Previous Editions | Press room | PDF version | Unicamp website | Subscribe to JU | Edition 257 - from June 28th to July 4th, 2004
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Cover
Letters
The profile of the new CUT
Soy: fight against anemia
Medicinal plants
Technological innovation in
  the most disruptive
Pagu: the story of the collector
Partnership in research in AM
Black people in the job market
Panel of the week
Job opportunities
Theses of the week
Unicamp in the media
Globalization of music
  contemporary
Caffeine-free coffee
 


PAGU
The writer and political activist Patrícia Galvão, known as Pagu, in a portrait taken in 1941 by photographer Kauffmann


MEMORY — Waste picker Selma Morgana Sarti (on the left, in the backyard of her house, in São Paulo) donated photos, photos, portraits and original documents of the writer, journalist and political activist Patrícia Galvão, Pagu, and her companion, the journalist, writer and critic Geraldo Ferraz. The material was found by Selma in one of the collections that the collector makes every morning on the streets of the Butantã neighborhood. Pages 6 and 7


Science arrives
to caffeine-free coffee

The discovery of a naturally decaffeinated coffee plant is news that is spreading around the world. Paulo Mazzafera, from Unicamp, and Luís Carlos Fazuoli and Bernadete Silvarolla, from IAC, give more details about their work and ask for more encouragement for traditional research for the improvement of plant species.

How far is innovation?

Unicamp's Department of Scientific and Technological Policy (DPCT) will participate in the implementation of an information system that will carry out a broad diagnosis of initiatives aimed at technological innovation in the country.

Research reveals the new CUT

Research carried out by the Center for Union Studies and Labor Economics at Unicamp (Cesit) and the Escola Sindical de São Paulo shows that the CUT has aged, moved closer to the State and distanced itself from the base.

Black people and the rise in work

Professors Marcio Pochmann and Waldir Quadros present different works with numbers that lead to a common finding: the lack of accessibility for black people to the best jobs.

The Portuguese Osvaldo Ferreira, who taught a conducting workshop at Unicamp, talks about the effects of internationalization on music.


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