The Blue and Gold
Green and Yellow
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Malden High School Volume 96 Edition 5
Our 96th Year February 2011
Malden High School Swim Team
Brittany McFeeley Head Copy Editor
Sophomore and The Blue and Gold reporter Amalia Quesada Nylen swims in a meet. Full article on page 19. Photo by Sharon Lee.
Revolutions in the Middle East
In This Issue: MBT-C+ at Best Page 4 Somali Pirates Page 8 Republican Congress Page 9 Monthly Profile Paul Marques Page 12
Catherine Poirier Copy Editor
A
s of late, the Arab Republic of Egypt has been in complete chaos. Starting Jan. 25, 2011, protesters started demanding that President Hosni Mubarak step down from his title, and the people got what they wanted three weeks later. In 1952, the Egyptian people, with the help of the military, overthrew the ruling monarch. After doing so, the new government created the Constitution of the Arab Republic of Egypt. Under Article 75 of their constitution, the president “must be an Egyptian born to Egyptian parents and enjoy civil and political rights. His age must not be less
than 40 Gregorian years.” Mubarak falls under all of these rules, so why are the people protesting his presidency? The 82 year old president is a former commander of the Egyptian Air Force, and served as Vice President for six years before assuming the Presidency on Oct. 14, 1981. Mubarak was the longest running Egyptian President; he was in command for 30 years. Egyptian democracy has been far from perfect during the 30 years Mubarak has reigned. He has only kept the presidency this long mainly due to corruption and continued on page 6.
Pink Out Charity Dance Page 13 Boston Globe Art Awards Page 15 Boys Track Page 21 Australian Open page 24
O
n Feb. 6, 2011, one did not have to watch ESPN highlights to find out the winner of Superbowl XLV; plastered all over Facebook and Twitter were the recurring statuses announcing the Green Bay Packers’ win over the Pittsburgh Steelers. Weeks before the biggest game of the NFL season, experts announced their predictions on who would walk away with the Vince Lombardi Superbowl trophy, and out of the ten experts that voted, half were in favor of Green Bay, the other five leaning towards Pittsburgh. After five-time Grammy award winner Christina Aguilera fumbled the National Anthem, players from both teams were ready to play one of the most important games of their football careers. About half way into the first half, Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers connected with Jordy Nelson to put Green Bay on the board first; after the extra kick by Mike Crosby, Green Bay was up by seven. With less than four minutes in the first quarter, Pittsburgh quarterback Ben Roethlisberger threw the first interception of the game. The pass, intended for Mike Wallace, was picked off by Nick Collins, who ran it for 37 yards into the end zone. After another extra kick, Green Bay was on top 14 to 0 by the end of the first quarter. continued on page 24
Opinion 2-5 World News 6-9 Local News 10-15 Entertainment 16-18 Sports 19-24