PAGE 4 THE GUARDIAN, JULY 2, 1982
Recent Deaths
(Information for this column is prepared from data furnished by the families of the deceased,
their pastors or funeral directors.)
MAX FELIX PIECHOCKI,
79, of Marche, died June 24
in Little Rock. The son of
Joe and Francis Michalak
Piechocki, he was a retired
carman after 25 years with
the MoPac Railroad and a
member of Immaculate
Heart of Mary parish and
its Rosary Society. Sur-
viving are his wife, Agnes
Zakrzewski Piechocki; two
sons, one daughter, one
brother, three sisters, 16
grandchildren and three
great-grandchildren. Fat-
her Edward J. McCormick
offered the Funeral Mass
June 26 in Immaculate
Heart of Mary Church.
Burial was in Immaculate
Heart of Mary Cemetery.
Surviving are his wife,
Cleo Liebhaber; two sons,
three daughters, two
brothers, two sisters, 12
grandchildren and one
great-grandchild. Father
John F. Hlavacek offered
the concelebrated Funeral
Mass June 23 in St. John's
Church, Engelbert. Burial
was in St. John's
Cemetery.
MRS. MARY VELVIN KING,
70, of 617 Oak Street, Pine
Bluff, died June 22 in Pine
Bluff. Born in North Little
Rock, she was a former
piano and violin teacher at
Annunciation Academy, a
member of St. Joseph's
JOE B. LIEBHABER, 74, of its Altar Society, the
Baggers, died in West Catholic Daughters of the
Memphis. Born Aug. I0, Americas, the Arkansas
1907, in Randolph County, Federation of Music Clubs,
he was a member of St. the Arkansas State Music
Paul's parish, a farmer Teachers Association, the
and a member of the National Guild of Piano
Knights of Columbus. Teachers and past
president of the Pine Bluff
Musical Coterie. Surviving
are three sons, one
daughter and 14 grand-
children. The Funeral
Mass was offered at St.
Joseph's Church. Burial
was in St. Joseph's
Cemetery.
KATHRYN B. BURNS, sister
of Msgr. Joseph M. Burns,
Hot Springs, died June 18
in Elkins Park, Pa. She
also is survived by two
sisters. The Funeral Mass
was offered at St. James
Church in Elkins. Burial
was in Holy Sepulchre
Cemetery there.
parish where she was choir JOHN NICHOLAS BOUR, 74,
director and organist, of Morrilton, died May 28.
Born Jan. 31, 1908, in Mor-
rilton, he was the son of
John and Barbara Meyer
Bour, a member of Sacred
Heart parish and a retired
foreman of the Morrilton
Lumber Company. Surviv-
ing are his wife, Mabel
Carlton Bour, a son and
two grandsons. Father
John A. Burns, C.S.Sp.,
offered the Funeral Mass
May 29 in Sacred Heart
Church. Burial was in
Sacred Heart Cemetery.
Continued from Pg. 3
several imperatives while the
process of orderly, negotiated
disarmament is under way.
Of primary importance, it
says, is the prevention of
development or deployment
of "destabilizing weapons" on
either side. It also says the
tendency toward "automatic
control" of weapons systems
and further proliferation of
nuclear weapons around the
world must be prevented.
The document's section on
nuclear weapons, which
represents an advance over
previous church teachings in
making specific moral
judgments on nuclear
deterrence, is likely to be the
focus of most attention, but
that section is only part of a
broader overview on the
scriptural, moral and
pastoral aspects of war and
peace questions.
The draft document begins
with analyzing the basic
Christian commitments to life
and to peace from a scriptural
perspective. It then discusses
in detail the just war theory,
which has been a cornerstone
of the Catholic moral ap-
proach to war and peace
issues since the fifth century.
While noting that the just
war theory sees the right of
self-defense as "an extension
of the commandment of
love," the authors comment,
"It is too often forgotten that
Bishops' Pastoral Draft
calls on Cathoi
the 'theory' of just war
elaborated through the
centuries was an evolving
"The VACATION CAPITAL Arkansas" Here and effort to discourage war" by
[ V| -- placing strict limits and
There Around conditions on it and making a
presumption in favor of
((}) SEE HISTORY'S OLOEST ART The Diocese peace.
dl[I
ON
Schedule Issued
. ITTINGTON AVENUE IN HOT SPRINGS LITTLE ROCK
ADVERfflSING YOUff0 A, PHOTOGRAPHY
YOUR HOT SPRINGS GUARDIAN REPRESENTATIVE
The Secular Carmelites will
meet at Mary Lake on Route 4
at the invitation of the Prior
and Chapter Counselor,
Father John Michael Payne,
O.C.D., on Saturday, July 10.
Mass will be at 11 A.M.
During the Mass, the
following applicants will be
admitted to Formation: Ann
Baltz, Don Baltz, Thelma
Buzbee, Rev. Clayton Gould,
Mary La Forge and Mattie
Wright. They will be
presented by Formation
Director Elizabeth Emrick
For Papal Visit
Madrid, Spain (NC) -- The
Spanish Bishops' Conference
said the nine-day visit of Pope
John Paul II for the October
celebrations honoring St.
Teresa of Avila includes stops
in 13 cities, an audience with
King Juan Carlos and the
ordination of priests.
According to the
preliminary schedule issued
by the bishops, the Pope
would visit Avila, birthplace
of the Carmelite nun who
Saying that modern
weapons of war "give special
urgency to questions of when,
if ever, violent resistance can
be permissible," it places its
analysis of nuclear warfare
within the context of the
classical moral position of the
just war theory - the con-
ditions required for legitimate
entry into warfare and the
limits placed upon the con-
duct of war, particularly the
protection of non-combatants
from attack and the
requirement that the means
used in war be proportional to
the ends for which the war is
being fought.
Even if waging war can be
justified in a particular
situation, it says, "the par-
ticular means used to wage
war may not be permissible.
The distinction is critical,
especially in view of the very
practical questions raised
today about nuclear
weapons."
The draft document also
addresses other issues of
warfare today. It notes, for
example, under the question
of the competent authority to
wage war, that "far too little
analysis has been made of the
moral issues involved in re-
volutionary-counter-revolut-
ionary or insurgency-counter-
insurgency conflicts." It also
notes that the right of self-
defense required for a just
war "does not include the
mere defense of all material
possessions, seizing the
possessions of others, or the
imposition of rule on others."
It also says that a decision
to forego a nuclear deterrent
itself poses difficult questions
and might "require a
willingness to pay higher
costs to develop conventional
forces."
The pastoral draft speaks at
length of the moral duty of
"waging peace." It calls on
the United States to be
prepared to take some "in-
dependent initiatives" toward
arms control and disar-
mament and says the
responsibility for disar-
mament cannot be evaded
"by one side's pointing ac-
cusingly at the other as
treacherous and aggressive."
It calls for a shift of military
expenditures to the easing of
misery in the world, noting
that true peace must be based
on justice and human dignity.
-; and will receive scapulars, became a reformer of It urges the development of
After the Mass, a luncheon religious life and a writer of effective non-violent means to
KITCHENS UNLIMITED provided by the members will mystic works, and Alba de resolve conflicts between
I beserved. A business meeting Tormes, where St. Teresa nations and guarantee their
CRAFTSMANSHIP OF TH[-P.ST e TECHNOL(iGY OF THE PRESENT will be , conducted by died October 15, 1582. Also on security and the development
SUPERIOR QUIETNESSeRELIABLEQUALITYCEILINGFANS President Frances Hart. the schedule is a visit to of a "compelling vision of
WE CREATE THE WORLO'S FINEST KITCHENS Because of the Regional Segovia tothe tombofanother peace, justice and a positive
2223A&ertPte Pkme 321-1334 Meeting in Albuquerque, N. mystic, St. John of the Cross, world order" in the in-
2 blocks to bath houses • a II color cable TV
• away from city traffic • refrigerators in all kit-
- downtown in a park chenettes nd rooms
230 Fountain St., Hot Springs Mountain Drive,
Phone 501 321 2230, Hot Springs Nat'l Park, AR 71901
HAPPY HOLLOW MOTEL
EMIL E. WENCEL m
Real Estate Sales Management Appraisals !11 .....
Memlr MLS Graduato Realtors Instituto
230 Fountain St., P.O. Box 1266, Hot Springs, AR 71901
Business Phone 501 321 2230
e
".Now, more than ever,
look to the larubnark."
M., in August, the next local
meeting will be in September.
HARDY
Knights of Columbus St.
John Neumann Council 6969 of
Cherokee Village Hardy
honored three of their founder
fathers recently with V.I.P.
Certificates. Noted were
Richard Fink, first Grand
Knight of the council, Past
District Deputy and present
State Church Director; Lester
Gamboe, second Grand
Knight of the council and
present trustee, and George
Weihofen, immediate past
Grand Knight and present
Faithful Navigator of the
Bishop Fletcher Assembly of
the Fourth Degree Knights of
Columbus.
Travel Service
Arkansas Bank &
Trust Company
ED KRENZELOi(
Manager
624-4611 624-5397
Hot Springs National Pork,
Arkansas
and a visit and rally at the
shrine of Our Lady of El Pilar
in Zaragoza.
The final itinerary of a
papal trip is prepared by the
Vatican, which usually issues
it shortly before the trip
begins. The Pope already has
announced his intention to
visit Spain for the
celebrations marking the
fourth centenary of St.
Teresa's den th.
NORTH LITTLE ROCK
ternational community.
Keep Current
Read
The $ G.u.00r00d),an
The Mother and Unborn
Baby Care Group will he
working directly with Abba
House, a home for unwanted
pregnant women, and the four
Sisters that Mother Teresa of
Calcutta is sending to manage i
it. The group is in dire need of
counsellors, typists and cash
donations. Those wishing to
help can contact Bonnie
Hartnedy, 225-7909, or Suzie
McNally, 771-0514.
ST. VINCENT
Instead of a country ham
dinner, it was announced that
a country style beef barbecue
dinner will be served at the
annual St. Mary's Bazaar
Saturday, July 5, starting at 5
P.M. Box lunches will he
available. A dance will follow.
Fed.eral
Savings
of Hot Springs
[] Home Office: Number One Market Place
[] Brm¢ll 0mcu: 700 hll Puke 3021 Mal=m Road
HOt Spc,nos Natoonal Park Arkansas 71901 1
:7 Nmm" One Cmiz Cmw
Hot Sgtings Village Arkansas 71901 ,=,,
their consciences
al dimensions ,
peace issues,
f00'b
reverence for li
to do penance for'
It praises "her
who have adopt;ei I A.
of pacifism and
for the sake of thXIMA
says that pacifislall C
better understan the 1
American CatFCathc
munity. tage i
At the same tirwhere
the role of Catlgissm
military and oing?
related work andjust
to bring the deptlm -- t
tradition to thehn unil
assure that Ameaily li
and practices inwho s|
defense are cirri togetl
sound moral basiether
It urges Cathol neigh
in peace activin ma
sensitive to the ri| But t
Christians to h6 e sot
positions in good)n ox
and to "build i=tdivid
mutual underst
respect. lm
It also addresS!
educators, priest
scientists,
technicians,
workers, workcl
media, public offl
people, parents
as citizens, suggll,l
they can work folq
justice in th
On C.K. of A=,..
Jasper, Ind.
Kordsmeier, Moff
was elected to a s I
and Herman
Sherwood, Ark., fin OF
year term on u
Board of Trus
Catholic Knights d
The election wa
41st National Co
group here recen
the convention w '
Fraternalism -
Change." \\;
Other representJ \\;
Arkansas at tl \\;.
were Bill Hegem[ /rl
Alicia Minden CI/11
Smith; William i/N[,.
Subiaco, and
Conway.
Charter
a Bud
Jim
irimin
:rtsis iv
NELSON- ECT "l
ontrib
BALMAZ. 00oo,
INSURANCE-BONDI! Gt
P.O. Box 5746, Little Rock, Arkoll
Offices: No. 4 Shackleford pl
Little Rock, Arkansas72211 (501) j Ad