between the two schools remain.
During World War II, Tufts College was one of 131 colleges and universities nationally that took part in the V-12 Navy College Training Program which offered students a path to a Navy commission.
Due to travel restrictions imposed by World War II, the Boston Red Sox conducted spring training for the 1943 Major League season at Tufts College. In 1955, continued expansion was reflected in the change of the school's name to Tufts University, though the corporate name remains as 'Trustees of Tufts College'.
In 1945, Tufts formed an affiliation with the Boston School of Occupational Therapy, which had been in existence for several decades. The Boston School was officially merged into Tufts in 1960. During the 1980s, its campus moved from Boston to Somerville to Medford, and it became a school within the College of Arts and Sciences. Later it became a department within the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Still sometimes referred to as the Tufts University – Boston School of Occupational …