07.15.76

Page 1

Printer-Broth,er's Three Hats By PAT McGOWAN

BROTHER WIlliAM KEANE, SS.CC.

The ANCHOR An Anchor of the Sou;, Sure and Firm-St. Paul

Vol. 20, No. 29 漏 1976 The Anchor $5.0:~~~\~~ Fall River, Mass., Thursday, July 15, 1976

Population Zero Means Trouble' NEW YORK (NC) - A noted economist and commentator on population issues has chaHenged the views held by many demographers concerning population trends, food and raw materials, saying that according to 1949 estimates, "I find that we have already used up the entire world supplies of copper, lead, zinc and some other minerals." Dr. Colin Clark of Monash University, Melbourne, Autralia, warned that falling birth rates are in reality the threat now facing the world. He quoted French historian Pierre Chaunu, as saying the current birth rate drop could produce by the 1990s ~ - - - I n

a historical disaster worse than the Black Death which swept Europe in the 17th century. Even sources hostile to Clark's position now concede their mistakes in past arguments, he contended. "One former official of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), after making some unfriendly references to my writings, went on to admit that it was far too easy ... to criticize FAO, because the truth of the matter was that, in the course of the next hundred years, there should be no serious difficulty about raising food Turn to Page Five

Brother William Keane is a Sacred Hearts Brother, a full time printer at the New Bedford Standard-Times and director of his community's house in Wareham. Two of his three hats are unique. He's the only member of his community holding a nonchurch-related paying job and he's the only brother anywhere, as far as he knows, who directs a community that includes priests. He makes light of the lastnamed post, in which he's responsible for the welfare of three priests and two other brothers. "It's not like the old idea of a superior," he explains. "No one asks permission to leave the house or anything like that. It's more that I do the dirty work the buck stops with me." The 49-year-old brother does, however, direct spiritual exercises for his small community as well as pay bills and oversee a

large ocean front estate that used to be a Sacred Hearts seminary and is now in process of conversion to a retreat house. He also admitted that at a national meeting he was asked for advice by another congregation considering a brother as -superior of a mixed community. For Brother Bill, as he's usually called, the experiment has worked out just fine; Equally successful, as far as his fellow workers are concerned, has been his transition from the lay to the religious state. "What do we call you now?" asked the other printers, when he first joined the Sacred Hearts congregation. "Try not to use a nasty name," he returned. Actually, he said, to most of his old friends, he's still plain Hilt "Most of them took it in stride, ,but I do get a bit of kidding now and then," said the stocky, round-faced brother. "They don't ask me religious

questions or anything like that," he continued. "If I had already been a brother when I started at the paper, it might have been different, but as it is, they just take me for granted." A veteran of 23 years at the Standard-Times and unmarried, Brother Bill said that when his mother, with whom he had made his home, died in 1970, he began to think there should be "more to life than getting up and going to work in the morning." Always active in his parish and friendly with the Sacred Hearts Fathers staffing his native parish of St. Anthony in Mattapoisett, he began wondering about religious life for himself and after consultation with the Sacred Hearts vocation director embarked on a postulancy and novitiate planned around his job commitment. "This was at a time when religious life styles were in a state of change, as they still are," he Turn to Page Four

Congress Features Heritage Program Hundreds from the Fall River diocese will be among the million pilgrims expected at the 41st ,International ,Eucharistic Congress to be held Aug. .1 through 8 in Philadelphia. Many of Portuguese background will participate in the International Heri路tage program that will be an important part of Congress activities. A Portuguese Eucharistic Celebration expected to be attended by three to five thC1usand Portuguese Catholics will take place at 10 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 7 at Convention Hall in Philadelphia, with Cardinal Antonio Ribeiro, Patriarch Of Lisbon, as principal celebrant. The homilist will be Cardinal Humberto Medeiros of Boston. Assisting in arrangements for the Mass is Rev. John J. Oliveira, Fall River vice-chancellor, who is also diocesan coordinator for all Congress activities and who over the past year has organized Eucharistic weekends in all areas of the diocese in spiritual preparation for the Congress. Following the Mass, as part of the Performing Arts section of the Congress, a Portuguese Rodeo Festival will take place at Murphy Field in Philadelphia. Portuguese folk song and dance groups from throughout the Northeast, including participants from the Fall River diocese, will be featured.

Many diocesans will join the official pilgrimage to the Congress, led by Bishop Daniel A.

Cronin and directed by Msgr. Anthony M. Gomes, with options Tum to Page Three

FIFrY YEARS AGO: On loan from Christians of Chicago to Christians of Philadelphia is elaborate monstrance used 50 years ago in Chicago at first. Eucharistic Congress held in U.S. It will be used again at Philadelphia Congress in August. Examining it are 'Congress officials Msgr. Charles McManus, Rev. Louis D'Addezio, David Schafer.

This Issue-

'Vade Mecum ad Helicopterorum Portum' Says Pope Page 3

. The Surrendering Court

Diocesans Were There

Sister Ann, St. Paul Agree

Providence Broadcaster' To Be Priest

Page 4

Page 6

Page路 7

Page 10


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.