional
Total
7,741
8,486
8,741
9,218
9,844
9,899
10,287
10,185
10,322
10,767
3,370
3,301
3,640
3,531
3,701
3,713
3,681
3,728
3,655
3,678
11,111
11,787
12,381
12,749
13,545
13,612
13,968
13,913
13,9n
14,445
Source: Registrar
NOTE: All enrollment statistics are as of Oct. 8, 1980. Enrollment figures fluctuate throughout the year as a result of
withdrawals. transfers. and mid-year graduations.
18
UNDERGRADUATE ENROLLMENT
BY SCHOOL
Year
A&S
SOM
Education
Nursing
Evening
Total
1971-72
1972-73
1973-74
1974-75
1975-76
1976-77
1977-78
1978-79
1979-80
1980-81
3,145
3,589
3,864
4,284
4,651
4,848
5,013
4,826
4,839
5,022
1,641
1,663
1,657
1,724
1,947
1,911
2,010
2,076
2,159
2,261
1,284
1,344
1,266
1,263
1,150
1,021
926
812
753
765
570
717
756
753
715
706
756
769
723
681
1,101
1,173
1,198
1,194
1,381
1,413
1,582
1,702
1,848
2,038
7,741
8,486
8,741
9,218
9,844
9,899
10,287
10,185
10,322
10,767
Source: Registrar
GRADUATE ENROLLMENT BY SCHOOL
Year
A&S·
SOM
Social
Work
1971-72
1972-73
1973-74
1974-75
1975-76
1976-77
1977-78
1978-79
1979-80
1980-81
2,107
2,048
2,388
2,245
2,302
2,255
2,187
2,157
2,129
2,124
288
317
320
319
398
446
493
503
489
496
244
228
244
257
267
258
243
271
252
280
Law
Total
731
708
3,370
3,301
3,640
3,531
3,701
3,713
3,681
3,728
3,655
3,678
688
710
734
754
758
797
785
778
-Includes Graduate Education and Nursing.
Source: Registrar
I
I,
!I
L
19
GRADUATE ENROLLMENT*
BY DEGREE PROGRAM AND DISCIPLINE
FULL- AND PART·TIME
I
I
I
19n-78
Masters
Ph.D.
American Studies
A&S Unspecified
Biology
Chemistry
Classics
Economics
Education
English
French
Geology
Geology-Geophysics
Geophysics
Germanic Studies
Greek
History
Interdisciplinary
Italian
Latin
Law
Linguistics
Management
Mathematics
Mathematics NSF
Nursing
Philosophy
Physics
Political Science
Psychology
Religious Education ••
Russian
Slavic
Social Work
Sociology
Spanish
Theology
Total
18
113
57
17
6
8
1,092
89
32
12
27
9
1
2
1
6
21
22
.
86
428
23
18
-
-
1978-79
Masters
26
226
40
23
5·
5
958
91
26
13
34
9
1
-
-
1979-80
Ph.D.
Masters
1
18
22
21
76
25
311
457
885
21
17
-
81
25
12
31
4
-
-
-
43
20
9
8
-
-
-
3
7
275
-
-
3
42
2
5
1
811
2
552
17
27
107
27
11
51
13
1
2
279
32
33
27
38
19
6
24
15
8
4
3
258
28
16
30
29
-3,481
-880
40
29
1
5
5
767
-
-
-
-
547
17
114
-
32
44
10
42
12
12
33
34
39
3,479
45
-837
-
41
2
5
1
788
-
-
544
-
26
8
-
1980-81
Ph.D.
Masters
Ph.D.
1
9
22
19
70
521
22
17
-
21
15
1
3
17
25
-
28
6
-
19
6
32
7
29
-
-
1
45
21
49
-
20
34
3
5
3
789
13
123
40
8
42
2
124
4
3
-
25
14
-
-
-
45
23
33
41
4
-
288
40
32
1
47
8
35
30
48
6
37
-3,422
-950
-3,231
-890
*Figures include students who attended for just one semester, as well as those who attended a full year.
"Previously included in "A&S Unspecified" and "Education."
Source: Registrar
-
-
33
32
45
12
588
1
20
16
30
6
-
40
65
471
29
-
16
31
121
-
44
23
9
13
795
76
15
UNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE ENROLLMENT
BY SEX
Year
1970-71
1971-72
1972-73
1973-74
1974-75
1975-76
1976-77
1977-78
1978-79
1979-80
1980-81
Undergraduate
Women
Men
Graduatel
Professional
Women
Men
5,311
5,019
4,945
4,700
4,745
4,779
4,695
4,850
4,625
4,556
4,603
1,983
2,029
1,975
2,022
1,831
1,908
1,867
1,802
1,783
1,701
1,642
2,428
2,722
3,541
4,041
4,473
5,065
5,204
5,437
5,560
5,766
6,164
1,234
1,341
1,326
1,618
1,700
1,793
1,846
1,879
1,945
1,954
2,036
Men
Women
Total
Enrollment
7,294
7,048
6,920
6,722
6,576
6,687
6,562
6,652
6,408
6,257
6,245
3,662
4,063
4,867
5,659
6,173
6,858
7,050
7,316
7,505
7,720
8,200
10,956
11,111
11,787
12,381
12,749
13,545
13,612
13,968
13,913
13,977
14,445
Total
Source: Registra;
FULL-TIME EQUIVALENT ENROLLMENT*
Graduatel
Year
Day
Undergraduate
. Evening
Total
Professional
Total
1970-71
1971-72
1972-73
1973-74
1974-75
1975-76
1976-77
1977-78
1978-79
1979-80
1980-81
6,663
6,640
7,313
7,543
8,024
8,463
8,486
8,705
8,483
8,474
8,729
491
638
637
578
614
651
675
768
809
861
920
7,154
7,278
7,950
8,121
8,638
9,114
9,161
9,473
9,292
9,335
9,649
2,464
2,545
2,378
2,550
2,418
2,486
2,491
2,440
2,516
2,448
2,505
9,618
9,823
10,328
10,671
11,056
11,600
11,652
11,913
11,808
11,783
12,154
*Method of computation: three part-time students equal one full-time equivalent student.
Source: Registrar
21
I
EVENING COLLEGE ENROLLMENT
Full·TIme
Men
Women
Part-TIm&
Men
Women
Fall 1975-76
Spring 1975-76
180
163
106
97
427
327
668
&17
flJ7
490
n4
604
1,381
1,094
Fall 1976-n
Spring 1976-n
188
181
118
117
397
326
710
542
585
flJ7
828
659
1,413
1,166
Fall 19n-78
Spring 19n-78
224
204
137
153
449
391
n2
618
673
595
909
nl
1,582
1,366
Fall 1978·79
Spring 1978-79
222
141
114
510
426
829
165
732
591
970
821
1,702
1,412
. Fall 1979-80
Spring 1979-80
201
173
167
133
5fIJ
449
930
761
751
622
1,097
894
1,848
1,516
Fall 1980-81
Spring 1980-81
200
161
142
587
1,090
788
787
648
1,251
930
2,038
1,578
Year
154
494
707
Total
Men
Women
Source: Registrar
SUMMER SESSION ENROLLMENT
Summer
Undergraduate
1974
1975
1976
19n
1978
1979
1980
1981
692
889
887
898
924
1,068
1,122
1,136
Graduatel
Professional'
1,830
1,876
1,732
1,714
1,679
1,590
1,700
1,759
*Includes students registered through Institute of Religious Education, and
Graduate School of Management.
Source: Summer Session Office
22
Total
2,522
2,765
2,619
2,612
2,603
2,658
2,822
2,895
Total
GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION OF STUDENTS·
(GRADUATE AND UNDERGRADUATE)
FALL 1981
Undergrad.
Alabama
Arkansas
Arizona
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
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Puerto Rico
Rhode Island
South Carolina
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Virgin Islands
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
Foreign
Totals
1
2
2
49
Evening
-
6
-
952
20
20
65
24
1
5
3
1
133
9
1
4
6
4
104
109
4,269
55
27
-
17
1
5
-
130
734
4
1,118
1
74
1
3
219
282
3
1
11
1
27
41
8
3
25
1
172
8,729
-
3
1
-
Grad.
A&S
4
15
3
45
3
2
3
3
1
-
-
1
4
1
-
2
2
1,927
3
1
-
11
6
-
29
-
1
2
2
12
6
1,705
9
-
-
1
3
6
1
1
7
2
16
83
1
1
1
-
-
9
29
(Included with forei9n students)
8
36
-
-
7
1
-
-
6
1
9
(Included with foreign studentsl
3
3
3
-
8
4
2
2
1
1
1
5
225
435
449
2
1
1
11
1
1
1
1
1
2
19
1
-
-
-
-
-
28
3
2
9
2
10
1
-
-
2
1
1
9
-
8
4
-
-
-
-
-
-
1
-
-
-
47
31
7
-
-
1
-
Total
-
3
2
2
58
Law
School
-
-
-
Grad.
SOM
Work
-
3
-
Social
1
-
,
-
6
7
35
1
1
100
2
10
10
-
10
1,064
27
24
82
12
14
1
147
14
3
6
8
7
125
123
9,010
81
30
1
22
4
8
2
215
814
6
1,324
3
96
1
-
-
-
1
2
10
270
13
1
4
18
361
4
1
2
2
1
-
-
-
-
3
3
21
3
-
-
1
6
4
40
58
3
-
11
6
32
1
-
5
57
-
3
11
7
255
2,038
2,124
280
496
n8
14,445
-
-
3
1
·~hhese ~~gures are based on the state which the student lists as a permanent address, which may not necessarily reflect the true
orne
state or country.
SOurce: Registrar
23
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT STATISTICS
FALL 1980
BY SCHOOL
College of Arts & Sciences
School of Nursing
School of Management
School of Education
Evening College
Graduate School of Arts & Sciences
Graduate School of Social Work
Graduate School of Management
Law School
49
1
36
3
2
127
8
26
3
255
10
~
Sub-total
Practical Training (Field Work)
Post Doctoral Research Scholars
30
295
Total
Source: Office of Student Programs & Resources
BY CLASS OR PROGRAM*
35
23
21
10
Freshmen
Sophomores
Juniors
Seniors
Total Undergraduate
89
Graduate/Professional
Masters
Ph.D
J.D.
Special Students
,
!!
104
50
3
7
164
10
TotalG,aduate/Professional
Practical Training
Research Scholars
30
Total
293
·Visiting students enrolled in the Evening College not included.
Source: Office of Student Programs & Resources
BY SEX AND PROGRAM
Program
Men
Undergraduate
Graduate
Practical Training
Research Scholars
51
91
5
25
172
Total
--
SO<Jrce: Office of Student Programs & Resources
24
Women
40
73
5
5
123
--
Total
91
164
10
30
-295
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT ENROLLMENT
BY COUNTRY
Algeria
Argentina
Australia
Austria
Bangladesh
Barbados
Belgium
Bermuda
Bolivia
Brazil
Canada
Chile
Colombia
Costa Rica
Ecuador
Egypt
EI Salvador
Ethiopia
Finland
France
Germany
Greece
Guyana
Hong Kong
Honduras
India
Indonesia
Iran
Ireland
Israel
Italy
Ivory Coast
1
1
13
1
3
1
2
1
3
2
23
6
4
1
3
9
3
1
1
3
8
6
1
12
1
17
1
28
13
3
2
2
Jamaica
Japan
Kenya
Korea
Lebanon
Lesotho
Liberia
Libya
Malaysia
Mexico
Morocco
Netherlands
Nicaragua
Nigeria
Panama
People's Republic of China
Peru
Philippines
Portugal
Republic of China (Taiwan)
Switzerland
Thailand
Trinidad
Turkey
Uganda
United Kingdom
Venezuela
zaire
Total Students
Countries Represented
2
13
2
4
3
1
3
2
1
5
1
5
4
7
1
10
2
4
2
10
2
5
2
4
2
5
15
2
-295
60
Source: Office of Student Programs and Resources
25
'j'l"
III
'I
UNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE
MINORITY ENROLLMENT
iI
I
I
,
, I
Undergraduate
Black
Men
Women
Total
Men
182
217
154
Women
166
295
116
143
4
10
5
4
Men
Women
191
345
129
6
Total
3
7
5
8
44
59
103
57
73
130
65
97
162
84
116
259
9
200
137
n
80
157
88
105
193
104
144
248
43
42
38
80
53
53
106
-822
21
Other
Men
Total
13
65
72
Hispanic
1980-81
Total
Women
399
10
American Indian
Oriental
1979-80
1978·79
1977-78
-322
-
-36214
-
35
-684
-32330
-
117
34
-
13
-365
-688
-330
--
-410
79
113
48
47
2
95
4
30
66
-
-
--362
-- -460
-740
-
--
Graduate
43
Black
74
1
Oriental
17
34
3
51
Hispanic
20
6
30
50
American Indian
Other
3
6
48
97
29
34
63
49
- f>I
28
37
65
18
32
24
50
29
25
54
-14227
35
-
-139
-281
-
-166
--
-191
472
549
1.021
628
651
2
5
-
-
-24221
--
-852
-
-174
-25926
-
409
517
926
408
539
947
f>I
57
3
49
2
36
3
-15515
-
,i
2
38
62
104
47
-
-357
Total Graduate
and Undergraduate
1,179
Source: Registrar
VETERANS ENROLLED AT BOSTON COLLEGE
1980-81
School
Arts and Sciences
Education
Evening College
Nursing
Management
Graduate School of A&S
Graduate SOM
Law School
Social Work
Total
Source: Registrar
26
Men
Women
22
14
7
6
-
6
21
2
13
25
16
10
4
113
--
-
4
5
3
1
46
Full·
Time
Part·
Time
35
8
10
6
16
13
2
13
3
106
1
18
1
35
17
30
14
2
16
13
5
-159
-
-
53
Total
9
28
6
17
<. .
~~-~-'
,
UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES CONFERRED*
BY DEGREE AND NUMBER OF MAJORS
1976-n
1977-78
1978-79
1979-80
1980-81
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
613
239
3
855
726
277
1
1,004
146
162
43
1
206
1,210
54
200
-1,055
--
273
27
2
302
119
136
413
255
303
1
927
653
308
3
964
717
259
1
977
134
42
168
42
-176
-
210
--
140
50
1
191
1,174
1,168
60
174
2
194
9
176
203
623
1,103
149
-6
215
433
386
444
60
396
57
72
79
112
473
453
506
465
556
168
-1,998
-2,093
175
-2,021
197
-2,016
201
177
-2,104
63
2
65
70
93
93
97
70
93
93
97
2,063
2,163
2,114
2,109
2,201
Triple Major
School of Nursing-B.S.
Subtotal-Undergraduate Degrees
Evening College
A.B.
B.S.
Total Undergraduate Degrees
Conferred
-
·Sept.-Jan.-June
Source: Registrar
27
UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES CONFERRED
BY SCHOOL AND BY MAJOR
A.&S.
A.B.
B.S.
Accounting
American Studies
Art History
Biology
Chemistry
Classics
Computer Science
Economics
English
Elementary Education
Finance
French
178
131
25
2
25
2
36
33
33
119
155
129
129
158
158
54
15
54
15
2
A.&S.
A.B.
B.S.
3
173
173
35
35
Nursing
197
Operations Management
25
12
204
175
54
63
17
17
16
1
FII
1
2
2
163
'2
197
25
181
201
1
144
32
1
1
2
".,
31
3~
2
163
.2
48
•
•
126
126
122
3
3
3
3
5
2
5
2
18
1
15
16
2
2
54
1
79
15
8
•
•
Slavic Studies
Sociology
98
98
2
52
Spanish
10
10
15
3
78
26
1
2
2
184
48
1
In
1
5
5
40
Psychology
18
31
8
In
12.
Secondary Education
31
10
201
1
8
217
Romance languages
Russian
53
184
217
8
51
53
26
1
2
2
Physics
Political Science
8
182
8
2
1
1
34
~
59
204
51
Org. StudieslHuman
Resources Mgmt.
Philo<::nrhy
59
22
10
3
78
8
Total
191
1
1
1
2
2
1
1
B.S.
144
32
16
17
17
1
1
49
63
86
2'
49
Nurs.
191
29
•
1981
Ed.
SOM
A.B.
B.S.
1
1
156
54
58
Marketing
5
192
171
58
Total
A.&S.
A.B.
B.S.
159
3
1
2'
B.S.
155
29
1
1
Nurs.
5
1
1
1980
SOM
Ed.
A.B.
B.S.
159
2
9
3
9
3
Management
Mathematics
Total
178
3
12
131
Human Development
Independent
Italian
Linguistics
Nurs.
B.S.
3
12
General Management
Geology
Geophysics
German
History
1979
Ed.
SOM
A.B.
B.S.
""
12'
132
3
3
132
122
106
106
•
•
3
3
28
28
1
00
1
8
Sp, Ed/Alternative
Environments
Sp, Ed/Elementary Education
12
12
15
81
15
81
2
Speech Communication
Speech Theatre
42
1
'2
1
62
64
3
53
3
Studio Art
10
10
13
13
19
3
1
3
1
8
8
2,021
964
Theology
Third World Studies
Total-
841
176
199
608
197
210
175
465
201
2,016
11
81
11
81
1
64
2
2
19
•
977
1
191
203
5
556
177
2,104
·Evening College majors are not included in this total.
Source: Registrar
29
,
,._-
I' ,
UNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE DEGREES CONFERRED*
BY DEGREE AND BY SEX
"
Ii
, ,d
.j
i ;~
'
: i
Men
,
'
! '1,:;
,
:
Undergraduate
College of A.&S.
A.B.
B.S.
,
.Ii:
Total A.&S.
,
School of Ed.-A.B.
School of Nursing-B.S.
School of Management-B.S.
.1
Subtotal Undergraduate
Evening College A.B.
II
Undergraduate
Degrees Conferred
"
if
I
Ph.D.
D.Ed.
M.A.
M.S.
M.Ed.
M.A.T.
M.S.T.
"
"
,
,
J,D,
M.B.A.
M.S.P.
M.S.W,
C.A.E.S.
"
,[
I
Total Graduate Degrees
Conferred
Total Undergraduate
Degrees Conferred
,
ill
1'1'
,. ~
I 'I
1978-79
Women
Total
Men
1,004
-~
454
206
117
57'
532
602
255
34
1.!!:!.
215
197
21
332
'61
192
174
506
942
1,079
492
512
'58
48
650
560
38
217
1
175
5
334
174
119
453
1,023
1,070
2,093
--
-- -- -- -- -
Total
Men
473
927
463
59
176
139
41
29
70
54
39
1,064
1,099
2,163
996
1,118
44
7
61
14
26
70
4
58
11
119
99
271
20
9
231
110
18
44
6
43
14
67
7
19
8
1979-80
Women
501
7'
-
572
Total Undergraduate and
Graduate Degrees--
52
10
5
167
85
219
10
4
64
38
n
9
10
9
24
20
479
595
1,074
1,064
1,099
2,163
1,643
1,694
3,237
62
-- -- -
I'
,
I
I
581
587
100
'75
9n
-
'91
~
455
205
556
2,021
925
1,091
2,016
957
1,147
2,104
93
52
41
93
45
52
97
2,114
977
1,132
2,109
1,002
·1,199
2,201
63
14
99
107
45
9
25
70
13
52
:n
89
57
8
78
89
'35
59
1
B8
106
160
3
203
---- -- -- -- -- -- -
86
30
56
93
164
215
6
5
81
56
62
7
23
'3
1
91
19
449
5
2B2
13
10
245
118
8
114
4
In
5
9
147
126
213
5
5
78
268
71
144
16
31
4
3
'81
105
20
175
8
7
206
53
'2
10
2
82
83
263
53
73
-
-
22
n
190
35
89
136
4
124
32
6
19
25
14
'6
94
30
656
1,105
470
633
1,103
493
637
1,130
996
1,118
2,114
977
1,132
2,109
1,002
1,199
2,201
1,445
1,774
3,219
1,447
1,766
3,212
1,495
1,836
3,331
-
4
-
-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -
·Sept.-Jan.-June
"'See page 79 "Degrees Conferred by Boston College."
Source: Registrar
'I!
II
II
,
I
,
I
I
I:
I:
I
WI
517
70
302
i I,
iii ,I
I
460
121
23
2
351
I
"J
964
210
-~
Total
176
20'
i
,',
Men
155
201
163
-
"
I
1980-81
Women
Total
I
Graduate
,
.
1977-78
Women
j
30
---
,
,
HEALTH SERVICES
NUMBER OF STUDENTS SERVED
Grand Totals
Total Visits to M.D.
Total Visits to Nurse Practitioner
Total Visits to R. N.
Total
1976-77
1977-78
1978-79
1979-80
1980-81
18,718
17,949
18,061
269
8,523
17,980
1,552
7,427
19,868
1,648
7,599
10,143
-28,861
-
10,158
28,107
26,853
--
26,959
29,115
Infirmary'
Total Admissions
Men
Women
Total Patient Days
Average Daily Census
Average Length of Stay (days)
Number of Days in Full
Operation
633
(280)
(353)
1,382
6.5
2.2
546
(256)
(290)
1,223
5.8
2.2
587
(242)
(345)
1,360
6.4
2.3
1,396
6.5
2.4
704
(276)
(428)
1,520
6.6
2.0
211
210
210
212
217.5
572
(286)
(2861
·Included in Grand Totals
Source: Health Services Office
31
UNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE FINANCIAL AID
19n-S1
NUMBER OF STUDENTS
19n-78
1978-79
1979-80
1980-81
2,214
1,021
1,147
790
1,231
2,308
2,861
1,409
1,235
869
1,211
2,453
3,294
1,418
2,321
1,262
1,490
2,639
3,764
1,600
2,332
1,449
1,450
3,124
Type of Aid - Undergraduate
University Scholarships and Grants'
State Scholarships'
Basic Educational Opportunity Grants'
Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants'
Work-Study
National Direct Student Loans'
Undergraduate Total'
-8,711
10,058
---
--12,424
282
345
306
371
2B9
255
356
324
---
13,719
Type of Aid - Graduate
Work-Study
National Direct Student Loans'
Total Undergraduate and Graduate'
9,338
---
10,735
--13,069
---
14,298
fThis statistic includes regular university scholarships and grants (through the operating budget). faculty kin tuition remission, minority
scholarships, athletic grants, Jesuit Reduction, Alumni Association Scholarships, and endowed monies for scholarships.
2State scholarship funds to students from Massachusetts, Vermont, Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsytvania, Rhode Island..
3Students who are enrolled at least half-time in an undergraduate degree program are eligible to apply for these grants. Grants are
aWim:Jud tv studt:'i-.t~ with Ileed, and eiigibiiity 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." The amount of the award must be matched by an equal amount of other aid.
5Available 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 lo-year repayment
period with an interest rate of 3% per year on the unpaid balance.
-This is a duplicated total since SO"'!8 students receive more than one type of aid.
Source: Financial Aid Office
32
UNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE FINANCIAL AID
1977-81
THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS
1977-78
1978-79
1979-80
1980-81
University Scholarships and Grants'
State Scholarships'
Basic Educational Opportunity Grants'
Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants'
Work-Study'
National Direct Student loans'
$ 2,806
854
1,071
646
1,463
$ 3,225
2,523
$ 3,745
1,018
2,398
1,065
1,698
2,855
$ 4,832
1,034
1,236
569
1,476
2,654
Undergraduate Total
$ 9,363
$10,194
$12,779
$13,838
345
665
380
454
743
400
720
$10,373
$11,317
$13,899
$14,872
Type of Aid - Undergraduate
1,152
2,263
1,137
1,815
2,639
,,
Type of Aid - Graduate
Work-Study'
National Direct Student loans'
Total Undergraduate and Graduate
5BO
:.,
I'
'This statistic includes regular university scholarships and grants (through the operating budget!, faculty kin tuition remission, minority
scholarships. athletic grants, Jesuit Reduction. Alumni Association Scholarships, and endowed monies for scholarships.
2State scholarship funds to students from Massachusetts, Vermont, Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsytvania, Rhode Island.
'Students who Bfe enrolled 8t least half-time in an undergraduate degree program are eligible to apply for these grants. Grants are
awarded to students with need, and eligibility is determined directly by the Federal Government.
4Available 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." The amount of the award must be matched by an equal amount of other aid.
'Gross work study wages for 1980-81 were $2,269,000. The breakdown between graduates and undergraduates is estimated.
'Available to undergraduates 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 1().year repayment period with an interest rate of 3% per year on
the unpaid balance.
NOTE: In an effort to minimize statistical detail, the above data does not include Boston College graduate student assistance
(approximately $2,107,000 in 1980-81>, administered by the various schools and departments. Also excluded are the Nursing
Scholarship and Loan Programs ($157,000 in 1980-80, 8 variety of government fellowships or scholarships from fraternal
organizations and clubs ($1,500,000 in 198().80, and Higher Education Loans processed by the Financial Aid Office and
disbursed by banks ($17,538,000 in 1980-81), all of which are open to both undergraduate and graduate students. (In addition to
these programs, the Student Employment Office placed 5,lXlO students in 'summer and term jobs both on and off campus.)
Source: Financial Aid Office.
33
'.
NOTES
34
J
ALUMNI
L
35
BOSTON COLLEGE ALUMNI CLUBS
Arizona
Mid-Hudson
Atlanta
Minnesota
New Hampshire
New Jersey
Buffalo
Cape Cod
Central New York
New Orleans
Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Dallas
Denver
Detroit
Fairfield County
North Shore
Northern California (San Francisco)
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
Rhode Island
Rochester
Florida
Hartford
St. Louis
San Diego
Seattle
Toledo
Washington, D.C.
Houston
Long Island
Los Angeles
Maine
Western Massachusetts (Springfield)
Wisconsin
Manhattan Business Group
Merrimack Valley
Worcester
Young Alumni of New York City
Source: Alumni Association
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
With Committee Assignments
1981-82
John P. Giuggio, '51
President
Richard D. Driscoll, '52
Vice President; President Elect; Awards
Raymond J. Kenney, '53, Law '58
Treasurer; By-Laws
Mary R. Marshall, NC 74
Secretary; Women'5 Resource
Edward T. Bigham, Law '53
Law School Alumni Liaison
Alan L. Butters, '67
Admissions
Donald P. Collins, EC '65
Evening College Alumni Liaison; Nominations
Thomas J. Condon, 74
Clubs
Roger T. Connor, '52
Nominations
John F..Doherty, '28
Annual Fund
Nancy Hebert Drago, '61, MBA 72
M. B.A. Alumni Liaison
John T. Driscoll, '49
Nominations
Source: Alumni Association
36
Rev. John H. Flynn, '48
By-Laws
Mary Jane Liddell Gould, '67
Classes
Dennis M. Griffin, M.D., '67
Nominations
James Hardeman, SW '73
Social Work Alumni Liaison
Ellen Ennis Kane, '64
Admissions
Peter A. Kerr, '39
Placement
Paula M. Lyons, NC '67
Continuing Education
William Kevin McCarthy, 70
Clubs
Janet Chartier D'Hanley, '59
Awards
Edward F. Saunders. Jr., 71
StudentlYou;1g Alumni
Kathleen Redd Taylor, 72
Minority Alumni
William J. Thomas, 72
Minority Alumni
ALUMNI
COMPARATIVE REGIONAL ANALYSIS
FALL 1981
Massachusetts
Metropolitan Boston
Postal Areas 01701.()2009
02101.()2215
9,339
19,958
29,297
Massachusetts Outside
Metropolitan Boston
10,920
Total Massachusetts Alumni
40,217
New England
Connecticut
Maine
3,703
778
New Hampshire
Rhode Island
Vermont
1,506
1,604
318
7,909
Total New England Outside-Massachusetts
Massachusetts
40,217
Total New England
48,126
Total Outside New England
21,453
Lost Alumni
Total Alumni
5,329
74,908
Source: Systems and Records, University Relations
ALUMNI
GEOGRAPHIC ANALYSIS BY STATE
FALL 1981
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California*
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
71
36
169
17
1,875
253
3,703
103
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
District of Columbia
490
Florida
Georgia
Guam
Hawaii
Idaho
989
Nevada
268
6
71
New Hampshire
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
896
174
66
Kentucky
109
140
Louisiana
23
65
Nebraska
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York*
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
778
1,159
40,217
461
200
22
209
24
48
28
1,506
2,366
68
5,273
245
12
724
66
95
1,223
Puerto Rico
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Virgin Islands
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
Total U.S.
127
1,604
87
20
100
483
32
318
1,175
25
187
47
220
Lost Alumni
15
68,668
911
69,579
5,329
Total Alumni
74,908
Foreign Nations
Total Active Alumni
·California and New York include APO addresses.
Source: Systems and Records, University Relations
NOTE: Alumni totals include widows of alumni who have chosen to maintain their husbands' ties with Boston College. This number
(620, FALL '81) is reflected in the male totals, with the spouse's respective class.
Also included are individuals who attended Boston College for at least one year without graduating. These alumni are referred
to as "EX". Please note the last columns of pages 38-41 which list these alumni with their classes.
Double- and triple-degreed alumni are counted by their primary (or first-received) degree only.
37
LIVING ALUMNI BY PRIMARY SCHOOL. SEX AND CLASS
FALL 1981
CIa..
A.&S.
1899
1900
1901
1902
1
-
1903
1904
1905
1906
-
1907
1908
1909
1
1910
11
Ed.
S.O.M.
S.O.N.
Evening Newton
College College
Grad.
A.&S.
Work
LBw
Weston
EX
Theo. Alumni
1
1
2
2
1915
1916
1917
1918
6
2
"
10
8
1
1
1
"
20
27
29
1923
192.
1925
1926
43
51
57
100
1927
1928
. 1929
1930
97
11.
111
128
1931
1932
1933
1934
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
2
1
-
-
-
2
1
-
1
-
1
1
2
3
1
1
2
3
1
1
2
3
1907
1908
1909
7
2
6
3
7
2
6
3
7
2
6
3
1911
1912
1913
1914
23
20
1915
1916
1917
1918
1
9
11
16
15
13
146
152
175
197
11
12
18
18
20
19
34
34
1935
1936
1937
1938
207
178
197
216
22
13
19
21
28
19
29
17
1939
1940
251
265
29
21
35
25
1
•
10
"'0
9
17
"
"
,.
"
1910
1919
25
29
43
58
55
1920
1921
1922
18
28
39
36
81
88
107
151
61
88
107
151
61
88
107
151
1923
192.
1925
1926
35
38
57
50
153
183
197
209
9
12
144
:3
179
193
153
183
197
209
1927
1928
1929
1930
63
50
61
65
257
2.
19
37
46
257
250
328
348
303
250
326
348
1931
1932
1933
1934
341
301
356
361
35
23
306
278
32
32'
30
331
341
301
356
361
1935
1936
1937
1938
51
33
375
390
426
423
1939
1940
7
13
20
10
25
17
12
2.
30
31
12
9
3
2
55
58
78
62
5
13
33
30
1
2
n
"
"
23
20
1900
1904
1905
1906
29
43
58
55
30
1
3
"
23
20
1
29
43
58
55
22
9
10
11
1899
1900
1901
1902
1
15
-
1
CIa..
1
6
9
10
8
-
1
Total
•-
1
1
-
1
Man
•-
•
3
1
Women
•-
1
3
2
2
1
Total
•-
-
1920
1921
. 1922
38
Social
-
19
1912
1913
1914
1919
Gred.
S.O.M.
67
426
423
16
171
233
231
289
LIVING ALUMNI BY PRIMARY SCHOOL. SEX AND CLASS
IContinued)
CIa..
A.&S.
1941
1942
1943
1944
2'9
217
1945
1946
106
14
'947
'42
175
'946
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1956
1956
Ed.
228
174
419
863
787
468
421
S.c.M.
S.O.N.
Evening Newton
Grad.
College College
A.&S.
40
'900
32S
132
175
154
205
63
68
81
136
'961
1962
1963
1964
1965
286
327
476
96
130
167
187
182
294
153
192
168
135
147
73
92
63
81
74
99
123
135
1966
1967
1968
1969
445
218
187
142
67
82
69
83
158
151
187
196
242
335
365
367
350
381
421
400
455
561
545
238
535
234
355
538
285
618
608
29'
249
386
3S8
19n
967
935
1160
1038
324
293
367
292
1976
1979
1900
1981
1209
1104
1184
1108
257
221
170
199
Total
24427
5471
1970
1971
19n
1973
1974
1975
1976
387
324
350
213
51
387
350
387
96
'47
50
329
37
51
51
357
64
278
333
329
10
126
'06
94
30
58
81
47
779
3
7
1
1516
1591
'71
201
187
68
56
49
61
1
2
3
5
4'
7.
46
98
1124
246
'090
983
1296
278
'26
36
29
26
29
'07
'41
126
202
29
26
32
35
64
4
59
73
3
111
168
127
56
1245
lfi16
1522
1626
362
466
443
33
40
33
46
51
38
2.
30
34
42
'369
1456
1847
1915
1866
463
240
8
27
32
27
"34
81
91
76
82
107
265
430
377
518
42
53
49
48
53
56
52
51
114
36
33
28
36
119
141
122
20
38
37
257
362
352
349
184
199
281
38
26
76
89
54
66
73
76
319
383
336
463
449
454
'20
145
163
140
149
160
209
227
161
'73
169
195
199
534
m
504
11902
4647
47
6'
75
100
188
135
'68
'07
258
220
97
66
71
207
175
467
527
252
64
245
n
200
110
212
5
79
73
91
110
-
47
-
2840
3m
95
1941
1942
1943
1944
425
29
27
29
25
81
116
127
12.
Class
426
425
61
68
100
63
5'
SI
Total
368
50
-
Men
376
26
34
28
30
Women
322
6
12
28
34
27
Total
50
9
18
24
27
38
44
73
Alumni
46
2'
2
25
75
'02
319
358
308
EX
Thea.
368
426
15
24
34
35
101
135
120
130
426
24
16
23
23
20
330
463
16
11
13
11
Weston
46
68
83
85
'3
6
1957
1958
1959
367
Law
20
33
135
378
Work
41
33
20
13
306
295
Social
46
47
54
263
236
202
293
350
Grad.
S.O.M.
2
40
61
68
67
71
59
64
70
89
1991
2183
2345
2449
293
357
594
567
667
689
637
779
1949
1950
1951
1952
999
1516
1591
1186
878
812
690
899
1124
1090
983
1296
'953
1954
1955
883
1245
1S16
1522
1626
1957
1958
1959
1960
1369
1456
1847
196'
1962
'090
1079
1032
Il86
889
1100
1226
1229
1915
1866
'955
'963
1964
1965
762
827
849
838
1229
1496
1511
2345
2449
'966
1967
1968
1969
999
1037
1161
1109
1417
2416
1970
149'
1611
1455
2528
1971
vn
19n
2564
1973
'356
1991
2183
22
85
vn
197
-
71
2564
99
115
206
-
2946
1974
3037
206
225
-
1590
1286
3306
2834
'975
1976
'05
1624
1716
1548
1413
'01
2946
3037
3306
2834
'563
-
55
9
4
'383
181
93
117
194
218
3
2
3032
3052
1476
1374
3032
3052
'21
86
233
-
3071
'366
3071
226
-
1155
2737
'979
1900
1981
2076
4443
569
46861
74908
Total
n
1330
'5
18
1186
653
1345
1390
357
1945
1946
1947
1948
173
68
76
7.
71
10243
,
147
2528
407
559
590
420
252
118
137
3
3
2
79
76
Sl4
521
476
92
,
350
-
60
88
89
79
109
118
114
64
2
1
2
1
115
146
102
76
59
62
486
4n
'5
'9
6
-
2416
-
2737
1554
1678
1706
1582
3588
74908
28047
19n
1976
Source: Systems and Records, University Relations
39
'"I
I
ALUMNI DONORS BY PRIMARY SCHOOL AND CLASS
1980-1981
Total
Class
'899
Ed.
S.a.M.
S.O.N.
Grad.
Grad.
Social
College College
A.&S.
S.O.M.
Work
Weston
law
Thea.
Alumni
EX
Alumni Donors
1
-
'899
-
1900
-
-
'902
-
-
1003
1004
-
1007
'906
1009
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
-
-
-
'906
-
-
1007
-
.
-
-
-
-
-
-
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
2
1
3
7
3
4
2
8
1919
1920
1921
1922
,
1
2
7
1
1918
3
1919
6
-
1920
8
1
-
'921
1922
11
14
-
4
2
'5
16
1923
18
22
5
2
8
6
23
3
8
5
2
43
79
13
4
5
6
121
76
-
-
-
"
-
51
39
70
62
66
-
1
1
2
1
-
1931
1932
1933
1934
102
68
3
-
3
2
60
87
3
3
7
1935
1936
1937
1938
67
74
81
59
4
2
4
6
3
1
4
2
1939
1940
113
101
6
8
4
3
'927
1
4
4
-
,-
-
3
3
6
3
9
-
4
5
8
2
1
3
7
4
-
11
5
-
-
-
'906
1009
1910
-
-
,
1928
1929
1930
'00'
1902
'003
1004
1905
-
1917
'924
1925
1926
Class
1
1900
1001
'905
1906
40
A.&S.
Evening Newton
•
24
Z1
57
69
69
1916
1917
1918
'923
1924
'925
'926
'927
'928
1929
1930
n
'931
1932
1933
107
'934
81
8ll
100
1935
1936
1937
8'
'938
142
1939
1940
'24
ALUMNI DONORS BY PRIMARY SCHOOL AND CLASS
(Continuedl
Newton
Grad.
Grad.
Social
College College
A.&S.
S.O.M.
Work
Evening
Class
A.&S.
Ed.
S.O.M.
S.O.N.
-
1941
1942
1943
1944
86
B4
16
76
69
I.
1
6
1
23
1945
1946
1947
1948
45
7
45
49
5
1
12
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
'957
1958
1959
1960
33
130
31
121
117
209
...
230
138
124
-
68
-
75
58
96
99
B4
-
103
26
94
25
111
31
107
91
34
33
85
22
90
26
36
1961
1962
1963
1964
129
127
1965
1966
1967
1968
121
138
130
138
53
1969
1970
1971
1972
158
157
48
41
1973
1974
1975
1976
19n
1978
'979
1960
37
27
27
49
32
86
68
30
50
100
104
23
45
42
48
43
93
26
95
115
111
49
44
23
16
27
26
'43
59
158
60
95
22
160
50
50
91
29
170
257
198'
154
167
160
160
1
Total
6202
3
-
4
5
9
14
2
3
1
5
1
1
5
6
2
7
7
6
2
5
6
9
•
20
33
•
11
116
109
115
206
6
7
6
I.
71
109
113
104
3
10
15
5
I.
I.
14
16
17
9
21
21
12
17
21
14
19
17
22
12
I
-
-
4
5
7
13
27
7
4
23
5
6
•
-
10
-
-
20
-
7
21
-
2
-
1
1
19
7
20
19
-
19
-
26
35
26
2
1
24
21
14
13
14
15
2
4
5
4
5
7
4
2
6
20
-
24
-
26
17
I
1
4
7
10
3
30
30
25
1
2
4
13
6
31
2
49
21
42
51
-
I.
•
74
30
III
109
1945
1946
1947
1948
3
5
9
4
206
397
424
3
17
7
3
1
I.
11
19
3
2
3
3
462
4
2
426
485
471
1969
1970
1971
19n
-
468
1973
1
491
1974
-
,
439
1975
1976
-
409
374
45
38
20
13
14
16
19
2
4
7
5
78
10
15
10
4
64
-
-
-
-
1
I.
13
1
20
-
30
47
24
10
1
31
21
16
-
33
13
15
15
26
10
14
25
5
2
38
21
2.
-
-
-
-
-
-
714
259
2'2
1052
13
266
25
24
9
19
-
75
1
-
6
-
929
3148
922
560
13
19
32
1961
1962
1963
1964
-
3
25
267
294
·4
4
6
5
12
101
69
123
1957
1958
1959
1960
350
343
350
453
.419
I.•
23
23
15
261
1
3
39
65
1953
1954
1955
1956
350
394
32
58
44
259
275
216
337
-
-
53
296
1949
1950
1951
1952
388
354
-
29
113
-
17
15
12
-
103
126
Class
17
6
4
1
•
20
Donors
115
5
5
4
7
6
Total
Alumni
1941
1942
1943
1944
20
105
73
145
44
Thea.
4
4
1
4
5
13
35
Low
EX
Alumni
2
6
2
2
3
10
11
14
31
30
Weston
-
626
385
368
•
14290
1965
1966
1967
1968
'9n
1978
1979
1960
1981
Total
Source: Systems and Records, University Relations
41
NEW HEIGHTS ADVANCEMENT CAMPAIGN*
I i,
:1
,I
Campaign To Date
Total Pledges
6/30/81
Source
Campaign Goal
Campaign Pledges
1980-81
Alumni
Parents/ Friends
Corporations
Foundations
Bequests/Estates
Jesuit Community
Associations
$10,200,000
2,200,000
2,000,000
2,000,000
1,950,000
2,000,000
700,000
$1,898,039
452,339
566,270
324,576
164,457
275,000
16,571
$10,897,216
2,178,780
4,290,388
2,891,506
2,084,581
2,185,118
866,168
$21,050,000
$3,697,252
$25,393,757
Total
-The five·year New Heights Advancement Campaign was officially completed in June, 1981.
Source: Office of Development
INDIVIDUAL DONORS*
BY GIVING CLUB
Giving Club
President's Circle
FIDES
Tower Builders
John Bapst Associates
McElroy Associates
Other Annual Fund
,
"
Total Individual
Donors
'
,
;1 :
Level of Gift
$5,000+
$1,000-4,999
$500-999
$250-499
$100-249
$1-99
1976-77
1977-78
1978-79
1979-80
1980-81
415
155
244
2,002
9,403
518**
202
406
2,295
10,239
91
595
253
529
2,650
11,032
13,680
15,150
(Established 1980-811
281
367
101
98
(Established 1978-79)
2,127
2,130
8,035
8,802
10,544
11,197
12,219
*Includes only alumni, parents and friends.
··Includes individual donors to the Thomas P. O'Neill, Jr. Endowed Chair in Political Science.
Source: Office of Development
42
PHYSICAL PLANT
43
44
.
r.
BOSTON COLLEGE
NEWlON CAMPUS
•
~Cl.'
.~
~
e"
~
,'.'
0100
200
.
i" ..'
I
300
2
: FT.
"'-rc.,..n:•
.
,.
,
"
~~1
~ TPKE
=-
EXIT 17 • • 5 MILES
.
W
BRIGHTON
SEPTEMBER
1979
8i
--_.
.... ..•_....- ..
_._,-'.--,,"~
-,
~
._,._'----
~
BOSTON COLLEGE
WESTON OBSERVATORY
MAGNETIC
OBSERVATORY
_
e?
TEST TOW.".
MAGNETIC
'OO~Fe
',0
CONTROL
TEST TOWf:R
CONTROL
GEOMAGNETIC
RESEARCH
COMPLEX
STORAOE
BUILDING
ELECTflONICS
LABORATORY
SEISMIC AND TECTONIC
RESEARCH COMPLEX
ROSTON
;1
illi
.,
WALTHAM
•
UTILITY BUILDING
••
SEISMIC VAULT
CONCORD ROAD
·s
w
~
~
WAYLAND
ill
<
>
--'
BOSTON COLLEGE PROPERTIES
FALL 1981
Square Feet
UPPER CAMPUS
Roncalli-Welch-Williams
O'Connell and Upper Dorms
Total Upper Campus
MIDDLE CAMPUS
Area bounded by Beacon Street,
Lower Campus Road, College Road,
Commonwealth Avenue including Hillside, Alumni,
Philomatheia, 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)
78 College Road (Brock)
72 College Road
36 College Road (Bourneuf)
176 Commonwealth (Bea)
Total Middle Campus
LOWER CAMPUS
Area bounded by Lower Campus Road,
Beacon Street, and St. Thomas More
Drive (excluding MDC property)
2150 Commonwealth Avenue
(St. Thomas More Hall)
Total Lower Campus
Total Upper, Middle and Lower Campuses
NEWTON CAMPUS
Total Chestnut Hill and Newton Campuses
OUTLYING PROPERTIES
Newton
258 Beacon Street (Hovey)
292 Hammond Street (Murray)
300 Hammond Street (Connolly)
314 Hammond Street (Haley)
31 Lawrence Avenue
67 Lee Road (Canisius)
55 Lee Road
137,446
472,838
610,284
TOTAL PROPERTIES OWNED BY
BOSTON COLLEGE
--
38.5
0.4
0.2
0.2
0.2
0.1
0.2
0.1
0.2
0.2
0.4
2,279,266
52.3
156,575
2,435,841
4,820,576
1,751,112
6,571,688
3.6
--
178,390
50,554
70,767
55,710
13,109
10,436
16,032
4,623
4,623
Total
Acres
3.1
10.9
1,677,845
17,346
9,579
7,349
7,191
6,463
7,960
6,308
7,100
9,126
18,184
1,774,451
394,998
Boston
2051 Commonwealth (Greycliff)
Acres
--
14.0
40.7
55.9
110.6
--
-40.2
-
150.8
4.1
1.2
1.6
1.3
0.3
0.2
0.37
--
9.07
0.1
0.1
-6,971,309
159.97
NOTE: The above statistics do not include rented properties used in University operations.
Source: Bui/dings and Grounds
47
,
BUILDINGS RELATED TO BOSTON COLLEGE OPERATIONS
LOCATION AND PRIMARY USE
FALL 1981
Name
Alumni Hall
Alumni Stadium
Bapst Library
Barat House
Barry Fine Arts Pavilion
Bea House'
Botolph House
Bourneuf House
Brock House
Campion Hall'
Canisius House'
Carney Hall
Cheverus Hall
Claver Hall
Connolly Faculty Center
Cottage and Garage
Cushing Hall
Cushing 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 Rubenstein Hall)
Hillside 0
Hopkins House
Hovey House
Kenny-Cottle Library
Keyes North
Keyes South
Kostka Hall
Lawrence House
Law Faculty Wing
Loyola Hall
Lyons Hall
48
Location'
Primary Use
Date
Constructed
or
Acquired
74 Commonwealth Ave.
Lower Campus
Middle Campus
885 Centre St.
8li5 Centre St.
176 Commonwealth Ave.
18 Old Colony Road
36 College Road
78 College Road
Middle Campus
67 Lee Road
Middle Campus
127 Hammond St.
40 Tudor Road
300 Hammond St.
885 Centre St.
Middle Campus
885 Centre St.
Middle Campus
90 College Road
885 Centre St.
885 Centre St.
200 St. Thomas More Dr.
102 College Road
46 Tudor Road
137 Hammond St.
Administrative
Sports
Library
Jesuit Res. & Admin.
Academic & Admin.
Jesuit Residence
Administrative
Administrative
Administrative
Academic & Admin.
Jesuit Residence
Academic & Admin.
Student Residence
Student Residence
Academic
Residence
Academic & 'Admin.
Student Residence
Academic & Admin.
Administrative
Student Residence
Student Residence
Student Residence
Jesuit Residence
Student Residence
Student Residence
1948
1957
1928
1974
1974
1965
1967
1974
1972
1955
1966
1962
1960
1956
1975
1974
1960
1974
1924
1975
1974
1974
1975
1938
1960
1960
Lower Campus
Middle Campus
Middle Campus
149 Hammond St.
2051 Commonwealth Ave.
885 Centre St.
314 Hammond St.
223 Beacon St.
885 Centre St.
Middle Campus
100 Commonwealth Ave.
100 Commonwealth Ave.
Sports & Admin.
Academic & Admin.
Academic & Admin.
Student Residence
Student Residence
Gymnasium
Residence
Residence
Student Residence
Academic & Admin.
Student Residence
Student Residence
1972
1948
1913
1958
1969
1974
1969
1907
1974
1966
1973
1973
90 Commonwealth Ave.
116 College Road
258 Beacon St.
885 Centre St.
885 Centre St.
885 Centre St.
149 Hammond SI.
122 College Rd.
885 Centre St.
42 Tudor Rd.
Middle Campus
Student Residence
Administrative
Academic
Library
Student Residence
Student Residence
Student Residence
Administrative
Academic & Admin.
Student Residence
Academic & Admin.
1973
1968
1971
1974
1974
1974
1958
1968
1974
1956
1951
f
L
Middle Campus
Middle Campus
lower Campus
29 Mill Street
lower Campus
150 St. Thomas More Dr.
292 Hammond St.
185 Hammond St.
2599 Beacon St.
86 Commonwealth Ave.
865 Centre St.
96 College Rd.
Middle Campus
182 Hammond St.
90 Commonwealth Ave.
Middle Campus
377 Beacon St.
lower Campus
38 Commonwealth Ave.
Middle Campus
865 Centre St.
St. Thomas More Dr.
865 Centre St.
lower Campus
60 Tudor Rd.
865 Centre St.
200 Hammond St.
Weston, MA
143 Hammond St.
44 Tudor Rd.
72 College Rd.
31 lawrence Ave.
55 lee Road
McElroy Commons'
McGuinn Hall
McHugh Forum
Mill Street Cottage
Modular Apartments
More Drive Dormitory
Murray House
O'Connell Hall
Parking Garage
Philomatheia Hall
Putnam Center
Rahner House
Roberts Center
Roncalli Hall
Rubenstein Hall
Service Building
Shaw House
Commander Shea Field
Southwell Hall
St. Mary's Hall'
St. Mary's House
St. Thomas More Hall
Stuart House (law School)
Theatre Arts Center
Townhouse
Trinity Chapel (Newton)
Welch Hall
Weston Observatory'
Williams Hall
Xavier Hall
Students Services & Admin.
Academic & Admin.
Ice Skating Rink
Residence
Student Residence
Student Res. & Dining Facility
Commuter Center
Student Union
General Use Parking Facility
Academic & Admin.
Academic
Academic
Academic, Admin. & Gym
Student Residence
Student Residence
Admin. & Trade Shops
Student Residence
Baseball Diamond
Administrative
Jesuity Residence
Academic & Admin.
Administrative
Academic & Admin.
Student Services & Academic
Student Residence
Chapel
Student Residence
Research & Admin.
Student Residence
Student Residence
Jesuit Residence
Academic
Residence
1955
1968
1958
1974
1971
1980
1967
1938
1979
1920
1974
1952
1958
1965
1973
1948
1962
1960
1937
1917
1974
1955
1974
1981
1971
1974
1965
1948
1965
1956
1970
1979
1978
'Rented to Jesuit Community of Boston College.
2Academic & Administrative
=
classrooms and offices.
3Student Services in McElroy Commons include bookstore, dining halls, mail room, U.S. Post Office.
"Ownec;l by the Jesuit Community of Boston College.
'Land rented from the New England Province of the Society of Jesus. Building owned by Boston College.
SUMMARY OF BUILDING USE
FALL 1981
Number of
Buildings
Building Use
23
Student Residences'
Administrative
Academic and Administrative'
Jesuit Residences
Miscellaneous Use'
11
20
6
18
78
TOTAL
'Keyes North and South = 1, Duchesne East and West
Hillside A&B = 1, Hillside C&D = " Modulars = 1
lAcademic and Administrative
=
=
I,
offices and classrooms. Also
includes Weston Observatory.
llncludes gymnasiums, libraries, student union, etc.
Source: Space Management
49
1
CLASSROOMS
FALL 1981
Number of
Building
Classrooms
Barry
Campion
Carney
Cushing
Devlin
Fulton
Gasson
Higgins
Kenny-Cottle Library
Lyons
5
14
Stations
474
786
1,179
842
373
1,047
972
657
125
518
595
572
20
8,160
25
11
2
13
19
8
1
10
15
McGuinn
Stuart
Theatre Arts Center
Total
8
1
132
Source: Space Management
DINING FACILITIES
FALL 1981
Name
Capacity
Location
Eagle's Nest Snack Bar
Faculty Dining Room
Lower Campus Dining Facility
Lyons Cafeteria
McElroy Dining Hall
Newton Campus Cafeteria
Newton Campus Snack Bar
McElroy Commons
McElroy Commons
More Drive Dormitory
Lyons Hall
McElroy Commons
Trustees' Room
McElroy Commons
500
175
650
550
1,000
Stuart House
Stuart House
360
200
40
3,475
Total Capacity
Source: Dining Department
OFFICES
FALL 1981
NEWTON CAMPUS
CHESTNUT HILL
Number of
Building
Alumni Hall
Bapst Library
Botolph House
Bourneuf House
Brock House
Campion Hall
Carney Hall
Cushing Hall
Devlin Hall
Donaldson House
Fulton Hall
Gasson Hall
Higgins Hall
Hovey House
Offices
B
B
10
9
7
56
230
55
40
7
B3
39
54
8
Number of
Building
Hopkins House
Lawrence House
Lyons Hall
McElroy Commons
McGuinn Hall
Philomatheia Hall
Roberts Center
Rubenstein Hall
Service Building
Southwell Hall
St. Thomas More Hall
31 lawrence Ave.
Subtotal
,·'n addition to 17 offices, Weston Observatory houses 12 laboratories.
Source: Space Management
50
Offices
11
11
74
32
188
7
24
12
17
26
Building
Barat House
Barry Fine Arts Pavilion
Law Faculty Wing
Kenny-Cottle Library
Stuart House
St. Mary's House
Subtotal
Weston Observatory·
Number of
Offices
9
25
21
8
63
5
131
17
B3
8
1,107
Total Offices
1,255
FACILITY CAPACITIES
FAll 1981
Location
Facility
Athletic
Alumni Stadium
Sporting Events
Field Seating
William J. Flynn Student Recreation Complex
INewWing)
McHugh Forum
Sporting Events
Floor Seating
Roberts Center
Sporting Events
Floor Seating
Auditoriums
Barry Rne Arts Pavilion 223
Cushing Hall 001
Devlin Hall ooa
Fulton Hall 412
Gasson Hall 305
Higgins Hall 304
Higgins Hall 307
McGuinn Hall 121
Stuart Hall 411
Stuart Hall 315
Theatre Arts Center
Conference Rooms
Murray Conference Room
Putnam Center 12 Conference Rooms)
Roberts lounge
Lecture
Dinner
Seating
Seating
Receptionl
Standing
32,000
3,000
4,000
2,500
4,000
Lower Campus
Lower Campus
Lower Campus
4,000
2,400
Middle Campus
4,200
BOO
Newton Campus
Middle
Middle
Middle
Middle
Middle
Middle
Middle
Campus
Campus
Campus
Campus
Campus
Campus
Campus
330
230
320
220
Newton Campus
Newton Campus
104
160
160
275
135
160
Lower Campus
650
McElroy Commons
Newton Campus
550
100
25/room
30
Trustees Board Room
St. Thomas More Hall
McElroy Commons
Dining Halls·
Eagle's Nest
Faculty Dining Room
~ yans Cafeteria
McElroy Dining Hall
Newton Campus Cafeteria
McElroy Commons
McElroy Commons
Lyons Hall
McElroy Commons
Stuart House
500
125
500
900
250
Newton Campus Snack Bar
Stuart House
200
40
75
40
Houses
Alumni Hall
O'Connell Hall
Philomatheia Hall
80
74 Commonwealth Avenue
125
200
185 Hammond Street
86 Commonwealth Avenue
80
125
Middle Campus
60
75
50
50
100
100
75
75
200
400
Newton Campus
300
300
500
Newton Campus
400
250
Lounges
Cushing Faculty Lounge
McElroy Student Lounge
McGuinn 3rd Floor Lounge
McGuinn 5th Floor Lounge
McElroy Commons
Middle Campus
Middle Campus
Multi-Purpose
Campion Auditorium
Gasson T-100
Newton Chapel
Newton Chapel Basement
Middle Campus
Middle Campus
·Capacities shown for dining facilities are those used for function seating, and therefore differ from capacities for student dining.
Source: Bureau of Conferences
Note: University facilities are available for function purposes through the Bureau of Conference 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.
51
RESIDENCE HALL STATISTICS
1981·82
Living Units
Students
Staff"
Total
3
3
3
3
3
3
2
3
1
2
3
3
138
78
145
144
157
162
103
137
22
100
153
141
CHESTNUT HILL
Upper Campus
Cheverus
Claver
Fenwick
Fitzpatrick
Gonzaga
Kostka
Loyola
Roncalli
Shaw
Townhouse
Welch
Williams
Xavier
LOWER CAMPUS
Edmond's Hall
Hillside A
Hillside B
Hillside D
Modulars
More Drive Dormitory
Rubenstein Hall
NEWTON CAMPUS
Cushing
Duchesne East
Duchesne West
Hardey
Keyes North
Keyes South
OFF CAMPUS
Greycliff
Total
*Area Directors not included.
Source: Housing Office
52
127 Hammond Street
40 Tudor Road
46 Tudor Road
137 Hammond Street
149 Hammond Street
149 Hammond Street
42 Tudor Road
182 Hammond Street
377 Beacon Street
60 Tudor Road
200 Hammond Street
142 Hammond Street
44 Tudor Road
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
885
885
885
885
885
885
Centre
Centre
Centre
Centre
Centre
Centre
Street
Street
Street
5 treet
Street
Street
2051 Commonwealth Avenue
68
40
74
73
80
81
52
69
8
51
76
72
40
784
206
36
29
24
86
144
42
567
64
64
72
96
74
57
427
25
1,803
135
75
142
141
154
159
101
134
21
98
150
138
~
1,526
792
210
152
188
498
784
174
2,798
119
132
129
174
140
105
799
38
-5,161
...?
~
34
1,560
8
3
2
2
9
18
800
...l
....I!2
45
2,843
3
3
2
3
5
122
135
131
177
145
108
818
...l
19
2
-100"
213
154
190
507
802
40
-5,261
FINANCE
53
,
"
HIGHLIGHTS OF FINANCIAL OPERATIONS
FOR THE FIVE YEARS ENDED JUNE 30, 1981
(DOLLARS IN MILLIONS)
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
$36.1
9.4
1.5
3.1
9.6
$39.6
9.5
1.8
3.7
10.7
$41.9
10.0
1.4
4.5
11.6
$46.2
13.8
1.7
5.1
13.2
$53.6
14.2
2.3
10.4
16.7
59.7
65.3
69.4
80.0
97.2
Expenditures and Transfers"
Instruction
Libraries
Sponsored Research
Student Services
Organized Activities
Plant Maintenance
General Administration
Student Aid/Loans
Auxiliary Enterprises
Other Transfers (Net)'
22.3
2.1
3.2
2.6
3.0
4.1
5.3
5.3
10.7
.9
23.4
2.3
3.1
2.7
3.3
4.8
5.9
5.7
11.4
2.6
25.1
2.5
3.4
3.0
3.2
4.9
6.3
6.3
12.3
2.3
27.9
2.8
4.1
3.2
3.5
5.9
6.7
8.6
13.4
3.6
30.7
3.4
4.3
3.6
3.9
7.5
8.1
10.7
16.4
8.5
Total Expenditures and
Transfers
$59.5
$65.2
$69.3
$79.7
$97.1
~ii
:1\
Revenues
Tuition and Fees
Contracts and Grants
Organized Activities
Gifts, Investments and Other'
Auxiliary Enterprises
.1:
i: 1
I!'I
"
'i
~,
i':
Total Revenue
I,
i
III'
'i,
! :
·For fiscal years 1980 & 1981, Gifts and Other Transfers include gifts restricted to Endowments and Plant Funds; fiscal years 1977·79 have
been restated to include similar gifts.
UBeginning with the fiscal year 1977, a facilities use allowance consisting of depreciation and interest on long-term debt has been allocated
to functional expenditures on the basis of building usage.
Source: Office of the Controller
H.E.F.A. BOND ISSUES*
Issue
Amount of
Issue
Date of
Issue
Series A
$20,875,000
April 24, 1974
Series B
15,800,000
October 20, 1976
Series C
14,150,000
June 27, 1979
Series 0
5,350,000
November 24, 1980
The Project
Edmond's Hall construction; refinancing of existing
dormitory and recreational facilities.
Improvement, renovation, construction to existing
facilities.
New Dormitory and Dining Hall; Parking Garage
facility construction.
Theatre Arts Center construction; refinancing
of central boiler facility.
·"The Massachusetts Health and Educational Facilities Authority is a body politic and corporate and a public instrumentality of The
Commonwealth of Massachusetts ... The purpose of the Authority is essentially to provide assistance for nonprofit institutions for
higher education and nonprofit hospitals in the construction, financing and refinancing of projects to be undertaken in relation to
programs for higher education and health care." - Official Statement, Boston College Issue, Series C
Source: Office of the Financial Vice President and Treasurer
54
TUITION AND FEES
FOR THE EIGHT YEARS ENDED JUNE 30. 1982
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
$2,800
190
70
$2,950
200
70
$3,175
210
75
$3,420
220
75
$3,645
230
80
$3,980
240
88
$4,530
250
96
$5,180
275
106
90
2,750
75
2,750
95
2,950
80
2,900
105
3,500
100
3,380
113
3,810
113
3,645
-
-
100
3,200
86
3,125
-
-
-
130
4,200
130
3,980
110
130
150
4,900
150
4,800
130
150
170
5,625
180
5,260
150
170
750
900
950
1,000
1,000
750
850
750
775
950
975
1,025
1,025
775
850
1,050
1,050
1,100
1,100
850
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
1,880
1,680
1,350
-
-
-
-
-
950
1,050
-
-
-
-
-
1,330
1,500
Undergraduate Schools
Arts & Sciences, Education,
Management, Nursing
Evening College (per course)
Summer Session (per credit houri
Graduate Schools
Arts & Sciences (per credit houri
Law School
Management (per credit hour)
Social Work
MSW part-time (per credit hourI
DSW part-time (per credit houri
-
Room Charge Per Student
/
Upper Campus, South Street"
Modulars
Hillside-3 bedroom
Hillside-2 bedroom
Edmond's Hall (Reservoir!
Newton
Kilsyth
Cleveland Circle
Pine Manor, SI. Gabriel's
More Drive Dormitory
Board Per Student
750
850
950
1,000
-
850
750
-
-
-
775
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
650
700
750
825
875
1,025
1,236
1,434
100
20
5
80
25
100
20
5
60
25
100
24
5
70
32
100
24
5
70
32
100
24
5
70
32
100
24
5
80
35
120
24
7
91
45
130
30
7
97
52
Representative Fees
Laboratory (Science)
Undergraduate Government
Graduate Student Association
Health.
Recreation
"South Street properties sold in 1981.
Source: Office of the Controller
81
., '
'ft,1
I.,.,.
d'
'I''I
BOSTON COLLEGE
TUITION RESTATED IN 1967 DOLLARS
t.I ~'
I'l
i It
II
,;1
Academic
Year
jl'
...,:
"
Consumer
Price
Index'
Tuition in
Absolute
Dollars
Tuition in
106.4
112.9
119.1
123.1
127.3
138.5
155.4
166.3
174.3
166.1
202.9
229.9
258.4
1,600
2,000
2,240
2,500
2,600
2,650
2,800
2,950
3,175
3,420
3,645
3,980
4,530
5,180
1,504
1,771
1,881
2,031
2,042
1,913
1,802
1,774
1,822
1,838
1,796
1,731
1,753
1,814
1967
Dollars
I"
1968/69
1969/70
1970/71
1971/72
1972/73
1973/74
1974/75
1975/76
1976/77
1977/78
1978/79
1979/80
1980/81
1981/82
285.5**
·CPI measured at December 31st of academic year. Source: Department of Commerce
Economic Indicators. July 1981.
··Estimate
Source: Office of the Controller
CONTRACTS AND GRANTS'
SOURCE AND APPLICATION OF FUNDING
(THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS)
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
$7,997
379
199
837
$9,412
$8,409
432
127
555
$9,523
$ 8,757
353
$10,017
$11,958
706
595
475
$13,734
$12,662
785
217
534
$14,198
4,113
2,221
3,078
4,052
2,287
3,184
4,384
2,207
3,426
5,329
3,124
5,281
5,700
3,169
5,329
$9,412
$9,523
$10,017
$13,734
$14,198
SOURCE
Federal Gov't.
State Gov't.
Local Gov't.
Non-Gov't.
Total
--
443
464
APPLICATION
Sponsored Research
Other Sponsored Programs
Student Aid
Total
--
-The amounts represent actual accounted expenditures for the referenced fiscal year. They are not reflective of awards made
to the University for that year.
Source: Office of the Controller
56
SUMMARY OF CONTRACT AND GRANT AWARDS*
JULY 1, 1980 - JUNE 30, 1981
Award Total
No. of Awards
Graduate School of Arts & Sciences
Biology
Chemistry
Geology & Geophysics
Weston Observatory
NECEP
Germanic Studies
History
Philosophy
Physics
Psychology
Romance Languages & Literature
Slavic and Eastern Languages
Social Welfare Research Institute
Sociology
Space Data Analysis Lab
Other
Subtotal
$
4
18
228,000
850,000
6
1
1
3
1
5
2
1
1
5
2
5
2
1,607,000
161,000
15,000
76,000
125,000
558,000
43,000
6,000
3,000
986,000
211,000
2,781,000
52,000
57
7,702,000
4
5
5
208,000
336,000
683,000
14
1,227,000
3
4
6
8
5
93,000
131,000
999,000
125,000
201,000
97
$10,478,000
School of Education
General
Special Education
Campus School
Law School
School of Management
School of Nursing
School of Social Work
Miscellaneous
TOTAL
.The awards are those received by the University during the referenced fiScal
year. The award total includes
multiple-year awards which will be expended over varying lengths of time.
Source: Office of Research Administration
--...,.
57
SELECTED CONTRACT AND GRANT AWARDS*
1980-81
Award
Title
BIOLOGY DEPARTMENT
Biochemistry of Insect Cuticle
Control of Differentiation:
Drosophila Chorion Genes
CHEMISTRY DEPARTMENT
Synthesis, Chemistry of Technetium
Radiopharmaceuticals
Chemiluminescence & Laser Induced
Fluorescence of Boron Atom Reaction
The Molecular Basis of Cellular
Control Mechanisms
Synthesis of Streptolydigin its
Congeners
Practical Synthesis of the
Anticancer Drug Adriamycin
Synthetic Utility of MetalStabilized Carbenium Ions
Probing Carcinogens' Active
Sites by F-Substitution
Exoergic Gas Phase Reactions
of Boron and Carbon Atoms
SCHOOL OF EDUCATION
District III/Boston College
Collaborative
Minimum Competency Testing Project
DIVISION OF SPECIAL EDUCATION
Rehabilitation Teaching Teachers of the Blind
Preparation of Teachers of
Orientation & Mobility
Guidelines for Improving Communications
with Visually Impaired Users of Rail
Rapid Transit Systems
CAMPUS SCHOOL
Campus School 1980-81
Support Staff Grant
Early Childhood Program
Summer School 1981
Source of Funding
National Institutes of Health
National Institutes of Health
National Cancer Institute
U.S. Air Force
National Institute of General
Medical Sciences
National Institute of General
Medical Sciences
National Cancer Institute
62,604
106,727
51,450
121,234
54,508
81,197
110,596
National Institute of General
Medical Sciences
National Cancer Institute
50,509
National Science Foundation
59,952
59,168
City of Boston
101,545
McLeod Corporation
100,000
U. S. Department of Education
84,410
DHHS-Office of Rehabilitation
Services
Department of Transportation
167,131
Mass-Local Towns
U.S. Department of Education
Mass-Local Towns
Mass-Local Towns
446,650
GEOLOGY & GEOPHYSICS DEPARTMENT - Weston Observatory
A Seismotectonic Study of
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
New England and Adjacent Areas
A Study of Seismicity &
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
Tectonics in New England
Conduct Geokinetic Environment
U.S. Air Force
Investigation
58
($)
80,000
58,600
79,143
63,655
350,000
190,518
1,054,170
I.
I
Award
Source of Funding
Totle
($)
HISTORY DEPARTMENT
Teachers' Institute in
Boston History
National Endowment for the
Humanities
58,842
LAW SCHOOL
Law School Clinical Experience
U.S. Department of Education
71,128
SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT
Small Business Development Center
U.S. Small Business Administration!
University of Massachusetts
110,660
DHHS-Division of Nursing
DHHS-Public Health Service
328,812
170,000
DHHS-Nationallnstitute of
Mental Health
DHHS-National Institute of
Mental Health
DHHS-Division of Nursing
203,648
PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENT
New Humanities Core Curriculum:
Perspectives on Western Culture
National Endowment for
the Humanities
125,121
PHYSICS DEPARTMENT
Siple Low Light Level TV Experiment
Electron & Ion Distributions at
High Latitudes
National Science Foundation
U.S. Air Force
136,843
337,948
SOCIAL WELFARE RESEARCH INSTITUTE
Program Impact Study
MRPIS-First Year Program
Public Assistance Data Analysis
Laboratory
DHHS
DHHS
DHHS
218,480
601,755
142,023
SCHOOL OF NURSING
Professional Nurse Traineeship
BCSN-HMS Program in MaternalChild Health
Graduate Psychiatric-Mental
Health Nursing Program
psychiatric Nursing Program
Adult Primary Care Clinical
Specialist
SCHOOL OF SOCIAL WORK
Social Work-Community Mental Health
SOCIOLOGY DEPARTMENT
Program in Social Economy and
Social Policy
Professionals as Workers
SPACE DATA ANALYSIS LABORATORY
Ionospheric Electron Density Profile
& Related Studies
Space Craft Charging
Satellite Data Analysis
MISCELLANEOUS
Learning-to-Leam-Improving the Skills of
the High Risk Students
127,635
165,580
DHHS-National Institute of
Mental Health
76,700
DHHS-National Institute of
Mental Health
DHHS-National Institute of
Mental Health
74,755
135,725
U.S. Air Force
443,921
U.S. Air Force
U.S. Air Force
1,071,073
1,186,789
U.S. Department of Education
140,595
·Selected awards are greater than $50,000.
Source: Office of Research Administration
59
NOTES
60
61
BOSTON COLLEGE LIBRARIES
Bapst Library
,
Geophysics Library
Main Library, Middle Campus
Weston Observatory
Weston, MA
, Kenny-Cottle Library
Law Library
Newton Campus
Resource Center
(Undergraduate)
School of Management Library
School of Nursing Library
School of Social Work Library
Science Library
Special Collections
, Kenny-Cottle library
Newton Campus
Fulton Hall, 2nd Floor
Cushing Hall, 4th Floor
McGuinn Hall, Basement
Devlin Hall, Rooms .103-108
More Hall, Rooms 215-216
Source: University Librarian
EXPENDITURES FOR LIBRARY MATERIALS
Library
Bapst
Law
Management
Nursing
Science
Social Work
Total
?
1976-n
1977-78
1978-79
1979-80
1980-81
$371,927
108,801
30,710
25,090
81,010
7,650
$334,521
112,084
44,324
24,380
104,144
10,142
$376,000
125,000
71,585
33,000
125,856
12,350
$444,193
143,384
96,104
39,101
147,344
14,602
$ 505,591
208,994
82,839
44,090
In,259
16,717
$625,188
$639,595
$743,791
$884,728
$1,030,490
Source: Office of the Controller
HOLDINGS BY INDIVIDUAL LIBRARIES - 1981
Volumes
Library
Bapst
Law
School of Management
School of Nursing
Science
Weston
Social Work
R~ource Center
Special Collections
Total
Periodical
Subscriptions
483,700
132,591
63,055
35,824
56,584
11,509
28,424
23,146
39,000
2,447
885
837
642
873,833
5,606
Microform Units
495,461
106,632
34,818
26,547
41,169
404
560
96
322
17
486
705,517
Source: University Librarian
CIRCULATION STATISTICS
Interlibrary
Year
Student
Faculty
loans
Reserve
Total
1976-n
19n-78
1978-79
1979-80
1980-81
108,364
78,609
86,940
96,876
94,584
11,453
12,406
12,690
13,333
12,762
3,646
3,420
5,386
7,901
5,463
98,118
113,107
130,833
152,369
170,123
221,581
207,542
235,829
270,479
282,932
Source: University Librarian
62
L
BOSTON COLLEGE LIBRARIES
COMPUTER SEARCHES
The following data bases are available to the Boston College Community for customized computer literature
searching. The computer search is an alternative to manual literature searching. It is recommended when a
literature search involves several concepts or groups of concepts, or when limiting factors (e.g., type of
publication, language) are introduced. Request forms and further information are available from the
reference staff in each library.
BIOMEDICINE
Excerpta Medicd
IPA (International Pharmaceutical Abstracts)
MEDOC
MEDLINE Data Bases
AVLlNE
BIOETHICS
CANCER LIT
CANCERPROJ
CATLINE
CHEMLINE
CLiNPROT
EPILEPSY
HEALTH PLANNING
HISTLINE
MEDLINE AND BACKFILES
POPLINE
RTECS
TOXICOLOGY DATA BANK
TOXLINE AND TOXBACK
BUSINESS AND ECONOMICS
Accountants Index
ADSEARCH
CBPI (Canadian Business Periodicals Indexl
CIN (Chemical Industry Notesl
Disclosure
Dow Jones News
EIS Industrial Plants
EIS Nonmanufacturing Establishments
Foreign Traders Index
Frost and Sullivan Defense Market Measures
INFORM (Abstracted Business Information)
International Economic Abstracts
LABOR DOC
LABSTAT (Labor Statistics)
Management Contents
PIE News (Petroleum and Energy)
PNI (Pharmaceutical News Indexl
Predicasts (Bibliographic)
F&S Index
International Forecasts
International Time Series
PROMT
U. S. Forecasts
U.S. Time Series
Predicasts (Computational)
Standard and Poor's News
Trade Opportunities
U.S. Exports
HUMANITIES AND SOCIAL SCIENCES
America: History and Life
ARTBIBLIOGRAPHIES MODERN
Bilingual Education and Bibliographic Abstracts
Child Abuse and Neglect
ECER (Exceptional Child Education Resources)
ERIC (RIE, CIJE, AIM/ARM)
Family Resources Database (National Council on
Family Relations)
Historical Abstracts
Language and Language Behavior Abstracts
Legal Resources Index
LEXIS
LISA (Library and Information Science Abstracts)
MLA Bibliography
NARIC (National Rehabilitation Information
Centerl
NCJRS (National Criminal Justice Referral
Systeml
NICEM (National Information Center for
Educational Medial
NIMH (National Institute of Mental Health)
NIMIS (National Center of Educational Media
and Materials for the Handicapped)
PAIS (Public Affairs Information Service)
Philosopher's Index
Psychological Abstracts
RILM Abstracts
Social Sciences Citation Index
Sociological Abstracts
Sport
U.S. Political Science Documents
U.S. Public School Directory
63
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
SCIENCES
Agricola
ASFA (Aquatic Sciences and Fisheries Abstracts)
BIOSIS (Biological Abstracts)
Chemical Abstracts
CHEMNAME
CHEMSEARCH
CHEMSIS
Claims/Chem
Claims/Chem/Uniterm
Claims/Class
Claims/U.S. Patents
Cold Regions
Commonwealth Agricultural Bureau Abstracts
CRIS (Current Information Service - USDA
GEOARCHIVE
GEOREF
INSPEC
IRL Life Sciences Collection
Oceanic Abstracts
Pacific Islands Ecosystems
Patents (Pergamon International
Information Corp.)
Pollution Abstracts
SCISEARCH (Science Citation Index)
SPIN (Searchable Physics Information Notices)
TROPAG (Abstracts on Tropical Agriculture)
TSCA Initial Inventory
II
TECHNOLOGY AND ENGINEERING
APILIT (American Petroleum Institute)
APIPAT (American Petroleum Institute, Patents)
APTIC (Air Pollution Technical Information
Center)
AQUACULTURE
Aqualine
BHRA Fluid Engineering
COMPENDEX (Engineering Index)
DICIS (Doane Agricultural Services)
DOE Energy
ELCOM (Electronics and Computers)
ENERGYLINE (Energy Information Abstracts)
ENVIROLINE (Environment Abstracts)
Environmental Bibliography
FOODS ADLIBRA
FOREST PRODUCTS
FSTA (Food Science & Technology Abstracts)
INPADOC (International Patent Classification
Center)
ISMEC (Mechanical Engineering)
METADEX (Metals Abstracts/Alloys Index)
Source: University Librarian
64
-_.
~
.
-
--_.- - -
MRIS (Maritime Research Information Service)
Non-Ferrous Metals Abstracts
PAPERCHEM (Institute of Paper Chemistry)
PIRA (Paper and Board, Packaging Abstracts)
RAPRA Abstracts
SAE Abstracts (Society of Automotive Engineers)
Safety Abstracts
STANDARDS AND SPECIFICATIONS
Surface Coatings Abstracts
TITUS (lnstitut Textile de France)
TRIS (Transportaton Research Information
System)
WATER RESOURCES ABSTRACTS
Weldasearch (Institute of Welding)
WORLD ALUMINUM ABSTRACTS
WORLD TEXTILES (World Textile Abstracts)
MULTIDISCIPLINARY
ASI (American Statistics Index)
Biography Master Index
BOOK REVIEW INDEX
BOOKSINFO
BOOKS IN PRINT
Boston Globe
CDI (Comprehensive Dissertation Index)
CIS (Congressional Information Service)
CNI (Canadian News Index)
Code of Federal Regulations Index
CRECORD (Congressional Record Index)
Conference Papers Index
Encyclopedia of Associations
Federal Register
FEDEX (Energy Information Administration)
Foundation Directory
Foundation Grants Index
GPO Monthly Catalog
GPO Publications Reference File
Grants
L1BCON
Magazine Index
MARC & REMARC (Library of Congress)
National Foundations
National Newspaper Index
New York Times Information Bank II
NTIS (National Technical Information Service)
Population Bibliography
Quebec-Actualite
SSI E (Smithsonian Science Information
Exchange)
State Publications Index
United States Contract Awards
VOTES (Roll Call Votes of U.S. Congress)
SPECIAL COLLECTIONS
Many rare and valuable materials are included in Special Collections, -ranging from medieval manuscripts to
modern limited editions, fine bindings, autographed copies, and letters of established authors. Because of their scarcity, value, or fragile nature access is limited. Below are brief notes on some of the more outstanding collections. Contact the Special Collections Librarian for further information.
BELLOC COLLECTION
The library and personal papers of Hilaire Belloc (1870-1953). Over 8,100 volumes; 150 manuscripts; 6,000 letters, includin9 correspondence with several outstanding literary figures.
CITYWIDE COORDINA TING COUNCIL
These archives contain materials documenting the Council's work in the court-ordered desegregation of the
Boston Public Schools through busing.
CONGRESSMAN ROBERT F. DRINAN ARCHIVES
These archives document the ten years (1970-1980) during which Robert F. Drinan, S.J. served as the
representative of the fourth congressional district of Massachusetts. It includes legislative and general correspondence, committee hearings and reports, voting records, speeches, campaigns, and local office files.
FRANCIS THOMPSON COLLECTION
This, the most complete collection of Thompsoniana in existence, includes first and rare editions,
manuscripts, notebooks, letters, and other material relating to the poet, his time (1859-1907) and his work.
IRISH COLLECTION
This collection contains rare and limited editions of works dating from the 17th century to the present, in all
fields of knowledge, with emphasis on history and literature. These special holdings are augmented by large numbers
of books in the Bapst circulating collection. Early manuscripts and letters, as well as those of modern authors, add
depth and interest to the published works. The collection is a rapidly growing one, and benefits from generous
donors; among them is the Eire Society of Boston, which recently deposited its archives here.
JESUITANA
A collection of early and rare works by and about Jesuits. It includes Lertere e Relazione Orientale, a series of
annual letters from Jesuit missionaries in Indo-China, Tibet, Japan, etc., published in Italy between 1590 and 1661.
Most treasured is an original letter of St. Francis Xavier to John III, King of Portugal, dated January 31, 1562.
LITURGICAL COLLECTION
This collection seeks to document and illustrate the transitions in Catholic thought and piety that have occurred in this century, especially in the area of the liturgy. It includes books, periodicals, music, religious art, devotional
material, unpublished manuscripts, and the papers of those most responsible for initiating and implementing renewal.
MERTON COLLECTION
The original typescript and galleys of The Seven Storey Mountain are gifts of Thomas Merton (1915-1968),
along with galleys of The Waters of Siloe, and his own copy of The Poetry and Prose of William Blake. There is an
autographed copy of each book published by him, and numerous periodicals contaihing the first printing of poems
and essays, many of them uncollected.
MEYNELL COLLECTION
The most extensive collection in the-Western Hemisphere of the works of Wilfrid and Alice Meynell and three
of their children - Everard, Viola, and Sir Francis - providing a well-rounded view of this remarkable family of poets,
biographers, novelists, essayists, editors and publishers over a period of nearly 75 years (ca. 1875-1950).
MORRISSEY COLLECTION OF JAPANESE PRINTS
Of particular value to those interested in the history of Japanese art this collection contains over 100 prints,
paintings, and reproductions, Japanese artifacts, and several books. Especially noteworthy are landscape designs of
Hiroshige (1797-1858) and Hokusai (1760-1849).
65
I·
PATMORE COLLECTION
Coventry Patmore (1823-1896), poet, essayist, critic, close friend of Francis Thompson and of the Meynells, is
represented here by numerous first editions, manuscripts, articles, book reviews and letters. Among the correspondents are Arnold, Browning, Carlyle, Emerson, Hawthorne, Rossetti, Tennyson and Thackeray.
STOUT COLLECTION
The library and papers of Rex Stout (1886-1975), creator of the Nero Wolfe mystery stories contain 1,054
volumes, including over 700 foreign editions in various languages; 125 literary manuscripts, many with the author's
corrections; 7 cases of correspondence.
WILLIAMS COLLECTION
Approximately 10,000 books and pamphlets are contained in this collection, which provides valuable source
material on the ethnology, social and natural history of the West Indies, with special emphasis on Jamaica. Some
unusual items of Africana and Judaica are also included.
THE BOSTON COLLEGE GUILD OF ST. LUKE OF BOSTON HEAL TH ETHICS COLLECTION
Initiated in 1974, this contains books, pamphlets, periodicals, reprints and audio-visual materials which concern the ethics of medicine and health care.
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, research, and other significant materials in nursing.
NA TlONAL HEAL TH PLANNING INFORMA TION CENTER
The Boston College School of Nursing Library is one of the twenty six United States and European
depositories for NHPIC non-copyrighted materials in microfiche format. These Cover a variety of topics relevant to
health planning and resources with a strong nursing component. Consult the Librarian and Reference Librarian for additional information in regard to the scope and use of this collection.
SPECIAL LIBRARY SERVICES
INTERLIBRARY LOAN
The Interlibrary loan Service is offered to students, faculty, administration and staff, to facilitate obtaining
materials not available in the Boston College Libraries. Books, photocopies of journal articles, microfilm, theses, and
government documents can be borrowed from other libraries. Except for unusual items, the waiting period is from
one to four weeks; for anyone willing to use the material at the holding library, a computerized system will provide
locations within twenty-four hours of the request. Request forms and further information are available from the
reference staff in each library.
.
BOSTON LfflRARY CONSORTIUM
The library is a member of the Boston Library Consortium, a group of area libraries which includes Brandeis,
Boston University, Tufts, Wellesley, Northeastern, MIT, Massachusetts State Library, Boston Public Library, and
University of Massachusetts. Faculty and graduate students may apply for a Consortium borrowers card at the
reference department in Bapst. The Consortium maintains a central office at the Boston Public Library, publishes a
newsletter, and maintains the following committees: Directors, Acquisitions, Serials, Readers' Services,and Cataloging. Further information may be found in the User Guide and the Consortium Handbook, available in all libraries.
UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PUBLICATION
In 1963 Boston College was designated one of the two depository libraries in this congressional district. This
status entitles Boston College Libraries to receive on a selective basis United States government publications at no
cost with the stipulation they be made available to the general public. The extensive collection is housed in each of the
libraries on campus. Most of the material circulates in the same manner as books. Inquiries related to the retrieval and
use of government documents should be directed to the Government Documents Department at Bapst Library.
NEW ENGLAND LIBRARY INFORMATION NETWORK
Through membership in the New England Library Information Network (NELINETl, there is on-line access to
publishing, cataloging, and inter-library loan location information from the data bank of DClC, Inc. which contains
over 7.6 million records from the Library of Congress and some 2,400 other contributing institutions.
Source: University Librarian
66
ATHLETICS
i
I
67
VARSITY SPORTS
1980-81
Men's Varsity
Participants
Baseball
Basketball
Cross-Country
25
14
13
Football
Golf
Ice Hockey
Lacrosse
Sailing
Skiing
Soccer
Swimming
Tennis
Track-Indoor
Golf
30
30
Lacrosse
Sailing
Skiing
Soccer
SWimming & Diving
Tennis
Track-Indoor
Track-Outdoor
Volleyball
10
13
25
25
10
Tra~k-Outdoor
Wrestling
10
Total
Basketball
Cross-Country
Fencing
Field Hockey
105
18
50
50
Women's Varsity
-428
Total.
Participants
14
12
4
31
4
26
8
13
32
33
15
33
29
16
270
Source: Sports Information Office
CLUB SPORTS
1980-81
Men's Club
Boxing
Rugby
Volleyball
Waterpolo
Participants
Women's Club
Participants
28
Ice Hockey
Rugby
Softball
22
60
15
15
Coed Club Sports
Judo
Karate
Volleyball
Source: Sports Information Office
68
19
18
.
,,
INTRAMURALS
1980-81
Men
Teams
Sport
Basketball
655
64
-
4
15
235
Handball
Ice Hockey
Sport
Participants
Racquetball
Co-ed
Women
Participants
Teams
Sport
Teams
2 on 2
48
-
Golf
35
Racquetball
Racquetball
Basketball
17
173
-
Doubles
16
32
Doubles
14
28
Doubles
Singles
-
96
Singles
-
30,
-
Soccer
26
197
22
Squash
-
2
-
32
Soccer
Squash
-
-
Tennis
Tennis
Doubles
Touch Football
64
-
32
Singles
24
320
103
20
357
16
32
-
26
453
Tennis
14
28
-
48
-
Doubles
Track
Total
1,667
-
-
Volleyball
Totel
60
Softball
32
-
8
30
Road Race
Doubles
Singles
Participants
18
205
--542
44
Volleyball
1,114
Total
Source: Sports Information Office
Unstructured Recreation
Lessons
Exercise
Badminton
Handball
Baseball
Jogging
Fencing
Basketball
Lacrosse
Figure Skating
Dance
Racquetball
Golf
Diving
Soccer
Life Saving
Exercise
Softball
Modern Dance
Figure Skating
Swimming
Racquetball
Football
Tennis
Scuba Diving
Golf
Volleyball
Squash
Weightlifting
Swimming
Tennis
Water Safety
Source: Sports Informaticn Office
69
VARSITY SPORTS RECORDS
1976-n
W-L·T
1977-78
W-L-T
1978-79
W·L-T
1979-80
W-L-T
1980-81
W-L-T
Football
Basketball
Ice·Hockey
Wrestling
Soccer
Lacrosse
Tennis
Baseball
SWimming
Golf
Women's Records
8-3
8-18
18-11-2
3-7
6-7-1
7-4
11-1
14-8
4-6
5-7
6-5
15-11
24-10
5-5
6-9-1
2-9
11-1
14-10-1
7-4
7-7
0-11
21-9
16-14
6-5
13-5
6-7
11-0
6-18
8-4
5-8
5-6
19-10
25-7-1
7-7
9·6-5
7-7
9-4
8-15
5-6
8-7
7-4
23-7
20-8-3
5-13
15-3-3
9-6
11-1
11-12
7·1
2-6
Basketball
Field Hockey
Swimming
Tennis
Volleyball
Lacrosse
Soccer
7-6
6-3-1
12-0
5-1
7-5
4·10
7-3-2
10-0
7-2
12-7
5-3
5-13
6-3·3
5-7
8-11
19-2
7·2
11-12
4-12-2
5-5
4-8
5-11
9-3
-
-
-
12-11
5-10-2
6-2
4-3
8-15
8-5
10-4
Men's Records
-
Source: Sports Information Office
VARSITY FOOTBALL SCHEDULES
Fall 1981
Sept. 19
Sept. 26
Oct. 3
Oct. 10
Oct. 17
Oct. 24
Oct. 31
Nov. 7
Nov. 14
Nov. 21
Nov. 28
Sept. 11
Sept. 18
Sept. 25
Oct. 2
Oct. 9
Oct. 16
Oet.23
Oct. 30
Nov. 6
Nov. 13
Nov. 20
Nov. 27
1982
at Texas A&M
OPEN
at Navy
Temple
at West Virginia
Rutgers
at Army
Penn State
at Massachusetts
Syracuse
OPEN
Holy Cross
Source: Sports Information Office
70
Texas A&M
at North Carolina
West Virginia
at Penn State
Navy
at Army
Pittsburgh
Massachusetts
at Syracuse
Rutgers
at Holy Cross
6:00 p.m.
1:00 p.m.
6:00 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
2:00 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:00 p.m.
1983
Sept. 17
Sept. 24
Oct. 1
Oct. 8
Oct. 15
Oct. 22
Oct. 29
Nov. 5
Nov. 12
Nov. 19
Nov. 26
at Rutgers
West Virginia
Temple
at Yale
at Air Force
at Alabama
Penn State
at Army
at Syracuse
Massachusetts
at Holy.Cross
Sept. 15
Sept. 22
Sept. 29
Oct. 6
Oct. 13
Oct. 20
Oct. 27
Nov. 3
Nov. 10
Nov. 17
Nov. 24
Dec. 1 .
1984
Alabama
North Carolina
at Miami
OPEN
OPEN
at West Virginia
Rutgers
at Penn. State
Army
Syracuse
at Massachusetts
Holy Cross
VARSITY HOCKEY SCHEDULE
1981-82
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
14
20
24
1
4
5
8
10
20
29
&
Dec.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Salem State
Holy Cross
Princeton
Brown
at 51. Lawrence
at Clarkson
Maine
Northeastern
Merrimack
at I LOVE
NEW YORK
30
Tournament
2
at New Hampshire
at Har,ard
Boston University
5
9
Jan. 12
Jan. 16
Jan. 19
Jan. 22
Jan. 24
Jan. 27
Feb. 1
Feb. 4
Feb. 8
Feb. 12
Feb. 16
Feb. 20
Feb. 23
Feb. 27
Mar. 3
Providence
at Cornell
at Yale
RPI
at Providence
Dartmouth
at Beanpot Tournament
New Hampshire
at Beanpot Finals
Colgate
at Maine
at Army
Vermont
at Northeastern
at Boston University
Source: Sports Information Office
VARSITY BASKETBALL SCHEDULE*
1981-82
Nov. 29
Dec. 2
Dec. 4
Dec. 9
Dec. 12
Dec. 19
Dec. 29
&
Dec. 30
Jan. 6
Jan. 10
Jan. 13
Jan. 16
Jan. 18
Jan. 23
Bentley
Stonehill
Villanova (home game)
at Meadowlands
Brown
at New Hampshire
at Fairfield
Gator Bowl Tournament
at Jacksonville, FL
at Villanova
at Georgetown
at Connecticut
Providence
Seton Hall
at Syracuse
Jan. 26
Jan. 28
Jan. 30
Feb. 3
Feb. 6
Feb. 10
Feb. 13
Feb. 17
Feb. 20
Feb. 22
Feb. 24
Feb. 27
Mar. 4
at Rhode Island
Northeastern
Merrimack
St. John's
Connecticut
at Providence
Holy Cross
Georgetown
at St. John's
Syracuse
St. Anselm's
at Seton Hall
Big East Tournament
Mar. 6
at Hartford, CT
"BIG EAST games appear in bold type.
Source: Sports Information Office
71
NOTES
72
,
~-
GENERAL INFORMATION
.
~.
,.
,;~
'.
. .
.".
~.
-,
!
I
I
-
73
INDEX OF
HONORARY DEGREES
AS 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.Sc.
D.Sc.Ed.
D.Sc.L.
D.Sc.T.
D.S.S.
H.D.
Hist. Phil. D.
J.U.D.
L.H.D.
LL.D.
Litt.D.
R.D.
S.T.D.
Sc.D.
Doctor of Arts
Doctor of Business Administration
Doctor of Commercial Science
Doctor of Engineering Science
Doctor of Fine Arts
Doctor of Journalism
Doctor of Music
Doctor of Nursing Science
Doctor of Public Administration
Doctor of Science
Doctor of Science in Education
Doctor of the' Science of Law
Doctor of the Science of Theology
Doctor of Social Science
Doctor of History
Doctor of History in Philosophy
Doctor of Civil and Canon Laws
Doctor of Humane Letters
Doctor of Laws
Doctor of Letters, Doctor of Literature
Doctor of Religion
Doctor of Sacred Theology
Doctor of Science
Source: Commencement Programs, 1952·1981
74
HONORARY DEGREES AWARDED BY BOSTON COLLEGE
1952-1981
1957
1952
Gregory Peter XV Cardinal Agagianian, LL.D.
(January 14, 1952)
James B. Connolly, Litt.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.
Wallace E. Carroll, LL.D.
Arthur J. 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
1958
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)
Most Rev. Amleto G. Cicognani, LL.D. (April 21, 1958)
Carl J. Gilbert, LL.D.
Paul Horgan, Lilt. D.
Barnaby C. Keeney, LL.D.Henry M. Leen;'"LL.D.
Jacques Maritain, Ll.D.
Raissa'Maritain, LL.D.
Harold Marston Morse, D.Sc.
Rev. John B. Sheerin. C.S.P., LL.D.
Francis Cardinal Spellman, LL.D. (December B, -1958)
1959
His Excellency Sean T. O'Kelly, LL.D. (March 22, 1959)
Ernest Henderson, Ll.D.
Rev. John LaFarge, S.J., LL.D.
Henry Cabot Lodge, LL.D.
George Meany, LL.D.
Carlos P. Romulo, LL.D.Helen C. White, Litt.D.
1955
1960
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.
Marian Anderson, O.Mus.
J. Peter Grace, LL.D.
Caryl P. Haskins, LL.D.
Robert F. Kenned.y, 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.Sc. (October 12, 1960)
1961
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.
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 J. Sennott, LL.D.
Edward Teller, LL.D.
·Commencement Speaker
75
1962
1966
,
!
Detlev W. Bronk, D.Sc.'
Ralph J. Bunche, LL.D.
Christopher J. Duncan, M.D., LL.D.
Sir Alec Guinness, D.F.A.
Rt. Rev. Francis J. Lally, Lin.D.
Ralph Lowell, LL.D.
Phyllis McGinley, Litt.D.
Perry G. Miller, Litt.D.
1963
Augustin Cardinal Bea, S.J., J.U.D. (March 26, 1963)
Rev. Edward B. Bunn, S.J., LL.D. (April 20, 19631
Lady Barbara Ward Jackson, Litt.D. (April 20, 19631
Nathan Marsh Pusey, L.H.D. (April 20, 19631
Bruce Catton, Litt.D.
Anthony Joseph Celebrezze, LL.D.'
Arthur Joseph Goldberg, LL.D.
John Jay McCloy, LL.D.
James Barren 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.Sc.
1964
John Coleman Bennett, LL.D.
Henri Maurice Peyre, LL.D.
Mo~t Rev. Ernest John Primeau, LL.D.
Sidney R. Rabb, L.H.D.
Paul Anthony Samuelson, LL.D.
Rev. Joseph L. Shea, S.J., LL.D.
Robert Sargent Shriver, Jr., LL.D.'
Mary Sullivan Stanton, LL.D.
1965
John P. Birmingham, LL.D.
Robert McAffee Brown, LL.D.
J.N. Douglas Bush, Lin.D.
Vietor L. Butterfield, L.H.D.
John T. Connor, LL.D.
Edith Green, LL.D.
Rev. John Courtney Murray, S.J., L.H.D.'
Rt. Rev. Lawrence J. Riley, LL.D.
Alan T. Waterman, D.Se.
I,
':
·Commencement Speaker
I
76
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.Sc.
(November 12, 1966)
William Bosworth Castle, M.D., L.H.D.
(November 12, 19661
Donald Frederick Hornig, LL.D.
(November 12, 19661
James Alfred Van Allen, D.Sc.
(November 12, 19661
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
Kingman Brewster, Jr., LL.D.·
Rev. Henri de Lubac, S.J., L.H.D.
Erwin N. Griswold, LL. D.
Rita P. Kelleher, D.Sc.
Most Rev. John J. McEleney, S.J., LL.D.
Cornelius W. Owens, LL.D.
James J. Shea, Sr.• LL.D.
Roger J. Traynor, LL.D.
1969
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.
Rt. Rev. John Melville Burgess, LL.D.
Joan Ganz Cooney, D.Sc.Ed.
Sterling Dow, L.H.D.
Hartford Nelson Gunn, Jr., L.H.D.
Rev. Bernard Joseph Francis Lonergan, S.J., Hist.PhiI.D.
Elliot Norton, L.H.D.
Perry Townsend Rathbone, D.F.A.
Earl Warren, D.Sc.L.*
1971
Walter Jackson Bate, H.D.
Andrew Felton Brimmer, S.S.D.
Rev. Msgr. George William Casey, LiIt.D.
Mircea E1iade, 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.Sc.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 Willia.., Arthur Lewis, L.H.D.
Louis Martin Lyons, D.Journ.
Rev. John Anthony McCarthy, S.J., Litl.D.
Hildegarde Elizabeth Peplau, D.N.S.
Adlai Ewing Stevenson, III, LL.D."
Walter Edward Washington, LL.D.
1973
A.J. 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.J., 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 J. Gilday, S.J., L.H.D.
Edward Lewis Hirsh, L.H.D.
Paul Ricoeur, L.H.D.*
Vincent Charles Ziegler, D.B.A.
Bicentennial Convocation
Sept. 28, 1975
Thomas Joseph Galligan, Jr., D.B.A.
Oscar Handlin, L.H.D.
William J. Harrington, M.D., D.Sc.
Edward Hirsh Levi, LL.D.
Rev. Michael Patrick Walsh, S.J.,
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.J., 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. *
1977
Rev. Raymond Edward Brown, Litt.D. *
Gerhard D. Bleicken, LL.D.
Alice Bourneuf, D.Sc.
James F. McDonough, M.D., D.Sc.
Maria Tallchief Paschen, D.A.
Michael Joseph Walsh, Litl.D.
·Commencement Speaker
77
1978
1980
Bruno Benelheim, Lin.O.
Rev. Charles F. Donovan, S.J., L.H.D.
Charles D. Ferris, LL.D.'
Marvin E. Frankel, LL.D.
John William McDevitt, LL.D.
Leo Perlis, D.S.S.
Germaine Bree, Lin.D. *
Albert M. Folkard, L.H.D.
Edward J. King, D. Pub. Admn.
Joseph Cardinal Malula, LL.D.
Bernard J. O'Keefe, D.E.Sc.
Kevin H. White, LL.D.
1979
1981
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.'
Rev. Joseph Delphis Gauthier, S.J., 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 Donavon Sullivan, D.S.S.
Thomas P. O'Neill, Jr., The Ignatius Meda"
·Commencement Speaker
Source: Secretary of the University
FOUNDER OF BOSTON COLLEGE
Rev. John McElroy, S.J.
Pastor, Immaculate Conception Parish, Boston
1861-1863
PRESIDENTS OF BOSTON COLLEGE
1. John Bapst, S.J.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
Robert W. Brady, S.J.
Robert Fulton, S.J.
Jeremiah O'Conner, S.J.
Edward V. Boursaud, S.J.
Thomas H. Stack, S.J.
Nicholas Russo, S.J.
Robert Fulton, S.J.
Edward I. Devitt, S.J.
Timothy Brosnahan, S.J.
W.G. Read Mullan. S.J.
William F. Gannon, S.J.
Source: Secretary of the University
78
1863-1869
1869-1870
1870-1880
1880-1884
1884-1887
1887
1887-1888
1888-1991
1891-1894
1894-1898
1898-1903
1903-1907
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
Thomas I. Gasson, S.J.
Charles W. Lyons, S.J.
William Devlin, S.J.
James H. Dolan, S.J.
Louis J. Gallagher, S.J.
William J. McGarry, S.J.
William J. Murphy, S.J.
William L. Keleher, S.J.
Joseph R.N. Maxwell, S.J.
Michael P. Walsh, S.J.
W. Seavey Joyce, S.J.
J. Donald Monan, S.J.
1907-1914
1914-1919
1919-1925
1925-1932
1932-1937
1937-1939
1939-1945
1945-1951
1951-1958
1958-1968
1968-1972
1972-
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 Administrtaion (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.)
ACCREDITATION AND MEMBERSHIPS OF THE UNIVERSITY
Accrediting Agencies
American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Business
American Bar Association
American Chemical Society
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
Association Memberships"
American Association of Colleges of Nursing
Council for Exceptional Children
American Association of College Registrars
Council of Graduate School
and Admissions Officers
International Association of Schools of Social
American Association of Colleges for
Work
-Teacher Ed'Jcation
International Association of Universities
American Association of Comparative Law
International Federation of Catholic Universities
American Association for Higher Education
Jesuit Student Personnel Association
American Association of University Women
National Association of College Admissions
American Council on Education
CounselorsAmerican Educational Research Association
National Association of College and University
American Public Welfare Association
Business Officers
Association of American Colleges
National Association of Independent Colleges
Association of Catholic Colleges and Universities
and Universities
Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning
National Association of Social Workers
Association for Continuing Higher Education
National Association of Student Financial
Association of Independent Colleges and
Aid Administrators
Universities in Massachusetts
National Association of Student Personnel
Association for Institutional Research
Administrators
Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities
National Conference of Catholic Charities
Association of Urban Universities
National Conference of Social Welfare
Boston Library Consortium
National League for Nursing
Boston Theological Institute
New England Educational Research Organization
The College Board
North American Association of Summer Sessions
Conference of Deans of Schools of Social Work
Order of the Coif""
Council for Advancement and Support of Education
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 belongs may be found in the University Student Guide.
Source: Deans' Offices
79
"I"
I
ACADEMIC DEPARTMENT LOCATIONS
Accounting Department
Administrative Sciences Department
Arts and Sciences
Biology Department
Center for East Europe, Russia and Asia
Chemistry Department
Classical Studies Department
Computer Sciences Department
Counseling Psychology
Counselors:
Arts and Sciences
Education
Management
Nursing
Economics Department
Education
Educational Foundations Program
English Department
Evening College
Finance Department
Fine Arts Department
General Management Program
Geology and Geophysics Department
Germanic Studies Department
Graduate Arts and Sciences
History Department
Honors Programs:
Arts and Sciences
Education
Management
Instructional Leadership and Admin. Program
Law School
Law Department
Management Center
Marketing Department
Mathematics Department
Music Program
Nursing
Organizational Studies Program
Philosophy Department
Physics Department
Political Science Department
Psychology Department
80
Fulton 400
Fulton 301C
Gasson 103
Higgins 321
Carney 201A
Devlin 223
Carney 124
Fulton 4060
McGuinn 314
Gasson 108
Campion 301
Fulton 205
Cushing 103
Carney 131
Campion 103-104A
Campion 310
Carney 450
Fulton 317
Fulton 310
Barry Pavilion 216, Newton Campus
Fulton 219
Devlin 209
Carney 326
McGuinn 221A
Carney 115
Gasson 111
Campion I04A
Fulton 400
McGuinn 603
Stuart M309, Newton Campus
Fulton 403
Fulton 405
Fulton 303
Carney 317
St. Mary's House, Newton Campus
Cushing 220
Fulton 214B
Carney 272
Higgins 355
McGuinn 200
McGuinn 349
31 Lawrence Ave.
Carney 333
Carney 236
McGuinn 132
McGuinn 426
McGuinn B14
Lyons 214B
McGuinn 400
Carney 418
Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry, Institute of
Romance Languages and Literatures Department
Slavic and Eastern Languages Department
Social Work Graduate School
Sociology Department
Special Education and Rehabilitation Program
Speech Communication and Theatre
Summer Session
Theology Department
Source: Registrar
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
Office of Student Programs and Resources
Personnel Relations
President's Office
Registrar
Research Administration
Secretary of the University
Space Management
Sports Information Office
Summer Session Office
Systems and Records, University Relations
University Librarian
N.B. Sources Bre responsible for the Bccuracy lind completeness
of data submitted for publication.
Special Thanks
ro
Photos: Lee Pellegrini,
Cover: Compliments of The Boston College Stylus, February, 1958
Published by: Z8R Publications, Inc.
3 Industrial Way
Wilmington, MA 01887
81
ACADEMIC CALENDAR
1981-82
First Semester
1982-83
Aug. 29-Sept. 1
Sept. 1
Sept. 2
Sept. 2
Sept. 7
Oct. 12
Nov. 11
Nov. 25
Dec. 10-11
Dec. 12-18
Dec. 19-Jan. 17
Freshmen and Transfer Orientation
_Registration for Students not Pre-registered
Aug. 29-Sept. 1
Sept. 1
Sept. 2
Sept. 3
Sept. 6
Oct. 11
Nov. 11
Nov. 24
Dec. 9-10
Dec. 11-17
Dec. 18-Jan. 17
Classes begin
Faculty convocation
Labor Day - No Classes
Columbus Day - No Classes
Veteran's Day - No Classes
Thanksgiving Holiday begins at Noon
Study DaYs - No Undergraduate Classes
Term Examinations
Holidays
Second Semester
Jan. 18
Feb. 15-19
Apr. 8-12
Apr. 19
May 4-5
May 6-12
May 24
Classes begin
Winter vacation
Easter Recess
Patriot's Day - No Classes
Study DaYS - No Undergraduate Classes
Term Examinations
Commencement
Source: Office of the Academic Vice President
I
it
r I,
i.!j
,
;
.
82
Jan. 17
Feb. 21-25
Mar. 31-Apr. 4
Apr. 18
May 3-4
May 5-11
May 23
NOTES
83
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