Einherjar86
Active Member

It's a good headline, but I'd like more specifics in the article. Is Brown simply ending loans conducted through the university, or prohibiting students from receiving all federal loans? And what about private loans? I'd be curious to hear more.
Beginning next school year, Brown University will eliminate all student loans in its undergraduate financial aid packages, replacing them with scholarships.
Following a $30 million fundraising effort launched in September, Brown administrators announced this week that 2,087 donors contributed toward the goal, and that the school, located in Providence, Rhode Island, plans to raise $90 million more to sustain the scholarship giving.
That doesn't answer my question. They'll replace loans in their financial aid with fellowships--but will they still allow students to apply for non-university loans?
When I applied for loans, some were through the school but others weren't.
Being "balanced" is much less important than being open about your partisanship. American media outlets seem to have this strange relationship with false bipartisanship that other countries don't have.
- NASA, in partnership with Google, has discovered two new planets orbiting sun-like stars.
- One of the new planets, Kepler 90i, is the eighth planet orbiting its star – making that solar system the only one known to have as many planets as ours.
- Astronomers who study Kepler exoplanet data applied Google’s artificial-intelligence algorithms in the search for more planets.
They'll have to pay $5 to read anything about it.What do all the Americans in here think of this net neutrality debacle?