Monday, 31 December 2012

Graduate Student Loans

Graduate Student Loans Detail
One month after graduating from Avila University this June with a master’s degree in business administration, Andy Fogel received his first statement detailing payments due on his $38,000 student loan.The bill: $380 a month for 10 years.

Fogel can’t afford that unless he limits his meals to a college diet of ramen noodles every night. No thanks.“There would be nothing left for unexpected situations,” said Fogel, who works in the financial aid office at Kansas State University. “With everything else, I just couldn’t afford to make those payments.”

Fogel, 30, recently found a program to help him reduce those payments. And if he had waited, he probably would have been one of the 1.6 million former students expected to qualify for an even friendlier federal student loan debt repayment program that launched Friday.
Graduate Student Loans
Graduate Student Loans
Graduate Student Loans
Graduate Student Loans
Graduate Student Loans
Graduate Student Loans
Graduate Student Loans
Graduate Student Loans
Graduate Student Loans
Graduate Student Loans
Graduate Student Loans
Graduate Student Loans
Graduate Student Loans
Graduate Student Loans
Graduate Student Loans
Graduate Student Loans
Graduate Student Loans
Graduate Student Loans
Graduate Student Loans
Graduate Student Loans

No comments:

Post a Comment