rdfs:comment
| - Boston University is the real-life college of Boston. In the world of Cheers, it is never seen, but it is known that Sumner Sloan teaches there.
- Boston University is an state university in Boston, Massachusetts. It was founded in 1839 by the Massachusetts legislature under the motto "Learning, Virtue, and Piety." For details on applying to the college, click Admissions in the Index, for a list of programs offered in each college, click the appropriate link in the Index
- Boston University is a private research university located in Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
- Boston University is the pride of Taxachusetts...(continue intro)
- The Boston University Terriers are the nine men's and twelve women's varsity athletic teams representing Boston University in NCAA Division I competition. The men compete in basketball, cross country, ice hockey, rowing, soccer, swimming, tennis, indoor and outdoor track, and wrestling. Women compete in basketball, cross country, golf, ice hockey, field hockey, lacrosse, rowing, soccer, swimming, tennis, indoor and outdoor track, and softball. There is no varsity baseball team.
- Boston University (most commonly referred to as BU) is a private research university located in Boston, Massachusetts. With more than 4,000 faculty members and more than 31,000 students, Boston University is one of the largest private universities in the United States and one of Boston's largest employers. The university is nonsectarian, but is historically affiliated with the United Methodist Church. Among its faculty and alumni, BU counts seven Nobel Prize winners, including Martin Luther King, Jr. (PhD '55); 22 Pulitzer Prize winners, and numerous Guggenheim and MacArthur fellows.
- Boston University is a large non-sectarian private university located in Boston, Massachusetts. It was founded as a Methodist seminary in Vermont in 1839, then transferred to Concord, New Hampshire in 1847, to Brookline, Massachusetts in 1867, and finally moved to its present campus along the Charles River in Boston in 1949. Originally the "Newbury Biblical Institute," it changed its name to "Methodist General Biblical Institute of Concord," "Brookline School of Theology," "Boston Theological Seminary" and "Boston School of Theology" before adopting the name "Boston University." [1] It should not be confused with Boston College, an entirely separate university in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts.
|