0 375 N. MAPLE n MA LE VILLAGE SHOPPING CENTER 769-1300 ff*'MON FRI S21,$ 6PM SAT-SUN$2IK3PM DAILY 1:30 4:20 7:10 9:40 A Paramount Pi urEF~ CoyigtIMCMLXXXI I'X, .M iPcl ltre4 lx, Faye Dunaway AR lS d 7, HARRISON D/', Vl OF THE- DAILY FORD I' LOST ARK PG 4:15 7:00 BARGAIN HOURS NOW IN EFFECT 9:30 What happened DAILY taphemtohoud 1:15 3:15 5:15 r' n.. Mhappenetofto- 715 915 1 Page 6-Friday, October 2, 1981-The Michigan Daily 6 6 6 6 AP Photo Re-united Mystic Marinelife Aquarium had a homecoming of sorts yesterday as two old female were together in California until the summer of 1979.She was lifted by friends were re-united. Kojak, right, greets his old pool mate from Sea World, San crane into a 34,000-gallon fresh water pool, following her cross-country trip. Diego, Calif., following her arrival to the Aquarium. Kojak and the still unnamed Can the Holocaust happen here? A NEW YORK (AP)- It was just an innocent question from a curious 16-year-old student. How, he asked his history teacher, could Germans claim ignorance of the mass murder of Jews during World War II? But the teacher, Ron Jones, didn't just thumb through a history book or refer to scribbled notes on a yellow lesson pad for the answer. INSTEAD, FOR one harrowing week 14 years ago, Jones showed his students exactly how the Holocaust could happen-right there, in an enlightened, middle- class, predominantly white high school in Palo Alto, Calif. That week, which one of Jone's former students, Steve Coniglio still looks back on as "exhilarating- and frightening," is dramatized in a television movie, "The Wave," appearing Sunday, Oct. 4 from 7-8 p.m., EDT on ABC. Bruce Davison plays the teacher. Jones, 41, said in an interview yesterday that he had kept the experience bottled up for years, until he recently ran into Coniglio in Berkeley, Calif.° THEY HADN'T seen each other in at least 10 years. But they saluted each other-that raised cupped- hand salute that his high school used during that strange week years earlier to symbolize membership in "The Third Wave," the Cubberly School equivalent of the German Nazi Party. It was then, Jones said, that he decided the time had conie to tell the world what happened. The day after the student asked the question about the Holocaust, Jones darkened the classroom. In the background he played music from "Die Walkure" by Richard Wagner, one of Hitler's favorite operas. "THAT FIRST day was designed to put students in a restricted environment, to teach them the beauty of discipline. I wrote on the blackboard, 'Strength Through Discipline.' I had them practice cryptic, sharp answers to my questions," Jones said. The lesson on the second day was "Strength Through Community," that society is more impor- tant than the individual; that it feels good to work for something bigger than yourself. The experiment grew 'more and more elaborate. And it spread. By the fourth day, there were 120 kids packed into Jones's history class. The principal of the school was giving the Third Wave salute. There were banners reading "Strength Through Discipline" going up in the library and the cafeteria. ALL PROCEEDED with barely a murmur of protest' from students, teachers, even parents, despite the fact that at one point students were assigned to recruit brothers and sisters into "The Third Wave." The climax occurred on the, fifth day. Three hun- dred students packed into an auditorium, where Jones promised to introduce a new national leader who would unite the country behind "The New Wave." Jones brought in two televisions, turned them on and said, "Here is your leader." Jones then left the auditorium, doors were loudly shut, and there was just silence interrupted only be the hiss of the televisions. "My most vivid image of the Holocaust," said Coniglio, "was imagining. people led into cement block rooms, the doors slamming phut and then the gas coming in. Well, we waited two minutes, then five minutes, and no new leader appeared on the TV screen. Then I got hit with that same feeling and said I'm getting out of here." And so the experiment ended, the lesson learned indelibly. But Jones now'says his teaching methods were "dangerous, and I wouldn't recommend it. WELCOME TO DASCOLA STYLISTS " 4 BARBERS . " NO WAITING * UNISEX Liberty of f State.........668-9529 East U, at So. U ........... 662-0354 Enter the Great Daily Give~A way Simply send or call in your subscription order and we might choose you as our free subscription winner. Two winners per day! Call 764-0558. Winners announced in Happenings Column Experts find huge hole in space WASHINGTON (UPI) - Astronomers yesterday reported the discovery of what appears to be an im- mense "hole" in distant space that is so big 2,00 ordinary-sized galaxies could fit within its borders. The startling finding, if confirmed by additional observations now under way, woud mean scientists would have to re- think some fundamental ideas on how matter tends to organize itself on a large scale in the universe over billions of years. "IT'S DIFFICULTito explain what we're seeing in terms of the pictures that are around of how galaxies tend to cluster, and how voids might. form," said Dr. Paul Schechter of the Kitt Peak National Observatory near Tucson, Ariz. r1 A- G Sprirngsteen coming to Criser ., . ht i . rr D~ie-hIiard f aye 3 r s f F : r t r :it a R T'"'' ML Wd" quieu~e 11p I '~d3nAO 19C/C 16°._, hk EXTRA EXTRA r. . ti;_, .0 N,, ' ci'.' doy A . tt8.B (XXit SUSPECT HELD IN BURSLEY SHOOTINGS "It means people need to think some on what might be going on here," he said in a telephone interview. Schechter, and Drs. Robert Kirshner of the University of Michigan, Augustus Oemler of Yale and Stephen Schectman of the Mt. Wilson Observatory near Pasadena, Calif., were studying clusters of galaxies when they found the immense space void. idiana jo, In-, ate our 'onsulIt in the n your more St't1. 1 Don.., ti. \ V\t 1 kt! 5 } 11 f f 'rttr!"rr{" r ;. ' .. _ INA Y " .+ ',mss=^.'-' . _. _ ... .-r.-.-s. M. 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