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  1. Cornell claims to be a “nonsectarian” university, but in some respects it is a highly sectarian institution, for it unjustifiably privileges particular points of view and discriminates against others.

  2. Cornell was founded as a non-sectarian school, but had to compete with church-sponsored institutions for gaining New York's land-grant status. A.D. White noted in his inaugural address, "We will labor to make this a Christian institution, a sectarian institution may it never be."

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  4. From its founding in 1865, Cornell University has been firmly nonsectarian, welcoming students and faculty of any religion, or no religion at all. This approach was controversial in the mid to late 19th century, when the majority of American universities were religiously affiliated; Cornell was called the “Godless” university by many.

  5. Cornell University, founded in 1865—were writing nonsectarian directives into their charters. Other schools, such as the University of Pennsylvania, University of Georgia, and Brown University, had been 1nonsectarian for decades, but none were as vocal about their opinion on religion as the Cornell founders.

  6. In his Enlightenment rationalism, public religion referred to what he assumed to be a universal mo­rality, while private religion described the sectarian beliefs of such groups as Presbyterians, Baptists, and Methodists.

  7. The Supreme Court’s Discriminatory Use of the Term “Sectarian” Why a Functional Definition of Religion Is Necessary If Justice is to Be Achieved in Public Education; Secular Bias and Environmental Policy — Giving Christians a Place at the Table “Cosmos,” Cosmologies, and the Public Schools; Public Education as “Brutal Censorship”

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