Boston College Fact Book 1979-80 BOSTON COLLEGE FACT BOOK TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Foreword ,...... .......... .... v Boston College - A Brief History. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. vii Boston College Profile _ _ - viii I. ADMINISTRATION AND FACULTY Chart of Administration _. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 4 Board of Trustees. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _. . . . . . . . . . . 6 Officers of the University Academic Deans. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 University Administrators. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Department Chairmen and Chairwomen. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Professional, Administrative and Support Staff Personnel. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Faculty: , , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 10 - by School and Rank _ 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 ' .' ," 13 Average Compensation by Rank II. STUDENTS , Freshman Enrollment by Year and Sex (Full-Time) , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Freshman Enrollees - SAT Average by Class Freshman Applications, Acceptances and Enrollment (Full-Time) , Class of 1984 Applications and Enrollees - Geographic Distribution. . . . . . . . . .. Enrollment 1979-80: _ Undergraduate Transfer Students by Type of Previous Institution and Sex .. _ Graduate and Undergraduate, Full- and Part-Time.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. _ Undergraduate, Day and Evening, and Graduate. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. _ Undergraduate, by School. , _ Graduate, by School , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. _ Graduate, by Degree Program and Discipline. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .. _ Undergraduate and Graduate, by Sex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 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 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. _ Handicapped Student Enrollment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Undergraduate Degrees Conferred: - by Degree and NumQer of Majors. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. _ by Major - . . . . . . . . . . . .. - by School and by Major. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. - by Degree and by Sex .. _. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 16 16 16 17 17 18 18 19 19 20 21 21 22 22 23 24 24 24 25 26 26 27 28 29 30 31 Page III. IV. V. VI. VII. Undergraduate and Graduate Financial Aid: - Number of Students. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . - Dollars .. ...... .. .. ... ..... . Health Services. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I ALUMNI Boston College Alumni Clubs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 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 Map - Chestnut Hill Campus. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Map - Newton Campus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Boston College Properties. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Buildings Related to Boston College Operation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Summary of Building Use. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Classrooms ' Dining Facilities. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Offices. . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Facility Capacities. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Residence Hall Statistics. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . FINANCE Highlights of Financial Operations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . H.E.F.A. Bond Issues " , .. Tuition and Fees - For the Eight Years Ended June 30, 1981 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tuition Restated in 1967 Dollars. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Contracts and Grants, Source and Application, 1979-1980. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Contract and Grant Awards 1979-1980 Selected Contract and Grant Awards 1979-1980 . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . LIBRARIES libraries. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Expenditures for library Materials. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Holdings by Individual .libraries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Circulation Statistics. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Computer Searches. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Special Collections . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Special library Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ATHLETICS Varsity Sports. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Club Sports. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Intramurals . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Varsity Sports Records. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Varsity Football Schedules - 1980-83 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Varsity Hockey Schedule - 1980-81 Varsity Basketball Schedule - 1980-81 . . . . . 32 33 34 36 37 37 38 40 42 42 44 45 46 47 48 49 49 49 50 51 . 54 54 55 56 56 57 58 . . . . . . . 62 62 62 62 63 65 66 . . . . . 68 68 69 70 70 71 71 Page VIII. GENERAL INFORMATION . Honorary Degrees. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Honorary Degrees Awarded, 1952-80 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Founder and Presidents. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Types of Degrees Conferred .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Accreditation and Memberships of the University. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Academic Department Locations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sources. . . . ... . . .. . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . Academic Calendar. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....... ....... ....... ....... ....... ....... ....... ....... 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-October, 1980 - to reflect the Academic Year 1979-80. 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 December 1980 v The original arrangement of the buildings at the old Boston College. Photographed sometime before 1875 by Oliver Wendell Holmes. .., ,-.. The Recitation Building fGasson Hall) on the Lawrence reservoir, circa 1914. vi BOSTON COLLI;GE_ 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 19 Jesuits, in addition to 19 Jesuit members of the university administration. 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 50 percent of the University's enrollment, and 38 percent of a total alumni body of over 72,000. Now the fourth largest private university in New England, with full- and part-time enrollment of almost 14,000, Boston College consists of eleven schools, colleges, and institutes offering thirteen degree programs and one certification program. vii <"', BOSTON COLLEGE PROFILE 1979-80 ADMISSIONS Applicants (Class of '84) Enrollees (Class of '84) Men Women Total Freshman Class 12,640 927 1,244 2,171 ENROLLMENT - (Full- and Part-Time) Undergraduate Graduate Total Enrollment 10,322 3,655 . 13,977 PERSONNEL Full-Time Faculty Part-Time Faculty (FTE) Teaching Fellows Graduate Assistants Total Administrative/Professional Staff & Sponsored Research (Aug. '80) Total Secretarial/Clerical & Sponsored Research (Aug. '80) Total Physical Plant Positions (Aug. '80) General Service (Aug. '80) 553 133 80 279 537 486 215 224 DEGREES CONFERRED Undergraduate Graduate & Professional Total Degrees Conferred ALUMNI LIBRARIES - (Total Holdings) - Volumes 2,109 1,103 3,212 72,166 845,953 PHYSICAL PLANT Acres (owned properties) Chestnut Hill Campus Newton Campus Other Total Acres Buildings (utilized properties) Administrative/Academic Student Housing Other Total 8uildings 110.60 40.20 10.07 160.87 31 30 23 84 FINANCE Revenues Expenditures and Transfers viii $80,000,000 $79,721,000 ADMINISTRATION & FACULTV 1 , ... , ------------------I, Vice Presidlnt. Assistant To President University Relations 1 I I O;,IKIO', bi'KIO', Alu ... "i Assoc;"t;on Di,oclo,. Dnalopm... t .. Financial Vie. President Vic. President. Student Aft,irs Vice President, DirH101', CommuniQliom ... ,-SIU.....l Proo'"'" DNno' St"dltflll Di_tor, AthletK:1 , Treasur.r 1 I c.,", Oi"clo•• Univemty Di,toetor Plen"ing& COOln,.I;", .. Di_tor. Buildi". P"'-"M Ground• Autst.nl Tr......... . ......" ""'.... AHANA Oi~or. Un;"''''';ty Oi,lOCto., Student Housi", H ..lth Budge1l Director, S-Vic:" I Oi_,o,of DirKt..... ..'" Dil'KtOl', Audit Di_to<. Di_to, of ..-.:I Procedures Pol~ • D;'KIO" Cent•• I, I af3 Source: Office of Personnel Relations, Dini"ll s.nicel HOUMh.pillll C ....pul PoliCII T.lKommunatio... Mail ., Oirector Purc.h~ng CornPo,lI.. 111 Plant s.r.ieeo BooIo.ltor. Note: University administrators occupying the positions reflected above are listed on pages 6 and 7. 111 s..wte.s Fi.....,i.. lnform-'ion and AnalVsi. Satv"," Director, In...... P~nt Connon.. [ [ Board of Truste~ President Oirecto" Affi,ma1m Action Unn..n;ty C....plain Executive Vic. President Ac.edemic Vice President .od Dean of Faculties '-. ~ . .' Associet. Dean of Dean, Graduet. School of Arts & Sciences (21 Faculties Oinc1or. SpxtOaUl AnalYJis Labora1ol)' Di..-aor. R_...,h Administration Oi'KIO', WS DireClor. SWAAI Oira<:lor, P'DlI,ams ,~ Oi'KIO', lnst. of Aal. Ed. and Paslo,al Min. .Woman ., Oi'.et.... Oi'K10'. udio ViJcAl S.... ic... Wanon Obw",MOI)' 121 Includes Gradu.1. ProgrilmS in Education and Nursing 2 of 3 Dean, College of Arts & Sciences Oi'a<:lo•• Honon P'D!J'lm BOSTON COLLEGE CHART OF ADMINISTRATION, 1980 j h~1 Oun. Dean, Summer Dean, School of School of e....ning Session Nursing Education College Dean. 8 DoM I I A_i.l. .......q 0 .... lUI OunlGI AsIoci.t41 O.... IG) D.an of Admissions, Records Dean, Graduate School of Diwision Ch.i....... em_to< T"li n llhal. & Ed- Policy Di_tor, ""'- . School Finanl;:illl Aid Chairm." 1 I DirKlo<, fiMftCial •• Di...,tot, 0-1","'1 Unwenity Librarian ,MI Social Work 1 Direc,o., 3M3 Dean, School of Management Ma...,....... c c.nl.. '. Di'K1CM' of Ad",iaions Uninnity R"'l!in,•• BOARD OF TRUSTEE MEMBERSHIPt 1980·81 Joseph F. Abely, Jr. '50 Vice Chairman of the Board R.J. Reynolds Industries, Inc. Director for Vocations Campion Residence and Renewal Center Milton C. Borenstein, '35 President Sweeheart Paper Products Co. John G. McElwee, J.D. '50 Wi.lliam L. Brown President First National Bank of Boston John J. McMullen Wayne A. Budd, '63 William W. Meissner, S.J. Partner Budd, Reilly & Wiley Donald R. Campion, S.J. Secretary for Communication Jesuit Conference John M. cataldo, '44 President . National Freight Traffic Service William F. Connell', '59 Chairman of the Board and President Ogden Food Service Corporation John M. Connors, Jr., '63 President Hill, Holliday, Connors, Cosmopulos, Inc. George L. Drury, S.J., '45, M.A. '46, M.S. '49, M.S. '58 Director of Retreats Eastern Point Retreat House Thomas J. Flanagan, '42 President Pan Am World Services, Inc. Thomas J. Flatley ·President . The Flatley Company Thomas J. Gibbons, S.J.', '53, 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 (Han.) United States Senator Joseph F. MacDonnell, S.J., '52, M.A. '59, S.T.B. '62 Associate Professor of Mathematics Fairfield University Francis C. Mackin, S.J.', M.A '53 Vice President: Westchester Fordham University tOnly Boston College Degrees listed. *Executive Committee Member 4 Joseph E. McCormick, S.J., M.A. '46 President and Chief Operations Officer John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co. Chairman John J. McMullen Associates, Inc. Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatry Harvard Medical School J. Donald Monan, S.J.' President Boston College Thomas M. Moran, '48 Vice President Charter Oil Company Diane J. Morash, '77 Staff Associate New England Association of Schools and Colleges Robert J. Morrissey, '60 Partner Withington, Cross, Park & Groden Michael E. Murphy, '58 Executive Vice President and Chief Financial and Administrative Officer Consolidated Foods Corporation The Honorabie David S. Nelson', '57, J.D. '60, LL.D. '79 (Han.) United States District Judge Joseph A. O'Hare, S.J. Editor in Chief America Magazine Robert J. O'Keefe, '51 Senior Vice President American Security Bank N.A. James P. O'Neill', '42 Executive Vice President Xerox Corporation The Honorable Thomas P. O'Neill, Jr., '36, LL.D. '73 (Han.) 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 Daniel J. Shine, S.J. '44, M.A. '45 Rector of the Jesuit Community Boston College Helen M. Stanton, M.S.W. '43 Co· Chairman, Boston College Parents' Committee Robert J. Starratt, S.J., '59, M.A. '60 Director Commission on Research and Development Jesuit Secondary Education Assoc. ' Sandra J. Thomson, M.D., '58 (Newton College) Department of Orthopaedic Surgery 'Children's Hospital Medical Center Thomas A. Vanderslice, '53 President and Chief Operating Officer General Telephone & Electronics Corp. An Wang Chairman of the Board and President Wang Laboratories, Inc. Source: President's Office TRUSTEES OF BOSTON COLLEGE DECEMBER, 1972 THROUGH SEPTEMBER, 1980 Joseph F. Abely, Jr. Raymond C. Baumhart, S.J. Milton C. Borenstein Joseph G. Brennan William L. Brown Wayne A. Budd Robert F. Byrnes Donald R. Cam'pion, 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. Fix 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 1975·83 1972·73 1979-83 1972·73 1973·81 19BO·84 1972·73 1980-84 1972-74 1978-82 1972-80 1974-82 1979-83 1972·79 1972·75 1977·81 1972·73 1972·73 1972·79 1972·78 1972·73 1976·80 1979-83 1978·B2 1973-77 1974·77 1972·80 1975-83 1972-78 1972-74 1972-80 1977·81 1972·74 1976·83 1972·79 1974·76 1972·77 1972-79 Joseph F. MacDonnell, S.J. 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. Michael E. Murphy David S. Nelson Francis Nicholson, S.J. William J. O'Halioran, S.J. Joseph A. O'Hare, S.J. Robert J. O'Keefe Adrian O'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 Thomas A. Vanderslice Michael P. Walsh, S.J. An Wang Thomas J. Watson, III Thomas J. White Vincent C. Ziegler 1973·81 1972·78, 1980·84 1977·81 1978·82 1974·77 1978·82 1979·83 1972·80 1972· 1980·84 1977·81 1980-84 1972·78 19B0-84 1972-78, 1979-83 1972·76 1972·7B 1973·81 1974-82 1972-73 1973·81 1972·84 1972·80 1975·83 1972·75 1980·84 1972-77 1976-84 1977·81 1978·82 1977-81 1978-82 1972·80 1978-82 1973·76 1972·76 1972·78 Source: President's'Office 5 " OFFICERS OF THE UNIVERSITY FALL 1980 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 Paul A. FitzGerald, S.J. James P. Mel ntyre Joseph A. Panuska, S.J. John R. Smith ACADEMIC DEANS FALL 1980 Admissions, Records and Financial Aid John J. Maguire, Dean The College of Arts and Sciences William B. Neenan, S.J., Dean John L. Harrison, Associate Dean Henry J. McMahon, Associate Dean Marie M. McHugh, Assistant Dean The Evening College a f Arts, Sciences and Business Administration James A. Woods, S.J., Dean The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Donald J. White, Dean The School of Educadon 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 FALL 1980, Director, Admissions Charles S. Nolan Director, Honors Program, College of Arts & Sciences Director, Affirmative Action Alice Jeghelian Director, Housing Richard E. Collins Director, AHANA Student Services Director, Internal Audit John Dunnet Donald Brown Albert M. Folkard Executive Director, Alumni Association John F. Wissler University Librarian Thomas F. O'Connell University Archivist Paul A. FitzGerald, S.J. Director, Management Center Director, Athletics William J. Flynn Director, Management Information Systems Director, University Audio· Visual Services Fred J. Pula Director, Personnel Leo V. Sullivan Director, University Budgets James P. Kennedy Director, Plant Services Joseph F. MacSweeney Director, BuiJdirgs and Grounds Alfred G. Pennino Director, University Policies and Procedures Fred B. Mills, Jr. Director, Campus School John R. Eichorn Director, Laboratory of Psychosocial Studies Marc A. Fried Director, Career Planning and Placement John E. Steele Director, Purchasing John D. Beckwith University Chaplain University Registrar John A. Dinneen, S.J. John McKiernan Bernard W. Gleason, Jr. Louise Lonabocker Director, Communications Paul J. Hennessy Director, Research Administration Charles F. Flaherty Director, Computer Center James Kidd Director, Social Welfare Regional Research Institute Controller Director, Space Data Analysis Laboratory Leo F. Power, Jr. Catherine H. Briel Barry A. Bluestone Director, University Counseling Services Weston M. Jenks, Jr. Director, Space Management Roderick G. Wallick Director, Development Karl M. Salathe Dean of Students Edward J. Hanrahan, S.J. Director, Financial Aid Robert M. Turner Director, Student Programs and Resources Carole L. Wegman Director, Financial Information and Director, Center for Testing Evaluation and Educational Policy George F. Madaus Analysis Michael T: Call nan Director, Financing Resources, Federal and State Francis F. Mills Director, Health Services Arnold F. Mazur, M.D. Assistant Treasurer Philip C. Thompson Director, Weston Observatory James W. Skehan, S.J. Director, Programs for Women Margaret Dever '-, Source: Office of Personnel Relations 7 '. DEPARTMENT CHAIRMEN AND CHAIRWOMEN FALL 1980 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 Dean of Faculties 8 Frederick J. Zappala David C. Murphy Jonathan J. Goldthwaite Jeong-Long Lin David H. Gill, S.J. James Gips Richard W. Tresch Joseph A. Appleyard, S.J. Walter T. Greaney Marianne W. Martin John C. Hepburn Christoph Eykman Alan Rogers William B. Hickey 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. PROFESSIONAL, ADMINISTRATIVE AND SUPPORT STAFF PERSONNEL AS OF JULY 1980 Full-Time Men Women Professional/Adm in istrative Dean of Faculties Business/Finance Student Affairs University Relations President's Office Chaplain's Office Executive Vice President Libraries Subtotal Professional!Administrative Sponsored Research 42 70 42 19 3 5 2 13 40 27 26 7 3 4 Open Total Part-Time Open Total Positions Positions Men Women Positions Positions - - 20 4 86 100 71 31 6 9 2 37 196 70 127 19 40 266 4 3 3 5 28 1 4 1 13 1 - - - - 9 1 1 9 - - - - - 1 - 100 102 121 33 6 9 2 38 342 38 20 11 411 - 110 4 12 - 126 167 19 452 42 32 11 537 23 20 250 42 17 3 290 65 - 39 8 10 1 - 339 74 43 292 20 355 1 47 10 413 12 34 - 46 4 23 - 73 55 326 20 401 5 70 10 486 39 40 89 10 2 - - - - - - 3 1 2 2 - - - - 13 2 6 39 40 106 12 8 2 - - 41 40 107 14 13 180 21 4 205 5 5 - 215 - - - - - 5 4 7 4 15 - - - 38 17 126 40 3 - Total Professional!Administrative and Sponsored Research Secretary/Clerical Libraries Subtotal Secretary/Clerical Sponsored Research (Includes Research Assistants) Total Secretary/Clerical and Sponsored Research Physical Plant Personnel Grounds Tradespeople Housekeeping Mailroom Switchboard Total Physical Plant Campus Police - 35 12 65 14 2 24 3 1 28 - 38 12 117 17 3 Total General Service 128 31 28 187 16 19 2 224 TOTAL POSITIONS' 629 545 71 1,245 68 126 23 1,462 Gate Attendants Dining Department General Service General Service Sponsored Research 3 4 - - - 1 1 ·The totals represent all of the authorized and budgeted positions for the above classifications as of July 1980. Source: Office of Personnel Relations I:•,!;"..... .. ' i 9 FACULTY FACULTY BY SCHOOL AND RANK 1979-80 Professor Associate % % School No. 73 18 13 2 Arts & Sciences Education Management Nursing Law Social Work Total 17 4 -127 Assistant % Instructor Total % Faculty No. Faculty No. Faculty No. Faculty No. % 22 33 21 3 61 21 137 15 22 18 1 10 42 28 36 30 4 53 104 15 31 28 28 31 21 26 16 6 9 22 4 5 11 15 36 14 - - 330 54 61 61 28 19 100 100 100 100 100 100 23 -203 17 19 6 5 -166 37 -57 30 10 -553 100 Source: Office of the Dean of Faculties FULL-TIME EQUIVALENT FACULTY BY SCHOOL * 1979-80 Full-Time School No. Arts & Sciences 330 Education 54 Management Nursing Law Social Work 61 61 28 19 Total -553 FTE of Part-Time % 60 10 11 11 5 3 -100 No. 80 14 16 11 6 6 -133 % 60 10 12 8 5 5 -100 Total FTE Faculty No. % 410 68 60 10 11 10 5 4 77 72 34 25 -686 -100 -Method of computation: three courses equals one full-time faculty member. Source: Office of the Dean of Faculties NOTE: Figures representing full-time faculty do not include the following: full-time academic administrators or directors, teaching fellows. special contracts; part-time academic administrators or staff. Graduate faculty of the Departments of Education and Nursing of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences are included in tables with their respective schools. 10 FACULTY BY SCHOOL AND TENURE STATUS 1979-80 ' School No. Arts & Sciences 230 35 33 19 18 14 Education Management Nursing Law Social Work Total % Faculty 70 65 54 31 64 74 -349 Total Non-Tenured Tenured No. % Faculty No. % 100 19 28 42 10 5 30 35 46 69 36 26 330 54 61 61 28 19 100 100 100 100 100 100 37 553 100 -204 63 -- Source: Office of the Dean of Faculties FACULTY BY SCHOOL AND SEX 1979-80 Men Women School Arts & Sciences Education Management Nursing Law Social Work Total No. 52 17 7 60 7 9 -152 Total % No. % 34 278 37 54 1 21 10 69 9 13 1 5 3 330 100 11 5 39 5 6 -100 -401 -- % Women Men 61 61 28 19 16 31 11 98 25 47 84 69 89 2 75 53 553 27 73 54 -- Source: Office of the Dean of Faculties 11 FACULTY BY HIGHEST EARNED DEGREE AND RANK 1979-80 Professor Degree No. Doctorate Masters First Professional* 116 2 9 -- I Assistant Instructor Total % No. % No. % No. % No. % 21 186 12 5 34 2 1 134 29 3 24 5 1 54 - 436 97 20 79 16 5 2 .-- 127 Total Associate 23 -- -- -- -203 37 166 - 3 57 30 9 1 -10 -553 -100 "lnclu9ing LLB, JD, STB, PhL. and STL. Source: Office of the Dean of Faculties FACULTY BY HIGHEST EARNED DEGREE AND SEX 1979-80 Women Men Total Degree No. % No. % No. % Doctorate Masters First Professional" 85 56 42 2 351 33 17 88 8 4' 436 97 20 79 16 5 Total 64 3 152 - -401 - -- 100 100 -- -- 553 100 "Including LLB, JD. STB, PhL, and STL. Source: Office of the Dean of Faculties FACULTY BY RANK AND SEX 1979-80 Women Total No. % No. % No. % Professor Associate Assistant Instructor 13 46 62 31 9 30 41 20 114 157 104 26 29 39 26 6 127 203 166 57 23 37 30 10 Total - 152 Source: Office of the Dean of raculties 12 Men Rank - 100 -401 -100 -- 553 -- 100 FULL-TIME FACULTY, GRADUATE ASSISTANTS, TEACHING FELLOWS BY SCHOOL AND DEPARTMENT 1979-80 ' Full-Time Faculty Arts & Sciences Biology Chemistry Classics Economics English Fine Arts Geology German History Mathematics Music Philosophy Physics Political Science Psychology Romance Languages Slavic/Eastern Sociology Speech Theology Arts & Sciences Total Graduate Asst's. 18 18 4 23 37 10 10 4 34 22 2 22 10 16 20 14 4 19 10 33 187 77* 330 54 2B 61 61 19 553 Education Law Management Nursing Social Work Total Teaching Fellows 69 11 14 1 279 "School of Education Graduate Assistants include 15 in Audio-Visual Services and 3 with the Institute of Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry. Source: Omces of the Dean of Faculties and Dean of Graduate School of Arts and Scie.nces AVERAGE COMPENSATION BY RANK* AAUP CATEGORY I (9-MONTH EOUIVALENT) 1979·80 Rank Boston College All Combined Category Professor Associate Assistant Instructor $37.000 27.800 22.000 18.000 $35.290 26.3BO 21.370 16.650 Church·Related $32.550 25.120 20.350 16.090 "Includes salary and fringe benefits. Sources: Omce of Dean of Faculties; Academe, page 278, Table 10, September 1980. 13 Notes 14 STUDENTS 15 FULL·TIME FRESHMAN ENROLLMENT* BY YEAR AND SEX FRESHMAN ENROLLEES SAT AVERAGES BY CLASS Enrollment Fall Men Women Total Class Verbal Mathematical 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1,402 1,024 1,253 913 1,144 962 1,041 1,028 901 856 927 685 725 976 874 1,008 1,069 1,091 1,177 1,176 1,186 1,244 2,087 1.749 2,229 1,787 2,152 2,031 2,132 2,205 2,077 2,042 2,171 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 533 530 528 518 515 504 511 496 509 516 512 554 554 552 554 548 544 550 538 644 552 555 . -Based on deposits received as of 5/19/80. Source: Admissions Office Source: Admissions Office FRESHMAN APPLICATIONS, ACCEPTANCES AND ENROLLMENT* (FULL·TIME) Acceptaqces %of Enrollment % of Enrollment Total % of Fall Applications Acceptances Applications Enrollment Acceptances Applications 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 6,605 6,712 7,286 8,358 8,377 9,486 10,848 11,336 12,411 12,505 12,640 5,441 4,748 5,077 4,660 4,964 4,952 5,548 5,479 4,821 4,514 4,389 82% 71 70 56 59 52 51 48 39 36 35 2,087 1,749 2,229 1,787 2,152 2,031 2,132 2,205 2,077 2,042 2,171 38% 37 44 38 43 41 38 37 43 45 49 32% 26 31 21 26 21 20 18 17 16 17 • Based on deposits received as of 5/19/80. Source: Admissions Office 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. 16 CLASS OF 1984 APPLICATIONS AND ENROLLEES GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION State Applications Alabama 5 8 4 57 18 1,517 46 27 118 13 3 3 208 23 4 5 5 8 4,684 213 148 90 43 36 1 11 Arizona Arkansas California Colorado . Connecticut District of Columbia Delaware Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Massachusetts Maryland Maine Michigan Minnesota Missouri Mississippi Nebraska State Enrollees - Applications North Carolina New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York Ohio Oklahoma Oregon 2 8 1 225 4 2 20 1 - Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah 47 4 1 3 2 992 23 32 13 9 2 33 176 2 299 17 17 220 1,319 3 2,180 143 4 6 439 122 424 4 1 6 33 3 47 75 9 11 49 9 218 Pennsylvania Puerto Rico Vermont Virginia Virgin Islands Washington Wisconsin West Virginia Foreign Enrollees 1 54 33 93 - 3 7 9 - 8 1 40 --- Total 4 2,171" 12,640 "Based on deposits received as of 5/19180. Source: Admissions Office UNDERGRADUATE TRANSFER STUDENT ENROLLMENT BY TYPE OF PREVIOUS INSTITUTION AND SEX Fall 2·Year Public 2·Year Private 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 41 54 35 42 33 41 58 48 28 22 11 47 4-Year 4·Year Public Private Total Men Women Total 83 156 79 64 95 75 232 342 204 172 163 175 414 600 346 300 302 338 163 240 113 96 114 95 251 360 233 204 188 243 414 600 346 300 302 338 Source: Admissions Office 17 '. GRADUATE AND UNDERGRADUATE ENROLLMENT FULL- AND PART-TIME F.T.* Year 1972·73 1973-74 1974-75 1975-76 1976-77 1977-78 1978-79 1979·80 .. Undergraduate P.T. Total 7,.656 7,774 8,325 8,749 8,792 9,066 8,846 8,842 830 967 893 1,095 1,107 1,221 1,339 1.480 8.486 8,741 9,218 9,844 9,899 10,287 10,185 10,322 F.T. Graduate P.T. Total Total 1,907 2,005 1,861 1,881 1,880 1,837 1,911 1,845 1,394 1,635 1,670 1,820 1,833 1,844 1,817 1,810 3,301 3,640 3,531 3,701 3,713 3,681 3,728 3,655 11,787 12,381 12,749 13,545 13,612 13,968 13,913 13,977 "·Includes full-time students in Evening College. Source: Registrar Pu 9 () UNDERGRADUATE DAY AND EVENING AND ~--/1 (I GRADUATE ENROLLMENT f 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 6,663 6,640 7,313 7,543 8,024 8.463 8.486 8,705 8.483 8.474 1,076 1,101 1,173 1,198 1,194 1,381 1.413 1,582 1,702 1,848 7,739 7,741 8.486 8,741 9,218 9,844 9,899 10,287 10,185 10,322 3,217 3,370 3,301 3,640 3,531 3,701 3,713 3,681 3,728 3,655 10,956 11,111 11,787 12,381 12,749 13,545 13,612 13,968 13,913 13,977 (/ Graduatel Source: Registrar ,~,-, Q" ".' '.\' ~ " NOTE: All enrollment statistics are as of October 10. 1979. 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 1970·71 1971·72 1972·73 1973·74 1974·75 1975·76 1976·77 1977·78 1978·79 1979·80 3,032 3,145 3,589 3,864 4,284 4,651 4,848 5,013 4,826 4,839 1,774 1,641 1,663 1,657 1,724 1,947 1,911 2,010 2,076 2,159 1,268 1,284 1,344 1,266 1,263 1,150 1,021 926 812 753 589 570 717 756 753 715 706 756 769 723 1,076 1,101 1,173 1,198 1,194 1,381 1,413 1,582 1,702 1,848 7,739 7,741 8,486 8,741 9,218 9,844 9,899 10,287 10,185 10,322 Source: RegIstrar GRADUATE ENROLLMENT BY SCHOOL Year A&S· SOM Social Work 1970·71 1971·72 1972·73 1973·74 1974-75 1975·76 1976-77 1977·78 1978·79 1979·80 2,019 2,107 2,048 2,388 2,245 2,302 2,255 2,187 2,157 2; 129 351 288 317 320 319 398 446 493 503 489 206 244 228 244 257 267 258 243 271 252 Law Total 641 731 708 3,217 3,370 3,301 3,640 3,531 3,701 3,713 3,681 3,728 3,655 688 710 734 754 758 797 785 -Includes Graduate Education and Nursing. Source: Registrar .-.... 19 GRADUATEENROLLMENT* BY DEGREE PROGRAM AND DISCIPLINE FULL· AND PART·TIME 1976-77 Masters American Studies 17 A&S Unspecified Biology 881*· Economics 35 16 7 7 Education 660·- 1977-78 Ph.D. 1 15 18 16 Masters 18 113*· Italian 3 - 57 17 6 8 1.092** 89 32 12 27 9 1 2 40 1 5 Latin - - - 767 1 510 14 - 767 , - - Chemistry Classics English French Geology Geology-Geophysics Greek 67 26 10 20 11 1 2 J:listory 34 Geophysics Germanic Studies Interdisciplinary Law Linguistics Management Mathematics Mathematics NSF Nursing Philosophy Physics Political Science Psychology Russian Slavic Social Work Sociology Spanish Theology TOlal - 85 23 7 28 6 4 2 266 28 17 20 3,575 60 352 19 7 1 1 23 3 41 13 28 39 21 5 18 -681 1978-79 Ph.D. 1 6 21 22 - 86 428 23 18 40 23 5 5 958*- 1 - - 29 5 - .- - 17 - 3,479 26 226·· 91 26 13 34 9 547 34 114 32 10 42 12 3 7 275 32 19 39 Masters ·44 12 33 45 - 33 6 24 -837 3 42 2 5 1 811 2 552 17 27 107 27 11 51 13 1 2 279 27 15 30 ~ 3,481 1979-80 Ph.D. 1 18 Masters 25 311*· 43 20 9 8 22 21 - 76 457 21 885·· 81 25 12 31 4 17 - - 1 9 22 19 70 521 22 17 - - - - - 26 8 41 2 5 1 788 28 6 - 1 40 19 32 45 - 1 38 8 29 -880 544 16 31 121 33 6 32 7 4 3 258 28 16 32 3,422 *Figures include students who attended for just one semester, as well as those who attended a full year. "Many of the A&S Unspecifieds now appear in Education because of stricter requirements for declaring a major department. Source: Registrar 20 Ph.D. - - - 45 21 29 49 - 1 47 8 35 -950 UNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE ENROLLMENT BY SEX Undergraduate Men Women Year 1969-70 1970-71 1971-72 1972-73 1973-74 1974-75 1975-76 1976-77 1977-78 1978-79 1979-80 5,205 5,311 5,019 4,945 4,700 4,745 4,779 4,695 4,850 4,625 4,556 1,910 2,428 2,722 3,541 4,041 4,473 5,065 5,204 5,437 5,560 5,766 Graduate) Professional Women Men 1,974 1,983 2,029 1,975 2,022 1,831 1,908 1,867 1,802 1,783 1,701 1,125 1,234 1,341 1,326 1,618 1,700 1,793 1,846 1,879 1,945 1,954 Total Men Women 7,179 7,294 7,048 6,920 6,722 6,576 6,687 6,562 6,652 6,408 6,267 3,035 3,662 4,063 4,867 5,659 6,173 6,858 7,050 7,316 7,505 7,720 Total Enrollment , 10,214 10,956 11,111 11,787 12,381 12,749 13,545 13,612 13,968 13,913 13,977 Source: Registrar FULL·TIME EOUIVALENT ENROLLMENT* Year Day Undergraduate Evening 1969-70 1970-71 1971-72 1972-73 1973-74 1974-75 1975-76 1976-77 1977-78 1978-79 1979-80 6,231 6,663 6,640 7,313 7,543 8,024 8,463 8,486 8,705 8,483 8,474 480 491 638 637 578 614 651 675 768 809 861 Total Graduatel Professional Total 6,711 7,154 7,278 7,950 8,121 8,638 9,114 9,161 9,473 9,292 9,335 2,324 2,464 2,545 2,378 2,550 2,418 2,486 2,491 2,440 2,516 2,448 9,035 9,618 9,823 10,328 10,671 11,056 11,600 11,652 11,913 11,808 11,783 ·Method of computation: three part-tIme students equal one full·tlme equivalent student. Source: Regisrrar ", 21 EVENING COLLEGE ENROLLMENT ", Full-Time Part-Time Total Year Men Women Men Women Men Women Total Fall 1974-75 Spring 1974-75 201 177 124 85 333 298 536 454 534 475 660 539 1,194 1,014 Fall 1975-76 Spring 1975-76 180 163 106 97 427 327 668 507 607 490 774 604 1,381 1,094 Fall 1976-77 Spring 1976-77 188 181 118 117 397 326 710 542 585 507 828 659 1,413 1,166 Fall 1977-7.8 Spring 1977-78 224 204 137 153 449 391 772 618 673 595 909 771 1,582 1,366 Fall 1978-79 Spring 1978-79 222 165 141 114 510 426 829 707 732 591 970 821 1,702 1,412 Fall 1979-80 Spring 1979-80 201 173 167 133 550 449 930 761 751 622 1,097 894 1,848 1,516 Source: Registrar SUMMER SESSION ENROLLMENT Summer Undergraduate 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 622 692 889 887 898 924 1,068 1,122 -Includes workshops and institutes. Source: Summer Session Office 22 Graduate! Professional * 1,778 1,830 1,876 1,732 1,714 1,679 1,590 1,700 Total 2,400 2,522 2,765 2,619 2,612 2,603 2,658 2,822 GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION OF STUDENTS· (GRADUATE AND UNDERGR~DUATE) FALL 1979 Undergrad. Alabama Arizona California Colorado Connecticut D.C. Delaware Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Missouri Montana Nebraska New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York NOrth Carolina NOrth Dakota Ohio Oregon Pennsylvania Puerto Rico Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Virgin Islands Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Foreign Total 1 2 35 6 944 28 20 52 9 3 1 115 11 4 2 5 3 93 100 4,274 57 26 12 1 3 121 712 1 1,044 - Evening - - 24 - - 4 1 1 .2 1,748 3 1 1 11 7 Grad. A&S . Social Grad. Work SOM - - - 1 3 10 2 42 5 1 5 1 - - - 2 1 8 - - - - 16 1 29 1 2 12 2 9 - 8 - - - 2 1 1 - - 1 6 1 1 1 3 2 8 6 1,733 5 5 189 1 - - 1 1 52 31 1 1 1 - - 4 1 5 7 - 2 - - - - 2 - 7 3 2 - - - 1 1 432 2 - - - - 31 54 2 8 7 - - - - Law School 6 8 479 13 2 1 1 1 9 28 1 93 1 1 68 2 216 - 9 1 1 - - - - - 7 28 3 3 15 267 1 1 4 3 36 13 5 18 - - - - 10 Total 2 5 63 10 1,055 34 23 72 13 12 2 136 15 8 4 8 5 113 117 8,855 81 29 14 5 6 202 786 2 1,237 3 1 89 2 272 (Included with Foreign Students) - - 26 35 1 7 5 23 133 - --8,474 1 1 1 1,848 - 1 1 1 1 1 2 16 2 (Included with Foreign Students) 3 3 4 11 42 4 1 8 --2,129 --252 -489 342 1 1 4 14 1 32 57 2 1 2 3 1 4 11 9 29 195 785 13,977 1 - ·These figures are based on the state which the student lists as a permanent address, which may not necessarily reflect the true "home" state or country. Source: Regi$tra~ 23 INTERNATIONAL STUDENT STATISTICS FALL 1979 BY SCHOOL College of Arts & Sciences Scho9' of Nursing School of Management Evening College Graduate Arts & Sciences Graduate School of Social Work Graduate School of Management Law School 37 1 22 1 110 6 23 2 202 Sub-total Practical Training (Field Work) Post Doctoral Research Scholars 7 18 227 Total Source: Office of Student Programs & Resources BY CLASS OR PROGRAM Freshmen Sophomores Juniors Seniors 23 19 8 11 Total Undergraduate 61 Graduate/Professional Masters Ph.D. J.D. Special Students 86 51 2 2 Total Graduate/Professional 141 7 18 227 Practical Training Research Scholars Total Source: Office of Student Programs & Resources BY SEX AND PROGRAM Program Men Undergraduate Graduate Practical Training Research Scholars 37 88 5 18 148 Total Source; Office of Student Programs & Resources 24 Women 24 53 Total 61 141 2 7 79 18 227 INTERNATIONAL STUDENT ENROLLMENT BY COUNTRY Algeria Argentina Australia Austria Bangladesh Barbados Belgium Bolivia Brazil Canada Chile Colombia Denmark Ecquador Egypt EI Salvador Ethiopia France Germany Greece Guyana Haiti Hong Kong Honduras India Indonesia Iran Ireland Israel Italy Ivory Coast 1 1 12 1 3 1 2 1 2 18 2 6 1 2 6 4 1 2 5 6 1 1 8 1 16 1 21 9 4 1 2 Jamaica Japan Kenya Korea Lebanon Lesotho Liberia Libya Mexico Morocco Netherlands New Zealand Nicaragua Nigeria Pakistan Panama Philippines Republic of China South -Africa Spain Switzerland Thailand Trinidad Turkey United Kingdom Venezuela Zaire Total Students Countries Represented 3 11 2 2 2 1 2 2 1 1 4 1 4 5 1 4 1 10 1 1 1 3 2 4 5 10 1 227 58 Source: Of(;ce of StuiJent Programs and Resources 25 UNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE MINORITY ENROLLMENT 1976·77 Undergraduate Black American Indian Oriental Hispanic Other Graduate Men Women Total Men Women Total Men . Women 155 1 33 38 19 206 4 45 35 23 361 5 78 73 42 182 3 44 217 7 '59 65 14 399 10 103 137 35 154 5 57 77 30 191 8 345 13 130 157 43 129 6 65 88 42 166 4 97 105 38 72 21 246 - 313 - -559 - 322 - 36 2 20 16 2 73 109 2 56 32 13 43 1 17 20 6 Oriental Hispanic - 36 16 11 - - 362 684 74 2 34 30 15 117 3 51 50 21 - - 73 80 13 323 365 -688 - -330 34 3 28 18 2 79 2 37 32 24 113 5 65 50 26 48 2 36 29 27 - -76 -136 - -212 - -87 - 155 - -242 - -85 322 449 771 409 517 926 408 - Total Graduate 1979·80 Total Black and Undergraduate 1978·79 Women American Indian Other 1977·78 Me." - - - - - - Education Evening College Nursing Management Graduate School of A&S Graduate SOM Law School Social Work Total Source: Registrar 26 95 4 66 54 62 - - 139 281 539 947 472 549 1.021 Full- Part- Time Time Total 18 3 36 3 11 37 22 19 8 16 7 7 6 7 5 1 1 2 34 10 22 9 18 15 5 20 9 - 1 34 10 43 9 18 42 23 20 10 67 209 142 47 2 30 25 35 - 142 Women -52 -740 -259 Men -157- 410 - - - VETERANS ENROLLED AT BOSTON COLLEGE 1979-80 Arts and Sciences 295 10 162 193 80 174 Source: Registrar School Total 21 27 18 - - HANDICAPPED STUDENT ENROLLMENT BY CLASS/PROGRAM AND HANDICAP FALL 1979 Nature of Handicap CLASS OF 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 Evening Cqllege School Law Social Wo<k Grad. A&S SOM Graduate AsthmaticRespiratory 2 6 1 - 2 1 - - Emotional - - - - - 1 - - - - Hearing 3 2 1 1 - - - Learning 1 6 - 4 6 3 1 Total Grad. Total Undergraduate Total Enrollment - - - - 1 1 - 7 12 12 - 7 - 1 20 21 - 7 32 39 MobilitY 4 6 4 10 7 1 3 4 - Speech 2 - - - - - - - - - 2 2 - 4 17 21 Visual 2 2 3 4 5 , 3 1 - Unspecified - - - - 4 - - - 15 3 18 4 22 14 22 9 19 24 7 7 5 15' 3' 30 95 125 Total "Estimated by the respective schools. Source: Office of the Dean of Students NOTE: The above statistics do not represent all handicapped students attending Boston College. The university is informed of handicaps only at the individual student's discretion. 27 UNDERGRADUATEDEGREESCONFERRED* BY DEGREE AND NUMBER OF MAJORS 1975-76 1976-77 1977-78 1978-79 1979-80 623 303 1 653 308 3 927 964 134 42 168 42 Arts and Sciences A.B. Single Major Double Major Triple Major B.S. Single Major Double Major Triple Major 687 242 5 School of Education-A.B, Single Major Double Major Triple Major School of Management-B.S. Single Major Double Major Triple Major School of Nursing-B.S. Subtotal-Undergraduate Degrees 726 277 1 934 - -855 136 47 146 54 162 43 1 200 206 183 Total A&S 613 239 3 1,117 1,055 334 23 1 273 27 2 -- 1,004 1,210 119 136 - 176 210 1,103 1,174 60 149 6 174 2 358 -302 255 430 62 413 60 396 57 492 473 453 -506 465 225 168 175 197 201 2,192 1,998 2,093 2,021 74 12 1 63 2 70 93 93 87 65 70 93 93 2,279 2,063 2,163 2,114 2,109 -215 433 72 1 176 386 79 2,016· Evening College A,8. B.S. A,A, Total Undergraduate Degrees Conferred ·Sept.·Jan.·June Source: Reg;strar 28 UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES CONFERRED BY MAJOR· 1975-76 Accounting American Studies Art History Biology Chemistry Classics Computer Science Deaf/Blind Economics English Elementary Education Finance Fine Arts French General Management Geology Geophysics German History Human Development 1976-77 1977-78 202 3 17 136 34 1 19 15 118 154 99 68 1 7 190 18 18 - - 7 1 4 77 13 4 77 16 1 8 74 - - - - 179 2 15 154 29 1 12 - 14 151 32 5 12 - - 89 157 120 149 215 52 84 64 - - - 3 - Italian 4 1 - Linguistics - 1 2 4 41 167 68 Independent Management Marketing Mathematics Modern Languages Nursing Operations Management Philosophy Physics Political Science Production Management Psychology Romance Languages Russian Secondary Education Slavic Studies Sociology Spanish Special Education/Alternative Environments Special Education/Elementary Education"· Speech Communication Speech Theatre Studio Art Theology Third World Studies Total"** 33 139 46 1 226 2 45 4 177 1 142 3 6 50 1 123 13 - 34 161 39 178 3 12 131 25 2 33 159 155 129 168 54 204 175 - - 16 2 9 3 1 58 1 - 1 24 173 35 - 5 156 29 3 49 - 54 63 - 17 16 17 - 1 87 2 2 1 1 2 163 42 - - - - 175 197 25 31 8 217 201 1 34 8 124 - 42 7 210 - - - 120 1 4 47 1 88 13 136 7 2 25 2 97 12 126 3 3 18 4 98 10 - - 160 26 3 9 7 - - "Double and Triple majors counted by first majors. HElementary Education majors with concentration in Special Education. ... ·Evening College majors are not included in this total. 1979-80 168 2 35 5 161 176 15 4 8 10 2,192 1978-79 1,998 50 5 11 5 - 2,093 - 12 42 1 10 3 1 2,021 - 122 5 2 16 2 54 15 15 81 64 3 13 8 2,016 .-. Source: Registrar 29 w UNDERGRADUATE DEGREES CONFERRED o BY SCHOOL AND BY MAJOR A.&S. A.B. B.S. Accounting American Studies Art History 2 15 154 29 Biology Chemistry Classics 1978 SOM Nun. A.8. B.S. B.S. 179 Ed. 1 12 12 Computer Science Economics English Elementary Education Finance French 108 148 1 215 52 18 Total 179 2 15 154 29 1 12 120 149 215 52 18 A.&S. A.B. B.S. 1979 SOM Nun. A.B. B.S. B.S. 178 Ed. 3 12 131 25 2 33 119 36 129 168 54 15 - General Management Geology Geophysics 15 1 German 8 History 72 16 1 8 74 1 2 - HumarvOevelopment 2 9 3 1 58 1 Independent Italian Linguistics Management Marketing Mathematics 2 4 41 157 57 1 175 Nursing Operations Management Philosophy Physics Political Science Psychology Romance Languages Russian 42 3 25 Secondary Education Slavic Studies Sociology Spanish Special Education Speech Communication Speech Theatre Studio Art Theology Third World Studies Total * 2 92 11 5 1 1 24 173 35 197 25 31 217 126 3 3 1.004 50 5 11 5 8 18 4 98 10 1 - 206 255 453 175 2.093 12 42 1 10 3 1 841 178 3 12 131 25 2 33 155 129 168 54 15 2 9 3 1 58 1 - 50 4 11 5 * Evening 'College maiors are not included in this total. Source: Registrar - 42 7 210 136 7 2 25 2 97 12 7 210 133 7 2 2 4 41 157 58 175 Total 176 199 608 197 1 24 173 35 197 25 31 8 217 126 3 3 18 4 98 10 12 42 1 10 3 1 2.021 A.B. 1980 SOM Nurs. A.B. B.S. B.S. 159 Ed. A.&S. B.S. 156 29 3 49 12 4 54 63 17 16 17 1 86 2 1 1 2 163 42 201 1 34 8 15 2 96 2 62 3 13 8 964 - - 1 2 124 122 5 2 1 2 52 15 159 5 156 29 3 49 204 175 54 63 17 16 17 5 192 171 Total 1 87 2 2 1 1 2 163 42 201 1 34 8 124 122 5 2 16 2 54 15 96 64 3 13 8 - 210 176 465 201 2,016 .' UNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE DEGREES CONFERRED* BY DEGREE AND BY SEX 197&77 Men Undergraduate College of A.&S. A.B. B.S. Total A.&S. School of Ed.-A.B. School of Nursing-B.S. School of Management-B.S. Subtotal Undergraduate Evening College A.B. 8.5. Subtotal Evening College Total Undergraduate Degrees Conferred Graduate** Ph.D. D.Ed. M.A. M.S. M.Ed. MAT. M.S.T. J.D. / M.B.A. M.S.P. M.S.W. C.A.E.S. Total Graduate Degrees - 1979-80 Women Total 454 117 571 34 5 332 -942 54 473 59 532 181 192 174 1,079 39 927 176 1,103 215 197 506 2,021 93 463 139 602 21 - - - - -- Total Men Women Total 453 62 515 263 167 105 1,050 27 855 200 1,055 302 168 . 473 1,998 63 2 65 492 158 650 38 1 334 1,023 41 512 48 560 -217 174 119 1,070 29 1,004 206 1,210 255 175 453 2,093 70 93 39 -54 --- -- Men Men 302 925 52 Women Total 501 71 572 155 201 163 1,091 41 964 210 1,174 176 201 465 2,016 --- ----s3 --- - 27 --- -41 29 --- -70 -- 986 1,077 2,063 1,064 1,099 2,163 996 1,118 2,114 977 1,132 2,109 53 11 62 24 97 6 9 169 66 9 19 5 33 1 64 77 230 7 2 76 33 18 70 18 86 12 126 101 327 13 11 245 99 27 89 23 44 7 61 14 52 10 5 167 38 9 62 10 26 4 58 85 219 10 4 64 72 9 24 20 70 11 119 99 271 20 9 231 110 18 86 30 44 6 43 14 67 7 5 .164 56 7 23 13 19 8 56 93 215 6 5 81 62 1 91 19 45 9 57 16 31 4 3 181 83 - 63 14 99 107 282 13 10 245 118 8 114 32 -- - 25 4 78 89 175 8 7 82 53 4 89 19 - 70 13 '135 105 206 12 10 263 136 4 124 25 --. -- - - - 52 - 35 6 41 93 --- - - -- - - -- Conferred 530 629 1,159 479 595 1,074 449 656 1,105 470 633 1,103 Total Undergraduate Degrees Conferred 986 1,077 2,063 1,064 1,099 2,163 996 1,118 2,114 977 1,132 2,109 1,516 1,706 3,222 1,543 1,694 3,237 1,445 1,774 3,219 1,447 1,765 3,212 Total Undergraduate and Graduate Degrees ~ 402 138 540 39 1 368 948 36 2 38 1978-79 1977-78 Women ·Sept.·Jan.-June • ·See page 79 "Degrees Conferred by Boston College", Source: Registrar - , UNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE FINANCIAL AID 1977-80 NUMBER OF STUDENTS 1976-77 1977-78 1978-79 1979-80 2,251 2,214 2,861 3,294 943 1,021 1,409 1,418 1,220 1,147 1,235 2,321 643 790 889 1,293 Work-Study 1,114 1,231 1,211 1,718 National Direct Student Loans s 2,141 2,308 2,453 2,889 Undergraduate Total 6 8,312 8,711 10,058 12,933 Work-Study 319 282 306 265 National Direct Student Loans s 389 345 371 395 9,020 9,338 10,735 13,593 Type of Aid - Undefgraduate University Scholarships and Grants! State Scholarships 2 Basic Educational Opportunity Grants J Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants4 Type of Aid - Graduate Total Und'ergraduate and Graduate 6 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. 2 State scholarship funds to students from Massachusetts, Vermont. Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania. Rhode Island. J Students who are enrolled at 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. 4 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. S Available to undergraduates and graduates enrolled at least half-time. These loan funds are obtained by Federal Government contributions, Boston College contributions and collections of previous loans awarded. The loans have up to a lO-year repayment period with an interest rate of 3% per year on the unpaid balance. 6 This is a duplicated total since some students receive more than one type of aid. Source: Financial Aid Office 32 UNDERGRADUATE AND GR~DUATE FINANCIAL AID 1977-80 THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS 1976-77 1977-78 1978-79 1979-80 $2,600 $ 2,806. $ 3,225 $ 3,745 795 854 1,034 1,018 1,108 1,071 1,236 2,398 512 646 569 1,065 Work-Study' 1,255 1,463 1,476 1,698 National Direct Student Loans 6 2,319 2,523 2,654 2,855 Undergraduate Total 8,589 9,363 10,194 12)79 Type of Aid - Undergraduate University Scholarships and Grants l State Scholarship,' Basic Educational Opportunity Grants 3 Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants4 -~-- ---- _. - - Type of Aid - Graduate ~- - ---~-- ---- - - ---- -~- Work.Study' 317 345 380 400 National Direct Student Loans 6 853 665 743 720 $9,759 $10,373 $11,317 $13,899 Total Undergraduate and Graduate IThis 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. 2 State scholarship funds to students from- Massachusetts. Vermont. Connecticut. New Jersey. Pennsylvania. Rhode Island. 3Students who are enrolled at 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. 4 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. SGross work study wages for 1979-80 were $2,098,000. The breakdown between graduates and undergraduates is estimated. 6 Available to undergraduates and graduates enrolled at least half-time. These loan funds are obtained by Federal Government contributions, Boston College contributions and collections of previous loans awarded. The loans have up to a 10-year repayment period with an interest rate of 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 $2,135.000 in 1979-80). administered by the various schools and departments. Also excluded are the Nursing Scholarship and Loan Programs ($138,000 in 1979~0), a variety of government fellowships or scholarships from fraternal organizations and clubs ($1,610.000 in 1979-80), and Higher Education Loans processed by the Financial Aid Office and disbursed by banks ($11,600,000 in 1979-80), all of which are open to both undergraduate and graduate students. (In addition to these programs, the Student Employment Office placed 5,000 students in summer and term jobs both on and off campus.) Source: Financial Aid Office 33 --- HEALTH SERVICES NUMBER OF STUDENTS SERVED Grand Totals Total Visits to M.D. 1975-76 1976-77 1977-78 1978-79 1979-80 19,123 18,718 17,949 18,061 10,143 10,158 8,792 17,980 1,551 7,427 28,861 28,107 26,853 26,958 Total Visits to Nurse Practitioner Total Visits to R.N. 10,671 --- --- 604 (266) (338) 1,367 6.2 2.2 633 (280) (353) 1,382 6.5 2.2 219 211 - - 29,794 Total Infirmary* Total Adm issions Men Women Total Patient Days Average Daily Census Average Length of Stay (days) Number of Days in Full- ---- Operation ~ 546 (256) (290) 1,223 5.8 2.2 587 (242) (345) 1,360 6.4 2.3 572 (286) (286) 1,396 6.5 2.4 , ---- 210 -~----- - - - 210 -- - - ~ ]12- - - - - I r I ·Included in Grand Totals I Source: Health Services Office ( 34 ALUMNI .~._---- " .. - -, - .\ ,' .' "t·, , I -,\ , i - '\ - I -, .. : .r, •. C., ~·""-'i';""'·-"'- ,- ,:..- ,~. - " , , .,~. \' I,t~· ., fI " i ,i , . "~ r I 1 , . "" " I "i .,..,' ,. '.' " -' - ,jl ._---~-- 35 BOSTON COLLEGE ALUMNI CLUBS Arizona Atlanta Buffalo Cape Cod Central New York Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Dallas Denver Detroit Fairfield County Florida Hartford Houston long Island Los Angeles Maine Manhattan Business Group Merrimack Valley Mid·Hu.dson Minnesota New Hampshire New Jersey New Orleans North Shore Northern California (San Francisco) Philadelphia Rhode Island Rochester St. Louis San Diego Seattle Toledo Washington, D.C. INestern Massachusetts (Springfield) Wisconsin Worcester Young Alumni of New York City Source: Alumni Association NOTE: Alumni totals include widows of alumni who have chosen to maintain their husbands' ties with Boston College. This number 1582. FALL '801 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. I 36 1 ALUMNI COMPARATIVE REGIONAL ANAL YSIS FALL 1980 Massachusetts Metropolitan Boston Postal Areas 01701·02009 02101-02215 8,942 19,089 28.031 Massachusetts Outside Metropolitan Boston 10,554 38,585 Total Massachusetts Alumni New England Connecticut 3,540 745 1,444 1,559 Maine New Hampshire Rhode Island Vermont Total New E~gland Outside Massachusetts Massachusetts Total New England Total Outside New England Lost Alumni Total Alumni ~ 7,587 38,585 46,172 20,299 5,695 72,166 Source: Systems and Records, University Relations ALUMNI GEOGRAPHIC ANALYSIS BY STATE FALL 1980 Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia Florida Georgia Guam Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana 69 32 159 14 1,753 234 3,540 92 460 928 252 4 69 21 839 166 60 60 106 130 Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania 745 1,106 38,585 432 196 21 207 18 42 26 1,444 2,266 64 4,990 232 15 707 59 84 1,146 Puerto Rico Lost Alumni 105 1,559 ·71 21 95 430 26 299 1,089 27 171 39 209 12 65.526 945 66,471 5,695 Total Alumni 72.166 Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Virgin Islands Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Total U.S. Foreign Nations Total Active Alumni Source: Systems and Records, University Relations 37 w LIVING ALUMNI BY PRIMARY SCHOOL, SEX AND CLASS FALL 1980 00 Enning CI~ A.&S. 1899 Ed. S.O,M. S.O.N. "''''~ Call,ge CoUege GrMi. ,,&S. Grlld. S.O.M. Weston Social W.'" L.w Th.~ 1 1900 - 1901 - Women Tot.1 Mo" 1 • • • Class 1 1899 • 1900 - - - - 2 2 2 2 1902 1 1 1 1 1903 1901 1903 - 1904 1 1 2 2 2 1904 1905 1 - 1 1 1 1905 1906 - 1 1 1 1 1906 1907 1 - 1 1 1 1907 1908 - 1 1 1 1 1908 1909 2 - 2 2 2 1909 1910 3 1 4 4 4 1910 1911 7 2 9 9 9 1911 1912 3 1913 4 1914 1915 1916 1 4 4 4 1912 3 2 9 9 9 1913 3 1 ,. 4 • - 2 ,. ,. 24 24 24 1916 ",. 1917 1917 31 1919 • • - 15 • - 14 4 4 ",. 13 31 " " 31 4 1914 1915 1919 ,." 1920 24 1 19 44 44 44 1920 1921 3. 2 2. B4 B4 B4 1921 1922 39 1 52 .2 1922 1923 52 - "14 52 56 56 56 1923 1924 64 - 9 oo 1924 1925 59 1 10 •• 9' 1926 107 1918 ;,.. -- Total 1 1902 ~'L' EX Alumni - 1 1927 104 1928 12. 1 1929 ". 4 " 30 ". ,.,." "10 ,. 33 105 31 168 29 ,.7 10 03 207 10 42 3 1930 140 10 13 1931 15' 1932 153 "12 21 1933 190 21 ~_ ._ -Y 1931 36 13 27 03 337 40 297 337 1933 34 ,.,. 14 03 343 45 297 343 1934 12 51 301 41 310 . 301 1935 9 .5 309 24 29. 309 1936 32 3 5. 357 30 332 357 1937 32 2 50 372 30 337 372 1938 2O ,. 13 ,. .13 30 • 27 ,.29 1932 30 ...- ." 1930 25O 2O 29 m ,.4 13 ". 19. 233 ,.5 1940 2O 235 1936 24 m ,. 30 223 1928 189 '.7 207 254 23 ,.. 174 2.0 204 1938 1927 13 1926 52 217 1939 "5 44 1935 2O ,. 147 1925 17 1934 213 ". ,.. 10 ,. 1937 , 105 ". 5 19 18 1918 • 33 1 59 427 52 m 427 1939 29 2 59 424 33 391 424 1940 _ ~ E.-nine " W <D 01_ A.Ilo5. 1941 1942 "6 222 60 1943 230 1944 179 '945 Ed. S.O.M. S.O.N. Con. -CoIl... G.... G.... A.&S. ..0.... ...... ..... low 21 16 24 33 33 11 40 20 13 55 13 6 107 21 16 1946 15 2 24 '5 25 1947 145 25 26 '946 175 77 20 4' - n- EX o Alumni T.... W_n Mon Totol ·el.- 2 42 372 48 324 372 1941 15 1 62 427 51 376 427 1942 '3 16 2 60 425 30 367 425 1943 11 6 1 351 27 324 351 1944 0 6 , 60 213 366 37 351 366 1945 16 12 3 160 53 07 '50 1946 34 24 29 3 5' 47 333 ·64 279 333 '947 40 26 . 1 7 307 50 336 307 1946 1940 1940 425 106 27 34 62 29 1950 662 321 36 27 34 68 27 1951 796 362 44 51 26 29 5' 76 1 25 765 115 670 795 3 40 1,518 151 1,367 1,518 '060 107 7 72 1.596 168 1,400 1.596 1951 1952 1952 402 3'0 74 57 30 '00 54 25 96 1 45 1,194 162 1,012 1,194 1953 427 267 61 55 40 121 36 70 1 34 1,132 248 666 1.132 1953 1064 353 240 116 68 20 143 29 56 2 71 1.096 270 610 1.1)" 1954 '955 296 1956 307 130 202 129 73 36 124 26 40 3 47 967 305 682 .67 1955 291 125 61 37 126 29 62 5 07 1,301 406 60S 1.301 1956 1957 331 1056 360 101 256 132 54 47 106 29 54 4 109 1,247 372 675 1.247 1957 135 361 175 66 61 141 26 66 3 '69 1,578 502 1,076 1.578 1056 1959 1960 369 120 356 164 63 75 126 32 73 15 127 1,530 483 1.067 1.530 1959 331 ,30 348 205 136 100 202 2 35 54 16 56 1,627 617 1.010 1,627 '961 1060 267 96 295 153 73 99 166 6 33 60 36 40 1,370 609 661 1.370 1961 1962 326 130 242 03 124 107 27 40 01 24 60 1,458 560 678 1,458 1962 1963 478 166 335 '92 168 83 130 250 32 33 76 30 66 1,849 697 1,162 1,849 '963 1964 483 187 365 135 81 188 220 27 46 82 34 87 1,915 713 1,202 1,915 1064 1965 427 182 357 147 74 135 241 34 52 107 42 71 l.869 656 1,213 1,869 1965 '968 445 184 351 218 67 158 265 43 53 115 36 55 1.990 799 1.191 1,990 1068 '967 455 10. 362 190 62 151 432 53 56 02 33 63 2,188 871 1,317 2,188 1967 '968 552 262 422 142 60 187 378 40 52 118 26 71 2,350 894 1,456 2,350 '968 61 .. 137 36 66 2,453 663 1,470 2,453 1069 60 115 - 70 2."'9 1,042 1,377 2,419 1970 148 - 75 2.533 1,075 1.458 2.633 1971 173 22 66 2.771 1,208 1,563 2,771 1972 '960 648 230 400 120 83 '88 621 48 1970 534 234 145 487 103 641 266 163 07 66 209 1971 356 387 174 520 78 1972 815 202 399 130 71 253 573 50 5" 406 62 79 107 - 71 2.565 ',158 1,407 2,565 1973 68 99 206 - 55 2,950 1,430 1,520 2.950 1974 80 1973 608 240 310 148 65 245 1974 '70 324 384 '60 77 201 1975 '37 1,159 294 337 209 111 213 560 78 "0 '81 - 3,047 1.668 1,379 3,047 1975 1976 367 4.3 229 7' 5 6" 75 '02 206 - 4 3,310 1,827 1,483 3,310 1976 1971 1,039 292 73 421 71 106 225 - - 2,837 1,635 1,202 2,837 1977 1978 1,208 257 44' 464 ,62 ,69 90 485 77 93 3,031 1,628 1.403 3,031 1978 109 117 - 3 476 '95 216 2 3,057 1,770 1,287 3,057 1979 285 11. 121 235 - - 2,804 1,575 1,229 2,804 1860 9,836 1,220 1.... 4,231 572 3,397 72,166 27,322 44,844 72,166 1979 1,104 221 504 '96 111 1980 1,146 170 461 '96 71 - Total 23,594 5,278 11,393 4,681 2,791 3,177 Sou~: SYstltms.OO RflCOrds, Ufll~nity Rfl1uiofls • ALUMNI DONORS BY PRIMARY SCHOOL AND CLASS 1979-80 .j>. o . Grad. Grad. A. ..s. Social S.O.M. Work Weston Thea. EX Total Alumni Donors 01... A... s. 1 1 - - 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 __ Newton CoUege 1899 1900 1901 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1901 1900 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 ~. Evening College ..- Ed. S.O.M. S.O.N. Law Alumni - - - - - 1 1 1 1 - - ~ 1 1 1 1 6 1 2 1 2 4 6 10 13 15 20 2 8 1 - 11 - 5 2 3 18 - 25 23 41 - 39 73 57 1 3 87 2 1 81 2 5 67 - 64 3 2 2 85 78 2 8 , 4 60 79 62 101 108 1 7 4 5 , 2 8 3 27 31 3 3 43 76 5 12 65 102 8 96 78 1 1 7 4 4 - 6 8 4 9 6 4 4 3 6 7 2 3 3 1 10 7 5 2 3 6 17 23 - 6 8 2 . 10 - 5 44 79 107 96 74 98 85 129 129 Class 1899 1900 1901 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 . Class A.&S. 1941 73 1942 1956 80 63 63 5' 5 35 46 128 224 202 '41 123 101 90 91 1957 95 1958 1979 1980 117 92 95 70 86 12' 121 125 107 123 129 144 134 139 154 160 196 '69 208 137 142 108 1 Total 5.698 1943 1944 1945 '946 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 4 1953 1954 1955 1959 1960 1961 1962 1983 1964 1965 1966 1987 1968 " 1969 1970 1971 1912 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 -I=> Ed. S.O.M. S.O.N. 22 23 40 26 24 18 18 38 38 29 24 51 53 , 38 48 59 48 54 35 35 40 19 25 22 825 2,809 Newton College 4 5 17 24 17 7 1 13 36 34 113 95 92 64 64 55 82 59 94 97 101 76 59 83 89 92 81 113 86 101 101 106 92 99 106 72 118 97 81 91 1 Evening Collage 3 12 8 14 22 34 36 31 31 37 32 36 22 41 39 19 17 41 31 29 18 25 23 29 24 24 32 32 15 21 25 17 - 14 19 20 14 9 7 21 4 803 529 SOUTC8: Systems and Records, University Relations Grad. Social s.a.M. Work L.w 1 5 3 5 1 6 8 8 9 2 5 7 7 3 4 5 4 7 5 6 7 3 3 6 9 2 9 5 4 5 6 10 2 5 9 5 6 - 3 8 5 1 7 4 2 3 6 2 4 8 5' 6 17 11 18 16 19 16 11 21 20 12 11 18 17 19 20 20 14 14 16 16 Grad. A.&S. - 2 1 1 - 1 - 2 1 1 4 1 1 - - 15 2 1 4 7 3 7 14 8 19 26 9 24 9 21 8 19 15 6 , 17 17 22 29 31 25 35 29 33 36 30 17 15 24 17 23 2 2 4 6 7 3 9 16 13 6 18 22 17 '4 1 12 12 12 18 9 12 12 2 687 214 202 Weston 3 3 5 10 20 28 33 25 15 15 12 19 17 18 9 19 16 28 28 21 22 27 33 38 46 28 48 48 58 51 64 35 48 24 18 995 Thea. - - EX Alumni 3 8 10 16 11 5 4 1 3 4 9 3 4 4 3 10 5 2 1 3 Total Alumni Donors 85 '30 109 103 1945 - - 252 13.014 1 1 2 - 5 3 3 1 ,3 4 3 4 4 1 1 1943 1944 1946 - - 1942 78 27 69 112 208 395 372 309 265 265 226 303 259 348 291 325 239 259 357 335 338 343 429 395 410 405 459 454 457 468 429 495 355 335 309 9 - Class 1941 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952'· 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1983 1964 1965 1968 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 NEW HEIGHTS ADVANCEMENT CAMPAIGN* Source Alumni Campaign Goal Campaign Pledges 1979-80 Campaign To Date Total Pledges 6/30/80 $10,200,000 $2,438,699 $ 9,023,600 Parents/F riends 2,200,000 548,310 1,726,348 Corporations 2,000,000 1,317,244 3,724,115 1,149,331 2,566,930 Foundations 2,000,000 Bequests/Estates 1,950,000 Jesuit Community 2,000,000 118 1,910,118 700,000 849,597 849,597 $21,050,000 $6,555,412 $21,720,850 Associations Total 252,113 - 1,920,142 -The five-year New Heights AdvancemE;nt Campaign will be officially completed in April, 1981. Source: Office of Development INDIVIDUAL DONORS* BY GIVING CLUB Giving Club Level of Gift 1975-76 1976-77 FIDES $1,000+ Tower Builders $500-999 John Sapst Associates $250-499 (Established 1978-79) McElroy Associates $100-249 2,022 2,127 Other Annual Fund $1-99 7,166 9,507 Total Individual Donors 1977·78 281 367 415 518*· 83 101 98 155 202 244 406 2,130 2,002 2,295 8,035 8,602 9,403 10,239 10,544 11,197 12,219 13,660 -Includes only alumni, parents and friends. 42 1979-80 236 ·*Includes individual donors to the Thomas P. O'Neill, Jr. Endowed Chair in Political Science. Source: Office of Development 1978-79 PHYSICAL PLANT 43 ........ i, , .· ~ I I 44 , BOSTON COLLEGE NEWlON CAMPUS • -. G'" --. ffiE]/1W] ""'OttlfVI I~I ..., ~I ~l ~, ~, .~"~~ ~ '" "" "-us . CUSHING HOUSE ~~ - ,"'" ~~~ DUCHESN' ~.::::::..: EAST --~~ ~ Mo\SS TPKE .1>0 <J1 SEPTEMBER 1979 E~IT fi•.5 MILES tilT i ine~ r BOSTON COLLEGE PROPERTIES FALL 1980 UPPER CAMPUS Roncalli-Welch-Williams O'Connell and Upper Dorms Total Upper Campus MIDDLE CAMPUS Square Feet Acres 137,446 472,838 610,284 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 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 Total Acres 14.0 Area bounded by Beacon Street, Lower Campus Road, College Road, Commonwealth Avenue including Hillside, Alumni, Philomatheia, Southwell 18 Old Colony Road (8otolph) 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 178,390 50,554 70,767 55,710 13,109 10,436 16,032 394,998 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 Boston 210 Chestnut Hill Avenue (Chestnut) 2051 Commonwealth (Greycliff) 5 South Street (Linden) 9 South Street (Radnor) 15 South Street (Pine) 19 South Street (Kirkwood) 25 South Street (Phelps) 39-41 South Street (South) TOTAL PROPERTIES OWNED BY BOSTON COLLEGE 4,833 4,623 2,407 3,184 3,759 9,365 4,711 7,760 40,622 7,007,308 NOTE: The above statistics do not include rented properties used in University operations. Source: Buildings and Grounds 46 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.2 1.0 160.87 BUILDINGS RELATED TO BOSTON COLLEGE OPERATION LOCATION AND PRIMARY USE FALL 1980 Date Constructed Name Alumni Hall Alumni Stadium Bapst library Barat House Barry Fine Arts Pavilion Bea Housel Botolph House Bourneuf House Brock House Campion Hall 2 Canisius Housel Carney Hall Chestnut 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 Housel Fenwick Hall Fitzpatrick Hall William J. Flynn Student Recreation Complex Fulton Hall Gasson Hall Gonzaga Hall Greycliff Hall Gym (Newton) Haley House Location Primary Use 74 Commonwealth Ave. Administrative Lower Campus Sports library Jesuit Res. & Admin. Academic & Admin. Middle Campus B85 Centre St. 885 Centre St. 176 Commonwealth Ave. 18 Old Colony Road 36 College Road 78 College Road Middle Campus 67 Lee Road Middle Campus 210 Chestnut Hill Ave. 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. Lower Campus Middle Campus Middle Campus 149 Hammond St. 2051 Commonwealth Ave. 885 Centre St. 314 Hammond St. Hancock House 223 Beacon St. Hardey House 885 Centre St. Higgins Hall Middle Campus Hillside A 100 Commonwealth Ave. Hillside B 100 Commonwealth Ave. Hillside C (Renamed Rubenstein Hall) Hillside 0 90 Commonwealth Ave. Hopkins House 116 College Road Hovey House 258 Beacon St. Kenny·Cottie Library 885 Centre St. Keyes North 885 Centre St. Keyes South 885 Centre St. Kirkwood Hall 19 South St. Kostka Hall 149 Hammond St. Lawrence House 122 College Rd. Law Facu Ity Wi ng . 885 Centre St. Linden Hall 5 South St. Loyola Hall 42 Tudor Rd. Lyons Hall Middle Campus Jesuit Residence Administrative Administrative Administrative, Academic & Admin. Jesuit Residence Academic & Admin. Student Residence 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 Sports & i'<dmin. Academic & Admin. Academic & Admin. Student Residence Student Residence Gymnasium Residence Residence Student Residence Academic & Admin. Student Residence Student Residence Student Residence Administrative Academic Library Student Residence Student Residence Student Residence Student Residence Administrative Academic & Admin. Student Residence Student Residence Academic & Admin. or Acquired 1948 1957 1928 1974 1974 1965 1967 1974 1972 1955 1966 1962 1969 1960 1956 1975 1974 1960 1974 1924 1975 1974 1974 1975 1938 1960 1960 1972 1948 1913 1958 1969 1974 1969 1907 1974 1966 1973 1973 1973 1968 1971 1974 1974 1974 1969 1958 )968 1974 1969 1956 1951 47 McElroy Commons 3 McGuinn Hall McHugh Forum M ill Street Cottage Modular Apartments More Drive Dormitory Murray House O'Connell Hall Parking Garage Phelps Hall Philomatheia Hall Pine Hall Putnam Center Radnor Hall Rahner House Roberts Center Roncalli Hall Rubenstein Hall Service Building Shaw House Commander Shea Field South Hall Southwell Hall St. Mary's Hall 4 St. Mary's House St. Thomas More Hall Stuart House (Law School) Townhouse Trinity Chapel (Newton) Welch Hall Weston Observatory5 Williams Hall Xavier Hall I Middle Campus Middle Campus Lower Campus 29 M ill Street Lower Campus 150 St. Thomas More Dr. 292 Hammond St. 185 Hammond St. 2599 Beacon St. 25 South St. 86 Commonweaith Ave. 15 South St. 885 Centre St. 9 South St. 96 College Rd. Middle Campus 182 Hammond St. 90 Commonwealth Ave. Middle Campus 377 Beacon St. Lower Campus 39·41 South St. 38 Commonwealth Ave. Middle Campus 885 Centre St. St. Thomas More Dr. 885 Centre St. 60 Tudor Rd. 885 Centre St. 200 Hammond St. Weston, MA 143 Hammond St. 44 Tudor Rd. 72 College Rd. 31 Lawrence Ave. 55 Lee Road I Rented to Jesuit Community of Boston College. 2 Academic & Administrative'" classrooms and offices. Student Services & Admin. Academic & Admin. Ice Skating Rink Residence Student Residence Student Residence & Dining Facility Commuter Center Student Union General Use Parking Facility Student Residence Academic & Admin. Student Residence Academic Student Residence Academic Academic, Admin. & Gym Student Residence Student Residence Admin; & Trade Shops Student Residence Baseball Diamond Student Residence Administrative Jesuit Residence Academic & Admin. Administrative Academic & Admin. Student Residence Chapel Student Residence Research & Admin. Student Residence Student Residence Jesuit Residence Academic Residence 3 Student Services in McElroy Commons include bookstore, dining halls, mail room, U.S. Post Office. .. Owned by the Jesuit Community of Boston College. 5 Land rented from the New England Province of the Society of Jesus. Building owned by Boston College. SUMMARY OF BUILDING USE FALL 1980 Building Use Student Residences 1 Administrative Academic and Administrative 2 Jesuit Residences Miscellaneous Use 3 TOTAL 30 11 20 6 17 84 1 Keyes North and South'" 1, Duchesne East and West'" 1, Hillside A&B ." 1, Hillside C&D '" 1 , Modulars "'.1 2 Academic and Administrative'" offices and classrooms. Also includes Weston Observatory. ) Includes gymnasiums, libraries, student union, etc. 48 Number of Buildings Source: Space Management 1955 1968 1958 1974 1971 1979 1967 1938 1979 1969 1920 1969 1974 1969 1952 1958 1965 1973 1948 1962 1960 1969 1937 1917 1974 1955 1974 1971 1974 1965 1948 1965 1956 1970 1979 1978 CLASSROOMS FALL 1980 Number of Classrooms Building Stations , 5 Barry Campion Carney Cushing 474 793 1,042 804 378 1,032 1,037 591 125 555 582 14 25 11 2 13 18 Devlin Fulton Gasson Higgins Kenny-Cottle Library . Lyons McGuinn 8 1 10 15 9 600 131 8,013 Stuart Total Source: Space Management DINING FACILITIES FALL 1980 location Name Capacity Eagle's Nest Snack 8ar McElroy Commons 500 Faculty Dining Room McElroy Commons 175 Kirkwood Cafeteria Lower Campus Dining Facility Kirkwood Hall 125 More Drive Dormitory Lyons Hall McElroy Commons 550 Lyons Cafeteria McElroy Dining Hall Newton Campus Cafeteria Newton Campus Snack Bar Stuart House Stuart House Trustees' Room McElroy Commons 650 1,000 360 200 40 Total Capacity 3,600 Source: Dining Department OFFICES FALL 1980 NEWTON CAMPUS CHESTNUT HILL BUilding Alumni Hall Bapst Library Botolph House Bourneuf House Brock HOl;Jse Campion Hall Carney Hall Cushing Hall Devlin Hall Donaldson House Fulton Hall Gasson Hall Higgins Hall Hovey House Number of Offices 8 8 10 9 7 56 222 55 40 7 81 36 54 8 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 *In addition to 17 offices, Weston Observatory houses 12 laboratories. Source: Space Management Number of Offices 11 11 75 32 186 7 24 12 Building Barat House Barry Fine Arts Pavilion Law Faculty Wing Kenny-Cottle Library Stuart House St. Mary's House Subtotal Number of Offices 9 25 21 8 61 5 129 17 26 83 8 1,093 Weston Observatory * . Total Offices 17 1,239 49 , Facility Athletic Alumni Stadium Sporting Events Field Seating William J. Flynn Student Recreation Complex (New Wing) McHugh Forum Sporting Events Floor Seating Roberts Center Sporting Events Floor Seating Auditoriums Barry Fine Arts Pavilion 223 FACILITY CAPACITIES FALL 1980 lecture Location Dinner Seating Reception! Seating 32,000 3,000 4,000 2,500 4,000 Standing Lower Campus Lower Campus Lower Campus 4,000 2,400 Middle Campus 4,200 800 Newton Campus Middle Campus Middle Campus 550 Middle Campus Middle Campus Middle Campus Middle Campus McGuinn Hall 121 Stuart Hall 411 330 230 320 220 104 160 160 Middle Campus il5 Newton Campus Stuart Hall 315 Newton Campus 135 180 Conferen~ Rooms Murray Conference Room Putnam Center (2 Conference Rooms) Roberts Lounge Trustees Board Room McElroy Commons Newton Campus St. Thomas More Hall McElroy Commons Dining Halls" Eagle's Nest Faculty Dining Room Lyons Cafeteria McElroy Dining Hall Newton Campus Cafeteria Newton Campus Snack Bar McElroy Commons McElroy Commons Lyons Hall McElroy Commons Stuart House Stuart House Houses Alumni Hall O'Connell Hall Philomatheia Hall 74 Commonwealth Avenue 185 Hammond Street 86 Commonwealth Avenue 80 80 125 200 125 Middle Campus McElroy Commons Middle Campus Middle Campus 60 75 50 50 100 100 75 75 200 400 Cushing Hall 001 Devlin Hall 008 Fulton Hall 412 Gasson Hall 305 Higgins Hall 304 Higgins Hall 307 100 25/room 30 40 75 40 500 125 500 800 250 200 Lounges Cushing Faculty Lounge McElroy Student Lounge McGuinn 3rd Floor Lounge McGuinn 5th Floor Lounge Multi·purpose Campion Auditorium Gasson T·100 Newton Chapel Newton Chapel Basement Middle Campus Middle Campus Newton Campus Newton Campus 300 300 800 400 250 "Capacities shown for dining facilities are those used for function seating. and therefore difler from capacities for student dining, Source: Bureau of Conferences Note: University facilities are available for function purposes through the Bureau of Conferences and/or the primary user responsible for the facility, All facilities are not available to all groups, The capacity figures are those used by the Bureau of Conferences in determining appropriate space needs for functions being scheduled. 50 1980-81 RESIDENCE HALL STATISTICS Living Units Students Staff Total 68 40 74 73 80 81 52 69 8 51 72 72 40 780 138 75 139 141 157 159 101 134 21 98 150 138 78 1,529 3 3 4 3 3 3 2 3 1 3 3 3 2 36 141 78 143 144 160 162 103 137 22 101 153 141 80 1,565 408 108 80 96 258 142 90 1,182 792 210 152 192 498 784 174 2,802 9 3 2 0 9 19 3 45 801 '213 154 192 507 803 177 2.847 64 64 72 98 74 55 427 119 128 131 180 137 105 800 3 3 2 4 4 3 19 122 131 133 184 141 108 819 19 29 12 36 12 12 12 30 162 34 40 19 60 20 24 20 50 -267 1 2 1 2 2 1 1 2 12 35 42 20 62 25 21 52 279 -2,551 -- 112 -5,510 CHESTNUT HILL Upper Campus Cheverus Claver Fenwick Fitzpatrick Gonzaga Kostka Loyola Roncalli Shaw Townhouse Welch Williams Xavier 127 Hammond Street 40 Tudor Road 46 Tudor Road 137 Hammond Road 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 Lower Campus Edmond's Hall Hillside A Hillside B Hillside 0 Modulars More Drive Dormitory Rubenstein Hall NEWTON CAMPUS Cushing Duchesne East Duchesne West Hardey Keyes North Keyes South 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 Street Centre Street Centre Street Centre Street Centre Street Centre Street . OFF CAMPUS South Street Chestnut Hall Greycliff Linden Kirkwood Phelps Pine Radnor South TOTAL 210 Chestnut Hill Avenue 2051 Commonwealth Avenue 5 South Street 19 South Street 25 South Street 15 South Street 9 South Street 39-41 South Street 5,398 - . 22 Source: Housing Office '. 51 FINANCE 53 HIGHLIGHTS OF FINANCIAL OPERATIONS FOR THE FIVE YEARS ENDED JUNE 30,1980 (DOLLARS IN MILLIONS) Revenues Tuition and Fees Contracts and Grants Organized Activities Gifts, Investments and Other* Auxiliary Enterprises Total Revenue Expenditures and Transfers"'· Instruction Libraries Sponsored Research Student Services Organized Activities Plant Maintenance General Administration Student Aid/Loans Auxiliary Enterprises Other Transfers (Net)' Total Expenditures and Transfers 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 $33.2 8.7 2.1 2.8 $36.1 9.4 "1.5 3.1 ---.M. $41.9 10.0 1.4 4.5 11.6 $46.2 13.8 1.7 5.1 -.JU. $39.6 9.5 1.8 3.7, 10.7 ...1ll 55.5 59.7 65.3 69.4 80.0 20.1 1.8 2.5 2.3 2.8 3.9 5.5 5.4 9:0 1.9 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 27.9 2.8 4.1 3.2 3.5 5.9 6.7 8.6 13.4 ~ 25.1 2.5 3.4 3.0 3.2 4.9 6.3 6.3 12.3 2.3 ---M $55.2 $59.5 $65.2 $69.3 $79.7 ·For fiscal year 1980. Gifts and Other Transfers include gifts restricted to Endowments and Plant Funds; fiscal years 1976-79 have been restated to include similar gifts. . "Beginning 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; fiscal year 1976 has been restated for comparability. Source: Office of the Controller H.E.FA BOND ISSUES· Is~ue Amount of Issue Series A $20,875,000 Series B Series C Date of Issue The Project April 24, 1974 Edmond's Hall construction; refinancing of existing dormitory and recreational facilities. 15,800,000 October 20, 1976 Improvement, renovation, construction to existing facilities. 14,150,000 June 27, 1979 New Dormitory and Dining Hall, Parking Garage facility construction. ·"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 30,1981 Undergraduate Schools I Arts & Sciences, Education, Management, Nursing Evening College (per course) Summer" Session (per credit houri I 1974 $2,650 180 70 I 1975 I $2,800 190 70 I 1976 I $2,950 200 70 I 1977 I $3,175 210 75 I 1978 I $3,420 220 75 I I 1979 $3,645 230 80 I 1980 I $3,980 240 88 I 1981 I $4,530 250 96 Graduate Schools Arts & Sciences (per credit hour) Law School Management (per credit hour) Social Work MSW part-time (per credit hour) DSW part·time (per credit hour) 85 2,550 70 2,600 90 2,750 75 2,750 95 2,950 80 2,900 100 3,200 86 3,125 105 3,500 100 3,380 113 3,810 113 3,645 - 130 4,200 130 3,980 110 130 150 4,900 150 4,600 130 150 - - - - - 650 750 800 850 750 850 950 1,000 - - 775 950 975 1,025 1,025 775 650 650 850 750 750 900 950 1,000 1,000 750 850 750 850 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 - 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, St. Gabriel's :",More Drive Dormitory Board Per Student - 775 - - - - 1,050 - - 950 - - - 1,330 600 650 700 750 825 875 1.025 1.236 100 20 5 60 25 100 20 5 60 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 35 100 24 7 91 45 Representative Fees Laboratory (Science) Undergraduate Government Graduate Student Association Health Recreation Source: Office of the ControJfer <J'1 <J'1 BOSTON COLLEGE TUITION RESTATED IN 1967 DOLLARS Consumer Price Index* Tuition in Absolute Dollars Tuition'in Academic Year 1967/68 1968/69 1969/70 1970/71 1971/72 1972/73 1973/74 1974/75 1975/76 1976/77 1977/78 1978/79 1979/80 1980/81 101.6 106.4 112.9 119.1 123.1 127.3 138.5 155.4 166.3 174.3 186.1 202.9 229.9 260.0" $1,600 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 $1,575 1,504 1,771 1,881 2,031 2,042 1,913 1,802 1,774 1,822 1,838 1,796 1,731 1,742 1967 Dollars "CPI measured at December 31st of academic year. Source: Department of Commerce E~onomic Indicators, July 1980. ·""Estimate Source: Office of the Controller CONTRACTS AND GRANTS SOURCE AND APPLICATION OF FUNDING (THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS) 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 $7,524 366 134 657 $7,997 379 199 837 $8,409 432 127 555 $ 8,757 353 443 464 $11,958 706 595 475 $8,681 $9,412 $9,523 $10,017 $13,734 3,355 2,379 2,947 4,113 2,221 3,078 4,052 2,287 3,184 4,384 2,207 3,426 5,329 3,124 5,281 $8,681 $9,412 $9,523 $10,017 $13,734 SOURCE Federal Gov't. State Gov't. Local Gov't. Non-Gov't. Total APPLICATION Sponsored Research Other Sponsored Programs Student Aid Total -The above amounts represent actual accounted expenditures for the referenced fiscal year. They are not reflective of awards made to the Univeristy for that year. - , Source: Office of the Controller 56 . SUMMARY OF CONTRACT AND GRANT AWARDS* JULY 1, 1979 - JUNE 30,1980 No. of Awards Biology Chemistry Award Total 5 $ 19 239,000 754,700 College of Arts and Sciences 360,000 Economics 25,100 4 5 4 1 $ 411,500 619,100 392,700 26,100 1,449,400 Geology & Geophysics Weston Observatory NECEP 1 9 2 60,000 1,206,100 50,400 1,316,500 Law School 5 187,000 School of Management 3 70,400 School of Nursing 6 1,008,000 Physics 6 490,400 Psychology 2 118,600 School of Social Work 8 825,900 SWRRI 5 445,300 Sociology 2 64,700 Space Data Analysis Laboratory 6 2,910,700 Miscellaneous 8 205,600 School of Education Campus School Special Education Lab of Statistical and Policy Research TOTAL $10,471,300 103 . "'The above awards are those received by the UniversitY during the referenced fiscal year. The sward total includes multiple-year awards which will be expended over varying lengths of time. Source: Office of Research Administration 57 SELECTED CONTRACT AND GRANT AWARDS' 1979-80 Title Source of Funding ($) COllEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES Faculty and Curricular Development Grant Award Mellon Foundation 360,000 BIOLOGY DEPARTMENT Biochemistry of Insect Cuticle National Institutes of Health Studies of Adenylate and Guanylate Cyclases Oscillatory Synthesis of Camp in Dictyostelium National Institutes of Health 55,800 51,000 National Science Foundation 53,800 Air Force Office of Scientific Research 60,000 Discoideum CHEMISTRY DEPARTMENT Chemiluminescence and Laser Induced Flourescence Exoergic Gas Phase Reactions of Boron and Carbon Atoms National Science Foundation Active-Site Directed Inhibitors of Phospholipase A2 National Institutes of Health Synthesis of the Anticancer Agent Tripoiolide National Institutes of Health Carbon Dioxide Via Transition Metal Coordination Office of Naval Research National Institute of Health 53,000 50,000 53,000 105,600 59,800 76,100 57,400 City of Boston World Bank 85,800 284,400 Preparation of Special Educators u.S. Department of Education Teaching Grant and Traineeships in Rehab. of 155,000 DHEW-Office of Human Development The Molecular Basis of Cellular Control Mechanism National Institutes of Health Practical Synthesis of the Anticancer Drug Adriamycin National Institutes of Health Probing Carcinogens' .Active Sites by F-Substitution SCHOOL OF EDUCATION 1979-80 District III/Boston College Collaborative Ain-Shams University Scholarship Program DIVISION OF SPECIAL EDUCATION the 81ind Services 189,400 CAMPUS SCHOOL Campus School 79·80 Mass-Local Towns Support Personnel for Severely Multi-Handicapped Commonwealth of Massachusetts Campus School Early·Childhood Program Mass-Local Towns 414,000 60,000 82,700 GEOLOGY & GEOPHYSICS DEPARTMENT - Weston Observatory A Seismotectonic Study of New England Adjacent Areas u.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission A Study of Seismicity and Tectonics In New England U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Investigation of Magnetic Field Measurements Air Force Geophysics Laboatory Narragansett Basin Phase II U.S. Department of Energy Study of Correlation of Onshore·Offshore Sediment Movement Office of Naval Research 360,000 193,100 240,000 339,800 60,000 lAW SCHOOL 1980 Summer Institute The Children's Hearings in Scotland Council on legal Education Opportunity/ law Schools Department of Justice 52,000 83,000 58 , . Source of Funding Title Award ($) SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT Critical Factors of the Stopping Rule In R&D Decisions University of North Carolina 60,400 DH EW - Division of Nursing DHEW - Health Resources Administration 109,000 328,800 164,200 172,900 DHEW - National Institute for Mental Health 199,400 National Science Foundation 135,000 Department of Energy 271,400 SCHOOL OF NURSING Recruitment & Retention of the Disadvantaged Student Professional NurseTraining Program Maternal - Child Health Nursing Program Adult Primary Care Clinical Specialist Grad. Psychiatric Mental Health Clinic Specialist Nursing Program DH EW - Division of Nursing U.S. Public Health Agency PHYSICS DEPARTMENT Studies of Birkeland Currents - Utilizing the IMS Data Base Evaporated Lithium-Doped Amorphous Silicon Solar Cells PSYCHOLOGY DEPARTMENT Family and Individual Coping Following Job Loss DHEW - National Institute of Mental Health 74,200 SOCIAL WELFARE RESEARCH INSTITUTE Private and Social Response to job Loss: A Metrostudy DHEW - National Institute of Mental Health Job Mobility and Job Loss Public Assistance Data Analysis Laboratory Department of Labor DHEW - Social Security Administration 96,800 147,900 144,800 Title XX Training Program Commonwealth of Massachusetts 582,000 Boston College Alcohol and Drug Training Program DHEW - National Institute on Alcoholism and Alcohol Abuse DHEW - National Institute of Mental Health SCHOOL OF SOCIAL WORK Training for Minority Women Social Workers 106,900 76,700 SPACE DATA LABORATORY Analysis of Spacecraft Chargin9 Data U.S. Air Force Tides In the Mesosphere and Lower Thermosphere National Science Foundation Radar Clutter Study Analysis of Optical Emissions U.S. Air Force U.S. Air Force 70,000 92,700 200,200 2,507,200 MISCELLANEOUS Women in Political and Governmental Careers U.S. Office of Education 81,300 "Selected awards are greater than $50,000. Source: Office of Research Admininstration I' .'.... 59 Notes 60 LIBRARIES ....., , .,.- ::...::-~~ ; ;. ~- ~ '. ""~ . ~ ..J-'.". ' .~ ,'\}~~ :i~';, f;;.)'.~: ~: .'" ~.~(' -. " '. . _.. :: t"; .'-, .' , .. ~. ~i' -, ; _. '.";-. "-. 61 BOSTON COLLEGE LIBRARIES Sapst Library Main Library, Mid.dle Campus Geophysics Library Weston Observatory Weston, Ma. Law Library Kenny-Cottle Library Newton Campus Resource Center' (Undergraduate) School of Management Library School of Nursing Library Kenny·Cottle Library Newton Campus Fulton Hall, 2nd Floor Cushing Hall, 4th Floor School of Social Work Library Science Library McGuinn Hall, Basement Devlin Hall, Rooms 103-108 Source: University Librarian EXPENDITURES FOR LIBRARY MATERIALS Library 1975-76 1976-77 1977·78 1978-79 1979-80 Social Work $350,150 92,704 29,757 19,500 68,080 6,300 $371,927 108,801 30,710 25,090 . 81,010 7,650 $344,521 112,084 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 TOTAL $566,491 $625.188 $639,595 $743,791 $884,728 8apst Law Management Nursing Science Source: Office of the Controller HOLDINGS BY INDIVIDUAL LIBRARIES - 1980 Periodical Library yolumes Subscriptions Microform Units 8apst Law School of Management 494,034 128,831 67,406 34,856 56,590 11.641 27,175 25,420 2,515 665 816 631 550 117 338 15 474,369 94,400 26,117 22,418 20,477 1,467 134 845,953 5,647 639,382 School of Nursing Science Weston Social Work Resource Center TOTAL Source: University Librarian CIRCULATION STATISTICS Year Student Faculty Interlibrary loans Reserve Total 1975-76 1976-77 1977-78 1978-79 1979-80 113,395 108,364 78.609 86,940 96,876 11,577 11,453 12,406 12,690 13,333 2,887 3,646 3,420 5,366 7,901 96,906 98,118 113.107 130,833 152,369 224,765 221,581 207,542 235,829 270,479 Source: University Librarian 62 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 is available from the reference staff in each library. BIOMEDICINE Excerpta Medica IPA (International Pharmaceutical Abstracts) MEDOC MEDLINE Data Bases AVLlNE BIOETHICS CANCERLIT CANCERPROJ CATLINE CHEMLINE CLiNPROT EPILEPSY HEALTH PLANNING HISTLINE MEDLINE AND BACKFILES RTECS TOXICOLOGY DATA BANK TOXLINE AND TOXBACK BUSINESS AND ECONOMICS Accountants Index CBPI (Canadian Business Periodicals Index) CIN (Chemical Industry Notes) Disclosure EIS Industrial Plants EIS Nonmanufacturing Establishments Foreign Traders Index Frost and Sullivan Defense Market Measures INFORM (Abstracted Business Information) International Economic Abstracts LABORDOC Management Contents PIE News (Petroleum and Energy) PNI (Pharmaceutical News Index) Predicasts (Bibliographic) F & S Index International Forecasts International Time Series PROMT U.S. Forecasts U.S. Time Series Predicasts (Computational) Trade Opportunities U.S. Exports HUMANITIES AND SOCIAL SCIENCES America: History and Life Art Modern Child Abuse and Neglect ECE R (Exceptional Child Education Resources) ERIC (RIE, CIJE, AIM/ARM) Historical Abstracts Language and Language Behavior Abstracts Legal Resources Index LEXIS LISA (Library and Information Science. Abstracts) MLA Bibliography NCJRS (National Criminal Justice Referral System) NICEM (National Information Center for Educational Media) NICSEM/NIMIS (National Information Center for Special Education Materials) NIMH (National Institute of Mental Health) PAIS (Public Affairs Information Service) Philosopher's Index Psychological Abstracts RI LM Abstracts Social Sciences Citation Index Sociological Abstracts Sport U.S. Political Science Documents U.S. Public School Directory 63 J SCIENCES Agricola ASFA (Aquatic Sciences and Fisheries Abstracts) BIOSIS (Biological Abstracts) Chemical Abstracts CHEMNAME CHEMSEARCH CHEMSIS Cold Regions Commonwealth Agricultural Bureau Abstracts CRIS (Current Information Service - USDA) Claims/Chem Claims/Chem/Uniterm Claims/Class Claims/U.S. Patents EIST (Environmental Impact Statements) GEOARCHIVE GEOREF INSPEC I RL Life Sciences Collection Ocean ic Abstracts Pacific Islands Ecosystems Pollution Abstracts SCISEARCH (Science Citation Index) SPIN (Searchable Physics Information Notices) TROPAG (Abstracts on Tropical Agriculture) TSCA Initial Inventory TECHNOLOGY AND ENGINEERING API LIT (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) ELCOM (E lectronics and Computers) ENERGYLINE (Energy Information Abstracts) ENVIROLINE (Environment Abstracts) Environmental Bibliography FOODS ADLIBRA FOREST PRODUCTS FSTA (Food Science & Technology Abstracts) I NPADOC (I nternational Patent Classification' Center) Source: University Librarian 64 ISMEC (Mechanical Engineering) METADEX (Metals Abstracts/Alloys Index) MRIS (Maritime Research Information Service) Non-Ferrous Metals Abstracts PAPERCHEM (Institute of Paper Chemistry) PI RA (Paper and Board, Packaging Abstracts) RAPRA Abstracts SAE Abstracts (Society of Automotive Engineers) Safety (Safety Abstracts) Surface Coatings Abstracts TITUS (lnstitut Textile de France) TRIS (Transportation Research Information System) Weldasearch (I nstitute of Welding) WORLD ALUMINUM ABSTRACTS WOR LD TEXTI LES (World Textile Abstracts) WATERLIT MULTIDISCIPLINARY ASI (American Statistics Index) Biography Master Index BOOKSINFO CD I (Comprehensive Dissertation Index) CIS (Congressional Information Service) CNI (Canadian News Index) CRECORD (Congressional Record Index) Conference Papers Index Encyclopedia of Associations Federal Register FEDEX (Energy Information Administration) Foundation Directory Foundation Grants Index Grants Information Bank (N.Y. Times) L1BCON Magazine Index Monthly Catalog of U.S. Government Publications National Foundations National Newspaper Index NTIS (National Technical Information Service) Population Bibliography Quebec-Actualite SSI E (Smithsonian Science Information Exchange) 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 collectio.ns. Contact Special Collections Librarian for further information. 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 times, and his work. 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. PA TMORE COLLECTION Coventry Patmore, poet, essayist, critic, contemporary and close friend of Francis Thompson, 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. SPECIAL IRISH COLLECTION Nearly every aspect of Irish history and literature is covered in this collection. Of special interest are the many papers of Patrick Andrew Collins, president of the Irish Land League, and letters of Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa, poet, editor and leader of the Fenian and related organizations. Included also is a facsimile, in color, of the famous Book of Kells, and complete editions of Malton's Views of Oublin, 1792·1799; The Ordinance Surveys, The Irish Bulletin, and the Acta Sanctorum Hiberniae. JESUITANA A collection of early and rare works by and about Jesuits. It includes Lettere e Relazione Orientale, a series of annual letters from Jesuit missionaries in Indo-China, Tibet, Japfln, 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, 1552. MERTON COLLECTION The original typescript and galleys of The Seven Storey Mountain are gifts of the author, along with galleys of The WatelS of Siloe, and his own copy of The Poetry and Prose of William Blake. There is an autographed copy of each book published by Merton, and numerous periodica's containing the first printing of poems and essays, many of. them uncollected. 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. 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). THE BOSTON COLLEGE GUILD OF ST. LUKE OF BOSTON HEALTH ETHICS COLLECTION Initiated in 1974, this contains books, pamphlets, periodicals, reprints and tapes which concern the ethics of medicine and health care. RITA P. 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 TlON 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 wide 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. Source: University Librarian 65 r 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 LIBRARY CONSORTIUM The library is a member of the Boston Library Consortium, a group of area libraries which includes Brandeis, Boston University, Tufts, WeliesleY,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 PUBLICATIONS In 1963 Boston College was designated one of the two depository libraries in this congression·al 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, therei£ on-line access to publishing, cataloging, and inter-library loan location information from the data bank of OCLC, Inc. which contains over 4.6 million records from the Library of Congress and the nearly 2,000 other contributing institutions. Source: University Librarian 66 J ATHLETICS 67 I j .. ., VARSITY SPORTS 1979-80 Men's Varsity Participants Baseball Women's Varsity Cross-Country Basketball 12 12 4 29 Cross-Country Fencing Field Hockey Football 105 18 28 37 10 13 21 25 10 50 50 Golf Ice Hockey Lacrosse Sailing Skiing Soccer Swimming Tennis Track-Indoor Track-Outdoor Golf 4 Lacrosse 26 5 8 20 22 14 38 24 15 Sailing Skiing Soccer Swimming & Diving Tennis Track-Indoor Track-Outdoor Volleyball Wrestling 10 Total 431 Total 233 CLUB SPORTS 1979-80 Men', Club P~rticipants Women's Club 60 Ice Hockey 14 Volleyball 15 Softball 20 Waterpolo 15 Waterpolo 15 Coed Club Sports Judo Karate Volleyball 68 Participants Rugby Source: Sports Information Office I i 15 26 13 Basketball Participants I INTRAMURAlS 1979-80 Men Sport Basketball 2-on-2 Teams Participants 75 910 18 Handball - Ice Hockey Sport Basketball 8 - 14 210 - Racquetball Doubles Singles - 90 72 Soccer - 101 Squash - 89 Table Tennis Co-ed Women - 40 Tennis Doubles Singles - 65 106 Touch Football 16 320 2 20 Teams Participants 15 188 -- Total Participants - 25 - 32 Freethrow Racquetball Doubles - Singles - 59 36 Soccer - 26 - Squash - 25 - Racquetball Doubles - - Road Race - 170 - Softball 10 160 Swimming - 16 Tennis Doubles - 84 Track - 49 Volleyball 20 Table Tennis - 12 Doubles Singles Touch Football - 56 46 2 26 8 89 - Volleyball Teams - Tennis - Sport Volleyball 2,049 Total Unstructured Recreation Badminton -563 - - Total lessons Exercise Fencing Figure Skating Dance Handball Jogging Lacrosse Racquetball Diving Soccer Exercise Modern Dance Softball Swimming Tennis Volleyball Baseball Basketball Figure Skating Football Golf Weightlifting 242 -778 Golf Life Saving Racquetball Scuba Diving Squash Swimming Tennis Water Safety Source: Sports Information Office 69 VARSITY SPORTS RECORDS 1975-1976 1976-1977 1977·1978 1978-1979 1979-1980 Men's ~Records W-L-T W-L-T W-L-T W-L-T W-L-T Football Basketball Ice Hockey Wrestling 7-4 9-1} 15-13-1 5-5 4-11-1 7-4 10-5 10-13 11-0 10·4 8-3 8-18 18-11-2 3-7 6-7-1 7-4 11-1 14-8 4-6 5-7 6-5 IS-II 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 7-5 7'1 11-0 11-2 6-5 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 Soccer Lacrosse Tennis Baseball Swimming Golf Women's Records Basketball Field Hockey Swimming Tennis Volleyball Lacrosse Source: Sports Information Office FOOTBALL SCHEDULES Fall 1980 Sept. 13 Sept. 20 Sept. 27 Oct. 4 Oct. 11 Oct. 18 Oct. 25 Nov. 1 Nov. 15 Nov. 22 Nov. 29 at Pittsbur9h Stanford at Villanova at Navy Yale at Florida State Army at Air Force Syracuse at Massachusetts Holy Cross 1981 Sept. 26 Oct. 3 Oct. 10 Oct. 17 Oct. 24 Oct. 31 Nov. 7 Nov. 14 Nov. 21 Nov. 28 at North Carolina West Virginia at Penn State Navy at Army Pittsburgh Villanova at Syracuse Massachusetts at Holy Cross Source: Sports Information Office 70 1:30 pm EDT 6:00 pm EDT 1:30 pm EDT 2:00 pm EDT 6:00 pm EDT 7:00 pm EDT 1:30 pm EDT 1:00 pm MST 1:30 pm EST 1:00 pm EST 1:30 pm EST 1983 1982 Sept. 18 Sept. 25 Oct. 2 Oct. 9 Oct. 16 Oct. 23 Oct. 30 at Villanova at Navy Temple at West Virginia Rutgers at Army Penn State Nov.... 13 Syracuse Nov. 20 Nov. 27 at Massachusetts Holy Cross Sept. 10 Sept. 24 Oct. 1 Oct. 8 Oct. 15 Oct. 22 Oct. 29 Nov. 5 Nov. 12 Nov. 19 Nov. 26 Villanova West Virginia Temple at Yale at Air Force at Alabama Penn State at Army at Syracuse Massachusetts at Holy Cross , 1980-81 VARSITY HOCKEY SCHEDULE Nov. 7 Nov. 8 Nov. 21 Nov. 24 Dec. 3 Dec. 5 Dec. 8 Dec. 11 .Dec.14 Dec. 29 Jan. 3 Jan.6 Jan. 9 Jan. 13 Jan. 16 at Bowling Green at Bowling Green Merrimack Holy Cross at Brown at Providence Maine at Vermont New Hampshire Salem State at Princeton Harvard at Boston University Dartmouth Cornell Yale Jan. 20 Jan. 23 Jan. 26 Jan. 29 Feb. 2 Feb. 6 Feb. 9 Feb. 13 Feb. 17 Feb. 20 Feb. 21 Feb. 24 Feb. 27 Mar. 1 Mar.4 St. Lawrence at Northeastern at Dartmouth at Beanpot Tournament Providence at Beanpot Finals Clarkson at Maine at Colgate at RPI Boston University Army at New Hampshire Northeastern Source: Sports Information Office 1980-81 BASKETBALL SCHEDULE* Nov. 30 Dec. 2 Dec. 6 Dec. 10 Dec. 13 Dec. 29 & Dec. 30 Jan. 3 Jan. 7 Jan. 10 Jan. 14 Jim. 17 Jan. 21 Jan. 24 Bentley New Hampshire Fordham Jan. 26 Jan. 30 at Brown Jan. 31 at VILLANOVA Music City Tournament at Nashville, TN (B.C., Penn State, Western Kentucky, Vanderbilt) at PROVIDENCE at Vermont GEORGETOWN CONNECTICUT Merrimack SYRACUSE at SETON HALL & Feb. 2 Feb. 4 Feb. 7 Feb. 11 Feb. 14 Feb. 18 Feb. 21 Feb. 25 Feb. 28 Mar. 5 VILLANOVA Colonial Classic at Boston Garden (B.C. vs. B.U.; Holy Cross vs. UMass) at ST. JOHN'!; Lowell at CONNECTICUT PROVIDENCE at Holy Cross at GEORGETOWN ST.JOHN'S at SYRACUSE SETON HALL BIG EAST TOURNAMENT at SYRACUSE ·BIG EAST games appear in bold type. Source: Sports Information Office 71 " " Notes " 72 GENERAL INFORMATION 73 , I 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.PhiI.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 Jou mal ism 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 Laws Doctor of Science Source: Commencement Programs, 1952·1980. ,, 74 ~. HONORARY DEGREES AWARDED BY BOSTON COLLEGE 1952-1980 1952 Gre90ry Peter XV Cardinal Agagianian, LL.D. (January 14, 19521 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. 1957 Wallace E. Carroll, LL.D. Arthur J. Kelly, LL.D. Augustus C. Lon9, LL.D.* Adrian O'Keeffe, LL.D. Very Rev. Msgr. Patrick W. Skehan, LL.D. Niis 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'Halioran, 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 Wahl, Lilt.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 8, 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. 1956 Bartholomew A. Brickley, LL.D. Peter J. W. Debye, 5o.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. Marian Anderson, D.Mus. J. Peter Grace, LL.D. Caryl P. Haskins, LL.D. Robert F. Kennedy, LL.D. Charles Malik, LL.D.' Most Rev. Russell J. McVinney, LL.D. Samuel Eliot Morison, LL.D. Rt, Rev, Matthew P. Stapleton, LL.D. Rev. Henry M. Brock, S.J., D.Sc. (October 12, 1960) 1961 Allen W. Dulles, LL.D. Anthony Julian, LL.D. Robert D. Murphy; LL.D.* . Louis R. Perini, LL.D. Abraham Ribicoff, LL.D. Rt. Rev. Robert J. Sennott, LL.D. Edward Teller, LL.[). "Commencement Speaker 75 '" ", 1962 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, Litt.D. Ralph Lowell, LL.D. Phyllis McGinley, Litt.D. Perry G. Miller, Litt.D. 1963 Augustin Cardinal Bea, S.Je, J.U.D. (March 26, 1963) Rev. Edward B. Bunn, S.J., LL.D. (April 20, 1963) Lady Barbara Ward Jackson, Litt.D. (April 20, 1963) Nathan Marsh Pusey, L.H.D. (April 20, 1963) Bruce Catton, Litt.D. Anthony Joseph Celebrezze, LL.D.* Arthur Joseph Goldberg, LL.D. John Jay McCloy, LL.D. ' James Barrett Reston, LL.D. Rt. Rev. John Joseph Ryan, L.H.D. Jose Luis Sert, Litt.D. Joseph Leo Sweeney, LL.D. Robert Clifton Weaver, LL.D. James Edwin Webb, D.Sc. 1966 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, '1966) Donald Frederick Hornig, LL.D. (November 12, 1966) James Alfred Van Allen, D.Sc. (November 12, 1966) 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. 1964 John Coleman Bennett, LL.D. Henri Maurice Peyre, LL.D. Most Rev. Ernest John Primeau, LL.D. Sidney R. Rabb, L.H.D. Paul Anthony Samuelson, LL.D. Rev. Joseph L. Shea, S.J., LL.D. Robert Sargent Shriver, Jr., LL.D.' Mary Sullivan Stanton, 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. 1965 John P. Birmingham, LL.D. Robert McAfee Brown, LL.D. J. N. Douglas Bush, Litt.D. Victor L. Butterfield, L.H.D. John T. Connor, LL.D. Edith Green, LL.D. Rev. John Courtney Murray, S.J., L.H.D.* Rt. Rev. Lawrence J. Riley, LL.D. Alan T. Waterman, D.Sc. ·Commencement Speaker 76 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. 1974 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 FrandsLonergan, S.J., Hist.PhiJ.D. Elliot Norton, L.H.D. Perry Townsend Rathbone, D.F.A. Earl Wacren, D.Sc.L.' 1971 Walter Jackson Bate, H.D. Andrew Felton Brimmer, S.S.D. Rev: Msgr. George William Casey, Litt.D. Mircea Eliade, R.D. Eli Goldston, L.L.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 William Arthur Lewis, L.H.D. Louis.Martin Lyons, D.Journ. Rev. John Anthony McCarthy, S.J .. Litt.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. 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.O.* 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 Hirsch 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. !"1cDonough, M.D., D.Sc. Maria Tallchief Paschen, D.A. Michael Joseph Walsh, Litt.D. ·Commencement Speaker 77 1 ! I I I I 1979 1978 Dorothy Baker, D.S.S. Edward Patrick Boland, LL.D. George P. Donaldson, D.B.A. Richard Ellmann, L.H.D. Robben W. Fleming, L.H.D. Walter F. Mondale, LL.D: David S. Nelson, LL.D: Bruno Bettelheim, Lilt.D. 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. 1980 Germaine Br~, Litt.D. * Albert M. Folkard, L.H.D. Edward J. King, D. Pub. Adm. Joseph Cardinal Malula, LL.D. Bernard J. O'Keefe, D.E.Sc. Kevin H. White, LL.D. ·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. Robert W. Brady, S.J. 3. 4. 5. 6. Robert Fulton, S.J. Jeremiah O'Conner, S.J. Edward V. Boursaud, S.J. Thomas H. Stack, S.J. 7. Nicholas Russo, S.J. 8. Robert Fulton, S.J. 9. Edward I. Devitt, S.J. 10. Timothy Brosnahan, S.J. 11. W. G. Read Mullan, S.J. 12. William F. Gannon, S.J. Source; Secretary of the University 78 1863·1869 1869-1870 1870·1880 1880-1884 1884·1887 1887 1887-1888 1888·1891 1891·1894 1894-1898 1898·1903 1903-1907 Thomas I. Gasson, S.J. Charles W. Lyons, S.J. William Devlin, S.J. James H. Dolan, S.J. 1907-1914 1914·1919 1919·1925 1925·1932 Louis J. Gallagher, S.J. Wiiliam J. McGarry, S.J. William J. Murphy, S.J. William L. Keleher, S.J. Joseph R. N. Maxwell, S.J. 22. Michael P. Walsh, S.J. 23. W. !'eavey Joyce, S.J. 24. J. Donald Monan, S.J. 1932-1937 1937-1939 1939·1945 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 1945-1951 1951·1958 1958-1968 1968-1972 1972· I TYPES OF DEGREES CONFERRED AT BOSTON COLLEGE Bachelor of Arts (A,B.) Bachelor of Science (B.S.) Master of Arts (M.A.) Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) Master of Business Administration (M.B.A.) Master of Education (M.Ed.) Master of Science (M.S.) Master of Science in Teaching (M.S.T.) Master of Social Work (M.S.W.) Certificate of Advanced Educational Specialization (C.A.E.S.) Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) Doctor of Law (J.D.) Doctor of Education (D.Ed.) Doctor of Social Work (D.S.W.) 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 Association of State Directors of Teacher Education 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 American Association of College Registrars and Admissions Officers American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education American Association of Comparative Law American Association for Higher Education American Association of University Women American Council on Education American Educational Research Association American Publ ic Welfare Association Association of American Colleges Association of Catholic Colleges and Universities Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning Association for Continuing Higher Education Association for Institutional Research Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities Association of Urban Universities Boston Library Consortium Boston Theological Institute The College Board Conference of Deans of Schools of Social Work Council for Advancement and Support of Education Council for Exceptional Children Council of Graduate Schools International Association of Schools of Social Work International Association of Universities International Federation of Catholic Universities Jesuit Student Personnel Association National Association of College Admissions Counselors National Association of College and University Business Officers National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities National Association of Social Workers National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators National Association of Student Personnel Administrators National Conference of Catholic Charities National Conference of Social Welfare National League for Nursing New England Educational Research Organization North American Association of Summer Sessions Order of the Coif** Phi Beta Kappa** -The above listing is meant only to be representative of the major types of memberships to which the University belongs. uA complete listing of honor societies to which the University belongs may be found in the U~iversity 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 Counselor Education and Counseling: Psychology Program Early Childhood Program Counselors: Arts and Sciences Education Management Nursing Curriculum and Instruction Program: Director Elementary Media Specialist Reading Specialist Science Education Secondary Education Economics Department Education Educational Administration and Supervision Program Educational Research, Measurement and Evaluation Program English Department Evening College Finance Department Fine Arts Department General Management Program Geology and Geophysics Department Germanic Studies Department Graduate Arts and Sciences Higher Education Program History Department History and Philosophy of Education Program Honors Programs: Arts and Sciences Education Management Law School Law Department Management Center Marketing Department Mathematics Department Music Program Nursing Organizational Studies Program 80 Fulton 400 Fulton 301C Gasson 103 Higgins 321 Carney 201A Devlin 218A Carney 124 Fulton 406D McGuinn 314 Campion 200C Gasson 108 Campion 301 Fulton 205 Cushing 103 Campion 202 Campion 202 Campion 10 Campion 312 Campion 219 Campion 303 Carney 132 Campion 103-104A McGuinn 604 Campion 311 Carney 450 Fulton 317 Fulton 310 Barry Pavilion 216, Newton Campus Fulton 219 Devlin 203 Carney 325 McGuinn 221A Campion 212 Carney 115 Campion 313 Gasson 111 Campion 104A Fulton 100 StuartM309, Newton Campus Fulton 403 Fulton 405 Fulton 303 Carney 317 St. Mary's House, Newton Campus Cushing 203 Fulton 216 Philosophy Department Physics Department Political Science Department Programs for Women PSYChology Department 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 Carney 272 Higgins 355 McGuinn 200 St. Mary's House, Newton Campus McGuinn 349 31 Lawrence Ave. Carney 333 Carney 236 McGuinn 132 McGuinn 416 McGuinn B14 McGuinn 501 McGuinn 400 Carney 41B Source: Registrar SOURCES Admissions Office Alumni Association Buildings and Grounds Controller's Office Dean of Facu Ities ; 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 are responsible for the accuracy and completeness of data submitted for publication. Special Thanks to Office of Communications Photos: Lee Pellegrini Cover Design: Susan Callaghan 81 ACADEMIC CALENDAR First Semester 1980-81 Sept. 3-6 Sept. 4-5 Sept. 5 Sept. 8 Oct. 13 Nov. 11 Nov. 26 Dec. 11·12 Dec. 13-19 Dec. 22·Jan. 16 1981·82 Freshman Orientation Registration for Students not Pre-registered Faculty Convocation Classes begin Columbus Day - No Classes Veteran's Day - No Classes Thanksgiving Holidays begin at Noon Study Days - No Undergraduate Classes Term Examinations Holidays Aug. 29-Sept. 1 Sept. 1 Sept. 2 Sept. 2 Oct. 12 Nov. 11 Nov. 25 Dec. 10-11 Dec. 12-18 Dec. 19-Jan. 17 Second Semester Jan. 19 Feb. 16·20 . April 16·20 April 20 May 4-5 May 6-12 May 25 Classes Begin Winter Vacation Holy Thursday - Easter Monday: Easter Recess Patriot's Day - No Classes Study Days - No Undergraduate Classes Term Examinations Commencement Source: Office of the Dean of Faculties 82 Jan. 18 Feb. 15-19 April 8-12 April 19 May 4-5 May 6-12 May 24