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If
you have historical photos in the following categories
that you would like added to this page, you can email
them to cmoffice@ccmcup.com.
Please include a brief description/caption, date of
photo, and the names of any people in the photo. It
is always helpful to include contact information for
folks identified on this page so that we can send
updates about the site and expand the content of this
section.
Newman
Photos by Year:
1942,
1949, 1950, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1957,
1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966,
1968, 1987, 1988, 1990, 1993, 1999, 2003, 2004, 2005
Newman
Photos by Activity:
History
of the Newman Movement:
John
Henry Cardinal Newman (1801-1890)

John
Henry Newman was an Anglican priest who converted
to Catholicism as a result of his involvement in the
Oxford Movement. While teaching at Oxford University,
he promoted a consistent pursuit of religious truth
as a necessary function of a university education.
Newman was an influential thinker who made significant
contributions to the academic disciplines of theology,
philosophy, and education. His teachings help provide
the intellectual foundation of liberal studies programs
in both religious and secular universities. Cardinal
Newman is still regarded as one of the most significant
Catholic thinkers and is regarded as a patron saint
of students, particularly those pursuing the insights
of religious truth.
The
Newman Movement grew out of the experience
of Catholic students on the campuses of non-Catholic
colleges. Catholic students at the University of Wisconsin
were invited to the home of John and Frances Melvin
on Thanksgiving Day in 1883 for the study of church
history and literature. The invitation resulted from
the students feeling ostracized from the church because
they were attending a secular university and experienced
strong anti-catholic sentiments on the part of many
of their teachers. Timothy Harrington, one of the
original members of "The Melvin Club", went
on to attend medical school at the University of Pennsylvania
where he started a group for Catholic students. These
first clubs developed branches at numerous colleges
and gave birth to many organizations which support
faith-based inquiry on secular campuses. Today, Newman
is a student-focused and lay-administered organization
that seeks to bring the insights of theology together
with one's professional education in order to form
Catholic men and women for leadership in society.
The
Newman Association is an officially recognized
student organization of Clarion University of Pennsylvania.
While its leadership is made up of students, it encourages
the input of faculty and religious representatives.
It is much more than just "The Catholic Club"
on campus; it seeks to foster dialog with the truth
that is found within theology, philosophy, and human
experience. Newman includes presentations on faith,
culture and morality; theological discussions and
debates; belief expressed in acts of charity; and
the pursuit of religious truth within a spirit of
community. The Newman Association serves the Clarion
University community. Newman respects the diversity
of religious traditions of the students, faculty,
staff and administration, as well as the open nature
of discussion and debate found within a public institution.
Newman believes that the mission of any university
is, in part, to pursue the knowledge found within
all academic disciplines and to integrate that knowledge
with one's academic and professional life. Accordingly,
the Newman Association encourages those who participate
in the mission of the university to be open as well
to the insights of theology and philosophy while pursuing
a degree, doing research, or teaching an academic
discipline.
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