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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 September 2014
1 It is most interesting to see O'Brien adopt Alice Gallin's refutation of James Burtchaell's and others' reliance on the analogy to the evangelical Protestant loss of control of the colleges and universities in the nineteenth century. Gallin's point is simply that Catholics are not Protestants, and now is not then. See her paper at the American Historical Association, December 29, 1992: “American Church-Related Higher Education.” See also Johnson, Henry C. Jr., “Down from the Mountain: Secularization and the Higher Learning in America,” Review of Politics 54 (Fall 1992): 551–58;CrossRefGoogle Scholar and Turner, James, “The Catholic University in Modern Academe: Challenge and Dilemma,” paper at University of Notre Dame Conference, 10 13, 1992Google Scholar (conference title: The Storm over the University). See also Reinhart, Dietrich O.S.B., “Inaugural Address,” St. John's University, Collegeville, MN, 09 13, 1991.Google Scholar