Sunday, December 9, 1973 I HE Ml(:HIUAN DAILY r uge ?lve Sunday, December 9, 1973lHEMI(.Hl(~AN L)AILY uge ?-ive PERSPECTIVE DUETS a concert in dance and mime SURVIVAL Energy crisis: How it may be lifesaving By TONY SCHWARTZ A COUPLE of weeks ago I had to stop making believe the en- ergy crisis didn't exist. Not read- ing about it wasn't making it go away, and more and more it was staring me in the face, stopping thoughts dead in midstream. It seemed absurd to make plans, to look at the future with any pe-- spective when a whole mode of existence was on the brink of radical change. The seriousness of it all came in a paranoid flash. I remember- ed sitting in a friend's apart- ment, in a bit of an alcoholic haze, on a beautiful day last spring. I was listening, bemused, to the kind of Ann Arbor lomnie I'd come to appreciate runnng into occasionally, those fringe types who make for provocative interludes. This calm-looking young man was running down his theory about the imminence of the end of the world, describ- ing a community of fellows he had joined. They were buying land in Indiana, stockpiling food, natural resources and other lfe necessities. The notion was sim- ple: the world was so mindless- ly and quickly depleting its lim- ited natural resources that the day of a vicious survival-of-the fittest showdown was fast ap- proaching. With too little for too many, this guy reasoned, the re- silt would be a torrential war in which everyone (else) would die. fM NOT ONE, however, to maintain a pessimist's stance for long, and this ominous me- mory was followed by a mellow- er, mixed one. I remembered .ny high school years in New York City, when the curious phenom- enon of shortage first took hold. In no particular order, I re- called living through resour'ce shortages (water, electricity), food shortages (milk, bread, meat), and people shortages (bus drivers, firemen, United Parcel drivers, policemen, etc.). There were hassles to be sure: won- dering if you'd be able to show- er the next day, getting stuck in an elevator during a blackout, watching garbage pile up onto the streets. But there was always a saving grace, the knowledge that any shortage was ephemer- al; an annoyance, but only a tem- porary one. And truthfully, there was some- thing positive about the crises - I kind of liked the serviceless times. The cold, hard, distant New Yorker seemed to magically transform. Policemen struck, but crime didn't increase. Blackouts descended, but people directed traffic on streetcornersdrather than looting stores. When the bus- ses and subways stopped, norm- ally locked car doors opened, people gave each other rides. There was a spirit, a camraderie, a sense of mutual caring among the millions who had to cope to- gether. I remember wishing it would last. f LEFT NEW YORK four years ago and since then, the mo- ments of large-scale camraderie have become increasingly few and far between. Values have be- come individual rather than col- lective. We are atomized, divided, and even groups which tradition- ally worked together - c i v I l rights advocates, anti-war act v- Have a flair for If oar e itere.t ed in reviev na poetry, and nkuit or writing feature stories about the drana. dance, film. arts: Contact Artf Editor, c/o The Michigan Daily. ists, SDSers - have splintere1 and gone their own ways. The most obvious reason for the change is that we have s.) little to believe in now. I'm not treading new ground by saying this is a time when heroes and ideals are in short supply. None- theless, in the otherwise intend- ed words of the man who makes me most aware of the loss, I feel it "now more than e v e r". W a t e r g a t e in general and Richard Nixon in particular have taken the issue a step further. The only choice now is to dis- believe; put another way, to trust in the primacy of deceit. People are looking instead for their own truths. It is a cele- bration of self-centeredness: f I don't rock the boat too much, if I just try to find my own hanoi- ness, advance my own limited cause, make a few good friends, then things will be fine. Which might be ok, if the over- lay wasn't a gluttunous turn to gimmicks , gadgetry and con- sumption. Personal enjoyment for many has come to know no limits; the watchword is w>>'it feels good at a given moment. I'm not trying to pass my~self off as a pristine ascetic, immune to the prevailing way. I think o, my car guzzling away gas, of grabbing the telephone indis- criminately, leaving lights on thoughtlessly, gettinguaccustom- ed to an overhot house in t h e winter and a freezing cold on., in the summer. I have often bought clothes not because I need them, but because they lit- ed a momentary need, gave a spark of pleasure. And clties were just a symbol. I realized not too long ago that I'd lost toucli with boundaries, and so had a lot of people I knew. Whatever felt good went. Y * * YHOPES about the energy crisis are simple, and two- fold. The first is that it will help pull some of the population out of the clouds, reintroduce in- to our everyday existence limits and a sense that individual ac- tions matter. What matters now is survival, for it is tangibly threatened, and the only future hope, if we haven't gone too far already, is to cut back, to seek again the essentials. That may be a strange notion in our technologically-obsessed nation, but the signs are already there that it will have to happen. Soon it is going to genuinely matter if we leave lights on unnecessarily; the result may be none the next day. Overpowered, overequipped cars are falling already by the wayside, and driving any car at all is being threatened. In Ihort, in the not too distant future we're just not going to be able to buyunlimited quantitiesbof nearly anything we want. My second hope is that people will see the need to come to- gether, that the energy crisi; will act as an equalizer in much the same way it did during the mninicrises I lived 'through in New York. Survival is something that appeals to people from every racial and economic group, to just about every political ati: social group. When it came to that in New York City, pe ple didn't eat each other up a la Dar- win. Rather they wirned to gether, the imminence of chaos producing the best from a huge percentage of the city'; e i g h t million inhabitants. I get a good feeling thinking about a ban on Sunday driving, for example. It seems romantic, a slowing down of a frenetic pace which I think, particulariv in the big cities, is getting out of hand. I fantasy people taking over the streets, the air getting cleaner; a time, even though enforced, set aside for pure reflection and relaxation. A1Y THEORY rests on the be- lief that when sarvval is knocking on people's back door, they will respond positiveiv. Per- haps we can again become, in the best sense of the word, our brother's (and sister's) keepers. It is a heady hope, but o n e worth thinking about when most other signs are frightingly nega- tive. The Most Spectacular Book Ever Published About Pro Football The PRO FOOTBALL EXPERIENCE 336 Maynard 1229 S. Univ. East Quad Auditorium FREE The World Isn't Coming To An End! 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U(Ti i'ersity Lutheran Chapel 0/), ( (o I / Us MoreI , (1 1id/he1.0/d ..' :' 30.. *A PRESENTS A SHAW FESTIVAL PRODUCTION HANUKAH DINNER and COFFEE HOUSE LAST DAY OF CLASSES Relax and enjoy Latkes and other good eating at our pre-Hanukah party. While you're having a good time, enjoy some fine entertainment. DEC. 12-6:00 p.m. HILLEL-1429 Hill St. Reservations for Dinner by Tuesday, 5 p.m.-$2.00 R IC HA R D MURDOCK You CAN PAXTON WHITEHEAD IN NEVER TELL by BERNARD SHAW WITH PATRICIA JAMES SHELIA GAGE VALENTINE HANEY directed by EDWARD GILBERT . the effervescent Shaw Festival Company . " -DETROIT FREE PRESS "An enormously winning, refreshingly civilized delight." --DETROIT NEWS DECEMBER 6-9 8 P.M. (Sat. & Sun. Matinees 3 P.M.) Ticket Information available at PTP Ticket Office 764-0450 Presented in MENDELSSOHN THEATRE N "' a TONI ( III T! Sun Dec 9 BAULNABY BYE 1.00 COMING: TIM BUCKLEY JAMES COTTON t ART SALE Ro .FIFTH FORUM ek & Roll Imancing: rS. Ashlcv-Ain Arbor 210 S. FIFTH AVE. 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