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Wednesday, May 11, 1966 Griffin Daily News
§
M
i
The story he tells seems in
credible. Yet he was a re
nowned author, a man of in
tegrity. I had known the stor
ies of the masks men wear,
masks behind which they hide
their real selves. History is
filled with men who have pre
tended to be brave, cowardly ,
joyous or cynical while lit
erally masking their real
selves. Thackeray told of the
actor who removed his mask
after the fall of the curtain.
"And said when he’s laughed and
his say,
He shows as he removes the
A mask, face that’s anything but
gay." about there
All us are men
who wear these masks, afraid
to reveal their real selves to
their neighbors. Or, for that
matter, to look at their real
selves.
Yet this mask was differ
late ent. The story is told by the the
Nikos Kazantzakis,
Greek author, best known in
our country as the author of
“Zorba the Greek.” He tells
of an episode in his life.
He was in Vienna and had
gone to a movie. A young
woman sat beside him and,
as he left, she left also. They
walked for a while, striking
up a conversation. They were
strangers but soon he was
arranging a tryst for another
day. home, be felt
On his way
blood rushing to his bead.
When he looked at the mirror
in his home he could not be
lieve the he sight. His scarcely face was
swollen; was could rec
ognizable. Obviously, he state.
not see Kazantzakis, the girl in this “An
Says of flesh ap
palling mask I was not
glued to my face demon." • • • was
a man; I was a
Each day he would tend
word, *1 cannot come, will
wme
'
mk Y '
J.
i
.s
Inquiry into state legislatures ftmFtKhi with KfS*® lament that suburban
legislators a
in his state were showing painful disinterest in
critical city problems. *
U.S. big-city mayors everywhere could appreciate the irony
underlying this comment, made to scholars, public officials,
businessmen and others attending Columbia University’s
American Assembly in Harriman, N.Y. JT*i «
legislatures Acting mostly under court duress, some four-fifths of state
have at long last shaken off decades of rural
agnation maintained through malapportioned represent*
But the changes generally are eoming too late to help major
cities long starved for proper representation and consequent
full state consideration of their problems. It is already the
legislative heyday of the nation’s bursting suburbs.
THE MAYOR’S COMPLAINT to assembly participants
spoke volumes. There is mounting evidence that suburbs
newly be and increasingly endowed with a legislative voice will
ty, no slums, more sympathetic to crushing urban problems—pover
viously congestion, pollution, crime—than were the pre
dominant fanners.
Said one specialist in government:
“A great chasm exists between suburbs and cities today.
How to close it may be the biggest challenge facing state
legislatures. in the suburbs
city. “The people in many cases ran from the
left They don’t want to have to deal with the problems they
behind, nor to spend money to meet them."
IT IS INDEED A STRANGE TWIST that, at the moment
the cities have become the greatest repositories of trouble
in the nation, a permanent decline in their political influence
may have begun. country’s 30 largest cities
Half of the lost population in
the 1950-60 decade, including 8 of the first 10. By 1970
more losses may be recorded. Though the United States pop
ulation is three-fourths urbanized, less than 30 per cent of
the people live in cities of 100,000 or more.
When the 1970 census is taken, most urbanized Americans
will be living in the suburbs, not the core cities. And the gap
will grow, say the population experts.
As core city votes decline in number, either absolutely or
relatively, so will the power of big city mayors shrink. Sub
urban delegations to state and national legislatures will be
the certain “rulers of tomorrow,” observes one political
scholar.
If the states do not tackle the cities’ problems in a big way,
futility may be the consequence of making their legislatures
more modem and more fairly representative. They will have
abdicated, and a growing federal-city program will result.
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FIXING THE FALLS—An Army Engineers survey crew
drills into rock at Luna Island at the southern flank of
American Falls as a first step toward eventual rehabilita
tion of crumbling Niagara Falls. The survey is part of
a federal study to determine what measures should be
taken to reduce erosion which has deposited huge piles
of rock at the base of the American Falls.
14
FINDING THE WAY
Do You Wear a Mask?
BY RALPH W. LOEW, D.D.
Newspaper, Enterprise Assn.
a
to
/
days dragged by and the fear
ful condition remained. Final
ly, he found his way to a
counsellor who pried from
him his innermost secrets.
This man told him that he
didn’t have leprosy or an in
curable disease. He pointed
to his inner conflict. He must
leave Vienna and the pro
posed liason with this girl. of
The rest of his story is
his final coming to himself,
leaving the city and discover
ing on his journey that his
face was returning to normal.
“We all carry a great ex
plosive and force lard. wrapped And what in our is
flesh
worse we do not want to
know it, for then the vil
lainy, cowardice and false
hood lose their justification;
we can no longer hide incompe; behind
man’s supposed
tence; we ourselves must
bear the Marne if we are vil
lains, cowards, or liars, for al
though ful force we inside, have an all-power-, dare not
we
use it for fear it will destroy
us.... How terrible to know
that we possess this force."
ble It story. sounds And like an I impossi
yet, remem
ber Jesus saying: “As a man
thinketh in his heart, so is
he." His mask is not some
thing His mask put on is from from the within outside. and
it is within him that the heal-
z ea » /-X
- * —n
'★ WASHINGTON^COLUMN ‘
*
‘Cities Witheros Suburbs
Rjm the'Legislative Show*
BY BRUCE BIOSSAT
Newspaper Washington Correspondent. Assn.*
^Enterprise