Keywords
Central Florida Future; Future; Student newspapers; 2004-2005 (Vol. 37)
Issue
Vol. 37 No. 26, November 11, 2004
Description
Frankenstein brings Library to life: Monster exhibit pairs literature modern science; Citrus lots squeezing parking cash; Distorted male image: Researchers say chiseled models sell ads shatter male self-worth; Cornerstone: Bear Care 101: Class project raises cash and awareness for battered animals.
Collection Description
Semi-weekly student newspaper of the University of Central Florida (UCF). It started in 1968 upon the opening of Florida Technological University (FTU), UCF's predecessor. Initially it was called "FuTUre" and published weekly. The words "Central Florida" were added around the time the school changed to UCF. It is available in microfilm (1968-1986, library call number LD1772.F9 A1438), online (September 2001-current, at http://www.centralfloridafuture.com) and in University Archives (1968-current).
Publication Date
11-11-2004
Publisher
Associated Collegiate Press
Document Type
Newspaper
Number of Pages
28 p.
Disciplines
Mass Communication | Organizational Communication | Publishing | Social Influence and Political Communication
Rights
All rights to images are held by the respective holding institution. This image is posted publicly for non-profit educational uses, excluding printed publication. For permission to reproduce images and/or for copyright information contact Special Collections and University Archives, University of Central Florida Libraries, (407) 823-2576, http://library.ucf.edu/SpecialCollections/
Digital Publisher
University of Central Florida Libraries
Digital Reproduction
PDF pages were derived from no less than 400 dpi tiff images.
Recommended Citation
"Central Florida Future, Vol. 37 No. 26, November 11, 2004" (2004). Central Florida Future. 1787.
https://stars.library.ucf.edu/centralfloridafuture/1787
Files
Download Full Issue (19.0 MB)
Included in
Mass Communication Commons, Organizational Communication Commons, Publishing Commons, Social Influence and Political Communication Commons