Print Editions

assets/importedimages/pw/_resampled/CroppedImage100100-2159.jpg

CARTOON: File away

assets/importedimages/pw/_resampled/CroppedImage100100-2167.jpg

July 14: LETTERS

Brother Quy will be missed Air travel? A revolting experience Remembering Vilma Espin Organizing support for HR 676

EDITORIAL: Rewriting history

The Supreme Court, now led by far-right Bush appointee Chief Justice John Roberts, chose the last day of its 2006-07 term to issue a decision on school integration that denies the basic American principle that all persons are created equal. The ruling turns history on its head.

The truth about the new HPV vaccine

With the release of Gardasil, Merck’s new vaccine for human papillomavirus (HPV), public health providers were ecstatic. HPV, an extremely common sexually transmitted virus, can cause genital warts and cancer — most notably cervical cancer, the second leading cause of cancer death among women in the United States.

July 14: This Week in Labor

Supreme Court slaps workers Clean up your dirty laundry!

UN rights body: Cuba, Belarus dont need special monitors

UNITED NATIONS — The UN Human Rights Council, meeting in Geneva mid-June, voted unanimously that neither Cuba nor Belarus need “human rights rapporteurs,” special UN investigators who look into alleged human rights abuses.

assets/importedimages/pw/_resampled/CroppedImage100100-2166.jpg

BBC interviews Cuban 5 prisoner

On July 2, BBC News broadcast a television interview conducted by reporter Claire Bolderson with Gerardo Hernandez, one of five Cuban men incarcerated in U.S jails since 1998 for defending Cuba against terrorism. Publicity like this for the Cuban Five is extremely rare.

July 14: World Notes

Syria: Iraqi immigration causes disruption Indonesia: Workers’ rights almost nonexistent Mozambique: Renewed attention to agrarian reform Chile: Subcontracted copper miners strike Italy: Center-left coalition puts pensions back in budget

Heat wave in Europe breaks 100-year record

ATHENS, Greece — A severe nine-day heat wave in Europe has broken 100-year temperature records. Throughout southern Europe and the Balkans, unusually high temperatures caused many deaths, including 29 in Romania where temperatures reached 113 degrees in Bucharest, the highest in 90 years.

July 14: National Clips

COLUMBIA, S.C.: Antiwar veterans tour bases, get arrested RICHMOND, Va.: Support Republicans, lose your seat TUCSON, Ariz.: Immigrant death toll climbs in heat JEFFERSON CITY, Mo.: Law restricts abortion, sex ed NEW YORK: Rent goes up, again

127 28 29 30 3163