Financial Aid Colleges

 Financial Aid Colleges Student Financial Aid



 

 

Loan Scandal Escalates

When Andrew M. Cuomo started asking questions about the relationships between lenders and colleges, many in higher education scoffed (off the record) that this was a case of an ambitious politician looking for headlines and that there wasn’t much for his inquiry to find. There’s no doubt that Cuomo, New York State’s new attorney general, is an ambitious politician looking for headlines, but he’s finding more and more to investigate. And some experts on aid are increasingly worried that the scandal is going to scare some students and families away from borrowing or from getting advice from financial aid offices.

.


Colleges uneasy about Harvard's deal on tuition

Two words to students hoping to get a break on college tuition now that Harvard and a handful of rivals have increased financial aid to middle-class students: Fat chance. Most colleges say they aren't loosening the purse strings just yet, although as financial-aid season approaches they are under intense pressure from parents to offer Harvard-style deals. Ursinus College's enrollment director, Richard DiFeliciantonio, said a parent already had called him to ask: "'If Harvard can do this for their kids, why can't you?' " The answer is obvious: Ursinus, like most colleges, isn't as filthy rich as Harvard, whose endowment of $35 billion is the largest in the nation. "Maybe 30 colleges in the country can even think about doing what Harvard is doing," said DiFeliciantonio, whose school has $150 million in its coffers.


Harmony may be shut down

Ohio Attorney General Marc Dann filed a lawsuit Friday seeking to shut down Harmony Community School, a charter school in Roselawn.

Dann's suit claimed that the school has a record of academic failure, financial mismanagement, ethical lapses and consumer fraud.

"Harmony has failed to accomplish its primary charitable purpose - educating students - despite receiving $31.9 million in taxpayers' money since 1998," Dann said during a news conference after personally filing the lawsuit in Hamilton County Common Pleas Court.

.


Educating Stéphane Dion

Halton MP Garth Turner and a handful of others were eager to hit the hustings and give Harper a kick in the pants. But folks like Dryden and other former Liberal leadership contenders were wary.

What followed from that Monday meeting was essentially two days of angst; two days of talking. The Liberals' Wednesday caucus meeting, which some described as the best they'd had in years, was an exercise in venting – worry, determination and frustration. The majority wanted an election avoided.

Dion dutifully took notes and then retreated, along with Deputy leader Michael Ignatieff, to work out the Liberal response. Against his own preference, knowing the barrage of ridicule awaiting him, a proud Dion had to write a speech that announced Liberal intentions to support Harper's government – for now.


the has-been

The Websites for actual front-runners Giuliani, Romney, and McCain are barely above 4 percent, 3 percent, and 2 percent.

Why does the Republican second-tier have a Second Life on the 'net? We know it's not the writers. Perhaps, in Huckabee's case, it's the prelude to a genuine, real-world breakthrough. Or perhaps, in the face of grim political realities, escape is just more entertaining. ... 4:20 P.M. (link)

Friday, Nov. 2, 2007

Special Favors: This week, Republican leaders officially gave up hope that Larry Craig will ever leave. A day after Craig passed Mr. Potato Head as the most popular Halloween costume in Idaho history, The Hill reported that the GOP has abandoned the last siege engine it had left against him, by agreeing to let the man keep his earmarks.


Future wide open for Skyline senior

His Skyline teammates tried to recruit him to Minnesota early on, but he asked them to stop.

"It's my decision," said Cooper, a 2007 SportsDay first-team All-Area selection. "Where I am most comfortable is where I'm going."

Cooper, No. 13 on SportsDay's Area Top 100, said he will visit Oklahoma or Wisconsin next weekend and possibly Kansas the weekend of Feb. 1. He visited Kansas State in the fall.

Cooper said if he's blown away by Texas Tech, he could commit this weekend. "It's the school that's been coming after me for awhile," Cooper said.

He plans to let things play out, but his cousin, Victor Hunter of Irving Nimitz, is a backup middle linebacker at Tech.

And his family wants him to stay close to home.



 

 

 

Link to us - Contact us