., ." , BOSTON COLLEGE FACT BOOK 1991-1992 ( I , " \ , ( : I 2 Contents Table of Contents Page For hword The University Objective A Brief History of Boston College A Boston College Chronology Boston College Profile 7 8 11 Administration & Faculty Board of Trustee Membership Board of Trustee Chairmen Trustee Associate Membership Officers of the University Chart of Administration Academic Administration Department Chairmen and Chairwomen University Administrators Professional, Administrative, and Support Staff Personnel Faculty: by School and Rank Full-Time Equivalent by School by School and Tenure Status by School and Gender by Highest Earned Degree and Rank by Highest Earned Degree and Gender by Rank and Gender Full-Time Faculty, Teaching Fellows, and Teaching Assistants: by School and Department Average Faculty Compensation: by Rank, 1982-83 through 1991-92 by Rank, Compared to AAUP Category I Averages for 1990-91 : 14 15 15 16 16 17 17 18 19 20 20 20 21 21 21 22 22 23 23 Students Freshman Enrollment by Year and Gender (Full-Time) Freshman Admission Profile Freshman Applications, Acceptances, and Enrollment (Full-Time) Class of 1996 Applications, Acceptances, and Enrollees _ Geographic Distribution Top Competitors for Highly-Rated Applicants Undergraduate Transfer Students: Applications, Acceptances, and Enrollment (Full-Time) by Type of Previous Institution and Gender Enrollment: by School, Gender, and Full- and Part-Time, Fall 1992 Student Credit Hours by School, 198:>-86 through 1991-92 by School, Gender, and Full- and Part-Time, Fall 1985 - 1992 AHANA and International Enrollment by Gender, Fall 1990 - 1992 Veteran Enrollment by Gender and Full- and Part-Time, Fall 1992 Full-Time Equivalent, by School, Fall 1983 - 1992 26 26 26 27 28 28 28 29 29 30 31 32 32 Contents 3 Page Undergraduate Majors by School, Fall 1981 ,-1992 Geographic Distribution of Newly Enrolled Graduate and Professional Students, Fall 1992 Graduate Enrollment by Degree Program and Discipline, 1987-88 through 1991-92 Summer Session Enrollment, 1983 - 1992 International Students and Scholars, 1991-92: by SChool.. by Class or Program by Gender and Program by Country Degrees Conferred: Undergraduate and Graduate by Degree and Gender, 1988-89 through 1991-92 Undergraduate by Degree and Number of Majors, 1987-88 through 1991-92 Undergraduate by Major, 1987-88 through 1991-92 Undergraduate by School and Major, 1989-90 through 1991-92 Graduate by School, Degree, and Primary Field, 1991-92 Undergraduate and Graduate Financial Aid, 1987-88 through 1991-92: Dollars of Aid Awarded Number of Awards Undergraduate Student Graduation Rates Senior Survey, Spring 1991: Educational Plans, Class of 1991 Academic Field of Highest Planned Degree, Class of 1991 Long-Term Career Plans, Class of 1991 33 34 35 35 36 36 36 37 38 39 40 .41 .42 43 43 44 44 .45 45 Alumni & Development Boston College Alumni Clubs Alumni Association Board of Directors Alumni Awards 1992 c Regional Analysis Geographic Distribution Uving Alumni by Primary School and Class Uving Alumni by Gender and Class Gifts to the University, 1987-88 through 1991-92 Individual Donors by Giving Club, 1987-88 through 1991-92 Alumni Donors by Primary School and Class 48 48 48 49 49 50 52 53 53 54 Physical Plant Buildings Related to Boston College Operations Boston College Properties Facility Capacities Dining Facilities Offices Classrooms Summary of Building Use Residence Hall Capacities 58 60 61 62 62 63 63 64 4 Contents Page Finance Highlights of Financial Operations, 1987-88 through 1991-92 Condensed Balance Sheet as of May 31, 1992 Tuition and Fees for the Ten Years Ending May 31, 1993 Tuition Restated in 1982-84 Dollars, 1982-83 through 1992-93 Contracts and Grants: New Awards Made to the University, 1991-92 Total Accounted Expenses, 1991-92 Source and Application of Funding, 1987-88 through 1991-92 Selected Awards Received, 1991-92 68 68 69 70 70 71 71 72 Libraries & Information Technology Boston College Libraries Expenditures for Library Materials, 1987-88 through 1991-92 Holdings by Individual Libraries Library Use Statistics Special Library Services John]. Burns Library of Rare Books and Special Collections Academic Development Center University Archives : Language Laboratory Information Processing Support Computer Center Management Information Systems Network Services : 76 76 76 76 77 78 79 79 79 80 81 82 82 Athletics Boston College Wins CFA Academic Achievement Award Intercollegiate Athletic Accomplishments, 1991-92 Intercollegiate Sports Participation, 1991-92 Intram.ural Sports Participation, 1991-92 Varsity Sports Records, 1987-88 through 1991-92 Varsity Football Schedules, 1992 and 1993 Varsity Hockey Schedule, 1992-93 Men's Varsity Basketball Schedule, 1992-93 Women's Varsity Basketball Schedule, 1992-93 86 87 89 89 89 90 90 91 91 General Information Founder and Presidents Honorary Degrees Awarded, 1952 - 1992 Types of Degrees Conferred· Honorary Degrees Accrediting Agencies Association Memberships Academic Department Locations Academic Calendars, 1992-93 and 1993-94 Sources Index Campus Maps _ 94 94 97 97 98 98 99 100 100 101 103 Foreword 5 Foreword The Boston College Fact Book is a summary of significant statistics gathered from various sources throughout the University. Once again. 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 _ July-September, 1992 - to renect the Academic Year 1991-1992, as well as the most current enrollment statistics for 1992-1993. The majority of the information is extracted from management reports produced on a regular basis by the various source offices. When reviewing the figures presented we advise you to always note the time frame referenced in the individual tables, and to contact responsible offices should you have further questions. With this 21st edition, we continue our efforts to produce a Fact Book that provides both current information and an historical perspective. We welcome your comments and suggestions for additional information that might be included or improvements in the way infonnation is presented. James M. O'Neill & Ivy R. Dodge, Editors Office of the Executive Vice President December, 1992 \ ...'., i ,I r\ \ .'1 [ ~" J" . I: I' \;1 I, Objective & History The University Objective As a university established by the Society of Jesus, Boston College is devoted to the moral and intellectual education of its students and to the general advancement of human understanding. It is founded on the belief in God the Creator and Redeemer who, by His example and teaching, and by the unique natural faculties He has bestowed upon mankind, provides for the guidance of human life. Its Jesuit faculty, so closely associated with both the religious and humanistic aspects of the University from the beginning, particularly manifests its dedication to this comprehensive quest for truth. It is the purpose of Boston College to cultivate the attitudes and to provide the means essential to achieve: 1. respect for truth as the primary concern of the academic community; 2. freedom of inquiry as indispensable for attaining truth; 3. a faculty of competent scholars and teachers to direct the process of student development; 4. a curriculum that presents the content and the spirit of the liberal arts, in conjunction with academic specialization and professional education; 5. an intellectual reflection on religious experience and a respect for its value within the educational enterprise. Boston College welcomes to its community all persons, regardless of race, creed, color, sex, age, or handicap who respect its vision and desire to share in fulfilling its purpose. Source: The University Statutes ABrief History of Boston College Boston College was founded by the Society of Jesus in 1863, and is one of twenty-eightJesuit colleges and universities in the United States. With three teachers and twentytwo students, the school opened its doors on September 5, 1864. At the outset and for more than seven decades of its first century, the college remained an exclusively liberal arts institution with emphasis on the Greek and Latin classics, English and modem languages and with more attention to philosophy than to the physical or social sciences. Religion of course had its place in the classroom as well as in the nonacademic life of the college. Originally located on Harrison Avenue in the South End of Boston, where it shared quarters with the Boston College 7 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 finn 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 the surrounding property. 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 buildings standing on forty acres, it is now the site of the Boston College Law School, as well as several academic departments, and donnitories housing over 800 students, primarily freshmen. 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 Wallace E. Carroll 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 Departroent of Boston College in 1947, offering courses in geophysics and geology. The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences began programs at the doctoral level in 1952. Now courses leading to the doctorate are offered by twelve Arts and Sciences departments plus Education and Nursing. The Carroll Graduate School of Management and the Graduate School of Social Work also offer doctoral programs. 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. By 1970 all undergraduate programs had become coeducational. Today women students comprise more than half of the University's enrollment. Source: University Historian 8 Chronology ABoston College Chronology· 1857 Father John McElroy, S.]. purchased property in 1860 1863 1864 1877 1883 1895 1907 1913 1918 1919 1923 1924 1925 1928 1929 1935 1936 1938 1940 1941 1946 the South End of Boston for a new college. College building, Jesuit residence and Church of the Immaculate Conception completed. Gov. John A Andrews signed the charter of Boston College, April 1. First meeting of the Boston College trustees, July 6. Boston College opened on September 5, with Father John Bapst, S.]. as president and Father Robert Fulton, S.]. as dean. Twenty-two students admitted. First Commencement. Nine students received AB. degrees, June 28. The Stylus, the College literary magazine, founded. Boston College and Georgetown debaters held first American Jesuit intercollegiate debate at Boston College. Father Thomas Gasson, S.J. named president; purchased 31 acre Lawrence farm in Chestnut Hill for new campus. Gasson Hall completed. First graduation held at the Heights, June 18. Four classes enrolled in Gasson in September. Conscription and voluntary enlistment for World War I reduced the College enrollment to 125 in October, down from 671 two years earlier. Boston College's first major football victory, 5-3 over favored Yale at New Haven. First issue of The Heights, student weekly, November 17. Baseball team beat Holy Cross 4-1 before 30, 000 at Braves Field, June 18. Summer School started. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences started. Bapst library opened, the fourth of the early Maginnis and Walsh buildings. Weston Observatory, the seismological station, founded. Law School opened at 11 Beacon St., Boston. Evening College started as "Boston College Intown" at 126 Newbury Street, Boston. Greek requirement for the AB. degree dropped. Graduate School of Social Work opened at Newbury Street. School of Management opened at Newbury Street as the "College of Business Administration." Cotton Bowl vs. Clemson (3-6) first bowl game. Cardinal O'Connell purchased the Uggett estate, the upper campus, and gave it to the College. To accommodate post war enrollment, army surplus barracks became dormitories on the site of present 1947 1949 1951 1952 1954 1955 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1963 1964 1966 1968 Campion Hall; a larger office/classroom building was erected on the site of McGuinn, and a recreation building on the site of Cushing Hall. Construction begun on the first permanent building since the completion of Bapst in 1928, to house the College of Business Administration (occupied in September 1948). The School of Nursing opened at 126 Newbury Street. College acquired small reservoir (lower campus). Hockey team won national title at Colorado Springs. Lyons Hall was completed in July. The School of Education opened in September in Gasson Hall. Doctoral programs were begun in Economics, Education, and History, the beginning of increased emphasis on graduate education. Law School moved to St. Thomas More Hall on the Chestnut Hill campus. Claver, Loyola, and Xavier Halls opened, first campus residences constructed by B.C. The School of Education moved into Campion Hall. Graduate School of Management founded. Alumni Stadium dedicated September 21. Father Michael P. Walsh succeeded Father Joseph R N. Maxwell as president, February 5. Latin no longer required for the A B . degree. The College of Arts and Sciences Honors Program and the Scholar of the College program were begun. The original gymnasium, Roberts Center, and the first hockey rink, McHugh Forum, were opened. The Board of Regents, advisory to the trustees and administration, was established. The Nursing School occupied its campus building, Cushing Hall. Three more student residences, named for the early bishops of Boston, Cheverus, Fenwick, and Fitzpatrick, were completed. McElroy Commons opened. The Boston College Centennial Convocation was addressed by President]ohn F. Kennedy on April 20. The Self·Study of the College of Arts and Sciences led to a new core curriculum, a reduction in the course load, election of department chairmen, the establishment of Educational Policy committees, and sabbaticals. Carney Hall opened. Welch, Williams, and Roncalli residences were occupied. Higgins Hall was dedicated in November. Father W. Seavey Joyce succeeded Father Michael P. Walsh as president, July 1. The Regents joined the Jesuit trustees to form the Board of Directors, October 8. The Black Talent Program was started, precursor to ARANA Student Programs. Chronology 1970 Women admitted for degrees in all undergraduate 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1979 1980 1982 1984 1985 1986 colleges (Sept.). The modular residences were placed on the lower campus. Pulse, an academic/ social action program, was started. The Campus School for multi-handicapped children was begun. The office of president of Boston College and rector of the Boston College Jesuit community were separated on January 1. Installation of Omicron Chapter, Phi Beta Kappa, April 6. Father]. Donald Monan succeeded Father Joyce as president, September 5. The trustees voted to eliminate the Board of Directors and to expand the Board of Trustees to include laymen, November 19. The newly structured Board of Trustees, with 35 members (13 Jesuits), elected Cornelius Owens '36 chairman. The Women's Center was established. The Long-Range Fiscal Planning Committee presented to the Trustees a plan for balanced budgets for the succeeding five years. Newton College of the Sacred Heart became part of Boston College. The announcement was made on March 11. The Law School moved to the Newton Campus. Edmond's Hall was occupied in September. The New Heights Advancement Campaign to raise $21 million over five years was begun in April. By 1981 it raised more than $25 million. 1,000 friends.of Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill gathered iti Washington for a dinner attended by President Carter to establish the O'Neill Chair in AmeriCan Politics, December 9. The Graduate School of Social Work established a doctoral degree program. The Recreation Complex named for Athletic Director, William]. flynn. The Jesuit community endowed the Thomas I. Gasson, SJ. Chair for distinguished Jesuit scholars. Walsh Hall residence dedicated to former president Michael P. Walsh, SJ., October 7. O'Neill Library dedicated to Speaker of the House Thomas P. O'Neill, '36, October 14. Doug Flutie awarded Heisman Trophy. Football team defeated Houston (45-28) in the Cotton Bowl, January 1. The E. Paul Robsham, Jr. Theater Arts Center was dedicated on October 25. Rededication of renovated Bapst Library, dedication of Burns Library, April 22. McHugh Forum demolished to make way for new sports complex. Hall of Fame Bowl victory over Georgia (27-24). Goals/or Nineties (planning document) published. Alumni Association moved to Alumni House (then called Putnam House) on the Newton Campus to make room for the Commonwealth Avenue student 1987 1988 1989 1991 1992 9 residences. St. Patrick's Day dinner in Washington honoring Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill. Speakers included President Reagan, former President Gerald Ford, and Bob Hope. $2 million was raised for B.c. scholarships. Five year $125 million Campaign for Boston College started. The dismantling of McHugh Forum was begun to make way for Conte Forum. The Carroll Graduate School of Management's doctoral program in finance was approved by the Trustees. The Jesuit Institute, funded by a $1.5 million gift from the Jesuit community, with a matching University subsidy, was founded to promote research on the religious and Jesuit traditions of Boston College. Father Monan established a standing Council on the Catholic and Jesuit Identity of Boston College. Celebration of the acquisition of the millionth volume by the libraries, September 22. The first students enrolled in the new Nursing doctoral program. The Music Program became a department of the College of Arts and Sciences. Voute Hall and its companion student residence on Commonwealth Avenue were occupied. The Museum of Art (then called the art gallery) was opened in Devlin Hall. Boston College defeated Army in the first American collegiate football game played in Dublin, Ireland, November 19. Father Peter-Hans Kolvenbach, Superior General of the Society of Jesus spoke at celebrations of the University's 125th anniversary, October 5 and 7. Congressman Silvio O. Conte '49 was present for the dedication of Conte Forum on February 18. The School of Management became the Carroll School of Management and the Carroll Graduate School of Management in honor of Wallace E. Carroll '28. Sister Thea Bowman was awarded an honorary degree and AHANA House was named for her in October. Roberts Center was razed to make room for the Chemistry building. New Core Curriculum adopted. Wing added to Campion Hall, with major renovation of the original building. The Eugene F. Merkert Chemistry Center dedicated. The Campaign for Boston College completed, exceeding the $125 million goal by over $11 million. * References to presidents and Board of Trustee chairmen are minimized in this chronology since they are listed elsewhere in this Fact Book. Source: University Historian r' Profile 11 Boston College Profile Undergraduate Admissions (Class of 1996) Applicants Enrollees: Men Women Total Freshman Class Enrollment (FulI- and Part-Time; Fall, 1992) Undergraduate Graduate & Professional Total Enrollment Degrees Conferred (1991-1992) Undergraduate Graduate & Professional Total Degrees Conferred Alumni (Fall, 1992) 12,283 1,124 1,091 2,215 10,158 4,297 14,455 2,432 1,295 3,727 104,445 Faculty (1991-1992) Full-TIme Faculty Part-TIme Faculty (FrE) Teaching Fellows Teaching Assistants 578 174 151 187 Professional, Administrative, and Support StaN (Fall, 1992) Total Professional, Administrative Staff Total Secretarial, Clerical, Technical Total Buildings & Grounds, Plant Services 768 603 494 libraries - (Total Holdings) - Volumes (1992) Physical Plant (Fall, 1992) Acres (owned properties): Chestnut Hill Campus Newton Campus Other Total Acres Buildings (utilized properties): Administrative/Academic Student Residence Other Total Buildings Finance (1991-1992) Revenues Expenditures and Transfers 1,280,467 115.3 40.3 29.1 184.7 35 26 22 83 $284,300,000 284,300,000 ADMINISTRATION & FACULTY 14 Administration & Faculty Board of Trustee Membershipt 1992-1993 Samuel J. Gerson, '63 Chainnan and Chief Executive Officer Filene's Basement, Inc. • Joseph F. Abely, Jr., '50 Chainnan (Retired) Sea-Land Corporation Susan M. Gianinno, '70 Executive Vice President/Worldwide Group Director Young & Rubicam, Inc. Joseph A. Appleyard, SJ., '53 Rector of the Jesuit Community Boston College • Geoffrey T. Boisi, '69 limited Partner Goldman Sachs & Company John P. Giuggio, '51 Vice Chainnan (Retired) The Boston Globe Richard T. Horan, '53 President and Chief Executive Officer Hughes Oil Company Wayne A. Budd, '63 Associate Attorney General United States Department of]ustice George W. Hunt, SJ. Editor-in-Chief America Magazine Denis H. Carroll, '64 Chairman and Chief Executive Officer CRL Industries, Inc. Jones & Associates • James F. Cleary, '50 Advisory Director Paine Webber, Inc. • William F. Connell, '59 Chainnan and Chief Executive Officer Connell limited Partnership * John M. Connors, Jr., '63 President Hill, Holliday, Connors, Cosmopulos, Inc. John M. Corcoran, '48 Partner John M. Corcoran & Company Brian E. Daley, SJ. Michael D. Jones, Esq., '72, J.D. '76 Judith B. Krauss, '68 Dean and Professor of Nursing Yale University Michael J. Lavelle, SJ., Ph.D. '65 President John Carroll University Peter S. Lynch, '65 Trustee Fidelity Groups of Funds Catherine T. McNamee, C.SJ., M.Ed. '55, M.A. '58 President National Catholic Educational Association John A. McNeice, Jr., '54 Chairman and Chief Executive Officer The Colonial Group, Inc. Associate Professor Weston School of Theology Michael A. Fahey, SJ., '57, L.Th. '65 Dean, Theology Faculty University ofToronto, SI. Michael's College John R. Farrell, Jr. Chairman and Chief Executive Officer North American Mortgage Company • Yen-Tsai Feng Roy E. Larsen Ubrarian (Retired) Harvard College Charles D. Ferris, Esq., '54, J.D. '61, LL.D. '78 (Hon.) Senior Partner Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky, and Popeo, P.C. Thomas J. Flatley President The Flatley Company • J. Donald Monan, SJ. President Boston College RobertJ. Morrissey, Esq., '60 Partner Morrissey & Hawkins RobertJ. Murray, '62 Executive Vice President The Gillette Company R. Michael Murray, Jr., '61, M.A. '65 Director McKinsey & Company, Inc. • Hon. David S. Nelson, '57, J.D. '60, LL.D. '79 (Hon.) United States District]udge Kevin G. O'Connell, SJ., '62, M.A. '63 President Le Moyne College Administration & Faculty 15 * Edward M. O'F1aherty, SJ., '59, Th.M. '66 Director. Office of Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs Archdiocese of Boston. Thomas D. O'Malley Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Trustee Associate Membershipt 1992-93 Tosco Corporation Milton C. Borenstein, Esq., '35 Partner Concorde Associates Thomas P. O'Neill, III, '68 Chairman McDermott/O'Neill & Associates, Inc. William L. Brown Chairman of the Board (Retired) Bank of Boston Nicholas S. Rashlord, SJ. President St. Joseph's University RaYmond J. Callahan, SJ., M.A. '64, B.D. '69 President Loyola Academy E. Paul Robsham, M.Ed. '83 President (Retired) Robsham Industries. Inc. John M. Cataldo, '44 Chairman Materials Development Corporation Walter T. Rossi, '64 Retail Executive Joseph F. Cotter, '49 Associate Director. Operational and Internal Control Bank of Boston Hon. Warren B. Rudman, J.D. '60 United States Senate Hon. Marianne D. Short, '72 (Newton College), J.D. '76 Minnesota Court of Appeals Sylvia Q. Simmons, M.Ed. '62, Ph.D. '90 John F. Cunningham, '64 Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer Cunningham and Company Massachusetts Higher Education Assistance Corp. John T. Fallon Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer RM. Bradley & Co., Inc. Richard F. Syron, '66, LL.D. '89 (Hon.) President and Chief Executive Officer Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Thomas J. Flanagan, '42 Chairman. President and Chief Executive Officer The Cislunar Corporation Sandra J. Thomson, M.D., '58 (Newton College) The Children's Hospital Medical Center Department of Orthodaedic Surgery Thomas J. Galligan, Jr., '41, D.B.A. '75 (Hon.) Chairman and Chief Executive Officer (Retired) Boston Edison Company Senior Vice President * Thomas A. Vanderslice, '53 Avram J. Goldberg Chairman The AVCAR Group Ud. Chairman and Chief Executive Officer M/A-COM. Inc. Mary Jane Voute Boston College Parent Patricia A. Guier, M.A. '51, Ph.D. '57 Dean of the College of Uberal Arts (Retired) University of Lowell tOnly Boston College degrees listed. -Executive Committee Member Source: President's Office Roberta L. Hazard, '56, M.Ed. '57 Rear Admiral (Retired) John J. Higgins, SJ., '59, M.A. '60, S.T.L. '67 Executive Assistant to the President Fairfield University Board of Trustee Chairmen Cornelius W. Owens Thomas J. Galligan, Jr. James P. O'Neill William F. Connell David S. Nelson Thomas A. Vanderslice John M. Connors, Jr. 1972-1975 1975-1978 1978-1981 1981-1984 1984-1987 1987-1990 1990- Denise Latson Janey, '75 (Newton College) Advisory Systems Engineer IBM Corporation Anne P. Jones, Esq., '58, J.D. '61 Partner Sutherland. Asbill & Brennan 16 Administration & Faculty Officers of the University Mary M. Lai Vice President for Finance and Treasurer Long Island University Fall 1992 John Lowell Partner Welch and Forbes J. Donald Monan, S,J. Francis C. Mackin, SJ., M.A. '53 Boston College Alumni Association Moderator Joseph E. McConnick, SJ., M.A. '46 Jesuit Urban Center John G. McElwee, J.D. '50, IL.D. '87 (Han.) Director John Hancock MutualUfe Insurance Company JohnJ. McMullen Chairman John J. McMullen Associates, Inc. Robert A. Mitchell, SJ. Consultant to the Jesuit Conference for Higher Education Thomas M. Moran, '48 President T.M. Moran Co., Inc. Giles E. Mosher, Jr., '55 President and Chief Executive Officer BayBank Emma Jeanne Mudd Boston College Parent Michael E. Murphy, '58 President Executive Vice President Joseph M. Pastore, Jr. Academic Vice President and Dean of Faculties William B. Neenan, S,J. Vice President for Administration John T. Driscoll Vice President, Assistant to the President Margaret A Dwyer Financial Vice President and Treasurer Peter C. McKenzie Vice President for Human Resources Leo V. Sullivan Secretary of the University Joseph P. Duffy, S,J. Senior Vice President James P. Mcintyre Executive Vice President and Chief Financial and Administrative Officer Sara Lee Corporation Vice President of Student Affairs Cornelius W. Owens, '36, IL.D. '68 (Han.) Executive Vice President (Retired) AT&T Vice President for Unversity Relations Clare A. Schoenfeld, '72 Independent Computer Consultant Helen M. Stanton, M.S.W. '43 Boston College Alumna Robert l.. Sullivan, '50, M.A. '52 International Practice Director (Retired) Management Consulting Peat, Marwick. Mitchell & Co. Joseph F. Turley President (Retired) The Gillette Company Blenda J. Wilson, Ph.D. '79 President California State University, Northridge t Only Boston College degrees listed. Source: President's Office Kevin P. Duffy Mary Lou Delong '. BOlrd .f TmI... •. I 0; • v~ l~., .........f(tes)}"....... If, aitv aptOTHif/ll "- Pmldelll J.D. Monan, SJ. Executive Academic Vice President Vice President Vici Prnldllll University lolhe Presldelll Relations M.DWYlr M.L.Delllllll ,,, VlcI Prnidenl Slnlor Vici Presidlal VlCI Presldenl VlCI Pmldanl Student f" Human Resources Affairs Admlnldralloll L. SUlllvall K.Dutty J. Driscoll UniYel$ity Cbaplala Unlverslly Unlnrslty Secretary Historian R. Cleary, SJ. J. Dllfty, S.J. C. DonllV3n, S.J. • Boston College Chart of Administration 1992 Assocl.le Aeldemlc VicI Presldanl Associate Dean 01 Faculties Associate Olin lor Admlnistr.tilm R. Newton D. White R. Spinello Dean Grldu.te School of Arts & Sciences Olin Collllliol Arts & Sclencls Olin DIID School or Nursing Low D. White J. R. Barth, SJ. B. MulllO School DllIn School 01 Educallon D. Coqulllelte D. Pullin Director Community Allairs E.eculin Dlreelor Illlormatlon Technology J. McKeigUi J. Wissler B. Glellon ElIcuUve Director DlvtllOllmant Director Computer Cenler Director Emplo,.. Relallona Director cerllr Canler DIrector BuildIngs and Grounds R. Jatlarsoll D. Brown M. Margin A. Pennino Dirtclor Space Manlgemenl Director Allirrnltive Action Dlla Stud.nt Dlvtlollmenl Dlflctor Housing Dlreclor Dinino Semces Legal Counsel Fln,nce and Busine.. Alfeirs R. Feat J. Saund.11I B. Mll1Ihali R. Sharwood M. Cunningham D. Yasalonla, SJ. Director Public AffIlrs Direttor M.I.S. Unhel1lll, Policies & Pmldarts Director Haman RasoaIA DeYllopmerrt Director CoallSlllng Semces OlflelDr Healtll •",1", campos Pollet Cblel Director Risk Managemenl aad lasurance D. Whiling J. Harrington I.Dodlle A. Jllgh$lian T. McGuinnass A. Mazur R.Mom M.Prinn Bealfils Mauller Director LurrrlllQ Rasollrcn tar AlIlIItU Dll1ctor Th,lIer Arts Cenlllr Director Booutol1 C. Glldcbut Anoclale Trallurer Colllroller P. Haran M. Driscoll Director Badgels R. Capalbo Dlreelor AudIovisual services Director Research Admlnlslrallon B. Birnbaum DIrector latamrallon Procautnll S".... J. Burtt Director Network Semces Dlraclor Cblld care J. Woods, SJ. J. Woods, SJ. Y. Sallo S. Erletson Director Institul. lor SlIac. Rneareh Director Institute 01 Religious Ed. and Pastoral MInistry L. Power R.lmballi Supervisor Uainl1llty Workshop Dlflctor Social Wellare Research Insl. Director Junior Year Abroad Program Acting Director Honors Proaram S. Winchell P. Sch,lVIsh J. Aagg M. O'Connor M. Callnan DI...... Purcbaslng DirectDr Internal AadU H. Enoch Unlvel1lty librarian Ol,n EnroUmell1 Mlneoemenl R. Lay I Associate Dean (G) Assoclale Olin Assocille Olin Auoelatl Olin (GJ Assoclale Olin P. De Lteuw J. Burns M. MtHugll N. Mccarthy B. Latch M. Bflbect L. Corsini A. Hanwell Director lalemaUonal Programs Senior Aaoclate Unlnrslty LIbrarian Director Academic Dlvelopment Cenler Dlractor Undergraduate AdmlAloD M. SI. DnDl T. cannoa T. bgelo J. Malloney I Assoclale Dean Associate Dean Assoclale Daln (UI Assocllt. Olin M.D.D'Keeffe.D.P. C. Hurd Green L. Higgins M. BrodIn Asslstllll Daan lor Siudents Associate Deln (U) Anistaal Olin Assislaal S. Donelan R. L. Dllllne Asslslanl Dian lor Field EducaUon Assoc. University Ubrarlan, AceeA Services P. Collins C. MDrntlr J. Bowdllch A. Casa, Director Caalar lor T,sling,EnI. & Ed. Policy I H. Reynolds R. Kleley L. Lonaboctar DlrectDr CampllS School Director Malllgemeat Ctnlllr Assoc:. UniYlrslly Ubrarllll, Colledlolll aad IlllomrlUOIl S. Hamby O'Conaor Director Eanlllmeat MaaagllmlDI Rnllrcb P.DiMatlia J. McKiernan J. SlIl'IIl A.Dellney Observatory Director law Scbool D..,lopmeat Dellatlmeat Cball1l Dlpatlmeat Cb,ll1 J. Stelwl. SJ. L. Datty Departmeat Cull1 W. Chadwlct Ualnrally Registrar G. Madaus Director Center for NlIl1Ilng Resaarcb M. Dally Director Westall AAlstaal Olin Director Anlnelal Aid Assoc. Ull;iYll1llty Ubrarllll, AutomaUoa Ind Tech. SeMen DOl' Chia' Ub"".. f- law Ubrary B. Krakowsty C. Jetrel1l S.ulon J. Hopps Senior Assoclale Olin T. McKeuna K. Lyons College J. NeuhlllSlr Assoelale Olin J. Beckwllh W. Aemlng Dlln Summer Anocille De.. ,,_ Director Publication alld Prlat Mal'llllllq Olin Enning Managemenl O.an Gredua" School 01' Social Wol'll -----.J Director AHANA StadeI'I Proorams Director Athlellcs Olin Schoot 01 M. CrOl1in P. McKemie (1) ElIeuUn Direclor Alamnl Auoclillon ~ W.O. Nnnan, SJ. Anlnel,l Viti President Ind Treasurer J. Mcilltyre I Ind Dean or Facullin J.M. Pastore. Jr. VlCI Prnldlnl Asslslant I Bllrns Ubrarlu R. O'Neill (1) AHANA - African-American, Hispanic, Asian, and Native American (2) Includes Graduate Programs in Education and Nursing Source: Office of Human Resources, December 1992 Administration & Faculty 17 Academic Administration Department Chairmen and Chairwomen Fall 1992 Fall 1992 William B. Neenan, S.]., Academic Vice President and Dean of Faculties Robert R Newton, Associate Academic Vice President Donald]. White, Associate Dean of Faculties Richard A Spinello, Associate Dean for Administration Accounting Biology Chemistry Classical Studies Communication and Theater Computer Sciences Economics English Finance Fine Arts Geology and Geophysics Germanic Studies History Law Marketing Mathematics Music Operations & Strategic Management Organizational Studies Philosophy Physics Political Science Psychology Romance Languages and literatures Slavic and Eastern Languages Sociology Theology The College of Arts and Sciences J. Robert Barth, S.J., Dean Marie M. McHugh, Senior Associate Dean Joseph]. Bums, Associate Dean Carol Hurd Green, Associate Dean Mary Daniel O'Keeffe, O.P., Associate Dean The Evening College of Arts, Sciences, and Business Administration James A Woods, S.]., Dean The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Donald J. White, Dean Patricia De Leeuw, Associate Dean The School of Education Diana C. Pullin, Dean Mary M. Brabeck, Associate Dean Anabel P. Casey, Assistant Dean for Students The Law School Daniel R Coquillette, Dean Mark Brodin, Associate Dean Brian P. Lutch, Associate Dean R lisa DiLuna, Assistant Dean The Carroll School of Management John]. Neuhauser, Dean Louis S. Corsini, Associate Dean (Graduate) James L. Bowditch, Associate Dean (Undergraduate) Richard Keeley, Assistant Dean The School of Nursing Barbara H. Munro, Dean Nancy C. McCarthy, Associate Dean (Graduate) Loretta Higgins, Associate Dean (Undergraduate) Susan E. Donelan, Assistant Dean The Graduate School of Social Work June G. Hopps, Dean Albert F. Hanwell, Associate Dean Pauline Collins, Assistant Dean for Field Education The Summer Session James A Woods, S.]., Dean Source: Office of Human Resources Kenneth Schwartz William Petri Evan R Kantrowitz Charles Ahern, Jr. W. James Willis Michael C. McFarland, S.]. Joseph F. Quinn Judith Wilt Hassan Tehranian Jeffery W. Howe David C. Roy W. Michael Resler James Cronin David P. Twomey Michael Peters William J. Keane T. Frank Kennedy, S.]. Jeffrey L. Ringuest Jean M. Bartunek, RS.C.J. Joseph F. X. Flanagan, S.]. Rein A Uritam Dennis B. Hale M. Jeanne Sholl Matilda Bruckner Michael]. Connolly Sharlene Hesse-Biber Donald Dietrich Source: Office of the Academic Vice President 18 Administration & Faculty University Administrators Fall 1992 Academic Development Center Thomas A Angelo, Director Electronics/Machine Workshop Scott W. Winchell, Supervisor Management Information Systems Joseph Harrington, Director Undergraduate Admission John L Mahoney, Jr., Director Dean for Enrollment Management Robert S. Lay Network Services Clayton Jeffers, Director Affirmative Action Barbara Marshall, Director Financial Aid Helen Reynolds, Director Center for Nursing Research Mary Duffy, Director AHANA Student Programs Donald Brown, Director Freshman Year Experience Programs Neal A Hartman, Director University Policies & Procedures Ivy Dodge, Director Alumni Association John F. Wissler, Executive Director Athletics Chet S. Gladchuk, Director Health Services Arnold F. Mazur, M.D., Director University Audiovisual Services Yoshio Saito, Director Honors Program, College of Arts & Sciences Mark O'Connor, Acting Director Bookstore Thomas McKenna, Director Housing Robert F. Capalbo, Director University Budgets Michael T. Callnan, Director Human Resource Development Alice Jeghelian, Director Buildings and Grounds Alfred G. Pennino, Director Information Processing Support William Fleming, Director Campus Police Robert A Morse, Chief Information Technology Bernard W. Gleason, Jr., Executive Director Campus School Philip A DiMattia, Director Career Center Marilyn S. Morgan, Director University Chaplain Richard T. Cleary, S,J. Child Care Center Barbara A Krakowsky, Director Community Mairs Jean S. McKeigue, Director Computer Center Rodney J. Feak, Director Controller Michael J. Driscoll University Counseling Services Thomas P. McGuinness, Director Development Executive Director (vacant) Dining Services Michael]. Cunningham, Director Publications and Print Marketing Ben Birnbaum, Director Public Affairs Douglas]. Whiting, Director Purchasing John D. Beckwith, Director University Registrar Louise M. Lonabocker Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry Robert P. Imbelli, Director Research Administration Stephen Erickson, Director Risk Management & Insurance Michael J. Prinn, Director Internal Audit William E. Chadwick, Director Social Welfare Research Institute Paul G. Schervish, Director International Programs Marian St. Onge, Director Space Management Joyce c. Saunders, Director Law School Development Lawrence Duffy, Director Law School library Sharon Hamby O'Connor, Chief librarian Learning Resources for Student Athletes Kevin M. Lyons, Director Legal Counsel, Finance and Business Mairs Dennis J. Yesalonia, S.J. University librarian Mary J. Cronin Management Center John McKiernan, Director Institute for Space Research Leo F. Power, Jr., Director Dean for Student Development RobertA Sherwood Center for Testing, Evaluation, and Educational Policy George F. Madaus, Director Theater Arts Center Howard Enoch, Director Associate Treasurer Paul P. Haran Weston Observatory James W. Skehan, S,J., Director Source: Office of Human Resources Administration & Faculty 19 Professional, Administrative, and Support Staff Personnel By Gender, Fall 1992 Men Professional, Administrative President's, Executive Vice President's Offices' Dean of Faculties" Men Pari-Time Positions Women Open Total 32 1 70 1 15 199 19 Financial and Business Affairs 22 27 1 50 Administration 61 22 8 91 Student Affairs 31 44 3 78 31 14 University Relations 24 25 2 51 2 Athletics 33 10 2 45 27 2 16 1 19 19 39 22 3 64 64 301 292 36 629 80 35 24 139 768 Secretarial, Clerical 15 362 18 395 1 40 9 50 445 Ubrary Assistants 28 36 4 68 1 12 13 81 Technical, other 49 10 5 64 9 2 2 13 77 Total 92 408 27 527 11 54 11 76 603 108 33 10 151 Grounds & Trades 99 1 5 105 1 1 2 107 Gate Attendants, Campus Police 41 2 2 45 17 2 19 64 8 7 15 2 4 2 8 23 96 35 4 135 6 8 14 149 Total 352 78 21 451 26 12 5 43 494 Total Positions 745 778 84 1,607 117 101 40 258 1,865 Information Technology Total Secretarial, Clerical, Technical 1 Total Positions 12 114 Human Resources 19 Full-Time Positions Women Open Total 6 5 30 33 229 50 1 92 5 50 128 4 3 9 60 10 11 48 93 1 BUildings & Grounds, Plant Services Housekeeping Mailroom, Switchboard Dining 151 • Includes Senior Vice President's Office, Chaplain's Office, Community Affairs, University Secretary's Office, University Historian's Office, Space Management, and University Policies and Procedures, and all executives. ** Includes Libraries. Note: The above figures represent all positions funded by the University as o[July I, 1992. Sponsored research positions are not included. Positions funded partially by the University and partially by outside contracts or grants are counted above as part-time University positions. Source: Office of Human Resources 20 Administration & Faculty Faculty by School and Rank 1991-1992 School Arts & Sciences Education Management Nursing Law Social Work Total Professor No. % 123 12 17 6 17 3 178 35 26 21 14 37 21 31 Associate No. % 149 19 27 25 12 5 237 43 40 33 60 26 36 41 Assistant No. % 68 15 29 8 17 6 143 20 32 36 19 37 43 25 Instructor No. % 7 1 9 3 2 2 10 7 20 3 Total No. % 347 47 82 42 46 14 578 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 Source: Office of the Academic Vice President Full-Time Equivalent Faculty by School* 1991-1992 School Arts & Sciences Education Management Nursing Law Social Work Total FTE of Full-Time Faculty No. % 317.95 59 44.00 8 78.60 15 41.00 8 40.00 7 14.75 3 536.30 100 FTE of Part-Time Faculty No. % 103.33 59 16.67 10 16.50 9 2.17 1 8.00 5 27.25 16 173.92 100 FTE of Teaching Fellows & Assistants No. % 94.83 85 16.30 15 111.13 100 Total FTE Faculty No. % 516.11 63 76.97 9 95.10 12 43.17 5 48.00 6 42.00 5 821.35 100 -Method of computation: three courses equal one full-time faculty member. Note: Figures representing full-time faculty do not include the following: full-time academic administrators or directors, teaching fellows, special contracts; pari-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. Source: Office of the Academic Vice President Faculty by School and Tenure Status 1991-1992 School Arts & Sciences Education Management Nursing Law Social Work Total Tenured Faculty No. % 263 76 31 67 41 50 32 76 24 52 __ 7 50 398 69 Source: Office of the Academic Vice President Non-Tenured Faculty No. % 84 24 16 33 41 50 10 24 22 48 ~ 50 180 31 Total No. 347 47 82 42 46 -.li 578 % 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 Administration & Faculty 21 Faculty by School and Gender 1991-1992 Women Men % School No. 'Ii No. 'Ii Arts & Sciences 87 17 14 42 14 6 180 48 9 8 23 8 4 100 260 30 68 65 8 17 32 8 398 8 2 100 Education Management Nursing Law Social Work Total Total No. Men Women 347 47 82 42 46 14 578 25 36 17 100 30 43 31 75 64 83 70 47 69 Source: Office of the Academic Vice President Faculty by Highest Earned Degree and Rank 1991-1992 Degree Doctorate Professor No. 'Ii 175 30 Masters 2 First Professional' 1 Total 178 Associate No. 'Ii 229 40 1 8 31 237 Assistant No. 'Ii 133 23 1 41 Instructor No. 'Ii 8 1 7 1 11 3 1 1 143 25 20 2 3 'Including STB, PhL, and STL. Source: Office of the Academic Vice President Faculty by Highest Earned Degree and Gender 1991-1992 Women Degree Doctorate Masters No. 168 12 93 7 First Professional' Total 180 'Including STH, PhL, and STL. Source: Office of the Academic Vice President Total Men No. 377 'Ii 100 95 No. 545 16 4 28 5 5 1 5 1 398 100 578 100 'Ii % 94 Total No. % 545 94 28 5 5 1 578 100 22 Administration & Faculty Faculty by Rank and Gender 1991-1992 Women Rank Professor No. 32 Associate Total Men % 37 No. 178 165 41 237 41 37 76 19 143 25 9 5 11 3 20 3 180 100 398 100 578 100 % 18 No. 146 72 40 Assistant 67 Instructor Total % 31 Source: Office of the Academic Vice President Full-Time Faculty, Teaching Fellows, and Teaching Assistants By School and Department, 1991-1992 Full-Time Faculty Teaching Fellows Teaching Assistants Arts & Sciences Biology Chemistry Classics Communication & Theater' Economics English Fine Arts' Geology German' History Mathematics Music' Philosophy Physics Political Science Psychology Romance Languages Slavic/Eastern Sociology Theology Arts & Science. Total Education Law Management Nursing Social Work Total 19 17 4 12 24 39 12 10 4 34 21 3 26 11 20 19 14 4 19 ~ 347 47 46 82 42 --l£ 578 33 28 13 25 7 15 3 12 17 30 1 38 1 7 __ 6 136 18 5 4 17 ----l£ 156 13 27 2 4 -151 *No graduate program. Sources: Office of the Academic Vice President; Dean's Office, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences -- 187 Administration & Faculty 23 Faculty Compensation Average by Rank* Year Professor Associate Assistant Instructor 1982-83 50.900 37.900 30.100 23,600 1983-84 52,600 39,700 32.100 27,000 1984-85 57.000 43,000 37,380 29,380 1985-86 61,990 46,120 38.300 32.380 1986-87 65.700 48.800 40,200 34,900 1987-88 68,800 51,600 40,900 35.300 1988-89 71.200 54.600 43.500 39,400 1989-90 75,200 58,100 46.600 46.600 1990-91 81,200 61.500 52,000 43.500 1991-92 87,000 66.800 57.700 48,800 'Includes salary and fringe benefits. Source: Office of the Academic Vice President Average Faculty Compensation by Rank* Boston College Compared to AAUP Category I (9-Month Equivalent), 1991-1992 Rank Boston College All Combined Category Church-Related Professor $87,000 $79.640 $83,830 Associate 66.800 57.660 60,960 Assistant 57.700 48.640 50,000 Instructor 48,800 35,290 42,150 'Includes salary and fringe benefits. Sources: Office of the Academic Vice President; Academe. March-April 1992. STUDENTS 26 Students Full-Time Freshman Enrollment Freshman Admission Profile By Year and Gender Fall Men Women Class Percentage in Top 10% 01 High School Verbal Math Combined 1989 82 520- 620 570- 660 1,110 - 1,260 1990 82 530- 620 570-670 1,110 - 1,280 1991 81 520- 620 580-670 1,130 - 1,270 1992 83 520 - 610 580-680 1,120 - 1,270 1993 85 520- 620 580 - 680 1,130 - 1,280 1994 76 510 - 603 590-680 1,120 - 1,270 1995 79 510 - 610 590-680 1,130 - 1,270 1996 69 520 - 610 590-680 1,140 - 1,270 Total 1983 981 1,357 2,338 1984 1,030 1,276 2,306 1985 984 1,393 2,377 1986 997 1,198 2,195 1987 1,022 1,259 2,281 1988 1,056 1,213 2,269 1989 866 1,252 2,118 1990 1,053 1,074 2,127 1991 1,138 1,440 2,578 1992 1,124 1,091 2,215 Middle 50% Range 01 SAT Scores Note: Statistics for the Class of 1996 are as oOuly, 1992. SAT score ranges, 25th percentile - 75th percentile, are now the standard reporting statistic in all major admissinn guides. Snurce: Dean of Enrollment Management Office Source: Office of Undergraduate Admission Freshman Applications, Acceptances, and Enrollment Full-Time Total Enrollment Enrollment as a % 01 Acceptances Enrollment as a % 01 Applications Fall Applications Acceptances Acceptances as a % 01 Applications 1983 12,414 4,890 39 2,338 48 19 1984 14,398 5,100 35 2,306 45 16 1985 16,163 4,938 31 2,377 48 15 1986 14,986 4,960 33 2,195 44 15 1987 15,593 5,029 32 2,281 45 15 1988 15,523 5,190 33 2,269 44 15 1989 13,526 5,069 37 2,118 42 16 1990 12,403 5,606 45 2,127 38 17 1991 11,516 6,423 56 2,578 40 22 1992 12,283 5,590 45 2,215 40 18 Freshman enrollment reporled above is based on deposits received, on or before the deadline set by the Committee on Admission, from students accepting the offer of admission extended by the University. Withdrawals may occur during the summer and the first two weeks in September. Acceptance and enrollment figures for Fall 1992 are based on deposits received as of May 14, 1992. Snurce: Office of Undergraduate Admission Note: Students 27 Applications, Acceptances, and Enrollees - Class of 1996 Geographic Distribution State Alabama Applications Acceptances Enrollees 18 10 2 State Nevada Alaska 13 7 2 New Hampshire Arizona 38 18 6 New Jersey Arkansas 6 1 California 620 269 89 New York Colorado 43 19 10 1.076 489 215 Delaware 30 19 7 Ohio District of Columbia 45 24 6 Florida 330 155 55 Georgia 72 30 6 Hawaii 77 42 11 Idaho 3 1 Illinois 273 112 48 Indiana 34 19 7 Iowa 19 8 Kansas 13 5 Kentucky 7 1 Louisiana 44 Maine Maryland Applications Acceptances Enrollees 9 4 4 254 97 35 1.228 497 221 10 3 1.926 835 302 North Carolina 24 9 3 North Dakota 3 1 209 101 24 Oklahoma 22 12 4 Oregon 27 13 2 Pennsylvania 510 225 94 Rhode Island 271 125 56 13 5 1 1 1 16 10 1 Texas 161 72 22 Utah 10 4 1 Vermont 69 25 9 28 7 Virginia 152 62 17 136 55 28 Washington 55 35 18 230 102 31 West Virginia 8 4 2 3.119 1.603 696 Wisconsin 76 40 19 Michigan 118 41 16 Wyoming 1 1 Minnesota 107 46 27 Guam 7 6 4 Mississippi 3 1 1 119 59 21 Missouri 70 38 11 6 3 Montana 8 6 522 175 66 Nebraska 22 17 12,283 5,590 2,215 Connecticut Massachusetts New Mexico South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Puerto Rico Virgin Islands Foreign 8 Total Note: Application totals are as of April 23. 1992. Acceplance totals are as of April 23. 1992. Enrollee totals are as of May 14. 1992. The Class of 1996 includes students from 40 states and 32 foreign countries. Source: Office of Undergraduate Admission 28 Students Top Competitors for Highly-Rated Applicants Class of 1995 Home Region 01 Applicant Inslilutions Harvard University, College of the Holy Cross, Tufts University Yale University, University of Connecticut, University of New Hampshire, Brown University Cornell University, SUNY-Binghamton, Princeton University Duke University, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, College of William and Mary Marquette University, University of Michigan, University of Wisconsin University of California-San Diego, Stanford University, University of California-Los Angeles Greater Boston Rest of New England Mid Atlantic South/Southwest Midwest West Note: Competing institutions are ranked within each region by volume of shared applications submitted by students rated in the top fIVe percent of Boston College's freshman applicant pool. Source: Office of Enrollment Management Research Undergraduate Transfer Student Applications, Acceptances, and Enrollment Ful1-Tnne Fall" Applications Acceptances 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1,557 1,584 1,621 1,608 1,579 1,465 1,415 436 455 496 416 535 549 479 Acceptances as a % ot Applications 28 29 31 26 34 37 34 Total Enrollment Enrollment as a % ot Acceptances Enrollment as a % 01 Applications 58 16 18 19 16 20 20 17 252 286 308 251 309 297 238 63 62 60 58 54 50 Source: Office of Undergraduate Admission Undergraduate Transfer Student Enrollment By Type of Previous Institution and Gender Fall" 2-Year Public 2-Year Private 4-Year Public 4-Year Private Total Men Women 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 19 6 27 17 29 37 27 9 17 20 4 6 12 15 49 73 59 51 57 43 73 175 190 202 179 217 205 123 252 286 308 251 309 297 238 100 114 119 94 135 128 99 152 172 189 157 174 172 139 *Transfer enrollment typically increases 75-125 students second semester. Source: Office of Undergraduate Admission Total 252 286 308 251 309 297 238 Students 29 Enrollment, Fall 1992 By School, Gender, and Full- and Part-TIme Full-Time Pari-Time School Men Women Total Undergraduate Enrollment Arts & Sciences Management Education Nursing 2,668 1,249 80 13 2,744 828 667 407 5,412 2,077 747 420 Total Day Students 4,010 4,646 211 Men Women Total Total Men Women Total 2,744 828 668 416 5,412 2,077 748 430 1 1 9 1 10 2,668 1,249 80 14 8.656 1 10 11 4,011 4,656 8,667 173 384 486 621 1,107 697 794 1,491 4,221 4,819 9,040 487 631 1,118 4,708 5,450 10,158 Graduate & Professional Enrollment Graduate Arts & Sciences Graduate Management Graduate Social Work Law 269 112 34 465 470 67 240 395 739 179 274 860 509 371 39 1 972 214 137 2 1,481 585 176 3 778 483 73 466 1,442 281 377 397 2,220 764 450 863 Total Graduate & Professional 880 1,172 2,052 920 1,325 2,245 1,800 2,497 4,297 5,991 11,092 1,407 1,956 3,363 6.508 7,947 14.455 Evening College Total Undergraduate Total University 5,101 -- Source: Registrar Student Credit Hours by School* School 1985-86 1986-87 1987-88 1988-89 1989-90 1990-91 1991-92 Undergraduate Arts & Sciences Management Education Nursing Evening College 151,582 62,816 19,628 14,591 20,355 153,602 60,700 20,461 12,422 19,329 155,925 62,105 20,435 10,625 19,367 160,413 61,414 19,831 9,424 20,206 156,841 59,681 20,951 9,992 19,794 153,955 59,720 21,693 9,678 19,016 159,523 59,668 22,221 10,241 19,103 268,972 266,514 268,457 271,288 267,259 264,062 270,756 19,512 8.394 10,437 21,754 18,874 8.761 9,780 24,108 19,003 9,290 9,956 21,906 20,113 9,927 9,541 22,935 21,213 10,439 10,167 23,593 22,465 11,648 10,866 25,080 22,932 11,224 12,416 24,339 60,097 61,523 60,155 62,516 65,412 70,059 70,911 329,069 328,037 328,612 333,804 332,671 334,121 341,667 Total Undergraduate Graduate & Professional Graduate Arts & Sciences" Graduate Management Graduate Social Work Law Total Graduate & Professional Total * Most one semester courses at Boston College carry a value of three credit hours. The figures shown are the sum of fall and spring semester enrollments for each academic year. Summer enrollment is excluded. ** Includes graduate course work in Education and Nursing. Source: Registrar 30 Students Undergraduate, Graduate, and Professional Enrollment, Fall 1985 to 1992 By School, Gender, and Full- and Part-TIme Undergraduate Fall 1985 Full-TIme Part-TIme Men Women Total Fall 1986 Full-TIme Part-TIme Men Women Total Fall 1987 Full-TIme Part-TIme Men Women Total Fall 1988 Full-TIme Part-TIme Men Women Total Fall 1989 Full-TIme Part-TIme Men Women Total Fall 1990 Full-Time Part-TIme Men Women Total Fall 1991 Full-TIme Part-TIme Men Women Total Fall 1992 Full-TIme Part-TIme Men Women Total Source: Registrar A&S Mgt. Ed. Nurs. Eve. Total GA&S GMgt. GSW Law Total Univ. Total 5,281 2,198 671 1,171 1,027 2,198 49 622 671 349 1,592 802 1,139 1,941 9,015 1,617 4,477 6,155 10,632 614 1,481 790 1,305 2,095 168 412 340 240 580 224 152 88 288 376 793 2,451 2,830 5,281 516 25 4 537 541 432 361 793 1,799 2,045 1,650 2,194 3,844 10,814 3,662 6,127 8,349 14,476 5,192 2,108 683 2,380 2,812 5,192 1,172 936 2,108 64 619 438 24 2 460 462 350 1,436 698 1,088 1,786 8,771 1,460 4,316 5,915 10,231 520 1,517 745 1,292 2,037 161 426 352 235 587 207 152 76 283 359 776 3 389 390 779 1,664 2,098 1562 2,200 3,762 10,435 3,558 5,878 8,115 13,993 5,413 2,152 706 2,486 2,927 5,413 1,224 928 2,152 65 641 706 369 16 1 384 385 374 1,428 768 1,034 1,802 9,014 1,444 4,544 5,914 10,458 549 1,491 718 1,322 2,040 190 474 409 255 664 226 152 79 299 378 783 7 396 374 770 1,728 2,124 1,602 2,250 3,852 10,742 3,568 6,146 8,164 14,310 5,579 2,154 694 2,560 3,019 5,579 1,269 885 2,154 77 617 694 325 13 1 337 338 402 1,364 707 1,059 1,766 9,154 1,377 4,614 5,917 10,531 647 1,530 769 1,408 2,177 208 491 447 252 699 217 141 76 282 358 795 1 387 409 796 1,867 2,183 1,679 2,351 4,030 11,021 3,540 6,293 8,268 14,561 5,493 2,093 705 2,487 3,006 5,493 1,262 831 2,093 81 624 705 342 16 5 353 358 399 1,278 717 960 1,677 9,032 1,294 4,552 5,774 10,326 702 1,482 779 1,405 2184 222 520 463 279 742 225 158 67 316 383 813 1 403 411 814 1,962 2,161 1,712 2,411 4,123 10,994 3,455 6,264 8,185 14,449 5,389 2,114 728 2,510 2,879 5,389 1,286 828 2,114 74 654 728 343 12 7 348 355 387 1,245 687 945 1,632 8,961 1,257 4,564 5,654 10,218 703 1,501 777 1,427 2,204 251 563 514 300 814 246 161 65 342 407 869 3 451 421 872 2,069 2,228 1,807 2,490 4,297 11,030 3,485 6,371 8,144 14,515 5,563 2,117 755 2,614 2,949 5,563 1,288 829 2,117 85 670 755 357 14 10 361 371 373 1,122 652 843 1,495 9,165 1,136 4,649 5,652 10,301 766 1,438 759 1,445 2,204 247 538 480 305 785 267 162 67 362 429 837 1 439 399 838 2,117 2,139 1,745 2,511 4,256 11,282 3,275 6,394 8,163 14,557 5,412 2,077 2,668 2,744 5,412 1,249 828 2,077 747 1 80 668 748 420 10 14 416 430 384 1,107 697 794 1,491 9,040 1,118 4,708 5,450 10,158 739 1,481 778 1,442 2,220 179 585 483 281 764 274 176 73 377 450 860 3 466 397 863 2,052 2,245 1,800 2,497 4,297 11,092 3,363 6,508 7,947 14,455 683 Graduate & Professional Students 31 AHANA and International Student Enrollment, Fall 1990, 1991 & 1992* By Gender Men 1991 Undergraduate Day Schools 1990 African-American American Indian Asian Hispanic 137 128 2 5 199 153 1992 1990 Women 1991 1992 223 163 138 10 260 171 164 159 170 776 308 337 331 248 251 247 1990 287 12 560 414 308 16 591 418 1,273 257 1,333 282 491 122 519 148 579 160 727 81 754 109 754 122 1,218 203 613 667 739 808 863 876 1,421 Evening College 1990 1990 Women 1991 African-American American Indian Asian Hispanic 16 Subtotal Evening College International Total Evening College 40 14 54 Graduate & Professional 3 8 13 1990 12 6 7 8 33 11 44 Men 1991 1992 16 2 11 7 36 17 53 1992 19 1 15 20 13 14 20 11 15 13 55 44 42 12 67 10 54 22 1990 Women 1991 58 6 48 49 80 34 48 2 47 35 132 161 293 128 173 301 132 186 318 161 166 327 All Schools 1990 Men 1991 African-American American Indian Asian Hispanic 201 7 249 206 African-American American Indian Asian Hispanic 48 2 42 40 Subtotal Graduate International Total Graduate 45 5 44 185 16 274 205 1992 202 14 318 213 1992 64 1992 1992 301 9 507 401 Subtotal Undergraduate Day Schools International Total Undergraduate Day Schools Men 1991 Total 1991 1990 77 21 98 Total 1991 1992 125 130 4 52 62 9 96 96 198 176 374 207 156 363 293 327 620 326 349 675 241 14 371 317 252 11 409 324 1992 266 8 401 328 3.6% 0.2% 6.8% 4.8% 14.2% 14.5% 15.4% 2.4% 2.9% 3.3% 78 5.8% 5.2% 5.2% 1.6% 1.4% 2.6% 39 -----117 7.4% 6.6% 7.9% 8 90 89 1990 3.3% 0.1% 6.4% 4.7% ------ 95 26 121 106 Women 1991 3.5% 0.1% 5.9% 4.7% 1,530 1,615 16.6% 17.4% 18.6% % of Total Evening College Students Total 1990 1991 1992 1990 1991 1992 2.1% 1.7% 2.0% 35 25 30 0.2% 0.4% 0.1% 4 6 2 27 26 1.4% 1.8% 1.7% 23 2.0% 1.3% 1.3% 33 19 20 82 2 55 68 4 % 01 Undergraduate Day School Students 1990 1991 1992 1990 442 21 620 523 Total 1991 437 27 683 529 102 103 % 01 Total Graduate & Prolessional Students 1990 1991 1992 2.5% 0.2% 2.1% 2.1% 2.9% 0.2% 2.3% 2.3% 3.0% 0.1% 2.4% 2.4% ------ 6.8% 7.7% 7.9% 339 8.2% 8.0% 342 -7.6% ----681 14.4% 15.9% 15.9% % olTotal Enrollment 1990 1991 1992 1992 3.0% 3.0% 3.2% 468 0.1% 0.2% 0.2% 22 4.3% 4.7% 5.0% 719 3.6% 3.6% 3.7% 541 ------ Subtotal All Schools 663 680 747 943 996 1,003 1,606 1,676 1,750 11.1% 11.5% 12.1% 4.3% 4.6% International 297 332 363 259 295 300 556 627 663 -3.8% ----Total All Schools 960 1,012 1,110 1,202 1,291 1,393 2,162 2,303 2,413 14.9% 15.8% 16.7% 'International students include nonresident aliens 01 all racial and ethnic groups, including caucasian. Source: Registrar 32 Students Veterans Enrolled at Boston College Fall 1992 School Arts & Sciences Management Education Nursing Evening College Graduate Arts & Sciences Graduate Management Graduate Social Work Law Total Source: Registrar Men Women Full-Time 6 3 3 3 9 3 3 1 1 2 5 3 3 Total 9 3 3 2 5 3 1 1 - Part-Time 1 6 31 - 5 5 - 26 5 3 3 2 2 1 2 - 10 6 36 Full-Time Equivalent Enrollment* By School, Fall 1983 - 1992 Undergraduate Arts & Sciences Management Education Nursing Total Day StudentS Evening College Total Undergraduate Graduate and Professional Graduate Arts & Sciences Graduate Management Graduate Social Work Law Total Graduate & Professional Total University . 1983 1984 1985 5,172 2,240 628 576 8,616 837 9,453 5,138 2,243 623 575 8,579 897 9,476 1,008 291 255 829 2,382 1,003 295 247 829 2,374 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 5,281 2,198 671 524 8,674 880 9,554 5,192 5,413 2,108 2,152 683 706 446 374 8,429 8,645 829 ~ 9,258 9,495 5,579 2,154 694 329 8,756 857 9,613 5,493 2,093 705 347 8,638 825 9,463 5,389 2,114 728 347 8,578 802 9,380 5,563 2,117 755 362 8,797 747 9,544 5,412 2,077 747 423 8,659 753 9,412 1,108 305 275 793 2,481 1,026 303 258 777 2,363 1,157 372 264 795 2,588 1,196 373 278 813 2,660 1,203 413 300 870 2,786 1,245 400 321 837 2,803 1,233 374 333 861 2,801 1986 1,046 348 277 765 2,436 11,836 11,851 12,035 11,621 11,931 12,201 12,123 12,166 12,347 12,213 • Method of computation: three part·time students equal one full-time equivalent student Source: Registrar Students 33 Undergraduate Majors* By School Arts & Sciences Art History Biochemistry Biology Chemistry Classics Communication Computer Science Economics English Geology/Geophysics German History Independent Mathematics Music Philosophy Physics Political Science Psychology Romance Languages Slavic Studies Sociology Studio Art Theater Theology 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 45 27 24 22 750 153 16 486 48 704 732 52 14 268 4 337 767 140 14 536 80 734 683 59 12 278 3 372 755 130 10 527 104 701 669 41 10 280 4 356 629 143 7 558 97 689 640 25 12 269 6 349 22 38 562 108 11 592 99 668 732 12 6 246 1 316 21 53 491 78 16 621 104 624 735 9 9 247 2 266 32 45 421 69 11 648 107 620 833 13 10 315 4 228 31 49 402 44 20 624 97 611 953 23 16 369 1 223 27 49 396 28 18 605 76 577 980 27 11 387 1 224 156 44 712 513 55 25 216 51 51 53 126 40 753 485 73 20 156 42 50 35 134 35 704 489 60 12 120 45 44 40 141 35 698 490 50 9 94 32 34 30 143 35 686 485 128 15 81 26 29 26 148 32 702 462 124 12 98 28 33 19 208 37 760 550 144 19 106 23 27 27 201 31 869 580 143 21 115 24 34 21 217 29 935 509 144 14 136 24 27 24 37 52 417 43 18 568 51 531 1,015 33 16 403 5 221 5 246 34 823 516 138 15 148 23 27 21 50 61 502 57 17 515 53 453 1,018 55 14 424 9 209 8 252 34 846 528 120 16 172 32 36 25 40 67 537 67 20 500 54 361 965 54 13 410 13 176 15 191 25 783 562 142 20 177 32 31 21 37 215 124 37 144 148 32 136 146 32 131 130 52 146 150 8 7 70 179 62 199 160 72 208 136 16 43 128 82 67 216 127 17 33 130 78 74 218 134 15 47 141 87 100 240 208 7 67 224 60 196 172 11 26 112 93 82 236 175 15 53 242 59 162 153 19 26 102 129 131 96 108 105 586 453 143 319 108 60 567 442 121 341 250 66 541 451 120 336 289 59 484 351 432 138 108 568 256 37 387 91 118 394 311 50 468 209 112 527 264 38 512 87 648 448 46 630 430 28 590 484 17 598 510 19 541 437 11 461 442 6 386 390 59 130 611 342 41 10 444 17 339 409 25 129 568 325 43 26 414 34 358 429 25 147 578 334 40 37 433 35 355 411 21 137 524 316 33 48 425 68 373 415 21 138 533 297 30 46 384 56 430 Education Early Childhood Elementary Education Human Development Middle School Moderate Special Needs Secondary Education Special Ed/Spec. Needs 99 Management Accounting Computer Science Economics Finance General Management Human Resource Mgt. Information Systems Marketing Strategic Management Nursing 111 609 240 38 * This chart includes each declared major. Students with double or triple majors are therefore counted two and three times. Thus, adding the numbers in a column does not produce accurate enrollment totals. Evening College students are not included in this table. Source: Registrar 34 Students Newly.Enrolled Graduate and Professional Students· Geographic Distribution, Fall 1992 State Alabama Graduate Graduate Graduate Arts & Manage- Social Sciences ment Work Law School 1 Arkansas California 25 Colorado 4 Connecticut 28 Delaware 1 District of Columbia 6 Florida 13 Georgia 5 25 2 6 5 1 New Jersey 26 1 13 16 1 New Mexico 2 4 2 14 51 3 3 12 1 1 13 New York 2 North Carolina 21 North Dakota Oklahoma 1 7 Oregon 3 1 1 Pennsylvania 28 5 13 4 Rhode Island 12 5 5 4 4 South Dakota Indiana 1 1 1 Tennessee Iowa 1 Kansas 2 Kentucky 2 Louisiana 1 Massachusetts 445 1 1 1 Michigan 14 Minnesota 4 209 1 7 Montana 1 Nebraska 2 Texas 15 Utah 1 Vermont 6 Virginia 2 7 1 4 1 2 1 1 Washington 4 1 1 West Virginia 2 111 112 Wisconsin 7 2 3 Wyoming 4 2 1 2 5 2 1 1 13 Mississippi Missouri 5 2 12 8 1 5 Illinois Maryland 1 2 Ohio South Carolina 2 51 1 Idaho 14 Law School New Hampshire Hawaii Maine Graduate Graduate Manage- Social ment Work Nevada 1 Alaska Arizona State Graduate Arts & Sciences 1 1 Guam 1 Puerto Rico 1 Virgin Islands Foreign Total 77 48 4 1 873 278 210 289 * Figures include full-time and part-time students and are based on student address at the time of application to the University. Source: Admission Offices of the Graduate School of Arts & Sciences, the Carroll Graduate School of Management. the Graduate School of Social Work, and the Law School. Sludents 35 Graduate Enrollment* By Degree Program and Discipline, Full- and Part-TIme 1987-88 Master's American Studies A&S Unspecified Biology Chemistry Economics Education English Geology Geology-Geophysics Geophysics History Interdisciplinary Latin & Greek Law Linguistics Management Mathematics Nursing Philosophy Physics Political Science Psychology Religious Education Romance Languages Russian Slavic Studies Social Work Sociology Theology Total 1988-89 Ph.D. Master's 20 27 31 25 5 667 99 16 42 24 34 62 396 26 28 24 2 694 115 15 30 20 36 64 383 26 45 4 6 793 4 782 17 176 58 10 45 4 180 43 3 1 350 29 39 -- 34 3 59 3 6 813 1 801 16 190 69 37 5 -- 3,501 57 26 36 16 8 23 10 1990-91 1989·90 Ph.D. 10 61 28 38 18 10 21 42 47 41 49 5 173 41 2 1 329 25 59 44 57 45 -- 875 3,580 903 Master's 21 1 26 22 2 764 118 26 4 14 45 7 6 826 3 900 15 158 62 3 60 3 172 47 3 Ph.D. Master's 1991-92 Ph.D. Master's 23 21 44 65 362 28 357 19 32 41 58 49 -- 21 18 7 803 116 32 1 8 46 9 7 877 5 936 23 169 68 2 57 4 151 52 2 2 392 22 37 -- 3,716 949 3,890 50 11 21 68 37 39 20 10 25 Ph.D. 21 24 9 7 797 107 30 1 8 50 2 7 848 2 927 22 177 82 4 25 48 71 333 30 58 3 29 67 37 45 20 72 69 7 11 36 78 29 46 21 10 25 38 66 54 3,897 1,002 22 942 71 329 30 2 150 49 4 4 425 24 42 10 35 58 51 -- 30 52 -Figures include students who attended for just one semester, as well as those who attended a full year. The figure for Master's students may include non-degree special students in some programs. The number of non-<!egree students is generally over two hundred in the field of education. Source: Registrar Summer Session Enrollment* Summer 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 Undergraduale 1,948 1,840 1,978 1,980 2,101 2,690 2,593 2,560 2,513 2,629 Graduale/Professional1,473 1,589 1,899 1,699 1,805 1,375 1,335 1,261 1,507 1,611 Tolal 3,421 3,429 3,877 3,679 3,906 4,065 3,928 3,821 4,020 4,240 - Includes students registered through the Institute of Religious Education and the Carroll Graduate School of Managemenl Source: Summer Session Office 36 Students International Student and Scholar Statistics International Student and Scholar Statistics By School, 1991-1992 By Class or Program, 1991-1992 Arts & Sciences Education Management 109 3 135 Nursing 2 Evening College Graduate Arts & Sciences Graduate Management Subtotal Practical Training (Field Work) Faculty and Postdoctoral Research Scholars Total 82 Sophomores 68 Juniors 58 Seniors 39 2 Evening College 266 Total Undergraduate 63 Graduate/Professional: Masters 10 CAE.5. 146 2 Ph.D. 172 592 52 -'fl 671 Source: Office of the Dean for Student Development 10 J.D. Special Programs Total Gmduate/Professional Faculty and Postdoctoral Research Scholars 27 671 International Student and Scholar Statistics By Gender and Program, 1991-1992 Undergraduate Men 145 Women 104 Total 249 Graduate 185 158 343 Practical Training 27 25 52 Faculty and Postdoctoral Research Scholars 21 6 27 378 293 671 Source: Office of the Dean for Student Development 343 52 Source: Office of the Dean for Student Development Total 13 Practical Training Total Program 249 4 Graduate Social Work Law Freshmen Students 37 International Students by Country Undergraduate and Graduate, 1991-1992 Under- Graduate and graduate Professional Algeria Argentina Australia Austria Bahamas Belgium Bennuda Bolivia Brazil Cameroon Canada Chile Colombia Costa Rica Dominican Republic Ecuador Egypt El Salvador France Gennany. Federal Republic Ghana Greece Guatemala Guyana Haiti Honduras Hong Kong Hungary India Indonesia Iran Ireland Israel Italy Jamaica Japan Jordan Kenya Korea, Republic of Kuwait 1 1 9 1 1 1 5 3 4 7 11 2 2 7 2 2 3 5 12 4 1 2 9 3 9 1 2 5 15 6 1 15 1 1 2 1 45 1 5 1 7 3 1 11 1 1 2 1 32 7 2 15 1 2 2 24 3 5 Source: Office of the Dean for Student Development Under- Graduate and graduate Professional Total 1 1 9 1 1 1 5 4 6 1 52 1 16 2 2 7 3 2 10 8 1 23 4 1 3 1 11 1 35 16 3 17 1 7 2 39 9 1 20 1 Lebanon Malawi Malaysia Mauritius Mexico Morocco Netherland Antilles Netherlands New Zealand Nigeria Norway Pakistan Panama Paraguay People's Republic of China Peru Philippines Portugal Russia Saudi Arabia Sierra Leone Somalia South Africa Spain Sri Lanka Sweden Switzerland Syria Taiwan Thailand Trinidad & Tobago Turkey United Arab Emirates United Kingdom Venezuela Yugoslavia Zambia Total Countries Represented 1 4 4 1 1 5 6 1 3 2 2 2 4 1 2 9 2 5 12 1 63 4 9 1 1 1 1 18 2 4 2 1 2 6 3 5 1 10 3 1 342 1 1 5 10 2 1 6 1 22 3 4 1 250 Total 6 1 4 4 6 1 1 7 2 4 1 2 9 1 65 9 21 1 1 1 1 2 5 28 2 6 3 1 8 7 3 27 1 13 7 1 1 592 77 38 Students Undergraduate and Graduate Degrees Conferred* By Degree and Gender 1988-89 Men Women Total Men Undergraduate Arts & Sciences AB. B.S. 554 56 - 716 65 -- 1,270 121 580 58 Total Arts & Sciences 610 781 Education - AB. Management - B.S. Nursing - B.S. 10 295 1989-90 Women Total Men Women Total Men Women Total 1,247 108 543 61 707 44 1,250 105 623 70 726 57 1,349 127 667 50 1990-91 1991-92 -- -- -- -- -- -- 1,391 638 717 1,355 604 751 1,355 693 783 1,476 172 237 90 182 532 90 16 316 145 200 86 161 516 86 9 331 143 254 83 152 585 83 12 335 2 154 225 78 166 560 80 915 1,280 2,195 970 1,148 2,118 944 1,231 2,175 1,042 1,240 2,282 Evening College - AB. 46 83 129 53 103 156 63 124 187 66 84 150 Total Undergraduate Degrees Conferred 961 1,363 2,324 1,023 1,251 2,274 Subtotal Undergraduate Day Degrees Conferred Graduate Ph.D. D.Ed. D.S.W. MA M.S. M.Ed. MAT. M.S.w. M.S.T. M.BA CAE.S. CAG.S. Total Graduate Degrees Conferred Professional 1.D. Total Graduate and Professional Degrees Conferred Total Degrees Conferred -- - - 1,007 1,355 2,362 49 3 2 146 174** 104 6 100 7 68 11 77 14 4 216 223** 134 11 116 9 163 17 43 32 8 75 8 74 39 27 6 17 2 119 8 175 85 128 18 108 2 59 23 314 670 984 335 257 120 130 250 1,133 434 800 1,234 28 4 1 61 41 36 4 25 2 101 4 37 7 1 101 103 120 11 98 5 63 22 1 65 11 2 162 144 156 15 123 7 164 26 1 28 11 2 70 49 30 5 16 2 95 6 307 569 876 125 132 432 701 1,393 2,064 3,457 1,457 2,051 - 1,108 1,324 2,432 249 124 155 24 125 4 178 31 40 8 1 92 72 34 3 18 3 128 8 55 1 4 157 84 115 9 110 71 21 95 9 5 249 156 149 12 128 3 199 29 638 973 407 627 1,034 146 157 303 139 122 261 481 795 1,276 546 3,508 1,488 2,150 3,638 749 1,295 1,654 2,073 3,727 'September, January, and May graduations combined. .. The large increase in M.S. degrees granted in 1989-90 was due to a change in the M.S. in Nursing program. In the prior years most students completed this program in the summer and graduated in September. The revised program now allows most students to graduate in May. The 1989-1990 graduation statistics included therefore two "classes" in one year. This was a one-time anomaly. Source: Registrar Students 39 Undergraduate Degrees Conferred* By Degree and Number of Majors Arts and Sciences A.B. Single Major Double Major Triple Major B.S. Single Major Double Major Triple Major Total Arts & Sciences School of Education-A.B. Single Major Double Major Triple Major Total School of Education School of Management-B.S. Single Major Double Major Triple Major 1987-88 1988-89 1989-90 1990-91 1991-92 1,001 151 1,088 182 1,049 198 1,040 209 1 -- 1,137 211 1 -- 1,152 1,270 1,247 1,250 1,349 97 6 1 90 30 1 96 11 1 93 12 113 14 -104 -- -- 1,256 1,391 85 71 3 126 54 2 118 43 121 -- -108 -1,355 -- -- 159 182 161 473 74 1 446 85 1 418 98 105 127 -- -- 1,355 1,476 94 57 1 113 52 1 -- -- 152 166 458 126 1 434 126 585 560 -- -- -- Total School of Management 548 532 516 School of Nursing-B.S. 128 90 86 83 80 2,091 2,195 2,118 2,175 2,282 Evening College-A.B. Single Major Double Major Triple Major 135 3 2 126 3 150 6 187 150 Total Evening College 140 129 156 187 150 2,231 2,324 2,274 2,362 2,432 Subtotal-Undergraduate Day Degrees Conferred Total Undergraduate Degrees Conferred 'September, January. and May graduations combined. Source: Registrar - -- 40 Students Undergraduate Degrees Conferred By Major* Accounting Art History Biochemistry Biology Chemistry Classics Communication Computer Science Early Childhood Education Early Childhood & Special Education Economics Education Elementary Education Elementary Education & Moderate Special Needs English Environmental Geosciences Finance French Geology Geophysics Geology/Geophysics German History Human Development Independent Information Systems Italian linguistics Management Marketing Mathematics Middle School Education Music Nursing Operations Management Organizational Studies/Human Resource Management Philosophy Physics Political Science Psychology Quantitative Analysis Russian Secondary Education Severe Special Needs Slavic Studies Sociology Spanish Studio Art Theater Theology Total** .. Double and Triple majors counted by first major. *'" Evening College majors are not included in this total. Source: Registrar 1987-88 1988-89 1989-90 1990-91 1991·92 112 11 9 75 16 2 150 43 17 127 11 10 85 13 4 139 43 20 1 224 1 49 13 280 114 9 8 82 6 3 141 36 20 6 195 143 9 13 73 5 7 152 11 20 3 186 1 50 7 267 2 222 14 3 130 15 9 90 7 3 146 20 21 5 190 239 1 60 223 214 22 212 11 4 2 81 55 1 7 76 71 2 1 1 4 157 51 4 1 6 151 46 5 48 8 282 1 204 10 5 1 1 93 47 1 3 1 2 13 151 39 7 128 1 11 46 7 139 121 90 1 14 43 9 192 143 2 86 8 3 70 5 196 131 19 2 2 21 1 7 38 6 3 8 4 23 2 1 39 8 1 4 4 2,195 2,118 38 12 3 3 9 -- 2,091 -- 5 97 44 2 5 5 1 22 162 48 2 2 83 4 9 44 10 215 143 3 24 1 2 38 7 5 4 2,175 53 2 300 4 193 16 9 1 1 10 107 55 7 5 2 11 160 55 5 1 80 19 11 60 8 223 142 24 1 2 56 8 5 6 4 2,282 Students 41 Undergraduate Degrees Conferred By School and Major* 1989-90 A&S AB. B.S. Accounting Art History Biochemistry Biology Chemistry Classics Communication Computer Science Early Childhood Education Early Childhood & Special Education Economics Education Elementary Education Elementary Education & Moderate Special Needs English - 114 9 3 141 29 7 20 6 182 48 8 8 282 1 204 10 5 1 1 - 204 5 1 1 93 47 1 3 1 2 13 151 39 7 47 3 13 151 7 86 8 3 5 Russian 23 2 1 39 8 1 4 4 1,247 108 161 516 • Double and Triple majors counted by first major. ** Evening College majors are not included in this total Source: Registrar 6 195 13 48 282 Environmental Geosciences Total** 114 9 8 82 6 3 141 36 20 8 82 6 Finance French 10 Geology Geophysics GeologyJGeophysics German 1 History 93 Human Development Independent 1 Information Systems Italian 1 Linguistics 2 Management Marketing Mathematics 39 Middle School Education Music Nursing Operations Management Organizational Studies/Human Resource Management Philosophy 70 Phllsics Po itical Science 196 Psychology 131 Secondary Education Severe Special Needs Slavic Studies Sociology Spanish Studio Art Theater Theology 1990-91 Ed. Mgt. Nurs. AB. B.S. B.S. Total 86 8 3 70 5 196 131 23 2 1 39 8 1 4 4 Ed. Mgt. Nurs. A&S AB. B.S. AB. B.S. B.S. Total - 143 9 143 9 13 73 5 7 152 11 20 13 73 5 7 152 10 20 3 169 1 3 186 1 50 17 1 50 7 267 2 - 14 7 267 2 222 14 3 222 3 5 97 44 2 5 5 1 22 162 48 2 2 83 4 9 44 1 215 143 3 9 24 1 2 38 7 5 4 862,118 1,250 105 152 585 5 97 44 2 5 5 1 22 162 48 2 2 83 4 9 44 10 215 143 3 24 1 2 38 7 5 4 1991·92 A&S Ed. Mgt. Nurs. AB. B.S. AB. B.S. B.S. Total - 130 15 130 15 9 90 7 3 146 20 21 9 90 7 3 146 18 21 5 161 300 4 16 10 107 2 53 53 2 2 300 4 193 16 9 1 1 10 107 55 7 5 2 - 193 9 1 1 55 7 5 2 11 160 55 5 1 80 19 11 60 223 142 5 190 29 8 24 1 2 56 8 5 6 4 832,1751,347 129 166 560 11 160 55 5 1 80 19 11 60 8 223 142 24 1 2 56 8 5 6 4 802,282 42 Students Graduate Degrees Conferred, 1991-92* By School, Degree, and Primary Field Men Graduate School 01 Arts & Sciences Humanities American Studies Classics English Linguistics Mathematics Philosophy Romance Languages Slavic Studies Theology Social Sciences Economics History Political Science Psychology Sociology Sciences Biology Chemistry Geology/Geophysics Physics Education Counseling Psychology Curriculum & Instruction Educational Foundations Special Education & Rehabilitation Religious Education & Pastoral Ministry Catholic School Leadership Law School Law 0.0.) Total Graduate & Professional Degrees Men Tolal Women Total 1 2 3 1 2 3 3 6 5 25 30 8 28 36 1 1 1 2 1 1 16 3 3 4 7 4 20 10 1 17 3 3 5 8 4 22 11 2 2 3 5 8 3 7 10 3 4 2 1 5 5 14 16 5 1 4 5 15 20 10 1 2 4 2 5 4 5 1 6 17 20 5 1 7 3 5 5 4 3 20 25 10 5 10 3 2 2 2 5 4 2 1 1 4 1 5 2 1 3 1 4 2 4 1 5 3 3 5 4 3 1 1 9 6 4 6 3 14 5 1 2 4 15 8 I 2 7 29 13 2 4 8 29 5 5 16 8 53 72 20 41 34 25 61 101 25 46 50 33 11 43 10 6 18 8 57 87 28 42 36 25 68 130 38 48 54 33 5 5 3 61 64 3 66 69 56 104 150 367 517 198 423 621 128 17 45 190 71 3 16 90 199 20 61 280 128 17 45 190 71 3 16 90 199 20 61 280 18 110 128 19 114 133 139 122 261 139 122 261 497 689 1,186 546 749 1,295 48 Graduate School 01 Management Business Administration Computer Science Finance Total - Graduate Mgt:. Graduate School 01 Social Work Social Work Masler's/Cerlilicates/J .D. Men Women Total 3 Nursing Total - Graduate A&S Doclorates Women Total 1 49 4 60 * Includes September 1991, January 1992, and May 1992 graduations. Source: Registrar 5 109 Students 43 Undergraduate and Graduate Financial Aid, 1988-1992 Thousands of Dollars 1987-88 1988-89 1989-90 1990-91 1991-92 Type of Aid - Undergraduate University Scholarships and Grants l State Scholarships' Pell Grants' Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants Work-Study Perkins Loans' $15.144 2,809 979 1,389 1,748 2,665 $16,914 2,905 1,106 1,278 1,863 2,868 $19,104 2,616 1,259 1,360 1,730 2,963 $21,106 2,087 1,181 1,363 1,771 2,389 $25,075 1,067 1,600 1,596 1,903 2,287 Undergraduate Total' $24,734 $26,934 $29,032 $29,898 $33,528 Type of Aid - Graduate Work-Study Perkins Loans' 438 998 532 1,736 688 1,516 545 1,371 500 1,368 $26,170 $29,202 $31,237 $31,814 $35,396 1987-88 1988-89 1989-90 1990-91 1991-92 3,928 1,897 716 877 1,413 1,910 3,226 1,894 808 941 1,361 1,880 3,657 1,711 997 1,383 1,965 4,404 1,343 773 870 1,296 1,707 4,957 955 984 1,072 1,345 1,672 Undergraduate Total' 10,741 10,110 10,549 10,393 10,985 Type of Aid - Graduate Work-Study Perkins Loans' 289 393 345 508 369 491 318 518 318 479 11,423 10,963 11,409 11,229 11,782 Total Undergraduate and Graduate Number of Awards Type of Aid - Undergraduate University Scholarships and Grants l State Scholarships' Pell Grants' Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants Work-Study Perkins Loans' Total Undergraduate and Graduate 834 l'Jbis 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. 'State scholarship funds to students from Massachusetts, Vermont, Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Maryland, Maine, New Hampshire; Gilbert Grants, and Herter Scholarships. 'Pell Grant eligibility is determined directly by the Federal Government 'These loan funds (formerly called "National Direct Student Loans") are obtained by Federal Government contributions, Boston College contributions, and collections of previous loans awarded. 'This is a duplicated total since some students receive more than one type of aid. Note: In an effort to minimize statistical detail, the above data does not include Boston College graduate student assistance (approximately $5.5 million in 1991-92) administered by the various schools and departments. Also excluded are the Nursing Loan Program ($213,725 in 1991-92), a variety of government fellowships or scholarships from fraternal organizations and clu bs ($ 1,751,580 in 1991-92), and Higher Education Loans processed by the Financial Aid Office and disbursed by banks ($20,124,106 in 1991-92), all of which are open to both undergraduate and graduate students. (In addition, the University processed parental loans totaling $9,957,456 from banks and the Massachusetts Education Loan Authority.) Source: Financial Aid Office 44 Students Undergraduate Student Graduation Rates Freshman Matriculants in Fall 1986 Rating at Time 01 Admission Number 01 Fall Matriculants Number 01 Graduates within Ten Semesters Graduation Rate Top 5% 127 114 89.8% Next 20% 772 704 91.2% 1,153 985 85.4% 2,052 1,803 87.9% Remaining 75% -- Total Source: Office of Enrollment Management Research Educational Plans Class of 1991 * Immediate Highest Degree(s) Planned Long-Term Number Percent Number Master's Degree - Arts and Sciences (M.A. M.S.) 121 6.5% 270 15.4% Master's Degree - Professional (e.g., M.B.A, M.S.W.• M.S.E., M.Div., M.Ed.) 106 5.7% 631 35.9% Doctorate - (ph.D., Ed.D., D.BA) 24 1.3% 319 18.1% Medical Degree - (M.D., D.O., D.D.S., D.V.M.) 55 3.0% 84 4.8% 195 10.6% 360 20.5% 21 1.1% 34 1.9% 522 28.2% 1,698 96.6% 1,328 71.8% 60 3.4% 1,850 100.0% 1,758 100.0% Law Degree - (LLB. or ].D.) Other Degree or Certificate Post-Graduate Degree Bachelor's Degree Total Number of Senior Responses *This is the most recent data available. The senior survey is conducted biennially. Source: Office of Enrollment Management Research, Spring 1991 Senior Survey -- -- Percent Students 45 Academic Fields of Highest Planned Degree Long-Term Career Plans Class of 1991 * Class of 1991 * Academic Field Rank Percent Career Field Rank Percent Business, management 1 27.5% Business, industry 1 26.4% Law 2 19.4% Law 2 14.5% Humanities (e.g., English, history, philosophy, languages) Medicine (all fields) 3 8.0% 3 8.8% University/college teaching, research 4 6.8% Education 4 8.1% Medicine 5 4.7% Communications· media, advertising, journalism 5.5 5.5% Social sciences 6 4.4% Arts - studio, performing, writing 5.5 5.5% Other health field 7 3.7% Public policy, government 8 3.5% Teaching, administration (elementary, secondary) 7 5.1% Communications, media 9 3.5% Human/social services 8 4.3% Social work 10 2.5% Government, politics 9 3.8% Fine/performing arts 11 1.8% Homemaker 10 1.9% Computer science 12.5 1.2% University/College Administration 11.5 1.3% Natural Sciences 12.5 1.2% Social sciences (nonacademic) 11.5 1.3% Other field not listed Undecided about which field to pursue 6.0% 3.7% Undecided Other 7.7% 7.9% -- 100.0% -100.0% *This is the most recent data available. The senior survey is conducted biennially. Source: Office of Enrollment Management Research, Spring 1991 Senior Survey *This is the most recent data available. The senior survey is conducted biennially. Source: Office of Enrollment Management Research, Spring 1991 Senior Survey ALUMNI & DEVELOPMENT 48 Alumni & Development Boston College Alumni Clubs Arizona California Los Angeles Northern California/San Francisco San Diego Colorado Connecticut Fairfield County Hartford New Haven Florida Miami/Fort Lauderdale Naples/Fort Myers Palm Beach Tampa/St. Petersburg Georgia Illinois Maine Maryland Baltimore Massachusetts Cape Cod Merrimack Valley North Shore Western Massachusetts Worcester Michigan Detroit Missouri St. Louis New Hampshire Manchester NH Seacoast New Jersey New York Albany Buffalo Mid-Hudson New York City Rochester Syracuse North and South Carolina Ohio Cincinnati Cleveland Pennsylvania Philadelphia Western Pennsylvania Puerto Rico Rhode Island Texas Dallas Houston Washington Washington, D.C. Wisconsin Source: Alumni Association Alumni Association Board of Directors With Committee Assignments 1992-1993 Peter S. Maher, Esq., '72, L'76 Admissions Joseph B. Dowd. M.D., '49 President Karen McCabe Hare, '87 Alcohol Awareness, Nominations Richard W. Renehan, Esq., '55 Vice President/President-elect, Awards David R Nugent. '87 Career Services, Young Alumni Club Richard]. O'Brien, '58, GSSW'60 Treasurer, Clubs Helen Garvey O'Meara, GSSW'45 Social Work Carolyn Kenney Foley, '56 Secretary, Social Activities Usa S. Quarles, Esq., '83 Classes George A Downey, '61 Past President, Athletic Liaison, Nominations Jeanne C. Salvucci, '84 Evening College Lee L. Barnes, CGSOM'88 Nancy M. Sandman, '73, G'85 Boston College Fund CGSOM Source: Alumni Association Leo V. Boyle, Esq., L'71 UIw School Paul L. Cantello, '92 CffissGovenunentCouncil Darcel D. Clark, Esq., '83 Nominations Roger T. Connor, '52 Classes, Tours, Merchandise programs Cathy A Coyne, '80 Clubs William G. Downey, Esq., '62 Clubs Katherine C. (Renda) Flaherty, '74, G'79 Nominations Susan G. Gallagher, '82 Community Service Irene R Good, Esq., '86, L'89 Awards, Social Activities John]. Hanwell, SJ., '78 Spiritual Karen K Kalbacher, '82 Communications Mary Ann Brennan Keyes, '62 Awards, Continuing Learning Alumni Association 1992 Awards The William V. McKenney Award Joseph R Stanton, M.D., '42 Awards 01 Excellence Commerce Therese Myers. Newton College '66 Education George F. Lawlor, SJ., Ph.D.'33, M.Ed.'57, Ph.D.'63 Eleanor Smith Tabeek, RN.'55, D.Ed.'90 Medicine George M. Bernier, Jr., M.D.• '56 Public Service Vice Admiral Richard M. Dunleavy, USN, '55 Religion Sister Zila M. Fleming, C.SJ., MA'63 Rev. John J. Philbin, '40 Young Alumni Achievement Award Kathleen Head Pawlowski, Esq.. '83 Source: Alumni Association Alumni & Development 49 Alumni Regional Analysis Alumni Geographic Distribution Fall 1992 Fall 1992 Massachusetts Metropolitan Boston: Postal Areas 01701-02009 02101-02215 Total Metropolitan Boston Outside Metropolitan Boston Total Massachusetts 13,163 23,561 36,724 15,984 52,708 Other New England States Connecticut Maine New Hampshire Rhode Island Vermont Total Other New England States 5,580 1,418 2,699 2,299 514 12,510 Total New England 65,218 Total Outside New England 39,227 Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California' Colorado Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia Florida Georgia Guam Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Total Alumni 104,445' • With 104,445 members, the Boston College Alumni Association is , the largest Catholic alumni organization in the world, Source: Information Services, University Relations 105 80 312 35 3,812 473 5,580 176 721 2,301 612 6 192 34 1,554 213 97 108 140 188 1,418 1,865 52,708 601 390 34 373 40 70 Nevada 74 New Hampshire 2,699 3,964 New Jersey New Mexico 134 7,893 New York' North Carolina 509 North Dakota 13 1,067 Ohio Oklahoma 77 Oregon 188 Pennsylvania 2,079 Puerto Rico 313 2,299 Rhode Island South Carolina 171 South Dakota 24 179 Tennessee 1,008 Texas 58 Utah Vermont 514 Virgin Islands 33 Virginia 1,966 Washington' 480 West Virginia 38 Wisconsin 350 Wyoming 19 100,387 Total U.S. Foreign Nations 1,908 Address Unknown 2,150 104,445 Total Alumni 'California, New York, and Washington include APO addresses, Note: Also included are individuals who attended Boston College for at least one year without graduating, These alumni are referred to as "EX Alumni,' Source: Information Services, University Relations 50 Alumni & Development Living Alumni By PrimllJY School and Class, FaU 1992 Class ASS 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 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 4 3 4 5 4 4 7 13 15 26 26 39 44 55 73 69 99 115 129 115 136 136 169 184 159 168 183 145 99 15 112 144 362 731 708 438 385 322 279 Ed. Mgt. Evening Newton Nursing College College Grad. ASS Grad. Mgt. Social Wor1t Law Weston Theo. EX' Honorary. Degrees Alumni 1 1 1 33 43 44 20 1 22 60 82 282 316 285 244 217 192 23 32 39 68 73 105 115 2 3 5 5 8 16 10 12 18 22 15 26 28 22 9 11 25 16 14 33 20 46 50 47 56 67 29 27 28 38 20 36 5 4 4 7 9 8 20 21 18 11 13 12 19 15 15 23 9 3 6 18 24 26 45 59 80 53 107 124 106 9 6 9 15 8 10 10 8 12 20 22 21 23 28 22 32 27 24 6 4 7 9 9 16 13 19 21 17 6 11 5 4 12 17 37 56 76 91 70 54 49 41 2 2 4 5 5 3 3 8 6 9 9 9 5 3 1 2 2 2 2 1 2 1 4 2 2 5 6 1 1 2 4 1 2 1 2 5 4 4 2 1 1 6 3 2 3 2 5 5 4 3 6 6 17 19 20 23 15 20 29 24 34 24 18 35 36 46 132 32 31 2 14 26 45 27 25 43 24 Total 4 5 5 1 11 7 7 10 17 22 35 40 51 57 73 110 114 157 183 196 172 210 213 271 271 252 303 315 263 282 116 246 307 638 1,283 1,388 1,042 1,011 969 892 I I, Alumni & Development 51 Living Alumni By Primary School and Class, Fall 1992 (Continued) Class AlIoS Ed. Mgt. 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 295 312 360 354 313 280 317 469 472 423 435 455 550 533 526 532 611 611 958 914 1,156 1,031 1,216 1,108 1,184 1,175 1,243 1,263 1,375 1,154 1,258 1,296 1,304 1,405 1,359 1,338 1,361 132 96 130 115 129 90 126 167 183 178 179 193 279 233 233 283 285 248 323 294 364 292 256 220 171 209 196 168 143 142 150 143 159 182 166 154 159 274 251 337 333 336 283 239 326 352 349 342 377 415 400 351 Total 36,670 Evening Newton NUl1ing College College 389 317 384 326 493 454 455 506 469 561 560 560 547 578 581 575 542 537 508 578 582 111 123 161 147 198 155 180 165 132 145 213 179 142 119 145 161 137 153 153 206 229 161 168 196 201 173 178 184 141 142 149 138 126 88 86 79 76 70 59 58 75 123 74 86 60 74 76 69 77 61 82 91 64 76 73 80 99 80 74 93 103 94 92 105 136 124 136 132 125 89 82 85 165 112 7,172 17,692 6,095 3,940 384 Grad. Mgt. Social Work 481 299 2 7 23 28 25 30 40 50 49 43 97 76 58 59 62 72 74 69 75 109 116 125 120 117 125 134 135 115 184 173 178 218 153 28 27 21 29 30 32 39 32 45 47 48 55 51 50 59 84 87 78 96 107 99 102 92 112 119 88 94 131 117 95 127 117 117 119 105 112 121 91 114 136 115 144 174 193 199 174 203 219 192 216 226 235 210 226 233 262 220 241 232 221 205 265 223 3,119 14,553 2,941 3,218 6,648 34 48 54 75 97 102 121 139 184 134 157 147 182 185 206 176 245 239 202 209 5 Grad. A&S 109 96 125 116 185 151 99 246 216 223 256 409 361 498 472 514 563 496 402 528 578 417 479 452 479 492 516 417 362 421 423 415 448 444 500 law 55 62 55 67 58 78 86 75 78 103 112 'EX Alumni are individuals who attended Boston College for at least one year without graduating. Source: Information Services, University Relations Weston Thea. 8 4 4 15 15 34 23 27 30 37 33 29 27 35 21 455 Honorary EX' Degrees Alumni 4 3 6 2 5 2 4 6 5 3 10 3 5 3 6 6 6 4 5 6 5 3 2 3 2 4 2 3 6 5 6 1 6 1 1 163 59 61 93 84 33 24 43 37 47 46 37 42 43 52 42 46 49 40 32 7 5 5 2 7 1 3 7 5 3 3 2 1 3 3 1 1 Total 1,179 1,142 1,404 1,412 1,524 1,312 1,386 1,777 1,843 1,794 1,931 2,107 2,279 2,369 2,343 2,470 2,701 2,511 2,896 2,942 3,291 2,827 3,030 3,032 3,062 3,157 3,231 3,205 3,178 3,072 3,184 3,168 3,208 3,255 3,196 3,391 3,087 1,779 104,445 52 Alumni & Development Living Alumni By Gender and Class, Fall 1992 Class 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 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 Women 1 0 1 5 2 6 7 14 14 19 27 28 20 21 26 35 25 34 42 35 18 26 42 39 41 91 122 150 156 216 242 Men 4 5 5 1 10 7 7 10 16 22 35 35 49 51 66 96 100 138 156 168 152 189 187 236 246 218 261 280 245 256 74 207 266 547 1,161 1,238 886 795 727 Total Class 4 5 5 1 11 7 7 10 17 22 35 40 51 57 73 110 114 157 183 196 172 210 . 213 271 271 252 303 315 263 282 116 246 307 638 1,283 1,388 1,042 1,011 969 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 260 361 328 441 420 560 461 531 639 659 601 730 774 811 881 955 1,005 1,114 1,080 1,356 1,571 1,699 1,535 1,550 1,672 1,707 1,761 1,868 1,955 1,826 1,837 1,869 1,931 1,882 1,924 1,845 1,961 1,729 632 818 814 963 992 964 851 855 1,138 1,184 1,193 1,201 1,333 1,468 1,488 1,388 1,465 1,587 1,431 1,540 1,371 1,592 1,292 1,480 1,360 1,355 1,396 1,363 1,250 1,352 1,235 1,315 1,237 1,326 1,331 1,351 1,430 1,358 892 1,179 1,142 1,404 1,412 1,524 1,312 1,386 1,777 1,843 1,794 1,931 2,107 2,279 2,369 2,343 2,470 2,701 2,511 2,896 2,942 3,291 2,827 3,030 3,032 3,062 3,157 3,231 3,205 3,178 3,072 3,184 3,168 3,208 3,255 3,196 3,391 3,087 Total 47,594 56,851 104,445 Source: Information Services, University Relations Women Men Total Alumni & Development 53 Gifts to the University* Total Private Gift Support, FY88-FY92 1987-88 Source Alumni $ 1988-89 7,650,676 $ 9,020,402 $ 1989-90 1990-91 8,647,358 $ 13,461,828 1991-92 $ 8,838,205 Parents 1,222,494 1,559,132 3,985,236 2,131,730 2,267,059 Friends 787,775 997,007 2,721,000 1,537,865 1,026,517 1,717,728 2,922,620 1,757,705 2,264,229 1,685,064 Matching Gifts 710,238 675,083 830,295 810,653 970,197 Foundations 453,560 1,692,297 1,953,000 2,226,506 1,742,276 Associations 1,622,357 140,933 126,000 58,085 50,404 $14,164,828 $17,007,474 $20,020,594 $22,490,896 $16,579,722 Corporations Total * Gifts represent cash received during the fiscal year which runs from June 1 to May 31. Source: Information Services, University Relations Individual Donors* By Giving Club 1987-88 1988-89 1989-90 1990-91 1991-92 $10,000 + 98 125 154 142 160 President's Circle $5,000 - $9,999 145 174 159 175 197 FIDES Patron $2,500 - $4,999 128 141 122 122 136 FIDES $1,000 - $2,499 1,018 1,112 1,071 1,079 1,052 Tower Builders $500 $999 541 681 703 650 748 John Bapst Associates $250 $499 1,426 1,688 1,776 1,721 1,973 McElroy Associates $100 $249 5,424 6,889 6,758 6,647 Other Annual Fund $1 $99 17,333 17,969 19,669 18,848 26,113 28,779 30,316 29,761 Giving Club Level 01 Gill President's Circle Patron Total Individual Donors * Includes alumni, parents, and friends. Excludes corporations and foundations. Source: Information Services, University Relations 7,178 r17,126/ 28,289 54 Alumni & Development Alumni Donors By Primary School and Class, 1991·92 Class A&S 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 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 3 Ed. Mgl. Evening Newton Nursing College College Grad. A&S Grad. Mgl. Social Work Law Weston Theo. Honorary Degrees EX' Alumni 1 2 1 1 1 3 7 5 13 17 20 22 29 39 35 37 49 52 56 64 66 82 92 82 114 73 73 58 4 53 55 143 242 285 163 135 120 103 1 1 1 1 17 26 26 10 1 12 30 34 112 103 127 89 71 48 1 1 1 6 5 1 1 1 1 1 4 4 4 2 3 2 1 2 3 3 3 1 5 3 3 5 4 2 3 9 8 10 20 9 15 7 3 8 10 7 5 5 7 10 12 3 6 4 8 8 II 16 17 25 37 3 2 4 8 5 14 14 12 18 15 9 6 9 8 1 4 1 29 14 2 1 2 1 2 4 2 6 2 7 3 4 2 2 14 II 26 25 21 22 21 13 1 1 1 4 6 5 7 1 4 7 3 9 6 7 12 10 15 20 3 8 1 6 9 6 5 5 6 Total 3 1 2 0 1 1 1 4 7 6 13 18 20 23 30 45 44 45 65 60 64 78 81 106 110 106 156 115 125 91 23 90 119 218 423 480 375 315 293 246 Alumni & Development 55 Alumni Donors By Primary School and Class, 1991-92 (Continued) Evening Newton Nursing College College Class A&S Ed. Mgl. 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 102 107 113 102 99 74 79 136 138 115 137 172 193 190 187 186 203 195 309 237 271 289 317 277 303 310 301 308 351 256 265 302 296 283 277 269 6 34 28 32 30 33 23 33 47 47 47 55 69 77 56 76 75 81 63 78 72 81 58 53 42 42 45 42 31 18 27 27 39 26 44 34 33 72 81 109 95 99 74 70 75 115 97 112 133 137 124 120 138 121 102 139 94 157 ·140 143 163 151 208 173 163 164 145 166 182 127 152 144 138 6 32 37 41 46 53 45 61 41 37 32 50 72 40 29 40 35 47 43 45 55 58 49 42 48 46 44 39 37 34 37 34 32 30 26 19 22 1 18 22 12 19 22 14 19 20 15 17 19 19 13 21 22 11 17 21 24 25 21 23 12 16 23 25 32 36 32 17 31 36 23 27 26 28 13 4 17 19 19 29 23 42 24 41 22 25 44 36 25 55 38 44 40 35 44 Total 10,153 1,699 5,335 1,601 912 663 Grad. A&S 19 10 24 15 31 28 11 22 27 33 37 66 48 64 69 88 109 70 55 59 54 59 58 45 63 76 70 61 53 47 50 53 53 40 48 49 3 1,915 Grad. Mgl. Social Work Law 32 41 36 30 30 27 43 52 35 34 5 7 6 11 14 10 14 12 19 14 11 17 17 19 16 16 21 27 23 25 24 18 12 30 23 20 20 22 23 11 18 17 24 17 27 21 15 23 20 15 22 28 29 29 26 24 42 39 39 61 37 49 57 68 76 63 54 83 68 71 55 75 69 64 61 74 69 86 76 51 59 48 43 715 734 2,061 2 4 7 7 9 6 13 14 11 10 19 20 22 17 12 17 20 12 31 37 36 29 Note: Double- and triple-degreed alumni are counted by their primary (or first-received) degree only. Source: Information Services, University Relations Weston Theo. Honorary EX* Degrees Alumni 1 10 8 8 7 8 7 9 6 8 6 2 3 4 8 3 2 5 3 4 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 4 2 15 1 3 1 1 1 2 1 2 1 35 1 2 1 8 291 Tolal 311 340 384 360 412 331 375 421 484 417 506 664 617 610 644 658 729 649 801 691 741 733 736 729 742 833 780 763 773 644 693 775 698 692 669 642 72 26,122 PHYSICAL PLANT 1III!·1!II"lI!c~,a- - ~ , '. - " • . ~~ t, -,'-o;=c-----7'-:J~ ' ~. - ~-- -. I . .. " >, -~, :'21'iJ~ ~~~-,~J :'!" • • 58 Physical Plant Buildings Related to Boston College Operations Location and Primary Use, Fall 1992 Name Alumni House Alumni Stadium Bapst Library Barnt House Barry Fine Arts Pavilion Bea House' Botolph House Boumeuf House Thea Bowman AHANA Center Brock House Campion Hall Canisius House' CameyHall Cheverus Hall Claver Hall Connolly Faculty Center Connolly Carriage House Silvio O. Conte Forum' Cottage and Garage Cushing Hall Cushing House Daly House' Devlin Hall Donaldson House Duchesne East/West Edmond's Hall Faber House Fenwick Hall Fitzpatrick Hall William J, Flynn Student Recreation Complex' Fulton Hall Gasson Hall Gonzaga Hall Greycliff Hall Haley House Haley Carriage House Hardey House Higgins Hall Hopkins House Hovey House Ignacio Hall Kenny-Cottle Library Keyes North/South Kostka Hall Lawrence House Loyola Hall Lyons Hall Locallon Primary Use Gross Date Constructed Square or Acquired Footage 885 Centre Street 2601 Beacon Street Middle Campus 885 Centre Street 885 Centre Street 176 Commonwealth Ave. 18 Old Colony Road 84 College Road 72 College Road 78 College Road Middle Campus 67 Lee Road Middle Campus 127 Hammond Street 40 Tudor Road 300 Hammond Street 300 Hammond Street Lower Campus 885 Centre Street Middle Campus 885 Centre Street 262 Beacon Street Middle Campus 90 College Road 885 Centre Street 200 SI. Thomas More Dr. 102 College Road 46 Tudor Road 137 Hammond Street Administrative Sports Library Jesuit Res. & Admin. Academic & Administrative Jesuit Residence Administrative Administrative Administrative Administrative Academic & Administrative Jesuit Residence Academic & Administrative Student Residence Student Residence Academic Academic Sports & Administrative Residence Academic & Administrative Student Residence Jesuit Residence Academic & Administrative Administrative Student Residence Student Residence Academic Student Residence Student Residence 1974 1957 1928 1974 1974 1965 1967 1985 1970 1972 1955 1966 1962 1960 1955 1975 1975 1988 1974 1960 1974 1981 1924 1975 1974 1975 1938 1960 1960 15,822 243,000 73,048 25,392 39,357 4,685 7,136 4,460 3,528 4,146 111,855 3,761 101,059 32,102 12,980 12,965 4,330 409,452 4,342 67,303 25,709 5,584 95,264 3,910 54,193 245,078 3,081 34,008 36,039 Lower Campus Middle Campus Middle Campus 149 Hammond Street 2051 Commonwealth Ave. 314 Hammond Street 314 Hammond Street 885 Centre Street Middle Campus 116 College Road 258 Hammond Street 100 Commonwealth Ave. 885 Centre Street 885 Centre Street 149 Hammond Street 122 College Road 42 Tudor Road Middle Campus Sports & Administrative Academic & Administrative Academic & Administrative Student Residence Student Residence Academic & Administrative Child Care Center Student Residence Academic & Administrative Administrative Academic & Administrative Student Residence & Admin. Library Student Residence Student Residence Administrative Student Residence Academic & Administrative 1972 1948 1913 1958 1969 1969 1969 1974 1966 1968 1971 1973 1974 1974 1957 1968 1955 1951 213,380 80,839 74,881 35,960 12,318 9,294 5,700 40,152 135,903 4,274 11,148 125,550 70,620 65,266 38,137 3,909 17,046 100,214 Physical Plant 59 Buildings Related to Boston College Operations Location and Primary Use, Fall 1992 (Continued) Name Mary House McElroy Commons McGuinn Hall Medeiros Townhouses Eugene F. Merker! Chemistry Center Mill Street Cottage Modular Apartments Murray House Murray Carriage House O'Connell House Thomas P. O'Neill, Jr. Uhrary Parking Garage Quonset Hut Rahner House Robsham Theater Arts Center Roncalli Hall Rubenstein Hall Service Building Shaw House Commander Shea Field Southwell Hall St. Mary's Hall' St. Thomas More Hall Stuart House and the James W. Smith Wing Trinity Chapel (Newton) Voute Hall Michael P. Walsh Hall Welch Hall Weston Observatory Williams Hall Xavier Hall Location 885 Centre Street Middle Campus Middle Campus 60 Tudor Road 2609 Beacon Street 29 Mill Street Lower Campus 292 Hammond Street 292 Hammond Street 185 Hammond Street Middle Campus Lower Campus 885 Centre Street 96 College Road Lower Campus 182 Hammond Street 90 Commonwealth Ave. Middle Campus 377 Beacon Street Lower Campus 38 Commonwealth Ave. Middle Campus St. Thomas More Drive Date . Constructed or Acquired Primary Use 1974 Academic & Administrative Student Services & Admin. 1960 Academic & Administrative 1968 1971 Student Residence 1991 Academic & Administrative Residence 1974 1970 Student Residence 1967 Commuter Center Academic 1967 1938 Student Union Central Research Library 1984 General Parking Facility 1979 1974 Gymnasium Administrative 1952 1981 Student Services & Academic Student Residence 1965 1973 Student Residence & Admin. 1948 Academic & Administrative 1962 Student Residence 1960 Baseball Diamond/Soccer Field 1937 Administrative 1917 Jesuit Residence 1955 Administrative Gross Square Footage 4,376 157,505 145,932 25,546 117,791 2,879 104,080 8,490 2,801 32,781 198,347 146,400 5,964 2,799 44,186 32,841 126,755 36,988 10,856 885 Centre Street 885 Centre Street 110 Commonwealth Ave. 150 St. Thomas More Dr. 200 Hammond Street Weston,MA 143 Hammond Street 44 Tudor Road 36 College Road 66 Commonwealth Ave. 80 Commonwealth Ave. 31 Lawrence Avenue 55 Lee Road Academic & Administrative Chapel Student Residence Student Res. & Dining Fac. Student Residence Research & Administrative Student Residence Student Residence Administrative Student Residence & Admin. Student Residence Academic Residence 108,426 26,238 89,243 205,801 32,876 22,182 32,868 12,938 3,766 67,560 70,853 5,105 7,363 Total Gross Square Footage 'Rented to the Jesuit Community of Boston College. 'Includes "open to below" atrium space of 138,846 SQ. ft. 'Owned by tlie Jesuit Community of Boston College. 'Includes "open to below" atrium space of 82,714 sq. ft. Note: The above statistics do not include leased properties used in University operations. Source: Space Management 1974 1974 1988 1980 1965 1948 1965 1955 1974 1989 1988 1979 1978 12,338 138,646 64,584 4,839,614 60 Physical Plant Boston College Properties Fall 1992 Building Gross Square Footage Acres 98,585 288,393 3.1 10.9 386,978 14.0 2,127,874 3,766 3,528 4,146 4,460 3,910 2,799 3,081 4,274 3,909 7,136 2,173,568 43.2 0.2 0.2 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.2 .0.4 45.2 1,611,377 64,584 52.7 3.4 Upper Campus Roncalli, Welch, and Williams Halls O'Connell House and Upper Campus Dormitories Total Upper Campus Middle Campus Area bounded by Beacon Street, Lower Campus Road, College Road, and Commonwealth Avenue - including the Ignacio and Rubenstein Residence Halls, 66 and 80 Commonwealth Avenue Residence Halls, Voute Hall, Southwell Hall, and the Chemistry Building 36 College Road 72 College Road (Thea Bowman AHANA Center) 78 College Road (Brock House) 84 College Road (Bourneuf House) 90 College Road (Donaldson House) 96 College Road (Rahner House) 102 College Road (Faber House) 116 College Road (Hopkins House) 122 College Road (Lawrence House) 176 Commonwealth Avenue (Bea House) 18 Old Colony Road (Botolph House) Total Middle Campus 4,685 Lower Campus Area bounded by Lower Campus Rnad, Beacon Street, and SI. Thomas More Drive (excluding MDC property) SI. Thomas More Hall Total Lower Campus Total Chestnut Hill Campus Newton Campus Total Chestnut Hill and Newton Campuses 1,675,961 56.1 4,236,507 115.3 488,736 40.3 4,725,243 155.6 5,584 11,148 8,490 2,801 12,965 7,660 9,294 5,700 5,105 7,363 3,761 0.5 0.4 0.2 79,871 9.6 12,318 0.1 22,182 19.4 114,371 29.1 4,839,614 184.7 Outlying Properties Newton 262 Beacon Street (Daly House) 258 Hammond Street (Hovey House) 292 Hammond Street (Murray House) 292 Hammond Street (Murray Carriage House) 300 Hammond Street (Connolly Faculty Center) 300 Hammond Street (Connolly Carriage House) 314 Hammond Street (Haley House) 314 Hammond Street (Haley Carriage House) 31 Lawrence Avenue 55 Lee Road 67 Lee Road (Canisius House) 4.1 1.2 1.6 1.3 0.3 Boston 2051 Commonwealth Avenue (Greycliff Hall) Weston Weston Observatory Total Outlying Properties Total Properties Owned by Boston College Note: The above statistics do not include rented properties used in University operations. Source: Space Management (square footage); Buildings and Grounds (acreage) Physical Plant 61 Facility Capacities Fall 1992 Facility Locallon Lecture Sealing Dinner Sealing Receplion! Standing Athletics Alumni Stadium: Sporling Events Field Seating Silvio O. Conte Forum Basketball Seating Hockey Seating Practice Court William J Flynn Student Recreation Complex Lower Campus 32,000 3,000 Lower Campus 8,500 Lower Campus 7,600 975 2,809 2,500 4,000 Auditoriums Barry Fine Arts Pavilion 223 Merkert Chemistry Center 127 Cushing Hall 001 Devlin Hall 012' Fulton Hall 412 Gasson Hall 305 Higgins Hall 304 Higgins Hall 307 McGuinn Hall 121 Robsham Theater Arts Center Stuart Hall 411 Stuart Hall 315 Newton Campus Middle Campus Middle Campus Middle Campus Middle Campus Middle Campus Middle Campus Middle Campus Middle Campus Lower Campus Newton Campus Newton Campus 330 150 185 322 224 104 160 160 266 591 130 200 178 Conference Rooms Murray Conference Room .... McElroy Conference Room McElroy Commons McElroy Commons 100 40 50 Dining Halls'" Eagle's Nest Faculty Dining Room Lyons Cafeteria McElroy Dining Hall Newton Campus Cafeteria Newton Campus Snack Bar Walsh Hall Dining Facilities: 450 150 550 McElroy Commons McElroy Commons Lyons Hall McElroy Commons Stuart House Stuart House Michael P. Walsh Hall 900 250 175 458 (300) Dining Room (lOB) Golden Lantern Function Rooms (25/25) Houses Barat House Haley House Hovey House O'Connell House Newton Campus 314 Hammond Street 258 Hammond Street 50 25 25 64 20 100 200 185 Hammond Street Lounges McGuinn 3rd Floor Lounge·· McGuinn 5th floor Lounge Middle Campus Middle Campus 50 50 75 50 50 75 Multi-Purpose 150 The Shea Room Conte Forum 350 250 140 Gasson T-lOO Middle Campus 250 300 Kresge Room & Lobby Robsham Theater Arts Center 200 Newton Chapel Newton Campus 500 .. Since Devlin Hall is under renovation during academic year 1992·93, its facilities are not currently available. ** Murray Conference Room and the McGuinn 3rd Floor Lounge are being used as a temporary classrooms during the 1992-93 academic year. These rooms are only available for other uses after 6:30 P.M. ••• Capacities shown for dining facilities are those used for function seating, and therefore differ from capacities for student dining. Note: University facilities are available for function purposes through the Bureau of Conferences and/or the primary user responsible for the facility. All facilities are not available to all groups. The capacity figures are those used by the Bureau of Conferences in determining appropriate space needs for scheduled functions. Source: Buildings and Grounds 62 Physical Plant Dining Facilities Fall 1992 Name location Capacity The Club O'Connell House Eagle's Nest Snack Bar McElroy Commons 446 Faculty Dining Room McElroy Commons 146 Lyons Cafeteria Lyons Hall 550 McElroy Dining Hall McElroy Commons 774 McElroy Cafe McElroy Commons 91 Newton Campus Cafeteria Stuart House 290 Newton Campus Snack Bar Stuart House 185 Walsh Hall Dining Facilities Michael P. Walsh Hall Total Capacity 56 468 --- 3,006 Source: Dining Department Offices Fall 1992 Building Ollices Chestnut Hill Campus Bea House Bapst Library Botolph House Boumeuf House Thea Bowman ARANA Center Brock House Campion Hall Carney Hall Conte Forum Cushing Hall Devlin HaW Donaldson House 1 5 12 8 7 7 62 237 54 77 42 8 Building Offices Faber House 3 Fulton Hall 118 Gasson Hall 40 Haley House 7 Haley Carriage House 2 Higgins Hall 65 Hopkins House 9 Hovey House 13 Lawrence House 9 Lyons Hall 112 McElroy Commons 32 McGuinn Hall 181 Merkert Chern Center 31 Building Offices Building Offices Newton Campus Alumni House BaratHouse Barry Fine Arts Pavilion Kenny-Cottle Library Mary House Stuart House 26 21 1 101 Subtotal 164 Murray House 2 O'Neill Library 55 Rahner House 7 Robsham Theater 7 Rubenstein Hall 23 Setvice Building 37 Southwell Hall 12 St. Thomas More Hall 127 31 Lawrence Avenue 13 36 College Road 8 Weston Obsetvatory --.1L Subtotal Total Offices 1,614 1,433 * Since Devlin Hall is under renovation during academic year 1992-93, its facilities are not currently available. Note: The above statistics do not include leased properties used in University operations. Source: Space Management 9 6 Physical Plant 63 Classrooms Summary of Building Use Fall 1992 Fall 1992 Building Number of Classrooms Number 01 Stations 490 Building Use Number of BUildings Student Residence' 26 Administrative 13 22 Campion Hall 5 12 Carney Hall 25 561 1,107 3 246 Jesuit Residence Cushing Hall 11 736 Miscellaneous Use' 17 Devlin Hall * 2 373 Total 83 Fulton Hall 13 945 Gasson Hall 18 883 Higgins Hall 6 Kenny-Cottle library 1 536 125 Lyons Hall 7 318 45 McGuinn Hall 1 13 . 546 O'Neill library 9 441 Robsham Theater Arts Center 2 606 Stuart House 9 578 137 8,536 Barry Fine Arts Pavilion Chemistry Building McElroy Commons Total * Since Devlin Han is under renovation during academic year 1992·93, its facilities are not currently available. Source: Space Management Academic and Administrative' 5 Keyes North and South -I, Duchesne East and West -I, Modulars = 1 'Includes Weston Observatory. , Includes gymnasiums, libraries, student union, etc. Note: The above statistics do not include leased properties used in University operations. Source: Space Management 1 64 Physical Plant Residence Hall Capacities Fall 1992 Residence Hall Address Living Units Students SlaW Tolal 67 40 74 73 78 79 49 50 69 8 78 72 39 134 76 142 141 151 154 92 94 134 23 156 141 74 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 3 1 3 3 3 137 79 145 144 154 157 95 98 137 24 159 144 77 776 1,512 38 1,550 42 206. 29 64 80 65 139 57 124 156 784 45 358 462 356 784 216 147 6 10 2 5 9 5 16 6 3 162 794 47 363 471 361 800 222 - 150 - 806 3,308 62 3,370 . 65 63 72 95 75 57 119 127 131 173 141 105 4 4 4 4 5 3 123 131 135 177 146 108 427 796 24 820 2,009 5,616 124 5,740 Chestnut Hill Campus Upper Campus Cheverus Hall Claver Hall Fenwick Hall Fitzpatrick Hall Gonzaga Hall Kostka Hall Loyola Hall Medeiros Townhouses Roncalli Hall Shaw Hall Welch Hall Williams Hall Xavier Hall 127 Hammond Street 40 Tudor Road 46 Tudor Road 137 Hammond Street 149 Hammond Street 149 Hammond Street 42 Tudor Road 60 Tudor Road 182 Hammond Street 377 Beacon Street 200 Hammond Street 142 Hammond Street 44 Tudor Road -- Lower Campus Commonwealth Avenue Dormitories Building B Edmond's Hall Greycliff Hall Ignacio Hall Modulars Rubenstein Hall Michael P. Walsh Hall Voute Hall 66 Commonwealth Avenue 80 Commonwealth Avenue 200 St. Thomas More Drive 2051 Commonwealth Avenue 100 Commonwealth Avenue St. Thomas More Drive 90 Commonwealth Avenue 150 St. Thomas More Drive 110 Commonwealth Avenue 66 Commonwealth Avenue Newton Campus Cushing House Duchesne East Duchesne West Hardey House Keyes North Keyes South 885 Centre Street 885 Centre Street 885 Centre Street 885 Centre Street 885 Centre Street 885 Centre Street Total • Assistant Directors and Hall Directors are not included. Source: Office of University Housing -- -- FINANCE 68 Finance Highlights of Financial Operations For the Five Years Ending May 31, 1992 (Dollars in Millions) 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 Tuition and Fees Contracts and Grants Gifts and Investment Income* Auxiliary Enterprises $ 114.2 14.0 28.0 40.6 $ 126.2 15.0 36.7 48.1 $ 136.9 15.5 43.2 52.1 $ 147.0 16.8 46.1 56.5 $ 162.3 17.2 43.7 61.1 Total Revenue $196.8 $226.0 $247.7 $266.4 $284.3 61.5 9.8 4.3 7.9 11.5 28.0 25.3 47.0 27.8 $ 65.4 9.9 5.7 8.4 13.1 30.0 27.5 48.0 37.5 $ 72.1 11.1 7.2 9.3 13.2 31.8 28.9 52.2 36.5 $ 77.4 11.6 7.4 11.0 14.8 33.0 34.3 55.4 39.4 $223.1 $245.5 $262.3 $284.3 Revenues Expenditures and Transfers Instruction Libraries . Sponsored Research Student Services Plant Maintenance General Administration Student Aid/Loans Auxiliary Enterprises Other Transfers* $ Total Expenditures and Transfers 57.7 8.8 4.5 7.1 10.6 23.0 22.1 38.1 23.4 $195.3 $ *Gifts and Other Transfers include gifts restricted to Endowment. Plant. and Student Loan Funds. Source: Office of the Controller Condensed Balance Sheet As of May 31, 1992 (Dollars in Millions) Student loan Funds Endowment & Similar Funds $ 37.8 0.8 8.6 $ 5.6 30.6 $ 318.3 37.0 0.4 Total Assets (Net) $47.2 $36.2 $355.7 liabilities & Equity Payables Bonds & Mortgages $30.0 Current Funds Assets Cash & Investments (at Market) Trustee Deposits Receivables & Other Physical Plant Depreciation Equity (Net) Total Liabilities & Equity Source: Office of the Controller Plant Funds Total 16.4 22.5 3.1 408.0 (104.5) $ 378.1 60.3 42.7 408.0 (104.5) $345.5 $784.6 $ $ 5.5 218.6 $ 35.5 218.6 30.0 17.2 36.2 355.7 224.1 121.4 254.1 530.5 $47.2 $36.2 $355.7 $345.5 $784.6 Finance 69 Tuition and Fees For the Ten Years Ending May 31,1993 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 Undergraduate Schools Arts & Sciences, Education, Management, Nursing Evening College (per course) Summer Session (per credit hour) $6,800 $7,475 $8,200 $9,120 $9,920 $10,760 $11,720 $12,700 $13,690 474 508 546 586 335 355 380 412 442 194 208 224 240 143 155 168 180 134 $14,580 618 254 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) 412 15,570' 474 12,280 332 382 440 16,590' 504 13,080 354 406 3,180 3,900 3,780 3,900 3,900 3,180 3,180 3,450 4,090 4,250 3,360 4,120 3,980 4,120 4,120 3,360 3,360 3,620 4,290 4,500 3,550 4,360 4,230 4,360 4,360 3,550 3,550 3,820 4,540 4,760 2,530 2,650 2,790 2,920 270 44 40 198 110 280 50 40 210 120 290 52 40 222 130 300 54 44 232 136 218 7,450 240 6,540 185 210 238 8,200 265 7,135 200 228 258 8,920 288 7,730 214 245 280 324 350 380 300 9,820 10,560 11,460 12,510 13,670 404 438 318 342 372 8,350 8,975 9,700 10,500 11,370 230 240 260 285 308 302 330 356 265 280 Upper Campus Modulars Hillside-3 bedroom Hillside 2-bedroom Edmond's Hall Newton 66 Commonwealth Avenue Walsh Hall Commonwealth Ave. Apartments Commonwealth Ave. Townhouses 1,645 2,015 2,005 2,050 2,050 1,645 1,775 2,180 2,160 2,200 2,200 1,775 1,830 1,960 1,940 2,400 2,360 2,400 2,400 1,940 1,940 2,150 2,300 2,820 2,750 2,820 2,820 2,300 2,500 2,520 2,450 3,000 2,930 3,000 3,000 2,450 2,660 2,680 2,770 3,390 3,320 3,390 3,390 2,770 2,770 3,030 3,590 3,690 2,980 3,650 3,570 3,650 3,650 2,980 2,980 3,260 3,860 3,970 Board Per Student Representative Fees 1,725 1,840 1,950 2,070 2,200 2,380 154 32 20 120 65 220 32 20 130 65 230 32 24 140 70 240 32 24 150 76 250 39 24 166 85 260 41 40 182 95 Room Charge Per Student Laboratory (Science) Undergraduate Government Graduate Student Association Health/Infirmary Recreation Note: All tuition and fees listed are for two semesters, except for those stated as "per course" or "per credit hour." This was the tuition rate for first year law students in academic year 1991-92. The second and third year tuition rate was $14,830. 2 This is the rate for first and second year law students in academic year 1992-93. The third year tuition rate is $15,800. Source: Boston College Policies and Procedures Manual I 70 Finance Boston College Tuition Restated in 1982-84 Dollars Effect of Inflation and Real Growth Academic Year Tuition in Absolute Dollars Consumer Price Index' 1982-83 1983-84 1984-85 1985-86 1986-87 1987-88 1988-89 1989-90 1990-91 1991-92 1992-93 $6,000 $6,800 $7,475 $8,200 $9,120 $9,920 $10,760 $11,720 $12,700 $13,690 $14,580 97.6 101.3 105.3 109.3 110.5 115.4 120.5 126.1 133.8 137.9 142.7 " Tuition in Constant 1982-84 Dollars $6,148 $6,713 $7,099 $7,502 $8,253 $8,596 $8,929 $9,294 $9,492 $9,927 $10,217 , CPI measured at December 31st of academic year. (1982-84· 100) **Estimate Sources: Bureau of Labor Statistics and the Office of the Controller Summary of Contract and Grant Awards· 1991-1992 Number of Awards Biology 8 Award Total $ 621,193 Number of Awards Award Total 5 1,442,403 Center for Testing 14 1,152,019 CDPRM/CASE 11 659,035 Schoolof~anagement 6 553,280 School of Nursing 9 215,430 Graduate School of Social Work 7 336,949 School of Education: Chemistry 23 1,908,375 Economics 2 153,285 English 1 310 Geology and Geophysics" 5 472,320 History 1 75,329 18 4,549,869 ~athematics 4 988,374 Social Welfare Research Institute 4 278,956 Physics 6 278,771 Sociology 2 8,031 Political Science 2 2,500 Theology 2 240,940 Psychology 3 163,047 Other 5 456,536 138 $14,556,952 Institute for Space Research Campus School Grand Total 'These amounts represent funds awarded to the University during lhe period June 1, 1991 to May 31, 1992 and include only funds officially authorized in thal year. They do l!l!l include the full amount of multi-year projects. "Includes Weston Observalory. Source: Office of Research Administration Finance 71 Contracts and Grants by Department* Total Accounted Expense 1991-92 (Thousands of Dollars) Athletic Association Biology Center for Testing Chemistry Classics College of Arts and Sciences Economics English Geology and Geophysics" Graduate School of Social Work History Institute for Space Research Law School Total Total Expense Expense 54 680 1,089 2,052 5 82 23 72 504 330 3 4,500 100 Mathematics Music Physics Political Science Psychology School of Education School of Management School of Nursing Social Welfare Research Institute Student Affairs Student Aid Theology Other Total 57 35 407 35 191 2,202 512 206 111 140 5,149 105 7 $18,651 * The amounts represent actual accounted expenditures for the referenced fiscal year. ** Includes Weston Observatory. Source: Office of the Controller Contracts and Grants* Source and Application of Funding (Thousands of Dollars) 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 Source Government: Federal State Local Non-Government $ 11,116 $ 11,600 $ 12,392 $ 13,817 $ 14,666 1,689 1,095 563 2,092 1,264 745 1,697 1,268 1,324 1,278 1,571 1,448 838 1,588 1,559 $14,463 $15,701 $16,681 $18,114 $18,651 Sponsored Research Other Sponsored programs Student Aid $ 6,339 $ 6,110 $ 7,770 $ 9,850 $ 10,122 3,012 5,112 3,557 6,034 3,310 5,601 3,326 4,938 3,380 5,149 Total $14,463 $15,701 $16,681 $18,114 $18,651 Total Application ,. The amounts represent actual accounted expenditures for the referenced fiscal year. Source: Office of the Controller 72 Finance Selected Contract and Grant Awards 1991-1992 Title Source 01 Funding Amount Biology Department Functional Role of Idoleamines in the Retina National Institutes of Health $110,186 Chemistry Department Entry of Gas Phase Pollutants into Fog Droplets Faculty Award for Women Scientists Prediction Methods: Hemolytic and Plasmin Kringles Environmental Protection Agency National Science Foundation National Institutes of Health 103,580 50,000 120.050 U.S. Geological Survey 114,346 Geology and Geophysics New England Seismic Network 1992 History Versions of the Mexican Revolution National Endowment for the Humanities 75,329 Institute for Space Research Computer Models for the Characterization of the Space Radiation Environment Irregularity Modeling and Plasma Line Studies at High Latitudes U.S. Air Force 150.000 National Science Foundation 93,316 National Science Foundation 910,778 Mathematics Department Implementation of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics Standard in Discrete Mathematics Physics Department A Novel Approach for New Radiation Source Based on Solid State Plasma Instabilities U.S. Army Research Office 85,000 School of Education Urban District Assessment Consortium Into the Mainstream/Improving the Mainstream Project Partner Pew Charitable Trust Massachusetts Department of Education Massachusetts Higher Education Coordinating Council 200,000 45.567 29.358 School of Management Business and the Public Schools: Analysis and Implications Spencer Foundation 7.500 Bradley Foundation 117.140 Theology Department Institute of Medieval Philosophy and Theology Source: Office of Research Administration Finance 73 LIBRARIES & INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY 76 Libraries & Information Technology Boston College libraries Bapst Library Middle Campus Ltw Library Kenny-Cottle Library, Newton Campus The John J. Bums Library of Rare Books and Special Collections Burns Library, Middle Campus Newton Resource Center (Undergraduate) Chapel Basement, Newton Campus Geophysics Library Weston Observatory, Weston. MA O'Neill Library Central Library, Middle Campus School of Social Work Library McGuinn Hall, Lower Level Educational Resource Center Campion Hall Academic Development Center O'Neill library Source: University Librarian Expenditures for library Materials Library 1987-88 1988-89 1989-90 455,511 $ 519,385 $ 520,877 1,644,721 1,909,336 2,071,738 33,306 34,601 41,505 Total $2,133,538 $2,463,322 $2,634,120 'Includes Special Collections and other general expenditures recorded as "University librarian." Source: Office of the Controller Law O'Neill' Social Work $ 1991-92 1990-91 $ 631,871 2,496,418 52,786 $3,181,075 $ 646,558 2,538,398 51,282 $3,236,238 Holdings by Individual libraries 1992 library Bapst Burns Special Collections Dormitory libraries Educational Resource Center Law O'Neill & Newton Resource Center Social Work Weston Geophysics Total Volumes 10,873 92,876 400 13,606 185,461 936,378 32,858 8,015 1,280,467 Serial Subscriptions 22 10 10 70 4,407 9,429 334 49 14,331 Microform Units Gov't. Document Volumes Media Units 250 5,910 5,996 735,319 1,409,032 3,093 2,192 2,155,882 1,100 139,425 511 12,451 120 139,936 19,581 Source: University Librarian library Use Statistics 1991-1992 Library Bapst Burns Educational Resource Center .Law O'Neill and Newton Resource Center O'Neill Government Documents Social Work Weston Geophysics Total Source: University Librarian Computer Searches Interlibrary Loans Reference Questions 2,905 66,969 1,576 68,545 649 18,491 1,072 __ 41 20,253 7,236 136,797 8,548 7,328 180 162,994 Libraries & Information Technology 77 Special Library Services Quest- Library Information System The Quest Computer system of the Boston College Libraries provides access to 1.3 million volumes including books, media materi;ils, microforms, newspapers and periodicals. Quest may be searched by author, title, call number, subject or key word from terminals in the libraries or by dialing in to the system from other locations on campus. Also, major periodical indexes in the humanities, social sciences, law, and the sciences may be searched by selecting the QWIL database when using the system. Computer Searching State of the art CD·ROM networks in the O'Neill Library and the Law Library give patrons immediate on-site access to many important and high use databases in the fields of education, psychology, business, the social sciences,. nursing and medicine, law, and public affairs. Dial-in access to the networks is available from other campus libraries. Additional CD-ROM databases are available on individual workstations in the O'Neill Library. New databases are added regularly and patrons should check with the Reference Department for a list of current titles. In addition to the search capabilities available through Quest and CD-ROM, the Libraries offer patrons and researchers access to several hundred on-line databases that may be used for the retrieval of bibliographic information, text, and statistical information. To use these databases, a researcher may plan a search strategy with a reference librarian and have the librarian perform the search, or the researcher may choose from among a smaller number of on-line services, such as Dow Jones or BRS/After Dark, and, after training, perform the search himself/herself for a lesser fee. The Law School Library has on-line access to LEXIS and WESTlAW as well as other databases. Access to some of these files may be limited by contract to members of the Law School community. The Libraries also facilitate access to many computerized databases in business, economics, and the social sciences on magnetic tape. The tapes are purchased by the libraries and are housed in the University computing facility. Contact the Reference Department for more information, and to arrange for demonstrations, workshops, or presentations to classes or departments. Interlibrary loan The Interlibrary Loan Service is offered to students, faculty, administrators, and staff to facilitate obtaining materials not available in the Boston College Libraries. Books, photocopies of journal articles, microfilm, theses, and government documents may be borrowed from other libraries. Except for unusual items, the waiting period is from one to four weeks; for anyone willing to use the material at the holding library, a computerized system at the reference desk will provide locations. Request forms and further information are available from the Interlibrary Loan staff in each library. Boston Library Consortium The library is a member of the Boston Library Consortium, a group of area libraries which includes Brandeis, Boston University, Tufts, Wellesley, Northeastern, MIT, Massachusetts State Library, Boston Public Library, and the University of Massachusetts System. Faculty and graduate students may apply for a Consortium borrower's card at the Reference Department in the O'Neill Library. The Consortium maintains a central office at the Boston Public Library. Further information may be found in the User Guide and the Consortium Handbook, available in all libraries. United States Government Publications In 1964, Boston College was designated as one of the Federal Depository Libraries for this congressional district. This status entitles the O'Neill Library to receive, on a selective basis, United States government publications at no cost with the stipulation that they be made available to the general public. Most of the material circulates in the same manner as books. Inquiries related to the use of government documents should be directed to the Government Documents Department on the first floor of the O'Neill Library. Media Department The Media Department on the second floor of the O'Neill Library houses information in many formats - videocassettes, videodiscs, 16mm films, phonodiscs, audiocassettes, compact discs, sound filmstrips, and slides. All materials may be used by patrons in individual carrels or, when accompanied by a faculty member, in meeting rooms. Loans are restricted to BC faculty members and librarians. The Department collects nonprint materials in all subject areas within the University's teaching and research interests. The Vision Resources area within the Department has adaptive computer hardware and software for students with vision impairments. New England Library Information Network/DClC Through membership in the New England Library Information Network (NELINE1), our users have on-line access to publishing, cataloging, and interlibrary loan location information from the data bank of OCLC, Inc. which contains over 26 million bibliographic records from the Library of Congress and from 4,000 other libraries in North America. Source: University ubrarian 78 libraries & Information Technology John J. Burns Library of Rare Books and Special Collections The University's special collections, including the University's Archives, are housed in the magnificently appointed John J. Bums library, located in the Bapst Library Building, north entrance. The distinguished and varied collections of the Honorable John J. Bums Library speak eloquently of the University's commitment to the preservation and dissemination of human knowledge. The Burns Library is home to nearly one hundred thousand volumes, more than three million manuscripts, and important collections of architectural records, maps, art works, photographs, films, artifacts, and ephemera. These materials are housed in the climate-controlled, secure environment of Burns either because of their rarity or because of their importance as part of a special collection. While treated with special care, these resources are available for use at Bums to all qualified students, faculty, and researchers. Indeed, their use is strongly encouraged, and visitors to Burns are always welcome, either simply to browse or to make use of the collections. Though its collections cover virtually the entire spectrum of human knowledge, the Bums Library has achieved international recognition in several specific areas of research, most notably: Irish studies; British Catholic authors; Jesuitana; fine print; Catholic liturgy and life in America, 192:>-1975; Boston history; Caribbeana; and Congressional archives. It has also won acclaim for significant holdings on nursing, detective fiction, Thomas Merton, Japanese prints, Colonial and early Republic Protestantism, and banking. Some of the significant named collections at Bums include: Hilaire Belloc Collection and Archives, 1870-1953 Banking Archives: Hibernia Savings Bank, Union Warren, The Provident Institution for Savings, the Yankee Bank for Finance and Savings, and the Savings Banks Association of Massachusetts The Honorable Edward Boland Papers Bookbuilders of Boston Archives, 1938British Catholic Authors Burns, Oates and Washboume Collection, 1847-1954 Gilbert Keith Chesterton Collection, 1874-1936 Citywide Coordinating Council Archives, 197:>-1978 Josephine A Dolan Collection The Rev. Robert F. Drinan, S.]. Papers Eire Society of Boston Archives Fine Print Collection Howard B. Gill Papers Seamus Heaney Collection Irish Collection Jesuitana Collection, 1540-1773 Rita Kelleher Collection Peter Levi Collection and Papers, 1931liturgy and life Collection, 192:>-1975 McNiff Collection of the Stanbrook Abbey Press Thomas Merton Collection Meynell Family Collection Morrisey Collection of Japanese Prints, 18th-19th centuries Nursing Archives The Honorable Thomas P. O'Neill, Jr. Papers Salem Divines Collection Joseph Coolidge Shaw, S.]., 1821-1851, Collection Rex Stout Collection and Archives Francis Sweeney, S.J. Collection Francis Thompson Collection, 1859-1907 Typography and Design . University Archives Sr. Madeleine Clemence Vaillot, O.P., Papers Nicholas M. Williams Memorial Collection of Caribbeana The John J. Burns Library is open Monday through Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. The Library is closed on all University holidays. Visitors are always welcome and are encouraged to view the permanent exhibition areas of the library. Guided tours are also available upon request Patrons using the collections must do so in the Burns Reading Room where specialized reference and copy services are provided. Source: University librarian Libraries 8. Information Technology 79 Academic Development Center University Archives The new Academic Development Center (ADC) is designed to support and enhance all aspects of academic excellence - Boston College's number one priority for the 1990's - by helping undergraduates, graduate students, and faculty improve learning quality and teaching effectiveness. The ADC, which opened its doors in September 1991, is located on the second floor of O'Neill Library in the Eileen M. and John M. Connors, Jr. learning Center. Archives are the official noncurrent papers and records of an institution that are deemed worthy of preservation for their legal, fiscal, or historical values. The'University Archives contain the office records and documents of the various University offices, academic and otherwise, copies of all University publications, including student publications, movie footage of Boston College football, some audiovisual materials, and tape recordings of the University Lecture Series and other significant events. A significant collection of photographs documents the pictorial history of Boston College. Alumni, faculty, and Jesuit records are also preserved. In addition, the Archives are the repository for the documents of Newton College of the Sacred Heart (194&-1975); The Jesuit Education Association (1934-1970); the Catholic International Education Office (1952-1976); and the documents of the Jesuit Community of Boston College (1863). Location-The Burns Library The ADC is a comprehensive, inclusive resource serving all of the University's students and faculty. To address the needs of the great majority of Boston College students, the Center provides tutoring for courses such as calculus, statistics, biology, chemistry, physics, nursing, accounting, and classical and foreign languages - along with training workshops in useful study skills and learning strategies. Graduate tutors in English help students strengthen their writing skills. (All ADC tutors are recommended and approved by their relevant academic departments; most are graduate students or outstanding seniors.) The Center offers programs designed to challenge the most academically talented, highest achieving students as well as programs designed to support those who are least prepared and most academically challenged. One member of the ADC's professional staff serves the needs of special populations, particularly those students with learning disabilities, helping to ensure their academic success at Boston College. The Center also sponsors seminars, workshops, and discussions for faculty and graduate teaching fellows on strategies for successful teaching and learning. Through these and other activities, the new Academic Development Center plays an increasingly important role in enhancing the quality of academic life at Boston College. Source: University Librarian Academic Development Center Tutoring Sessions Fall Semester 1991 Spring Semester 1992 Total Hours of Tutoring 835 801 1,567 1,461 2,368 2,296 Source: University Librarian The Language Laboratory The Language Laboratory, serving all the language departments, English for Foreign Students, and the Boston College community at large, is located in Lyons 313. In addition to its state-of-the-art listening/recording stations and dual-teacher console, the facility includes video and film viewing rooms, microcomputers, and a short-wave radio. The Lab's audio and videotape collection, computer software, and other audiovisual learning aids directly support and/or supplement the curriculum requirements in foreign language, foreign literature, and foreign music. Lab materials are designed to assist users in the acquisition and maintenance of aural comprehension, oral and written proficiency, and cultural awareness. Prominent among the Lab's holdings are SCOLA (Satellite Communications for Learning) international news broadcasts. These live or near-live news broadcasts in Chinese, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish and other languages are received via satellite at Boston College, videotaped by the Audiovisual Department, and stored and viewed in the Language Lab. The Language Laboratory Director and student lab assistants are available during the day and evening to assist students (undergraduate and graduate) and faculty in the operation of equipment and selection of appropriate materials for their course-related or personal language needs. Source: Language Laboratory 80 Libraries & Information Technology Information Processing Support The department of Information Processing Support (IPS) serves as the main "interface" between the Boston College computing community and Information Technology. It provides computing and communications support to faculty, students, and staff through its three main units: Departmental Systems, Personal Computing Systems, and Special Services. The most significant areas of focus for IPS are: • departmental computing and communications needs analyses, which includes helping to design and implement solutions to technology-related business needs and helping to manage the university's departmental computing resources; • assisting community members with day-to-day problems that arise in their use of technology resources, and empowering them to more effectively address their business needs through more skillful usage of existing resources; and • searching for solutions to relatively idiosyncratic and advanced problems that community members encounter. The following tables summarize the statistical outcomes of some of the department's work during the last five years. Workstations (micro-computers and terminals) are presented as a cumulative number while the number of users trained and requests for assistance addressed are annual figures. Information Processing Support Service Statistics Workstations (cumulative, by vice presidential area) Vice Vice Vice Academic Executive President Financial Vice President President Vice Vice Human Vice President President University Student In'ormation President President Resources President Administration Relations Affairs Technology 1987-88 1988-89 1989-90 1990-91 1991-92 799 1,171 1,496 1,711 1,931 * * * 27 30 16 32 35 13 16 82 119 122 137 148 69 67 86 97 122 7 14 18 23 26 51 68 99 100 101 67 89 128 142 166 236 352 362 379 438 Athletics Other Total ** ** ** 14 24 29 52 43 1,341 1,936 2,375 2,681 3,040 .. 23 *Previously counted under the Executive Vice President's group. **Previously counted under the Vice President for Student Affairs's group. Source: Information Processing Support Users Trained (annually, by vice presidential area) Academic Vice President 1987-88 456 1988-89** 1,287 1989-90 505 1990-91 641 1991-92 562 Executive Vice President Vice President Human Resources Financial Vice President 25 89 35 14 18 * * * 56 18 40 112 44 122 76 Vice President Administration 60 168 66 30 27 President 30 84 33 35 20 Vice President University Relations Vice President Student Affairs 61 153 60 43 122 48 83 52 83 66 Information Technology Other 127 357 140 238 107 *Previously counted under the Executive Vice President's group. **1988-1989 includes V-Buy information and training sessions made possible by the addition of trainers from other departments. Source: Infonnation Processing Support Total 848 6 20 2,392 939 8 35 1,337 980 34 libraries 8. Information Technology 81 User Contacts (annually, by vice presidential area) Vice Vice Vice President President Academic Executive President Financial Vice Human President President University Student Information Vice Vice Vice Relations ANairs Technology President President Resources President Administrallon 1987-88 6,492 1988-89 7.368 1989-90 8.364 1990-91 13.730 1991-92 20.788 288 96 36 265 403 • • • 49 74 264 204 156 175 264 132 168_ 216 398 604 60 168 468 378 569 456 336 252 344 520 504 576 660 955 1,445 780 1.620 3.360 2.335 3,503 Athletics •• •• •• •• 41 Other Total 24 24 36 205 267 9.000 10.560 13,548 18.834 28,478 *Previously counted under the Executive Vice President's group. **Previously counted under the Vice President for Student Affairs's group. Source: Infonnation Processing Support Computer Center The Boston College Computer Center is responsible for the operation and support of the IBM and Digital mainframe computers, located on the fifth floor of the O'Neill Library_ The Operations department of the Computer Center maintains a twentyfour hour per day, seven day per week operations schedule in support of academic and administrative computing and printing needs_ The IBM and Vax Systems Programming Staff is responsible for the installation. maintenance, and support of the operating systems software, and for hardware problem detection and reporting. Support is also provided for the activities of Management Information Systems, Network Services, and Information Processing Support, as well as limited support directly to mainframe computing users. Computer Center Transaction Statistics, 1985-1992 CICS Transactions per Month* 1984-85 524,726 385.521 582.230 707.323 600.759 522,520 401.094 765,119 606.508 732,009 584.114 591,824 June July August September October November December January February March April May 7,003,747 Total 1985·86 484,915 505,926 464,156 766,132 566,585 544,944 472,133 817,777 677,724 729.059 742.138 628.931 1986-87 557,652 581,815 533.779 881,052 651,573 626,686 542,953 940,444 779.383 838,418 853,459 723.271 1987·88 791,119 686,182 665,433 1,058.694 789,745 746,530 631,745 919,948 828,965 1.016,217 741.848 852.840 1988-89 933.363 769.058 900.613 1.205.252 970.269 1,052,648 802,909 1,065,414 911,994 1,060,994 1.016,564 1,094,437 7,400,420 8,510,483 9,729,266 11,783,515 1989-90 1,098.606 1,161.579 1,437.353 1,752,357 1,730,430 1,624,901 1,142,023 1,785,243 1.597,879 1,716,360 1.550,587 1.795,311 18,392,629** 1990-91 1,427,130 1,198.564 1,443.748 1,904.501 1.843.787 1.812.016 1,308,458 1.949,465 1,648,494 1,676,527 2.033,330 2,095,809 1991-92 1,381.226 1,614.807 1.588,472 2,158,555 1.958.205 1,730,395 1,421,116 2,298,859 1,827,456 2,222,971 1,758,706 2,157,498 20,341,829 22,118,266 'CICS (IBM's Customer Information Conlrol System) is the University's integrated. on-line administrative information system. •• The 56% growth in the volume of Iransactions from 1988-89 to 1989-90 was largely due the implementation of U-Buy, the University's online requisition system. Source: Computer Center 82 libraries & Information Technology Management Information Systems The department of Management Infonnation Systems (MIS) develops and maintains the University's infonnation systems. Each year MIS receives nearly 1,000 requests for changes or enhancements to existing programs and development of new systems. The time needed to complete these changes, enhancements, and new systems can range from two hours to many months. The Boston College information systems environment is dynamic, complex, and constantly open to change. Users of CICS (IBM's Customer Information Control System), across the university, access over 1,900 different screen fonnats in the on-line production system. Each night more than 195 scheduled computer jobs plus special requests are run in "batch" producing grade reports, paychecks, registration forms, bills, labels, and other vital documents. More recently, the MIS department is increasingly concerned with integrating the installation and implementation of desk-top and departmental solutions with existing and upgraded mainframe capabilities. The table below presents a summary of selected perfonnance statistics for fiscal years 1987-88 through 1991-92*. Management Information Systems 1989-90 1990·91 1991-92 275 342 741 370 869 745 160 600 2,200 170 17 100 1,134 203 800 2,430 195 21 155 59 1,530 221 1,100 3,125 197 23 140 80 421 1,274 79 1,569 169 2,200 4,250 172 23 114 90 1987-88* Connected Administrative Workstations (Coax) Connected Administrative Workstations (Dial-up) Connected VAX. Workstations (via SNA gateway) CICS Users Administrative Computer Files Special Requests (Monthly) Programs in Library Test Files Staff On-Line Transactions Under Development Batch Programs Under Development 'Statistics for fiscal year 1988-89 are not available. 100 Source: Management Information Systems Network Services The Network Services department is responsible for the installation, repair, and troubleshooting of all voice and data communication networks on the various campuses of the University. The tables below and on the next page present a summary of the work accomplished by Network Services during recent years and track the growth and evolution of the campus telecommunications and computing network. Network Services Operations Statistics 1987-88 Workstations Added to Campus Network Voice Lines Installed (Removed) DEC Data Lines Installed (Removed) IBM Data Lines Installed Northern Telecom Data Lines Installed Networks Installed Networking Projects Voice Service Repairs Microcomputer Repairs/Installations Network Repairs Source: Network Services 98 85 (26) 56 157 7 22 1,786 2,178 756 1988-89 272 (460) 6 9 97 4 54 1,842 2,297 1,537 1989-90 250 172 23 97 125 34 100 1,900 2,454 1,700 1990-91 128 135 (7) 120 136 20 62 2,342 3,902 874 1991-92 293 121 (12) 116 118 23 41 1,452 4,346 1,567 Libraries & Information Technology 83 Campus Network Elements Number of Sites Supported* Number of Switches Service Through the Switches Standard Voice tines Tie Lines Incoming Lines 800 Service Lines Outgoing Lines FX Lines (to New York City, Washington, D,C., etc.) Off Premise Extensions (OPX) Standard Data Lines Leased Data Lines Modem Pool Lines Fax Lines Voice Mailboxes Voice Mail Ports 1986·87 1987-88 1988-89 1989·90 1990-91 1991·92 5 2 4 2 6 2 9 3 14 4 14 5 3,045 4 80 3 3,072 4 80 4 87 3 1 384 25 50 2 3,475 4 80 8 87 3 541 25 20 9 3,015 8 80 13 976 3 1 638 25 20 22 3,231 48 96 16 96 2 4 763 28 20 43 234 24 4,192 56 96 14 96 2 7 837 27 20 60 696 28 13 14 24 26 29 5 11 15 72 3 3 256 25 50 Private Telephone tines 17 Cellular Telephones Switch Data Connections IBM Data Connections DEC Data Connections Local Area Networks (lANS) Off Campus Networks Workstations on the Campus Network 297 524 112 454 580 86 551 589 92 676 686 115 812 806 108 993 922 98 21 1 75 28 4 173 32 4 445 66 4 695 86 9 823 109 12 1,116 One reason for the growth in Network Services is the increase in the number of separate physical locations at which communication support is required. The fourteen current sites are: Main Campus, Newton Campus, SI. Clement's Hall, Weston Observatory, New York offices, Bedford offices, Laselle I & 2, 1380 Soldiers Field Road, 325 Beacon Street Warehouse, and the four Social Work satellite campuses (Springfield, MA; Paxton, MA; Plymouth, MA; and Portland, ME). Note: All statistics are reported as of the end of the fiscal year indicated. Source: Network Services * Network Serv.ices Project Time Allocation Proportion of ProjeclTime by Area Academic (excluding Libraries) Libraries Finance University Relations Student Affairs Athletics Operations* Information Technology All Other Areas * Operations 1989·90 1990·91 1991·92 20% 6% 14% 8% 14% 14% 12% 9% 3% 44% 3% 2% 1% 2% 10% 17% 19% 2% 41% 8% 6% 5% 7% 9% 12% 8% 4% includes Buildings and Grounds, Dining Services, Campus Police, and the Bookstore. Source: Network Services ATHLETICS l' c o 86 Athletics Bosion tollege Wins CfA Academic Achieyemeni Award for 1[J)[J)% IGrallillnaftio01 ~aJie The College Football Association (CFA) has named Boston College a winner of the Academic Achievement Award, presented annually to the member institution with the highest graduation rate among members of its football team. Boston College received the honor as 100 per cent of the Eagles' incoming class of 1986 was graduated within five years of registration. Texas Christian University also shared the honor with a perfect graduation rate among its football student-athletes. Previously, Boston College had been honored by the CFA for seven consecutive years for its consistently high rate of player graduation, but this marks the first time the Eagles have been the national leader since the award was established in 1981. ]. Donald Monan, SJ., President of Boston College, reflected the University's high regard for this academic accomplishment. "Having the highest graduation rate among Division I-A teams in the nation should be a source of pride to our players this year. An even more lasting source of pride is the fact that year after year, the graduation rate of Boston College players has been among the nation's leaders. Their record is testimony to the seriousness of their commitment, both as athletes and as students." Dr. Kevin Lyons, Boston College's Director of Learning Resources for Student-Athletes, was also named winner of the CFA Athletic Academic Advisor Award, for his part in . the Eagles' sterling classroom performance. He will accept the Academic Achievement Award and the advisor's award at the Liberty Bowl Luncheon in Memphis in December. In a similar study; published in USA Todfly in August, Boston College was acknowledged to have the highest graduation rate of any Division I-A football program in the nation, with a success rate of 85 per cent among football recruits enrolled in 1983 and 1984, the base years of that study. BC's 85 per cent graduation rate puts it first on the list of major colleges ahead of Duke (84 per cent), Notre Dame (82), Northwestern (78), Ohio University (76), Stanford and Virginia (both 74), and California-Berkeley (70). The USA Todfly poll also placed the Eagle athletic teams high among all BIG EAST Conference schools in graduation rates of scholarship student-athletes. In addition to the 85 per cent football graduation rate, the women's basketball team was first with a 100 per cent diploma completion level, and men's basketball was at 83 per cent. Overall, Boston College posted a student-athlete graduation rate of 89 per cent, the highest of the 10 BIG EAST Conference schools. Athletics 87 Intercollegiate Athletic Season Highlights 1991-1992 Baseball - Head Coach Moe Maloney Team won the Beanpot title for the second time in three years; Chris Higgins earned tournament MYP honors. Men's Goll - Head Coach Tom Boron Won ECAC New England Regional Qualifier; Peter Keller won Mass. States (third time) and Greater Bostons. Men's Basketball - Head Coach Jim O'Brien Team finished with 17-14 mark and earned berth in National Invitation Tournament; Bill Curley earned AllBIG EAST second team honors. Women's Goll - Head Coach Tom Boron Team won Mass. States; finished third in the Northeast Invitational, marking first time all individual scores were below 90. Women's Basketball - Head Coach Margo Plotzke Sarah Behn, BC's all-time leading scorer, finished among the national scoring leaders with a 26.5 points per game average; Behn earned All-BIG EAST first team honors; Kerry Curran earned All-BIG EAST third team honors. Hockey - Head Coach Len Ceglarski Scott LaGrand earned All-America and team MVP honors; Joe Cleary and David Franzosa shared James E. TIerman Memorial Award. Men's Cross-Country - Head Coach Randy Thomas Chris Georgules represented U.S. in World Cross-Country Championships and was national junior cross-country champion; the team placed second in Greater Boston Championships. Women's Cross-Country - Head Coach Randy Thomas Greater Boston champions; placed second in the National Catholic Championships and the New England Championships; led by Heather Grimshaw, the team placed 19th in the NCAA Division I Cross-Country Championships (highest finish ever by a BC team). Men's & Women's Fencing - Head Coach Sydney Fadner Men 9-6 on year, fifth of 13 teams in New England Tournament. Women 4-11 on the year, sixth of 10 in N. E. Tourney. Field Hockey - Head Coach Sherren Granese Joelle Kozma and Jennifer Mudano earned Northeast Regional All-America honors; Julie Obear named Boston Four Rookie of the Year; senior goalie Marilyn Huang recorded three shutouts; convincing 3-0 home victory over highly-ranked New Hampshire. Football - Head Coach Tom Coughlin Mark Chmura earned All-America honors, while Chmura and Tom McManus captured All-East accolades. Men's Lacrosse - Head Coach Ed Moy Team MYP Colin Mclane finished as BC's career goal scoring leader with 124 goals; Mark Gaffney finished with 100 career goals; team's 7-7 record is the best since 1981. Women's Lacrosse - Head Coach Sherren Granese Big season-ending 7-5 win over Yale; Katy Finch led team with 21 goals and four assists. Men's Sailing - Head Coach Norm Reid Finished sixth in New England finals, best showing ever; should be nationally ranked after the spring competition. Women's Sailing - Head Coach Norm Reid Great spring, winning three trophy events; ranked in Top 10 in nation. Men's Skiing - Head Coach Bill Tool Osborne Division champions; fifth in USCSC national competition; Tony Deleo and Hans Schemmel earned AllAmerica honors. Women's Skiing - Head Coach Bill Tool Kirsten Mohill and Jill Cupoli earned All-Conference honors; Mohill selected as All-American. 88 Athletics Men's Soccer - Head Coach Ed Kelly Freshman back Carlos Casas named BIG EAST Rookie of the Year; Justin Ceccarelli led the team with nine goals and 19 points. Women's Soccer - Head Coach Terez Bonorden Team finished 7-7-1; Heather Hughes and Stacy Smith earned All-New England second teams honors. Softball - Head Coach Nancy McGuire Finished with 15-19 record; 2B Roseann Sheehan earned All-BIG EAST Conference honors. Men's Swimming and Diving - Head Coach Tom Groden Team set 10 New England records; Maarten Kraaijvanger, holder of four BC individual records, earned the Muir Award as top point scorer in the New England Championships over the past four years; Curt Jablonowski was New England champ in 100 backstroke and 200 breaststroke. Women's Swimming and Diving - Head Coach Tom Groden Team won their fifth straight New England Championship and placed third in National Catholic Championships; RoseMarie Deleo won the Fromer Award as top point scorer in N.E. Championships over the past four years. Men's Tennis - Head Coach Mark Burns Team led by junior Bill Powers (first singles) and sophomore Alex Bitar (second singles); Power and Bitar also played first doubles. Women's Tennis - Head Coach Mark Burns Pam Piorkowski, BIG EAST Flight "B" champion, earned Eastern Volvo Tennis Senior Player of the Year honors; Jennifer Lane honored with prestigious BIG EAST PostGraduate Scholarship; Lane and Piorkowski are among the top doubles teams in the east Men's Indoor Track - Head Coach Karen Keith-Dobbs Keith Yuen earned All-America honors in the 3,000; Sean McEllin, Rob Williams, Jamahl Prince and Yuen won the IC4A Distance Medley title; team finished third in New England. Women's Indoor Track - Head Coach Karen Keith-Dobbs Greater Boston champions; third in New England; Jennifer Rolfe won NE title in 5,000 meter and 3,000 meter. Men's Outdoor Track - Head Coach Karen Keith-Dobbs Third in Greater Bostons; Ray Neves was GBC champion in 100 and 200. Women's Outdoor Track - Head Coach Karen Keith-Dobbs Jennifer Rolfe qualified for NCAA Championships in 5,000 meter and 10,000 meter; TIffany Young seta school record in 200 meters; team was second in Greater Bostons. Volleyball - Head Coach Gary Gildea Maryellen MacKinnon earned team MVP honors; big road win over Holy Cross. Water Polo - Head Coach Jerry Moss Team finished with 12-7 record; big wins over Army, Harvard, Yale, and MIT; Maarten Kraaijvanger earned team MVP honors. Wrestling - Head Coach Rod Bullry Freshman Jim Gallagher (118Ibs.) won the New England title and qualified for the NCAA Division I Championships. Source: Sports Information Office Athletics 89 Intercollegiate Sports Participation Intramural Sports Participation 1991-1992 1991-1992 Sport Men Women Varsity 31 12 28 12 Baseball Basketball Cross-Country Fencing Field Hockey Football Golf lee Hockey Lacrosse Sailing Skiing Soccer Softball Swimming/Diving Tennis Track - Indoor Track - Outdoor Volleyball Waterpolo Wrestling Total 11 22 7 23 102 15 25 37 14 18 20 14 25 10 7 23 18 32 8 29 29 15 39 14 50 50 14 23 504 273 Source: Flynn Recreation Complex Number 01 Teams Sport College Basketball (Men's) 33 Pro Basketball (Men's) 33 Little East Basketball Tournament (Men's) 32 Basketball (Women's) 17 Little F..ast Basketball Tournament (Women's) 6 Touch Football 31 Field Goal Kicking Ice Hockey (Men's) 14 Singles Racquetball (Men's) Doubles Racquetball (Men's) 11 Singles Racquetball (Women's) Doubles Racquetball (Coed) 4 Softball (Men's - Fall) 32 Softball (Men's - Spring) 8 Softball (Coed) 15 Squash (Men's) Singles Tennis (Men's· Fall) Singles Tennis (Men's - Spring) Doubles Tennis (Men's) 26 Singles Tennis (Women's - Fall) Singles Tennis (Women's - Spring) Doubles Tennis (Women's) 11 Doubles Tennis (Coed) 13 Volleyball (Women's) 22 Volleyball (Coed) ----.M Total 332 Total Men: 2,398 Total Women: 936 Number 01 Participants 320 368 128 171 24 409 7 207 24 22 4 8 393 124 331 4 36 25 52 57 20 22 26 240 __ 312 3,334 Source: Flynn Recreation Complex Varsity Sports Records Men's Records Football Basketball lee Hockey Soccer Lacrosse Baseball Swimming & Diving Women's Records Basketball Field Hockey Swimming & Diving Tennis Lacrosse Soccer Softball Source: Sports Information Office 1987-88 1988-89 1989-90 1990-91 1991-92 W-L-T W-L-T W-L-T W-L-T W-L-T :>-6 18-15 13-18-3 4-12-3 3-11 15-16 8-3 3-8 12-17 25-11-4 7-11-1 5-8 20-17 12-1 2-9 8-20 28-13-1 8-10-1 4-10 21-22-1 9-2 4-7 11-19 27-12 14-5-2 6-8 20-14 7-3 4-7 17-14 14-18-3 8-7-3 7-7 18-17-1 9-4 17-11 8-10 8-3 8-4 6-6 7-6-2 21-7 7-10-1 7-4 15-4 10-2 4-9 12-7 23-12-1 16-12 7-11-2 10-2 25-16 4-9 8-9-1 23-12-1 12-16 4-15 10-2 10-3 6-7 6-8-3 14-6 5-23 5-14 10-4-1 2-10 5-7 7-7-1 15-19 90 Athletics Varsity Football Schedules Varsity Hockey Schedule 1992 and 1993 1992-1993 1992 September 5 Rutgers September 12 Northwestern September 19 Navy September 26 Michigan State October 10 at West Virginia October 17 at October 24 at Tulane October 31 Temple November 7 at November 14 November 21 Penn State Notre Dame Syracuse at Army 1993September 4 Miami September 11 West Virginia September 18 at Northwestern September 25 Temple October 2 at October 9 at Rutgers Syracuse October 23 Army October 30 Tulane November 6 Virginia Tech November 13 at Pittsburgh November 20 at Notre Dame * as of 12/10/92· subjectto change. Source: Sports Information Office October 24 October 30 October 31 November 7 November 13 November 14 November 20 November 21 November 27 November 29 December 4 December 5 December 9 December 28 December 29 January 3 January 8 January 10 January 12 January 15 January 16 January 22 January 24 January 27 January 29 February 1 February 5 February 8 February 12 February 13 February 19 February 20 February 26 February 27 March 2 March 5 at Army at U. of Alaska-Anchorage at U. of Alaska-Anchorage at University of Vermont U. of Massachusetts-Lowell at U. of Massachusetts-Lowell University of New Hampshire at University of New Hampshire St Lawrence University Clarkson University Providence College at Providence College at Boston University at Badger Classic . at Badger Classic at Harvard University at Northeastern University Northeastern University at Yale University Boston University at Boston University University of Maine University of Maine at Merrimack College Merrimack College Beanpot vs. Boston University at Merrimack College Beanpot U. of Massachusetts-Lowell at U. of Massachusetts-Lowell University of New Hampshire at University of New Hampshire Providence College at Providence College at University of Maine Northeastern University HOCKEY EAST games in Bold Type. Source: Sports Information Office Athletics 91 Men's Varsity Basketball Schedule Women's Varsity Basketball Schedule 1992-1993 1992-1993 November 19 Marathon Oil (Exhibition) November 22 Irish Senior Women (Exhibition) November 28 Kazakhstan National Team (Exhibition) December 1 University of Maine December 5 Harvard University December 4-5 at Michigan State Tournament December 8 Temple University December 9 December 10 Fairleigh Dickinson University December 12 Ohio State University December 12 Coastal Carolina Community College December 20 at College of the Holy Cross at Boston University December 20 at University of Notre Dame December 22 Northeastern University December 23 Coppin State College December 30 lona College December 28 Long Island University January 2 St. John's University Villanova University December 30 at Syracuse University January 6 January 2 at College of the Holy Cross January 9 at University of Connecticut January 5 Villanova University January 13 at Georgetown University January 9 at Georgetown University January 16 Seton Hall University January 12 at Providence College January 19 at University of Pittsburgh January 16 University of Connecticut January 23 at Providence College January 20 University of Pittsburgh January 27 Syracuse University January 31 University of Miami January 23 at Villanova University January 26 St. John's University February 3 at Seton Hall University January 30 Georgetown University February 6 at Villanova University February 6 Seton Hall University February 10 University of Connecticut Georgetown University February 10 at University of Miami February 13 February 13 at St. John's University February 16 February 16 at University of Pittsburgh February 20 University of Pittsburgh February 20 Syracuse University February 24 Providence College February 24 February 27 at University of Connecticut University of Miami March 3 at Seton Halt University March 6 Providence College BIG EAST games in Botd Type. Source: Sports Infonn.tion Office at University of Miami February 27 at St. John's University March 1 at Syracuse University BIG EASf games in Bold Type. Source: Sports Infonnation Office GENERAL INFORMATION I / ?- ,. • '·", • I , " I '--'~; , .,. .' ',' 94 Generallnformalion Founder of Boston College Honorary Degrees Awarded by Boston College 1952-1992 Rev. John McElroy, S.]. Pastor, Immaculate Conception Parish, Boston 1861-1863 1952 Gregory Peter XV Cardinal Agagianian, LL.D. Oanuary 14,1952) James B. Connolly, Utt.D. James M. O'Neill, U.D. Most Rev. Thomas F. Markham, LL.D. * Presidents of Boston College 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. John Bapst, S.]. Robert W. Brady, S.]. Robert Fulton, S.]. Jeremiah O'Connor, S.]. Edward V. Boursaud, S.]. Thomas H. Stack, S.]. Nicholas Russo, S.]. Robert Fulton, S.]. Edward I. Devitt, S.]. Timothy Brosnahan, S.]. W. G. Read Mullan, S.]. William F. Gannon, S.]. Thomas I. Gasson, S.]. Charles W. Lyons, S.]. William Devlin, S.]. James H. Dolan, S.]. Louis]. Gallagher, S.]. William]. McGarry, S.]. William]. Murphy, S.]. William L. Keleher, S.]. Joseph R. N. Maxwell, S.]. Michael P. Walsh, S.]. W. Seavey Joyce, S.]. ]. Donald Monan, S.]. Rt. Rev. ThomasJ. Riley, Ll.D. JamesJ. Ronan, ILD. 1863 1869 1870 1880 1884 - 1887 1888 1891 1894 1898 1903 1907 1914 1919 1925 1932 1937 1939 1945 1951 1958 1968 1972 - 1869 1870 1880 1884 1887 1887 1888 1891 1894 1898 1903 1907 1914 1919 1925 1932 1937 1939 1945 1951 1958 1968 1972 1953 Dorothy I. Book, Ll.D. Most Rev. James L. Connolly, u.n. Clifford J. Laube. ILD. Francis J. O'Halloran, A.M. Most Rev. LeonardJ. Raymond. ll..D" Alex Ross. AM. John C. H. Wu, Ll.D. 1954 Edward H. Chamberlin. Ll.D. John J. Heame, Ll.D.' James W. Manary, Sc.D. Thomas A Printon, LLD. Ven. Bro. William Sheehan. C.F.x.. Ll.D. Most Rev. Christopher J. Weldon, LLD. Louis de Wohl,lllt. D. William J. O'Keefe, LL.D. (November 21, 1954) 1955 Fred J. Driscoll, LL.D. Christian A. Herter. LL.D. Edward A. Hogan, Jr.. LL.D.' Rear Adm. Bartholomew W. Hogan. Sc.D. John B. Hynes, ILD. Source: President's Office His Beatitude Maximos IV, LL.D. (August 23, 1955) Valerian Cardinal Gracias. LL.D. Russel Kirk. lilt.D. Edward A. Sullivan, LL.D. 1956 Bartholomew A. Brickley, LL.D. Peter J. W. Debye, Sc.D. Most Rev. Frederick A Donaghy, LL.D. lohn F. Kennedy, LLD.· John W. King. Ll.D. Charles Munch, D. Mus. Edward F. Williams, Ll.D. Generallnformalion 95 1957 Wallace E. Carroll. LL.D. Arthur J, Kelly. Ll.D. Augustus C. Long, LL.D. * Adrian O·Keeffe. LL.D. Very Rev. Msgr. Patrick W. Skehan Ll.D. Nils Y. Wessell. LL.D. 1958 Most Rev. Amleto G. Cicognani, LL.D. (April 21, 1958) Carl j. Gilbert, Ll.D. Paul Horgan. Litt.D. Barnaby C. Keeney. LL.D.· Henry M. Leen. LL.D. Jacques Maritain, LLD. Raissa Maritain, LL.D. Harold Man;ton Morse, D.Se. Rev. john B. Sheerin, C.S.P" Ll.D. Francis Cardinal Spellman, LL.D. (December 8, 1958) 1959 His Excellency Sean T. O'Kelly, LLD. (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. Romula, LL.D. * Helen C. White. Urt.D. 1960 Marian Anderson. D.Mus. 1. Peter Grace. LL.D. Caryl P. Haskins, Ll.D. Robert F. Kennedy, LL.D. Charles Malik, LL.D.· Most Rev. Russell 1. McVinney, LLD. Samuel Eliot Morison, LL.D. Rt. Rev. Matthew P. Stapleton. LLD. Rev. Henry M. Brock. Sj" D.Se. (October 12. 1960) 1961 Allen W. Dulles. Ll.D. Anthony julian, LL.D. Robert D. Murphy, LL.D.· Louis R Perini, LLD. Abraham Ribicoff. Ll.D. Rt. Rev. Robert j. Sennott. LL.D. Edward Teller. LL.D. 1962 Detlev W. Bronk. D.Se.· Ralph j. Bunche. Ll.D. Christopher J, Duncan, M.D" LL.D. Sir Alec Guinness, n.FA Rt. Rev. FrancisJ, Lally, Litt.D. Ralph Lowell, Ll.D. Phyliss McGinley. Lilt.D. Perry G. Miller. LitlD. 1963 Augustin Cardinal Bea,Sj.,J,U.D. (March 26. 1963) Rev. Edward B. Bunn, Sj.• 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, Utt.D. Anthony Joseph Celebrezze, LLD. '" Arthur joseph Goldberg. LL.D. john jay McCloy, LL.D. James Barrett Reston. LLD. Rl. Rev. john joseph Ryan. L.H.D. jose Luis Sert, Litt.D. Joseph Leo Sweeney. LL.D. Robert Clifton Weaver, IL.D. james Edwin Webb. D.Se. 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, Sj" LL.D. Robert Sargent Shriver. jr" LL.D.· Mary Sullivan Stanton, Ll.D. 1965 John P. Birmingham. LL.D. Robert McAffee Brown. Ll.D. j. N. Douglas Bush. Lilt.D. Victor L. Butterfield. I.H.D. John T. Connor, LL.D. Edith Green. LL.D. Rev. john Courtney Murray. S,J.• L.H.D.· Rl. Rev. Lawrence J. Riley, Ll.D. Alan T. Waterman. D. Sc. 1966 Most Rev. john W. Comber, M.M., I.H.D. Edward F. Gilday. L.H.D. Edward M. Kennedy. LL.D, Francis Keppel. u...O.* Mother Eleanor M. O'Byrne, RS.Cj" Ll.D. Stephen P. Mugar, LL.D. Abram L. Sachar, L.H.D. Rene Wellek. Utt.D. George Wells Beadle. D.Se. (November 12. 1966) William Bosworth Castle. M.D., LH.D. (November 12, 1966) Donald Frederick Hornig, LLD. (November 12, 1966) james Alfred Van Allen. D.Se, (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. 1968 Kingman Brewster, Jr.. LL.D." Rev. Henri de Lubac, S,J" L.H.D, Erwin N. Griswold, LL.D. Rita P. Kelleher. D.Se. Most Rev. john J. McEleney, S,J.• LL.D, Cornelius W. Owens, LL.D. jamesj. Shea, Sr" LL.D. Roger j. Traynor, LL.D. 1969 R Buckminster Fuller, D.F.A .. Katharine Graham. DJoUTll. Philipj. McNiff. L.H.D. Talcott Parsons. D.S.S. A Philip Randolph, Ll.D. Henry Lee Shattuck, D.C.S. Terence Cardinal Cooke. LLD. 1970 james Edward Allen. jr., D.Se.Ed. Rl. Rev. john Melville Burgess, LL.D joan Ganz Cooney, D.Se.Ed, Sterling Dow, LH.D, Hartford Nelson Gunn, jr" L.H.D. Rev. Bernard Joseph Francis Longergan. S.]., HisI.Phil.D. Elliot Norton. L.H.D. Perry Townsend Rathbone. D.FA Earl Warren. D.Se.L.· 96 General Information 1971 Walter Jackson Bate, H.D. Andrew Felton Brimmer, 5.S.D. Rev. Msgr. George William Casey,litt.D. Mircea Eliade, RD. Eli Goldston, LLD. Elma Lewis, D.F.A Michael Joseph Mansfield, LLD.· Wiiliam James McGiiI, S.S.D. Bicentennial Convocation September 28, 1975 Thomasjoseph Galligan. Jr., D.B.A Oscar Handlin, LH.D. William J. Harrington, M.D., D.Se. Edward Hirsh Levi, LLD. Rev. Michael Patrick Walsh, SJ., LH.D. Mary Lou Williams, D.A 1981 1110mas Cardinal 0 Fiaich, LittD. (October, 1981) Rev. Joseph Delphis Gauthier, SJ., L.H.D. Margaret M. Heckler. U_D. Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy, L.H.D. Donald F. McHenry, LLD. Joseph Harry Silverstein. D.A. Paul Donovan Sullivan, D.S.S. Thomas P. O'Neill. Jr.• The Ignatius Medal· Most Rev. Humberto Sousa Medeiros. S.T.D. 1976 Walter George Muelder, D.Se.T. Leverett Saltonstall, LLD. Abram Thurlow Collier, D.BA John Hope Franklin, LH.D. 1982 Rev. Martin Patrick Hamey. S.J., H.D. Rev. Robert 1. Bums, S.J., LH.D. Mildred Fay Jefferson, M.D., D.Se. Asa Smallidge Knowles, D.Se.Ed. George Bush. LL.D.· 1972 Mary Ingraham Bunting, D.Se. Robert A Charpie, D.Se. Arthur Fiedler, n.Mus. Northrop Frye, LH.D. John James Griffin, D.C.S. Most Rev. Joseph Francis Maguire. Daniel Patrick Moynihan. LLD. * Sir William Arthur Lewis. LH.D. Louis Martin Lyons. DJoum. 1977 Rev. Raymond Edward Brown. Utt.D. * Maya Angelou, LH.D. Virginia A. Henderson. D.N.S. Gerhard D. Bleicken, LL.D. Joseph McKenney, D.Ed. Alice Bourneuf, D.Se. James F. McDonough. M.D .. D.Se. Maria Tallchief Paschen. DA Rev. Vmcent T. O'Keefe, SJ., L.H.D. (March, 1983) Rev. Bruce]. Ritter. O.F.M., 0.5.5. * An Wang, LLD. Rev. John Anthony McCarthy, SJ. UttD. Hildegarde Elizabeth Peplau, D.N.S. Adlai Ewing Stevenson, III. LL.D.'" Walter Edward Washington, LLD. U~.D. Josephine L. Taylor. D.Se.Ed. 1983 Michae1)oseph Walsh, WtD. 1973 Aj. Antoon, L.H.D. Harold Bloom, LH.D. Fred J. Borch, D.BA Vernon E. Jordan, Jr., LL.D. 1978 Bruno Bettelheim. Litt.D. Rev. Charles F. Donovan. SJ., LH.D. Charles D. Ferris. LLD. * lohn George Kemeny, D.Se.... Rev. Daniel Unehan, SJ., D.Se. Thomas Philip O'Neiil, Jr., LLD. John William McDevitt. LLD. Muriel Sutherland Snowden, 0.5.5. Leo Perlis, D.S.S. alto Phililp Snowden, D.S.S. 1974 Soia Mentschikoff, LL.D.'" Thomas L Phiilips, D.BA Carl Thomas Rowan. L.H.D. Thomas Paul Salmon, LL.D. Sir Ronald Syme, LH.D. Henry Bradford Washburn, Jr., LH.D. Marvin E. Frankel, LLD. 1979 1985 Dorothy Baker, D.S.S. Edward Patrick Boland, LLD. George P. Donaldson, LLD. Richard E1lmann, LH.D. Rev. Frederick Joseph Adelmann, SJ.. LH.D. Robben W. Fleming, LH.D. Walter F. Mondale, LL.D. * David S. Nelson. LLD. * 1975 Melnea A Cass, L.H.D. Silvio O. Conte, LLD. John Thomas Duntop,lL.D. Rev. FrancisJ. Gilday, S.J., LH.D. Edward Lewis Hirsh, L.H.D. Paul Ricoeur. LH.D.... Vmcent Charles Ziegler, D.BA 1984 Leon Higginbotham, LLD. Richard Hill, D.BA. Most Rev. Bernard F. Law, S.T.D.· Robert Merrifield, D.Se. Lena Frances Edwards. D.Se. Rev.). Bryan Hehir, LLD. Agnes Mongan, D.FA Anthony John Francis O'Reilly, D.BA (March, 1985) Andrew J. Young. LL.D.· Edward Zigler, LH.D. 1980 Gennaine Bree. lltt.D. * Albert M. Folkard, LH.D. Edward J. King, D.Pub.Admn. Joseph Cardinal Malula, LL.D. Bernard J. O'Keefe, D.E.Se. Kevin H. White, LL.D. 1986 Corazon C. Aquino, The Ignatius Medal (September, 1986) Guido Calabresi, LL.D. Jacques d'Amboise, D.F.A. Annie Dillard, LH.D. Lionel B. Richie. Jr. D.Mus. Francis C. Rooney, Jr., D.B.A Jamie Cardinal Sin. S.T.D.· Generallnformalion 97 1987 josephine A. Dolan. D.N.S. Garret fitzGerald. LLD. Types of Degrees Conferred at Boston College Walter E. Massey, D.Se. john G. McElwee. LLD. Rev. Francis W. Sweeney, SJ., LH.D. VemonA Walters. LLD.* 1988 His Grace. Samuel E. Carter. SJ.• S.T.D." Esme Valerie Eliot. utt.D. Hans-Georg Gadamer, LH.D. Robert Francis O'Malley, D.Se. Richard Alan Smith. LL.D. Paul A Voleker. LL.D. 1989 Thea Bowman. F.S.P A., RD. George E. Doty, The Ignatius Medal (April 6. 1989) Jonathan Kozol. D.S.S. * Thomas S. MUrPhy. LL.D. Kenneth Gilmore Ryder, D.Se.Ed. Richard Francis Syron. LLD. (March 18. 1989) Jerzy Turowicz. LH.D. 1990 Edward A Brennan. D.RA Thomas). Brokaw, L.H.D.· Raymond G. Chambers. The Ignatius Medal (April 5. 1990) Franklyn G. jeni!er. LL.D. Rev. Cesar A jerez. SJ., LH.D. Eunice Kennedy Shriver. LH.D. Robert M. Solow, LLD. 1991 William Aramony, The Ignatius Medal (April 18. 1991) john J. Curtin. jr.. LLD. Rev. Yunolhy S. Healy. SJ.. LH.D.· Seamus). Heaney, Utt.D. Rachel A Robinson, D.Se.Ed. john R Smith, D.BA 1992 Barbara Bush. The Ignatius Medal (April 2, 1992) Mary Ann Glendon. LL.D. Roberto C. Goizueta, D.BA john E. jacob, LH.D. john j. Moakley, LLD. Caroline C. Putnam. RS.CJ., D.FA Warren B. Rudman. u.n." *Commencement Speakers Source: President's Office Bachelor of Arts (AR) Bachelor of Science (B.S.) Master of Arts (MA) Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) Master of Business Administration (M.B.A.) Master of Education (M.Ed.) Master of Science (MS.) Master of Science in Teaching (M.S.T.) Master of Social Work (M.S.W.) Certificate of Advanced Educational Specialization (CAE.S.) Certificate of Advanced Graduate Studies (CAG .S.) Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) Doctor of Law a.D.) Doctor of Education (D.Ed.) Doctor of Social Work (D.SW.) Honorary Degrees Granted by Boston College D.A. D.B.A. D.C.S. D.E.Sc. D.F.A. D,Journ. D.Mus. D.N.S. D.Pub.Adm. D.Se. D.Se.Ed. D.Se.L D.Sc.T. D.S.S. H.D. HistPhil.D. J.U.D. LLD. LH.D. LiitD. RD. S.T.D. Se.D. Doctor of Arts Doctor of Business Administration Doctor of Commercial Science Doctor of Engineering Science Doctor of Fine Arts Doctor of Journalism Doctor of Music Doctor of Nursing Science Doctor of Public Administration Doctor of Science Doctor of Science in Education Doctor of the Science of Law Doctor of the Seience of Theology Doctor of Social Science Doctor of History Doctor of History in Philosophy Doctor of Civil and Canon Laws Doctor of Laws Doctor of Humane Letters Doctor of Letters, Doctor of Literature Doctor of Religion Doctor of Sacred Theology Doctor of Science Source: Commencemenl Programs, 1952-1992 98 Generallnlormalion Accrediting Agencies American Assembly 01 Collegiate Schools 01 Business American Bar Association American Chemical Society American Psychological Association Association 01 American Law Schools Council on Social Work Education Interstate Certification Compact National Council lor Accreditation 01 Teacher Education National League for Nursing New England Association of Schools and Colleges Source: Deans' Offices 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 Bar Association American Council on Education American Educational Research Association American Public Welfare Association Association of American Colleges Association of American Law Schools Association of Catholic Colleges and Universities Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning Association for Continuing Higher Education Association of Independent Colleges and Universities in Massachusetts Association for Institutional Research Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities Association of Urban Universities Boston Library Consortium Boston Theological Institute The College Board Council for Advancement and Support of Education Council for Exceptional Children Council of Graduate Schools Council on Social Work Education International Association of Schools of Social Work International Association of Universities International Federation of Catholic Universities Jesuit Conference of Nursing Programs Jesuit Student Personnel Association Massachusetts Association of Colleges of Nursing Massachusetts/Rhode Island League for Nursing National Association of Catholic Charities National Association of College Admissions Counselors National Association of College and University Business Officers National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators National Association of Student Personnel Administrators National Association of Deans and Directors of Schools of Social Work National League for Nursing New England Educational Research Organization New England Organization for Nursing North American Association of Summer Sessions Northeastern Association of Graduate Schools Alpha Sigma Nu** Order of the Coif** Phi Beta Kappa** *1be above listing is meant only to be representative of the major types of memberships held by the University. '*'*A complete listing of honor societies to which the University belongs may be found in the Boston Col/ege Student Guide. Source: Deans' Offices Generallnformalion 99 Academic Department locations Accounting Department Fulton 400 Gasson 109 Arts and Sciences, College 01 Biology Department Higgins 321 Merkert 125 Chemistry Department Classical Studies Department Carney 122 Communication and Theater Lyons 215 Computer Science Department Fulton 423 Counseling, Developmental Psychology, and Research Methods Department. Campion 309 Counseling Services Gasson 108, Campion 301, Fulton 201 Curriculum, Administration, and Special Education Department.. Campion 211 Economics Department Carney 131 Education, School 01 Campion 101 English Department Carney 450 Evening College Fulton 314 Finance Department Fulton 312 Fine Arts Department... Barry Pavilion 216, Newton Campus Geology and Geophysics Department Service Building 103 Germanic Studies Department Carney 325 Graduate Arts and Sciences McGuinn 221 Graduate Management Program Fulton 306 Carney 116 History Department Honors Program Arts and Sciences Gasson 102 Education Campion 101 Management Fulton 301 Language Laboratory Lyons 313 Law School Stuart Hall, Newton Campus Law Department Fulton 403 Fulton 202 Management Center Marketing Department Fulton 301 Mathematics Department Carney 318 Music Department Lyons 407 Cushing 202 Nursing, School 01 Operations and Strategic Management Department Fulton 214 Organizational Studies Program Fulton 214 Carney 251 Philosophy Department Physics Department Higgins 355 Political Science Department McGuinn 201 McGuinn 301 Psychology Department Religious Education and Pastoral Ministry, Institute 01.. 31 Lawrence Avenue Lyons 304 Romance Languages and Uteratures Department Carney 235 Slavic and Eastern Languages Department Social Work, Graduate School of McGuinn 132 Sociology Department McGuinn 426 Summer Session Fulton 314 Theology Department Carney 417 Fulton 306 Undergraduate Management Program Source: University Registrar 100 General Informafion Academic Calendars Sources 1992-1993 Academic Vice President's Office Undergraduate Admission Office Graduate Admission Offices Alumni Association Buildings and Grounds Computer Center Controller's Office Deans' Offices Development Office Dining Department Enrollment Management Research Financial Aid Office Flynn Recreation Complex University Historian University Housing Vice President for Human Resources lnfonnation Processing Support Language Laboratory University Librarian Management Infonnation Systems Network Services University Policies & Procedures Office of the President University Registrar Research Administration Space Management Sports Infonnation Office Dean for Student Development Summer Session Infonnation Services, University Relations First Semester August 28 -30 August 31 September 2 September 7 October t2 November 11 November 25 - 27 December 9· 10 December 11-18 Friday - Sunday: Freshman and Transfer Orientation and Advisement Monday: Classes begin Wednesday: Faculty Convocation Monday: Labor Day - No Classes Monday: Columbus Day· No Classes Wednesday: Veterans Day· No Classes Wednesday - Friday: Thanksgiving holidays Wednesday and Thursday: Study days- No classes for undergraduate day students only. Friday - Friday noon: Tenn examinations Second Semester January 15 Friday: Freshman and Transfer Orientation and Advisement January 19 February 15 March 8-12 April 8-9 April 19 May 6-7 Tuesday: Classes begin Monday: Celebration of Washington's Birthday· No Classes May8-15 May 24 Monday - Friday: Spring Vacation Holy lbursday - Good Friday: Easter Weekend Monday: Patriots Day - No Classes Thursday and Friday: Study days· No classes for undergraduate day students only. Saturday - Saturday noon: Tenn examinations Monday: Commencement 1993-1994 First Semester August 29 -August 31 September 1 September 1 September 6 October 11 November 11 November 24 - 26 December 11·12 December 11- 18 Second Semester January 14 January 18 February 21 March 7-11 March 31- April 1 April 18 May 5-6 May7-14 May 23 Sunday -Tuesday: Freshman and Transfer Orientation and Advisement Wednesday: Classes begin Wednesday: Faculty Convocation Monday: Labor Day· No Classes Monday: Columbus Day - No Classes Thursday: Veterans Day - No Classes Wednesday - Friday: Thanksgiving holidays Thursday and Friday: Study days· No classes for undergraduate day students only. Saturday· Saturday noon: Tenn examinations Friday: Freshman and Transfer Orientation and Advisement Tuesday: Classes begin Monday: Celebration of Washington's Birthday· No Classes Monday - Friday: Spring Vacation Holy Thursday· Good Friday: Easter Weekend Monday: Patriots Day - No Classes Thursday and Friday: Study days· No classes for undergraduate day students only. Saturday - Saturday noon: Tenn examinations Monday: Commencement Source: Office of the Academic Vice President N.B. Sources are responsible for the accuracy and completeness of dala submitted for publication. Photo Credits: Gary Gilbert Pages 13, 25, 85 Geoffrey Why Pages 47, 75, 86 Lee Pellegrini Pages 6, 57, 67 Kristin Vizvary Page 93 Aerial Photos International, Inc. Pages 10 Cover Design: Sharon J. Sabin Assistance with Desktop Publishing Technology: Kristin Ringuest Index 101 Fact Book Index Academic Calendars, 100 Academic Deans, 17 Academic Department Locations, 99 Academic Development Center, 79 Accrediting Agencies, 98 Administration and Faculty, 14-23 Administrators, University, 18 AHANA Student Enrollment, 31 Alumni, 48-55 Alumni Association Board of Directors, 48 Alumni Awards, 48 Alumni by Primary School, Gender, and Class, 50-52 Alumni Clubs, 48 Alumni Donors by Primary School and Class, 54-55 Alumni, Geographic Analysis by State, 49 Alumni, Regional Analysis, 49 Applications, Acceptances, and Enrollment, Freshman, 26 Applications, Acceptances, and Enrollment, Transfer Students, 28 Archives, 79 Association Memberships, 98 Athletics, 86-91 Balance Sheet, Condensed, 68 Board of Trustee Membership, 14 Boston College, A Brief History, 7 Boston College, A Chronology, 8 Boston College Profile, 11 Boston College Properties, 60 Building Use, Summary, 63 Buildings and Grounds, 58-65 Buildings, Boston College, 58-59 Campus Maps,103-104 Career Plans of Seniors, 45 Chairmen and Chairwomen, Department, 17 Chairmen, Board of Trustees, 15 Chart of Administration, 16 Classrooms, 63 Compensation, Faculty, 23 Competitors for Highly-Rated Applicants, 28 Computer Center, 81 Computer Statistics, 80-83 Contracts and Grants, 70-72 Deans, Academic, 17 Degrees Conferred at Boston College, Types, 97 Degrees Conferred, 38-42 Departroent Chairmen and Chairwomen, 17 Development Statistics, 53-55 Dining Facilities, 62 Donors by Giving Club, 53 Dormitories, 64-65 Educational Plans of Seniors, 44 Enrollment, Evening College, 29-30 Enrollment, Full-Time Equivalent, 32 Enrollment, Full-Time Freshman by Year and Gender, 26 Enrollment, Graduate, by School, Gender, and Full- and Part-Time, 29-30 Enrollment, Graduate, by Degree Program and Discipline, 35 Enrollment, International Students, 36-37 Enrollment, Minority Students, 31 Enrollment, Summer Session, 35 Enrollment, Transfer Students, 28 Enrollment, Undergraduate by School, Gender, and Fulland Part-Time, 29-30 Enrollment, Veterans, 32 Evening College Enrollment, 29-30 Facility Capacities, 61 Faculty, Administration and, 14-23 Faculty, Average Compensation by Rank, 23 Faculty, by Highest Earned Degree and Gender, 21 Faculty, by Highest Earned Degree and Rank, 21 Faculty, by Rank and Gender, 22 Faculty, by School and Gender, 21 Faculty, by School and Rank, 20 Faculty, by School and Tenure Status, 20 Faculty, Full-Time Equivalent by School, 20 Faculty, Full-Time, Teaching Fellows, Teaching Assistants, 22 Finance, 68-72 Financial AId, Undergraduate and Graduate, 43 Financial Operations, Highlights, 68 Foreign Student and Scholar Statistics, 31, 36-37 Foreword,5 Founder of Boston College, 94 Freshman Admission Profile, 26 Freshman Applications, Acceptances, and Enrollment, 26 Freshman, Full-Time, Enrollment by Year and Gender, 26 Freshman, Geographic Distribution, 27 Full-Time Equivalent Enrollment, 32 Fund Raising, 53-55 102 Index Fact Book Index (Continued) General Information, 94-100 Geographic Distribution, Freshman, 27 Geographic Distribution of Newly Enrolled Graduate and Professional Students, 34 Gifts to the University, 53 Graduate Degrees Conferred, 38, 42, 97 Graduate Enrollment by Degree Program and Discipline, 35 Graduate Enrollment by Gender, 29-30 Graduate Enrollment by School, 29-30 Graduate Enrollment, Full- and Part-Time, 29-30 Graduation Rates, 44 History, Boston College, 7-9 Honorary Degrees Awarded, 94-97 Honorary Degrees, Types Granted, 97 Information Processing Support, 80-81 Information Technology, 80-83 International Student and Scholar Statistics, 31, 36-37 Intramural Sports, 89 Language Laboratory, 79 Ubraries, 76-79 Ubrary Expenditures, 76 Ubrary Holdings, 76 Library Services, 77 Library Special Collections, 78 Ubrary Use Statistics, 76 Majors, Undergraduate, 33 Management Information Systems, 82 Maps, Campus, 103-104 Minority Student Enrollment, 31 Network Services, 82-83 Objective, University, 7 Officers of the University, 16 Offices, 62 Organization Chart, Administration, 16 Personnel, Professional, Administrative, and Support Staff, 19 Physical Plant, 58-65 Presidents of Boston College, 94 Professional, Administrative, and Support Staff Personnel, 19 Profile, Boston College, 11 Properties, Boston College, 60 Residence Hall Capacities, 64 SAT, Average by Class, Freshman Enrollees, 26 Senior Survey, 44-45 Sources of Fact Book Information, 100 Special Collections, 78 Sports Participation Statistics, 89 Sports Records, 89 Sports Schedules, 90-91 Student Credit Hours by School, 29 Students, 26-45 Summer Session Enrollment, 35 Teaching Fellows, Teaching Assistants, and Full-Time Faculty,22 Transfer Students, Applications, Acceptances, and Enrollment, 28 Transfer Students, Enrollment by Previous Institution and Gender, 28 Trustee Associate Membership, 15 Trustee Membership, Board of, 14-15 Tuition and Fees, 69-70 Undergraduate and Graduate Financial Aid, 43 Undergraduate Degrees Conferred, 38-41, 97 Undergraduate Enrollment by Gender, 29-30 Undergraduate Enrollment by School, 29-30 Undergraduate Enrollment, Full- and Part-Time, 29-30 Undergraduate Graduation Rates, 44 Undergraduate Majors, 33 University Administrators, 18 University Archives, 79 Veterans Enrolled at Boston College, 32 Campus Maps 103