Catholic News 2
NEW YORK (AP) -- The annual Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation Dinner, a white-tie gala in New York that is often the last time the two presidential nominees share a stage before Election Day, is traditionally a time when campaign hostilities are set aside....
Denver, Colo., Oct 20, 2016 / 02:02 pm (CNA).- If you've been waiting for the extra push to pursue a master's degree in theology, this scholarship opportunity might be exactly what you need.The Augustine Institute's Graduate School of Theology, a Catholic theological school offering formation in the New Evangelization, has announced its fourth annual St. John Paul II scholarship competition, in which four winners will be awarded full-tuition scholarships starting in the 2017-2018 academic year.“The Institute is particularly looking for men and women with an ardent desire to proclaim the Truth of the Gospel in and through the spiritual and corporal works of mercy,” the Augustine Institute’s Academic Dean, Dr. Christopher Blum, told CNA.“We are sure to have many more qualified applicants than we can bring to Denver as finalists, so the competition will be significant,” he said.Over the past four years, the Augustine Institute – located i...

Denver, Colo., Oct 20, 2016 / 02:02 pm (CNA).- If you've been waiting for the extra push to pursue a master's degree in theology, this scholarship opportunity might be exactly what you need.
The Augustine Institute's Graduate School of Theology, a Catholic theological school offering formation in the New Evangelization, has announced its fourth annual St. John Paul II scholarship competition, in which four winners will be awarded full-tuition scholarships starting in the 2017-2018 academic year.
“The Institute is particularly looking for men and women with an ardent desire to proclaim the Truth of the Gospel in and through the spiritual and corporal works of mercy,” the Augustine Institute’s Academic Dean, Dr. Christopher Blum, told CNA.
“We are sure to have many more qualified applicants than we can bring to Denver as finalists, so the competition will be significant,” he said.
Over the past four years, the Augustine Institute – located in Denver, Colorado – has offered various students full-ride scholarship opportunities, which has proven successful for the Denver community, the Institute, and the scholars themselves.
”The John Paul II scholars have enjoyed remarkable internship opportunities here in Denver,” Dr. Blum noted.
“They have served as student-teachers in archdiocesan schools, missionaries with the homeless and college students, catechists at local parishes, and some we have placed with apostolates such as RealLifeCatholic or have been able to incorporate into the Institute's own apostolic work,” he said.
When choosing among the many individuals who are eager to pursue a Master’s in theology, the Augustine Institute’s scholarship committee will screen the applicants and choose twelve finalists who will make the journey to Denver on January 12, 2017 for final interviews.
Dr. Blum said that “the deciding factor typically has to do with how applicants demonstrate their commitment to serve the Church's mission of evangelization. Leading candidates have often spent several years working in parishes or schools or with apostolates of one kind or another.”
In addition, “the St. John Paul II award is bestowed on those students who demonstrate themselves to be devout servants of Christ and His Church and who show significant potential as leaders in the New Evangelization,” an Oct. 11 press release stated.
Although only four applicants are chosen for the full-tuition scholarships, many runner-ups are given the opportunity for partial scholarships to the Augustine Institute.
More information about the Augustine Institute and the St. John Paul II Scholarship is available at: https://www.augustineinstitute.org/scholarship-competition/
IMAGE: CNS/Nancy WiechecBy Nancy WiechecMOOSE,Wyo. (CNS) -- Shirley Craighead knows a thing or two about grizzly bears. Sheand the bears live in the same place."Ilive here and love it!" Craighead emphatically told Catholic News Service inher home in Moose, just shy of the Teton Range in Grand Teton National Park."It'sa rare day that I don't get up and say, 'God, what am I doing here? How did Iever get here, to live here?'"Inher house, she has knickknacks featuring bears, pictures of bears and even apair of salt and pepper shakers in the shape of bears. Beside the shoes at herdoorway, lie cans of bear spray, a deterrent for use against aggressive bears.Shirleycame to know a lot about grizzlies and other wildlife from her late husband,Frank Craighead, and his twin brother, John, who died this past September atage 100. As researchers and conservationists, the Craighead brothers are knownfor their studies of the greater Yellowstone area."Theydid the original study on grizzly bears and d...

IMAGE: CNS/Nancy Wiechec
By Nancy Wiechec
MOOSE, Wyo. (CNS) -- Shirley Craighead knows a thing or two about grizzly bears. She and the bears live in the same place.
"I live here and love it!" Craighead emphatically told Catholic News Service in her home in Moose, just shy of the Teton Range in Grand Teton National Park.
"It's a rare day that I don't get up and say, 'God, what am I doing here? How did I ever get here, to live here?'"
In her house, she has knickknacks featuring bears, pictures of bears and even a pair of salt and pepper shakers in the shape of bears. Beside the shoes at her doorway, lie cans of bear spray, a deterrent for use against aggressive bears.
Shirley came to know a lot about grizzlies and other wildlife from her late husband, Frank Craighead, and his twin brother, John, who died this past September at age 100. As researchers and conservationists, the Craighead brothers are known for their studies of the greater Yellowstone area.
"They did the original study on grizzly bears and developed the radio tracking that is used commonly nowadays," she said.
The tracking innovation has been used by scientists for decades, helping humans understand animal migration and the systems in which they live.
As a girl growing up in Massachusetts, Shirley Craighead read a lot of books. She said she longed to have the same adventures and to see different places like the characters she read about.
"That just stuck with me as I grew older."
She became a Maryknoll sister and went on to work in Chile. Her life also led her to other places: Belize, El Salvador and Mexico.
Later in life, Shirley met Frank Craighead at a book lecture.
"Eventually after six years of knowing him, we married and I moved out here," she told CNS. "That's how I came to live in beautiful Grand Teton National Park."
Shirley smiles large when talking about her love of the park.
"It's for climbers and rafters probably more than anything. It is (also) definitely for scenery, so the people who really want to stay in their cars or maybe just get out and take some pictures, it serves them too. There are beautiful spots, beautiful lakes that you can almost drive to. ... It's sort of a park for every ability."
She said there are wonderful fishing spots, canoeing, skiing and of course bird and animal watching.
Has she seen a grizzly?
"Oh, yes, yes, several times," she said. "I've seen grizzlies both here in this park and in Yellowstone."
Shirley shared a specific story about taking a visiting priest on his first tour of Grand Teton, and he was eager to spot a grizzly.
During the tour, the two stopped at Oxbow Bend, a popular Teton viewpoint along a meander of the Snake River. It's a favorite spot for ospreys and bald eagles, river otters, beavers, muskrats, elk and moose.
Then, Shirley and her guest were treated to a spectacular surprise.
"All of a sudden from down in the bushes a mother grizzly and three cubs came out and they were just grazing," she recalled. "We just had marvelous, very safe views because we were right beside our car."
Another time, Shirley was away from her house when her neighbors spotted a grizzly snooping around her porch.
"I was sorry to miss that opportunity," she said and then added that if she had been there, "hopefully I would have known he was there before I'd have opened the door."
Shirley considers all of Grand Teton to be special, but there are a couple of places that make it "extra special."
One is the Catholic Chapel of the Sacred Heart, an all-log structure that has served park visitors and the locals for nearly 80 years. She has been its caretaker and sacristan for the past 15.
"The chapel is extremely interesting," Shirley said. It's one of very few active churches that exist within a national park, a place that has given her the opportunity to meet people from all over the world.
The second is Cascade Canyon.
"That has always been one of my very favorite spots," she said. "And it's half the country's favorite trail too. ... It's very well used."
Shirley said the canyon trail is challenging going up, but along the way hikers are treated to a waterfall and open views at Inspiration Point.
"Then you turn back into the Tetons and you have about three miles of just walking a wonderful trail between these gorgeous mountains."
On the 100th anniversary of the National Park Service, Shirley reflected on the wisdom U.S. leaders had in setting up the national park system.
"It's one of the most wonderful things we did for the world," she said. "It's saving God's beautiful planet in so many different ways."
The Craighead house sits on an inholding, land that was privately owned before it was included within the park boundaries.
But Shirley Craighead said her land in many ways is our land.
"It doesn't matter where our line of property is because basically it belongs to all of us. And that's the beauty of a national park; it belongs to the people."
- - -
Follow Wiechec on Twitter: @nancywiechec.
- - -
Copyright © 2016 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. www.catholicnews.com. All rights reserved. Republishing or redistributing of CNS content, including by framing or similar means without prior permission, is prohibited. You may link to stories on our public site. This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To request permission for republishing or redistributing of CNS content, please contact permissions at cns@catholicnews.com.
CLEVELAND (AP) -- The grueling four-month championship drought could soon be over....
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Environmental Protection Agency had sufficient authority and information to issue an emergency order to protect residents of Flint, Michigan, from lead-contaminated water as early as June 2015 - seven months before it declared an emergency, the EPA's inspector general said Thursday....
LONDON (AP) -- Thousands of men who were convicted under now-abolished British laws against homosexuality are to receive posthumous pardons, the government announced Thursday. Those who are still alive can will be eligible to have their criminal records wiped clean....
DETROIT (AP) -- A 50-year-old woman who died after a car wreck last month in California is the 11th U.S. victim of Takata Corp.'s defective air bag inflators....
EL CAJON, Calif. (AP) -- Seated at his desk at a suburban San Diego middle school, 12-year-old Abdulhamid Ashehneh tries not to let his mind wander to the painful memories of his life in civil war-torn Syria....
PHOENIX (AP) -- First lady Michelle Obama has emerged as perhaps the most effective Donald Trump critic in the Democrats' lineup, and she's done it without ever uttering two key words: Donald Trump....
DELAWARE, Ohio (AP) -- Mocking his critics, Donald Trump pledged Thursday to fully accept the outcome of next month's presidential election - if he wins. The Republican said he reserved the right to contest questionable results, deepening his unsubstantiated assertions that the race against Hillary Clinton could be rigged against him....