0 5s, r-4A ,0 I CHARDIN !> 0 (from page seven) lates us when we receive him instead of we assimilating him. Teilhard loved the age-old Catholic de- votion to Christ's Sacred Heart, although he rejected many of the exaggerated prac- tices that sprang up around it. To con- ceive of the physical heart of the God- man as a symbol of God's love become generously human and close to men Was for him the most natural thing in the world. As De Lubac puts it: "More and more, for Teilhard, the Heart of Jesus was the 'Fire' bursting into the cosmic milieu, to 'amorize' it." Inrgeneral, Teilhard speakseofChrist's Incarnation as an on-going event, what St. Paul referred to as "the building up of the body of Christ" (Eph. 4, 13). Christ has not yet associated to himself all that is 'chosen,' all that is to be saved for the Father. What Augustine called "the total Christ" is yet incomplete, even physically incomplete, to use the word 'physical' in an expanded sense. Awareness of this "enables us to see and love in Christ both 'he who is,' and 'he who is in process of becoming.' Christ has not yet drawn to himself the last folds of his garment of flesh and love made up those who believe in him." S DE LUBAC remarks, Teilhard's real- ism was always hard on the type of theology that preferred what are called moral or juridical rather than physical- that is, more organic-links. But De Lu- bac culls many phrases from the preach- ing and writing of the Church Fathers to show that this is by no means a new orientation. The position of the Church, in rela- tionship to Christ's cosmic role as Omega, developed only very slowly in Teilhard's mind. Gradually he connected the con- cept of charity, which is the driving force in the Christian movement toward God, with that of love-energy, which he saw as the ultimate key to socialization and unity in the noosphere. The conviction grew in him that the Church, the Christian "ax- is,' is in reality a 'phylum of love' insert- ed by God into the evolutionary process. The Church, an organic 'people of God, represented in his eyes a qualita- tive evolution of love within the cosmos. It appeared to be "the true carrier of human life," and we find him speaking of the 'Catholic phylum' as the "center of the privileged zone where the upward cosmic movement of 'complexity-consci- ousness' is united with the downward per- sonal movement of attraction with its power to personalize." DESPITE WHAT his critics have char- ged, Teilhard was not Hegelian, and realized quite well the risks and uncer- tainties of this Christogenesis. Man must choose between revolt and adoration, and the success of the whole world-process hangs in the balance. So keenly and per- sonally did he feel the threat of evil that he echoed modern man's bitter reproach to the Gospel for fostering passivity in the face of it. In The Divine Milieu the charge comes up again and again: toQ many Christians have shrunk from a harsh world rather than labor and suffer with all their power to make it a worthy place for Christ to come to. Teilhard realized, just as acutely, that man's labor in this life is doomed to ulti- mate check and must undergo the passi- vities of death. But death, if undergone with faith, is for every man and all of 'chosen' mankind a privileged threshold of "ecstacy in God." Christ, after all, is the one St. Paul has termed "the first- born of the dead." As De Lubac puts it: In death Teilhard saw a confluence of all the setbacks, all the obscurities, all the evils that are the portion of our terrestial condition. At the same time he believed that 'death releases' and that 'if there were no death, the earth would certainly seem stifling. . .Death does not return us to 'the great current of Things' but 'surren- ders us totally to God.' O NE SHORTCOMING of Teilhard's that both De Lubac and Mooney point out is his tendency to lose sight of the indi- vidual and his.crises and agonies in his preoccupation with the panorama of cos- mogenesis. But each of them quotes a passage of John Henry Newman to the effect that a great theological pioneer need not be expected to marshall together all facets and factors of theology in fol- lowing out his specific insight, otherwise the van of theology would never progress an inch. More seriously, they both admit his strange silence on the subject of Christ's reconciliation. There was, says Mooney, some "mental block which prevented him from seeing any relationship whatsoever between the success of evolution and the reparation made by Christ for the sins of the world." N SKETCHING A Christian approach to the concept of death, Teilhard does full justice to its positive aspect of pas- sage into loving union with God, but neglects the traditional concept which is inverse to this, death to sin, whereby a man repudiates, in humbly accepting the painful darkness of his last moments, all the specific egoism in his past history. And it would seem that Teilhard coh- sistently dissociates the need for Christ to make reparation for past sin with his mission of unifying mankind in love, as if the historical Passion and Death were NIUSd VOL XI 1I, NO. 2 5fcr4tgan IaitI MAGAA TH URSDAY, sume kind of unavoidable penal inflic- tion. Christ, in submitting out of loving 'obedience to the Father's will to the course of humanly unjust events that led to his death (and his integrity really gave him only one course of action), healed man's failure of love. Mooney remarks: What Teilhard apparently never sees when dealing with redemption (and with sin as a sort of impersonal force) is that the one essential condi- tion for . . evolution's success can only be Christ's conquest of that mysterious capacity in man for dis- union and hatred on the personal level. Now this is an anomaly of the first order. But the anomaly itself, the fact that Teilhard neglects an important phrase or two even in his favorite passage of St. Paul (earlier quoted), can be used to add the final distinguishing touch to the por- trait of this extraordinary man and priest. His inadequate view of the 'reconciliation' is not so much a lapse of basic theology as a reaction, no doubt, to the long his- tory of penitential practices within the Catholic Church. Teilhard was sensitive to all excess in this direction, and above all to a great deal of somewhat distorted writing -and teaching that led very gen- erous souls into a negative mentality of flight from an evil world and consumed energies that should have been better used in building up the kingdom of God. TEILHARD HIMSELF had much to en- dure in his lifetime, not only from the sufferings and loss of those whom he held very dear, but above all from those who failed to sympathize with his teaching or to support him in his desire to publish his reflections. It mightdwell havepmade another man impatient, bitter, or des- pondent. In Teilhard de Chardin it served to enhance the instinct for kindliness and human understanding, the .depth of his mind and the closeness of his union with God. He continued peacefully to write his manuscripts and deliver his lectures until the end, confident, certainly, that there lay dormant within the seeds of his thought a vitality that would send up a worldwide harvest in God's own day. And again he was right. is The- New American Music LETI .: t;: 3 r:.;,y ,. {stis..I The marking at left calligraphy nor kir art. It is part of the a musical composil example of a more mod( freer, more fun, but b4 serious reassessment of (from page five) parlor. One of Cohen's students, Paul Bo- nus, releases balloons with flashing lights and sound-making devices late at night. If you really want to go the whole technological hog, "recent experiments have indicated that some greenhouse plants respond favorably to either 'rock 'n roll or classical sonatas, by growing more than they do without musical ac- companiment" (news item). Togetherness Strikes Again: Social Art THE NEW presentations of art activity through community effort carry en- tirely different credentials than the ear- lier Art classifications. An interchange of ideas and talents is encouraged, inawhich everyone contributes what they can do. Most composers feel that no persons should be barred from making a perform- ance come alive just because he does not read music. "Which is more musical: a truck passing by a factory or a truck passing by a music school? Are the peo- ple inside the school musical and the ones outside unmusical? (Cage in "Silence", Wesleyan University Press). For pieces of music, composers have be- gun to use visual phenomena, theatrical or matrixed activity, audience participa- tion and new performance locations where public events like sports can be held. Some composers have substituted written instructions, called verbal music, instead of the less communicative stand- ard notation-concerts and "festivals" of new music have become experiments in living themselves. Some of these gatherings could, how- ever, take a tip from bar entertainers, who just do one bit with lots of gusto and don't bring the whole world in the doors. Most happenings and alogical plays, which involve only practicing pain- ters and poets, put a lot together to make a shock. They wind up with the kind of total theatre which is frozen en- vironment. This is art done-at-you, strad- dlingand failing to do away with the old mythological fence between Art and life or, for that matter, between all-encom- passing politics and life. Outdoor Events MUSIC AS AN outdoor activity has ex- isted from ancient rituals to the transistorized beach party; from Han- del's "Water Music" to Ives' "Universal Symphony" performed on mountainsides and in valleys, from ranchers serenading the cattle at night to Newport festivals. When musicians and their friends start moving the events outside, the landscape, changes- "City Scale" was a trip-event organized by Anthony Martin, Ramon Sender, and Ken Dewey in San Francisco in 1965. The audience traveled about in trucks observ- ing and performing in events (musical and otherwise), never quite certain whe- ther the events were planned or happen- ing anyway: Sender writes: "The arrival of the au- dience in trucks at a small park over- looking the Mission coincided with a col- lision between two teenage gangs. I had arrived early to inflate four 17-foot wea- ther balloons and noticed the kids col- lecting. Just as the two groups started toward each other, our trucks full of excited participants roared up. Sixty peo- ple started running across the park to- ward the balloons, and the teenagers cat- tered to the periphery. I don't know what went through their minds in the minutes that followed, as adults chased balloons and each other through the park." (Tu- lane Drama Review). For George Brecht's "Motor Vehicle Sundown Event" the car owners gather- ed at sundown and simultaneously start- ed their activities: manipulating the horn, lights, windshield wipers, the motor, etc. Special lights and equipment, such as carousels, ladders and fire hoses may al- so be used. Suggestion: Between the hours of 5 and 7 p.m. you can make as much noise as you want to on your own proper- ty in Ann Arbor. WALTER DeMARIA has proposed an "Art Yard" (bulldozers digging a hole in the ground), "Meaningless Work" (which does not make you money or ac- complish any conventional purpose, but contains all the best qualities of old art forms . . . meaningless work is the new way to tell who's square) and has insti- tuted the "Beach Crawl" (done with sol- emnity, no stopping to bark at dogs, no altering of straight ahead course for horses or fishermen). John Cage's famous silent piece, en- titled 4' 33" because it was first performed as four minutes and 33 seconds of tacet (the performer makes no intentional sounds), can be done anywhere. In a per- formance of this work people are observ- ing, experiencing, meditating and listen ing to the environment doing its bit, per- haps more than usual. When the per- former begins to play, the situation has not changed. ("What's he doing? He's just sitting there! Well, something's go- ing on.") Hundreds of verbal pieces have been written. Some have lasted for only five minutes; others are freely exchanged like the baseball scores. Check these: Mary Tsaltas "Hole" (a sculpture), "Walk Backward all Day Saturday," Grant Fish- er's "Window Event." ("On a stormy night, leave your window, open. The next day, give a party for all the things that get blown in.") Bob Sheff's "Back in Texas Again" is a travel piece involving anybody's home town; his memorial "Plan for an Auditory American Flag" is currently being transistorized. The every- day event "Grass Roots" is for any num- ber of people in concert blowing sounds from blades of grass, and the instruc- tions for "Hum" read: "Rum" is for any- one, anywhere, anytime. "Hum" is as good as music. "Hum" because it feels good. "Hum" is something else. 'THE COLLECTIVE efforts of groups such as ONCE in Ann Arbor, Fluxus in New York and the Yamday Festival in New Jersey (XMAS EVENT: Give a yam this year) have added the artist's contri- bution to . . . what? To our daily lives. YOU can use the U.S. Mail as an art medium. YOU can protest and propose something better than the Dada-politick- ing Provos of Holland, than the poet Al- len Ginsberg's idea for a mother-child, flag-waving, flower-carrying, anthem- singing anti-war activation, than the "Send Batman to Viet Nam" posters, or sending "a salami to your boy in the army." Someone says: We did that in my day, but we didn't call it art. No matter what you say, I don't like it. I do that all the time. I oughta warsh your ears out with soap. ART MUST ACT, and even be danger- ous and anonymous. It must be some- thing useful to our lives. "But we have been less ready to. out- grow the crude reaction which positively demands that a work of art should shock rather than instruct . . . Beethoven does not become an inartistic preacher be- cause of the fact that his sense of respon- sibility is an essential part of his musical style . . . Beethoven's music is edifying." (Donald Francis Tovey). Publicity, the "word of mouth," sim- plicity and social character are the con- temporary artist's prime moving tools. Music is a gesture of good will. Tice IJWCh"ifat 46ir MAGAZIN E ROBERT NATHAN is the pseudonym for a local musician and composer. Nathan has asked that the article be dedicated to the Panther. Daily Associate Editorial Director CHARLOTTE WOLTER is coordinating the avant-garde series. JAMES TORRENS is a candidate for a Ph.D. in English here. He joined the Jesuits in 1948 and studied at the College-Saint-Albert, in Louvain, Belgium. He is writing his thesis on T.S. Eliot's references to Dante. STEPHEN TONSOR is Associate Professor of History at the University. Tonsor has writ- ten for various conservative magazines, in- cluding National Review, Modern Age, He is on the. Education Commission of the Na- tional Association of Manufacturers. ROBERT JOHNSTON was editor of the Daily in 1965-66. He edited the Peace Corps volun- teer magazine in 1968 and spent. last sum- ver in Europe. He is now studying political science at Princeton University. PICTURES p.1, Philip Corner; p. 2, Andrew Sacks; p. 3, Associated Press' p. 5, Gordon Mumma, Bob Ashley: p. 6, Thomas R. Copi; p. 7, Associated Press Daily Editor: Mark R. Killingsworth: Magazine Editor: Robert Moore. sic is. A composer Su avant-garde concept of Fellowship of Bleeding Hearts A campus conservative spokesman takes a hard look at the New Left and casts a dissent- ing and angry ballot: its goals are negative and ambiguous, its loyalties questionable, its future dim. (page 2) Teithardde Chardiii Teilhard de Chardin, a Catholic priest, sur- prised two worlds by welding science and the- olfogy into a highly affirmative view of man. A Jesuit explains Chardin's sweeping faith in man and God. (page 3) international Student Exchange The neglected field of international study could be a powerful force for world peace and development. An ex-DAILY editor tells what's wrong now and gives six specific steps the 0 University should take to improve it. (page 6) I T'11LAI~. 10- EI ' AIt -.f- ,A A - I IJlr ,roc iit ^uE1 .wAl Roil, Nf- AAAV-A 71bj