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Wikipedia

Boston University

Boston University (BU) is a private research university in Boston, Massachusetts. The university is nonsectarian,[10] but has a historical affiliation with the United Methodist Church.[4][5][6] It was founded in 1839 by Methodists with its original campus in Newbury, Vermont, before moving to Boston in 1867.[11]

Boston University
Latin: Universitas Bostoniensis
Former name
Newbury Biblical Institute (1838–1847)
Methodist General Biblical Institute (1847–1867)
Boston Theological Seminary (1867–1869)
Boston Theological Institute (1869–1871)
Motto"Learning, Virtue, Piety"[1]
TypePrivate research university
EstablishedApril 24, 1839; 183 years ago (April 24, 1839)[2][3]
AccreditationNECHE
Religious affiliation
Historically affiliated with the United Methodist Church[4][5][6]
Academic affiliations
Endowment$3.4 billion (2022)[7]
PresidentRobert A. Brown
ProvostJean Morrison
Academic staff
4,187 (2022)[8]
Administrative staff
10,468 (2022) (including faculty)[8]
Students36,729 (2022)[8]
Undergraduates17,590 (2022)[8]
Postgraduates17,937 (2022)[8]
Other students
1,202 (2022)[8]
Location, ,
United States

42°20′56″N 71°06′01″W / 42.34889°N 71.10028°W / 42.34889; -71.10028Coordinates: 42°20′56″N 71°06′01″W / 42.34889°N 71.10028°W / 42.34889; -71.10028
CampusUrban, 169 acres (0.68 km2)
Other campuses
NewspaperThe Daily Free Press
ColorsScarlet and white[9]
   
NicknameTerriers
Sporting affiliations
MascotRhett the Boston Terrier
Websitewww.bu.edu

The university has more than 4,000 faculty members[12] and nearly 34,000 students and is one of Boston's largest employers.[13] It offers bachelor's degrees, master's degrees, doctorates, and medical, dental, business, and law degrees through 17 schools and colleges on three urban campuses.[14] The main campus is situated along the Charles River in Boston's Fenway-Kenmore and Allston neighborhoods, while the Boston University Medical Campus is located in Boston's South End neighborhood. The Fenway campus houses the Wheelock College of Education and Human Development, formerly Wheelock College, which merged with BU in 2018.[15]

BU is a member of the Boston Consortium for Higher Education and the Association of American Universities.[16][17] It is classified among "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very High Research Activity".[18] The Boston University Terriers compete in the NCAA Division I. BU athletic teams compete in the Patriot League and Hockey East conferences, and their mascot is Rhett the Boston Terrier. Boston University is well known for men's hockey, in which it has won five national championships, most recently in 2009.

Among its alumni and current or past faculty, the university counts 8 Nobel Laureates, 23 Pulitzer Prize winners, 10 Rhodes Scholars,[19][20] 6 Marshall Scholars,[21] 9 Academy Award winners, and several[quantify] Emmy and Tony Award winners. BU also has MacArthur, Fulbright, and Truman Scholars,[quantify] as well as American Academy of Arts and Sciences and National Academy of Sciences members,[quantify] among its past and present graduates and faculty. In 1876, BU professor Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone in a BU lab.

History

Presidents of Boston University
William Fairfield Warren 1873–1903
William E. Huntington 1904–1911
Lemuel H. Murlin 1911–1924
Edwin Holt Hughes (acting) May–Sep 1923
William F. Anderson (acting) 1925–1926
Daniel L. Marsh 1926–1951
Harold C. Case 1951–1967
Arland Christ-Janer 1967–1970
Calvin B.T. Lee (acting) 1970
John Silber 1971–1996
Jon Westling 1996–2003
John Silber (acting) 2003–2004
Aram Chobanian 2004–2005
Robert A. Brown 2005–present

Predecessor institutions and University Charter

Boston University traces its roots to the establishment of the Newbury Biblical Institute in Newbury, Vermont, in 1839,[22] and was chartered with the name "Boston University" by the Massachusetts Legislature in 1869. The university organized formal centennial observances both in 1939 and 1969.[23] One or the other, or both dates may appear on various official seals used by different schools of the university.

On April 24–25, 1839, a group of Methodist ministers and laymen at the Old Bromfield Street Church in Boston elected to establish a Methodist theological school. Set up in Newbury, Vermont, the school was named the "Newbury Biblical Institute".

In 1847, the Congregational Society in Concord, New Hampshire, invited the institute to relocate to Concord and offered a disused Congregational church building with a capacity of 1200 people. Other citizens of Concord covered the remodeling costs. One stipulation of the invitation was that the Institute remain in Concord for at least 20 years. The charter issued by New Hampshire designated the school the "Methodist General Biblical Institute", but it was commonly called the "Concord Biblical Institute".

With the agreed twenty years coming to a close, the trustees of the Concord Biblical Institute purchased 30 acres (120,000 m2) on Aspinwall Hill in Brookline, Massachusetts, as a possible relocation site. The institute moved in 1867 to 23 Pinkney Street in the Beacon Hill neighborhood of Boston, and received a Massachusetts Charter as the "Boston Theological Seminary".

In 1869, three trustees of the Boston Theological Institute obtained from the Massachusetts Legislature a charter for a university by the name of "Boston University".[11] These trustees were successful Boston businessmen and Methodist laymen, with a history of involvement in educational enterprises, and they became the founders of Boston University. They were Isaac Rich (1801–1872), Lee Claflin (1791–1871), and Jacob Sleeper (1802–1889), for whom Boston University's three West Campus dormitories were later named. Lee Claflin's son, William, was then Governor of Massachusetts and signed the University Charter on May 26, 1869, after it was passed by the Legislature.

As reported by Kathleen Kilgore in her book Transformations, A History of Boston University (see Further reading), the founders directed the inclusion in the Charter of the following provision, unusual for its time:

No instructor in said University shall ever be required by the Trustees to profess any particular religious opinions as a test of office, and no student shall be refused admission ... on account of the religious opinions he may entertain; provided, nonetheless, that this section shall not apply to the theological department of said University.

Every department of the new university was also open to all on an equal footing regardless of sex, race, or (with the exception of the School of Theology) religion.

Early years (1870–1900)

 
Alexander Graham Bell, who invented the telephone at Boston University
 
688 Boylston Street, the early home of the College of Liberal Arts, the precursor to the College of Arts & Sciences

The Boston Theological Institute was absorbed into Boston University in 1871 as the BU School of Theology.[24]

On January 13, 1872, Isaac Rich died, leaving the vast bulk of his estate to a trust that would go to Boston University after ten years of growth while the university was organized. Most of this bequest consisted of real estate throughout the core of the city of Boston, which was appraised at more than $1.5 million. Kilgore describes this as the largest single donation to an American college or university as of that time. By December, however, the Great Boston Fire of 1872 had destroyed all but one of the buildings Rich had left to the university, and the insurance companies with which they had been insured were bankrupt. The value of his estate, when turned over to the university in 1882, was half what it had been in 1872.[citation needed]

As a result, the university was unable to build its contemplated campus on Aspinwall Hill, and the land was sold piecemeal as development sites. Street names in the area, including Claflin Road, Claflin Path, and University Road, are the only remaining evidence of university ownership in this area. Following the fire, Boston University established its new facilities in buildings scattered throughout Beacon Hill, and later expanded into the Boylston Street and Copley Square area, before building its Charles River Campus in the 1930s.[citation needed]

After receiving a year's salary advance to allow him to pursue his research in 1875, Alexander Graham Bell, then a professor at the school, invented the telephone in a Boston University laboratory.[25] In 1876, Borden Parker Bowne was appointed professor of philosophy. Bowne, an important figure in the history of American religious thought, was an American Christian philosopher and theologian in the Methodist tradition. He is known for his contributions to personalism, a philosophical branch of liberal theology.[26] The movement he led is often referred to as Boston Personalism.[27]

 
Helen Magill White, the first woman to receive a PhD from an American university

The university continued its tradition of openness in this period. In 1877, Boston University became the first American university to award a PhD to a woman, when classics scholar Helen Magill White earned hers with a thesis on "The Greek Drama".[25][22] Then in 1878 Anna Oliver became the first woman to receive a degree in theology in the United States, but the Methodist Church would not ordain her.[25] Lelia J. Robinson, who graduated from the university's law school in 1881, became the first woman admitted to the bar in Massachusetts.[25] Solomon Carter Fuller, who graduated from the university's School of Medicine in 1897, became the first black psychiatrist in the United States and would make significant contributions to the study of Alzheimer's disease.[25]

20th century and establishment of the Charles River campus

 
Marsh Plaza and its surrounding buildings were one of the first completed parts of the Charles River Campus
 
Commonwealth Avenue in the 1930s

Seeking to unify a geographically scattered school and enable it to participate in the development of the city, school president Lemuel Murlin arranged that the school buy the present campus along the Charles River. Between 1920 and 1928, the school bought the 15 acres (61,000 m2) of land that had been reclaimed from the river by the Riverfront Improvement Association. Plans for a riverside quadrangle with a Gothic Revival administrative tower modeled on the "Old Boston Stump" in Boston, England were scaled back in the late 1920s when the State Metropolitan District Commission used eminent domain to seize riverfront land for Storrow Drive.[28] Murlin was never able to build the new campus, but his successor, Daniel L. Marsh, led a series of fundraising campaigns (interrupted by both the Great Depression and World War II) that helped Marsh to achieve his dream and to gradually fill in the university's new campus.[29] By spring 1936, the student body included 10,384 men and women.[30]

 
Sert's buildings expanded the campus in the 1960s

In 1951, Harold C. Case became the school's fifth president and under his direction the character of the campus changed significantly, as he sought to change the school into a national research university. The campus tripled in size to 45 acres (180,000 m2), and added 68 new buildings before Case retired in 1967. The first large dorms, Claflin, Rich and Sleeper Halls in West Campus were built, and in 1965 construction began on 700 Commonwealth Avenue, later named Warren Towers, designed to house 1800 students. Between 1961 and 1966, the BU Law Tower, the George Sherman Union, and the Mugar Memorial Library were constructed in the Brutalist style, a departure from the school's traditional architecture. The College of Engineering and College of Communication were housed in a former stable building and auto-show room, respectively.[31] Besides his efforts to expand the university into a rival for Greater Boston's more prestigious academic institutions, such as Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (both in Cambridge across the Charles River from the BU campus), Case involved himself in the start of the student/societal upheavals that came to characterize the 1960s.

When a mini-squabble over editorial policy at college radio WBUR-FM – whose offices were under a tall radio antenna mast in front of the School of Public Relations and Communications (later College of Communications) – started growing in the spring of 1964, Case persuaded university trustees that the university should take over the widely-heard radio station (now a major outlet for National Public Radio and still a BU-owned broadcast facility). The trustees approved the firing of student managers and clamped down on programming and editorial policy, which had been led by Jim Thistle, later a major force in Boston's broadcast news milieu. The on-campus political dispute between Case's conservative administration and the suddenly active and mostly liberal student body led to other disputes over BU student print publications, such as the B.U. News and the Scarlet, a fraternity association newspaper.

The Presidency of John Silber also saw much expansion of the campus and programs. In the late 1970s, the Lahey Clinic vacated its building at 605 Commonwealth Avenue and moved to Burlington, Massachusetts. The vacated building was purchased by BU to house the School of Education.[32] After arriving from the University of Texas in 1971, Silber set out to remake the university into a global center for research by recruiting star faculty. Two of his faculty "stars", Elie Wiesel and Derek Walcott, won Nobel Prizes shortly after Silber recruited them.[33] Two others, Saul Bellow and Sheldon Glashow won Nobel Prizes before Silber recruited them.[33]

In addition to recruiting new scholars, Silber expanded the physical campus, constructing the Photonics Center for the study of light, a new building for the School of Management, and the Life Science and Engineering Building for interdisciplinary research, among other projects.[34] Campus expansion continued in the 2000s with the construction of new dormitories and the Agganis Arena.

History of student and faculty activism on campus

To protest the poor condition of Boston University's African-American curriculum, on April 25, 1968 (three weeks after the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.), African-American students conducted a sit-in and locked BU President Dr. Arland F. Christ-Janer out of his office for 12 hours.[35] Umoja, BU's Black Student Union, put forward ten demands to Dr. Christ-Janer and got nine of them approved that included the creation of a Martin Luther King Chair of Social Ethics, expansion of African-American library resources and tutoring services, opening an "Afro-American coordinating center," admission and selection of more Black students and faculty. No disciplinary action was taken against the students who only opened the chains after their demands were met. "There was no surprise, or feeling of victory on the students' parts," said Dr. Christ-Janer in response to the sit-in. "They had confidence in their demands, and I had a confidence in them. The university, black and white alike, was the winner."[35]

 
The back page of the bu exposure, March 1979

The late twentieth century saw a culmination in student activism at Boston University during the presidency of John R. Silber. In 1972, student protests rose against the university administration's endorsement of Marine Corps recruitment on campus which faced significant opposition from the Student Democratic Society.[36] On March 27, 1972, 50 police officers in "riot gear" defused a demonstration of 150 protesters at 195 Bay State Road, the BU Placement Office, where Marine recruiters were holding student interviews. A few protesters were arrested while some sustained minor injuries, including a student and two officers. Contrary to student claims of a peaceful protest, Silber said, "Civilization doesn't abdicate in face of barbarism. Those students or nonstudents who deliberately seek violent confrontation and refuse all efforts at peaceful resolution of issues must expect society to use its police power in its own defense." In response to Silber's decision of a forceful police intervention, the Faculty State conducted a vote on Silber's resignation which could not pass due to a "vote of 140-25 with 32 abstentions."[36] As a result of this failed motion, Peter P. Gabriel resigned his position as the dean of Boston University's School of Management in protest of Silber's presidency and his "counterproductive" leadership.[37] Silber's support of military recruitment on campus, which he pushed to make the university eligible for Federal grants,[38] caused other demonstrations. On December 5, 1972, fifteen BU Student Government officers started a three-day hunger strike at Marsh Chapel demanding Silber "to file a lawsuit against the Federal government challenging the constitutionality of the Herbert Amendment."[39]

On March 16, 1978, about 900 Boston University students gathered at the George Sherman Union to protest against the $400 rise in tuition and $150 rise in housing charges declared by the trustees on March 7.[38] The protest interrupted a board of trustees conference. While John Silber and Arthur G.B. Metcalf, the chairman of the board of trustees, were negotiating with student government representatives to discuss the matter further on a separate occasion, the protesters marched into the building from two entrances, effectively trapping 40 trustees and 10 university administrators in the building for over thirty minutes. Twenty officers from the Boston University Police Department had to disperse the crowd from the stairwells. The protest resulted in the arrest of 19 year old Joshua Grossman, while another student and two BUPD officers were taken to hospitals.[38]

On April 5, 1979, several hundred faculty members, as well as clerical workers and librarians, went on strike. The faculty members were seeking a labor contract while the clerical workers and librarians were seeking union recognition. The strike ended by mid-April under terms favorable to the employees.

On November 27, 1979, the committee to Defend Iranian Students- composed of Iranian students, Youths Against Foreign Fascism and the Revolutionary Communist Party, held a demonstration at the George Sherman Union against the deposed Shah of Iran and the deportation of Iranian students from the US. "To the Iranian people, that man (the shah) is Adolf Hitler," students protested. "The Shah Must Face the Wrath of the People." This was met with chants of "God Bless America" from the opposing group. Twenty policemen broke up the confronting parties though no arrests were made.[40]

21st century

Robert A. Brown's presidency, which started in 2005, has sought to further the consolidation of campus infrastructure that was commenced by earlier administrations. During his tenure, Brown has strengthened the core missions of undergraduate, graduate, and professional education, interdisciplinary work, and research and scholarship across all 17 schools and colleges.

In 2012, the university was invited to join the Association of American Universities, comprising 66 leading research universities in the United States and Canada. BU, one of four universities at the time invited to join the group since 2000, became the 62nd member. In the Boston area, Harvard, MIT, Tufts, and Brandeis are also members.[17][41][42]

That same year, a $1 billion fundraising campaign was launched, its first comprehensive campaign, emphasizing financial aid, faculty support, research, and facility improvements. In 2016, the campaign goal was reached. The Board of Trustees voted to raise the goal to $1.5 billion and extend through 2019. The campaign has funded 74 new faculty positions, including 49 named full professorships and 25 Career Development Professorships.[43] The campaign concluded in September 2019, raising a total of $1.85 billion over seven years.[44]

In February 2015 the faculty adopted an open-access policy to make its scholarship publicly accessible online.[45]

In 2016, Times Higher Education (THE) named Boston University to a list of 53 "international powerhouse" institutions, schools that have the best chance of being grouped alongside—or ahead of—THE's most elite global "old stars", a group that includes the University of Oxford, Stanford, Harvard, Yale, MIT, and Princeton.[46]

The Charles River and Medical Campuses have undergone physical transformations since 2006, from new buildings and playing fields to dormitory renovations. The campus has seen the addition of a 26-floor student residence at 33 Harry Agganis Way, nicknamed StuVi2, the New Balance Playing Field, the Yawkey Center for Student Services, the Alan and Sherry Leventhal Center, the Law tower and Redstone annex, the Engineering Product Innovation Center (EPIC), the Rajen Kilachand Center for Integrated Life Sciences & Engineering, and the Joan and Edgar Booth Theatre, which opened in fall 2017.[47] The construction of the Rajen Kilachand Center for Integrated Life Sciences & Engineering was funded by part of BU's largest ever gift, a $115 million donation from Rajen Kilachand.[48] The Dahod Family Alumni Center in the renovated BU Castle began in May 2017 and was completed in fall 2018.[49] Development of the university's existing housing stock has included significant renovations to BU's oldest dorm, Myles Standish Hall and Annex, and to Kilachand Hall, formerly known as Shelton Hall, and a brand new student residence on the Medical Campus.

In 2019, Boston University expanded its financial aid program so that it would "meet the full need for all domestic students who qualify for financial aid," starting in fall 2020.[50]

In September 2022, Robert A. Brown announced he will step down at the end of the 2022–2023 academic year. Brown began his presidency in September 2005, and his contract was set to run through 2025.[51]

Response to the COVID-19 pandemic

The university closed down due to the COVID-19 pandemic and shifted to online learning for the remainder of the semester on March 11, 2020.[52] For the fall 2020 semester, BU offered a hybrid system that allows for students to decide whether to take a remote class or participate in-person. Larger classes would be broken down into smaller groups that rotate between online and in-person sessions. The school started administering its own COVID-19 testing for faculty, staff, and students on July 27, 2020.[53] The new BU Clinical Testing Laboratory has accelerated testing that can give results to students, staff, and faculty by the next day.[54] The lab uses eight robots to process up to 6,000 tests per day.[55] A contact tracing team is part of the process to contain infections on campus.[56] BU also started a new website "Back2BU" to provide students with the latest information on reopening.[57]

The results of the tests are published on BU's public COVID-19 Testing Data Dashboard.[58]

BU's National Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratories (NEIDL) has been working with live coronavirus samples since March 2020, and—at the time—was the only New England lab to have live samples.[59][60]

In August 2020, BU filed a service mark application with the United States Patent and Trademark Office to secure the phrase "F*ck It Won't Cut It" for a student-led COVID-19 safety program on campus. The slogan is meant to promote "safe and smart actions and behaviors for college and university students in a COVID-19 environment", according to the application.[61][62]

In July 2021, BU announced faculty and staff will be required to be vaccinated against COVID-19 for the fall 2022 semester. This comes after a vaccine requirement for all students, which was announced in April.[63][64][65]

COVID-19 research and gain-of-function controversy

In October 2022, Boston University's National Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratories conducted research in a Biosafety Level 3 lab that modified the original strain of the virus that causes COVID-19 with the spike proteins of the Omicron variant.[66] This resulted in a virus that was more lethal to lab mice than the Omicron variant itself, but less lethal than the original strain.[66] Some medical authorities criticized the research as dangerous "gain of function" research, but others argued that it did not technically count as gain of function research because the modified virus happened not to be quite as lethal as the original strain.[67] Marc Lipsitch of Harvard, however, argued "these are unquestionably gain-of-function experiments. As many have noted, this is a very broad term encompassing many harmless and some potentially dangerous experiments. GOF is a scientific technique, not an epithet."[68] While the BU researchers gained internal research and Boston government approvals for the research, they failed to notify the US Government's National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases that was a funder of the lab.[66]

Campus

 
Boston University's East Campus along Commonwealth Avenue

Boston campuses and facilities

 
The "BU Beach" is a linear strip of land sandwiched between the main BU campus and busy Storrow Drive, and is used as an outdoors space to relax and sunbathe in good weather.

The university's main Charles River Campus follows Commonwealth Avenue and the Green Line, beginning near Kenmore Square and continuing for over a mile and a half to its end near the border of Boston's Allston neighborhood. The Boston University Bridge over the Charles River into Cambridge represents the dividing line between Main Campus, where most schools and classroom buildings are concentrated, and West Campus, home to several athletic facilities and playing fields, the large West Campus dorm, and the new John Hancock Student Village complex.

The main campus buildings of BU are separated from the Charles River Esplanade parkland and the Paul Dudley White Bike Path along the banks of the nearby Charles River, by heavily trafficked Storrow Drive, a high-speed limited-access major roadway connecting downtown Boston to its western suburbs. The separation occurred in the late 1920s, when the Commonwealth of Massachusetts seized land by eminent domain for the construction of the new roadway along the riverbank. A narrow strip of grassy lawn between BU academic buildings lining Commonwealth Avenue and the torrent of traffic on Storrow Drive has been humorously dubbed "BU Beach", because it is a favorite hangout for sunbathing in good weather. The lounging students are protected from traffic incursions by a raised earthen berm, which also muffles the traffic noise to a dull roar. To protect pedestrians from vehicular collisions, Storrow Drive is enclosed by fencing, with pedestrian bridges allowing safe crossings at Silber Way and at Marsh Chapel. An additional crossing is possible at the BU Bridge, which also allows street traffic to cross from the Boston side to the Cambridge side of the Charles River.

As a result of its continual expansion, the Charles River campus contains an array of architecturally diverse buildings. The College of Arts and Sciences, Marsh Chapel, and the School of Theology buildings are the university's most recognizable, and were built in the late-1930s and 1940s in collegiate gothic style. A sizable amount of the campus is traditional Boston brownstone, especially at Bay State Road and South Campus, where BU has acquired almost every townhouse those areas offer. The buildings are primarily dormitories, but many also serve as various institutes as well as department offices.

From the 1960s–1980s many contemporary buildings were constructed, including the Mugar Library, BU Law School, and Warren Towers, all of which were built in the brutalist style of architecture. The Metcalf Science Center for Science and Engineering, constructed in 1983, might more accurately be described as Structural Expressionism. Morse Auditorium, adjacent, stands in stark architectural contrast, as it was originally constructed as a Jewish synagogue. The most recent architectural additions to BU's campus are the Photonics Center, Life Science and Engineering Building, The Student Village (which includes the FitRec Center and Agganis Arena), and the Questrom School of Business. All these buildings were built in brick, a few with a substantial amount of brownstone. Boston University converted the old Nickelodeon Cinemas complex into College of Engineering labs and offices.[69] In 2016, the university sold the building that housed the Huntington Theatre Company and constructed the Joan & Edgar Booth Theatre and College of Fine Arts Production Center to consolidate the theater program on campus.[70][71]

BU has earned several historic preservation awards with recent extensive building renovation projects, such as the School of Law tower,[72] the Alan & Sherry Leventhal Center,[73] Myles Standish Hall,[74] and the Dahod Family Alumni Center (formerly The Castle).[75] Construction of the brick and glass Yawkey Center for Student Services was designed to follow the requirements of the Bay State Road historic district.[76] Use of glass and steel for new construction on Commonwealth Avenue includes the Rajen Kilachand Center for Integrated Life Sciences & Engineering, which opened in 2017, and the 19-story Center for Computing & Data Sciences, which opened in 2022.

The ceremonial opening on December 8th, 2022 was covered by publications including Bloomberg, The Boston Globe, and CBS News which praised the building for being the largest carbon-neutral building in Boston and noted its unusual design.[77][78][79] A ribbon cutting ceremony was performed by Boston Mayor Michelle Wu, President Robert A. Brown, the associate provost for computing and data sciences Azer Bestavros, dean of Arts & Sciences Stan Sclaroff, BU Board of Trustees chair Ahmass Fakahany, BU provost Jean Morrison, and Boston city councilor Kenzie Bok.[80]

In 2018, following negotiations in the preceding year, Boston University purchased the former Wheelock College, which is now referred to as the Boston University Fenway Campus (although it is actually located in the adjacent neighborhood of Longwood).

As of 2019, BU has sold or leased to real estate developers several building sites it owned in Kenmore Square next to its campus. Large multistory buildings are being constructed there, which will transform the long-time appearance of the busy traffic hub.[81]

In September 2021, BU completed a $115 million project to renovate and expand the Henry M. School of Dental Medicine.[82] The project expanded clinical spaces, added a simulation learning center, and improved collaborative spaces for students.[83]

Student housing

 
A brownstone townhouse used by Boston University as dormitory
 
Warren Towers constitutes the second-largest non-military dorm in the country.[84]
 
Built in 1925 as the Myles Standish Hotel, this building was converted to dorm space in 1949.

Boston University's housing system is the nation's 10th largest among four-year colleges. BU was originally a commuter school, but the university now guarantees the option of on-campus housing for four years for all undergraduate students. Currently, 76 percent of the undergraduate population lives on campus. Boston University requires that all students living in dormitories be enrolled in a year-long meal plan with several combinations of meals and dining points which can be used as cash in on-campus facilities.[85]

Housing at BU is an unusually diverse melange, ranging from individual 19th-century brownstone townhouses and apartment buildings acquired by the school to large-scale high-rises built in the 1960s and 2000s.

The large dormitories include the 1,800-student Warren Towers, the largest on campus, as well as West Campus and The Towers. The smaller dormitory and apartment style housing are mainly located in two parts of campus: Bay State Road and the South Campus residential area. Bay State Road is a tree-lined street that runs parallel to Commonwealth Avenue and is home to the majority of BU's townhouses, often called "brownstones". South Campus is a student residential area south of Commonwealth Avenue and separated from the main campus by the Massachusetts Turnpike. Some of the larger buildings in that area have been converted into dormitories, while the rest of the South Campus buildings are apartments.

Boston University's newest residence and principal apartment-style housing area is officially called 33 Harry Agganis Way, "StuVi2" unofficially, and is part of The John Hancock Student Village project. The north-facing, 26-story building is apartment style while the south-facing, 19-story building is in an 8-bedroom dormitory-style suite pattern. In total, the building houses 960 residents.

Aside from these main residential areas, smaller residential dormitories are scattered along Commonwealth Avenue.

Boston University also provides specialty houses or specialty floors to students who have particular interests.

All large dormitories have 24/7 security and require all students to swipe and validate their school identification before entering.

Kilachand Hall, formerly Shelton Hall, is rumored to be haunted by the ghost of playwright Eugene O'Neill. O'Neill lived in what was originally room 401 (now 419) while the building was a residential hotel. He died in a hospital on November 27, 1953, and his ghost is rumored to haunt both the room and the floor. The fourth floor is now a specialty floor called the Writers' Corridor.[86]

John Hancock Student Village

 
Student Village II with Student Village I in the background, as viewed from Nickerson Field

The Student Village is a large new residential and recreational complex covering 10 acres (40,000 m2) between Buick Street and Nickerson Field, ground formerly occupied by a National Guard Armory, which had been used by the university for indoor track and field and as a storage facility before its demolition and the start of construction. The dormitory of apartment suites at 10 Buick Street (often abbreviated to "StuVi" by students) opened to juniors and seniors in the fall of 2000. In 2002, John Hancock Insurance announced its sponsorship of the multimillion-dollar project.

The Agganis Arena, named after Harry Agganis, was opened to concerts and hockey games in January 2005. The Agganis Arena is capable of housing 6,224 spectators for Terrier hockey games, replacing the smaller Walter Brown Arena. It can also be used for concerts and shows. In March 2005, the final element of phase II of the Student Village complex, the Fitness and Recreation (FitRec) Center, was opened, drawing large crowds from the student body. Construction on the rest of phase II, which included 19- and 26-story residential towers was finished in fall 2009.

Other facilities

 
The Elie Wiesel Center for Judaic Studies on Bay State Road

The Mugar Memorial Library is the central academic library for the Charles River Campus. It also houses the Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center, formerly called the Twentieth Century Archive, where documents belonging to thousands of eminent figures in literature, journalism, diplomacy, the arts, and other fields are housed.

The George Sherman Union (GSU), located next to Mugar Memorial Library, provides students with a food court featuring many fast-food chains, including Panda Express, Basho, Starbucks, and Pinkberry. The GSU also provides lounge areas for students to relax or study. The basement of the George Sherman Union is home to the BU Central lounge, which hosts concerts and other activities and events.

 
The Castle (built 1915) on Bay State Road

"The Castle" located on the West end of Bay State Road is one of the older buildings on campus. The building was commissioned by William Lindsay for his own use in 1905, long before his daughter's honeymoon on the ill-fated Lusitania.[87] In 1939, the university acquired the property by agreement with the city to repay all back taxes owed; these funds were raised through donations from, among others, Dr. William Chenery, a University Trustee.[88] It served as the residence of the university president until 1967, when President Christ-Janer found it too large for his needs as a residence and turned it to other uses. It is now a conference space. Underneath the Castle is the BU Pub, the only BU-operated drinking establishment on campus.[89]

The Florence and Chafetz Hillel House on Bay State Road is the Hillel House for the university. With four floors and a basement, the facility includes lounges, study rooms and a kosher dining hall, open during the academic year (including Passover) to students and walk-ins from the community. The first floor also includes the Granby St. Cafe as well as TVs and ping-pong, pool and foosball tables. The Hillel serves as a focal point for BU's large and active Jewish community. It hosts approximately 30 student groups, including social, cultural, and religious groups, and BU Students for Israel (BUSI), Holocaust Education, and the Center for Jewish Learning and Experience. It hosts a plethora of programs and speakers as well as Shabbat services and meals.[90]

Cultural life

The university is located at the junction of Fenway-Kenmore, Allston, and Brookline. In the Fenway-Kenmore area are the Museum of Fine Arts, the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, and the nightlife of Landsdowne Street as well as Fenway Park, home of the Boston Red Sox. Allston has been Boston's largest bohemian neighborhood since the 1960s. Nicknamed "Allston Rock City",[91] the neighborhood is home to many artists and musicians, as well as a variety of cafés, and many of Boston's small music halls.

Beyond the southern border of the campus in Brookline, Harvard Avenue offers independent and foreign films at Coolidge Corner Theatre, and author readings at the Brookline Booksmith. Other nearby cultural institutions include Symphony Hall, Jordan Hall, the main branch of the Boston Public Library in Copley Square, the art and commerce of fashionable Newbury Street, and across the Charles River, the museums, shops, and galleries in Harvard Square and elsewhere in Cambridge.

 
The Charles River and the university

BU is home to the Boston Playwrights' Theatre. BU was previously associated with the Huntington Theatre Company on Huntington Avenue, but put the BU Theatre property up for sale in 2016, casting a shadow over the future of the organization.[92][93] BU replaced the old Huntington Theatre facilities with the new Joan and Edgar Booth Theatre, located next to the Fuller Building housing the College of Fine Arts.

BU hosts campus and non-campus musical performances in the Tsai Performance Center at 685 Commonwealth Avenue, and the CFA Concert Hall at 855 Commonwealth Avenue.

Visual art works by students and by visiting artists are displayed in rotating exhibitions in the university's three galleries: the BU Art Gallery (BUAG) at the Stone Gallery, the 808 Gallery, and the Sherman Gallery, located respectively at 855, 808, and 775 Commonwealth Avenue. In addition, BU had been associated with the Photographic Resource Center located at 832 Commonwealth Avenue, which mounts several exhibitions yearly, as well as special events for student and professional photographers. However, BU withdrew its support as of May 2017,[94] and the Photographic Resource Center is now a resident partner with the College of Art and Design at Lesley University.[95]

Guest and visitor policies

Prior to September 2007, Boston University had a restrictive visitor policy, which limited the ability of students from different dormitories to visit each other at night. This changed when a new policy approved by Brown took effect.[96] The new policy allows for students living on campus to swipe into any on-campus dormitory between the hours of 7 am and 2 am using their Terrier cards. Student residents can also sign in guests with photo identification at any time, day or night. Overnight visitors of the opposite sex are no longer required to seek a same-sex "co-host".[97] However, during reading period and the week before final exams,[98] no guests are permitted in the halls overnight, and are expected to be out of the hall by 2 am.[99]

Mass transit

Most of the buildings of the main campus are located on or near Commonwealth Avenue, served by the Kenmore subway stop on the Green Line and five surface stops on the Green Line B branch. Crowding on the busy B branch is very seasonal; during the summer, ridership falls by more than half, largely due to the reduced student population.[100] The South Campus area is served by St. Mary's Street on the C branch and Fenway on the D branch. MBTA bus route 57 parallels the B branch on Commonwealth Avenue; Lansdowne on the MBTA Commuter Rail Framingham/Worcester Line is located near East Campus.

Bicycle traffic on Commonwealth Avenue is heavy,[101] and advocacy groups have held public meetings with BU, the MBTA, and the City of Boston to improve safety and congestion along this travel corridor.[102][103] The MBTA plans to consolidate and reduce the number of stops along Commonwealth Avenue to speed travel and to reduce construction costs to upgrade the remaining stations. Improvements planned include full handicapped accessibility at the new stations, fencing to encourage pedestrians to use protected crosswalks, traffic signal prioritization for transit vehicles, and improved esthetics. The Commonwealth Avenue Improvement Project is coordinated by the Massachusetts Highway Department, in cooperation with BU, the MBTA, the City of Boston, the Boston Water and Sewer Commission, and other organizations.[104][101]

The Medical Campus is served by the #1 and CT1 crosstown buses which run along Massachusetts Avenue, as well as the No. 47 and CT3 crosstown buses which connect the Boston University Medical Center with the Longwood Medical Area. The Silver Line Washington Street Branch runs the entire length of the Medical Campus, one block north of most parts of the campus; it connects Boston University Medical Center with Tufts Medical Center station and downtown Boston. The nearest rapid transit subway station is the Massachusetts Avenue station on the Orange Line, located three blocks north of the Medical Center.

Sustainability

The university has a sustainability initiative and a sustainability office.[105] Boston University's Strategic Plan for Campus Sustainability is also integrated into the university's overarching strategic plan in many areas including the Climate Action Plan Task Force, a faculty-led initiative developing the university's first Climate Action Plan.

The university bought a wind farm in South Dakota to meet its goal of carbon neutrality by 2040.[106]

Other campuses

 
Study abroad program sites

London Campus

 
43 Harrington Gardens, the main academic building for Boston University's London Campus

Boston University's largest study abroad program is located in London, England. Boston University London Programmes offers a semester of study and work in London through their London Internship Program (LIP), as well as a number of other specialized programs. The LIP program combines a professional internship with coursework that examines a particular academic area in the context of Britain's history, culture, and society and its role in modern Europe. Courses in each academic area are taught exclusively to students enrolled in the Boston University program by a selected faculty body representing multiple cultural backgrounds. Upon successful completion of a semester, students earn 16 Boston University credits. BU London Programmes are headquartered in South Kensington, London. The campus consists of the main building at 43 Harrington Gardens, as well as three nearby residences to house students. This program is open to Boston University students, as well as students at other American colleges.

Los Angeles Campus

In Los Angeles, BU has an internship program for students to study and work in the heart of the film, television, advertising, public relations, and entertainment management and law industries. The program offers three tracks from which undergraduate and graduate students can choose: Advertising and Public Relations, Film and Television, and Entertainment Management. Graduated students have the opportunity to continue their education by enrolling in the Los Angeles Certificate Program, where students can choose either the Acting in Hollywood or the Writer in Hollywood track. Courses are taught by Boston University faculty and alumni who serve as mentors in and out of the classroom. Upon successful completion of a semester students will earn 16 Boston University credits. Students who successfully complete the Los Angeles Certificate Program will receive 8 Boston University credits and a certificate from Boston University College of Fine Arts or College of Communication.[107]

Paris Campus

The Paris Center runs several programs, the largest of which is the Paris Internship Program dating from 1989. Students take language and elective courses with French faculty at the BU Paris Center, then are placed in internships with French businesses and organizations in the area. Students live with host families or in a dormitory for the extent of the semester. Boston University Paris also organizes exchange programs with the business school Paris Dauphine University and a yearlong program with the Institut d'études politiques de Paris (Sciences Po).[108]

Washington, DC Campus

In Washington, D.C., BU has internship, journalism and management programs. Students study in the university's building on Massachusetts Avenue in Dupont Circle and take advantage of the city by interning at different locations. In 2011, the university completed construction of a new, multistory residence to house students in the program featuring touch-less entry cards for security and suites with communal kitchens, right next to the Woodley Park Metro station.[109] The Multimedia and Journalism program allows students to act as Washington, D.C. correspondents for newspapers and television stations across the Northeast and New England while interning at major news outlets in the city, as well as at many PR internships in politics, government and public affairs. Internship opportunities are also offered in a wide variety of sectors for students enrolled in other BU Study Abroad Washington programs.

Sydney Campus

In Sydney, BU has internship, management, film festival, travel writing, engineering, and School of Education programs that vary based on semester. Around 150 students live in the university's building in Chippendale developed by Tony Owen Partners.[110][111] The building uses "fissures to provide maximum solar access to bedrooms as well as natural ventilation throughout the building".[112] The building opened in the beginning of 2011 and features underground classrooms, a lecture hall, office space, library, and a roof patio.

Other internship and study abroad opportunities are available through the Study Abroad office.[113]

Academics

Colleges and schools

Boston University offers bachelor's degrees, master's degrees, and doctorates, and medical, dental, and law degrees through its 17 schools and colleges. The newest school at Boston University is the Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies (established 2014). Boston University Wheelock College of Education & Human Development was renamed in 2018 following the merger with Wheelock College. In 2019, BU created the Faculty of Computing & Data Sciences, which is an interdisciplinary academic unit that will train students in computing and enable them to combine data science with their chosen field. In 2022, BU's medical school was renamed the Aram V. Chobanian & Edward Avedisian School of Medicine (following a $100 million gift from Edward Avedisian).[114][115]

Each school and college at the university has a three letter abbreviation, which is commonly used in place of their full school or college name. For example, the College of Arts & Sciences is commonly referred to as CAS, the College of Engineering is ENG, and the College of Fine Arts is CFA, etc.

The College of Fine Arts was formerly named the School of Fine Arts (SFA). The College of Arts & Sciences (CAS) was formerly named the College of Liberal Arts (CLA). The College of Communication was formerly named the School of Public Communication (SPC). The Questrom School of Business (Questrom) was formerly known as the School of Management (SMG),[116] and the College of Business Administration (CBA) prior to that. The College of General Studies (CGS) was formerly named the College of Basic Studies (CBS).

The Mental Health Counseling and Behavioral Medicine (MHCBM) Program at Boston University School of Medicine offers a master's degree for students who wish to become licensed to practice as a mental health counselor. The program adheres to educational guidelines and standards of the American Counseling Association (ACA), American Mental Health Counselors Association (AMHCA), and the Council for Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs (CACREP), which is an independent agency recognized by the Council for Higher Education Accreditation. The MHCBM Program is the only counselor education program in the entire United States that is housed in a medical school for solely training students in clinical mental health counseling to treat clients and patients with a mental disorder via counseling and psychotherapy. Boston University is accredited by the New England Commission of Higher Education.[117]

Admissions

Fall Freshman statistics[118][119][120][121][122][123]

  2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017
Applicants 80,794 75,733 61,006 62,210 64,473 60,815
Admits 11,434 13,884 11,286 11,260 14,184 15,204
% Admitted 14.2 18.3 18.5 18.1 22.0 25.0
Enrolled 3,100 3,200 3,100 3,100 3,620 3,614
Avg Unweighted GPA 3.95 3.90 3.90 3.82 3.80 3.80
SAT Middle 50% 1491 1482 1470 1468 1468 1452

Based on currently enrolled student responses within the university student database 50.6% white, 14% Asian, 11.6% international students, 8.6% Hispanic, and 3.2% black. Fall 2015 international student enrollment at Boston University is 43% Chinese, 9% Indian, 5% Korean, 5% Saudi Arabian, 4% Canadian, 4% Taiwanese, 2% Turkish, and 1% from each of the following countries: Venezuela, Brazil, Mexico, Italy, France, Thailand, Spain, and Japan. The other 18% of international enrollment comes from 123 other countries.[124] Among international students, 39% are pursuing undergraduate degrees, 37% are pursuing graduate degrees, and 23% are enrolled in other programs.[124] BU also has the second highest number of Jews of any private school (after NYU) in the country with between 3,000[125][126] and 4,000,[127] or roughly 15%[126] identifying as Jewish.

The plurality of registrants were from Massachusetts (19%), followed by New York (16%), New Jersey (9%), California (8%), Connecticut (4%), Pennsylvania (4%), and Texas (2%).[128]

Boston University's financial aid program, "affordableBU," meets the full demonstrated need of domestic students.[citation needed]

Rankings

USNWR 2021 departmental rankings[138]

Biomedical Engineering 9
Biological Sciences 85
Chemistry 59
Clinical Psychology 27
Computer Science 49
Earth Sciences 78
Economics 23
English 42
Fine Arts 32
Health Care Management 28
History 44
Mathematics 47
Physics 37
Political Science 56
Psychology 39
Public Health 8
Social Work 10
Sociology 47
Speech-Language Pathology 10
Statistics 50

U.S. News & World Report ranks Boston University tied for 41st among national universities and tied for 57th among global universities for 2022.[139] It also ranked BU 29th in "Best Value Schools", tied for 41st in "Most Innovative Schools", and tied for 45th in "Best Undergraduate Engineering Programs" at schools whose highest degree is a doctorate and 12th in Biomedical Engineering.[140] U.S. News & World Report also ranks Boston University's online graduate information technology programs tied for 10th in the U.S., the online graduate criminal justice programs tied for 3rd, and the online graduate business programs (excluding MBAs) tied for 10th.[141]

Boston University is ranked No. 40 nationally in the 2021 Wall Street Journal/Time Higher Education U.S. colleges and universities ranking.

QS World University Rankings ranked Boston University 93rd overall in the world in its 2019 rankings, with a 5-star rating.[142]

Times Higher Education ranked Boston University 54th in the world for 2021.[143]

Times Higher Education ranked Boston University 6th in the 2017 Global University Employability Rankings.[144]

The Academic Ranking of World Universities ranks Boston University 36th in the United States, and 76th in the world, in its 2019 list.

Newsweek (International Edition), in its list of the Top 100 Global Universities, ranked Boston University the 35th in the United States, and 65th in the world.[145]

The Chronicle of Higher Education places the Boston University School of Social Work as sixth in the nation for research productivity by faculty.[146]

BU is one of 96 American universities receiving the highest research classification ("RU/VH") by the Carnegie Foundation.[18]

Research

 
The Talbot Building located on the medical campus houses the School of Public Health
 
Sponsored Program Awards FY1971-2016

In FY2016, the university reported in $368.9 million in sponsored research, comprising 1,896 awards to 722 faculty investigators.[147] Funding sources included the National Science Foundation (NSF), the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the US Department of Defense, the European Commission of the European Union, the Susan G. Komen Foundation, and the federal Health Resources and Services Administration. The university's research enterprise encompasses dozens of fields, but its primary focus currently lies in seven areas: Data Science, Engineering Biology, Global Health, Infectious Diseases, Neuroscience, Photonics, and Urban Health.[148]

In 2017, BU received a $20 million grant over five years from the NSF in order to establish an Engineering Research Center (ERC).[149][150] The ERC's goal is to bioengineer functional heart tissue.[151] The director of the center is David Bishop, a professor of physics and computer and electrical engineering.[152]

As of FY2021, the university reported $526.6 million in sponsored research, and 56% of federal funding was from the National Institutes of Health.[153]

In 2003, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases awarded Boston University a grant to build one of two National Biocontainment Laboratories. The National Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratories (NEIDL) was created to study emerging infectious diseases that pose a significant threat to public health.[154] NEIDL has biosafety level 2, 3, and 4 (BSL-2, BSL-3, and BSL-4, respectively) labs that enable researchers to work safely with the pathogens.[155] BSL-4 labs are the highest level of biosafety labs and work with diseases with a high risk of aerosol transmission.[156]

The strategic plan also encouraged research collaborations with industry and government partners. In 2016, as part of a broadbased effort to solve the critical problem of antibiotic resistance, the US Department of Health & Human Services (HHS) selected the Boston University School of Law (LAW)—and Kevin Outterson, a BU professor of law—to lead a $350 million trans-Atlantic public-private partnership called CARB-X to foster the preclinical development of new antibiotics and antimicrobial rapid diagnostics and vaccines.[157] CARB-X was allotted an additional $370 million in funding in May 2022. HHS will continue to support CARB-X with up to $300 million over 10 years, and global charity Wellcome will fund up to $70 million over three years.[158]

In its effort to increase diversity and inclusion, Boston University appointed Ibram X. Kendi in July 2020 as a history professor and the director and founder[159] of its newly established Center for Antiracist Research.[160][161] The university also appointed alumna Andrea Taylor as its first senior diversity officer.[162] Later in August, Twitter founder and then CEO Jack Dorsey donated $10 million to the Center, noting that the gift came with "no string attached."[163]

Ibram Kendi was named a 2021 MacArthur fellow and will receive a "genius grant" of $625,000 split over five years for his center's research.[164][165][166]

Grade deflation

The independently run student newspaper at Boston University, The Daily Free Press,[167] as well as The New York Times,[168] have published articles exploring the existence of grade deflation. The Times discovered that administrators have suggested to faculty members deflated ideal grade distributions. Although an article in the official publication BU Today asserted that "the GPAs of BU undergrads and the percentage of As and Bs have both risen over the last two decades", The New York Times has found BU grades have been rising more slowly with respect to many other schools.

In 2014, the average GPA of a BU undergraduate was 3.16, compared to the averages of 3.35 for Boston College (2007), 3.48 for Amherst College (2006), 3.52 for New York University (2015), and 3.65 for Harvard University (2015).[169]

About 81 percent of all grades earned in either the A or B range (75% in the B range). The article went on to note that although the university attempted to curb grade inflation and inconsistency in the late 1990s, both the percentage of As and GPAs have been rising since. They attributed the grade inflation that has occurred not to teachers' grading policies, but to the increasing quality of each incoming class which leads to more top grades.[170]

Journals and publications

 
The Rafik B. Hariri Building houses the Questrom School of Business and the office of the university president

Boston University is home to several academic journals and publications. The School of Law hosts six nationally recognized law journals: the Boston University Law Review, American Journal of Law and Medicine, Review of Banking & Financial Law, Boston University International Law Journal, Journal of Science and Technology Law, and Public Interest Law Journal.[171] The School of Education houses the Journal of Education, which is the oldest continuously published journal in the field of education in the country.[172] In the College of Arts and Sciences, Studies in Romanticism is housed at the Department of English[173] and the Journal of Field Archeology is housed at the Department of Archeology.[174][175] The Department of History is affiliated with The Historical Society, which publishes The Journal of the Historical Society and Historically Speaking.[176] The American Journal of Media Psychology and the Public Relations Journal are currently edited by professors at the College of Communication,[177] which is also home to the New England Center for Investigative Reporting, which generates numerous publications yearly.[178]

Special academic programs

General Education: the BU Hub

BU Hub, the university-wide undergraduate general education curriculum, requires course work in the core capacities of: philosophical, aesthetic, and historical interpretation; scientific and social inquiry; quantitative reasoning; diversity, civic engagement, and global citizenship; written, oral, and multimedia communication; and an intellectual toolkit that includes critical thinking, collaboration, and creativity.[179]

Kilachand Honors College

The University Honors College matriculated its first class in 2010. In 2011, it was renamed Arvind and Chandan Nandlal Kilachand Honors College following a $25 million donation from Rajen Kilachand; the largest donation in the history of the university. The Kilachand Honors College is a university-wide community of faculty and students dedicated to preserving, renewing, and rethinking classic ideals of liberal education: love of learning, intellectual curiosity, self-discovery, empathy, clarity of thought and expression. It rests on three pillars: an integrated, four-year curriculum; an extensive series of co-curricular events that include site-visits to leading cultural institutions as well as talks and readings by leading figures in the arts, sciences, and professions; and, finally, a "living and learning" community that offers students the personal atmosphere of a small liberal arts college and fosters responsibility and citizenship.[180]

Trustee Scholars Program

Around 20 freshmen from every Boston University graduating class are part of the Trustee Scholars Program. These students are recipients of the Trustee Scholarship, known to be the most prestigious merit-based, full-tuition scholarship for undergraduates. Although not an academic program per se, students "become part of a unique campus community that offers many intellectual, cultural, and social opportunities",[181] such as special lectures by distinguished professors and scholars. They also gather for events, such as plays and performances in the Boston area, movie screenings, and book discussions.

Boston University Academy

Boston University Academy is a private high school operated by Boston University. Founded in 1993, the school sits within the university's campus and students are offered the opportunity to take university courses.

Student life

Student body composition as of May 2, 2022
Race and ethnicity[182] Total
White 35% 35
 
Foreign national 21% 21
 
Asian 19% 19
 
Hispanic 12% 12
 
Other[a] 9% 9
 
Black 4% 4
 
Economic diversity
Low-income[b] 17% 17
 
Affluent[c] 83% 83
 

Student publications

Independent from the university, The Daily Free Press (often referred to as The FreeP) is the campus student newspaper and the fourth largest daily newspaper in Boston. Since 1970, it has provided students with campus news, city and state news, sports coverage, editorials, arts and entertainment, and special feature stories. The Daily Free Press is published every regular instruction day of the university year and is available in BU dorms, classroom buildings, and commercial locations frequented by students.

The literary magazine Clarion has been printed since 1998. The first issue, titled "?", was published by the group Students for Literary Awareness with the sponsorship of the Department of English; subsequent issues were issued by the BU Literary Society, and most recently, by the BU BookLab. Burn Magazine is a younger literary magazine, affiliated with Clarion, but publishing the work of student authors only.

Boink was launched in February 2005 by a group of undergrads led by Alecia Oleyourryk, who was then a senior at the College of Communications. The magazine featured BU students posing nude, as well as articles on sexuality.

ROTC

The Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) at BU traces its origins back to August 16, 1919, when the US War Department stood up the Students' Army Training Corps at Boston University, the predecessor to the current Army ROTC program.[183] Today, BU is one of twenty five colleges and universities in the country to host all three ROTC programs – Army, Navy, and Air Force. Students wishing to be commissioned into the Marine Corps study as Navy Midshipmen.

Honor Societies

Alpha Phi Sigma - Nu Mu Chapter

Athletics

 
Inside Agganis Arena after a hockey game

Boston University's NCAA Division I Terriers compete in men's basketball, cross country, golf, ice hockey, rowing, soccer, swimming, tennis, track, and lacrosse, and in women's basketball, dance, cross country, field hockey, golf, ice hockey, lacrosse, rowing, soccer, softball, swimming, tennis, and track. Boston University athletics teams compete in the Patriot League, Hockey East, and Colonial Athletic Association conferences, and their mascot is Rhett the Boston Terrier. As of 1 July 2013, a majority of Boston University's teams compete in the Patriot League.[184] On April 1, 2013, the university announced it would cut its wrestling program following the 2013–14 season.

The Boston University men's hockey team is the most successful on campus, and is a storied college hockey power, with five NCAA championships, most recently in 2009. The team was coached by hall-of-famer Jack Parker for 40 seasons, and is a major supplier of talent to the NHL, as well as to the 1980 USA Olympic gold medal-winning men's hockey team. The Terriers have won 31 Beanpot titles, more than any other team in the tournament, which includes Harvard University, Boston College, and Northeastern University.[185][186] The BU Women's ice hockey team has won 2 beanpot titles, once in 1981 and once in 2019. Boston University also won a game in 2010 against Boston College at Fenway Park by a score of 3–2, played a week after the NHL Winter Classic.[187]

 
DeWolfe Boathouse

BU has also won two national championships in women's rowing, in 1991 and 1992.

In 2020, the men's basketball team won the Patriot League Men's Basketball Championship for the first time, but the NCAA men's Division I basketball tournament was canceled due to coronavirus concerns.[188][189][190]

Boston University recently constructed the new Agganis Arena, which opened on January 3, 2005, with a men's hockey game between the Terriers and the University of Minnesota Golden Gophers. The arena also hosts non-sporting events, such as concerts, ice shows, and other performances.

Boston University disbanded its football team in 1997. The university used the nearly $3 million from its football program to build the multimillion-dollar John Hancock Student Village and athletic complex. The university also increased funding to women's athletic programs. "By implementing the total plan, we can achieve a much more balanced set of sports programs for both men and women, which is consistent with the philosophy underlying Title IX", said former BU athletic director Gary Strickler.[191]

Club sports

Boston University students also compete in athletics at the club level. Thirty-four club sports are recognized by the university: badminton; baseball; cricket; cycling; equestrian; fencing; figure skating; golf; gymnastics; inline, men's, and women's ice hockey; jiu-jitsu; kendo; kung fu; women's and men's rugby; sailing; Shotokan karate; ski racing; snowboarding; men's and women's soccer; squash; women's synchronized skating; synchronized swimming; table tennis; triathlon; women's and men's ultimate frisbee; men's and women's volleyball; and women's and men's water polo.[192]

The BU Sailing Team is one of the most successful teams in college sailing. The team has won seven National Championships, most recently in 1999. They have also had three team members graduate as "College Sailor of the Year".[193] Notable alumni of the team include Ken Read, skipper for PUMA Ocean Racing in the Volvo Ocean Race, and 2012 US Sailing Rolex Yachtsman of the Year nominee, John Mollicone.[194]

 
BU Sailing Pavilion.

The BU Figure Skating Team has won five Intercollegiate National Figure Skating Championships and has not finished outside of the top three since 2009.

The BU Men's Club Volleyball team won the NCVF 1AA National Championship in 2016.

The BU Roller Hockey Team advanced to the NCHRA Tournament in 2001, 2002, and 2003. The team advanced all the way to the Final Four in 2001.

Both Men's and Women's Intervarsity Table Tennis Teams have attended the National Collegiate Table Tennis Tournaments and ranked as high as the top 10 nationwide.

Notable alumni and academics

 
Martin Luther King Jr. earned a PhD from BU in 1955

Over the course of its history, a number of people associated with Boston University have become notable in their fields. Affiliates of Boston University have won seven Nobel prizes. With over 342,000 alumni, Boston University graduates can be found around the world.[8] American civil rights movement leader Martin Luther King Jr. earned his doctorate in systematic theology at BU in 1955. After gaining prominence by advocating nonviolent resistance to segregation, he won the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize.[195] Howard Thurman, the Dean of Marsh Chapel, influenced King's embrace of nonviolence.[196] Three other alumni hold special historical importance: Rebecca Lee Crumpler was the first African-American woman and Charles Eastman (first named Ohiyesa) the first American Indian to be certified as doctors, and Helen Magill White was the first woman in the US to earn a PhD.

Mathematics and sciences

 
Alexander Graham Bell, inventor of the telephone

Among the most famous of Boston University scientists is Alexander Graham Bell, an inventor of the telephone who conducted many of his experiments on the BU campus when he was professor of Vocal Physiology and Elocution.[197] In Boston, Bell was "swept up" by the excitement engendered by the many scientists and inventors residing in the city. In 1875, the university gave Bell a year's salary advance to allow him to pursue his research. The following year, he invented the telephone in a Boston University laboratory.[25] In the twenty-first century, the university has become a pioneering center for synthetic biology thanks to the work of James Collins. Collins and co-workers also discovered that sublethal levels of antibiotics activate mutagenesis by stimulating the production of reactive oxygen species, leading to multidrug resistance.[198] This discovery has important implications for the widespread use and misuse of antibiotics.

Dr. Christopher Chen, an interdisciplinary researcher whose work involves engineering, medicine, and biology, joined BU in 2013.[199] Chen directs the Biological Design Center at the Rajen Kilachand Center for Integrated Life Sciences & Engineering.[200] His research focuses on tissue engineering and regenerative medicine.

Other notable Boston University scientists include Sheldon Glashow, winner of the 1979 Nobel Prize in Physics, Daniel Tsui, winner of the 1998 Nobel Prize in Physics, and Osamu Shimomura, winner of the 2008 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.[201]

Humanities, music, and art

Numerous actors trained at Boston University, including Faye Dunaway, Alfre Woodard, Russell Hornsby, Jason Alexander, Ginnifer Goodwin, Marisa Tomei, Emily Deschanel, Marc Maron, Viola Léger, Julianne Moore, Uzo Aduba, Paul Michael Glaser, Michael Chiklis, Sarah Chase, and Geena Davis. Notable musicians include Taiwanese composer Wen-Pin Hope Lee, rapper Aesop Rock and Russian-American Violinist Yevgeny Kutik. Folk singer Joan Baez attended BU for several months before dropping out to concentrate on her musical career.

Law

David A Rose (judge), noted judge in Boston, Associate Justice 1972–1976, Recalled retired justice 1978–1985, who headed Rights Panel.

Literature

Two US Poets Laureate have taught at Boston University: Robert Lowell and Robert Pinsky.[201] During John Silber's tenure as president, he recruited two Nobel Prize–winning literary figures to the university's faculty: Elie Wiesel, winner of the 1986 Nobel Peace Prize, and Saul Bellow, winner of the 1976 Nobel Prize in Literature.[201] Another Nobel Prize winner in the English Department in the twentieth century was Derek Walcott, winner of the 1992 Nobel Prize in Literature.[201] Alumni of the university have earned over thirty Pulitzer Prizes.[202] Other writers associated with the university include Bob Zelnick,[203] executive editor of the Frost-Nixon interviews, Lambda Literary Award winner Ellen Bass, historian Andrew Bacevich,[204] Ha Jin, Pulitzer Prize winner Jhumpa Lahiri, and Isaac Asimov.[205]

In 1986, literary critic Christopher Ricks, whom W. H. Auden called "exactly the kind of critic every poet dreams of finding", joined the university's faculty and founded the Editorial Institute with Geoffrey Hill.[206] Controversial historian Howard Zinn taught in the political science department for many years.[207] Journalist Thomas B. Edsall and playwright Eliza Wyatt graduated from Boston University.[208] Paul Beatty, who earned bachelor's and master's degrees in psychology at BU, won the National Book Critics Circle Award and the Man Booker Prize for his novel The Sellout. He is the first writer from the United States honored with the Man Booker. The bestselling author Casey Sherman graduated from BU in 1992.

Politics

 
President William Howard Taft lectured at BU School of Law from 1918 to 1921

Boston University counts eleven current or former governors of US states, seven United States senators, and 33 members of the United States House of Representatives among its alumni. Notable Boston University alumni in American politics include former Defense Secretary William Cohen, former US Ambassador to China Gary Locke, former Senator Judd Gregg, former United States Senator Edward Brooke; the first popularly elected African-American senator, former Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley, former Second Lady Tipper Gore, and the former First Vice President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Earle O. Latham. Former President William Howard Taft lectured on Legal Ethics at the university's law school from 1918 to 1921.[209] After leaving politics in 2014, former Boston mayor Thomas Menino was professor of the practice of political science at the university until his death later in the year.[210] Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the youngest woman elected to the House of Representatives, graduated in 2011.[211]

 
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez at Women's March in New York City in 2019

Television personality Bill O'Reilly studied journalism at the university in the 1970s and was a columnist for the student newspaper, The Daily Free Press.[212] Describing his time at the university, he wrote, "Throughout that fall at BU, covering stories became a passion for me. I loved going places and seeing new things. I ran around Boston annoying the hell out of everyone, but bringing back good, crisp copy" and "what I learned at Boston University firmly set me on the course I continue to this day. Amidst the chaos of Commonwealth Avenue, I found an occupation that I enjoyed."[212]

In international politics, Boston University alumni include Sherwin Gatchalian, a Philippine senator elected in 2016, and Daniyal Aziz, a Pakistani politician affiliated with the Pakistan Muslim League (N) who is currently a member of the National Assembly of Pakistan. Archbishop Makarios, the first President of Cyprus, studied at Boston University under a World Council of Churches scholarship. The founder of the Albanian Orthodox Church, Fan S. Noli, received a doctorate from Boston University. Moeed Yusuf, the current National Security Advisor (Pakistan) to the Prime Minister of Pakistan, received his master's and doctoral degrees from Boston University.[213]

Hollywood

 
Julianne Moore

In 2014, The Hollywood Reporter took note of the number of female BU graduates working in Hollywood.[214] The university estimates that more than 5,000 alums, 54 percent of them women, work in entertainment. They include actresses Geena Davis, Julianne Moore, Uzo Aduba, Marisa Tomei, Alfre Woodard, Rosie O'Donnell, Ginnifer Goodwin, Yunjin Kim. Behind the scenes players include former CBS Entertainment Chair Nina Tassler, NBCUniversal Cable Entertainment Group' Bonnie Hammer, A&E Networks' Nancy Dubuc, Warner Horizon Television Brooke Karzen, V writer Corinne Brinkerhoff, DreamWorks Animation's Bonnie Arnold, and Red Hour Films' Debbie Liebling.

 
Howard Stern

Popular culture

A number of Boston University graduates have reached fame in popular culture. These include radio personality Howard Stern, Bravo executive Andy Cohen, CBS producer Gordon Hyatt,[215] celebrity chef Rocco DiSpirito, bestselling self-help author Mark Manson, reality show contestant and television host Rob Mariano, Kevin O'Connor presenter of This Old House, and cohost of Project Runway and fashion editor for Marie Claire Magazine Nina Garcia. American comedian Marc Maron and YouTube personality Jenna Marbles studied for a master's degree in education at the university. The "Craigslist killer" Philip Markoff studied medicine at the university. YouTube essayist Evan Puschak of The Nerdwriter and musician and YouTube personality Dan Avidan both went to Boston University.

Athletics

1968 Olympic 400 m hurdles gold medalist David Hemery[216] was a student at BU in the 1960s, and a coach in the 1970s and 1980s. John Thomas[217] attended BU in the early 1960s and he won a silver medal in the Olympic High Jump. He was an assistant track coach at BU during the 1970s.

On October 29, 2020, Travis Roy, a philanthropist, motivational speaker, and former BU ice hockey player, died. In 1995, Roy collided with the boards and was paralyzed just 11 seconds into his first hockey game for Boston University, making him quadriplegic.[218] In 1996, Roy founded the Travis Roy Foundation to fund research for and help other spinal cord injury survivors.[219] In 2017, BU created the Travis M. Roy Professorship in Rehabilitation Sciences after receiving $2.5 million from anonymous donors.[220][221][222]

In popular culture

Boston University is sometimes referenced in art or pop culture. Here below are some notable examples.

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Other consists of Multiracial Americans & those who prefer to not say.
  2. ^ The percentage of students who received an income-based federal Pell grant intended for low-income students.
  3. ^ The percentage of students who are a part of the American middle class at the bare minimum.

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Further reading

  • Kilgore, Kathleen (1991). Transformations: A History of Boston University. Boston: Boston University Press. ISBN 0-87270-070-4.
  • Saltzman, Nancy (1985). Buildings and Builders: An Architectural History of Boston University. Boston: Boston University Press. ISBN 0-87270-056-9.

External links

boston, university, this, article, about, private, university, founded, 1839, list, universities, boston, list, colleges, universities, metropolitan, boston, confused, with, boston, college, private, research, university, boston, massachusetts, university, non. This article is about the private university founded in 1839 For a list of universities in Boston see List of colleges and universities in metropolitan Boston Not to be confused with Boston College Boston University BU is a private research university in Boston Massachusetts The university is nonsectarian 10 but has a historical affiliation with the United Methodist Church 4 5 6 It was founded in 1839 by Methodists with its original campus in Newbury Vermont before moving to Boston in 1867 11 Boston UniversityLatin Universitas BostoniensisFormer nameNewbury Biblical Institute 1838 1847 Methodist General Biblical Institute 1847 1867 Boston Theological Seminary 1867 1869 Boston Theological Institute 1869 1871 Motto Learning Virtue Piety 1 TypePrivate research universityEstablishedApril 24 1839 183 years ago April 24 1839 2 3 AccreditationNECHEReligious affiliationHistorically affiliated with the United Methodist Church 4 5 6 Academic affiliationsAAUURAAICUMNAICUIAMSCUSpace grantEndowment 3 4 billion 2022 7 PresidentRobert A BrownProvostJean MorrisonAcademic staff4 187 2022 8 Administrative staff10 468 2022 including faculty 8 Students36 729 2022 8 Undergraduates17 590 2022 8 Postgraduates17 937 2022 8 Other students1 202 2022 8 LocationBoston Massachusetts United States42 20 56 N 71 06 01 W 42 34889 N 71 10028 W 42 34889 71 10028 Coordinates 42 20 56 N 71 06 01 W 42 34889 N 71 10028 W 42 34889 71 10028CampusUrban 169 acres 0 68 km2 Other campusesBedfordLos AngelesWashington D C LondonParisSydneyNewspaperThe Daily Free PressColorsScarlet and white 9 NicknameTerriersSporting affiliationsNCAA Division I FCS Patriot LeagueHockey EastMascotRhett the Boston TerrierWebsitewww wbr bu wbr eduThe university has more than 4 000 faculty members 12 and nearly 34 000 students and is one of Boston s largest employers 13 It offers bachelor s degrees master s degrees doctorates and medical dental business and law degrees through 17 schools and colleges on three urban campuses 14 The main campus is situated along the Charles River in Boston s Fenway Kenmore and Allston neighborhoods while the Boston University Medical Campus is located in Boston s South End neighborhood The Fenway campus houses the Wheelock College of Education and Human Development formerly Wheelock College which merged with BU in 2018 15 BU is a member of the Boston Consortium for Higher Education and the Association of American Universities 16 17 It is classified among R1 Doctoral Universities Very High Research Activity 18 The Boston University Terriers compete in the NCAA Division I BU athletic teams compete in the Patriot League and Hockey East conferences and their mascot is Rhett the Boston Terrier Boston University is well known for men s hockey in which it has won five national championships most recently in 2009 Among its alumni and current or past faculty the university counts 8 Nobel Laureates 23 Pulitzer Prize winners 10 Rhodes Scholars 19 20 6 Marshall Scholars 21 9 Academy Award winners and several quantify Emmy and Tony Award winners BU also has MacArthur Fulbright and Truman Scholars quantify as well as American Academy of Arts and Sciences and National Academy of Sciences members quantify among its past and present graduates and faculty In 1876 BU professor Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone in a BU lab Contents 1 History 1 1 Predecessor institutions and University Charter 1 2 Early years 1870 1900 1 3 20th century and establishment of the Charles River campus 1 4 History of student and faculty activism on campus 1 5 21st century 1 5 1 Response to the COVID 19 pandemic 1 5 2 COVID 19 research and gain of function controversy 2 Campus 2 1 Boston campuses and facilities 2 1 1 Student housing 2 1 2 John Hancock Student Village 2 1 3 Other facilities 2 1 4 Cultural life 2 1 5 Guest and visitor policies 2 1 6 Mass transit 2 1 7 Sustainability 2 2 Other campuses 2 2 1 London Campus 2 2 2 Los Angeles Campus 2 2 3 Paris Campus 2 2 4 Washington DC Campus 2 2 5 Sydney Campus 3 Academics 3 1 Colleges and schools 3 2 Admissions 3 3 Rankings 3 4 Research 3 5 Grade deflation 3 6 Journals and publications 3 7 Special academic programs 3 7 1 General Education the BU Hub 3 7 2 Kilachand Honors College 3 7 3 Trustee Scholars Program 3 8 Boston University Academy 4 Student life 4 1 Student publications 4 2 ROTC 4 3 Honor Societies 5 Athletics 5 1 Club sports 6 Notable alumni and academics 6 1 Mathematics and sciences 6 2 Humanities music and art 6 3 Law 6 4 Literature 6 5 Politics 6 6 Hollywood 6 7 Popular culture 6 8 Athletics 7 In popular culture 8 Gallery 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory EditPresidents of Boston University William Fairfield Warren 1873 1903William E Huntington 1904 1911Lemuel H Murlin 1911 1924Edwin Holt Hughes acting May Sep 1923William F Anderson acting 1925 1926Daniel L Marsh 1926 1951Harold C Case 1951 1967Arland Christ Janer 1967 1970Calvin B T Lee acting 1970John Silber 1971 1996Jon Westling 1996 2003John Silber acting 2003 2004Aram Chobanian 2004 2005Robert A Brown 2005 presentPredecessor institutions and University Charter Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Boston University news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Boston University traces its roots to the establishment of the Newbury Biblical Institute in Newbury Vermont in 1839 22 and was chartered with the name Boston University by the Massachusetts Legislature in 1869 The university organized formal centennial observances both in 1939 and 1969 23 One or the other or both dates may appear on various official seals used by different schools of the university On April 24 25 1839 a group of Methodist ministers and laymen at the Old Bromfield Street Church in Boston elected to establish a Methodist theological school Set up in Newbury Vermont the school was named the Newbury Biblical Institute In 1847 the Congregational Society in Concord New Hampshire invited the institute to relocate to Concord and offered a disused Congregational church building with a capacity of 1200 people Other citizens of Concord covered the remodeling costs One stipulation of the invitation was that the Institute remain in Concord for at least 20 years The charter issued by New Hampshire designated the school the Methodist General Biblical Institute but it was commonly called the Concord Biblical Institute With the agreed twenty years coming to a close the trustees of the Concord Biblical Institute purchased 30 acres 120 000 m2 on Aspinwall Hill in Brookline Massachusetts as a possible relocation site The institute moved in 1867 to 23 Pinkney Street in the Beacon Hill neighborhood of Boston and received a Massachusetts Charter as the Boston Theological Seminary In 1869 three trustees of the Boston Theological Institute obtained from the Massachusetts Legislature a charter for a university by the name of Boston University 11 These trustees were successful Boston businessmen and Methodist laymen with a history of involvement in educational enterprises and they became the founders of Boston University They were Isaac Rich 1801 1872 Lee Claflin 1791 1871 and Jacob Sleeper 1802 1889 for whom Boston University s three West Campus dormitories were later named Lee Claflin s son William was then Governor of Massachusetts and signed the University Charter on May 26 1869 after it was passed by the Legislature As reported by Kathleen Kilgore in her book Transformations A History of Boston University see Further reading the founders directed the inclusion in the Charter of the following provision unusual for its time No instructor in said University shall ever be required by the Trustees to profess any particular religious opinions as a test of office and no student shall be refused admission on account of the religious opinions he may entertain provided nonetheless that this section shall not apply to the theological department of said University Every department of the new university was also open to all on an equal footing regardless of sex race or with the exception of the School of Theology religion Early years 1870 1900 Edit Alexander Graham Bell who invented the telephone at Boston University 688 Boylston Street the early home of the College of Liberal Arts the precursor to the College of Arts amp Sciences The Boston Theological Institute was absorbed into Boston University in 1871 as the BU School of Theology 24 On January 13 1872 Isaac Rich died leaving the vast bulk of his estate to a trust that would go to Boston University after ten years of growth while the university was organized Most of this bequest consisted of real estate throughout the core of the city of Boston which was appraised at more than 1 5 million Kilgore describes this as the largest single donation to an American college or university as of that time By December however the Great Boston Fire of 1872 had destroyed all but one of the buildings Rich had left to the university and the insurance companies with which they had been insured were bankrupt The value of his estate when turned over to the university in 1882 was half what it had been in 1872 citation needed As a result the university was unable to build its contemplated campus on Aspinwall Hill and the land was sold piecemeal as development sites Street names in the area including Claflin Road Claflin Path and University Road are the only remaining evidence of university ownership in this area Following the fire Boston University established its new facilities in buildings scattered throughout Beacon Hill and later expanded into the Boylston Street and Copley Square area before building its Charles River Campus in the 1930s citation needed After receiving a year s salary advance to allow him to pursue his research in 1875 Alexander Graham Bell then a professor at the school invented the telephone in a Boston University laboratory 25 In 1876 Borden Parker Bowne was appointed professor of philosophy Bowne an important figure in the history of American religious thought was an American Christian philosopher and theologian in the Methodist tradition He is known for his contributions to personalism a philosophical branch of liberal theology 26 The movement he led is often referred to as Boston Personalism 27 Helen Magill White the first woman to receive a PhD from an American university The university continued its tradition of openness in this period In 1877 Boston University became the first American university to award a PhD to a woman when classics scholar Helen Magill White earned hers with a thesis on The Greek Drama 25 22 Then in 1878 Anna Oliver became the first woman to receive a degree in theology in the United States but the Methodist Church would not ordain her 25 Lelia J Robinson who graduated from the university s law school in 1881 became the first woman admitted to the bar in Massachusetts 25 Solomon Carter Fuller who graduated from the university s School of Medicine in 1897 became the first black psychiatrist in the United States and would make significant contributions to the study of Alzheimer s disease 25 20th century and establishment of the Charles River campus Edit Marsh Plaza and its surrounding buildings were one of the first completed parts of the Charles River Campus Commonwealth Avenue in the 1930s John Silber Seeking to unify a geographically scattered school and enable it to participate in the development of the city school president Lemuel Murlin arranged that the school buy the present campus along the Charles River Between 1920 and 1928 the school bought the 15 acres 61 000 m2 of land that had been reclaimed from the river by the Riverfront Improvement Association Plans for a riverside quadrangle with a Gothic Revival administrative tower modeled on the Old Boston Stump in Boston England were scaled back in the late 1920s when the State Metropolitan District Commission used eminent domain to seize riverfront land for Storrow Drive 28 Murlin was never able to build the new campus but his successor Daniel L Marsh led a series of fundraising campaigns interrupted by both the Great Depression and World War II that helped Marsh to achieve his dream and to gradually fill in the university s new campus 29 By spring 1936 the student body included 10 384 men and women 30 Sert s buildings expanded the campus in the 1960s In 1951 Harold C Case became the school s fifth president and under his direction the character of the campus changed significantly as he sought to change the school into a national research university The campus tripled in size to 45 acres 180 000 m2 and added 68 new buildings before Case retired in 1967 The first large dorms Claflin Rich and Sleeper Halls in West Campus were built and in 1965 construction began on 700 Commonwealth Avenue later named Warren Towers designed to house 1800 students Between 1961 and 1966 the BU Law Tower the George Sherman Union and the Mugar Memorial Library were constructed in the Brutalist style a departure from the school s traditional architecture The College of Engineering and College of Communication were housed in a former stable building and auto show room respectively 31 Besides his efforts to expand the university into a rival for Greater Boston s more prestigious academic institutions such as Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology both in Cambridge across the Charles River from the BU campus Case involved himself in the start of the student societal upheavals that came to characterize the 1960s When a mini squabble over editorial policy at college radio WBUR FM whose offices were under a tall radio antenna mast in front of the School of Public Relations and Communications later College of Communications started growing in the spring of 1964 Case persuaded university trustees that the university should take over the widely heard radio station now a major outlet for National Public Radio and still a BU owned broadcast facility The trustees approved the firing of student managers and clamped down on programming and editorial policy which had been led by Jim Thistle later a major force in Boston s broadcast news milieu The on campus political dispute between Case s conservative administration and the suddenly active and mostly liberal student body led to other disputes over BU student print publications such as the B U News and the Scarlet a fraternity association newspaper The Presidency of John Silber also saw much expansion of the campus and programs In the late 1970s the Lahey Clinic vacated its building at 605 Commonwealth Avenue and moved to Burlington Massachusetts The vacated building was purchased by BU to house the School of Education 32 After arriving from the University of Texas in 1971 Silber set out to remake the university into a global center for research by recruiting star faculty Two of his faculty stars Elie Wiesel and Derek Walcott won Nobel Prizes shortly after Silber recruited them 33 Two others Saul Bellow and Sheldon Glashow won Nobel Prizes before Silber recruited them 33 In addition to recruiting new scholars Silber expanded the physical campus constructing the Photonics Center for the study of light a new building for the School of Management and the Life Science and Engineering Building for interdisciplinary research among other projects 34 Campus expansion continued in the 2000s with the construction of new dormitories and the Agganis Arena History of student and faculty activism on campus Edit To protest the poor condition of Boston University s African American curriculum on April 25 1968 three weeks after the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr African American students conducted a sit in and locked BU President Dr Arland F Christ Janer out of his office for 12 hours 35 Umoja BU s Black Student Union put forward ten demands to Dr Christ Janer and got nine of them approved that included the creation of a Martin Luther King Chair of Social Ethics expansion of African American library resources and tutoring services opening an Afro American coordinating center admission and selection of more Black students and faculty No disciplinary action was taken against the students who only opened the chains after their demands were met There was no surprise or feeling of victory on the students parts said Dr Christ Janer in response to the sit in They had confidence in their demands and I had a confidence in them The university black and white alike was the winner 35 The back page of the bu exposure March 1979 The late twentieth century saw a culmination in student activism at Boston University during the presidency of John R Silber In 1972 student protests rose against the university administration s endorsement of Marine Corps recruitment on campus which faced significant opposition from the Student Democratic Society 36 On March 27 1972 50 police officers in riot gear defused a demonstration of 150 protesters at 195 Bay State Road the BU Placement Office where Marine recruiters were holding student interviews A few protesters were arrested while some sustained minor injuries including a student and two officers Contrary to student claims of a peaceful protest Silber said Civilization doesn t abdicate in face of barbarism Those students or nonstudents who deliberately seek violent confrontation and refuse all efforts at peaceful resolution of issues must expect society to use its police power in its own defense In response to Silber s decision of a forceful police intervention the Faculty State conducted a vote on Silber s resignation which could not pass due to a vote of 140 25 with 32 abstentions 36 As a result of this failed motion Peter P Gabriel resigned his position as the dean of Boston University s School of Management in protest of Silber s presidency and his counterproductive leadership 37 Silber s support of military recruitment on campus which he pushed to make the university eligible for Federal grants 38 caused other demonstrations On December 5 1972 fifteen BU Student Government officers started a three day hunger strike at Marsh Chapel demanding Silber to file a lawsuit against the Federal government challenging the constitutionality of the Herbert Amendment 39 On March 16 1978 about 900 Boston University students gathered at the George Sherman Union to protest against the 400 rise in tuition and 150 rise in housing charges declared by the trustees on March 7 38 The protest interrupted a board of trustees conference While John Silber and Arthur G B Metcalf the chairman of the board of trustees were negotiating with student government representatives to discuss the matter further on a separate occasion the protesters marched into the building from two entrances effectively trapping 40 trustees and 10 university administrators in the building for over thirty minutes Twenty officers from the Boston University Police Department had to disperse the crowd from the stairwells The protest resulted in the arrest of 19 year old Joshua Grossman while another student and two BUPD officers were taken to hospitals 38 On April 5 1979 several hundred faculty members as well as clerical workers and librarians went on strike The faculty members were seeking a labor contract while the clerical workers and librarians were seeking union recognition The strike ended by mid April under terms favorable to the employees On November 27 1979 the committee to Defend Iranian Students composed of Iranian students Youths Against Foreign Fascism and the Revolutionary Communist Party held a demonstration at the George Sherman Union against the deposed Shah of Iran and the deportation of Iranian students from the US To the Iranian people that man the shah is Adolf Hitler students protested The Shah Must Face the Wrath of the People This was met with chants of God Bless America from the opposing group Twenty policemen broke up the confronting parties though no arrests were made 40 21st century Edit Robert A Brown s presidency which started in 2005 has sought to further the consolidation of campus infrastructure that was commenced by earlier administrations During his tenure Brown has strengthened the core missions of undergraduate graduate and professional education interdisciplinary work and research and scholarship across all 17 schools and colleges In 2012 the university was invited to join the Association of American Universities comprising 66 leading research universities in the United States and Canada BU one of four universities at the time invited to join the group since 2000 became the 62nd member In the Boston area Harvard MIT Tufts and Brandeis are also members 17 41 42 That same year a 1 billion fundraising campaign was launched its first comprehensive campaign emphasizing financial aid faculty support research and facility improvements In 2016 the campaign goal was reached The Board of Trustees voted to raise the goal to 1 5 billion and extend through 2019 The campaign has funded 74 new faculty positions including 49 named full professorships and 25 Career Development Professorships 43 The campaign concluded in September 2019 raising a total of 1 85 billion over seven years 44 In February 2015 the faculty adopted an open access policy to make its scholarship publicly accessible online 45 In 2016 Times Higher Education THE named Boston University to a list of 53 international powerhouse institutions schools that have the best chance of being grouped alongside or ahead of THE s most elite global old stars a group that includes the University of Oxford Stanford Harvard Yale MIT and Princeton 46 The Charles River and Medical Campuses have undergone physical transformations since 2006 from new buildings and playing fields to dormitory renovations The campus has seen the addition of a 26 floor student residence at 33 Harry Agganis Way nicknamed StuVi2 the New Balance Playing Field the Yawkey Center for Student Services the Alan and Sherry Leventhal Center the Law tower and Redstone annex the Engineering Product Innovation Center EPIC the Rajen Kilachand Center for Integrated Life Sciences amp Engineering and the Joan and Edgar Booth Theatre which opened in fall 2017 47 The construction of the Rajen Kilachand Center for Integrated Life Sciences amp Engineering was funded by part of BU s largest ever gift a 115 million donation from Rajen Kilachand 48 The Dahod Family Alumni Center in the renovated BU Castle began in May 2017 and was completed in fall 2018 49 Development of the university s existing housing stock has included significant renovations to BU s oldest dorm Myles Standish Hall and Annex and to Kilachand Hall formerly known as Shelton Hall and a brand new student residence on the Medical Campus In 2019 Boston University expanded its financial aid program so that it would meet the full need for all domestic students who qualify for financial aid starting in fall 2020 50 In September 2022 Robert A Brown announced he will step down at the end of the 2022 2023 academic year Brown began his presidency in September 2005 and his contract was set to run through 2025 51 Response to the COVID 19 pandemic Edit The university closed down due to the COVID 19 pandemic and shifted to online learning for the remainder of the semester on March 11 2020 52 For the fall 2020 semester BU offered a hybrid system that allows for students to decide whether to take a remote class or participate in person Larger classes would be broken down into smaller groups that rotate between online and in person sessions The school started administering its own COVID 19 testing for faculty staff and students on July 27 2020 53 The new BU Clinical Testing Laboratory has accelerated testing that can give results to students staff and faculty by the next day 54 The lab uses eight robots to process up to 6 000 tests per day 55 A contact tracing team is part of the process to contain infections on campus 56 BU also started a new website Back2BU to provide students with the latest information on reopening 57 The results of the tests are published on BU s public COVID 19 Testing Data Dashboard 58 BU s National Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratories NEIDL has been working with live coronavirus samples since March 2020 and at the time was the only New England lab to have live samples 59 60 In August 2020 BU filed a service mark application with the United States Patent and Trademark Office to secure the phrase F ck It Won t Cut It for a student led COVID 19 safety program on campus The slogan is meant to promote safe and smart actions and behaviors for college and university students in a COVID 19 environment according to the application 61 62 In July 2021 BU announced faculty and staff will be required to be vaccinated against COVID 19 for the fall 2022 semester This comes after a vaccine requirement for all students which was announced in April 63 64 65 COVID 19 research and gain of function controversy Edit In October 2022 Boston University s National Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratories conducted research in a Biosafety Level 3 lab that modified the original strain of the virus that causes COVID 19 with the spike proteins of the Omicron variant 66 This resulted in a virus that was more lethal to lab mice than the Omicron variant itself but less lethal than the original strain 66 Some medical authorities criticized the research as dangerous gain of function research but others argued that it did not technically count as gain of function research because the modified virus happened not to be quite as lethal as the original strain 67 Marc Lipsitch of Harvard however argued these are unquestionably gain of function experiments As many have noted this is a very broad term encompassing many harmless and some potentially dangerous experiments GOF is a scientific technique not an epithet 68 While the BU researchers gained internal research and Boston government approvals for the research they failed to notify the US Government s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases that was a funder of the lab 66 Campus Edit Boston University s East Campus along Commonwealth Avenue Boston campuses and facilities Edit The BU Beach is a linear strip of land sandwiched between the main BU campus and busy Storrow Drive and is used as an outdoors space to relax and sunbathe in good weather The university s main Charles River Campus follows Commonwealth Avenue and the Green Line beginning near Kenmore Square and continuing for over a mile and a half to its end near the border of Boston s Allston neighborhood The Boston University Bridge over the Charles River into Cambridge represents the dividing line between Main Campus where most schools and classroom buildings are concentrated and West Campus home to several athletic facilities and playing fields the large West Campus dorm and the new John Hancock Student Village complex The main campus buildings of BU are separated from the Charles River Esplanade parkland and the Paul Dudley White Bike Path along the banks of the nearby Charles River by heavily trafficked Storrow Drive a high speed limited access major roadway connecting downtown Boston to its western suburbs The separation occurred in the late 1920s when the Commonwealth of Massachusetts seized land by eminent domain for the construction of the new roadway along the riverbank A narrow strip of grassy lawn between BU academic buildings lining Commonwealth Avenue and the torrent of traffic on Storrow Drive has been humorously dubbed BU Beach because it is a favorite hangout for sunbathing in good weather The lounging students are protected from traffic incursions by a raised earthen berm which also muffles the traffic noise to a dull roar To protect pedestrians from vehicular collisions Storrow Drive is enclosed by fencing with pedestrian bridges allowing safe crossings at Silber Way and at Marsh Chapel An additional crossing is possible at the BU Bridge which also allows street traffic to cross from the Boston side to the Cambridge side of the Charles River As a result of its continual expansion the Charles River campus contains an array of architecturally diverse buildings The College of Arts and Sciences Marsh Chapel and the School of Theology buildings are the university s most recognizable and were built in the late 1930s and 1940s in collegiate gothic style A sizable amount of the campus is traditional Boston brownstone especially at Bay State Road and South Campus where BU has acquired almost every townhouse those areas offer The buildings are primarily dormitories but many also serve as various institutes as well as department offices From the 1960s 1980s many contemporary buildings were constructed including the Mugar Library BU Law School and Warren Towers all of which were built in the brutalist style of architecture The Metcalf Science Center for Science and Engineering constructed in 1983 might more accurately be described as Structural Expressionism Morse Auditorium adjacent stands in stark architectural contrast as it was originally constructed as a Jewish synagogue The most recent architectural additions to BU s campus are the Photonics Center Life Science and Engineering Building The Student Village which includes the FitRec Center and Agganis Arena and the Questrom School of Business All these buildings were built in brick a few with a substantial amount of brownstone Boston University converted the old Nickelodeon Cinemas complex into College of Engineering labs and offices 69 In 2016 the university sold the building that housed the Huntington Theatre Company and constructed the Joan amp Edgar Booth Theatre and College of Fine Arts Production Center to consolidate the theater program on campus 70 71 BU has earned several historic preservation awards with recent extensive building renovation projects such as the School of Law tower 72 the Alan amp Sherry Leventhal Center 73 Myles Standish Hall 74 and the Dahod Family Alumni Center formerly The Castle 75 Construction of the brick and glass Yawkey Center for Student Services was designed to follow the requirements of the Bay State Road historic district 76 Use of glass and steel for new construction on Commonwealth Avenue includes the Rajen Kilachand Center for Integrated Life Sciences amp Engineering which opened in 2017 and the 19 story Center for Computing amp Data Sciences which opened in 2022 The ceremonial opening on December 8th 2022 was covered by publications including Bloomberg The Boston Globe and CBS News which praised the building for being the largest carbon neutral building in Boston and noted its unusual design 77 78 79 A ribbon cutting ceremony was performed by Boston Mayor Michelle Wu President Robert A Brown the associate provost for computing and data sciences Azer Bestavros dean of Arts amp Sciences Stan Sclaroff BU Board of Trustees chair Ahmass Fakahany BU provost Jean Morrison and Boston city councilor Kenzie Bok 80 In 2018 following negotiations in the preceding year Boston University purchased the former Wheelock College which is now referred to as the Boston University Fenway Campus although it is actually located in the adjacent neighborhood of Longwood As of 2019 update BU has sold or leased to real estate developers several building sites it owned in Kenmore Square next to its campus Large multistory buildings are being constructed there which will transform the long time appearance of the busy traffic hub 81 In September 2021 BU completed a 115 million project to renovate and expand the Henry M School of Dental Medicine 82 The project expanded clinical spaces added a simulation learning center and improved collaborative spaces for students 83 Student housing Edit Main article Boston University Housing System A brownstone townhouse used by Boston University as dormitory Warren Towers constitutes the second largest non military dorm in the country 84 Built in 1925 as the Myles Standish Hotel this building was converted to dorm space in 1949 Boston University s housing system is the nation s 10th largest among four year colleges BU was originally a commuter school but the university now guarantees the option of on campus housing for four years for all undergraduate students Currently 76 percent of the undergraduate population lives on campus Boston University requires that all students living in dormitories be enrolled in a year long meal plan with several combinations of meals and dining points which can be used as cash in on campus facilities 85 Housing at BU is an unusually diverse melange ranging from individual 19th century brownstone townhouses and apartment buildings acquired by the school to large scale high rises built in the 1960s and 2000s The large dormitories include the 1 800 student Warren Towers the largest on campus as well as West Campus and The Towers The smaller dormitory and apartment style housing are mainly located in two parts of campus Bay State Road and the South Campus residential area Bay State Road is a tree lined street that runs parallel to Commonwealth Avenue and is home to the majority of BU s townhouses often called brownstones South Campus is a student residential area south of Commonwealth Avenue and separated from the main campus by the Massachusetts Turnpike Some of the larger buildings in that area have been converted into dormitories while the rest of the South Campus buildings are apartments Boston University s newest residence and principal apartment style housing area is officially called 33 Harry Agganis Way StuVi2 unofficially and is part of The John Hancock Student Village project The north facing 26 story building is apartment style while the south facing 19 story building is in an 8 bedroom dormitory style suite pattern In total the building houses 960 residents Aside from these main residential areas smaller residential dormitories are scattered along Commonwealth Avenue Boston University also provides specialty houses or specialty floors to students who have particular interests All large dormitories have 24 7 security and require all students to swipe and validate their school identification before entering Kilachand Hall formerly Shelton Hall is rumored to be haunted by the ghost of playwright Eugene O Neill O Neill lived in what was originally room 401 now 419 while the building was a residential hotel He died in a hospital on November 27 1953 and his ghost is rumored to haunt both the room and the floor The fourth floor is now a specialty floor called the Writers Corridor 86 John Hancock Student Village Edit Student Village II with Student Village I in the background as viewed from Nickerson Field Main article John Hancock Student Village The Student Village is a large new residential and recreational complex covering 10 acres 40 000 m2 between Buick Street and Nickerson Field ground formerly occupied by a National Guard Armory which had been used by the university for indoor track and field and as a storage facility before its demolition and the start of construction The dormitory of apartment suites at 10 Buick Street often abbreviated to StuVi by students opened to juniors and seniors in the fall of 2000 In 2002 John Hancock Insurance announced its sponsorship of the multimillion dollar project The Agganis Arena named after Harry Agganis was opened to concerts and hockey games in January 2005 The Agganis Arena is capable of housing 6 224 spectators for Terrier hockey games replacing the smaller Walter Brown Arena It can also be used for concerts and shows In March 2005 the final element of phase II of the Student Village complex the Fitness and Recreation FitRec Center was opened drawing large crowds from the student body Construction on the rest of phase II which included 19 and 26 story residential towers was finished in fall 2009 Other facilities Edit The Elie Wiesel Center for Judaic Studies on Bay State Road The Mugar Memorial Library is the central academic library for the Charles River Campus It also houses the Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center formerly called the Twentieth Century Archive where documents belonging to thousands of eminent figures in literature journalism diplomacy the arts and other fields are housed The George Sherman Union GSU located next to Mugar Memorial Library provides students with a food court featuring many fast food chains including Panda Express Basho Starbucks and Pinkberry The GSU also provides lounge areas for students to relax or study The basement of the George Sherman Union is home to the BU Central lounge which hosts concerts and other activities and events The Castle built 1915 on Bay State Road The Castle located on the West end of Bay State Road is one of the older buildings on campus The building was commissioned by William Lindsay for his own use in 1905 long before his daughter s honeymoon on the ill fated Lusitania 87 In 1939 the university acquired the property by agreement with the city to repay all back taxes owed these funds were raised through donations from among others Dr William Chenery a University Trustee 88 It served as the residence of the university president until 1967 when President Christ Janer found it too large for his needs as a residence and turned it to other uses It is now a conference space Underneath the Castle is the BU Pub the only BU operated drinking establishment on campus 89 The Florence and Chafetz Hillel House on Bay State Road is the Hillel House for the university With four floors and a basement the facility includes lounges study rooms and a kosher dining hall open during the academic year including Passover to students and walk ins from the community The first floor also includes the Granby St Cafe as well as TVs and ping pong pool and foosball tables The Hillel serves as a focal point for BU s large and active Jewish community It hosts approximately 30 student groups including social cultural and religious groups and BU Students for Israel BUSI Holocaust Education and the Center for Jewish Learning and Experience It hosts a plethora of programs and speakers as well as Shabbat services and meals 90 Cultural life Edit The university is located at the junction of Fenway Kenmore Allston and Brookline In the Fenway Kenmore area are the Museum of Fine Arts the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum and the nightlife of Landsdowne Street as well as Fenway Park home of the Boston Red Sox Allston has been Boston s largest bohemian neighborhood since the 1960s Nicknamed Allston Rock City 91 the neighborhood is home to many artists and musicians as well as a variety of cafes and many of Boston s small music halls Beyond the southern border of the campus in Brookline Harvard Avenue offers independent and foreign films at Coolidge Corner Theatre and author readings at the Brookline Booksmith Other nearby cultural institutions include Symphony Hall Jordan Hall the main branch of the Boston Public Library in Copley Square the art and commerce of fashionable Newbury Street and across the Charles River the museums shops and galleries in Harvard Square and elsewhere in Cambridge The Charles River and the university BU is home to the Boston Playwrights Theatre BU was previously associated with the Huntington Theatre Company on Huntington Avenue but put the BU Theatre property up for sale in 2016 casting a shadow over the future of the organization 92 93 BU replaced the old Huntington Theatre facilities with the new Joan and Edgar Booth Theatre located next to the Fuller Building housing the College of Fine Arts BU hosts campus and non campus musical performances in the Tsai Performance Center at 685 Commonwealth Avenue and the CFA Concert Hall at 855 Commonwealth Avenue Visual art works by students and by visiting artists are displayed in rotating exhibitions in the university s three galleries the BU Art Gallery BUAG at the Stone Gallery the 808 Gallery and the Sherman Gallery located respectively at 855 808 and 775 Commonwealth Avenue In addition BU had been associated with the Photographic Resource Center located at 832 Commonwealth Avenue which mounts several exhibitions yearly as well as special events for student and professional photographers However BU withdrew its support as of May 2017 update 94 and the Photographic Resource Center is now a resident partner with the College of Art and Design at Lesley University 95 Guest and visitor policies Edit Prior to September 2007 Boston University had a restrictive visitor policy which limited the ability of students from different dormitories to visit each other at night This changed when a new policy approved by Brown took effect 96 The new policy allows for students living on campus to swipe into any on campus dormitory between the hours of 7 am and 2 am using their Terrier cards Student residents can also sign in guests with photo identification at any time day or night Overnight visitors of the opposite sex are no longer required to seek a same sex co host 97 However during reading period and the week before final exams 98 no guests are permitted in the halls overnight and are expected to be out of the hall by 2 am 99 Mass transit Edit The College of Arts and Sciences fronts along busy Commonwealth Avenue Most of the buildings of the main campus are located on or near Commonwealth Avenue served by the Kenmore subway stop on the Green Line and five surface stops on the Green Line B branch Crowding on the busy B branch is very seasonal during the summer ridership falls by more than half largely due to the reduced student population 100 The South Campus area is served by St Mary s Street on the C branch and Fenway on the D branch MBTA bus route 57 parallels the B branch on Commonwealth Avenue Lansdowne on the MBTA Commuter Rail Framingham Worcester Line is located near East Campus Bicycle traffic on Commonwealth Avenue is heavy 101 and advocacy groups have held public meetings with BU the MBTA and the City of Boston to improve safety and congestion along this travel corridor 102 103 The MBTA plans to consolidate and reduce the number of stops along Commonwealth Avenue to speed travel and to reduce construction costs to upgrade the remaining stations Improvements planned include full handicapped accessibility at the new stations fencing to encourage pedestrians to use protected crosswalks traffic signal prioritization for transit vehicles and improved esthetics The Commonwealth Avenue Improvement Project is coordinated by the Massachusetts Highway Department in cooperation with BU the MBTA the City of Boston the Boston Water and Sewer Commission and other organizations 104 101 The Medical Campus is served by the 1 and CT1 crosstown buses which run along Massachusetts Avenue as well as the No 47 and CT3 crosstown buses which connect the Boston University Medical Center with the Longwood Medical Area The Silver Line Washington Street Branch runs the entire length of the Medical Campus one block north of most parts of the campus it connects Boston University Medical Center with Tufts Medical Center station and downtown Boston The nearest rapid transit subway station is the Massachusetts Avenue station on the Orange Line located three blocks north of the Medical Center Sustainability Edit The university has a sustainability initiative and a sustainability office 105 Boston University s Strategic Plan for Campus Sustainability is also integrated into the university s overarching strategic plan in many areas including the Climate Action Plan Task Force a faculty led initiative developing the university s first Climate Action Plan The university bought a wind farm in South Dakota to meet its goal of carbon neutrality by 2040 106 Other campuses Edit Study abroad program sites London Campus Edit 43 Harrington Gardens the main academic building for Boston University s London Campus Boston University s largest study abroad program is located in London England Boston University London Programmes offers a semester of study and work in London through their London Internship Program LIP as well as a number of other specialized programs The LIP program combines a professional internship with coursework that examines a particular academic area in the context of Britain s history culture and society and its role in modern Europe Courses in each academic area are taught exclusively to students enrolled in the Boston University program by a selected faculty body representing multiple cultural backgrounds Upon successful completion of a semester students earn 16 Boston University credits BU London Programmes are headquartered in South Kensington London The campus consists of the main building at 43 Harrington Gardens as well as three nearby residences to house students This program is open to Boston University students as well as students at other American colleges Los Angeles Campus Edit In Los Angeles BU has an internship program for students to study and work in the heart of the film television advertising public relations and entertainment management and law industries The program offers three tracks from which undergraduate and graduate students can choose Advertising and Public Relations Film and Television and Entertainment Management Graduated students have the opportunity to continue their education by enrolling in the Los Angeles Certificate Program where students can choose either the Acting in Hollywood or the Writer in Hollywood track Courses are taught by Boston University faculty and alumni who serve as mentors in and out of the classroom Upon successful completion of a semester students will earn 16 Boston University credits Students who successfully complete the Los Angeles Certificate Program will receive 8 Boston University credits and a certificate from Boston University College of Fine Arts or College of Communication 107 Paris Campus Edit The Paris Center runs several programs the largest of which is the Paris Internship Program dating from 1989 Students take language and elective courses with French faculty at the BU Paris Center then are placed in internships with French businesses and organizations in the area Students live with host families or in a dormitory for the extent of the semester Boston University Paris also organizes exchange programs with the business school Paris Dauphine University and a yearlong program with the Institut d etudes politiques de Paris Sciences Po 108 Washington DC Campus Edit In Washington D C BU has internship journalism and management programs Students study in the university s building on Massachusetts Avenue in Dupont Circle and take advantage of the city by interning at different locations In 2011 the university completed construction of a new multistory residence to house students in the program featuring touch less entry cards for security and suites with communal kitchens right next to the Woodley Park Metro station 109 The Multimedia and Journalism program allows students to act as Washington D C correspondents for newspapers and television stations across the Northeast and New England while interning at major news outlets in the city as well as at many PR internships in politics government and public affairs Internship opportunities are also offered in a wide variety of sectors for students enrolled in other BU Study Abroad Washington programs Sydney Campus Edit In Sydney BU has internship management film festival travel writing engineering and School of Education programs that vary based on semester Around 150 students live in the university s building in Chippendale developed by Tony Owen Partners 110 111 The building uses fissures to provide maximum solar access to bedrooms as well as natural ventilation throughout the building 112 The building opened in the beginning of 2011 and features underground classrooms a lecture hall office space library and a roof patio Other internship and study abroad opportunities are available through the Study Abroad office 113 Academics EditColleges and schools Edit College School Year foundedSchool of Theology 1839School of Medicine 1848School of Law 1872College of Arts and Sciences 1873Graduate School of Arts and Sciences 1874College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences Sargent College 1881Boston University Wheelock College of Education amp Human Development 1888Questrom School of Business 1913School of Education 1918School of Social Work 1940College of Communication 1947College of Engineering 1950College of General Studies 1952College of Fine Arts 1954Henry M Goldman School of Dental Medicine 1963Metropolitan College 1965School of Public Health 1976School of Hospitality Administration 1981Arvind and Chandan Nandlal Kilachand Honors College 2010Frederick S Pardee School of Global Studies 2014Boston University offers bachelor s degrees master s degrees and doctorates and medical dental and law degrees through its 17 schools and colleges The newest school at Boston University is the Frederick S Pardee School of Global Studies established 2014 Boston University Wheelock College of Education amp Human Development was renamed in 2018 following the merger with Wheelock College In 2019 BU created the Faculty of Computing amp Data Sciences which is an interdisciplinary academic unit that will train students in computing and enable them to combine data science with their chosen field In 2022 BU s medical school was renamed the Aram V Chobanian amp Edward Avedisian School of Medicine following a 100 million gift from Edward Avedisian 114 115 Each school and college at the university has a three letter abbreviation which is commonly used in place of their full school or college name For example the College of Arts amp Sciences is commonly referred to as CAS the College of Engineering is ENG and the College of Fine Arts is CFA etc The College of Fine Arts was formerly named the School of Fine Arts SFA The College of Arts amp Sciences CAS was formerly named the College of Liberal Arts CLA The College of Communication was formerly named the School of Public Communication SPC The Questrom School of Business Questrom was formerly known as the School of Management SMG 116 and the College of Business Administration CBA prior to that The College of General Studies CGS was formerly named the College of Basic Studies CBS The Mental Health Counseling and Behavioral Medicine MHCBM Program at Boston University School of Medicine offers a master s degree for students who wish to become licensed to practice as a mental health counselor The program adheres to educational guidelines and standards of the American Counseling Association ACA American Mental Health Counselors Association AMHCA and the Council for Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs CACREP which is an independent agency recognized by the Council for Higher Education Accreditation The MHCBM Program is the only counselor education program in the entire United States that is housed in a medical school for solely training students in clinical mental health counseling to treat clients and patients with a mental disorder via counseling and psychotherapy Boston University is accredited by the New England Commission of Higher Education 117 Admissions Edit Fall Freshman statistics 118 119 120 121 122 123 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017Applicants 80 794 75 733 61 006 62 210 64 473 60 815Admits 11 434 13 884 11 286 11 260 14 184 15 204 Admitted 14 2 18 3 18 5 18 1 22 0 25 0Enrolled 3 100 3 200 3 100 3 100 3 620 3 614Avg Unweighted GPA 3 95 3 90 3 90 3 82 3 80 3 80SAT Middle 50 1491 1482 1470 1468 1468 1452 Based on currently enrolled student responses within the university student database 50 6 white 14 Asian 11 6 international students 8 6 Hispanic and 3 2 black Fall 2015 international student enrollment at Boston University is 43 Chinese 9 Indian 5 Korean 5 Saudi Arabian 4 Canadian 4 Taiwanese 2 Turkish and 1 from each of the following countries Venezuela Brazil Mexico Italy France Thailand Spain and Japan The other 18 of international enrollment comes from 123 other countries 124 Among international students 39 are pursuing undergraduate degrees 37 are pursuing graduate degrees and 23 are enrolled in other programs 124 BU also has the second highest number of Jews of any private school after NYU in the country with between 3 000 125 126 and 4 000 127 or roughly 15 126 identifying as Jewish The plurality of registrants were from Massachusetts 19 followed by New York 16 New Jersey 9 California 8 Connecticut 4 Pennsylvania 4 and Texas 2 128 Boston University s financial aid program affordableBU meets the full demonstrated need of domestic students citation needed Rankings Edit Academic rankingsNationalARWU 129 40 54Forbes 130 54THE WSJ 131 42U S News amp World Report 132 41Washington Monthly 133 86GlobalARWU 134 101 150QS 135 108THE 136 62U S News amp World Report 137 65USNWR 2021 graduate school rankings 138 Business 48Education 39Engineering 36Law 20Medicine Primary Care 43Medicine Research 29Public Health 8Social Work 10Occupational Therapy 1USNWR 2021 departmental rankings 138 Biomedical Engineering 9Biological Sciences 85Chemistry 59Clinical Psychology 27Computer Science 49Earth Sciences 78Economics 23English 42Fine Arts 32Health Care Management 28History 44Mathematics 47Physics 37Political Science 56Psychology 39Public Health 8Social Work 10Sociology 47Speech Language Pathology 10Statistics 50U S News amp World Report ranks Boston University tied for 41st among national universities and tied for 57th among global universities for 2022 139 It also ranked BU 29th in Best Value Schools tied for 41st in Most Innovative Schools and tied for 45th in Best Undergraduate Engineering Programs at schools whose highest degree is a doctorate and 12th in Biomedical Engineering 140 U S News amp World Report also ranks Boston University s online graduate information technology programs tied for 10th in the U S the online graduate criminal justice programs tied for 3rd and the online graduate business programs excluding MBAs tied for 10th 141 Boston University is ranked No 40 nationally in the 2021 Wall Street Journal Time Higher Education U S colleges and universities ranking QS World University Rankings ranked Boston University 93rd overall in the world in its 2019 rankings with a 5 star rating 142 Times Higher Education ranked Boston University 54th in the world for 2021 143 Times Higher Education ranked Boston University 6th in the 2017 Global University Employability Rankings 144 The Academic Ranking of World Universities ranks Boston University 36th in the United States and 76th in the world in its 2019 list Newsweek International Edition in its list of the Top 100 Global Universities ranked Boston University the 35th in the United States and 65th in the world 145 The Chronicle of Higher Education places the Boston University School of Social Work as sixth in the nation for research productivity by faculty 146 BU is one of 96 American universities receiving the highest research classification RU VH by the Carnegie Foundation 18 Research Edit The Talbot Building located on the medical campus houses the School of Public Health Sponsored Program Awards FY1971 2016 In FY2016 the university reported in 368 9 million in sponsored research comprising 1 896 awards to 722 faculty investigators 147 Funding sources included the National Science Foundation NSF the National Institutes of Health NIH the US Department of Defense the European Commission of the European Union the Susan G Komen Foundation and the federal Health Resources and Services Administration The university s research enterprise encompasses dozens of fields but its primary focus currently lies in seven areas Data Science Engineering Biology Global Health Infectious Diseases Neuroscience Photonics and Urban Health 148 In 2017 BU received a 20 million grant over five years from the NSF in order to establish an Engineering Research Center ERC 149 150 The ERC s goal is to bioengineer functional heart tissue 151 The director of the center is David Bishop a professor of physics and computer and electrical engineering 152 As of FY2021 the university reported 526 6 million in sponsored research and 56 of federal funding was from the National Institutes of Health 153 In 2003 the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases awarded Boston University a grant to build one of two National Biocontainment Laboratories The National Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratories NEIDL was created to study emerging infectious diseases that pose a significant threat to public health 154 NEIDL has biosafety level 2 3 and 4 BSL 2 BSL 3 and BSL 4 respectively labs that enable researchers to work safely with the pathogens 155 BSL 4 labs are the highest level of biosafety labs and work with diseases with a high risk of aerosol transmission 156 The strategic plan also encouraged research collaborations with industry and government partners In 2016 as part of a broadbased effort to solve the critical problem of antibiotic resistance the US Department of Health amp Human Services HHS selected the Boston University School of Law LAW and Kevin Outterson a BU professor of law to lead a 350 million trans Atlantic public private partnership called CARB X to foster the preclinical development of new antibiotics and antimicrobial rapid diagnostics and vaccines 157 CARB X was allotted an additional 370 million in funding in May 2022 HHS will continue to support CARB X with up to 300 million over 10 years and global charity Wellcome will fund up to 70 million over three years 158 In its effort to increase diversity and inclusion Boston University appointed Ibram X Kendi in July 2020 as a history professor and the director and founder 159 of its newly established Center for Antiracist Research 160 161 The university also appointed alumna Andrea Taylor as its first senior diversity officer 162 Later in August Twitter founder and then CEO Jack Dorsey donated 10 million to the Center noting that the gift came with no string attached 163 Ibram Kendi was named a 2021 MacArthur fellow and will receive a genius grant of 625 000 split over five years for his center s research 164 165 166 Grade deflation Edit The independently run student newspaper at Boston University The Daily Free Press 167 as well as The New York Times 168 have published articles exploring the existence of grade deflation The Times discovered that administrators have suggested to faculty members deflated ideal grade distributions Although an article in the official publication BU Today asserted that the GPAs of BU undergrads and the percentage of As and Bs have both risen over the last two decades The New York Times has found BU grades have been rising more slowly with respect to many other schools In 2014 the average GPA of a BU undergraduate was 3 16 compared to the averages of 3 35 for Boston College 2007 3 48 for Amherst College 2006 3 52 for New York University 2015 and 3 65 for Harvard University 2015 169 About 81 percent of all grades earned in either the A or B range 75 in the B range The article went on to note that although the university attempted to curb grade inflation and inconsistency in the late 1990s both the percentage of As and GPAs have been rising since They attributed the grade inflation that has occurred not to teachers grading policies but to the increasing quality of each incoming class which leads to more top grades 170 Journals and publications Edit The Rafik B Hariri Building houses the Questrom School of Business and the office of the university president Boston University is home to several academic journals and publications The School of Law hosts six nationally recognized law journals the Boston University Law Review American Journal of Law and Medicine Review of Banking amp Financial Law Boston University International Law Journal Journal of Science and Technology Law and Public Interest Law Journal 171 The School of Education houses the Journal of Education which is the oldest continuously published journal in the field of education in the country 172 In the College of Arts and Sciences Studies in Romanticism is housed at the Department of English 173 and the Journal of Field Archeology is housed at the Department of Archeology 174 175 The Department of History is affiliated with The Historical Society which publishes The Journal of the Historical Society and Historically Speaking 176 The American Journal of Media Psychology and the Public Relations Journal are currently edited by professors at the College of Communication 177 which is also home to the New England Center for Investigative Reporting which generates numerous publications yearly 178 Special academic programs Edit General Education the BU Hub Edit BU Hub the university wide undergraduate general education curriculum requires course work in the core capacities of philosophical aesthetic and historical interpretation scientific and social inquiry quantitative reasoning diversity civic engagement and global citizenship written oral and multimedia communication and an intellectual toolkit that includes critical thinking collaboration and creativity 179 Kilachand Honors College Edit The University Honors College matriculated its first class in 2010 In 2011 it was renamed Arvind and Chandan Nandlal Kilachand Honors College following a 25 million donation from Rajen Kilachand the largest donation in the history of the university The Kilachand Honors College is a university wide community of faculty and students dedicated to preserving renewing and rethinking classic ideals of liberal education love of learning intellectual curiosity self discovery empathy clarity of thought and expression It rests on three pillars an integrated four year curriculum an extensive series of co curricular events that include site visits to leading cultural institutions as well as talks and readings by leading figures in the arts sciences and professions and finally a living and learning community that offers students the personal atmosphere of a small liberal arts college and fosters responsibility and citizenship 180 Trustee Scholars Program Edit Around 20 freshmen from every Boston University graduating class are part of the Trustee Scholars Program These students are recipients of the Trustee Scholarship known to be the most prestigious merit based full tuition scholarship for undergraduates Although not an academic program per se students become part of a unique campus community that offers many intellectual cultural and social opportunities 181 such as special lectures by distinguished professors and scholars They also gather for events such as plays and performances in the Boston area movie screenings and book discussions Boston University Academy Edit Main article Boston University Academy Boston University Academy is a private high school operated by Boston University Founded in 1993 the school sits within the university s campus and students are offered the opportunity to take university courses Student life EditStudent body composition as of May 2 2022 Race and ethnicity 182 TotalWhite 35 35 Foreign national 21 21 Asian 19 19 Hispanic 12 12 Other a 9 9 Black 4 4 Economic diversityLow income b 17 17 Affluent c 83 83 Student publications Edit Independent from the university The Daily Free Press often referred to as The FreeP is the campus student newspaper and the fourth largest daily newspaper in Boston Since 1970 it has provided students with campus news city and state news sports coverage editorials arts and entertainment and special feature stories The Daily Free Press is published every regular instruction day of the university year and is available in BU dorms classroom buildings and commercial locations frequented by students The literary magazine Clarion has been printed since 1998 The first issue titled was published by the group Students for Literary Awareness with the sponsorship of the Department of English subsequent issues were issued by the BU Literary Society and most recently by the BU BookLab Burn Magazine is a younger literary magazine affiliated with Clarion but publishing the work of student authors only Boink was launched in February 2005 by a group of undergrads led by Alecia Oleyourryk who was then a senior at the College of Communications The magazine featured BU students posing nude as well as articles on sexuality ROTC Edit The Reserve Officer Training Corps ROTC at BU traces its origins back to August 16 1919 when the US War Department stood up the Students Army Training Corps at Boston University the predecessor to the current Army ROTC program 183 Today BU is one of twenty five colleges and universities in the country to host all three ROTC programs Army Navy and Air Force Students wishing to be commissioned into the Marine Corps study as Navy Midshipmen Honor Societies Edit Alpha Phi Sigma Nu Mu ChapterAthletics EditMain article Boston University Terriers See also Boston University Terriers men s ice hockey Inside Agganis Arena after a hockey game Boston University s NCAA Division I Terriers compete in men s basketball cross country golf ice hockey rowing soccer swimming tennis track and lacrosse and in women s basketball dance cross country field hockey golf ice hockey lacrosse rowing soccer softball swimming tennis and track Boston University athletics teams compete in the Patriot League Hockey East and Colonial Athletic Association conferences and their mascot is Rhett the Boston Terrier As of 1 July 2013 update a majority of Boston University s teams compete in the Patriot League 184 On April 1 2013 the university announced it would cut its wrestling program following the 2013 14 season The Boston University men s hockey team is the most successful on campus and is a storied college hockey power with five NCAA championships most recently in 2009 The team was coached by hall of famer Jack Parker for 40 seasons and is a major supplier of talent to the NHL as well as to the 1980 USA Olympic gold medal winning men s hockey team The Terriers have won 31 Beanpot titles more than any other team in the tournament which includes Harvard University Boston College and Northeastern University 185 186 The BU Women s ice hockey team has won 2 beanpot titles once in 1981 and once in 2019 Boston University also won a game in 2010 against Boston College at Fenway Park by a score of 3 2 played a week after the NHL Winter Classic 187 DeWolfe Boathouse BU has also won two national championships in women s rowing in 1991 and 1992 In 2020 the men s basketball team won the Patriot League Men s Basketball Championship for the first time but the NCAA men s Division I basketball tournament was canceled due to coronavirus concerns 188 189 190 Boston University recently constructed the new Agganis Arena which opened on January 3 2005 with a men s hockey game between the Terriers and the University of Minnesota Golden Gophers The arena also hosts non sporting events such as concerts ice shows and other performances Boston University disbanded its football team in 1997 The university used the nearly 3 million from its football program to build the multimillion dollar John Hancock Student Village and athletic complex The university also increased funding to women s athletic programs By implementing the total plan we can achieve a much more balanced set of sports programs for both men and women which is consistent with the philosophy underlying Title IX said former BU athletic director Gary Strickler 191 Club sports Edit Boston University students also compete in athletics at the club level Thirty four club sports are recognized by the university badminton baseball cricket cycling equestrian fencing figure skating golf gymnastics inline men s and women s ice hockey jiu jitsu kendo kung fu women s and men s rugby sailing Shotokan karate ski racing snowboarding men s and women s soccer squash women s synchronized skating synchronized swimming table tennis triathlon women s and men s ultimate frisbee men s and women s volleyball and women s and men s water polo 192 The BU Sailing Team is one of the most successful teams in college sailing The team has won seven National Championships most recently in 1999 They have also had three team members graduate as College Sailor of the Year 193 Notable alumni of the team include Ken Read skipper for PUMA Ocean Racing in the Volvo Ocean Race and 2012 US Sailing Rolex Yachtsman of the Year nominee John Mollicone 194 BU Sailing Pavilion The BU Figure Skating Team has won five Intercollegiate National Figure Skating Championships and has not finished outside of the top three since 2009 The BU Men s Club Volleyball team won the NCVF 1AA National Championship in 2016 The BU Roller Hockey Team advanced to the NCHRA Tournament in 2001 2002 and 2003 The team advanced all the way to the Final Four in 2001 Both Men s and Women s Intervarsity Table Tennis Teams have attended the National Collegiate Table Tennis Tournaments and ranked as high as the top 10 nationwide Notable alumni and academics EditMain article List of Boston University people Martin Luther King Jr earned a PhD from BU in 1955 Over the course of its history a number of people associated with Boston University have become notable in their fields Affiliates of Boston University have won seven Nobel prizes With over 342 000 alumni Boston University graduates can be found around the world 8 American civil rights movement leader Martin Luther King Jr earned his doctorate in systematic theology at BU in 1955 After gaining prominence by advocating nonviolent resistance to segregation he won the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize 195 Howard Thurman the Dean of Marsh Chapel influenced King s embrace of nonviolence 196 Three other alumni hold special historical importance Rebecca Lee Crumpler was the first African American woman and Charles Eastman first named Ohiyesa the first American Indian to be certified as doctors and Helen Magill White was the first woman in the US to earn a PhD Mathematics and sciences Edit Alexander Graham Bell inventor of the telephone Among the most famous of Boston University scientists is Alexander Graham Bell an inventor of the telephone who conducted many of his experiments on the BU campus when he was professor of Vocal Physiology and Elocution 197 In Boston Bell was swept up by the excitement engendered by the many scientists and inventors residing in the city In 1875 the university gave Bell a year s salary advance to allow him to pursue his research The following year he invented the telephone in a Boston University laboratory 25 In the twenty first century the university has become a pioneering center for synthetic biology thanks to the work of James Collins Collins and co workers also discovered that sublethal levels of antibiotics activate mutagenesis by stimulating the production of reactive oxygen species leading to multidrug resistance 198 This discovery has important implications for the widespread use and misuse of antibiotics Dr Christopher Chen an interdisciplinary researcher whose work involves engineering medicine and biology joined BU in 2013 199 Chen directs the Biological Design Center at the Rajen Kilachand Center for Integrated Life Sciences amp Engineering 200 His research focuses on tissue engineering and regenerative medicine Other notable Boston University scientists include Sheldon Glashow winner of the 1979 Nobel Prize in Physics Daniel Tsui winner of the 1998 Nobel Prize in Physics and Osamu Shimomura winner of the 2008 Nobel Prize in Chemistry 201 Humanities music and art Edit Numerous actors trained at Boston University including Faye Dunaway Alfre Woodard Russell Hornsby Jason Alexander Ginnifer Goodwin Marisa Tomei Emily Deschanel Marc Maron Viola Leger Julianne Moore Uzo Aduba Paul Michael Glaser Michael Chiklis Sarah Chase and Geena Davis Notable musicians include Taiwanese composer Wen Pin Hope Lee rapper Aesop Rock and Russian American Violinist Yevgeny Kutik Folk singer Joan Baez attended BU for several months before dropping out to concentrate on her musical career Law Edit David A Rose judge noted judge in Boston Associate Justice 1972 1976 Recalled retired justice 1978 1985 who headed Rights Panel Literature Edit Robert Lowell Elie Wiesel Two US Poets Laureate have taught at Boston University Robert Lowell and Robert Pinsky 201 During John Silber s tenure as president he recruited two Nobel Prize winning literary figures to the university s faculty Elie Wiesel winner of the 1986 Nobel Peace Prize and Saul Bellow winner of the 1976 Nobel Prize in Literature 201 Another Nobel Prize winner in the English Department in the twentieth century was Derek Walcott winner of the 1992 Nobel Prize in Literature 201 Alumni of the university have earned over thirty Pulitzer Prizes 202 Other writers associated with the university include Bob Zelnick 203 executive editor of the Frost Nixon interviews Lambda Literary Award winner Ellen Bass historian Andrew Bacevich 204 Ha Jin Pulitzer Prize winner Jhumpa Lahiri and Isaac Asimov 205 In 1986 literary critic Christopher Ricks whom W H Auden called exactly the kind of critic every poet dreams of finding joined the university s faculty and founded the Editorial Institute with Geoffrey Hill 206 Controversial historian Howard Zinn taught in the political science department for many years 207 Journalist Thomas B Edsall and playwright Eliza Wyatt graduated from Boston University 208 Paul Beatty who earned bachelor s and master s degrees in psychology at BU won the National Book Critics Circle Award and the Man Booker Prize for his novel The Sellout He is the first writer from the United States honored with the Man Booker The bestselling author Casey Sherman graduated from BU in 1992 Politics Edit President William Howard Taft lectured at BU School of Law from 1918 to 1921 Boston University counts eleven current or former governors of US states seven United States senators and 33 members of the United States House of Representatives among its alumni Notable Boston University alumni in American politics include former Defense Secretary William Cohen former US Ambassador to China Gary Locke former Senator Judd Gregg former United States Senator Edward Brooke the first popularly elected African American senator former Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley former Second Lady Tipper Gore and the former First Vice President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Earle O Latham Former President William Howard Taft lectured on Legal Ethics at the university s law school from 1918 to 1921 209 After leaving politics in 2014 former Boston mayor Thomas Menino was professor of the practice of political science at the university until his death later in the year 210 Alexandria Ocasio Cortez the youngest woman elected to the House of Representatives graduated in 2011 211 Alexandria Ocasio Cortez at Women s March in New York City in 2019 Television personality Bill O Reilly studied journalism at the university in the 1970s and was a columnist for the student newspaper The Daily Free Press 212 Describing his time at the university he wrote Throughout that fall at BU covering stories became a passion for me I loved going places and seeing new things I ran around Boston annoying the hell out of everyone but bringing back good crisp copy and what I learned at Boston University firmly set me on the course I continue to this day Amidst the chaos of Commonwealth Avenue I found an occupation that I enjoyed 212 In international politics Boston University alumni include Sherwin Gatchalian a Philippine senator elected in 2016 and Daniyal Aziz a Pakistani politician affiliated with the Pakistan Muslim League N who is currently a member of the National Assembly of Pakistan Archbishop Makarios the first President of Cyprus studied at Boston University under a World Council of Churches scholarship The founder of the Albanian Orthodox Church Fan S Noli received a doctorate from Boston University Moeed Yusuf the current National Security Advisor Pakistan to the Prime Minister of Pakistan received his master s and doctoral degrees from Boston University 213 Hollywood Edit Julianne Moore In 2014 The Hollywood Reporter took note of the number of female BU graduates working in Hollywood 214 The university estimates that more than 5 000 alums 54 percent of them women work in entertainment They include actresses Geena Davis Julianne Moore Uzo Aduba Marisa Tomei Alfre Woodard Rosie O Donnell Ginnifer Goodwin Yunjin Kim Behind the scenes players include former CBS Entertainment Chair Nina Tassler NBCUniversal Cable Entertainment Group Bonnie Hammer A amp E Networks Nancy Dubuc Warner Horizon Television Brooke Karzen V writer Corinne Brinkerhoff DreamWorks Animation s Bonnie Arnold and Red Hour Films Debbie Liebling Howard Stern Popular culture Edit A number of Boston University graduates have reached fame in popular culture These include radio personality Howard Stern Bravo executive Andy Cohen CBS producer Gordon Hyatt 215 celebrity chef Rocco DiSpirito bestselling self help author Mark Manson reality show contestant and television host Rob Mariano Kevin O Connor presenter of This Old House and cohost of Project Runway and fashion editor for Marie Claire Magazine Nina Garcia American comedian Marc Maron and YouTube personality Jenna Marbles studied for a master s degree in education at the university The Craigslist killer Philip Markoff studied medicine at the university YouTube essayist Evan Puschak of The Nerdwriter and musician and YouTube personality Dan Avidan both went to Boston University Athletics Edit 1968 Olympic 400 m hurdles gold medalist David Hemery 216 was a student at BU in the 1960s and a coach in the 1970s and 1980s John Thomas 217 attended BU in the early 1960s and he won a silver medal in the Olympic High Jump He was an assistant track coach at BU during the 1970s On October 29 2020 Travis Roy a philanthropist motivational speaker and former BU ice hockey player died In 1995 Roy collided with the boards and was paralyzed just 11 seconds into his first hockey game for Boston University making him quadriplegic 218 In 1996 Roy founded the Travis Roy Foundation to fund research for and help other spinal cord injury survivors 219 In 2017 BU created the Travis M Roy Professorship in Rehabilitation Sciences after receiving 2 5 million from anonymous donors 220 221 222 In popular culture EditBoston University is sometimes referenced in art or pop culture Here below are some notable examples The Standells a 1960s California rock and roll band mocked the curfew that applied to female students in that time in their 1966 song Dirty Water singing Frustrated women have to be in by twelve o clock 223 Parts of the 2008 film 21 were filmed at The Castle when Robert Luketic could not film at MIT Other areas around the Boston University campus including BU s School of Management Mugar Library and FitRec also provided production locations for the film 224 Ash a character in Ubisoft s 2015 game Rainbow Six Siege studied at Boston University 225 In 1962 Timothy Leary performed his Marsh Chapel Experiment also known as the Good Friday Experiment in the university s Marsh Chapel 226 The experiment investigated whether psilocybin the active principle in psilocybin mushrooms would act as a reliable entheogen in religiously predisposed subjects Gallery Edit Morse Auditorium built 1906 Marsh Chapel Ralph Adams Cram School of Education built 1925 Boston University Theatre Law Tower built 1964 Josep Lluis Sert Photonics Center built 1997 Talbot Building School of Public Health Moakley Building Boston Medical Center Boston University School of Medicine Instructional building on medical campus National Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratories BU Bridge Agganis Arena View of Boston from the John Hancock Student VillageSee also EditBoston University Tanglewood Institute Boston University Police Department Einstein Papers Project Framingham Heart StudyNotes Edit Other consists of Multiracial Americans amp those who prefer to not say The percentage of students who received an income based federal Pell grant intended for low income students The percentage of students who are a part of the American middle class at the bare minimum References Edit The origin of BU s motto Learning Virtue Piety BU Today October 20 2005 Archived from the original on December 6 2010 Retrieved November 22 2009 BU Timeline Boston University Archived from the original on March 10 2015 Retrieved March 11 2015 First quarter centennial of Boston university Programs and Addresses Boston The Riverdale Press 1898 pp iii Archived from the original on March 19 2015 Retrieved March 11 2015 a b Boston University Names University Professor Herbert Mason United Methodist Scholar Teacher of the Year Boston University 2001 Archived from the original on December 26 2010 Retrieved October 20 2011 Boston University has been historically affiliated with the United Methodist Church since 1839 when the Newbury Biblical Institute the first Methodist seminary in the United States was established in Newbury Vermont a b Cambridge University Student Union International 2003 2004 The Hermit Kingdom Press 2005 ISBN 9781596890442 Retrieved June 30 2007 Emory University an academic institution of higher education that is under the auspices of the United Methodist Church Duke University Boston University Northwestern University are among other elite universities belonging to the United Methodist Church a b Kurian George Thomas Lamport Mark A November 10 2016 Encyclopedia of Christianity in the United States Rowman amp Littlefield p 1502 ISBN 978 1 4422 4432 0 Methodists affiliated universities founded during the nineteenth century include Northwestern Boston University Syracuse Duke and Emory Most Doug October 13 2021 BU Financial Report 2022 PDF Bostonia Retrieved October 16 2021 a b c d e f g Our DNA Boston University Archived from the original on October 2 2011 Retrieved May 4 2021 Boston University Master Logo Retrieved April 7 2015 The College of Fine Arts Introduction Boston University Archived from the original on December 5 2014 Retrieved June 30 2007 Boston University is coeducational and nonsectarian a b Buckley James Monroe 1898 A History of Methodism in the United States Harper amp Brothers Company p 203 BU Facts amp Stats Office of the President www bu edu Retrieved November 30 2020 The Boston Economy 2008 Holding Strong PDF Boston Redevelopment Authority Research Division September 2008 p 16 Archived from the 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largest ever will fund life sciences and engineering research The Boston Globe Retrieved November 24 2020 Take a peek inside BU s renovated castle Boston com Real Estate March 28 2019 Retrieved November 24 2020 BU Boosts Financial Aid to 100 Percent of Calculated Need Boston University Retrieved November 24 2020 Most Doug September 7 2022 Robert A Brown BU s 10th President to Retire after 2022 23 School Year BU Today Retrieved September 17 2022 Most Doug March 11 2020 Updated BU Moves All Classes Online Due to Coronavirus Questions and Answers BU Today Retrieved August 12 2020 Universities use robots to reopen safely during pandemic NBC News Retrieved November 30 2020 Boston University Clinical Testing Lab Back To BU www bu edu Retrieved November 30 2020 Boston University develops lab to regularly test students for coronavirus NBC News Retrieved November 30 2020 COVID 19 Screening Testing amp Contact Tracing Back To BU www bu edu Retrieved November 30 2020 Barlow Rich August 12 2020 FAQ Quarantine vs Isolation and BU s Safety Plans for Reopening Campus BU Today Retrieved August 12 2020 BU COVID 19 Testing Data Dashboard Healthway www bu edu Retrieved November 30 2020 Groopman Jerome The Long Game of Coronavirus Research The New Yorker Retrieved November 30 2020 Saltzman Jonathan March 24 2020 Controversial BU lab is only one in New England with live coronavirus The Boston Globe Retrieved November 30 2020 F CK IT WON T CUT IT United States Patent and Trademark Office Retrieved August 12 2020 Promoting public awareness of safe and smart actions and behaviors for college and university students in a COVID 19 environment Annear Steve August 11 2020 Here s why Boston University had the f bomb in a trademark application for a COVID 19 initiative The Boston Globe Retrieved August 12 2020 Boston University announces vaccination requirement for faculty and staff www boston com Retrieved February 15 2022 Staff and Faculty React to BU COVID 19 Vaccine Mandate Boston 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Retrieved February 10 2021 Boston University s Myles Standish Hall Honored with Preservation Achievement Award www shawmut com Retrieved February 10 2021 Dahod Family Alumni Center Earns Double Accolades I News and Events www faainc com Retrieved February 10 2021 Yawkey Center for Student Services Bruner Cott Retrieved February 10 2021 Staid Boston Gets an Architectural Wake Up Call Bloomberg com April 26 2022 Retrieved January 9 2023 Chesto Jon March 27 2022 BU s Jenga Building is coming together above the Charles River The Boston Globe The Boston Globe Retrieved January 9 2023 Grand opening for unique looking Boston University building www cbsnews com Retrieved January 9 2023 BU Unveils Dramatic Fossil Fuel Free Center for Computing amp Data Sciences Boston University Retrieved January 9 2023 Woolhouse Megan January 31 2019 Reimagining Kenmore Square BU Today Boston University Archived from the original on September 24 2019 Retrieved September 21 2019 Boston University Celebrates 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College Boston University College of Health amp Rehabilitation Sciences Sargent College www bu edu Retrieved November 30 2020 Altschiller Donald Music lyrics with a Boston theme Boston University Libraries Boston University Archived from the original on August 8 2014 Retrieved June 26 2014 Daily Free Press Archived May 9 2013 at the Wayback Machine February 27 2007 Actor producer Spacey brings filming to BU Castle Ash Tom Clancy s Rainbow Six Siege Wiki Guide IGN retrieved April 23 2021 Penner James The Good Friday Experiment Archived November 1 2022 at the Wayback Machine Timothy Leary The Harvard Years Early Writings on LSD and Psilocybin with Richard Alpert Huston Smith Ralph Metzner and others July 21 2014 Retrieved on February 12 2016 Further reading EditKilgore Kathleen 1991 Transformations A History of Boston University Boston Boston University Press ISBN 0 87270 070 4 Saltzman Nancy 1985 Buildings and Builders An Architectural History of Boston University Boston Boston University Press ISBN 0 87270 056 9 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Boston University Wikisource has the text of the 1920 Encyclopedia Americana article Boston University Official website The Brink Boston University research news Boston University The New Student s Reference Work 1914 Boston University Encyclopedia Americana 1920 Boston University Collier s New Encyclopedia 1921 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Boston University amp oldid 1134252966, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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