<p>I need to know if there is any place on or near campus where I can print in color and the price per page?</p>
<p>PCL on the main floor. Select the PCL color printer when the pop up box comes up. The cost is an amazing 80 cents per page. Yikes!</p>
<p>Your specific college/school might offer printing. For example, I am in the business school. If I go to the Millennium Lab in the GSB I can print for 4 cents per B/W page and 12 cents per color page. I get a $12 credit to my account at the beginning of the year to use.</p>
<p>Just another of the many ways McCombs students receive special treatment and the rest of us are treated like stepchildren.</p>
<p>lol you are absolutely right about that. but hopefully i will be like that next year because i am trying to get in McCombs.</p>
<p>Um, those $12 come from our tuition money most likely. And most of the schools get free printing. My roommate is in the School of Geosciences and he gets a certain number of free pages a semester I think.</p>
<p>I get some free printing too. Black and white two sided, with no color at that price. McCombs students get special email addresses which are theirs forever, even after graduation. They have lockers available which, unlike the ones at PCL, aren’t broken into constantly. They have special study lounges for students such as the special MPA lounge. The list goes on and on. </p>
<p>I have nothing against McCombs or the students in it. I’m very happy with my own major. What I dislike is the differential treatment. It is what it is.</p>
<p>We also pay a higher tuition. The individual school, not the university, provides those perks to us, using our own tuition money and all the endowments and such that they have/get.</p>
<p>Why Two Kay</p>
<p>I don’t mean to be attacking you or anything. I hope you don’t take it that way. Sometimes it seems very slanted the way the business school is treated and the way the rest of us are. </p>
<p>One peeve of mine is getting this note from my advisor: </p>
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</p>
<p>Why is it gracious? That course is part of my degree plan. It is required not only by UT, but also by the Society of Actuaries. If I want to become an actuary, I must have that course. Does the business school send out notices to their students about how the math department “graciously” allows the use of calculus courses? No, of course not. We are one university, although at times it doesn’t seem like it. That is my real beef, and it seems all things favor McCombs. It is not meant to be at any student in particular.</p>