3. Don’t just hit
“ACCEPT”
Wait for the numbers to load
to see how much money is
in your account.
If your available money says
(1.20), that means that you owe
$1.20. If you put $5 on your
account, you will have $3.80 to
spend.
Available $$$
4.
5. What does printing cost?
Two-sided Black & White printout
14 cents per printout
Front only Black & White
10 cents per printout
Two-sided Color
44 cents per printout
Front only Color
25 cents per printout
6.
7. Love Your Library and Win
Win a $250 B&N gift card by
writing a one-page esssay
on “Why I Love My College Library”
Send it to jlink0018@kctcs.edu by
February 28.
See sign at desk for more details.
8.
9. Where do you add
money to your print
account?
At the Billing Office on
this floor – where you
probably paid your
tuition.
10.
11. Need help with:
Academic advising
Career exploration/planning
Financial Aid assistance
Individual Success Plan
Transfer assistance
Much more
All services are FREE
12.
13. PTK News
Bluegrass student members of
Phi Theta Kappa have been
invited to present on the
success of our College Fish
implementation
19. Best books Bill Gates read in 2013
• Why Does College Cost So Much?, by
Robert B. Archibald and David H.
Feldman.
The title is a question that seems to get
more attention every year. The authors
are good about not pointing fingers but
instead talking about how America’s
labor market affects the cost of college.
23. Best books Bill Gates read in 2013
• The Box, by Marc Levinson. You might think
you don’t want to read a whole book about
shipping containers. And Levinson is pretty selfaware about what an unusual topic he chose. But
he makes a good case that the move to
containerized shipping had an enormous impact
on the global economy and changed the way the
world does business. And he turns it into a very
readable narrative. I won’t look at a cargo ship in
quite the same way again.
27. Best books Bill Gates read in 2013
• The Bet, by Paul Sabin. Sabin chronicles the
public debate about whether the world is
headed for an environmental catastrophe. He
centers the story on Paul Ehrlich and Julian
Simon, who wagered $1,000 on whether human
welfare would improve or get worse over time.
Without ridiculing either proponent, Sabin shows
how their extreme views contributed to the
polarized debate over climate change and other
issues that continues today.