For-profit colleges face federal crackdown
It wasn’t until after she graduated in 2008 — two years and $30,000 in student loans later — that Miller learned the state university wouldn’t take her credits from Everest, a unit of Santa Ana-based Corinthian Colleges Inc. "I got completely taken advantage of, and now I’m struggling to pay the bill for it," said Miller, now 26. "I got sold my degree by a used-car salesman. I got a lemon."
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by Walter Hamilton, The Los Angeles Times.
