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The wave todd
The wave todd









"The teleplay revolved around a love affair between two students. Jones was initially frustrated by the changes made to his story in Strasser's novel and especially the television adaptation. It then caught on quickly in the mainstream media. Ron Jones first went public with the story in a self-published collection of short stories he wrote in 1976 called No Substitute for Madness! The events were also chronicled in an article in The CoEvolution Quarterly, an alternative periodical that was later retitled The Whole Earth Review. The Third Wave did not attract much media attention at the time it happened. Jones got them to salute and shout slogans before he revealed the truth about the experiment. However, the novel's time frame is accurate-within a week, 200 to 300 students had embraced The Wave and showed up for the rally at which Mr. Unlike in the novel, there was no violence committed as part of The Third Wave. Jones's ideas are the same as the ones Strasser describes in The Wave––for example, Strasser lifts the "Strength Through Discipline" and "Strength Through Community" slogans directly from Jones's written accounts of The Third Wave. He introduced them to a movement he called The Third Wave, based on discipline and community.

the wave todd

In 1967, Ron Jones, a young teacher at Cubberley High School, decided to try an innovative method to teach his students about fascism.











The wave todd