Skip to main content

Full text of "Catalogue of the officers and students of Boston College"

See other formats


«>c 


t  i  "* 


fr». 


£ 


.***#!> 


,%' 


*'. 


N       -  ■*•■: 


■ 


r       BOSTON 

i 

l      COLLEG 
ARCHIVES 


CATALOGUE 


OF   THE 


OFFICERS  and  STUDENTS 


OF 


BOSTON     COLLEGE 

BOSTON,  MASS. 


J  907        Ml  Mlffi        1908 


PUBLISHED   FOR  BOSTON  COLLEGE- 
1908 


A.   M.    D.   G. 


Boston    College 

This  institution,  controlled  and  directed  by  the  Fathers  of 
the  Society  of  Jesus,  was  chartered  May  25,  1863,  by  the  state  of 
Massachusetts,  under  the  corporate  title  of  "THE  TRUSTEES 
OF  THE  BOSTON  COLLEGE  IN  BOSTON,"  with  power 
and  authority  "to  confer  such  degrees  as  are  usually  conferred 
b)  colleges  in  this  Commonwealth,  except  medical  degrees." 

Under  the  act  of  incorporation,  schools  were  opened  Sep- 
tember 5,  1864. 

The  same  act  of  incorporation  provides  "that  no  student  of 
said  College  shall  be  refused  admission  to,  or  denied  any  of  the 
privileges,  honors,  or  degrees  of  said  College  on  account  of  the 
religious  opinions  he  may  entertain."  Students  who  are  not 
Catholics  will  not  be  required  to  participate  in  any  distinctively 
Catholic  exercise,  nor  will  any  undue  influence  be  exerted  to  in- 
duce a  change  of  religious  belief,  but  evidence  will  be  demanded 
of  the  candidate  to  prove  good  moral  character. 

The  College  is  not  prepared  to  furnish  board  and  lodging 
for  students.  Those,  however,  whose  homes  are  at  a  distance 
from  Boston,  and  who  desire  to  live  in  the  city  during  the  schol- 
astic year,  are  admitted  on  special  approval  of  the  Faculty,  and 
may  find  suitable  accommodations  near  the  College. 


College   Calendar   for    1908-1909. 


1908. 


Spring  Term. 


January  31 — Friday,   Term   Holiday. 

February  3 — Monday,  Second  Term  begins. 

March    4 — Ash  Wednesday,  Mass  at  10  a.m. 

March  17 — Tuesday,   Holiday. 

March  24 — Tuesday,  Prize  Debate  in  College  Hall  at  8  p.  m. 

April     7 — Tuesday,   Annual  Retreat  begins. 

April  10 — Friday,   General  Communion,  Mass  at  9  a.   m. 

April  15 — Wednesday,  Easter  Holidays  begin  at  12  M. 

April  22 — Wednesday,  Classes  resumed. 

April  30-^-Thursday,  Contest  for  Prize  in  Oratory  at  8  p.  m.  in  Col- 
lege Hall. 

May     1 — Friday,  Theses  in  Philosophy  given. 

May  16 — Saturday,  Contest  for  Christian  Doctrine  Prize,  9  a.  m.  to  12  M. 

May  28 — Ascension   Day,   Holyday. 

May  29 — Friday,  Close  of  Classes  for  Senior  Year. 

June  11 — Thursday,   General  Examinations  begin. 

June  17 — Wednesday,   Holiday. 

June  19 — Friday,  Celebration  of  Feast  of  St.  Aloysius;  General  Com- 
munion, Mass  at  9  a.  M. 

June  21 — Sunday,  Solemn  Vespers  at  7.30  p.  m.  in  the  Church,  with  Bac- 
calaureate   Sermon. 

June  22 — Monday,   Class    Day. 

June  24 — Wednesday,  Graduation  Exercises. 

June  27 — Saturday,  9  a.  m..  Competition  for  Scholarships.     See  page   30. 


6  BOSTON    COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 

1908. 
Fall  Term. 

September  2  to  4 — Examination   of    "Conditioned"    Students    and    Candi- 
dates for  admission,  beginning  at  9  a.  m.  each  day. 
N.   B. — Examinations  of  said  students  and  can- 
didates will  take  place  only  on  the  dates  and  in  the 
matter  specified  by  the  following  schedule : — 

September  2 — Wednesday,  Latin  and   Greek. 

September  3 — Thursday,    English,    History,    Modern   Languages. 

September  4 — Friday,    Mathematics    and   Chemistry. 

September  10— Thursday,  OPENING  OF  SCHOOLS. 

8.30  to  10  a.  m.,  Enrollment  of  New  Students;  10 
a.  m.j  Reading  of  Roll,  Assignment  of  Classes; 
Schola  brevis  in  Literature,  Classics  and  Philos- 
ophy. 

September   12 — Friday,    9   a.    m.,    Class;    12.30  p.    mv    Schola    brevis  in 
Mathematics,    Modern   Languages    and    Sciences. 

September  14 — Monday,  10  a.  m.,  Solemn  Mass  of  the  Holy  Ghost,  Ser- 
mon, Veni  Creator. 

September  17 — Thursday,  Inauguration  of  Senior  Sodality. 

September   18 — Friday,  First  Meeting  of  the  Fulton  Debating  Society. 

November    3 — Tuesday,   State   Elections,   no   classes   for   Seniors. 

November  13 — Friday,   Rector's  Day. 

November  26 — Thursday,   Thanksgiving   Day,   Holiday. 

December     1 — Tuesday,    Subjects    for    Prize    Essays    announced. 

December    8 — Tuesday,   Feast  of   Immaculate   Conception,   Holyday. 

December  23 — Wednesday,   Christmas  Holidays  begin  at  I  P.   M. 


1909. 


January    4 — Monday,   Classes    Resumed. 
January  25 — Monday,   Mid-Year  Examinations. 


BOSTON    COLLEGE,    1907-1908.  7 

1909. 
Spring  Term. 

January  29 — Friday,   Term  Holiday. 

February     1 — Monday,   Second  Term  begins. 

February  22 — Monday,   holiday. 

February  24 — Ash  Wednesday,  Mass  at  10  a.  m. 

March  17 — Thursday,  Holiday. 

March  23 — Tuesday,  Prize  Debate  in  College  Hall  at  8  p.   m. 

March  30 — Tuesday,  Annual  Retreat  begins. 

April     2 — Friday,   General   Communion,   Mass  at  9   a.    m. 

April     7 — Wednesday,  Easter  Holidays  begin  at   12  m. 

April  14 — Wednesday,    Classes   resumed. 

April  19 — Holiday. 

April  30 — Friday,   Theses   in   Philosophy  given. 

May  5 — Wednesday,  Contest  for  Prize  in  Oratory  at  8  p.  M.  in  Col- 
lege Hall. 

May  15 — Saturday,  Contest  for  Christian  Doctrine  Prize,  9  a.  m.  to  12  M. 

May  20 — Ascension  Day,  Holyday. 

May  28 — Friday,   Close   of   Classes    for   Senior  Year. 

June  10 — Thursday.  General    Examinations  begin. 

June  17 — Thursday,    Holiday. 

June  18 — Friday,  Celebration  of  Feast  of  St.  Aloysius ;  General  Com- 
munion, Mass  at  9  a.   m. 

June  20 — Sunday,  Solemn  Vespers  at  7.30  p.  M.  in  the  Church,  with  Bac- 
calaureate  Sermon. 

June  21 — Monday,  Class  Day. 

June  23 — Wednesday,  Graduation  Exercises. 

June  26 — Saturday,  9  a.  m.,  Competition  for  Scholarships.     See  page  30. 


Trustees   of  Boston    College. 


REV.  THOMAS  I.  GASSON,  S.  J.,  President. 
REV.  JOSEPH  T.  KEATING,  S.  J.,    Treasurer. 
REV.  ALPHONSE  CHARLIER,  S.  J.,  Secretary. 

rev.  michael  a.  o'kane,  s.  j. 
rev.  john  m.  colgan,  s.  j. 
rev.  david  w.  hearn,  s.  j. 
rev.  william  p.  brett,  s.  j. 
rev.  edward  m.  corbett,  s.  j. 
timothy  j.  fealy,  s.  j. 

edward  a.  Mclaughlin,  a.  m. 

Legal  Adviser  to  the  Board. 


Offi 


cers. 


REV.  THOMAS  I.  GASSON,  S.  J., 

President. 

REV.  DAVID  W.  HEARN,  S.  J., 

Vice-President;  Prefect  of  Studies. 

REV.  GEORGE  A.  KEELAN,  S.  J., 

Piefect  of  Discipline. 

REV.  JOSEPH  T.  KEATING,  S.  J., 

Treasurei . 

JOSEPH  A.  MURPHY,  S.  J., 

Librarian. 

EDWARD  P.  TIVNAN,  S.  J., 

Secretary. 

REV.  EDWARD   M.  C0RBE1T,  S.  J., 

Minister. 

REV.  ALPHONSE  CHARLIER,  S.  J., 
Chaplain. 


Faculty. 


REV.    THOMAS    I.    GASSON,    S.  J., 
President. 

REV.    DAVID   W.    HEARN,    S.  J., 
Vice-President, 

PRKFECT    OF    STUDIES. 

REV.    REDMOND  J.    WALSH,    S.  J., 

PROFESSOR  OF  METAPHYSICS,  RATIONAL  AND  PHYSIOLOGICAL  PSYCHOLOGY,  EVIDENCES  OF  RELIGION. 

REV.    WILLIAM   P.    BRETT,    S.  J., 

PROFESSOR    OF    ETHICS,    POLITICAL    ECONOMY,     HISTORY    OF    PHILOSOPHY,     ELEMENTS    OF    LAW. 

THOMAS   H.    MILEY,    S.  J., 

PROFESSOR    OF    PHYSICS,     MECHANICS,     ASTRONOMY,     CALCULUS. 

EDWARD   P.    TIVNAN,    S.  J., 

PROFESSOR     OF    CHEMISTRY,     GEOLOGY. 

REV.    PATRICK  J.    CORMICAN,    S.  J., 

PROFESSOR    OF    LATIN,     GREEK    AND    ENGLISH    LITERATURE    IN    JUNIOR    CLASS. 

MICHAEL    EARLS,    S.  J., 

PROFESSOR    OF    SOPHOMORE    CLASS. 

REV.    CHARLES   E.    LANE,   S.  J., 

PROFESSOR    OF    FRESHMAN     CLASS. 

JOSEPH    A.    MURPHY,    S.  J., 

PROFESSOR    OF    FRESHMAN    CLASS. 

REV.   GEORGE   de;  BUTLER,   S.  J., 

PROFESSOR    OF    FRENCH 


io  BOSTON    COLLEGE,    1907-1908. 

REV.  JOHN   D.    BUTLER,    S.  J., 

PROFESSOR    OF    HISTORY. 

REV.   JOSEPH  T.   KEATING,    S.  J., 

PROFESSOR    OF    TRIGONOMETRY,     ANALYTICAL    GEOMETRY. 

REV.  JOHN  M.  COUGHLAN,  S.  J., 
CHARLES  ZENKERT,  A.  B., 

PROFESSORS    OF    GERMAN    AND    SPANISH. 

JOSEPH   H.    WILLIS,    A.  M., 

DIRECTOR    OF    DRAMATICS,     ELOCUTION. 

MICHAEL  EARLS,    S.  J., 

DIRECTOR    OF     *'  STYLUS." 


College   Catalogue. 


NAME. 

Anderson,   Ernest  W. 
Begley,  Patrick  J. 
Birmingham,  Charles  A. 
Blanchard,  Charles  F. 
Bonner,  Joseph  F. 
Buckley,  Thomas  W. 
Burke,  Daniel  F. 
Burke,  Joseph  M. 
Carroll,  William  L. 
Chamberlin,  Stephen  J. 
Churchward,   John   W. 
Cleary,  John  H. 
Cody,  Patrick  L.  J. 
Coleman,  Edward  F. 
Conroy,  Edward  U. 
Conroy,  William 
Cotter,  James  J. 
Coveney,  James  A. 
Cox,   Edward   J. 

Cronin,  James  V. 

Cronin,  William  J. 

Cull,  John 

Cummings,  Edward  J. 

Cummings,  Francis  V. 

Curley,  Vincent  A. 

Doherty,  John  E. 

Dolan,  Gerald  L. 

Donovan,   Daniel   D. 

Dorr,   Eugene  H. 

Downing,   John    G. 

Dunfey,  Frederick  A. 


CLASS. 

Freshman 

Special 

Special 

Freshman 

Senior 

Junior 

Freshman 

Freshman 

Freshman 

Sophomore 

Freshman 

Senior 

Senior 

Junior 

Freshman 

Sophomore 

Freshman 

Sophomore 

Special 

Sophomore 

Junior 

Freshman 

Freshman 

Freshman 

Freshman 

Sophomore 

Sophomore 

Junior 

Junior 

Freshman 

Freshman 


12 


BOSTON    COLLEGE,     1907-1008. 


NAME. 

Falvey,    Miah    J. 
Finn,   Aloysius   R. 
Flaherty,  John  A. 
Flanagan,  Michael  A. 
Flynn,  Thomas  A. 
Garrick,  Francis  J. 
Giblin,  John  F. 
Green,  Vincent  L. 
Griffin,  Thomas  F. 
Guiney,  Cornelius  A. 
Hartigan,  Edward  M. 
Heenan,  Michael  J. 
Hennessey,  Ambrose 
Hopkins,  Thomas   W. 
Howley,  Francis  J. 
Irwin,  Eugene  F. 
Keelan,    George  V. 
Kelleher,  Louis  F. 
Kelly,  Joseph  E. 
Keville,  Francis  T. 
Kiely,  Lawrence  E.,  Jr. 
Kinsella,  James 
Kirby,  John  J. 
Lally,  John  J. 
Landrigan,   Peter  A. 
Langguth,  Aloysius  B. 
Lee,  George  F. 
Leonard,  George  J. 
Logue,   Charles    A. 
Looby,  Edward  J. 
Low,  Francis  E. 
Luby,  James  E. 
Lynch,  Joseph    E. 
Mack.  William  F. 
Mahoney,  John  J. 
Mahoney.  John  'W. 
Mahonev.  Thomas   E. 


CLASS. 

Freshman 

Freshman 

Freshman 

Freshman 

Freshman 

Senior 

Freshman 

Freshman 

Freshman 

Freshman 

Freshman 

Freshman 

Sophomore 

Senior 

Freshman 

Freshman 

Senior 

Sophomore 

Freshman 

Sophomore 

Freshman 

Freshman 

Sophomore 

Sophomore 

Junior 

Sophomore 

Junior 

Freshman 

Sophomore 

Senior 

Freshman 

Senior 

Sophomore 

Sophomore 

Freshman 

Junior 

Senior 


BOSTON    COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 


13 


Maloney,  Charles  M. 
Manning,  John  P.,  Jr. 
Manning,  Joseph  A. 
Mansfield,  Charles  E.  V. 
McCarthy,  Florence  W. 
McCloskey,  Edwin  H. 
McDonald,    Patrick   F. 
McDonough,  Edward  M. 
McDonough,    William   P. 
McEleney,  John  P. 
McGlinchey,  Henry  P. 
McGrath,   Thomas  J.   A. 
McGrory,  John  T. 
McHale,  William  F. 
McHugh,  Daniel  H. 
McLaughlin,  Maurice  A. 
McLaughlin,   Roy  L. 
McMahon,  John  J. 
McNamara,  Francis  X. 
McSwiney,  Myles   J. 
Milan,   Maurice   G 
Molloy,  James  P. 
Monahan,  John  F. 
Moore,  William  F. 
Moynihan,  John  F.  X. 
Mullin,  John  B. 
Mulrey,  Frederick  J. 
Murphy,  Frederick  J. 
Murphy,  Thomas  J. 
Murphy,  William  D. 
Murray,   George  A. 
Noonan,  Leo  P. 
O'Brien,  Cornelius  T. 
O'Brien,   Denis   A. 
O'Brien,  Edward  J.  H. 
O'Brien,  Francis  A. 
O'Brien,  William  A. 


CLASS. 

Sophomore 

Junior 

Sophomore 

Sophomore 

Junior 

Freshman 

Freshman 

Freshman 

Freshman 

Freshman 

Junior 

Sophomore 

Freshman 

Sophomore 

Freshman 

Junior 

Freshman 

Senior 

fcophomore 

Junior 

Junior 

Freshman 

Sophomore 

Freshman 

Sophomore 

Freshman 

Sophomore 

Freshman 

Senior 

Freshman 

Junior 

Freshman 

Sophomore 

Senior 

Sophomore 

Freshman 

Freshman 


14 


BOSTON    COLLEGE,    1907-ic 


NAME. 

O'Hara,  Francis  J. 
O'Hare,  John  T. 
O'Kane,  Bernard  S. 
O'Keefe,  Michael  J. 
O'Sullivan,    Joseph    F. 
Pearce,  George  H. 
Powers,  Henry  T. 
Quinlan,  Walter  A. 
Reardon,   Cornelius   L. 
Rose,  Charles  B. 
Ryan,  Edward  T. 
•Ryan,  William  H. 
Savage,  John  J. 
Shaughnessy,   Gerald 
Sheehan,  Edward  B. 
Sheehan,  Thomas  W. 
Sheehan,  Timothy  A. 
Shields,  Luke  E.  M. 
Sliney,  James  F.  • 
Smith,   Francis   C. 
Smith,  William  L. 

Sullivan,  Daniel  H.,  Jr. 

Sullivan,  Denis   F. 

Sullivan,  John  J. 

Sullivan,  Peter  M. 

Sullivan,  Raymond  E. 

Supple,  Leo  F. 

Tattan,  Henry  M.  J. 

Vigneron,  John  F. 

Walker,  Ambrose  D. 

Walsh,   Michael  S. 

Walsh,  William  J. 

Waters,  David  B. 

Welsh,  James  E.  Jr. 

Whalen,  Joseph  I. 

White,  Charles  J. 

White,  Andrew  J.,  Jr. 


CLASS. 

Sophomore 

Senior 

Junior 

Senior 

Senior 

Sophomore 

Senior 

Senior 

Freshman 

Senior 

Sophomore 

Junior 

Junior 

Junior 

Junior 

Special 

Freshman 

Sophomore 

Junior 

Junior 

Special 

Sophomore 

Junior 

Junior 

Senior 

Junior 

Sophomore 

Junior 

Freshman 

Sophomore 

Senior 

Freshman 

Freshman 

Freshman 

Junior 

Freshman 

Junior 


BOSTON    COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 


15 


O'Bryan,  Edward  D. 
O'Connell,  John  C. 
O'Connell,  Patrick  J. 
O'Connell,  Philip  J. 
White,  Louis  A. 
Wholly,   Edward   B. 
Winston,  Walter  C. 
Young,   Raymond  H. 


CLASS. 

Senior 

Junior 

Sophomore 

Senior 

Sophomore 

Freshman 

Freshman 

Sophomore 


Total  number  of  students        150 


Catalogue   of  Classes. 
1907-1908. 


Bonner,  Joseph  F. 
Cleary,  John  H. 
Cody,  Patrick  L. 
Garrick,   Francis   J. 
Hopkins,  Thomas  W. 
Keelan,   George   V. 
Looby,   Edward   J. 
Luby,    James   E. 
Mahoney,  Thomas  E. 
McMahon,  John  J. 
Murphy,  Thomas  J. 
O'Brien,  Denis  A. 
O'Bryan,  Edward  D. 
CTConnell,   Philip  J. 
O'Hare,  John  T. 
O'Keefe,  Michael  J. 
O' Sullivan,  Joseph  F. 
Powers,  Henry  T. 
Quinlan,  Walter  A. 
Rose,    Charles    B. 
Sullivan,    Peter   M. 
Walsh.  Michael   S. 


Senior. 


RESIDENCE. 

Dorchester 

Jamaica  Plain 

Maiden 

Somerville 

Concord 

Dedham 

South  Boston 

Milford 

Charlestown 

Brockton 

Newton 

Lozvell 

South  Boston 

Lawrence 

Cambridge 

Jamaica  Plain 

Newtonville 

Braggville 

Hyde  Park 

Somerville 

Quincy 

Cambridge 


Buckley,  Thomas  W. 
Coleman,  Edward  F. 
Cronin,  William  J.. 


Junior. 


West  Quincy 

Dorchester 

Rockland 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 


17 


NAME. 

Donovan,   Daniel  DeC. 
Dorr,  Eugene  H. 
Landrigan,  Peter  A. 
Lee,    George  F. 
Mahoney,  John  W. 
Manning,  John  P.,  Jr. 
McCarthy,  Florence  W. 
McGlinchey,  Henry  P. 
McLaughlin,   Maurice  A. 
McSwiney,  Myles  J. 
Milan,  Maurice  G. 
Murray,  George  A. 
O'Connell,  John  C. 
O'Kane,  Bernard  S. 
Ryan,  William  H. 
Savage,  John  J. 
Shaughnessy,  Gerald 
Sheehan,  Edward  B. 
Sliney,  James  F. 
Smith,  Francis   C. 
Sullivan,   Denis  F. 
Sullivan,  John  J. 
Sullivan,    Raymond    E. 
Tattan,  Henry  M. 
Whalen,  Joseph  I. 
White,  Andrew  J.,  Jr. 

Sophomore. 

Chamberlin,  Stephen  J. 
Coveney,  James  A. 
Conroy,  William   E. 
Cronin,  James  V. 
Doherty,  John  E. 
Dolan,  Gerald  L. 
Hennessey,  Ambrose 
Kelleher,  Louis  F. 
Keville,  Francis  T. 
Kirby,  John  J. 


RRSIDENCE. 

Rockland 

Dorchester 

Dorchester 

Lowell 

Somerville 

Roxbiiry 

Boston 

Cambridge 

Lawrence 

Beverly 

Brockton 

South  Boston 

Wakefield 

Chestnut  Hill 

Rockland 

Somei-oille 

Plymouth 

Roxbury 

Brockton 

Somerville 

East  Boston 

Canlbridge 

Ro.x'bitry 

Somerville 

Dorc-hester 

Brookline 


Revere 

Hyde  Park 

Weston 

South  Boston 

Milford  ' 

Chelsea 

Salem 

Cambridge 

Somerville 

Cambridge 


i8 


BOSTON    COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 


NAME. 

Lally,  John  J. 
Langguth,  Aloysius   B. 
Logue,  Charles  A. 
Lynch,  Joseph  E. 
Mack,  William  F. 
Maloney,  Charles  M. 
Manning,  Joseph  A. 
Mansfield,  Charles  E. 
McGrath,  Thomas  J. 
McHale,  William  F. 
McNamara,  Francis  X. 
Monahan,  John  F. 
Moynihan,  John  F. 
Mulrey,  Frederick  J. 
O'Brien,  Cornelius  T. 
O'Brien,  Edward  J.  H. 
O'Connell,  Patrick    J. 
O'Hara,  Francis  J. 
Pearce,  George  H. 
Ryan,  Edward  T. 
Shields,  Luke  E. 
Sullivan,  Daniel  H.,  Jr. 
Supple,  Leo  F. 
Walker,  Ambrose  D. 
White,  Louis  A. 
Young,  Raymond  H. 


RESIDENCE. 

Dorchester 

Dorchester 

Chariest  own 

Roxbury 

Lowell 

North  Cambridge 

Roxbury 

South  Boston 

Brockton 

Stoneham 

Haverhill 

North  Abingtor: 

Maiden 

Cambridge 

Revere 

Boston 

Newburyport 

Cambridge 

Roxbury 

Dorchester 

Roxbury 

Boston 

Holliston 

Roxbury 

Forest  Hills 

Roxbury 


Freshman  A. 


Anderson,  Ernest  W. 
Burke,  Daniel  F. 
Carroll,  William  L. 
Cotter,  James  J. 
Cummings,  Edward  J. 
Dunfey,    Frederick    A. 
Flaherty,  John  A. 
Flvnn,  Thomas   A. 


Med  ford 

Cambridge 

Cambridge 

Roxbury 

South   Boston 

Lowell 

Salem 

South  Framingham 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 


19 


NAME. 

Greene,  Vincent  L. 
Hartigan,  Edward  M. 
Kelly,  Joseph  E. 
Kiely,  Lawrence  E.  J. 
Leonard,   George   J. 
Mahoney,  John  J. 
McCloskey,  Edwin  H. 
McDonald,   Patrick  F.,  Jr. 
McDonough,  Edward  M. 
McElene}r,  John  P. 
McHugh,  Daniel  H. 
Molloy,  James   P. 
Moore,  William  F. 
Murphy,    Frederick    J. 
Noonan,  Leo   P. 
O'Brien,   Francis  A. 
Welch,  James  E.,  Jr. 
Wholly,    Edward   D. 
Winston,    Walter    C. 


RESIDENCE. 

South  Boston 

South  Boston 

East  Boston 

Charlestown 

Dorchester 

Boston 

Cambridge 

Dorchester 

Maiden 

Roxbury 

Jamaica  Plain 

Boston 

Taunton 

South  Boston 

Dorchester 

Dorchester 

Boston 

Lynn 

Roxbury 


Freshman  B. 


Blanchard,  Charles  F. 
Burke,    Joseph 
Churchward,   John   W. 
Conroy,  Edward  U. 
Cull.  John  L. 
Cummings,   Frank  V. 
Curley.  Vincent  A. 
Downing,  John  G 
Falvey,  Miah  J. 
Finn,  Aloysius  R. 
Flanagan,   Michael  A. 
Giblin.  John  F. 
Griffin.  Thomas  L. 
Guiney,  Cornelius  A. 
Heenan,  Michael  J. 


Concord 

Newtonville 

Roxbury 

East  Weymouth 

Concord 

Cambridge 

Atlantic 

South  Boston 

Brighton 

Dcdham 

South   Lawrence 

Dorchester 

Holliston 

Boston 

Ashland 


20 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-ic 


NAME. 

Howley,  Francis  J. 
Irwin,  Eugene  F. 
Kinsella,  James 
Low,  Francis  E. 
McDonoug,h  William  P. 
McGrory,  John  T. 
McLaughlin,  Roy  L. 
Mullin,  John  B. 
Murphy,   William  D. 
O'Brien,  William  A. 
Reardon,  Cornelius  L. 
Sheehan,  Timothy  A. 
Vigneron,  John  F. 
Walsh,  William  J. 
Waters,  David  B. 
White,  Charles  J. 


RESIDENCE. 


West  Quincy 

Medford 

Salem 

Wakefield 

Charlestown 

South   Weymouth 

Providence,  R.  I. 

Dorchester 

Roxbnry 

Quincy 

North   Abington 

Boston 

Cambridge 

Somerville 

Newton   Centre 

Dorchester 


SPECIAL   STUDENTS. 


Begley,  Patrick  J. 
Birmingham,  Charles  A. 
Cox,   Edward  J. 
Sheehan,  Thomas  W. 
Smith,  William  L. 


Loii'ell 

South  Boston 
East  Boston 
Maiden 
Concord  Jet. 


Total  number  of  students  150 


Attenc 

lance   \ 

Dy    Districts. 

Ashland 

i 

Newburyport 

1 

Atlantic 

i 

Newton 

1 

Boston 

60 

Newton  Center 

1 

Beverly 

1 

Newtonville 

2 

Braggville 

i 

North  Abington 

1 

Brockton 

4 

North  Cambridge 

2 

Brookline 

1 

Plymouth 

1 

Cambridge 

13 

Providence,  R.  I. 

1 

Chelsea 

1 

Quincy 

2 

Chestnut    Hill 

1 

Revere 

2 

Concord 

4 

Rockland 

3 

Dedham 

2 

Salem 

3 

East  Weymouth 

1 

Somerville 

8 

Haverhill 

1 

South  Framingham 

1 

Holliston 

2 

South  Lawrence 

1 

Hyde    Park 

2 

South  Weymouth 

1 

Lawrence 

2 

Stoneham 

1 

Lowell 

5 

Taunton 

1 

Lynn 

1 

Wakefield 

2 

Maiden 

4 

West   Quincy 

- 

Medford 

2 

Weston 

1 

Milford 

2 

Total 


ISO 


System   of  Education. 


The  educational  system  of  Boston  College  is  substantially 
that  of  all  other  colleges  of  the  Society  of  Jesus.  Those  who  are 
desirous  of  making  either  a  scientific,  or  historical  study  of  that 
system,  have  abundant  sources  of  information  in  the  following 
works:  Monnmenta  Germaniae  Pedagogica,  Vols.  II.,  V.,  IX., 
XVL  Un  College  de  Jesuites,  par  C.  De  Rochemonteix,  S.  J., 
and  for  a  shorter,  but  complete,  commentary  on  the  Ratio  Studi~ 
orum,  the  reader  is  referred  to  "Jesmt  Education,"  by  Robert 
Schwickerath,  S.  J.,  {Herder,  St.  Louis,  1903). 

The  subjoined  brief  outline  of  the  underlying  principles  of 
the  system,  the  dominant  features  of  its  method,  and  the  object 
aimed  at  by  its  teaching  will  give  a  general  idea  of  its  purpose. 

Education  is  understood  by  the  Fathers  of  the  Society  in  its 
completest  sense,  as  the  full  and  harmonious  development  of  all 
those  faculties  that  are  distinctive  of  man.  It  is  not,  therefore, 
mere  instruction  or  the  communication  of  knowledge.  In  fact, 
the  acquisition  of  knowledge,  though  it  necessarily  accompanies 
any  right  system  of  education,  is  a  secondary  result  of  education. 
Learning  is  an  instrument  of  education,  not  its  end.  The  end  is 
culture,  and  mental  and  moral  development. 

Understanding,  then,  clearly  the  purposes  of  education,  such 
instruments  of  education,  that  is,  such  studies,  sciences  or  lan- 
guages, are  chosen  as  will  most  effectively  further  that  end. 
These  studies  are  chosen,  moreover,  only  in  preparation,  and  in 
such  numbers  as  are  sufficient  and  required.  A  student  who  is  to 
be  educated  will  not  be  forced,  in  the  short  period  of  his  college 
course  and  with  his  immature  faculties,  to  study  a  multiplicity  of 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908.  23 

the  languages  and  sciences  into  which  the  vast  world  of  modern 
knowledge  has  been  scientifically  divided.  If  two  or  more  sci- 
ences, for  instance,  give  similar  training  to  some  mental  faculty, 
that  one  is  chosen  which  combines  the  most  effective  training 
with  the  largest  and  most  fundamental  knowledge. 

The  purpose  of  the  mental  training  given  is  not  proximately 
to  fit  the  student  for  some  special  employment  or  profession, 
but  to  give  him  such  a  general,  vigorous  and  rounded  develop- 
ment as  will  enable  him  to  cope  successfully  even  with  the  un- 
foreseen emergencies  of  life.  While  giving  the  mind  stay,  it  tends 
to  remove  the  insularity  of  thought  and  want  of  mental  elasticity, 
which  is  one  of  the  most  hopeless  and  disheartening  results  of 
specialism  in  students  who  have  not  brought  to  their  studies  the 
uniform  mental  training  given  by  a  systematic  college  course. 
The  studies,  therefore,  are  so  graded  and  classified  as  to  be 
adapted  to  the  mental  growth  of  the  student  and  the  scientific 
unfolding  of  knowledge;  they  are  so  chosen  and  communicated 
that  the  student  shall  gradually  and  harmoniously  reach,  as  nearly 
as  may  be,  that  measure  of  culture  of  which  he  is  capable. 

It  is  fundamental  in  the  system  of  the  Society  of  Jesus  that 
different  studies  have  distinct  and  peculiar  educational  values. 
Mathematics,  the  Natural  Sciences,  Language  and  History  are 
complementary  instruments  of  education  to  which  the  doctrine  of 
equivalence  cannot  be  applied.  The  specific  training  given  by 
one  cannot  be  supplied  by  another. 

Furthermore,  Language  and  History  have  always  been  held 
in  esteem  as  leading  factors  in  education.  Mathematics  and  the 
Natural  Sciences  bring  the  student  into  contact  with  the  material 
aspects  of  nature,  and  exercise  the  inductive  and  deductive 
powers  of  reason.  Language  and  History  effect  a  higher  union ; 
they  are  manifestations  of  spirit  to  spirit,  and  by  their  study  and 
for  their  acquirement  the  whole  mind  of  man  is  brought  into 


24  BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 

widest  and  subtlest  play.  The  acquisition  of  Language  especially 
calls  for  delicacy  of  judgment  and  fineness  of  perception,  and  for 
a  constant,  keen  and  quick  use  of  the  reasoning  powers.  A 
special  importance  is  attached  to  the  classic  tongues  of  Rome  and 
Greece.  As  these  are  languages  with  a  structure  and  idiom  re- 
mote from  the  language  of  the  student,  the  study  of  them  lays 
bare  before  him  the  laws  of  thought  and  logic,  and  requires  at- 
tention, reflection,  and  analysis  of  the  fundamental  relations  be- 
tween thought  and  grammar.  In  studying  them  the  student  is 
led  to  the  fundamental  recesses  of  language.  They  exercise  him 
in  exactness  of  conception  in  grasping  the  foreign  thought,  and 
in  delicacy  of  expression  in  clothing  that  thought  in  the  dissimi- 
lar garb  of  the  mother-tongue.  While  recognizing,  then,  in  edu- 
cation the  necessity  and  importance  of  Mathematics  and  the 
Natural  Sciences,  which  unfold  the  inter-dependence  and  laws 
of  the  world  of  time  and  space,  the  Jesuit  system  of  education 
has  unwaveringly  kept  Language  in  a  position  of  honor  as  an 
instrument  of  culture. 

Lastly,  the  system  does  not  share  the  illusion  of  those  who 
seem  to  imagine  that  education,  understood  as  an  enriching  and 
stimulating  of  the  intellectual  faculties,  has  a  morally  elevating 
influence  in  human  life.  While  conceding  the  effects  of  education 
in  energizing  and  refining  imagination,  taste,  understanding,  and 
powers  of  observation,  it  has  always  held  that  knowledge  and 
intellectual  development  of  themselves  have  no  moral  efficacy. 
Religion  only  can  purify  the  heart,  and  guide  and  strengthen  the 
will. 

The  Jesuit  system  of  education,  then,  aims  at  developing, 
side  by  side,  the  moral  and  intellectual  faculties  of  the  student, 
and  sending  forth  to  the  world  men  of  sound  judgment,  of  acute 
and  rounded  intellect,  of  upright  and  manly  conscience.  And 
since  men  are  not  made  better  citizens  bv  the  mere  accumulation 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-190S.  25 

cf  knowledge,  without  a  guiding  and  controlling  force,  the  prin- 
cipal faculties  to  be  developed  are  the  moral  faculties.  More- 
over, morality  is  to  be  taught  continuously ;  it  must  be  the  under- 
lying base,  the  vital  force  supporting  and  animating  the  whole 
organic  structure  of  education.  It  must  be  the  atmosphere  the 
student  breathes ;  it  must  suffuse  with  its  light  all  that  he  reads, 
illumining  what  is  noble  and  exposing  what  is  base,  giving  to 
the  true  and  false  their  relative  light  and  shade. 

In  a  word,  the  purpose  of  Jesuit  teaching  is  to  lay  a  solid 
sub-structure  in  the  whole  mind  and  character  for  any  super- 
structure of  science,  professional  and  special,  also  for  the  build 
ing  up  of  moral  life,  civil  and  religions. 


Statement. 


It  is  one  of  the  decided  advantages  of  the  system  followed 
in  this  College,  that  the  student  may  begin  his  studies  in  the  Pre- 
paratory School  connected  with  the  College,  and  then  pass  on, 
through  the  College  Course,  to  graduation,  in  the  same  institu- 
tion. This  secures,  besides  the  moral  influence  thus  gained,  a 
uniform  and  homogeneous  course  of  teaching  and  of  training. 
The  result  of  such  a  course  of  study  is  a  continuous  and  normal 
development  of  the  mental  faculties  along  well-defined  lines,  and 
the  possession  of  a  clear  and  coherent  system  of  principles  upon 
which  any  special  courses  may  afterwards  safely  rest. 

At  the  end  of  the  Classical  Course,  the  degree  of  Bachelor 
of  Arts  will  be -conferred  on  those  students  who  shall  have  at- 
tained the  required  yearly  averages  and  passed  satisfactory  final 
examinations. 

For  the  further  degree  of  Master  of  Arts  it  will  be  required 
that  the  applicant  shall  have  continued  his  studies  in  College  one 
year,  under  the  direction  of  the  Faculty. 

The  moral  and  religious  part  of  education  is  considered  to 
be  incomparably  the  most  important.  Catholic  students  are 
required  to  recite  the  daily  catechetical  lesson,  to  attend  the 
weekly  lecture  on  the  doctrines  of  the  Church,  to  make  an  annual 
retreat,  to  present  themselves  to  their  confessor  every  month. 

There  are  various  societies  in  which,  under  the  moderator- 
ship  of  College  officers,  the  work  of  the  class-room  is  supple- 
mented, or  special  fields  in  the  liberal  arts  are  cultivated. 

A  choice  collection  of  books,  numbering  about  four  thou- 
sand, affords  the  student  ample  means,  both  for  preparation  of 


BOSTON     COLLEGE.     1907-1908. 

k  ssons  and  themes,  and  for  reading  in  connection  with  his 
studies. 

A  report  of  each  student's  class  standing  is  sent  to  parents  or 
guardians  at  the  end  of  each  term.  This  report  is.  after  inspec- 
tion, to  be  signed  by  the  parents  or  guardians  and  returned  to 
the  Prefect  of  Studies. 

On  the  scale  used,  100  is  the  highest  mark  and  o  the  lowest. 
The  student's  rank  is  determined  by  his  position  in  one  of  five 
grades:  A,  very  good,  100-90;  B,  good,  90-80:  C,  fairly  good, 
80-70;  D,  70-60;  E,  below  60,  deficient. 

At  the  end  of  each  month,  the  average  of  all  marks  in  the 
separate  departments  is  announced.  The  average  of  these 
monthly  averages  is  what  is  termed  the  average  of  monthly  re- 
sults. To  obtain  the  term  average,  that  of  the  monthly  results 
and  of  the  examinations  are  combined  in  a  ratio  of  two  to  one. 
In  the  second  term  or  session  the  same  method  is  followed,  and 
the  year's  results  are  seen  in  the  average  obtained  from  the  com- 
bination of  those  of  the  two  terms. 

According  to  this  average  of  results  for  the  year,  class 
honors  and  promotions  are  determined.  The  medal  and  premium 
are  conferred  on  the  first  two  students  who  have  reached  the 
highest  annual  average  above  93 ;  "honorable  mention,"  on  those 
above  &$.  An  average  of  60  is  required  for  promotion.  To  pre- 
vent exclusive  devotion  to  one  pursuit  it  has  been  found  neces- 
sary for  culpable  failure  in  Mathematics,  Modern  Languages,  or 
Natural  Sciences  to  refuse  promotion  in  the  main  class.  Hence 
students  whose  grand  average  for  the  year  is  above  60,  but  whose 
mark  is  below  60  in  any  study  at  either  of  the  semi-annual  ex- 
aminations, will  be  '"conditioned"  in  such  studies,  and  will  not  be 
promoted  until  the  condition  is  removed  by  a  satisfactory  ex- 
amination. 

All  students  must  be  in  their  respective  class-rooms  at  9 


28  BOSTON    COLLEGE,     1907-1908.  .     , 

o'clock ;  those  who  come  later  must  apply  for  an  admission  ticket 
to  the  Prefect  of  Discipline. 

Any  conduct  unbecoming  the  character  of  a  gentleman  will 
be  regarded  as  a  violation  of  the  College  rules. 

Flagrant  offences,  such  as  are  detrimental  to  the  reputation 
of  the  Obllege,  or  are  obstructive  of  the  good  of  other  students, 
are  grounds  for  suspension  or  for  conditional  or  absolute  expul- 
sion. 

The  usual  hours  for  school  are  from  9  a.  m.  to  2.30  p.  M., 
with  short  recesses  at  convenient  intervals.  Students  of  Natural 
Sciences  are  expected  to  spend  forty-five  hours  in  laboratory 
work  each  term,  outside  the  usual  school  hours. 


Terms   and    Holidays. 


The  first  term  of  1908-1909  begins  on  Thursday,  September  10; 
the  second  on  Monday,  February  1,  but  students  are  not  precluded 
from  entering  at  other  times.  Schools  will  close  by  Graduation 
Exercises  on  Weduesday,  June  23,  1909. 

Graduation  Exercises  in  1908  will  take  place  on  June  24,  1908. 

The  following  are  ordinary  holidays : — 

Every  Saturday;  the  days  of  a  term  remaining  after  the 
close  of  an  examination;  all  the  holydays  of  obligation;  from 
December  24  to  January  1  ;  from  Wednesday  in  Holy  Week  to 
Wednesday  in  Easter  Week. 

The  feasts  of  St.  Patrick  and  St.  Aloysius. 

Thanksgiving  Day,  Washington's  Birthday,  Patriots'  Day, 
Memorial  Day,  Bunker  Hill  Day. 

For  further  details  of  the  Calendar,  see  pages  5-7. 


Expenses  for  Each  of  the  Two  Terms. 


Tuition    $30.00 

Fee  for  Library  and  Athletics   1.50 

Fee  for  Chemistry    5.00 

Fee  for  Laboratory  Work  in  Physics  for  the  year  ....       5.00 
Fee  for  the  Privilege  of  Examination  in  any  Condi- 
tioned  Branch    1.00 


Scholarships. 


The  College  offers  a  number  of  Scholarships  to  needy  stu- 
dents. It  is  understood  that  only  those  who  are  really  in  need  of 
such  assistance  will  apply  for  these  Scholarships.  Those  who 
can  afford  to  pay  the  tuition  are  not  eligible  for  Scholarships. 

The  regularly  founded  Scholarships  are: — 

The  Edward  L.  Baker  Scholarship,  founded  in  January, 
1906. 

The  Father  Charlier  Scholarship,  founded  in  1894,  by 
the  Immaculate  Conception  Conference  of  St.  Vincent  de  Paul 
Society,  to  commemorate  the  semi-centenary  in  Religion  of  their 
Spiritual  Director. 

The  John  F.  Cronan  Scholarship,  founded  August,  1897, 
by  John  F.  Cronan,  Esq.,  of  Boston.  This  foundation  is  in  favor 
of  any  deserving  young  man  who  is  without  means  of  securing 
an  education.  This  Scholarship  shall  be  open  to  competition. 
All  examinations  for  the  same  shall  be  held  after  due  notice  is 
given  in  at  least  two  newspapers.  The  holder  of  this  Scholarship 
is  entitled  to  all  the  privileges  of  the  four  years'  course  in  Boston 
College.  In  the  event  of  no  one  applying  to  compete  for  the 
Scholarship,  there  is  reserved  the  right  of  selection  by  His  Grace 
the  Archbishop  of  Boston. 

A  Scholarship  founded  by  the  late  Miss  Ruth  Charlotte 
Dana. 

The  Day  Scholarship  founded  in  1905,  by  the  late  John 
J.  Day. 

The  Henry  Doherty  Scholarship,  founded  in  1895,  by 
the  late  Henry  Doherty. 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908.  31 

The  Dolan  Scholarships,  one  founded  in  1896,  another 
in  1898,  and  a  third  in  1903,  by  Rev.  Michael  Dolan  of  Newton. 
The  beneficiary  is  to  be  a  graduate  of  the  Grammar  or  High 
School  of  the  Parish  of  our  Lady  at  Newton.  In  case  no  such 
student  applies,  another  may  be  sent  by  the  pastor  of  said  church 
or  the  Archbishop  of  Boston,  provided  he  is  fit  to  begin  the  course 
at  the  College  or  High  School. 

The  Ellen  Driscoll  Scholarship,  founded  in  1905,  by  a 
bequest  of  the  lady,  whose  name  it  bears. 

The  Rose  Fitzpatrick  Scholarship,  founded  in  1894,  by 
a  bequest  of  the  lady  whose  name  it  bears. 

A  Scholarship  founded  by  the  late  Rev.  John  Flatley  of 
Cambridge,  Mass. 

The  Flatley  Scholarship,  founded  in  1896,  by  the  late 
Rev.  Michael  F.  Flatley  of  Maiden,  in  favor  of  some  deserving 
student  of  the  parochial  school  of  the  Church  of  the  Immaculate 
Conception,  Maiden. 

The  James  E.  Hayes  Scholarship,  founded  in  June,  1900, 
by  the  State  Council,  Knights  of  Columbus. 

The  Mary  G.  Keefe  Scholarship,  founded  in  1906,  by  a 
bequest  of  the  lady  whose  name  it  bears. 

A  Scholarship,  founded  in  1904,  by  Miss  Sarah  Kelleher. 

A  Scholarship,  founded  by  the  late  Mrs.  Mary  Kramer. 

Three  Scholarships,  known  as  The  Loyola  Scholarships, 
founded  by  the  late  Rev.  Thomas  Scully  of  Cambridgeport, 
Mass. 

The  Hannah  McCarthy  Scholarship,  founded  in  1898, 
by  a  bequest  of  the  lady  whose  name  it  bears. 

Two  Scholarships,  founded  by  the  late  Rev.  William  Orr 
of  Cambridge. 

The  Rockwell  Scholarship,  founded  in  1904,  in  memory 
of  the  late  Horace  T.  Rockwell. 


32  BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 

Twenty  Scholarships. at  the  disposal  of  St.  Mart's  Church 
dt  the  North  End.  The  Scholarships  were  given  by  the  College 
in  1864,  in  recognition  of  generous  contributions  made  by  the 
parishioners  of  St.  Mary's  to  the  building  of  the  College  Church 
of  the  Immaculate  Conception.  The  pastor  of  St.  Mary's  selects 
the  candidates  from  among  the  pupils  of  the  parish  school,  in 
which  the  Scholarships  are  won  by  competition. 

A  scholarship  founded  by  the  late  Joseph  F.  Sinnott  of  Phila- 
delphia, Pennsylvania. 

A  Scholarship  founded  by  Mrs.  John  Sullivan  in  memory 
of  her  husband. 

Two  Scholarships  founded  by  the  late  Miss  Cecilia  Tully. 

Four  Scholarships  founded  by  the  late  Mrs.  Anna  H.  Ward. 

A  Scholarship  for  eight  years  founded  by  Joseph  Lynch 
Early,  '01. 

The  Patrick  F.  McCarthy  Scholarship,  founded  in  April,  1907, 
by  the  late  Patrick  F.  McCarthy  of  Boston. 

Besides  these  Scholarships,  the  generous  efforts  of  friends 
of  the  College  have  enabled  the  Faculty  to  establish  twenty-three 
more,  which  may  be  called  the  Boston  College  Scholarships. 

Four  Scholarships  are  open  this  year  for  competition  to 
students  entering  the  High  School ;  each  entitles  the  winner  to 
free  tuition  in  Boston  College  High  School  for  the  four  years' 
course,  from  September,  1907 .  For  date  of  competition,  see 
pages  5  and  7. 

The  sum  of  $1,500  will  furnish  a  Scholarship  which  will 
ensure  the  tuition  of  a  student,  but  it  will  require  the  interest  of 
$2,000  to  enable  the  student,  besides,  to  purchase  his  text-books 
and  to  meet  other  contingent  expenses  of  the  course. 


Societies   of  the    Students. 


The  Sodality  of  the  Immaculate  Conception. 

This  Sodality  was  organized  under  the  patronage  of  St. 
Stanislaus  Kostka  in  the  year  1868- 1869,  and  is  intended  to  excite 
the  students  to  greater  piety,  and  especially  to  devotion  to  the 
Blessed  Virgin  Mary. 

Officers: — Director,  Rev.  Joseph  T.  Keating,  S.  J.;  Prefect, 
John  T.  O'Hare,  '08;  First  Assistant,  Edward  D.  O 'Bryan,  '08  ;  Sec- 
ond Assistant,  Francis  J.  Garrick.  '08  ,  Secretary,  Bernard  S.  O'Kane, 
'09  ;  Treasurer,  John  W.  Mahoney,  '09  ;  Instructor  of  Postulants, 
Eugene  H.  Dorr,  '09. 

Consultors  : — John  J.  McMahon,  '08  ;  Thomas  W.  Buckley, 
'09;  Louis  F.  Kelleher,  '10;  William  F.  McHale,  '10;  Joseph  E. 
Kelly, '11. 

Sacristans: — Peter  A.  Landrigan,  '09  ;  Patrick  L.  Cody,  '08. 

Organist: — Francis  T.  Keville,  '10. 

Lector: — Edward  J.  Looby,  '08. 


The  Apostleship  of  Prayer. 
Promoters'  Council. 

Director: — Rev.  John  D.  Butler,  S.  J. 

Promoters  : — Senior,  Edward  D.  O'Bryan,  Michael  J.  O'Keefe  ; 
funior,  Eugene  H.  Dorr,  Peter  A.  Landrigan;  Sophomore,  Daniel  H. 
Sullivan,    Ambrose    Hennessey,    Louis    F.    Kelleher,    Thomas    J. 


34  BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 

McGrath ;    Freshman,   Daniel  F.   Burke,  James  P.   Molloy,  Leo.  P. 
Noonan,  Timothy  A.  Sheehan,  John  F.  Vigneron. 


Students'    Library. 

The  Students'  Library  consists  of  a  collection  of  four  thou- 
sand volumes,  especially  adapted  to  the  consultation  and  home 
use  of  the  student.  The  large  and  elegantly  appointed  room  is 
open  to  them  from  8.30  to  9  a.  m.,  i  to  1.30  and  2.30  to  3  p.  m.  on 
school  days. 

Librarian,  Henry  A.  Coffey,  S.  J. ;  Assistants,  Edward  D. 
O'Bryan,  '08 ;  Henry  M.  Tattan,  '09 , 


Fulton  Debating  Society  of  Boston  College. 

Moderator,  Rev.  Redmond  J.  Walsh,  S.  J. 

Officers,  First  Term  : — President,  John  T.  O'Hare,  '08  ;  Vice- 
President,  Henry  T.  Powers,  '08  ;  Secretary,  Denis  A.  O'Brien,  '08  ; 
Jreasurer,  James  A.  Coveney,  '10  ;  First  Censor,  Peter  M.  Sullivan, 
'08  ;  Second  Censor,  John  W.  Mahoney,  '09. 

The  number  of  members  is  limited  to  fifty. 

The  Annual  Prize  Debate  took  place  on  Monday  evening,  April 
8,  1907,  in  Boston  College  Hall.     The  question  debated  was  : 

Resolved,  "  That  the  Federal  Government  Shall  Own  and  Oper- 
ate the  Railroads."  Mr.  Francis  J  Carney,  '98,  Secretary  of  Boston 
College  Alumni  Association,  acted  as  Chairman.  Edward  J.  Hurley, 
'07,  and  Henry  P.  McGlinchey,  '09,  upheld  the  affirmative.  John 
T.  O'Hare,  '08,  and  James  A.  Coveney,  '10,  upheld  the  negative.  The 
following  gentlemen   were   judges   of  the   debate:   Mr.    Edward   F. 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908.  35 

McSweeney,    Chairman;    Hon.    E.    Mark    Sullivan,    Mr.  Edwin    F. 
Benson. 

At  the  "close  of  the  debate  the  Chairman  of  the  judges  an- 
nounced their  decision,  and  presented  the  gold  medal,  the  gift  of  a 
Friend  of  the  College,  to  John  T.  O'Hare. 


Marquette  Debating   Society   of    Boston  College. 

This  Society  was  formed  in  September,  1902,  for  the  benefit 
of  the  members  of  the  classes  of  Sophomore  and  Freshman  who 
were  debarred  from  entering  the  Fulton  Debating  Society  owing 
to  its  limited  membership.  Meetings  are  held  every  Friday- 
The  number  of  members  is  restricted  to  fifty. 

Moderator : — Thomas  H.  Miley,  S.  J. 

First  Term  : — President,  Stephen  J.  Chamberlin  ;  Leader  of 
the  Minority,  Louis  F.  Kelleher  ;  Secretary,  John  F.  Monahan  ; 
Treasurer,  Eugene  Irwin  ;  Set  geant-at- Arms,  Aloysius  A.  Finn. 


The  Stylus. 

The  Boston  College  Stylus  is  a  journal  founded  by  the 
members  of  the  Class  of  1884.  In  1889  the  publication  was  sus- 
pended, but  resumed  in  December,  1893.  It  is  now  published 
monthly. 

The  object  of  the  Stylus  is  to  encourage  literary  work 
among  the  students,  and  to  chronicle  class  and  college  incidents. 
A  special  department  is  given  to  the  news  of  Alumni  and  to  their 
letters  and  articles. 

The  Board  of  Editors  is  elected  annually  in  May. 

Faculty  Director,  Michael  Earls,  S.  J. 


36  BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 

Staff  of  1907-1908  : — Editor-in-Chiefs  Joseph  F.  O'Sullivan,  '08; 
Associates,  Michael  J.  O'Keefe,  '08,  Philip  J.  O'Connell,  '08,  Denis 
A.  O'Brien,  '08,  John  J.  Mahoney,  '09,  Stephen  J.  Chamberlin,  '10, 
John  E.  Doherty,  '10,  Cornelius  A.  Guiney,  '11,  James  J.  Cotter,  'n  ; 
Domi,  John  T.  O'Hare,  '08  ;  Alumni,  Francis  J.  Carney,  '98,  and 
John  J.  Savage,  '09. 


Dramatic  Class. 

Instructor^  Joseph  H.  Willis,  A.B.,  '90;  A.M.,  '93. 

A  play  of  Shakespeare  is  read  during  the  year  by  alljthe  stu- 
dents of  the  College.  The  play  selected  for  study  during  the  year 
1907-1908  was  "  Henry  IV."  On  Thursday  evening,  December  19, 
this  same  drama  was  presented  by  the  students  of  the  College. 


French  Academy. 

The  French  Academy,  under  the  title  of  "Societe  Francaise, 
organized  in  the  year  1899- 1900,  has  for  its  object  the  advance- 
ment of  the  students  in  the  French  language.  Once  a  week  a 
debate  is  held  in  French  or  a  paper  is  read  and  discussed  on  a 
subject  relating  to  French  history,  or  on  some  other  topic  of 
interest. 

Moderator,  Rev.  George  de  Butler,  S.  J. 


St.  Cecilia  Society. 

The  St.  Cecilia  Society,  organized  in  the  year  1868-1869,  sup- 
plies music  at  the  College  Mass,  and  gives  aid  at  celebrations,  either 


BOSTON    COLLEGE,    1907-1908.  37 

oFthe  College  or  of  the  Church  of  the  Immaculate  Conception.     It 
includes  the  College  Glee  Club. 


College  Orchestra. 
Oepicers. 

Director,  Michael  Earls,  S.  J. ;   Concert-Master,  James  Fitzgerald. 
President,  Edward  Wholley  ;  Librarian,  James  Molloy. 


The  College  Glee  Club. 

The   College   Glee    Club   is   under  the   direction    of    Edward   P. 
Tivnan,  S.  J.     See  above,  St.  Cecilia  Society. 


Requirements    for    Admission    to     Boston 
College,     1908. 


All  candidates  for  admission  must  present  satisfactory  testimonials  of 
good  moral  character,  and  of  honorable  dismissal  from  the  school  or  col- 
lege which  they  last  attended. 

Candidates  for  advanced  standing  must  satisfy  the  conditions  for  admis- 
sion to  the  Freshman  class,  and  must  pass  an  examination  in  the  studies 
previously  pursued  by  the  class  which  they  aim  to  enter. 

There  are  three  methods  of  admission  to  the  Freshman  class  : 

i.     Admission  by  Graduation  in  the  Boston 
College  High  School. 

Those  who  have  satisfactorily  completed  the  course  of  the  Boston  Col- 
lege High  School  are  admitted  without  examination. 

2.  Admission  by  Certificate. 

Graduates  of  certain  High  Schools,  approved  by  vote  of  the  Faculty, 
are  admitted  without  examination  on  presentation  of  a  copy  of  the  de- 
tailed programme  of  studies  pursued  by  them  in  such  schools,  and  of  a 
certificate  from  the  Head  Master  stating  that  they  have  successfully  com- 
pleted the  course  and  are  prepared  to  enter  college. 

3.  Admission  by  Examination. 

Candidates  who  are  not  admitted  by  the  first  or  second  methods  are  re- 
quired to  pass  the  entrance  examination  as  defined  below.  The  pro- 
gramme of  this  examination  is  based  on  the  course  of  studies  in  the  Boston 
College  High  School. 

The  examinations  for  entrance  will  take  place  at  Boston  College  as  fol- 
lows, beginning  each  day  at  9  a.  m. 

September  2.     Wednesday  :  Latin  and  Greek. 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-ic 


39 


September  3.     Thursday  :  English,  History,  Modern  Languages. 
September  4.     Friday  :   Mathematics  and  Natural  Sciences. 

LATIN. 

1.  Grammar.  The  examination  will  suppose  a  thorough  knowledge 

of  the  complete  Latin  Grammar. 

2.  Prosody.  The  rules  of  Prosody,  as  given  in  Casserly's  Latin 

Prosody,  with  explanation  and  application  to  Hex- 
ameter and  Pentameter  verse ;  rearrangement  of 
broken  verses  ;  translation  of  a  short  English  pas- 
sage into  Latin  Hexameter  and  Pentameter  verse. 

3.  Translation.     The  translation  into  Latin  prose  of  an  English  para- 
graph based  on  Cicero's  De  Amicitia. 


Authors. 

Cicero  :  De  Amicitia,  or  De  Senectute. 

Selected  Letters  (Dillard's  Edition)  500  lines. 
In  Catilinam,  I.,  II. 
Caesar:  Gallic  Wat,  I.,  II.,  IV. 

Sallust :  Jugui  tha. 

Catiline. 
Virgil :  Eclogues,  I.,  IV. 

Georgics,  IV. 
JEneid,  I.,  II. 
Ovid  :  Iristia,  500  lines. 

Metamorphoses,  500  lines. 
Translation      A  passage  from  Cicero  will  be  assigned  for  a  test  in 
at  Sight.  translation  at  sight. 


*  GREEK. 

The  examination  will  suppose  a  thorough  knowledge 
of  the  complete  Greek  Grammar. 

The  rules  of  Prosody  :  general  principles  of  Greek 
verse  ;  application  to  Homeric  verse. 

The  translation  into  Greek  prose  of  an  English  para- 
graph based  on  Xenophon's  Cytopcedia. 

*  In  the  case  of  students  from  High  Schools  who  have  had  no  Greek,  but  have  pursued 
an  equivalent  branch,  special  arrangements  may  be  made  by  which  they  may  enter  the  Fresh- 
man class,  and  take  Greek  in  the  Special  Greek  class.  The  quality  of  the  degree  which  they 
receive  will  depend  on  the  amount  of  Greek  seen  in  their  first  three  years  of  college. 


i.     Grammar. 


2.    Prosody. 


3.    Translation. 


40  BOSTON    COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 

4.  Authors. 

Xenophon  :       Anabasis,  I.,  II. 

Cyropcsdia,  I. 
Homer:  Iliad.,  I.,  III.,  VI. 

5.  Translation      A  passage  from  Xenophon  will  be  assigned  for  a  test 
AT  Sight.  in  translation  at  sight. 


ENGLISH. 

1.  Reading.  The  candidate  will  be  required  to  give  evidence  of  a 

general  knowledge  of  the  following  books  by  an- 
swering simple  questions  on  the  lives  of  the  authors 
and  the  subject-matter  of  the  books. 

Addison  :  Sir  Roger  De  Cover ly  Papers. 

Irving  :  Sketch  Book. 

DeQuincey  :      The  Flight  of  a  Tartar  Tribe. 

Goldsmith  :      The  Vicar  of  Wakefield. 

Scott :  The  Talisman. 

Thackeray  :     Henry  Esmond. 

Newman  :         Collista. 

Cooper  :  The  Last  of  the  Mohicans. 

Goldsmith  :     The  Deserted  Village. 

Tennyson  :       The  Holy  Grail ;  Sir  Galahad. 

Lowell:  7  he  Vision  of  Sir  Launfal. 

N.  B. — The  reading  prescribed  for  the  uniform  Col- 
lege entrance  requirements  for  the  current 
year  will  be  accepted. 

2.  ^Sttjdy.  The  candidate  will  be  further  required  to  answer  de- 

tailed questions  on  the  subject-matter,  form  and 
structure  of  the  following  books  : 

Shakespeare  :  Macbeth. 

Milton  :  Paradise  Lost,  I  ,  II. 

Burke  :  On  conciliation  with  America. 

Macaulay  :       fohnson,  Addison. 

Longfellow  :    Evangeline. 

3.  Composition.      The  candidate  will  also  be  required  to  write  a  short 

composition  on  one  of  ten  subjects  selected  from  the 
books  assigned  for  reading. 


Ancient. 
Modern. 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 
HISTORY. 


41 


The   History   of   Oriental    Nations,    Greece   and 

Rome. 
General   Modern    History  ;    History  of  England 

and  the  United  States  ;  Elements  of  Civics. 


Algebra. 


Geometry. 


MATHEMATICS. 

Factors  and  Fractions — Equations  of  the  First 
and  Second  Degrees — Radical  and  Imaginary 
Expressions — Ratio  and  Progressions — Expo- 
nents and  Coefficients — Variables  and  Limits — 
Determinants. 

Plane. 

Solid. 


FRENCH. 

(Alternative  with  German.) 

Grammar.  Etymology  and  Syntax,  complete.     The  mastery  of 

Duf out's  French  Grammar  or  Whitney's  Brief 
French  Grammar  will  be  sufficient. 

Translation.     The  translation  of  simple  French  prose  at  sight. 

Reading.  The  reading  of  French  as  a  test  in   pronunciation, 

and  the  writing  of  French  from  dictation  as  a  test 
in  the  recognition  of  French  phrases. 


GERMAN. 
(Alternative  with  French.) 

Grammar.  Etymology  and  Syntax,  complete.     The  mastery  of 

Whitney's  Brief  German  Grammar  will  be  suffi- 
cient. 

Translation.     The  translation  of  simple  German  prose  at  sight. 

Reading.  The  reading  of  German  as  a  test  in  pronunciation, 

and  the  writing  of  German  from  dictation  as  a  test 
in  the  recognition  of  German  phrases. 


42  BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 

NATURAL   SCIENCE. 

The  following  may  be  offered  for  entrance,  but  are  not  exacted  : 
Biology.  The  elementary  study  of  plant  life  and  animal  life. 

Physiology.  The  elementary  study  of  the  human  body. 

Astronomy.  Descriptive  Astronomy. 

Physics.  High  School  Physics. 

The  examinations  in  these  four  studies  will  suppose  the  amount  of 
knowledge  usually  contained  in  the  text  books  designed  for  secondary 
schools,  and  two  one-hour  lessons  per  week  through  one  year  in  each 
study. 


Course    of  Studies. 


All  the  studies  of  the  subjoined  programme  are  prescribed,  unless 
otherwise  noted.     French  and  German  are  alternatives. 

The  number  ot  hours  given  after  each  study  indicates  the  amount  of 
time  per  week  for  each  study. 


LATIN.— Authors 


6  hours. 
GREEK.— Authors 


FRESHMAN. 

FIRST   TERM. 
Cicero,  Pro  Archia. 
Horace,  Ars  Poetica. 
Virgil,  JEneid. 
Livy,  book  XXI. 

Exercises  in  Latin  Prose  Composition. 

Exercises  in  Latin  Verse  Composition. 

Bradley's  Aids  to   Writing  Latin  Prose ;  and 

Gepp's  Latin  Versification,  recommended. 

Homer,  Odyssey. 
Plato,  Apology. 
Herodotus. 

Exercises  in  Greek  Prose  Composition. 
Sidgwick's     Greek     Ftose     Composition,    recom- 
mended. 


5  hours. 
ENGLISH.— Precepts 

Literature  : 
Authors  : 


4  hours. 


Kleutgen,  Ars  Dicendi. 
Coppens,  Introduction  to  Rhetoric. 
Lake  School  and  Victorian  Period  (1745-1900). 
Pastoral  and  Lyric  Poets. 

Palgrave's  Golden  Treasury,  book  IV.,  and  second 
series ; 
Spencer's  Astrophel ;  Milton's  Lycidas ; 
Shelley's  Adonais ;    Arnold's    7 hyrsis ;    Selec- 
tions. 
English  Prose  (Minto)  : 

De  Quincey,  Newman,  Ruskin,  Hawthorne. 
Composition  in  Prose  or  Verse  each  week. 

*  See  note  on  page  39. 


44  BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 

HISTORY. — Lectures  on  some  of  the  following  :  General  Review  by 
Epochs  :  Grecian  Supremacy  and  its  Significance — 
Roman  Supremacy  and  its  Significance — Barbarian  Su- 
premacy and  its  Significance — Feudalism  and  Chivalry — 
Scholasticism — Renaissance — Reformation — Revolution  — 
Modernism. 
Guggenberger,  Vol.  I. 
2  hours. 

MATHEMATICS— Trigonometry  and  Surveying. 
4  hours. 

CHRISTIAN  DOCTRINE.— Creation  of  the  World— the  Different  Orders 
of  Creation  and  their  Relation  to  One  Another — Decree 
and  Plan  of  the  Redemption— the  Redeemer,  One  Person 
and  Two  Natures — -the  Work  of  the  Redemption 
(Wilmers). 

1  hour. 

FRENCH. — Authors:      Chateaubriand,    Le    dernier   des    Abencerages  ; 
Atala. 
Moliere,  Le  bourgeois gentilhomme  ;  L'avare. 
A  series  of  lectures  will  be  delivered  on  French  Literature, 
divided  into  three  periods  : 
Le  Moyen  Age. 
L"1  Age  Classique. 
IS  Age  Moderne. 

2  hours. 

GERMAN. — Authors:     Jensen,  Die  braune  Etica. 

Goethe,  Hermann  und  Dorothea. 
Schiller,   Wilhelm  Tell. 

Literary    Criticism    and    Exercises    in    German 
Composition — Conversation. 
2  hours. 

SPANISH. — Optional  course  :  Prose  and  poetry  of  the  nineteenth  cen- 
tury— Lectures  and  reading  in  Modern  Spanish  Literature 
— Composition — Conversation. 

ELOCUTION.— 1  hour. 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908.  45 

SECOND   TERM. 

LATIN. — Authors  :     Cicero,  In  Verrem,  De  Signis,  or  Second  Philippic, 
Horace,  Odes. 
Livy,  book  XXI. 

Composition,  as  in  First  Term. 
Bradley's  Aids  ;  Lupton's  Latin  Lyrics. 
6  hours. 

GREEK. — Authors  :     Demosthenes,  Olynthiacs,  I.,  II.,  III. 
Euripides,  Hecuba  or  Medea. 
Herodotus. 

Greek  Prose  Composition,  as'in  First  Term. 
5  hours. 

ENGLISH. — Precepts,  as  in  First  Term,  continued. 

Literature  :     From  Elizabeth  to  Pope  (1 603-1730). 
Authors  :     Lyric  and  Epic  Poetry  :  Selections. 

Palgrave's  Golden  Treasury,  book  III. 
Milton's  Paradise  Lost,  books  I.,  II. 
English  Prose  (Minto) : 
Dryden,  Addison,  Swift,  Johnson. 
4  hours. 

HISTORY.— As  in  First  Term,  continued. 
2  hours. 

MATHEMATICS.— Analytic  Geometry. 
4  hours. 

CHRISTIAN  DOCTRINE.— Grace,  Actual  and  Sanctifying  :     Baptism, 

Confirmation,  Holy\Eucharist  (Wilmers) 

1  hour. 

FRENCH. — French  Poetry.     Authors:     Corneille,  Le  Cid  ;  Polyeucte. 

Racine,  Athalie^ 

2  hours. 

GERMAN. — As  in  First  Term,  continued. 
2  hours. 

ELOCUTION.— 1  hour. 


46  BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 

SOPHOMORE. 

FIRST   TERM. 

LATIN. — Authors  :     Cicero,  Pro  Lege  Manilia,  Pro  Matcello. 

Horace,  Epodes,  Satires,  Epistles,  Carmen  Seculare. 
Tacitus,  Agricola,  Get  mania. 

Latin  Prose  Composition  :     Bradley's  Aids. 
Latin  Versification  :     Lupton's  Latin  Lyrics. 
6  hours. 

GREEK. — Authors  :     Demosthenes,  Philippic  I. 
^Eschines,  On  the  Crown. 
Sophocles,  CEdipus  King. 
Thucydides,  book  II. 

Greek  Prose  Composition  ;  Sidgwick. 
5  hours. 

ENGLISH.— Precepts  :     Kleutgen,  Ars  Dicendi. 

Coppens,  Oratorical  Composition. 
The  study  of  Oratorical   Composition — Oratorical  Analysis 
of  iEschines  On  the  Crown,  Cicero  On  the  Manilian  Law, 
Demosthenes  First  Philippic,  and  Burke    On   American 
Taxation  or  Bristol  Election. 

Authors:     Shakespeare,    Hamlet,    King   Lear;     Burke, 
Bristol  Election;  Webster,  Bunker  Hill ; 
Newman,      Second      Spring ;      Palgrave's 
Golden  Treasury,  book  I. 
Literature  :     Elizabethan  Age. 
4,  hours. 

HISTORY. — Lectures  on  some  of  the  following  :  Christian  History  by 
Epochs  :  The  Anti-Nicene  Church — the  Benedictines — 
Gregory  the  Great  and  the  Missionaries — the  Dark  Ages — 
Charlemagne — Gregory  VII.  and  the  War  of  Investitures — 
Boniface  and  Philip  the  Fair — the  Crusades — Scholastic- 
ism and  Education  in  General — the  Schism  of  the  West — 
Renaissance  and  Reformation — Jansenism  and  Revolution 
— Modern  Times. 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-IQ08.  47 

In  the  treatment  of  these  topics,  special  emphasis  is  given 
to  the  Church's  conservatism  and  yet  breadth,  the 
Church's  democratic  spirit  and  sympathy  with  the  poor, 
the  Church  as  a  binding  force  in  the  world. 

Guggenberger,  Vol.  II. 


2  hours. 


SCIENCE. — Astronomy  :     General  Principles  of  Spherical  Trigonometry, 
4  hours. 

General  Chemistry  :     Lectures,  2  hours  a  week.    Laboratory 
practice,  45  hours  a  term. 
CHRISTIAN   DOCTRINE  :     The  Sacraments  :     Penance,  Extreme  Unc- 
tion, Holy  Orders  and  Matrimony  (Wil- 
mers) . 
1  hour. 


ELOCUTION.— 1  hour. 


SECOND   TERM. 


LATIN. — Authors  :       Cicero,  Pro  Milone,  Fro  Ligario. 
Juvenal,  Satires. 
Tacitus,  Annates. 

Latin  Prose  Composition  :     Bradley's  Aids. 
Latin  Versification  :     Lupton's  Latin  Lyrics. 
6  hours. 

GREEK. — Authors  :     Demosthenes,  On  the  Crown. 

Sophocles,  GLdipus  Coloneus,  or  Antigone. 
Thucydides,  book  II. 

Greek  Prose  Composition  :     Sidgwick. 
5  hours. 

ENGLISH.— Precepts  :     Kleutgen,  Ars  Dicendi. 

Coppens,  Oratorical  Composition. 
Oratorical  Analysis  of  Cicero  For  Milo,  Demosthenes  On 
the  Crown  and  Three  English  Speeches  (Burke's  Concilia- 
tion with  America  and  one  speech  of  Webster). 
Authors  :    Shakespeare,  Macbeth,  Julius  Ccssar  ;  Selections. 
Literature :     American. 
4  hours. 


48  BOSTON    COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 

HISTORY.— Constitutional  History  :     Guggenberger,  Vol.  II. 
2  hours. 

MATHEMATICS. — Mechanics  :     Lectures  and  use  of  instruments  ;  lab- 
oratory work,  4  hours. 

SCIENCE.— General  Chemistry  :     Lectures,  2  hours  a  week.    Laboratory 

practice,  45  hours  a  term. 

CHRISTIAN   DOCTRINE.     1  hour. 

ELOCUTION.     1  hour. 

Courses  in  French,  German  and  Spanish  optional. 

JUNIOR. 
PHILOSOPHY. 

First  and  Second  Term.  Formal  Logic  :  Province  and  Definition  of 
Logic  —  Foundations  of  Logic  —  the  Three  Operations  of 
Thought :  Simple  Apprehension,  Judgment  and  Reasoning — 
Simple  Apprehension,  Modern  Errors  respecting  it — Doctrine 
of  Universals,  Definition,  Division — Judgment  :  Divisions  of 
Judgment,  the  Nature  and  Divisions  of  Propositions,  the  Im- 
port and  Various  Kinds  of  Propositions,  Opposition  and  Con- 
version of  Propositions — Reasoning  :  the  Syllogism  and  its 
Laws,  Various  Kinds  of  Syllogism,  Formal  and  Material  Induc- 
tion, Example  and  Analogy,  Fallacies,  Method  and  its  Laws, 
the  Scholastic  Method. 

Applied  Logic  :  Definition  of  Truth — Definition  of  Certi- 
tude— Kinds  and  Degrees  of  Certitude — Universal  Scepticism 
— Cartesian  Doubt — the  Primary  Facts  and  Principles  of  the 
Logician — Various  False  Theories  about  the  Ultimate  Crite- 
rion of  Certitude — Evidence  is  the  Ultimate  Objective  Criterion 
of  Truth — the  Origin  of  Error  in  the  Understanding — the 
Trustworthiness  of  the  Senses,  Consciousness,  Memory — Belief 
on  Human  Testimony — Belief  on  Divine  Testimony. 

General  Metaphysics  :  Nature  and  Need  of  Metaphysics 
— the  Notion  of  Being — Essence  and  Existence — Three  Attri- 
butes of  Being  :  Unity,  Truth  and  Goodness — the  Possibilities 
of  Being — the  Finite  and  the  Infinite  in  Being — Substance  and 
Accident — Substance  as  Hypostasis  and  Personality — Causality 
— Relation — Space  and  time. 
6  hours. 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908.  49 

The  course  in  Philosophy  includes  the  lectures  by  the  Professor,  the 
oral  repetition  of  each  lecture  by  the  students,  dissertations  on  selected 
topics  treated  in  the  lectures,  oral  discussions  by  the  students  in  the 
Philosophical  Academy.  The  Academy  is  an  exercise  in  debate  accord- 
ing to  the  rules  of  Dialectics  and  the  Scholastic  Method,  and  is  held  twice 
a  week  under  the  direction  of  the  Professor. 

LATIN. 

First  Term.     Authors  :     Cicero,  Qucsstiones  lusculancz. 
Plautus,  Duo  Captivi. 
Discussions  of  Latin  Style  ;  Essays  in  Latin. 
Bradley's  Aids. 
2  hours. 

Second  Term.     Authors  :     Cicero,  Qucsstiones  luscilance,  continued. 

Pliny,  Letters. 
Seneca,  One  Play. 
Discussion  of  Latin  Style  ;  Essays  in  Latin. 


2  hours. 


GREEK. 


First  Term.     Authors  :     vEschylus,  Agamemnon. 
Plato,  Crito,  Phtzdo. 


2  hours. 


St.  Basil,  Classical  Literature. 


Second  Term.     Authors  :     Plato,  Republic,  book  I. 

Aristophanes,  Birds,  or  Frogs,  or  Wasps. 
Pindar,  Olympic  Odes  I.,  II.,  VI.,  VII. 


2  hours. 


ENGLISH. 


First  Term.     Lectures  on  one  of  the  following  subjects : 

1.  Chaucer,  Dante,  and  Italian  Influence  on  English  Litera- 

ture. 

2.  Pre-Elizabethan  Literature. 

3.  Shakespeare. 

Repetitions  of  lectures,  oral  discussions,  essays. 
3  hours. 


50  BOSTON    COLLEGE,    1907-190S. 

Second  Term.      Age  of  Queene  Anne. 

Repetitions  of  lectures,  oral  discussions,  essays. 


2  hours. 


HISTORY. 


First  Term.     Guggenberger,  Vol.  III. 
2  hours. 

Second  Term.     Constitutional  History.   . 
2  hours. 

SCIENCE. 

First  Term.     Physics:     Liquids  and  Gases — Sound — Heat. 

Lectures,  repetitions,  laboratory  practice. 
6  hours. 

Analytical  Chemistry* 
2  hours. 

Second  Term.     Physics  :     Light— Electricity. 

Lectures,  repetitions,  laboratory  practice. 


6  hours. 
2jhours. 


Analytical  Chemistry. 


CHRISTIAN    DOCTRINE. 


First jTerm. — Christianity  a  Revealed  Religion — Revelation,  Natural  and 
Supernatural — Miracles  and  Prophecies  as  sure  evidences  of 
Divine  Revelation — the  Primitive,  Patriarchal  and  Mosaic  Rev- 
elations— the  Christian  Revelation — the  Divine  Origin  of  the 
Christian  Revelation — The  Miraculous  Facts  of  the  Christian 
Revelation  proved  by  various  evidences. 

The  Church,  the  Dispenser  of  the  Christian  Religion — the 
Institution  of  the  Church — the  Church  a  Society,  founded 
directly  by  Christ,  to  endure  to  the  end  of  time,  unchangeable, 
intended  for  all  nations,  and  for  all  individuals — the  end  of  the 
Church — the  Triple  Office  of  the  Church  as  Teacher,  Priest  and 
Pastor — the  Primacy  of  the  Pope  (Wilmers). 
1  hour. 


BOSTON    COLLEGE,     1907-1908.  51 

SecondiTerm.  Marks  of  the  Church  :  One,  Holy,  Catholic  and  Apostoli 
— the  Teaching  Office  of  the  Church — Infallibility — Tradition 
and  Scripture  the  Remote  Rule  of  Faith — Inspiration  of  Scrip- 
ture— Nature  of  Tradition. 

The  Existence  and  the  Nature  of  God — the  Attributes  of  God 
— the  Unity  of  God — God  in  Three  Persons  (Wilmers). 
1  hour. 


ELOCUTION. 

Both  Terms.     1  hour. 

OPTIONAL   STUDIES. 

Calculus  ;  Modern  Languages. 

SENIOR. 
PHILOSOPHY. 

Both  Terms.  Special  Metaphysics  :  The  Origin  of  the  World — 
Pantheism  and  Monism  Rejected — Creation  Vindicated — the 
Nature  and  Material  Substance — the  Atomic,  Dynamic  and 
Scholastic  Theories  regarding  the  nature  of  Material  Substance 
— the  Nature  and  Possibility  of  Miracles. 

Psychology  :  Life  in  General — Vegetable  Life — Sensi- 
tive Life — the  Senses,  External  and  Internal — Sense  Percep- 
tion— Imagination — Sensuous  Appetite — Feeling. 

The  Human  Soul — the  Simplicity,  Spirituality  and  Immor- 
tality of  the  Soul — Recent  Theories  Concerning  the  Soul — In- 
dividuality and  Unity  of  the  Soul — Union  of  the  Soul  with  the 
Body — Locus  of  the  Soul — Origin  of  the  Soul — Animal  Psy- 
chology. 

Intellectual  Cognition — Origin  of  Ideas — Judgment  and 
Reasoning  Intellectual  Attention — Reflection — Self — Memory 
— Rational  Appetite — Desire — Free-Will — the  Emotions. 

Natural  Theology  :  Proofs  of  the  Existence  of  an  In- 
telligent First  Cause  or  Personal  God — the  Fundamental  At- 
tributes   of  the   Personal   God — the  Fundamental  Relation  of 


52  BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 

God  to  the  World — Refutation  of  Pantheism — Doctrine  of  Cre- 
ation— the  Divine  Intellect  and  Will — the  Omnipotence  of  God 
— the  Metaphysical  Essence  of  God — Divine  Preservation  and 
Concurrence — Divine  Providence  and  its  Relation  to  Existing 
Evil — Possibility  of  a  Supernatural  Providence. 

5  hours. 

Generl  Ethics:  Happiness — Human  Acts  —  Passions 
— Habits  and  Virtues — Origin  of  Moral  Obligation — the  Eternal 
Law — the  Natural  Law  of  Conscience — the  Sanction  of  the 
Natural  Law — Hedonism  and  Utilitarianism. 

Special  Ethics  :  The  Philosophy  of  Religion — Individ- 
ual Rights  and  Duties — Suicide — Duelling — Charity  and  Justice 
— Freedom  of  Conscience — Right  of  Self-Defence — Ownership 
— Socialism — Society,  in  General — the  Family — Marriage — 
Emancipation  of  Woman — Parental  Right — Slavery — the  State 
— Origin  of  the  State— False  Views  of  Hobbes  and  Rousseau — 
Constitution  of  the  State — Powers  and  Rights  of  the  State — 
Church  and  State — the  School  Question — Liberty  of  the  Press — 
International  Law — Intervention — Treaties — Concordats — War. 

5  hours. 

The  course  in  Philosophy  includes  the  lectures  by  the  Professor,  the 
oral  repetition  of  each  lecture  by  the  students,  dissertations,  and  oral  dis- 
cussions by  the  students  in  the  Philosophical  Academy. 

POLITICAL   ECONOMY. 

First  Term.  Aim  and  Scope  of  Political  Economy — General  History  of 
Economics — Tenets  of  the  Leading  Economic  Schools — Vari- 
ous Definitions  of  Wealth,  Value,  Price — the  Factors  of  Pro- 
duction, Natural  Resources,  Labor,  Capital — Industrial  Organi- 
zation—  Industrial  Progress  —  Influence  of  Locality  and  of 
Dimensions — Theories  and  Particulars  of  Consumption. 

Exchange — Home  Trade — Market  Prices — Non-Market  Prices 
— International  Trade — Monometallism  and  Bimetallism — Com- 
mercial Credit — Free  Trade  and  Protection — Population  and 
Production — Malthusianism— Population  and  Consumption. 

2  hours. 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-190S.  53 

Second  Term.  The  Distribution  of  Wealth — Real  and  Nominal  Profits — 
Rents — Wages — Rich  and  Poor — Various  Proposals  by  Com- 
munists, Socialists,  Anarchists,  for  the  Division  of  Wealth — 
Rights  of  Property — Various  Social  Relations — Needed  Re- 
forms— Revenue  and  expenditure  of  Government — Taxation — 
Public  Debts — Wider  Aspects  of  Economic  Study  —  Modern 
Illusions. 

2  hours. 


HISTORY    OF    PHILOSOPHY. 

First  Term.  Oriental  Philosophy:  the  Sacred  Books  of  the  Chinese — 
the  Vedas  and  the  Other  Productions  of  Indian  Literature— the 
Philosophy  of  Mimansa  and  Vedanta,  of  Sankhya  and  Yoga,  of 
Nyaya  and  Vaiseshika — Philosophical  Theories  of  Egypt  and 
of  Western  Asia. 

Greek  Philosophy :  the  Ionic  School — the  Pythagoreans — 
the  Eleatics — the  Sophists — Socrates  and  the  Socratic  Schools 
— Plato — Aristotle — the  Epicureans — the  Stoics — the  Sceptics — 
the  Syncretists  and  Roman  Philosophy. 

Christian  Philosophy  :  the  Gnostics — the  Neo-Platonists — 
the  Fathers  of  the  Church. 

Scholastic  Philosophy  :  Boethius — St.  John  of  Damascus — 
Erigena— St.  Anselm — Abelard — the  Dispute  about  the  Uni- 
versals — Avicenna — Averoes — Alexander  of  Hales — St.  Bon- 
aventure  —  Albertus  Magnus  —  St.  Thomas  Aquinas  —  Roger 
Bacon — Duns  Scotus — Raymundus  Lullis — William  of  Occam — 
Peter  d'Ailly — Tauler — Gerson — Nicholas  of  Cusa— the  Mystics 
— the  Revival  of  Plantonism,  of  Aristotelianism,  of  Atomism — 
the  Secular  Philosophers — the  Political  Philosophers. 

2  hours. 

Second  Term.  Modern  Philosophy :  Descartes  and  His  Followers  — 
Malebranche  —  Spinoza — Bayle  —  Cudworih — Locke  —  Hume — 
Condillac — Helvetius — Voltaire— the  Encyclopaedists — Leibnitz 
— Wolff — Berkeley— Rousseau— the  Scottish  School — the  Tran- 
scendentalists  :  Kant,  Fichte,  Schelling,  and  their  Schools  of 
Thought — Herbart  and  Schopenhauer — Krause  and  Hegel — the 


54  BOSTON    COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 

Neo-Kantians — Von   Hartmann — Trendelenburg  —  Lotze — Cur- 
rent Philosophical  Theories — Neo-Scholastics — Thomistic  Phi- 
losophy under  Leo  XIII. 
2  hours. 

PHYSIOLOGICAL   PSYCHOLOGY. 

First  Term.  The  Anatomy  and  Physiology  of  the  Central  Nervous  Sys- 
tem— Anatomy  and  Physiology  of  the  End  Organs  of  the  Ner- 
vous System — the  Localization  of  Cerebral  Function. 

Correlation  of  the  Nervous  Mechanism  and   Mental  Condi- 
tions and  Actions^Hypnotism. 
2  hours. 
This  elementary  course   is   intended   only  as   an   aid   to   the  study  of 
Rational  Psychology. 


Second  Term.     2  hours. 


GEOLOGY. 


ENGLISH. 


Weekly  essays. 


CHRISTIAN   DOCTRINE. 


First  Term.  Review,  with  fuller  treatment — Revelation,  Natural  and 
Supernatural — the  Institution,  End,  Constitution  and  Marks  of 
the  Church — the  Teaching  Office  of  the  Church — Scripture  and 
Tradition — the  Existence,  Nature  and  Attributes  of  God — the 
Creation  of  the  World  and  of  Man — the  Fall  of  Man. 
1  hour. 

Second  Term.     The  Redeemer  and  Work  of  the  Redemption — Grace — 
the  Nature  and  Efficacy  of  the  Sacraments — Eschatology  (Wil- 
mers). 
1  hour. 

ELOCUTION. 

Both  Terms.     1  hour. 


BOSTON    COLLEGE,    1907-1908.  55 

ELECTIVE   COURSES. 

Two  hours  a  week  must  be  devoted  to  one  or  more  of  the  following; 
subjects  : 

Pedagogy. 

Principles  of  Law. 

History. 

English  Literature. 

Descriptive  Geometry  and  Mechanical  Drawing. 

Biology. 

Laboratory  Physics. 

Organic  Chemistry  :  The  Course  in  Organic  Chemistry  has 
been  adapted  particularly  to  the  requirements  of  those  who 
propose  to  pursue  the  study  of  medicine  afterwards,  or  enter 
technical  schools.  It  will  consist  of  lectures  and  recitations  in 
which  a  standard  textbook  will  be  followed,  in  conjunction 
with  a  laboratory  course  of  experimental  work.  In  the  selec- 
tion of  experiments  for  this  course,  particular  attention  has  been 
paid  to  compounds  used  in  the  industries  and  domestic  life. 
The  course,  which  treats  first  of  the  purification  and  elementary 
analysis  of  compounds,  includes  the  hydro-carbons  of  the  marsh- 
gas  series,  alcohols,  aldehydes,  haloid  derivatives,  acids,  ethers, 
carbohydrates,  amines  and  amides,  together  with  the  proteins 
and  alkaloids.  Opportunity  will  be  given  to  those  who  desire 
it  for  extra  work  in  the  laboratory. 

2  hours  a  week. 


Commencement   Exercises. 


Baccalaureate  Services  were  held  in  the  Church  of  the  Im- 
maculate Conception,  Sunday,  June  16,  1907.  at  7.30  p.  M.  The' 
Vespers  were  sung  under  the  direction  of  Mr.  George  Whiting, 
organist.  The  Celebrant  was  Rev.  Thomas  I.  Gasson,  S.  J.  Rev, 
Thomas  F.  Brannan,  '85,  preached  the  Baccalaureate  sermon. 


Graduation    Exercises. 


Wednesday  Evening,  June  19,  1907, 
In  Boston  College  Hall. 


To-Day 's  Ethical  Principles  in  Economic  Questions 

Daniel  Michael  Lyons 
To-Day's  Ethical  Principles  in  Politics  and  Public  Life 

David  Vincent  Fitzgerald 
To-Day's  Ethical  Principles  in  Social  Questions 

William  Joseph  Wheatley 
The  Tr'ue  Principles       ....       Edward  James  Hurley 
Address  to  the  Graduates 
Hon.  Michael  Joseph  Murray 


The  Degree  of  Master  of  Arts  was  conferred  on  :  — 
JAMES   PETER  WARREN,    A.  B.,  '96 


The  Degree  of  Bachelor  of  Arts  was  conferred  on  :  — 
JOSEPH   KENNA   BURNS 

WILLIAM  JAMES    CARR 

VALENTINE   ALBERT   COLLINS 

ANDREW   NICHOLAS   DORR 

DAVID  VINCENT   FITZGERALD 
NICHOLAS  JOSEPH  FLATLEY 
JOHN   PATRICK    GRADY 

EDWARD  JAMES   HURLEY 

FRANCIS    ELLIS   KELLY 

DANIEL   MICHAEL   LYONS 
HENRY  JEREMIAH    McGUINESS 
JOHN  JOSEPH    MURRAY 

JOSEPH   DENIS   SULLIVAN 

JAMES   EDWARD   SUPPLE 

WILLIAM  JOSEPH   WHEATLEY 
DAVID   LAWRENCE   WILLIAMS,   M.  D.,  Tufts,  1906. 


Award  of  Prizes  for  the  Year  1906-1907. 

Awarded  June  19,  1907. 


SENIOR    YEAR. 

In  the  Classes  of  Psychology  and  Natural  Theology. 

The  Gold  Medal,  the  gift  of  Most 

Rev.     William     H.     O'Connell, 

D.  D.,  Coadjutor  Archbishop  of 

Boston,  Mass.,  was  awarded  to    .     Daniel  M.  Lyons 
The  premium  was  awarded  to    .     .     David  V.  Fitzgerald 
Worthy  of  Honorable  Mention  .     .     Edward  J.  Hurley 

James  W.  Carr 


I71  the  Classes  of  Ethics,  Political  Economy  and  History  of 

Philosophy . 

The  Gold   Medal,  the   gift  of  the 

Class  of  '72,  was  awarded  to    .     .  Daniel  M.  Lyons 

The  Premium  was  awarded  to    .     .  David  V.  Fitzgerald 

Worthy  of  Honorable  Mention  .     .  Edward  J.  Hurley 


In  the  Class  of  Calculus. 

The  prize  was  awarded  to       ...     James  W.  Carr 
Worthy  of  Honorable  Mention  .     .     Nicholas  J.  Flatley 

Daniel  M.  Lyons 
John  P.  Grady 
Joseph  K.  Burns 
Valentine  A.  Collins 


In  the  Class  of  Foundations  of  Positive  and  Commercial 

Law. 
The  prize  was  awarded  to       ...     David  V.  Fitzgerald 


BOSTON    COLLEGE,    1907-190S. 


59 


JUNIOR   YEAR. 

In  the  Classes  of  Logic  and  Metaphysics. 

The  Gold  Medal  was  awarded  to    .     Charles  B.  Rose 
The  Premium  was  awarded  to    .     .     John  J.  McMahon 
Worthy  of  Honorable  Mention  .     .     Edward  J.  Looby 

Michael  J.  O'Keefe 
Walter  A.  Quinlan 
Francis  J.  Garrick 
Thomas  W.  Hopkins 
Henry  T.  Powers 


In  the  Class  of  Literature. 


The  Gold  Medal  was  awarded  to 
The  Premium  was  awarded  to  . 
Worthy  of  Honorable  Mention  . 


Joseph  F.  O'Sullivan 
Charles  B.  Rose 
Edward  J.  Looby 
Thomas  W.  Hopkins 
Henry  T.  Powers 
Patrick  L.  Cody 
James  F.  Savage 
Edward  D.  O'Bryan 
Michael  J.  O'Keefe 
John  T.  O'Hare 
John  J.  McMahon 


In  the  Class  of  Physics. 


The  Gold  Medal  was  awarded  to 
The  Premium  was  awarded  to  . 
Worthy  of  Honorable  Mention  . 


Charles  B.  Rose 
Henry  T.  Powers 
Thomas  W.  Hopkins 
Edward  J.  Looby 
Edward  D.  O'Bryan 
Thomas  J.  Murphy 
Denis  A.  O'Brien 


6o 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 


In  the  Class  of  Analytical  Chemistry . 


The  First  Prize  was  awarded  to 
The  Second  Prize  was  awarded  to 
Worthy  of  Honorable  Mention  . 


Edward  J.  Looby 
Michael  J.  O'Keefe 
Edward  D.  O'Bryan 
Henry  T.  Powers 
Joseph  F.  Bonner 
John  J.  McMahon 


In  the  Class  of  History. 

The  First  Prize  was  awarded  to      .     Henry  T.  Powers 

The  Second  Prize  was  awarded  ex 

csquo  to John  H.  Cleary 

Joseph  F.  O'Sullivan 

Worthy  of  Honorable  Mention  .     .     Charles  B.  Rose 

Thomas  W.  Hopkins 
Edward  D.  O'Bryan 
Francis  J.  Garrick 
James  F.  Savage 
Patrick  L.  Cody 
John  J.  McMahon 
Thomas  E.  Mahoney 


SOPHOMORE   YEAR. 
hi  the  Classes  of  Latiji,  Greek  and  English  Literature. 


The  Gold  Medal  was  awarded  to 
The  Premium  was  awarded  to  . 
Worthy  of  Honorable  Mention  . 


Francis  J.  Connell 
John  J.  Flynn 
Bernard  S.  O'Kane 
Eugene  H.  Dorr 
Gerald  Shaughnessy 
Andrew  J.  White,  Jr. 
George  A.  Murray 
Daniel  D.  Donovan 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908 


61 


In  the  Classes  of  Astronomy  and  Mechanics. 


The  First  Prize  was  awarded  to 
The  second  Prize  was  awarded  ex 

csquo  to 

Worthy  of  Honorable  Mention  .     . 


Frank  J.  Connell 
George  A.  Murray- 
Bernard  S.  O'Kane 
Gerald  Shaughnessy 
John  J.  Flynn 
John  C.  0"Connell 
Eugene  H.  Dorr 
Andrew  J.  White,  Jr. 


In  the  Class  of  Geiieral  Chemistry . 


The  First  Prize  was  awarded  to 
The  Second  Prize  was  awarded  to 
Worthy  of  Honorable  Mention  . 


George  A.  Murray 
Francis  J.  Connell 
Bernard  S.  O'Kane 
Myles  J.  McSweeney 
John  J.  Flynn 
Eugene  H.  Dorr 
Gerald  Shaughnessy 
Andrew  J.  White,  Jr. 


In  the  Class  of  History. 

The   First  Prize  was  awarded  ex  j  Francis  J.  Connell 
&quo  to <  Bernard  S.  O'Kane 

Worthy  of  Honorable  Mention  .     .     George  A.  Murray 

Gerald  Shaughnessy 
Eugene  H.  Dorr 
John  C.  O'Connell 
Andrew  J.  White,  Jr. 
Henry  J.  McSherry 
John  J.  Flynn 
Francis  C.  Smith 


62  BOSTON    COLLEGE,    1907-1908. 

FRESHMAN   YEAR,    SECTION   A. 
In  the  Classes  oj  Latin,  Greek  and  English  Literature. 

The  Gold  Medal  was  awarded  ex  j  John  E.  Doherty 

cequo  to I  Louis  F.  Kelleher 

The  Premium  was  awarded  to    .     .     Louis  A.  White 
Worthy  of  Honorable  Mention  .     .     Leo  F.  Supple 

Patrick  J.  O'Connell 


FRESHMAN   YEAR,    SECTION   B. 
In  the  Classes  of  Lati?t,  Greek  and  English  Literature. 

The  Gold  Medal  was  awarded  to    .     Charles  E.  Mansfield 
Worthy  of  Honorable  Mention  .     .     William  F.  McHale 

William  F.  Mack 


In  the  Classes  of  Trigonometry  and  Analytical  Geometry. 

Section  A. 

The  First  Prize  was  awarded  to       .     John  E.  Doherty 
The  Second  Prize  was  awarded  to  .     Louis  F.  Kelleher 
Worthy  of  Honorable  Mention  .     .     Leo  F.  Supple 


In  the  Classes  of  Trigonometry  and  Analytical  Geometry. 

Section  B . 

The  First  Prize  was  awarded  to  .  William  F.  McHale 
The  Second  Prize  was  awarded  to  .  Joseph  A.  Manning 
Worthy  of  Honorable  Mention  .     .     Charles  E.  Mansfield 

Edward  T.  Ryan 
Charles  A.  Birmingham 
William  F.  Mack 
Raymond  H.  Young 


The  First  Prize  was  awarded  to 
The  Second  Prize  was  awarded  to 
Worthy  of  Honorable  Mention  . 


BOSTON    COLLEGE,     1907-190S. 

In  the  Class  of  History. 

John  K.  Doherty 


63 


William  F.  McHale 
Louis  F.  Kelleher 
William  F.  Mack 
Leo  F.  Supple 
Stephen  J.  Chamberlin 


In  the  Class  of  German. 


The  First  Prize  was  awarded  to 
The  Second  Prize  was  awarded  to 
Worthyjof  Honorable  Mention  . 


Aloysius  B.  Langguth 
William  F.  McHale 
Frederick  J.  Mulrey 
Leo  F.  Supple 
Joseph  E.  Lynch 
Charles  E.  Mansfield 
Louis  A.  White 
George  H.  Pearce 
Daniel  H.  Sullivan,  Jr. 
Alphonse  J.  Peter 


In  the  Class  of  French. 


Worthy  of  Honorable  Mention 


John  E.  Doherty 
William  F.  Mack 
Cornelius  T.  O'Brien 


In  the  Class  of  Spanish. 
The  Prize  was  awarded  to      .     .     .     Edward  J.  Looby 


Special    Competition    Prizes. 


In  Christian  Doctrine,  in  Course  A,  including  the  Senior  and  Junior 
Classes,  a  prize  of  fifty  dollars  in  gold,  founded  by  the  late  Denis  H. 
Tully  for  the  best  paper  on  "The  Canon  of  the  Sacred  Scriptures,"  was 
awarded  to  David  V.  Fitzgerald.  The  second  prize  of  twenty-five  dollars 
in  gold  was  awarded  to  Joseph  D.  Sullivan. 


In  Christian  Doctrine,  in  Course  B,  including  the  Sophomore  and 
Freshman  Classes,  a  prize  of  twenty-five  dollars  in  gold,  founded  by  the 
late  Denis  H.  Tully,  for  the  best  paper  on  "  Christ,  the  Redeemer,"  was 
awarded  to  Francis  J.  Connell.  The  second  prize  of  fifteen  dollars  in  gold 
was  awarded  to  John  E.  Doherty. 


The  Alumni  prize  of  fifty  dollars  in  gold,  the  gift  of  the  Alumni  Asso- 
ciation of  Boston  College,  for^the  best  essay  on  "The  Concordat  and  the 
Religious  Crisis  in  France,"  was  awarded  to  John  C.  O'Connell. 


A  purse  of  fifty  dollars  in  gold,  the  gift  of  Hon.  Joseph  H.  O'Connell, 
of  the  Class  of  '93,  for  the  best  historical  essay  on  "The  Influence  of  the 
Irish  in  the  American  Revolution,"  was  awarded  to  John  J.  Savage. 


A  purse  of  twenty-five  dollars  in  gold,  the  gift  of  the  Class  of  '97,  for  the 
best  student  essay  contributed  to  the  Boston  College  Stylus  during  the 
past  year,  was  awarded  to  Denis  A.  O'Brien. 


A  prize  of  twenty-five  dollars  in  gold,  the  gift  of  the  Class  of  '80,  for  the 
best  scientific  and  literary  essay  on  "Earthquakes,"  was  awarded  to 
Francis  J.  Connell. 

In  the  Oratorical  Contest,  a  purse  of  fifty  dollars,  the  gift  of  a  friend, 
for  the  best  written  and  spoken  oration,  was  awarded  to  Edward  J. 
Hurley. 


Acknowledgments. 


The  Mary  G.  Keefe  Scholarship  (in  addition  to  former  be- 
quest)  


Form    of  Bequest. 


I  give  and  bequeath  unto  the  Trustees  of  the  Boston  College,  in 
Boston,  a  corporation  duly  incorporated  under  the  laws  of  the 
Commonwealth  of  Massachusetts,  the  sum  of dollars. 


Officers   of  the    Alumni   Association. 

{Elected  in  June,  1907.) 


President 
John  F.  O'Brien,  M.  D.,  'I 


First  Vice-President 
Rev.  Michael  J.  Scanlan,  '95 

Treasurer 
Dr.  Timothy  J.  Murphy,  '88 


Second  Vice-President 
Rev.  Francis  R.  Mullin,  1900 

Secretary 
Francis  J.  Carney,  '98 


Historian 
Michael  Glennon,  M.  D.,  '77 

Executive  Committee 


Rev.  John  F.  Cummins,  '72 
Rev.  John  F.  Broderick,  '77 
Hon.  Richard  Sullivan,  '78 
Rev.  Joseph  A.  Fitzgerald,  '79 
Rev.  Francis  J.  Butler,  '80 
Thomas  P.  Flanagan,  '81 
Rev.  Joseph  V.  Tracy,  '82 
Hugh  J.  Molloy,  '83 
Eugene  A.  McCarthy,  M.  D.,  ' 
Rev.  Patrick  J.  Supple,  D.  D., 
Francis  J.  Keleher,  M.  1).,  '86 
Rev.  Joseph  J.  Dermody,  '87 
John  A.  Brett,  '88 
Rev.  Thomas  F.  McCarthy,  '8< 
John  D.  DrumJ  '90 
Joseph  C.  Pelletier,  '91 


84 
'85 


John  A.  Coulthurst,  '92 
Edward  A.  Facey,  '93 
James  A.  Dorsey,  '94 
Rev.  Thomas  J.  Golding,  '95 
Charles  J.  Martell,  '96 
Rev.  Albert  C.  Mullin,  '97 
Rev.  Maurice  F.  Flynn,  '98 
Eugene  J.  Feeley,  '99 
Rev.  William  B.  Finigan,  [900 
Rev.  Edward  F.  Ryan,  '01 
Edward  J.  Fegan,  '02 
Thomas  E.  Kelley,  '03 
William  T.  Miller,  '04 
Daniel  J.  O'Hern,  '05 
John  B.  Godvin,  '06 
Andrew  N.  Dorr,  '07 


Graduates   of  Boston    College. 


CLASS   LIST. 
1872 

CUMMINS,  REV.  JOHN  F.,  A.  B.  Holy  Cross,  72,  A.  M.  79. 

Pastor   Roslindale,   Mass. 

DUNN,    DR.    WILLIAM    A.,  M.D.  Harvard,  75.     A.B.  77, 

A.  M.  79.     Physician  Boston,  Mass. 

Mclaughlin,  edward  a.,  a.b,,  Loyola,  72,  am.  77, 

LL.B.  Boston  Univ.,  77.    Lawyer  Boston,  Mass. 

tMURPHY,  JAMES  R.,  A.  B.  Georgetown,  72,  A.  M.  Loyola, 

72,  LL.B.  Boston  Univ.,  76.    Lawyer  Boston,  Mass. 

tOTOOLE,  REV.  LAWRENCE  J.,  A.B.   Georgetown,  72, 

Pastor    West  Newton,   Mass. 

TOWLE,    DR.    HENRY    C,  A.B.  77,  M.D.   Univ.  City  of 

N.   Y.,  77,  A.  M.  79.     Physician Boston,   Mass. 


iS77 

BRODERICK,   REV.  JOHN  F.,  A.M.  79.  Pastor      West  Roxbury,  Mass. 
CALLANAN,    REV.    PATRICK   H.,  A.M.  79.     Pastor, 

Newton  Lower  Falls,  Mass. 
*COLLINS,   REV.   DANIEL  J.,  A.M.  79.  Priest,  died  Feb.  15,  1897. 
DONOVAN,    REV.    JOHN    M.,  S.T.B.  Laval,  79,  A.M.  95. 

Pastor    Ipswich,    Mass. 

*GALLIGAN,    REV.   JOHN,  A.M.  79.  Priest,  died  July  31,  1898. 
GLENNON,   DR.   MICHAEL,  M.D.  Bellevue,  83.  Physician, 

Stoughton,  Mass. 
*HART,    STEPHEN   J.    Died  August,  1877. 

*   Deceased. 

f  Course  completed  at  Boston   College.      Degree  A.  B.  given  by  Georgetown  College  in 
the  name  of  Boston  College. 


68  BOSTON    COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 

MACDONALD,    DR.    WILLIAM    G.,   M.D.  Harvard,  85. 

A.  M.   92.     Physician    Boston,    Mass. 

MILLERICK,  REV.  WILLIAM  J.,  A.  M.  79.     Pastor    Stoneham,  Mass. 
WALSH,   REV.   NICHOLAS  R.,  A.M.  79-  Pastor 

Beverly  Farms,  Mass. 

1878 

♦BYRNES,    REV.    EDWARD    P.    Priest,  died  Jan.  5,  1890. 
COGHLAN,  REV.  THOMAS  I.,  A.M.  81.  Pastor  .East  Pepperell,  Mass. 
GALLAGHER,   REV.  JOHN   M.,  A.M.  81.    Pastor  No.  Andover,  Mass. 
♦HARRIGAN,   CORNELIUS  J.  Eccles.  stud.,  died  Jan.  14,  1881. 
HOYNES,    EDWARD    F.,   A.M.   79,   LL.B.  Boston   Univ., 

82.  Business   Boston,  Mass. 

♦KELLY,   DR.   WILLIAM   P.,  M.  D.    Harvard,  78.    Physi- 
cian, died  April  9,  1882. 

*LAMB,   JOHN   B.    Scholastic,  Society  of  Jesus,  died  July  3,  1891. 
LYONS,    DR.    HERBERT   H.,  M.D.  Harvard,  81,  A.M.  95. 

Physician Fitchburg,  Mass. 

SULLIVAN,    HON.    RICHARD,  A.M.  81,  LL.B.     Boston 

Univ.,  83.    Lawyer Boston,  Mass. 

TALBOT,   REV.   JAMES   E,  A.M,  80,  S.T.D.  Propaganda, 

83.  Priest    Boston,    Mass. 

tHERRMANN,  JAMES,  S.  B.  Santa  Clara,  76,  LL.B.    Har- 
vard, 78.    Lawyer   San  Francisco,  Cal. 

1879 

ALLISON,    REV.    JAMES    W.     Pastor    East  Weymouth,   Mass. 

FITZGERALD,  REV.  JOSEPH  A.    Pastor East  Boston,  Mass. 

GLENNEN,   REV.   CHARLES   F.,  A.M.    80.    Priest    Somerville,  Mass. 
♦HARRINGTON,    JOHN    F. 

♦KELLY,    REV.    MARTIN    F.     Priest,  died  Sept.  25,  1888. 
♦KEYES,   REV.   JOSEPH   E.   Priest;  died  Feb.  8,  1903. 
♦MANAHAN,  JAMES   S.,  A.M.  80.    Journalist,  died  Jan.  5,  1890. 

*McMANUS,    REV.    PATRICK    B.     Pastor  South  Natick,  Mass 

MURPHY,   DANIEL   A. 

*  Deceased. 

*  Master  of  Arts. 


BOSTON    COLLEGE,    1907-1908.  69 

RILEY,    REV.    DANIEL.     Pastor Walpole,   Mass. 

RIORDAN,   REV.  DANIEL  C,  A.M.  81.    Pastor  . . .  Middleboro,  Mass. 
♦SHANNON,   REV.  JAMES   W.    Subdeacon,  died  Sept.  15,  1882. 
SULLIVAN,    REV.   HENRY   A.    Pastor  Danvers,  Mass. 

1880 

BARRY,   REV.   GARRETT  J.     Pastor Foxboro,  Mass. 

BURNS,    EDWARD    F.    Journalist   Boston,   Mass. 

BUTLER,    REV.    FRANCIS    J.     Pastor    Dorchester,    Mass. 

CROWE,   REV.  JOHN  A.    Pastor Cambridge,  Mass. 

DOODY,    REV.    MICHAEL    J.     Pastor    Cambridgeport,   Mass. 

GILFETHER,    REV.    JAMES    F.     Pastor  West  Lynn,  Mass. 

KELLEHER,    REV.    JOHN    F.      Pastor    Brockton,    Mass. 

KELLY,   JOHN    W.    Journalist  Boston.  Mass. 

KENNEDY,    DANIEL    F.     Clerk,  P.  O Cambridge,  Mass. 

LAMB,   EDWARD    P.    Scholastic,  Society  of  Jesus  ....Baltimore,  Md. 
*MAHONEY,  REV.  THOMAS  J.    Priest,  died  Aug.  19,  1903. 

MCCARTHY,   REV.   JOHN   W.    Pastor  No.  Attleboro,  Mass. 

MERRITT,  REV.  NATHANIEL  J.,  A.M.  81.  Pastor  W.  Medford,  Mass. 

MORI  ARTY,     REV.    DANIEL    W.      Pastor    Jackson,    Neb. 

O'KEEFE,    REV.   ARTHUR   C.     Pastor .Taftville,  Conn. 

O'REILLY,  DR.  WILLIAM  J.,  M.D.  Bellevue,  83,  A.M.  95. 

Physician   Roxbury,  Mass 

*SULLIVAN,  REV.  JOHN  W.,  A.M.  81.    Priest,  died  April  20,  1893. 

1881 

*BUCKLEY,    DENNIS.     Died  Aug.,  1881. 

DALEY,    REV.    JOHN    A.    Pastor  Ashmont,  Mass. 

DAW,   REV.   JOHN   C.  Pastor  Illiopolis,  111. 

FLANNAGAN,   THOMAS    P.    Business  Boston,  Mass. 

*FLYNN,    HON.    EDWARD    J.,  LL.B.  Boston   Univ.,  84, 

A.M.  84.    Lawyer,  died  Feb.  18,  1903. 
♦FORD,    REV.    JOHN    F.    Priest,  died  March  19,  1903. 

GRIFFIN,  REV.  JOHN  H.    Pastor Winthrop,  Mass. 

*HEALEY,   REV.   TIMOTHY  J.    Priest,  died  Dec.  13,  1894. 

*   Deceased 


70  BOSTON    COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 

*LALLY,    REV.   JOHN   J.     Priest. 
*LONG,    MICHAEL   J.    Died  Feb.  22,  1882. 
*LYNCH,   REV.   JOHN   T.    Priest,  died  Oct.  1,  1896. 

MACHUGH,   JAMES    B.     Stenographer,  City  Hall Boston,  Mass. 

O'CONNELL,  MOST  REV.  WILLIAM  H.,  D.  D. 

Archbishop   of   Boston 
*0"CONNOR,  REV.   CHARLES  A.     Priest,  died,  1907. 
*QUIRK,    REV.    WILLIAM   J.     Priest,  died  April  24,  1887. 

1882 

BALL,     DR.     T.     JOSEPH,     M.D.  Harvard,    87,    A.M.    88. 

Physician Chelsea,  Mass. 

CAHALAN,    REV.   JOHN    J.     Pastor New  Straitsville,  Ohio 

CALLANAN,    DR.    SAMSON   A.,  A.M.  83,  M.D.  Harvard, 

86.      Physician    ■. Hoxbury,    Mass. 

FEGAN,   REV.   EDWARD  J.     Pastor    - .  .Rockland,  Mass. 

FITZGERALD,    REV.    EDWARD    S.     Pastor    Owensboro,    Ky. 

GARTLAND,   PETER   F,  A.M.  92.    Junior  Master,  English 

High  School  1 Boston,  Mass. 

*KELLY,    REV.    HUGH    B.     Priest,  died  Dec.  8,  1901. 

LEE,    REV.    DENIS    F.     Pastor   Reading,  Mass. 

Mclaughlin,   dr.   Joseph   l,  m.d.    Harvard,  90, 

A.M.  93.     Physician   Boston,  Mass. 

MCLAUGHLIN,    REV.    THOMAS    H.     Pastor    Adams,   Mass. 

MOORE,    REV.    JOHN    J.     Priest   Philadelphia,  Pa. 

O'CONNELL,    JOHN    J.,    LL.B.     Boston  Univ.,  85.     Clerk 

Washington,  D.  C. 
O'DONNELL,    DR.     FRANCIS     M.,     M.D.   Harvard,   87, 

A.M.   88.     Physician    Newtonville,   Mass. 

POWERS,  REV.  WILLIAM  F.     Pastor  .  .Manchester-by-the-Sea,  Mass. 
RAFTER,    AUGUSTINE   L.,  A.M.  92.     Supervisor,  Boston 

Schools    Boston,   Mass. 

*REARDON,    REV.    DANIEL    H.     Priest,  died  Mar.  23,  1895. 
TRACEY,    REV.    JOSEPH    V.,  D.D.     St.  Mary's  Sem.,  98. 

Pastor    Brighton,  Mass. 

WELCH,   REV.    MICHAEL   J.     Priest  Somerville,  Mass. 

*   Deceased. 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908.  71 

1883 

BARRETT,   REV.  JAMES   A.     Priest   Revere,  Mass. 

*CLEXTON,   REV.    EDWARD   E.    Priest,  died  Jan.  9,  1897. 

CORKERY,   CORNELIUS   S. 

*KIELY,    REV.    MICHAEL    C.     Priest,  died  1900. 

MAHONEY,    THOMAS    F.     Teacher. 

MAHONEY,    REV.    TIMOTHY    J.     Priest  .South  Boston,  Mass. 

MOLLOY,    HUGH    J.,  A.M.  St.  Francis  Xavier,  84.     Pro- 
fessor, State  Normal  School   Lowell,  Mass. 

MONGAN,    DR.    CHARLES    E.,    M.D.    Harvard,  92,  A.M. 
95.     Physician  Somerville,  Mass. 

*MURPHY,   REV.   MICHAEL  F.    Priest,  died  Feb.  12,  1896. 

SHAY,   DR.   THOMAS   M.,  M.D.    Harvard,  89.     Physician, 

Roxbury,  Mass. 

*  SHERIDAN,  DR.   OLIVER   M.,  M.D.    Univ.  City  of  N.  Y '., 
87,  A.M.  92.     Physician,  died  Feb.  2,  1907. 

SMITH,   DR.   DANIEL   P.,  M.D.    Bellevue,  87.     Physician 

Forest   Hills,  Mass. 

WALSH,   REV.   HENRY   A.    Priest Woburn,  Mass. 

1884 

AYLWARD,   JAMES    F.,   A.M.,  92.     Lawyer  Cambridge,  Mass. 

BARNES,   DR.   FRANCIS   J.,  M.D.    Harvard,  88,  A.M.  92. 

Physician   Cambridge,  Mass. 

BRENNAN,    GEORGE   H.    Theatrical  manager  New  York,  N.  Y. 

BROWNE,    REV.    WALTER    J.     Priest   ...South  Boston,  Mass. 

CARROLL,    CHARLES    V.     Business Boston,  Mass. 

COAKLEY,    TIMOTHY    W.,  A.M.  92.     Lawyer  Boston,  Mass. 

COAN,    REV.    JOHN    J.     Pastor Quincy,  Mass. 

COLMAN,  REV.  PATRICK.     Pastor Swampscott,  Mass. 

CUNNINGHAM,  REV.   FRANCIS  A.,  A.M.  85.  Priest    Belmont,  Mass. 
FARLEY,    PHILIP    J.,  LL.B.     Boston  Univ.,  87,  A.M.  92. 

Lawyer    Lowell,    Mass. 

FINN,   MICHAEL  J.    Business  Columbus,  Ohio 

*GARRITY,   REV.   JOHN   J.    Priest,  died  March  3,  1904. 
HOLLAND,    REV.    TIMOTHY    J.     Pastor   Maplewood,  Mass. 

*   Deceased. 


72  BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 

LEARY,    DR.    JOHN    H.,   M.D.      Bellevue,  87,    A.M.    95. 

Physician  Fall  River,  Mass. 

MCCARTHY,  DR.   EUGENE  A.,  M.D.    Harvard,  87,  A.M. 

92.    Physician  Cambridge,  Mass. 

1885 

BRANNAN,    REV.    THOMAS    F.     Priest  South  Boston,  Mass. 

*DOWNEY,   REV.   JOHN   J.    Priest,  died  Sept.  21,  1905. 
FLAHERTY,    REV.    MATTHEW   J.     Priest,  Lecturer,  St. 

John's  Seminary  Brighton,  Mass. 

FOLEY,   JEREMIAH   G.,  LL.B.    Boston  Univ.,  91,  A.M.  93. 

Lawyer. 

GRADY,    REV.    HENRY    T.     Priest  Chelsea,  Mass. 

GRAHAM,  REV.  JOHN  J.     Priest. 

Supervisor  of  Diocesan  Schools    Haverhill,  Mass. 

HARRIS,  REV.  RICHARD  F.,  A.M.  93.    Pastor. .  .McMechen,  W.  Va. 
*HAYES,  HON.  JAMES  E.,  A.M.  93.    Lawyer,  died  Feb.  8,  1898. 
*HICKEY,  MAURICE  F.     Died  June  23,  1905. 

HURLEY,    THOMAS   J.,  A.M.  87.     Clerk,  City  Hall  ....Boston,  Mass. 
LYONS,   REV.   GEORGE  A.     Priest 

Supervisor    of    Diocesan    Schools    Boston,  Mass. 

LYONS,    REV.    JEREMIAH    J.     Priest   Maiden,  Mass. 

*McGUIGAN,   REV   JAMES    P.    Priest,  died  Dec.  27,  1905. 
MURPHY,    REV.  ' DANIEL    M.     Priest,  Chaplain   ....Roxbury,  Mass. 

RYAN,    REV.    JOHN    J.    Pastor    Cambridge,   Mass. 

SCANNELL,    REV.    DANIEL    P.     Pastor   Franklin7  Mass. 

SULLIVAN,    REV.    JOHN    P.     Priest  Marlboro,  Mass. 

SUPPLE,    REV    PATRICK    J.,    S.T.D.     Propaganda,  90. 

Priest    Cambridge,   Mass. 

WINN,    DR.    CHARLES    H.,  A.M.  87,  M.D.  Harvard,  88. 

Physician   Roxbury,  Mass. 

1886. 
♦CASEY,   REV.    PATRICK  J.    Deacon,  died  Mar.  3,  1891. 

CORBETT,   REV.  MARTIN  J.     Pastor    Westfield,   N.   Y. 

DORNEY,   JAMES    W. 

HOPWOOD,    JOHN    H.,   A.M.  91.     Lawyer   Boston,  Mass. 

*    Deceased. 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-190S.  73 

KELEHER,  DR.  FRANCIS  J.,  M.D.  Harvard,  90,  A.M.  90. 

Physician    , Boston,    Mass. 

KELLEHER,    REV.   JOHN    B.    Priest,  Society  of  Jesus 

Washington,  D.  C. 
♦McGRATH,   REV.   MATTHEW   H.    Priest,  died  Jan.  30,  189S. 
♦O'GARA,   JOHN   W. 
SULLIVAN,   JAMES. 

1887 

ANDERSON,  REV.  JOSEPH  G.     Pastor  Boston, .  Mass. 

♦CROWLEY,   REV.  DENNIS  J.    Priest,  died  Jan.  18,  1897. 
*CURTIS,    DR.    JOHN    B.,  M.D.  Harvard,    91,    A.M.    95. 

Physician,  died  Oct.  1,  1898. 

DEGAN,    REV.    JOHN    A.     Priest   Dorchester,   Mass. 

♦DELANY,  RT.  REV.  JOHN  B.,  D.D.,  Late  Bishop  of  Manchester,  N.  H. 

Died  June  11,  1906. 

DERMODY,    REV.   JOSEPH    J.     Priest  East  Boston,  Mass. 

DOHERTY,   REV.   OWEN   J.,  A.M.  92.    Priest Boston,  Mass. 

FOLEY,     REV.     MAURICE     P.,    S.T.D.     Propaganda,   92. 

Rector,   Cathedral    St.  Augustine,  Fla. 

♦HARTY,    JEREMIAH    J.      Scholastic,    Society    of    Jesus, 

died  March  23,  1896. 
HICKEY,    DR.    JOHN    A.,   M.D.   Harvard,  96.        Physician 

East  Boston,  Mass. 

HORGAN,    REV.    DANIEL  F.      Priest   East  Cambridge,  Mass. 

MACKIN,   RICHARD   J.    Clerk,  Custom  House  Boston,  Mass. 

McGUIGAN,   DR.  JOHN  J.,  M.D.    Harvard,  90.    A.M.  93. 

Physician Lynn,   Mass. 

♦QUIRK,   REV.    EDWARD   A.    Priest,  died  Nov.  30,  1894. 
SHERIDAN,   BERNARD    M.,  A.M.  93-     Superintendent  of 

Schools  Lawrence,  Mass. 

STANTON,    REV.    JAMES    F.     Priest   ...Norwood,   Mass. 

1888 
BRETT,    JOHN    A.    LL.B.      Boston   Univ.,  93,    A.M.    93. 

Lawyer    Boston,  Mass. 

♦DALEY,    THOMAS    J.    Eccles.  stud.,  died  Aug.  24,  1891. 

*    Deceased. 


74  BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-190^ 

GORMLEY,    REV.    PHILIP   J.    Priest  Charlestown,  Mass. 

HALLORAN,    REV.    FLORENCE    J.,    S.T.B.   St.   Mary's 

Sem.,  93.     Priest  Dorchester,  Mass. 

KEANEY,   DR.   FRANCIS   J.,  M.D.    Harvard,  92,  A.M.  92. 

Physician  Boston,  Mass. 

LENEHAN,    REV.    DANIEL    W.     Priest   Somerville,  Mass. 

Mclaughlin,  daniel  j. 

MURPHY,  DR.  TIMOTHY  J.,  M.D.  Harvard,  92,  A.M.  95. 

Physician    Roxbury,    Mass. 

O'BRIEN,  DR.  JOHN  R,  M.D.  Harvard,  92,  A.M.  95. 
Physician Charlestown,   Mass. 

*0'LALOR,  CHARLES  H.  Scholastic,  Society  of  Jesus. 
Died,  Jan.  26,  1897. 

*0'SHEA,    JOHN    J.  Lawyer,  died  June  20,  1896. 

SHANAHAN,  REV.  EDMUND  T.,  S.T.D.  Propa- 
ganda, 93,  J.  C.  L.  Roman  Sem.,  95,  Ph.D.  Roman  Acad., 
95,  Professor  of  Dogmatic  Theology,  Catholic  Univ.  Washington,  D.  C. 

SHEEHAN,  DR.  WILLIAM  J.,  M.D.  Harvard,  91,  A.M. 
93.     Physician   Salem,  Mass. 

WELLER,  DR.  FRANCIS  J.,  M.D.  Harvard,  94.  Physi- 
cian   South  Boston,  Mass. 


1889 

CLEARY,    REV.    HUGH    J.   Priest   Somerville,  Mass. 

CONDON,   THOMAS   J.  Clerk  South  Boston,  Mass. 

CRIMMINS,   REV.   DENIS   P.    Priest  South  Boston,  Mass. 

CROWLEY,    REV.    MICHAEL   F.     Priest Charlestown,  Mass. 

*DRISCOLL,   REV.  JOHN   J.    Priest,  died  May  6,  1904. 

GLYNN,  REV.  LAWRENCE  J.     Priest   Brookline,  Mass. 

HARRIGAN,    REV.    JOHN    H.     Priest   Roxbury,  Mass. 

LEAHY,  REV.  GEORGE  V.  Priest,  S.T.B.  Catholic 
Univ.,  94,  S.T.L.  Catholic  Univ.,  95.  Lecturer,  St.  John's 
Seminary    Brighton,  Mass. 

LEARY,   JAMES   H.  Sub-Master,  Emerson  School  ..East  Boston,  Mass. 

LEE,  REV.  PHILIP  J.     Priest   Worcester,  Mass. 

*   Deceased. 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908.  75 

MacCORMACK,    REV.  THOMAS    J.  Pastor   . . Norwood,  Mass. 

MALEY,    REV.    FRANCIS    W.,    S.  T.  B.  Catholic     Univ.-, 

94.     Priest  South  Boston,  Mass. 

MCCARTHY,    REV.    JAMES    J.     Priest,  Cathedral   .....Boston,  Mass. 

MCCARTHY,  REV.  THOMAS  F.     Priest  Charlestown,  Mass. 

McSWEENEY,  DR.  DANIEL  J.,  M.D.  Harvard,  03.. ....  .Boston,  Mass. 

MURPHY,  REV.  JAMES  J.    Priest   Peabody,  Mass. 

O'HARA,    EDWARD    P.,  A.M.  03.     Master,  English  High 

School   Boston,  Mass. 

SKULLEY,  FRANCIS  J.     Clerk  Springfield,  Mass. 

tBROGAN,  FRANCIS   M.     Journalist    Lowell,   Mass. 


1890 

COTTER,  JAMES.     Business   ."Boston,  Mass. 

CRONIN,  REV.  DANIEL  W.     Priest  Charlestown,  Mass. 

DRUM,  JOHN  D.,  A.M.  92,  LL.  B.  Boston  Univ.,  95.    Law- 
yer   Boston,  Mass. 

DRUM,   REV.   WALTER  M.     Priest,   Society  of  Jesus,     Beirut,    Syria. 
-*KELLEY,  DENNIS  M.    Medical  student,  died  June  29,  1893. 

LENNON,  GEORGE  T.    Journalist Haverhill,  Mass. 

LYNCH,  REV.  MAURICE.    Priest East  Weymouth,  Mass. 

*MALONEY,  REV.  MICHAEL  J.    Priest,  died  Oct.  7,  1895. 

McDONALD,  REV.  ROBERT  N.     Pastor   Calvary,  Ky. 

O'CONNOR,  REV.  WILLIAM  T.      Priest Wakefield,  Mass. 

QUINN,  REV.  PETER  C.     Priest Roxbury,  Mass. 

SHERIDAN,  REV.  JOHN  A.     Priest  Jamaica  Plain,  Mass. 

WILLIS,   JOSEPH   H.,  A.M.  93.    Instructor,  Boston  College 

High  School Boston,  Mass. 

tBURKE,  TOBIAS  A.    Journalist Portland,  Maine 

*$CARROLL,    REV.    MICHAEL   M.,  A.B.  St.  Mary's  Sent. 
89.     Priest,  died. 


*   Deceased. 

f   Bachelor  of  Science. 

I   Master  of  Arts. 


76  BOSTON    COLLEGE,     1907-190S. 

1891 

CADIGAN,  DR.  JOHN  J.,  A.M.  St.  Francis  Xavier,  92,  M.D. 
Harvard,  99.  Physician,  Instructor,  English  High  School,  Boston,  Mass. 

COPPINGER,  REV.  JOSEPH  F.    Priest  Boston,  Mass. 

CREAGH,   REV.  JOHN   t,  A.M.,  92,   S.T.L.   St.   Thomas 

Aquinas,    Rome,    96,    J.U.L.,    J.C.D.     Roman    Sem.,    97 

Associate  Professor  of  Canon  Law,  Catholic  Univ.    . .  Washington,  D.  C. 

DALEY,  DR.  ROBERT  N.,  M.D.  Harvard,  94,  A.M.  95 
Physician South  Boston,  Mass. 

EAGAN,  DR.  JOHN  J.,  M.D.  Harvard,  94.    Physician.  .Gloucester,  Mass. 

GALLIGAN,  REV.  CHARLES  J.    Priest West  Newton,  Mass. 

*GALLIVAN,  DANIEL  T. 

GRACE,  PIERCE  J.,  A.M.  Georgetown,  92,  B.M.  George- 
town, 92.    Business  Boston,  Mass. 

JOHNSTONE,    REV.    JULIAN    E.,    A.M.     Niagara,   95. 

Priest  Quincy,  Mass. 

KELLEHER,  REV.  JOHN  F.    Priest Watertown,  Mass. 

*LYNCH,   REV.   RICHARD   T.  Deacon,  died  May  6,  1895. 

McCARTHY,  REV.  WILLIAM  J.    Priest Lynn,  Mass. 

MURPHY,  WILLIAM  A.,  A.M.  Georgetown,  92.  Journalist,  Boston,  Mass. 

PELLETIER,  JOSEPH  C,  A.M.  93,  LL.B.  Boston  Univ.,  95. 
Lawyer  Boston,  Mass. 

QUIRK,  HON.  CHARLES  I.,  A.M.  95,  LL.B.  Boston  Univ., 
95.     Lawyer  Boston,  Mass. 

READDY,  REV.  ALBERT  M.     Priest Charlestown,  Mass. 

ULLRICH,  REV.  CHARLES  A.    Priest  South  Boston,  Mass. 

WALSH,  WILLIAM  A.,  A.M.  03.  Librarian,  Lawrence  Pub- 
lic Library  Lawrence,  Mass. 

WHALEN,  REV.  WILLIAM  B.     Priest  South  Boston,  Mass. 

1892 

BURKE,  DR.  MICHAEL  F.,  M.D.  Harvard,  96.  Physi- 
cian    Natick,  Mass. 

CARNEY,    REV.    DANIEL   J.     Priest  Melrose,  Mass. 

COULTHURST,  JOHN  A.,  A.M.  Georgetown,  93,  LL.B. 
Boston,  Univ.,  95.    Lawyer  Boston,  Mass. 

*   Deceased. 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-190S.  77 

CURTIN,  REV.  TIMOTHY  A.     Priest   Lynn,  Mass. 

DESMOND,  JAMES  A.,  A.M.  95.    Clerk,  City  Hall .Boston,  Mass. 

FLANNERY,  REV.  JAMES  H.     Priest   Dorchester,  Mass. 

GALLAGHER,  DANIEL  J.,  A.M.  Boston  Univ.,  95.  Law- 
yer   Newton,  Mass.. 

GILBRIDE,  REV.  MICHAEL  C.    Priest  South  Boston,  Mass. 

HEANEY,  REV.  CHARLES  P.    Priest Dorchester,  Mass.. 

*KEENAN,  JOHN  H.,  A.M.  93.    Lawyer,  died  Jan.  29,  1902. 

MADDEN,  REV.  MARK  E.    Priest  Jamaica  Plain,  Mass. 

McGILLICUDDY,  DR.  CORNELIUS  J.,  M.D.  Harvard,  96. 

Physician Boston,    Mass. 

O'LEARY,  TIMOTHY  A.    Business  Lynn,  Mass. 

WOODS,  REV.  TIMOTHY  J.    Priest   Cambridgeport,  Mass. 

fCUNNINGHAM,  HENRY  V.,  LL.B.  Boston  Univ.,  87. 
Lawyer  Boston,  Mass. 

$OBER,  RAYMOND  A.     Business    Brookline,  Mass. 

1893 

*BRICK,  C.SS.R.,  REV.  JAMES  J.    Priest,  died  June  8,  1900. 

*CRONIN,  DR.  JEREMIAH  A.,  M.D.  Bellevue,  96.  Phy- 
sician.    Died  April  2,  1906. 

CRONIN,  REV.  JOHN  J.    Priest Whitman,  Mass. 

CROWLEY,  TIMOTHY  F.    Teacher  Porto  Rico- 

DOUGLASS,  JOHN  J.,  A.M.,  96,  LL.B.  Georgetown,  96. 
Lawyer  Boston,  Mass. 

$FACEY,  EDWARD  A.  Business  Boston,  Mass. 

FITZGERALD,  DR.  THOMAS  P.,  M.D.,  Harvard,  97. 
Physician    Brighton,    Mass. 

KELLY,  REV.  JAMES  F.    Priest  Newton,  Mass. 

LENNON,   JOSEPH   M.    Business  Boston,  Mass. . 

McLEOD,  REV.  EDWARD  F.     Priest  Boston,  Mass. 

MAGUIRE,  DR.  CHARLES  F,  M.D.  Harvard,  97.  Phy- 
sician     Somerville,   Mass. 

MALLEY,  REV.  AUGUSTINE  D.    Priest  Charlestown,  Mass. 

*   Deceased. 

f   Master  of  Arts  (Honoris  Causa). 

J   Bachelor  of  Science. 


78  BOSTON    COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 

MULLIN,  REV.  WILLIAM  G.     Priest  Lowell,  Mass. 

O'CONNELL,  HON.  JOSEPH  F.,  LL.B.  Harvard,  96, 
Lawyer    \ Boston,    Mass. 

O'CONNELL,  REV.  WILLIAM  H.    Priest  Boston,  Mass. 

STACK,  DR.  CHARLES  F.,  M.D.  Harvard,  98.  Physi- 
cian  Hyde  Park,  Mass. 

SULLIVAN,  MICHAEL  A.,  LL.B.  Boston  Univ.,  1900. 
Lawyer Boston,  Mass. 

1894 

BURKE,  JOHN  J.    Clerk,  Probate  Office  Boston,  Mass. 

CRAWFORD,  DR.  FRANCIS  X.,  M.D.  Harvard,  98.  Physi- 
cian, Woman's  Hospital  New  York,  N.  Y. 

DAVIS,    OWEN   F.,  LL.B.  Boston  Univ.,  86.  Lawyer  ..Brockton,  Mass. 
DELANEY,  THOMAS  A. 

DORSEY,  JAMES  A.,  LL.B.  Boston  Univ.,  1900.    Lawyer.  .Boston,  Mass. 
DRUM,  JOSEPH  C,  LL.B.  Georgetown,  99.    Business,  Sacramento,  Cal. 

FLOOD,  REV.  JOHN  J.     Priest  Newburyport,  Mass. 

FOLEY,  REV.  PETER  J.     Priest  Waltham,  Mass. 

GLEASON,  REV.  MICHAEL  M.     Pastor   Gibson  City,  111. 

HEALY,  DR.  DANIEL  L.,  M.D.  Harvard,  98..  .South  Framingham,  Mass. 

HOUSTON,  REV.  FRANCIS  H.     Priest  Hyde  Park,  Mass. 

JOHNSTON,   JOHN    C,  LL.B.  Harvard,  99.    Lawyer  ...Boston,  Mass. 

LEONARD,  JOHN  M.    Business  Boston,  Mass. 

MACDONALD,  ALBERT  E.    Business  Boston,  Mass. 

MAGUIRE,  JOHN  F.     Medical  Student,  Harvard Boston,  Mass. 

MAHAR,  REV.  JOSEPH  P.    Priest Roxbury,  Mass. 

McNULTY,  JAMES  A.     Lawyer   Philadelphia,   Penn. 

MURRAY,  FRANCIS  A.    Business .Boston,  Mass. 

REGAN,  REV.  DAVID  F.,  Ph.B.  St.  John's  Sem.,  95-  Priest, 

Waltham,  Mass. 
SMITH,  DR.  RICHARD  A.,  M.D.  Harvard,  99.    Physician,  Boston,  Mass. 

SULLIVAN,  REV.  MICHAEL  J.     Priest  Danvers,  Mass. 

WHITE,  DR.  MICHAEL  W.,  M.D.  Harvard,  98.  Physi- 
cian    Somerville,   Mass. 

1895 
BROCK,  DR.  LAWRENCE  J.,  M.D.  Harvard,  1900.    Physi- 
cian     Charlestown,    Mass. 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-190S  79 

CARRIGAN,  THOMAS   C.     Lawyer    ...Worcester,   Mass. 

FARRELL,  REV.  JOHN  M.    Priest Dorchester,  Mass. 

GOLDING,  REV.  THOMAS  J.    Priest  Norwood,  Mass. 

*HARTY,  MARTIN  J.     Business,  died  October  24,  1901. 

HEALEY,    WILLIAM    C.    S.,    A.B.    Harvard,    98,    A.M. 
Harvard,  99.    Business  East  Boston,  Mass. 

KINNEEN,  PETER  J.,    Business Arlington,  Mass. 

KIRBY,   JOHN   J.,   A.M.    Georgetown,   98,    LL.B.   George- 
town, 99 ;  LL.M.  Georgetown,  1900.    Lawyer New  York  City,  N.  Y. 

LAMB,  BERNARD  F.     Business  .Boston,  Mass. 

McCOY,  REV.  THOMAS  R.     Priest  Boston,  Mass. 

MURPHY,  REV.  WILLIAM  J.     Priest North  Cambridge,  Mass. 

NUGENT,  REV.  JOHN  J.    Pastor  ...  .St.  Francis'  Harbor,  Nova  Scotia 

SCANLAN,  REV.  MICHAEL  J.,  A.M.,  Georgetown,  96.  Priest, 

Boston,  Mass. 

SHANNON,  MICHAEL  J.     Head-Master,  Lincoln  School 

South  Framingham,  Mass. 

*STINSON.  REV.  JOHN  T.,  S.T.B.  Catholic   Univ.,  1900. 
Priest,  died  Nov.  15,  1904. 

WELCH,  REV.  JAMES  E.    Priest  Chelsea,  Mass. 

WELLER,  GEORGE  J.     Lawyer    Boston,   Mass. 

fKIRMAYER,    FRANZ   H.  Professor,  State  Normal  School 

Bridgewater,  Mass. 

1896 

BERGIN,  DR.   STEPHEN  A.,  M.D.    Harvard,  1900.  Physi- 
cian     Worcester,   Mass. 

BRICK,  FRANCIS  A.  Principal  Grammar  School   Bayonne,  N.  J. 

BUTLER,   REV.   MICHAEL  A.    Priest  Everett,  Mass. 

♦CAMPBELL,    DR.    WILLIAM    J.,    M.D.    Harvard,    1900. 
Physician,  died  June  14,  1901. 

COX,  DR.  SIMON  F.,  M.D.  Harvard,  1901.     Physician. 

Superintendent  Consumptives'  Hospital   Boston,  Mass. 

CRONIN,  REV.  FRANCIS  T.     Priest  West  Newton,  Mass. 

DELANY,  REV.  FREDERICK  J.     Priest  Boston,  Mass. 

*   Deceased. 

■j-   Doctor  of  Philosophy  (periculo  facto). 


80  BOSTON    COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 

DIERKES,  HERMAN  J.    Business  Dorchester,  Mass. 

DURAN,  REV.  JOHN  F.    Priest Roxbury,  Mass. 

GLEASON,  REV.  MATTHEW  J.    Priest  Salem,  Mass. 

HANNA,  DR.  THOMAS  F.,  M.D.  Harvard,  1900.  Physi- 
cian    Natick,  Mass. 

HART,  JOHN  W.,  Jr.     Business Washington,  D.  C. 

HASSON,  WILLIAM  J.    Actor Boston,  Mass. 

KINGSLEY,  PATRICK  H. 

LAWLESS,  REV.  JOSEPH  P.     Priest Cohasset,  Mass. 

LEAHY,  DAVID  D.,  LL.B.  Boston  Univ.,  1900.   Lawyer.  .Boston,  Mass. 

LYONS,  REV.  HENRY  M.    Priest Marblehead,  Mass. 

MAGUIRE,  REV.  MICHAEL  F.     Priest  Brockton,  Mass. 

MAHONEY,  HERBERT  J.    Business  Charlestown,  Mass. 

MARTELL,  CHARLES  J.,  LL.B.  Georgetown,  99;LL.M. 
Georgetown,  1900.     Lawyer   Boston,  Mass. 

MULLEN,  DR.  JOHN  H.,  M.D.  Harvard,  1900.     Physician. 

Waltham,  Mass. 

MURPHY,  CORNELIUS  P.  J.    Business  Dorchester,  Mass 

*MYERS,  MATTHEW  J.     Died  June,  1898. 

POTTS,  LOUIS  J.,  A.M.  Georgetown,  98;  LL.B.  George- 
town, 99 ;  Ph.D.  Georgetown,  99.     Lawyer  City  of  Mexico 

REDICAN,  REV.  JAMES  J.  Priest,  St.  John's  Industrial 
School    Newton  Highlands,   Mass. 

RING,  REV.  CHARLES  J.     Priest  Roxbury,  Mass. 

SCANNELL,    DAVID    A.     Business   Brookline,  Mass. 

SCANNELL,  REV.  PATRICK  j.     Priest   Ipswich,  Mass. 

WARREN,    JAMES    P.     Instructor,  Eastern  District  High 

School   Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 

1897 
BROCK,  HENRY  M.,  S.B.  Mass.  Inst,  of  Technology,  1900. 
Scholastic,  Society  of  Jesus,  Holy  Cross  College  ....Worcester,  Mass. 

BROWN,  REV.  DENNIS  W.     Priest  v  .Cambridgeport,  Mass. 

CAREY,  REV.  MICHAEL  J.,  C.S.P.     Priest   San  Francisco,  Cal. 

*CORBETT,  NICHOLAS  D.    Died  Jan.  6,  1904. 

CROWLEY,  REV.  JAMES  A.    Priest  Wakefield,  Mass. 

CUNNIFF,  PATRICK,  S.,  LL.B.  Georgetown,  99.     Lawyer. 

Watertown,  Mass. 

*    Deceased. 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-190S.  81 

DEVLIN,  JAMES  H.,  LL.B.  Harvard.  1900.    Lawyer. . . .  Allston,  Mass. 
DOLAN,    ARTHUR    W.,    LL.B.  Harvard,  1900.      Lawyer 

Charlestown,  Mass. 
tDWYER,    MICHAEL   J.,  A.M.    98;  LL.B.    Boston  Univ., 

1900.    Lawyer  Boston,  Mass. 

FOGARTY,  FRANCIo  W.,  LL.B.  Harvard,  1900.    Lawyer, 

Boston,  Mass. 

GRAINGER,  HENRY  A.    Druggist  East  Boston,  Mass. 

KENNEY,  REV.  EDWARD.    Priest  Boston,  Mass. 

LANE,  RICHARD  J.    Lawyer  Boston,  Mass. 

LYONS,    REV.    WILLIAM    F.     Priest  West  Lynn,  Mass. 

McDERMOD,  REV.  HUGH  M.     Priest  Lowell,  Mass. 

McELENEY,  JOHN  T Charlestown,  Mass. 

tMcLAUGHLIN,  JAMES  M.,  A.M.  98.    Director  of  Music, 

Boston  Public  Schools   Boston,  Mass. 

MULLIN,  REV.  ALBERT  C.    Priest  Somerville,  Mass. 

O'NEIL,  REV.  LEO  F.  J.    Priest Boston,  Mass. 

SPLAINE,  REV.  MICHAEL  J.,  D.D.   Chancellor  Cathedral, 

Boston,  Mass. 
*SWEENEY,  JOHN  C.     Died  Nov.   1,  1900. 

WALSH,  JOSEPH  P.,  LL.B.  Harvard,  1900.    Lawyer ....  Boston,  Mass. 
WENNERBERG,  JAMES  B.    Business   Boston,  Mass. 

1898 
AHERN,  TIMOTHY  J.,  LL.B.  Boston  Univ.,  01.    Lawyer. 

Roxbury,  Mass. 

BERGIN,  THOMAS  F.    Business  Waltham,  Mass. 

BREWIN,  DR.  JOHN  A.,  M.D.  Davidson  College,  North 

Carolina,  04.     Physician   Elmo,  W.  Va. 

CARNEY,    FRANCIS    J.,     LL.B.       Harvard,    ot.      Lawyer, 

West  Somerville,  Mass. 

CHAPMAN,  DANIEL  J.    Real  Estate South  Boston,  Mass. 

COYNE,  BARTHOLOMEW  B.,  LL.B.  Harvard,  01.  Lawyer, 

New  York,  N.  Y. 

DORE,  DR.  FRANCIS  J.,  M.D.  Harvard,  '02.     Novitiate, 

Society  of  Jesus    Rochampton,  England 

*   Deceased. 

f  Tha  degree  of  Bachelor  of  Arts  was  conferred  (pericu/a  facto),  Thnrsday   December  30 

1897. 


82  BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907- 1908. 

*DUFFY,  CHARLES  F.     Died  Sept.  4,  1906. 

DUFFY,  JOHN  F.,  LL.B.  New  York  Univ.  Law  School,  01. 
Lawyer    South    Boston,    Mass. 

*FARRELL,     ARTHUR    L.,    LL.B.    Harvard,    02.      Lawyer, 

East  Cambridge,  Mass. 

FARRELL,   REV.   WILLIAM   J.     Priest    Lexington,   Mass. 

FLYNN,  REV.  MAURICE  F.    Priest Roxbury,  Mass. 

GALLAGHER,  DR.  JOHN  V,  M.D.  Tufts,  02.    Physician,  Boston,  Mass. 

GARRAHAN,  REV.  THOMAS  C.     Priest  ..South  Framingham,  Mass. 

GRADY,    THOMAS   J.,  LL.B.  Boston  Univ.,  01.  Lawyer ..  Boston,  Mass. 

GRAINGER,  DR.   EDWARD* J.,  M.D.  Harvard,  03.     Phy- 
sician    East  Boston,  Mass. 

KEOGH,  JOSEPH  L.,  LL.B.  Harvard,  01.   Lawyer Roxbury.  Mass. 

LANDREGAN,  REV.  JAMES  T.  Priest  South  Lawrence,  Mass. 

MAGUIRE,  REV.  CHARLES  J.     Priest    Cambridge,  Mass. 

MCLAUGHLIN,  GEORGE  A.,  LL.B.  Harvard,  01.    Lawyer 

New  York,  N.  Y. 

MURPHY,  DR.  PATRICK  W.,  M.D.  Harvard,  02.     Physi- 
cian     Canton,    Mass. . 

O'BRIEN,  DR.   CHARLES   T.,  M.D.  Harvard,  01.     Physi- 
cian     Woburn,    Mass. 

ROONEY,    DR.    HENRY    M.,    M.D.    Univ.    of    Michigan. 
Physician     Illinois 

RUSSELL,  JAMES  D.    Teacher  Dorchester,  Mass. 

SHEEHAN,  REV.  JOHN  P.    Priest Brookline,  Mass. 

SPLAINE,  REV.  RICHARD  H.     Priest   Watertown,  Mass. 

SUPPLE,  REV.  DAVID  G.,  D.D.    Priest  Maiden,  Mass. 

TEELING,  REV.  BENJAMIN  F.     Priest  Boston,  Mass. 

WHITE,  DR.  ARTHUR  J.,   M.D.  Harvard  04.     Physician 

Dorchester,  Mass. 

1899 

CADY,  JOSEPH  U.     Teacher,  English  High  School   Boston,  Mass. 

v  East  Boston.   Mass. 

*CREED,     WILLIAM     C.      Ecclesiastical     Student.       Died 

July  6,  1901. 
CRONIN,   PATRICK  D.     Lawyer   Washington.  D.  C. 

*    Deceased. 


BOSTOX     COLLEGE,     1907-1908.  83 

DALY,  REV.  EDMUND  D.     Priest  Jamaica  Plain,  Mass. 

DOYLE,    JOHN    B.,   A.M.,   LL.B.     Columbia,  03.     Lawyer 

New  York  City,  N.  Y. 
FEELEY,    EUGENE    J.      Teacher,    Boston    College    High 

School   Boston,   Mass. 

FINN,  REV.  CHARLES  A.     Priest  Salem,  Mass. 

HAYES,  JOHN  J.    Business Boston,  Mass. 

LOUGHRY,  JOSEPH  P.     Business   New  Haven,  Conn. 

NUGENT,  WILLIAM  D.  ■  Business   Philadelphia,  Pa. 

O'BRIEN,  REV.  CHARLES  A.     Priest  Roxbury,  Mass. 

POWERS,    JOSEPH    L.     Instructor,  Roxbury  High  School 

Arlington,  Mass. 

SHEEHAN,  REV.  JOHN  O'D.     Priest  Somerville,  Mass. 

SWIFT,  JOHN  E.     Lawyer    . '. Boston,  Mass. 

TEELING,    RICHARD    S.,    J.B.,  J.M.  Boston    Univ.,  04. 

Lawyer Boston,    Mass. 

WILLIAMS,  JOSEPH  R.    Lawyer Boston,  Mass. 

1900 

ALLCHIN,  REV.  FREDERIC  J.    Priest  .  ...Newton  Upper  Falls,  Mass. 

COLEMAN,  DR.  DAVID  C,  M.D.  Georgetown,  04.  Physi- 
cian,   Beverly,  Mass. 

COSTELLO,  REV.  EDWARD  A.     Priest  Brockton,  Mass. 

COVENEY,  DENNIS  J.     Business  Hyde  Park,  Mass. 

CROWLEY,    REV.    EDWARD    F.     Priest  West  Lynn,  Mass. 

DAIGNAULT,    ELPHEGE    J.     Lawyer Woonsocket,  R.   T. 

DONNELLY.  REV.  JAMES  A.    Priest Maynard.  Mass 

DONOVAN,  JEREMIAH  J.  Student,  Mass.  Inst,  of  Tech- 
nology     -.  .Randolph,  Ma;^. 

DORE,    REV.    AMBROSE    A.     Priest   Somerville,  Mass. 

DUFFY,  WILLIAM  J.     Priest  Boston,  Mass. 

FARRELL,  REV.  EDWARD  P.    Priest  Manchester,  N.  H. 

FINIGAN,    REV.    WILLIAM    B.     Priest    Roxbury,   Mass. 

FOGARTY,    ARTHUR    H.     Business   Boston,  Mass. 

FRAHER,    REV.    EDWARD    J.     Priest    Jamaica    Plain.    Mass. 

GALLAGHER,    JAMES    C.     Business Boston.   Mass. 

GILL,    REV.    WALTER    H.     Priest  Brockton.  Mass. 

KELLEY,  VINCENT  L.    Instructor  Somerville,  Mass. 


84  BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-190S. 

MAGUIRE,    REV.    DENNIS   J.     Priest  Beverly  Farms,  Mass. 

MAHONY,    CHARLES    F.     Business    Boston,   Mass. 

MOORE,  JOSEPH.    Lawyer Concord,  N.  H. 

MULLIN,    FRANCIS    R.     Lawyer   Cambridge,  Mass. 

O'BRIEN,  REV.  JOHN  J.    Priest Jamaica  Plain,  Mass. 

QUIGLEY,    REV.    GEORGE    H.  Priest    Boston,   Mass. 

SULLIVAN,    EDWARD    M.      Lawyer.       Associate    Justice 

Third  District  Court,  Essex  Co Beverly,  Mass. 

SUPPLE,    REV.    JAMES    A.,  D.D.     Priest  Cambridge,  Mass. 

WALSH,  REV.  JOHN   F.  Priest Cambridge,    Mass. 

WELSH,  REV.  MARTIN  S.  Priest,  Order  of  Preachers, 

Washington,  D.  C. 
1901 
CALLAHAN,    DENNIS    E.  Principal    Tarbox    School,  Lawrence,  Mass. 

CROWLEY,   JOSEPH    F.     Business  East  Boston,  Mass. 

CURRY,  REV.  WILLIAM  T.     Priest   Haverhill,  Mass. 

EARLY,    REV.    JOSEPH    L.     Priest,  Catholic  University 

Washington,  D.  C. 
FOLEY,   DANIEL   A.    Teacher,  Roxbury  High  School  ..Boston,  Mass. 

GATELY,  REV.  GEORGE  A.     Priest   Rockland,  Mass. 

HESSION,    THOMAS    P.     Business  Boston,  Mass. 

LAVELLE,    THOMAS    D.     Lawyer   Boston,  Mass. 

LYNCH,    REV    DENNIS    J.     Priest   Concord,  Mass. 

McDONOUGH,    VINCENT    S.     Scholastic,  Society  of  Jesus 

St.  John's  College,  New  York  City 

McGRATH,    HUGH    C.  Instructor  Boston,  Mass. 

McNAMARA,    WILLIAM     F.,    LL.B.       Georgetown,     '04. 

Lawyer    Boston,    Mass. 

MITCHELL,    REV.   WALTER  J.    Priest  Boston,  Mass.. 

MURDOCK,   JAMES   M.    Teacher,  Washington  School  ..Boston,  Mass. 
MURPHY,    DR.    JAMES    C,  M.D.    Harvard,  05   ....Norwood,  Mass. 

NORRIS,    REV.    CORNELIUS   J.     Priest  Columbus,  O. 

O'HARA,    JOHN    J.,  LL.B.     Georgetown    04.    Lawyer  ..Boston,  Mass. 

O'REGAN,  REV  PETER  L.,  C.S.P.     Priest Chicago,  111. 

*REARDON,  JOHN  A.     Died  Oct.  7,  1906. 

PENAUD,   REV.  JOHN   L.     Priest    ■ Waterville,  Me. 

RICH,   WILLIAM   J.    Business  Boston,  Mass. 

*    Deceased. 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908.  85 

ROCHE,    REV.    WALTER   J.    Priest  Cambridge,  Mass. 

RYAN,   REV.    DAVID   D.    Priest  Boston,  Mass. 

RYAN,    REV.    EDWARD    F.     Priest,  American  College   Rome 

SPELMAN,    THOMAS    M.     Lawyer   Newtonville,   Mass. 

SULLIVAN,   AUGUSTUS   L.     Business  Boston,  Mass. 

TRAINOR,    LAWRENCE   A.     Business   Boston,  Mass. 

WOODIS,    JOHN    J.     Business   Boston,  Mass. 

1902 

BENSON,   EDWIN   F.    Master,  English  High  School  ...Boston,  Mass. 

BUCKLEY,  REV.  JOHN  C.     Priest   Boston,  Mass. 

CALLAHAN,  DR.  HENRY  A,  M.D.  Harvard,  06.  Physician, 
Carney  Hospital   Boston,  Mass. 

COLLINS,    P.    HENRY.  Business  Whitman,  Mass. 

CONNOLLY,  JAMES  F.    Business  Porto  Rico 

CURRY,   ARTHUR   L.     Business   Boston,  Mass. 

FEGAN,  EDWARD  J.,  A.M.  Georgetown;  03 ;  LL.B.  George- 
town, 05.     Lawyer Boston,  Mass. 

FLYNN,  REV.  WILLIAM  H.     Priest  Boston,Mass. 

FOX,  JOHN  M.     Scholastic,  Society  of  Jesus  Woodstock,  Md. 

GALLAGHER,  DANIEL  F.     Business   Quincy,  Mass. 

KOEN,    WILLIAM    H.     Business   Salem,  Mass. 

LENNON,  JOSEPH  A.,  A.M.,  Georgetown,  03.     Law   Stu- 
dent, Georgetown  University Washington,  D.   C. 

McCARTY,  REV.  JAMES  E.     Priest   Boston,  Mass. 

McCUSKER,    CORNELIUS    M.    Business  So.  Groveland,  Mass. 

McGLINCHEY,  REV.  JOSEPH  F.    Deacon,  American  College  ...Rome 

McKENNA,    HENRY    C.      Law    Student,    Georgetown   Uni- 
versity  Washington,  D.  C. 

MEHERAN,  REV.  JOHN  F.     Priest   Boston,  Mass. 

MULROY,    JAMES    T.     Business    Boston,   Mass. 

O'BRIEN,   REV.   FRANCIS   A.    Priest  Lincoln,  Neb. 

O'CONNOR,   REV.  TIMOTHY  J.     Priest   Boston,  Mass. 

O'NEIL,  LEO  F.,  E.E.    Columbia,  06.     General  Electric  Co., 
West    Lynn    Boston,  Mass. 

RYAN,    JOSEPH    A.     Business. Keene,    N.   H. 


86  BOSTON    COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 

SLINEY,  REV.  EDMUND  C.     Priest Boston,  Mass. 

TIERNEY,  REV.  WILLIAM  E.    .  Priest Boston,  Mass.  _ 

1903 

CAREY,    DANIEL    C.       Eccl.   Student,   Paulist   House  of 

Studies   Washington,  D.  C. 

CONNOLLY,  MARTIN  J.     Mining  Engineer  Salt  Lake  City,  Utah 

COVENEY,  PHILIP  P.,  J.B.  Boston  University,  05.  Lawyer, 

Hyde  Park,  Mass. 
CRONIN,    JAMES    F.     Eccl.    Student,    Paulist    House   of 

Studies   Washington,  D.  C. 

CROWLEY,  THOMAS  F.    Medical  student,  Harvard,  Holliston,  Mass. 
CUNNINGHAM,  REV.  CHARLES  N.     Deacon,  St.  John's 

Seminary   Brighton,   Mass. 

DEVANEY,    PATRICK    A.     Medical  student,  Harvard 

Waltham,  Mass. 

DRISCOLL,    MARK    C.     Student,   American    College    Rome 

DUFFY,  JOSEPH   M.    Teacher,  Boston  Public  Schools  ..Boston,  Mass. 
FITZPATRICK,    FRANCIS    J.     Medical  student,  Harvard 

Boston,  Mass. 
GOOD,  WILLIAM  J.,  J.B.  and  J.M.  Boston   University,  06. 

Lawyer Randolph,  Mass. 

GRIFFIN,    JOSEPH    W.  Teacher   Porto  Rico 

KELLEY,  THOMAS  E.    Teacher,  Boston  Public  Schools,  Boston,  Mass. 

KENDREGAN,    JAMES    H.     Teacher    Milwaukee,   Wis. 

LUCEY,    DANIEL   J.    Law  student,  Georgetown  Melrose,  Mass. 

POWERS,    JOHN    H.     Student,  American  College   Rome 

RILEY,   JOHN    C.    Teacher,  Boston  Public  Schools  Boston,  Mass. 

SULLIVAN,    JOHN    H.     Medical  student,  Harvard   ....Boston,  Mass. 
SULLIVAN,    PATRICK    J.     Student,  St.  John's  Seminary 

Brighton,  Mass. 
SUPPLE,  EDWARD  A.  Medical  student,  Harvard  ....  Holliston,  Mass. 
TIGHE,  MICHAEL  A.  Medical  student,  Harvard  ....Lowell,  Mass. 
WARD,    FREDERICK    A.     Business   Saxonville,  Mass. 

1904 
BARDEN,   JOSEPH   A.,  Student,  St.  John's  Seminary.  .Brighton,  Mass. 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908.  87 

BARRETT,    JOHN    V.     Teacher Laconia,   N.   H. 

COLLINS,  JAMES   E.    Business  Boston,  Mass. 

CROWLEY,  JAMES  A.  Teacher,  Boston  Public  Schools.  .Boston,  Mass. 
CUMMINGS,  JOHN  J.  Teacher,  Boston  Public  Schools.  .Boston,  Mass. 
DEVLIN,    NEIL    J.     Teacher,   St.  Joseph's     Institute    for 

Blind    Jersey    City,    N.    J. 

DORE,  CLEMENT  J.     Business   New  York  City 

DORE,  LEO  A.     Novitiate,  Society  of  Jesus  Poughkeepsie,  N.  Y. 

DOWNEY,  JAMES  H.  Student,  St.  John's  Seminary.  .Brighton,  Mass. 
DOWNEY,   MICHAEL   J.    Teacher,  Boston  Public  Schools 

Boston,  Mass. 

DRISCOLL,   JAMES   W.  Business  Lynn,  Mass. 

FULTON,  DAVID  H.  Teacher,  Newman  School  . . .  Hackensack,  N.  J. 
KENNEDY,    PHILIP   F.    Student,  .Mass.  Inst.  Technology 

Boston,  Mass. 
LEDDY,  CHARLES  J.  Student,  St.  John's  Seminary,  Brighton,  Mass. 
LYDON,  PATRICK  J.  Student,  St.  John's  Seminary  . .  .Brighton,Mass. 
MacNEILL,  FRANCIS  A.  Student,  St.  John's  Seminary,  Brighton,  Mass 
MADDEN,  JOHN   C.    Law  student,  Boston  University  ..Newton,  Mass.. 

tMAHAN,    GEORGE    B.     Business   Boston,  Mass. 

MASTERSON,    VINCENT    P.     Principal,  Blackstone  High 

School    Blackstone,    Mass. 

McELANEY,  HUGH  J.  Teacher,  Boston  Public  Schools  . .  Boston,  Mass. 
MILLARD,    RICHARD    S.,  Jr.     Student,  St.  John's  Semi- 
nary     Brighton,   Mass. 

MILLER,    WILLIAM   T.    Teacher,  Boston  Public  Schools 

Boston,  Mass. 
MULDOON,    FREDERICK    F.     Student,  St.  John's  Semi- 
nary     Brighton,    Mass. 

MURDOCK,   STEPHEN  J.  Teacher,  Boston  Public  Schools 

Boston,  Mass. 
MURPHY,  DANIEL  J.,  JR.  Medical  Student,  Bellevue,  New  York  City 

MURPHY,  LEONARD  A.  Teacher   Duramer  Academy 

QUINLAN,  JOSEPH  J.     Business   New  York  City 

QUINN,    JOSEPH    A.     Business Waltham,   Mass. 

SHEA,    JOACHIM    P.    Business   Boston,  Mass. 

f    Bachelor  of  Science. 


88  BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 

SHEANON,  JOSEPH   P.    Business  Boston,  Mass. 

JDeMOREIRA,   MANUEL.    Business  Rio  de  Janeiro,  Brazil 

1905 
CAMPBELL,   EDWARD  J.    Student,  St.  John's  Seminary 

Brighton,  Mass. 
CASHMAN,  JOHN  J.,   Jr.  Student,  Seminary  of  Our  Lady 

of  the  Angels   Niagara  Falls 

COLLINS,  ALBERT  S.    Student,  Seminary  of  Our  Lady  of 

the  Angels Niagara  Falls 

DANAHY,    MICHAEL   J.     Student,  St.  John's  Seminary 

Brighton,  Mass. 

DUNN,    JAMES    E.     Law  student,  Georgetown   Washington,  D.  C. 

EBERLE,   GEORGE   T.    Novitiate,  of  the  Society  of  Jesus 

Poughkeepsie,  N.  Y. 
GIBLIN,   EDWARD   M.    Teacher,  Boston  Public  Schools 

Holliston,  Mass. 

GRAINGER,    GEORGE    L.     Business Boston,   Mass. 

GREENE,   JOHN    F.     Student,  Mass.  Inst.  Technology      Boston,  Mass. 
HARKINS,     HOWLAND    J.     Student,    Seminary   of   Our 

Lady  of  the  Angels    Niagara  Falls 

HOWARD,    RICHARD  F.     Student,  St.  John's  Seminary 

Brighton,  Mass. 

KERENS,  JOHN  T.     Business  Washington,  D.  C. 

LAMBERT,    WALTER   J.     Student,  St.  John's  Seminary 

Brighton,  Mass. 
LYONS,  GEORGE  A.  Medical  student,  Harvard  ...Winchester,  Mass. 
McGUINNESS,  JAMES  L.  Student,  St.  John's  Seminary,  Brighton,  Mass. 

McMANUS,    BERNARD    I.     Teacher   Natick,  Mass. 

NEVINS,    JOSEPH    V.'    Student,   St.  John's   Seminary 

Brighton,  Mass. 

O'BRIEN,  WILLIAM  A.     Teacher,  Seton  Hall  Orange,  N.  J. 

♦O'CONNOR,  PATRICK  J.    Died  August,  1906. 

O'HERN,   DANIEL   J.    Law  student,  Columbia     ....Hyde   Park,  Mass. 

SPENCER,    JOHN    W.     Student,  St.  John's   Seminary 

Brighton,  Mass. 

*    Deceased. 

$   The  degree  of  Master  of  Arts  (Honoris  Causa)  was  conferred  March   2f,   1904. 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908.  S9 

SULLIVAN,   TIMOTHY   C.    Student,  St.  John's  Seminary 

Brighton,  Mass. 

1906 

CRONIN,  NEIL  A.     Student,  American  College  Rome 

FITZGIBBONS,  JOSEPH  M.  Student,  St.  John's  Semi- 
nary     Brighton,  Mass. 

GALLAGHER,  JOHN  P.     Business   Watertown,  Mass. 

GIFFORD,  IRVING  L.     Student,  St.  John's  Seminary  ..Brighton,  Mass. 

GODVIN,  JOHN   B.     Business    Jamaica   Plain,  Mass. 

HOGAN,  FRANCIS  X.  Student  in  Pedagogy,  Harvard,  Lawrence,  Mass. 

McMORROW,    JOHN    F.     Teacher,    Boston   College    High 

School     Boston,  Mass. 

McMORROW,  WILLIAM  M.  Business Boston,  Mass. 

MURPHY,  JOSEPH  A.    Student,  American  College Rome 

O'BRIEN,  ANDREW  J.     Student,  American  College   Rome 

POWERS,   RICHARD   F.     Business    Boston,  Mass. 

REARDON,  HENRY  C.     Student,  St.  John's  Seminary,  Brighton,  Mass. 

REGAN,  JOHN  J.     Principal  of  School   Odessa,  Minn. 

REYNOLDS,  EUGENE  J.    Teacher Porto  Rico 

TWOMEY,  EUGENE  A.    Student,  St.  John's  Seminary,  Brighton,  Mass. 

WELCH,  JOHN  F.     Business Chelsea,  Mass. 

WHALEN,  LEONARD  S.  Student  in  Pedagogy,  Bridge- 
water  Normal  School   Boston,  Mass. 

f COCHRANE,    MARTIN   J.     Business    Brookline,    Mass. 


1907. 

BURNS,  JOSEPH  K.     Business Quincy,  Mass. 

CARR,  JAMES  W.     Business   ■. . .  Cambridge,  Mass. 

COLLINS,  VALENTINE  A.     Teacher   Whitman,  Mass. 

DORR,   ANDREW   N.     Business    Dorchester,  Mass. 

FITZGERALD,  DAVID  V.     Student,  American  College   Rome 

FLATLEY,   NICHOLAS   J.     Journalist    Maiden,  Mass. 

GRADY,  JOHN  P.    Eccl.  Student,  Paulist  House  of  Studies, 

Washington,  D.   C. 

t    Bachelor  of  Science.  J[ 


9°  BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 

HURLEY,  EDWARD  J.     Student,  American  College   Rome 

KELLY,  FRANCIS  E.     Business    Cambridge,  Mass. 

LYONS,   DANIEL   M.     Teacher    Dorchester,  Mass. 

Mc  GUINESS,.  HENRY  J.     Journalist    Boston,  Mass. 

MURRAY,  JOHN  J.     Business    So.   Boston,  Mass. 

SULLIVAN,  JOSEPH  D.     Teacher    Porto  Rico 

SUPPLE,  JAMES   E.     Business    Chelsea,  Mass. 

WHEATLEY,   WILLIAM  J.     Business Ballardvale,  Mass. 

WILLIAMS,    DAVID    L 


Alumni    Catalogue 


AHERN,    Timothy  J. 
ALLCHIN,   Rev.  Frederick  J. 
ALLISON,  Rev.  James  W. 
ANDERSON,    Rev.  Joseph  G. 
AYLWARD,  James  F. 

BALL,  Dr.  Thomas  J. 
BARDEN,   Joseph  A. 
BARNES,    Dr.  Francis  J. 
BARRETT,   Rev.   James   A. 
BARRETT,  John  V. 
BENSON,  Edwin  F. 
BARRY,  Rev.   Garrett  J. 
BERGIN,  Dr.   Stephen  A. 
BERGIN,  Thomas  F. 
BRANNAN,  Rev.  Thomas  F. 
BRENNAN,  George  H. 
BRETT,  John  A. 
BREWIN,  Dr.  John  A. 
BRICK,  Francis  A. 
*BRICK,  C.  SS.  R.,  Rev.  Jas. 
BROCK,  Henry  M. 
BROCK,  Dr.  Lawrence  J. 
BRODERICK,  Rev.  John  F. 
tBROGAN,   Francis   M. 
BROWN,  Rev.  Dennis  W. 
BROWNE,  Rev.  Walter  J. 
*BUCKLEY,  Dennis 
BUCKLEY,  Rev.  John  C. 
BURKE,   John  J. 


98  BURKE,  Dr.  Michael  F.  92 

00  tBURKE,  Tobias  A.  90 

79  BURNS,  Edward  F.  80 

87  BURNS,  Joseph  K.  07 
84  BUTLER,  Rev.  Francis  J.  80 

BUTLER,  Rev.  Michael  A.  96 

82  *BYRNES,  Rev.  Edward  P.  78 
04 

84  CADIGAN,  Dr.  John  J.  91 

83  CADY,  Joseph  P.  99 
04  CAHALAN,  Rev.  John  J.  82 
02  CALLAHAN,  Dennis  E.  01 

80  CALLAHAN,  Dr.  Henry  A.  02 
96  CALLANAN,  Rev.  Patrick  H.  77 
pS  CALLANAN,  Dr.  Samson  A.  82 

85  CAMPBELL,  Edward  J.  05 

84  ^CAMPBELL,  Dr.  William  J.  96 

88  CAREY,  Daniel  C.  03 
98  CAREY,   Rev.   Michael  J.  97 

96  CARNEY,  Rev.   Daniel  J.  92 

93  CARNEY,  Francis  J.  98 

97  CARR,  James  W.  07 
95  CARRIGAN,  Thomas  C.  95 
77  CARROLL,  Charles  V.  84 

89  *tCARROLL,  Rev.  Michael  M.  90 
97  *CASEY,  Rev.  Patrick  H.  86 
84  CASHMAN,  John  J.,  Jr.  05 

81  CHAPMAN,  Daniel  J.  98 
02  CLEARY,  Rev.  Hugh  J.  89 

94  *CLEXTON,  Rev.  Edward  E.  83 


*   Deceased. 

f    Degree  other  than  A.  B. 


t)2 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1900. 


COAKLEY,  Timothy  W. 
COAN,  Rev.  John  J. 
tCOCHRANE,  Martin  J. 
COGHLAN,  Thomas   I. 
COLEMAN,  Dr.  David  C. 
COLLINS,  Albert  S. 
*COLLINS,  Rev.  Daniel  J. 
■COLLINS,  James  E. 
COLLINS,  Patrick  H. 
COLLINS,  Valentine  A. 
COLMAN,  Rev.  Patrick 
CONDON,  Thomas  J. 
CONNOLLY,  James  F. 
■CONNOLLY,  Martin  J. 
COPPINGER,  Rev.  Joseph  F. 
CORBETT,  Rev.  Martin  J. 
*CORBETT,  Nicholas  D. 
CORKERY,  Cornelius  S. 
COSTELLO,  Rev.  Edward  A. 
COTTER,  James 
COULTHURST,  John  A. 
COVENEY,  Dennis  J. 
COVENEY,  Philip  P. 
COX,  Dr.  Simon  F. 
COYNE,  Bartholomew  B. 
CRAWFORD,  Dr.  Francis  X. 
CREAGH,  Rev.  Dr.  John  T. 
*CREED,   William   C. 
CRIMMINS,  Rev.  Dennis  P. 
CRONIN,  Rev.  Daniel  W. 
CRONIN,  Rev.  Francis  T. 
CRONIN,  James  F. 
*CRONIN,  Dr.  Jeremiah  A. 
CRONIN,  Rev.  John  J. 
CRONIN,   Neil  A. 
CRONIN,  Patrick  D. 


84  CROWE,   Rev.   John  A.  80 

84  'CROWLEY,  Rev.  Dennis  J.  87 

06  CROWLEY,  Rev.  Edward  F.  00 
78  CROWLEY,  Rev.  James  A.  97 
00  CROWLEY,  James  A.  04 

05  CROWLEY,  Joseph  F.  01 
77  CROWLEY,  Rev.  Michael  F.  89 
04  CROWLEY,  Timothy  F.  93 
02  CROWLEY,  Thomas  F.  03 

07  CUMMINGS,  John  J.  04 
84  tCUMMINS,  Rev.  John  F.  72 
89  CUNNIFF,  Patrick  S.  197 

02  CUNNINGHAM,  Rev.  Chas.  N-  03 

03  CUNNINGHAM,  Rev.  Francis  A.  84 

91  tCUNNINGHAM,  Henry  V.  92 
86  CURRY,  Arthur  L.  02 

97  CURRY,  Rev.  William  T.  01 
83  CURTIN,  Rev.  Timothy  A.  92 
00  *CURTIS,  Dr.  John  B.  87 
90 

92  DAIGNAULT,  Elphege  J.  00 
00  DALY,  Rev.  Edmund  D.  99 
03  DALY,  Dr.  Robert  N.  91 
96  DALY,  Rev.  John  A.        .  81 

98  *DALY,  Rev.  Thomas  J.  88 
94  DANAHY,  Michael  J.  05 
91  DAVIS,  Owen  F.  94 

99  DAW,  Rev.  John  C.  81 

89  DEGAN,  Rev.  John  A.  87 

90  DELANEY,  Thomas  A.  94 
96  DELANY,  Rev.  Frederick  J.  96 
03  *DELANY,  Rt.  Rev.  J.  B.,  D.D.  87 

93  IDeMOREIRA,  Manuel  04 
93  DERMODY,  Rev.  Joseph  J.  87 

06  DESMOND,  James  A.  92 
99  DEVANEY,  Patrick  A.  03 


*   Deceased. 

t    Degree  other  than  A.  B. 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 


93- 


DEVLIN,  James  rf. 
DEVLIN,  Neil  J. 
DIERKES,  Herman  J. 
DOLAN,    Arthur   W. 
DOHERTY,  Rev.  Owen  J. 
DONNELLY,  Rev.  James  A. 
DONOVAN,  Jeremiah  J. 
DONOVAN,  Rev.  John  M. 
DOODY,   Rev.   Michael   J. 
DORE,  Rev.  Ambrose  A. 
DORE,  Clement  J. 
DORE,  Dr.  Francis  J. 
DORE,  Leo   A. 
DORNEY,  James  W. 
DORR,   Andrew   N. 
DORSEY,  James  A. 
DOUGLASS,  John  J. 
DOWNEY,  James  H. 
*DOWNEY,  Rev.  John  J. 
DOWNEY,  Michael  J. 
DOYLE,  John  B. 
DRISCOLL,  James  W. 
*DRISCOLL,   Rev.  John  J. 
DRISCOLL,  Mark  C. 
DRUM,  John  D. 
DRUM,  Joseph  C. 
DRUM,  S.  J.,  Rev.  Walter  M. 
*DUFFY,   Charles   F. 
DUFFY,  John  F. 
DUFFY,  Joseph  M. 
DUFFY,  Rev.  William  J. 
DUNN,  James  E. 
DUNN,  Dr.  William  A. 
DURAN,  Rev.  John  F. 
tDWYER,  Michael   T. 


97  EAGAN,  Dr.  John  J.  91 
04  EARLY,  Rev.  Joseph  L.  01 
96  EBERLE,  George  T.  05- 

97 

87  tFACEY,  Edward  A.  93. 

00  FARLEY,  Philip  J.  84 

00  *FARRELL,  Arthur  L.  98 

77  FARRELL,  Rev.  Edward  P.  00 

80  FARRELL,  Rev.  John  M.  95 

00  FARRELL,  Rev.  William  J.  98 

04  FEELEY,  Eugene  J.  99- 

98  FEGAN,  Rev.  Edward  J.  82 
04  FEGAN,  Edward  J.  02 
86  FINIGAN,  Rev.  William  B.  00 
07  FINN,  Rev.  Charles  A.  99 
94  FINN,  Michael  J.  84- 

93  FITZGERALD,  David  V.  07 
04  FITZGERALD,  Rev.  Edward  S.  82 
85  FITZGERALD,  Rev.  Joseph  A.  79 
04  FITZGERALD,  Dr.  Thomas  P.     93. 

99  FITZGIBBONS,  Joseph  M.  06 

04  FITZPATRICK,  Francis  J.  03 

89  FLAHERTY,  Rev.  Matthew  J.  85 
03  FLANNAGAN,  Thomas  P.  81 

90  FLANNERY,  Rev.  James  H.  92 

94  FLATLEY,  Nicholas  J.  07 
90  FLOOD,  Rev.  John  J.  94. 
98  *FLYNN,  Hon.  Edward  J.  81 
98  FLYNN,  Rev.  Maurice  F.  98 
03  FLYNN,  Rev.  William  H.  02 
00  FOGARTY,  Arthur  H.  00 

05  FOGARTY,  Francis  W.  97 
72  FOLEY,  Daniel  A.  B.  01 

96  FOLEY,  Jeremiah  G.  8$. 

97  FOLEY,  Rev.  Maurice  F.  87 
FOLEY,  Rev.  Peter  J.  94- 


*  Deceased. 

t    Degree  other  than  A.  B. 


94 


BOSTON    COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 


*FORD,  Rev.  John  F.  81 

FOX,  S.  J.,  John  M.  02 

FRAHER,  Rev.  Edward  J.  00 

FULTON,  David  H.  04 

GALLAGHER,  Daniel  F.  02 

GALLAGHER,  Daniel  J.  92 

GALLAGHER,  James  C.  00 

GALLAGHER,  Rev.  John  M.  78 

GALLAGHER,   John   P.  06 

GALLAGHER,  Dr.  John  V.  98 

GALLIGAN,  Rev.  Charles  J.  91 

*GALLIGAN,  Rev.  John  77 

*GALLIVAN,  Daniel  T.  91 

GARRAHAN,  Rev.  Thomas  C.  98 

*GARRITY,  Rev.  John  J.  84 

GARTLAND,   Peter  F.  82 

GATELEY,  Rev.  George  A.  01 

GIBLIN,  Edward  M.  05 

GIFFORD,  Irving  L.  06 

GILBRIDE,  Rev.  Michael  C.  92 

GILFETHER,  Rev.  James  Fv  80 

GILL,  Rev.  Walter  H.  00 

GLEASON,  Rev.  Matthew  J.  96 

GLEASON,  Rev.  Michael  M.  94 

GLENNEN,  Rev.  Charles  F.  79 

GLENNON,  Dr.  Michael  77 

GLYNN,  Rev.  Lawrence  J.  89 

GODVIN,    John   B.  06 

GOLDING,  Rev.  Thomas  J.  95 

GOOD,  William  J.  03 

GORMLEY,  Rev.  Philip  J.  88 

GRACE,  Pierce  J.  91 

GRADY,  Rev.  Henry  T.  85 

GRADY,  John   P.  07 

GRADY,  Thomas  J.  98 


GRAHAM,  Rev.  John  J. 
GRAINGER,  Dr.  Edward  J. 
GRAINGER,  George  L. 
GRAINGER,  Henry  A. 
GREENE,   John   F. 
GRIFFIN,  Rev.  John  H. 
GRIFFIN,  Joseph   W. 

HALLORAN,  Rev.  Florence 
HANNA,  Dr.  Thomas  F. 
HARKINS,  Howland  J. 
*HARRIGAN,  Cornelius  J. 
HARRIGAN,  Rev.  John  H. 
*HARRINGTON,  John  F. 
HARRIS,  Rev.  Richard  F. 
HART,  Jr.,  John  W. 
*HART,  Stephen  J. 
*HARTY,  S.  J.,  Jeremiah  J. 
*HARTY,  Martin  J. 
HASSON,  William  J. 
-*HAYES,  Hon.  James"  E. 
HAYES,  John  J. 
*HEALEY,  Rev.  Timothy  J. 
HEALEY,  William  C.  S. 
HEALY,  Dr.   Daniel  L. 
HEANEY,  Rev.  Charles  P. 
tHERRMANN,  James 
HESSION,  Thomas  P. 
HICKEY,  Dr.  John  A. 
*HICKEY.   Maurice  F. 
HOGAN,   Francis   X- 
HOLLAND,  Rev.  Timothy  J 
HOPWOOD,  John  H. 
HORGAN,  Rev.  Daniel  F. 
HOUSTON,  Rev.  Francis  H. 
HOWARD,   Richard  F. 


J. 


98 
05 
97 
OS 
81 

03 


96 
05 
78 
89 
79 
85 
96 
77 
87 
95 
96 

85 

99 
81 

95 
94 
92 

78 
01 

87 

85 
06 

84 
86 
87 
94 
OS 


*  Deceased. 

■j"   Degree  other  than   A.   B. 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 


95 


HOYNES,  Edward  F.  78 

HURLEY,  Edward  J.  07 

HURLEY,  Thomas  J.  85 

JOHNSTON,  John  C.  94 
JOHNSTONE,  Rev.  Julian  E.       91 

KEANEY,  Dr.  Francis  J.  88 

*KEENAN,  John  H.  92 

KELEHER,  Dr.  Francis  J.  86 

KELLEHER,  Rev.  John  B.  86 

KELLEHER,  Rev.  John  F.  80 

KELLEHER,  Rev.  John  F.  91 

*KELLEY,  Dennis  M.  90 

KELLEY,  Thomas  E.  03 

KELLEY,  Vincent  L.  00 

KELLY,  Francis  E.  07 

♦KELLY,  Rev.  Hugh  B.  82 

KELLY,  Rev.  James  F.  93 

KELLY,  John  W.  80 

*KELLY,  Rev.  Martin  F.  79 

♦KELLY,  Dr.  William  P.  78 

KENDREGAN,  James  H.  03 

KENNEDY,  Daniel  F.  80 

KENNEDY,  Philip  F.  04 

KENNEY,  Rev.  Edward  97 

KEOGH,  Joseph  L.  98 

KERENS,  John  T.  05 

♦KEYES,  Rev.  Joseph  E.  79 

♦KIELY,  Rev.  Michael  C.  83 

KINGSLEY,  Patrick  H.  96 

KINNEEN,  Peter  J.  95 

KIRBY,  John  J.  95 

tKIRMAYER,  Franz  H.  95 

KOEN,  William  H.  02 


♦LALLY,  Rev.  John  J.  81 

LAMB,  Bernard  F.  95 

LAMB,  S.  J.,  Edward  P.  80 

♦LAMB,  S.  J.,  John  B.  78 

LAMBERT,  Walter  J.  05 

LANE,  Richard  J.  97 

LANDREGAN,  Rev.  Jas.  T.  98 

LAVELLE,  Thomas  D.  01 

LAWLESS,  Rev.  Joseph  P.  96 

LEAHY,  David  D.  96 

LEAHY,  Rev.  George  V.  89 

LEARY,  James  H.  89 

LEARY,  Dr.  John  H.  84 

LEDDY,   Charles  J.  04 

LEE,  Rev.  Denis  F.  82 

LEE,  Rev.  Philip  J.  89 
LENEHAN,  Rev.  Daniel  W.         88 

LENNON,  George  T.  90 

LENNON,  Joseph  A.  02 

LENNON,  Joseph  M.  93 

LEONARD,  John  M.  94 

♦LONG,  Michael  J.  81 

LOUGHRY,  Joseph  P.  99 

LUCEY,   Daniel  J.  03 

LYDON,  Patrick  J.  04 

LYNCH,  Rev.  Dennis  J.  01 

*LYNCH,  Rev.  John  T.  81 

LYNCH,  Rev.  Maurice  90 

♦LYNCH,  Rev.  Richard  T.  91 

LYONS,  Daniel  M.  07 

LYONS,  Rev.  George  A.  85 

LYONS,  George  A.  05 

LYONS,  Rev.  Henry  M.  96 

LYONS,  Dr.  Herbert  H.  78 

LYONS,  Rev.  Jeremiah  J.  85 

LYONS,  Rev.  William  F.  97 


*    Deceased. 

I    Degree  other  than  A.   B. 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 


MacCORMACK,  Rev.  Thomas  J.  89 

MACDONALD,  Albert  E.  94 

MACDONALD,  Dr.  William  G.  78 

MACHUGH,  James  B.  81 

MACKIN,   Richard  J.  87 

MACNEILL,  Francis  A.  04 

MADDEN,  John  C.  04 

MADDEN,  Rev.  Mark  E.  92 

MAGUIRE,  Dr.  Charles  F.  93 

MAGUIRE,  Rev.  Charles  J.  98 

MAGUIRE,  Rev.  Dennis  J.  00 

MAGUIRE,  John  F.  94 

MAGUIRE,  Rev.  Michael  F.  96 

tMAHAN,  George  B.  04 

MAHAR,  Rev.  Joseph  P.  94 

MAHONEY,  Herbert  J.  96 

MAHONEY,  Thomas  F.  83 

*MAHONEY,   Rev.   Thomas  J.  80 

MAHONEY,  Rev.  Timothy  J.  83 

MAHONY,  Charles  F.  00 

MALEY,  Rev.  Francis  W.  89 

MALLEY,  Rev.  Augustine  D.  93 

*MALONEY,  Rev.  Michael  J.  90 

*MANAHAN,  James  S.  79 

MARTELL,  Charles  J.  96 

MASTERSON,  Vincent  P.  04 

MCCARTHY,  Dr.  Eugene  A.  84 

MCCARTHY,  Rev.  James  J.  89 

MCCARTHY,  Rev.  John  W.  80 

MCCARTHY,  Rev.  Thomas  F.  89 

MCCARTHY,  Rev.  William  J.  91 

McCARTY,  Rev.  James  E.  02 

McCOY,  Rev.  Thomas  R.  95 

McCUSKER,  Cornelius  M.  02 

McDERMOD,  Rev.  Hugh  M.  97 

McDONALD,  Rev.  Robert  N.  00 


McDONOUGH,  S.  J.,  Vincent  S.  or 
McELANEY,  Hugh  J.  04 
McELENEY,  John  T.  97 
McGILLICUDDY,  Dr.  Corne- 
lius J.  92 
McGLINCHEY,  Rev.  Joseph  F.  02 
McGRATH,  Hugh  C.  01 
*McGRATH,  Rev.  Matthew  H.  86 
*McGUIGAN,  Rev.  James  P.  85 
McGUIGAN,  Dr.  John  J.  87 
McGUINESS,  Henry  J.  07 
McGUINNESS,  James  L.  05 
McKENNA,  Henry  C.  02 

Mclaughlin,  Daniel  j.    ,  88 

tMcLAUGHLIN,  Edward  A.  72 

Mclaughlin,  George  a.  98 

Mclaughlin,  jas.  m.  07 

MCLAUGHLIN,  Dr.  Joseph  I.  82 
MCLAUGHLIN,  Rev.  Thomas  H.  82 

McLEOD,  Rev.  Edward  F.  93 

McMORROW,  J.   Francis  06 

McMORROW,  Wiliiam  M.  06 

McNAMARA,  William  F.  01 

McMANUS,  Bernard  I.  05 

*McMANUS,   Rev.   Patrick  B.  79 

McNULTY,  James  A.  94 

McSWEENEY,  Dr.  Daniel  J.  89 

MEHERAN,  Rev.  John  F.  02 

MERRITT,  Rev.  Nathaniel  J.  80 

MILLARD,  Richard  S.,  Jr.  04 

MILLER,  William  T.  04 

MILLERICK,  Rev.  William  J.  77 

MITCHELL,  Rev.  Walter  J.  01 

MOLLOY,  Hugh  J.  83 

MONGAN,  Dr.  Charles  E.  83 

MOORE,  Rev.  John  J.  82 


*  Deceased. 

f   Degree  other  than  A.  B. 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 


97 


MOORE,  Joseph 
MORIARTY,  Rev.  Daniel  W. 
MULDOON,  Frederick  F. 
MULLEN,  Dr.  John  H. 
MULLIN,  Rev.  Albert  C. 
MULLIN,  Francis  R. 
MULLIN,  Rev.  William  G. 
MULROY,  James  T. 
MURDOCK,  James  M. 
MURDOCK,  Stephen  J. 
MURPHY,  Cornelius  P.  J. 
MURPHY,  Daniel  A. 
MURPHY,  Daniel  J.,  Jr. 
MURPHY,  Rev.  Daniel  M. 
MURPHY,  Dr.  James  C. 
MURPHY,  Rev.  James  J. 
MURPHY,  James  R. 
MURPHY,  Joseph  A. 
MURPHY,   Leonard   A. 
♦MURPHY,  Rev.  Michael  F. 
MURPHY,  Dr.  Patrick  W. 
MURPHY,  Dr.  Timothy  J. 
MURPHY,  William  A. 
MURPHY,  Rev.  William  J. 
MURRAY,  Francis  A. 
MURRAY,  John  J. 
♦MYERS,  Matthew  J. 

NEVINS,  Joseph  V. 
NORRIS,  Rev.  Cornelius  J. 
NUGENT,  William  D. 
NUGENT,   Rev.   John   J. 

tOBER,  Raymond  A. 
O'BRIEN,  Andrew  J. 
O'BRIEN,   Rev.   Charles  A. 


98 
02 
88 
00 
OS 
83 
93 


00  O'BRIEN,  Dr.  Charles  T. 

79  O'BRIEN,  Rev.  Francis  A. 

04  O'BRIEN,  Dr.  John  F. 

96  O'BRIEN,  Rev.  John  J. 

97  O'BRIEN,  William  A. 

00  O'CONNELL,  John  J. 
93  O'CONNELL,  Joseph  F. 
02  O'CONNELL,  Most  Rev.  Wil- 
or  Ham  H.  8j 
04  O'CONNELL,  Rev.  William  H.  93 
96  *0'CONNOR,  Rev.  Charles  A.  81 
79  *0'CONNOR,  Patrick  J.  05 
04  O'CONNOR,  Rev.  Timothy  J.  02 
85  O'CONNOR,  Rev.  William  T.  90 

01  O'DONNELL,  Dr.  Francis  M.  82 
89  *0'GARA,  John  W.  89 
72  O'HARA,  Edward  P.  89 

06  O'HARA,  John  J.  0l 
04  O'HERN,  Daniel  J.  05 
83  O'KEEFE,  Rev.  Arthur  C.  80 

98  *0'LALOR,  S.  J.,  Charles  H.  88 
88  O'NEIL,  Rev.  Leo  F.  J.  97 

91  O'NEIL,  Leo  F.  02 

95  O'LEARY,    Timothy  A.  92 

94  O'REGAN,  Rev.  Peter  L.  01 

07  O'REILLY,  Dr.  William  J.  80 

96  *0'SHEA,  John  J.  88 
O'TOOLE,  Rev.  Lawrence  J.  72 

05 

01  PELLETIER,  Joseph   C.  91 

99  POTTS,  Louis  J.  96 

95  POWERS,  John  H.  03 
POWERS,  Joseph  L.  99 

92  POWERS,  Richard  F.  06 
06  POWERS,  Rev.  William  F.  82 
99 


*    Deceased. 

t    Degree  other  than  A.  B. 


QUIGLEY,  Rev.  George  H.  oo 

QUINLAN,  Joseph  J.  04 

QUINN,  Joseph  A.  04 

QUINN,  Rev.  Peter  C.  90 

QUIRK,  Hon.  Charles  I.  91 

*QUIRK,  Rev.  Edward  A.  87 

*QUIRK,  Rev.  William  J.  81 

RAFTER,   Augustine  L.  82 

READDY,  Rev.  Albert  M.  91 

*REARDON,  Daniel  H.  82 

REARDON,  Henry  C.  06 

*REARDON,  John  A.  01 

REDICAN,  Rev.  James  J.  96 

REGAN,  Rev.  David  F.  94 

REGAN,  John  J.  06 

RENAUD,  Rev.  John  L.  01 

REYNOLDS,    Eugene    T.  06 

RICH,  William  J.  01 

RILEY,  Rev.  Daniel  79 

RILEY,  John  C.  03 

RING,  Rev.  Charles  J.  96 

RIORDAN,  Rev.  Daniel  C.  79 

ROCHE,  Rev.  Walter  J.  01 

ROONEY,  Dr.  Henry  M.  98 

RUSSELL,  James  D.  98 

RYAN,  Rev.  David  D.  01 

RYAN,  Rev.  Edward  F.  01 

RYAN,  Rev.  John  J.  85 

RYAN,  Joseph  A.  02 

SCANLAN,  Rev.  Michael  J.  95 

SCANNELL,  Rev.  Daniel  P.  85 

SCANNELL,  David  A.  96 

SCANNELL,  Rev.  Patrick  J.  96 
SHANAHAN,  Rev.Dr.EdmundT.  88 


BOSTON    COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 


*SHANNAN,  Rev.  James  W.  79 

SHANNON,  Michael  J.  95 

SHAY,  Dr.  Thomas  M.  83 

SHEA,  Joachim  P.  04 

SHEANON,  Joseph  P.  04 

SHEEHAN,  Rev.  John  O'D.  99 

SHEEHAN,  Rev.  John  P.  98 

SHEEHAN,  Dr.  William  J.  88 

SHERIDAN,  Bernard  M.  8> 

SHERIDAN,  Rev.  John  A.  90 

*SHERIDAN,  Dr.  Oliver  M.  83 

SKULLEY,  Francis  J.  89 

SLINEY,  Rev.  Edmund  C.  02 

SMITH,  Dr.  Daniel  P.  83 

SMITH,    Dr.   Richard   A.  94 

SPELMAN,  Thomas  M.  01 

SPENCER,  John  W.  05 

SPLAINE,  Rev.  Michael  J.  97 

SPLAINE,  Rev.  Richard  H.  98 

STACK,  Dr.  Charles  F.  93 

STANTON,  Rev.  James  F.  87 

*STINSON,  Rev.  John  T.  95 

SULLIVAN,  Augustus  L.  01 

SULLIVAN,  Edward  M.  00 

SULLIVAN.  Rev.  Henry  A.  79 

SULLIVAN.  James  86 

SULLIVAN,  John  H.  03 

SULLIVAN,  Rev.  John  P.  85 

*SULLIVAN,  Rev.  John  W.  80 

SULLIVAN,  Joseph  D.  07 

SULLIVAN,  Michael  A.  93 

SULLIVAN,  Rev.  Michael  J.  94 

SULLIVAN,  Patrick  J.  03 

SULLIVAN,  Hon.  Richard  78 

SULLIVAN,  Timothy  C.  05 

SUPPLE,  Rev.  David  G.  98 


*    Deceased. 


BOSTON     COLLEGE,     1907-1908. 


99 


SUPPLE,  Edward  A.  03 

SUPPLE,  Rev.  James  A.  00 

SUPPLE,  James  E.  07 

SUPPLE,  Rev.  Patrick  J.  85 

*SWEENEY,  John  C.  97 

SWIFT,  John  E.  99 

TALBOT,  Rev.  James  78 

TEELING,  Rev.  Benjamin  F.  98 

TEELING,  Richard  S.  99 

TIERNEY,  Rev.  William  E.  02 

TIGHE,  Michael  A  .  03 

TOWLE,  Dr.  Henry  C.  72 

TRACEY,  Rev.  Dr.  Joseph  V.  82 

TRAINOR,  Lawrence  A.  01 

TWOMEY,   Eugene   A.  06 

ULLRICH,  Rev.  Charles  A.  91 

WALSH,  Rev.  Henry  A.  83 

WALSH,  Rev.  John  F.  00 

WALSH,  Joseph  P.  97 


WALSH,  Rev.  Nicholas  R.  77 

WALSH,  William  A.  91 

WARD,  Frederick  A.  03 

WARREN,  James  P.  96 

WELCH,  Rev.  James  E.  95 

WELCH,  John  F.  06 

WELCH,  Rev.  Michael  J.  82 

WELLER,  Dr.  Francis  J.  88 

WELLER,  George  J.  95 
WELSH,  O.  P.,  Rev.  Martin  S.    00 

WENNERBERG,  James  B.  97 

WHALEN,   Leonard    S.  06 

WHEATLEY,  William  J.  07 

WHALEN,  Rev.  William  B.  91 

WHITE,  Dr.  Arthur  J.  98 

WHITE,  Dr.  Michael  W.  94 

WILLIAMS,  Dr.  David  L.  07 

WILLIAMS,  Joseph  R.  99 

WILLIS,  Joseph  H.  90 

WINN,  Dr.  Charles  H.  85 

WOODIS,  John  J.  01 

WOODS,  Rev.  Timothy  J.  91 


Summary    for    1907 


Clergymen 197 

Lawyers            ............  60 

Physicians       .        .         .        .         .         .         .         .        .        .         .         .  54 

Teachers           .                  49 

Electrical  Engineer        . 1 

Journalists        ............  8 

Business , 86 

Clerical  Students '  •         •  39 

Law  Students 6 

Medical  Students    ....*.......  9 

Technical  Students .         .         .  3 

Students  in  Pedagogy 2 

Non-Classified 8 

Total 522 

Dead         .............  65 

Total  Number  of  Graduates         .         .         .         .         .         .  587 


INDEX. 


CALENDAR   5 

TRUSTEES     . 8 

OFFICERS ,  8 

FACULTY • 9 

STUDENTS    „ 

STUDENTS,  BY  CLASSES          .         .                 ^ 

SYSTEM  OF  EDUCATION 22 

STATEMENT         .                 26 

TERMS  AND  HOLIDAYS 29 

EXPENSES 29 

SCHOLARSHIPS            ......        T       ...  30 

SOCIETIES 33 

REQUIREMENTS  FOR  ADMISSION 38 

COURSE  OF  STUDIES 43 

COMMENCEMENT    EXERCISES 56 

GRADUATION  EXERCISES 57 

AWARD  OF  PRIZES 58 

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 65 

FORM  OF  BEQUEST 65 

OFFICERS  OF  THE  ALUMNI  ASSOCIATION,  1907      ...  66 

GRADUATES  OF  BOSTON  COLLEGE 67 

ALUMNI  CATALOGUE 91 


H-n 


l#& 


iv  £1 


WJ 


;  V*0 


«**V*i. 


^^