In 1965 Laurence Veysey published what has remained the definitive study of the transformation of the American university in the late nineteenth century. Over twenty-five years later, there is as yet no similarly comprehensive history of what could be called the second transformation of the university—the emergence of the post—World War II “multiversity.” There is, however, a large literature on the postwar university, both appreciative and critical, from which has emerged the generally accepted account of this transformation. This account idealizes the prewar university as a tightly knit community of scholars and scientists, dedicated to the expansion and transmission of knowledge, and portrays the university's postwar transformation, through federal support for research, into a disparate collection of scientists and scholars sharing only the goals of serving a variety of publics and advancing their own careers. If the prevailing image of the prewar university has been the “ivory tower,” the postwar image has been the federally funded laboratory, staffed with researchers who are exempt from, or little interested in, teaching, and who work in large groups with expensive scientific equipment.