Several alumni have also earned graduate degrees from private religious and public secular universities.
However, as time progressed, a growing number of Catholic university students began attending secular universities.
Dozens of secular universities around the nation offer such courses.
By 1960, there were five publicly supported secular universities.
Today, it is a secular university that includes a medical school and has awarded more than 60,000 degrees.
May a secular university deny otherwise qualified students a degree because of their religion?
This is also the ancestor of the modern mortarboard used today in secular universities.
This approach is different from a secular university, where some have felt they are discriminated against based upon their Christian worldview.
The question mentioned private, public, secular and religious universities, and asked the secretary, "Who do you think has the best deal?"
Before the 1950s, Stanford "had the reputation of being a completely secular university".