VOLUME CXXX
SEPTEMBER 29, 2006
ISSUE 4
Celebrate Service… Celebrate Geneva’s Bicentennial! Rachel Sumner ‘08 Herald Reporter
INSIDE:
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NEWS CAMPUS
Darfur update
Don’t forget it is Parents Weekend !!!!!
The 14 th annual Day of Service will be held on Saturday, October 14th, 2006. The planning committee has been working wicked hard to ensure that this year’s Day of Service is even more awesome than usual, because this year is also Geneva’s bicentennial. If you volunteer on DOS, not only will you receive a fantastic Day of Service 2006 t-shirt, but you’ll also help others and be a part of this great HWS tradition!
We are hoping to have a record number of volunteers, both from HWS and from the Geneva community, in order to get a ton of service done and to unite the two communities for a common cause. If you’re interested in being a volunteer, please sign up at our table in Saga starting Monday, October 2nd. You can sign up as an individual, or you can sign up as part of a team to do some service with your friends! Participating in Day of Service
is a great way to meet new people, try something new, and give back to this excellent community in which we spend the school year. After doing service in the morning, there will be an awesome celebration on the Quad, including food, music, and other delightful activities. We need your enthusiasm and participation to make Day of Service 2006 a wonderful and successful event!
After Major Problems, Facebook is at it Again Annalise VanHouten ‘09 News Editor
A&E
Interview with Mark Neveldine ‘95, wirter and director of Crank
OP-ED
Forced to go Downtown Super Wal-Mart
SPORTS
We’re still searching for sports writers! Contact herald@hws.
The Herald needs your help! As always, you should feel guilty for not contributing to The Herald. Please help continue our tradition of ‘excellence.’
Every Tuesday Night In the Office Next to the ATM in Scandling 7 p.m. If you play sports or do another activity, quit. We need you more.
It seems like the popular website Facebook has been changing non-stop these days. First was the News Feed and mini-feed in early September. These alerts, as creator Mark Zuckerberg stated, let you “know when Mark adds Britney Spears to his Favorites or when your crush is single again.” Shortly after, users complained so furiously that it became headline news on ABC, and was featured in a number of prominent newspapers and websites, including Time magazine. However, aside from the annoyances that the News Feed and mini-feed have caused, there is more significant issue. As you have probably noticed, membership on Facebook has been opened up “to anyone in
the world” with Internet access. The days of Facebook being exclusively for college students are gone, and recent changes, like opening the site to high school students, may have foreshadowed this occurrence. According to co-founder Chris Hughes, this major expansion includes 500 networks all over the world, with smaller regions and groupings for the United States. Zuckerberg claims that this expansion answers the “number one request [he receives] from people…to invite friends outside their college network.” What do students at HWS think? Diana Haydock, a William Smith sophomore, says “I think Facebook should be restricted to college students, faculty, and alumni (within two
to three years of graduating). If corporations or businesses want a network like this they should start their own and make it more professional… not a means to find out which co-workers are single or what their favorite movies are.” Rafeek Mohamed, a Hobart junior, agrees. “I feel like Facebook entails an academiaacademia relationship and there is a degree of privacy, but with everyone on Facebook, it will essentially be another ‘MySpace.’” These students reflect the general feeling of discontent among Facebook members. This will most likely continue, due to alarming news that has surfaced in the past week. According to Yahoo News, Face-
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