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After Harvard, Yale boosts aid

Yale announced this week that it will change its undergraduate financial aid policy for all students this fall. The changes are meant to make college more affordable for middle and upper-income families and follow in the footsteps of a similar policy enacted by Harvard last December.

"We want all of our students to make the most of Yale — academically and beyond — without worrying about excessive work hours or debt," Yale president Richard Levin said in a press release. "Our new financial aid package makes this aspiration a reality."

At both Yale and Harvard, parents with annual incomes below $60,000 a year will not have to contribute toward their child's college education, and families with incomes from $60,000 to $120,000 will now pay between 1 and 10 percent of their incomes toward tuition.


A long-kept Md. secret: interest-free college loans

Undergraduate and graduate students are eligible. There's no age limit. Recipients range from age 17 to 61.

To qualify for a loan, you must apply for federal financial aid. You need to have a grade-point average of at least 2.0 on a scale of 4. And you must have a co-signer for the loan so that if you don't repay it, the co-signer would be on the hook.

Central Scholarship will begin accepting applications for the 2008-2009 academic year in January. The deadline is May 31. For more details check out the nonprofit's Web site at www.centralsb.org.

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A Shaky Season for Student Loans

Shortly after New Year's Day, Pat Watkins, financial aid director at Eckerd College in St. Petersburg, Fla., placed a worried call to National Education, a student loan company she has been working with for nearly two decades. She had heard rumors that the company was no longer funding federal Stafford and PLUS (Parent Loans for Undergraduate Students) education loans, but had received no official word from the company.

She found out that the phone of National Education's local rep had been disconnected. Later she learned that Chicago-based National Education was not planning to accept applications for new loans for the spring semester after Jan. 15, though they planned to fund disbursements for students who received loans for the fall.

Federal Loans Lose Funders

That was the first surprise.


Bodde back and aiming to impress refs

The tough-tackling midfielder says he now wants to draw a line under the latest red-card incident after insisting he's taken on board to his manager's advice.

And, as the 25-year-old aims to make up for lost time against struggling Port Vale, Bodde says he hopes he can take his frustration out – in a fair way – by maintaining Swansea's lead at the summit.

"The gaffer told me I need to be smarter and get used to what you can and can't do and he's right," he added.

"I can't change the way I play, but I can adapt to different styles. Hopefully I can show that now. Not being able to play a part in the FA Cup games with Havant was a big disappointment so I'm itching to go.

"I've kept myself in shape and luckily the games have come thick and fast so it hasn't been too long watching on.



 

 

 

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