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Posted: June 2nd, 2008, 9:36pm CDT
Some of the nation’s biggest banks have cut off students at community colleges and other less competitive schools.
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Posted: June 2nd, 2008, 5:45pm CDT
Hundreds of students could lose their financial aid after two lenders decided not to offer funding to two-year and community colleges.
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Posted: June 2nd, 2008, 5:03pm CDT
WMBD/WYZZ-TV—EAST PEORIA--Some of the country's biggest banks are putting an end to loan funding for students at community colleges. The decision will cost local students extra time and money.
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Posted: June 2nd, 2008, 9:30am CDT
An increasing number of banks are refusing to write any new loans to students attending community or two-year colleges, like Cincinnati State.
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Posted: June 2nd, 2008, 8:55am CDT
(From The New York Times ) Some of the nation’s biggest banks have closed their doors to students at community colleges, for-profit universities and other less competitive institutions, even as they continue to extend federally backed loans to students at the nation’s top universities.
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Posted: June 2nd, 2008, 8:12am CDT
Some of the biggest U.S. banks have closed their doors to students at community colleges, for-profit universities and other less competitive institutions, even as they continue to extend loans backed by the U.S. government to students at the top American universities.
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Posted: June 2nd, 2008, 7:45am CDT
Plans to introduce student loans in Guernsey are criticised as an "unfair" tax on education.
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Posted: June 2nd, 2008, 6:34am CDT
Several large banks in the student loan business are cutting specific colleges off from lending to their students, bank and college officials said.The students most often hurt by the profit-oriented decisions are those in community colleges or less than elite private schools, The New York Times reported Monday.Citibank has temporarily suspended lending at schools which tend to have loans with ...
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Posted: June 2nd, 2008, 4:33am CDT
The world of student loans just became more complicated, unfair and expensive for some borrowers, while others are about to get a great deal! It all depends on whether you're borrowing now -- or dealing with loans from the past.
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Posted: June 2nd, 2008, 1:05am CDT
As the market for student loans gets tighter for the nation's college students in an atmosphere of shrinking credit, hundreds of additional colleges and universities have enrolled in a federal student loan program that doesn't turn away any eligible student.