Quote:
Originally Posted by pearlbubbles
Nope, not at all; there are several girls who do pay for their college by themselves. Yet, I know their parents still had to sign the forms. I'm just assuming the reason for a parental signature is to have a place to acquire payment if the member majorly defaulted payment or something like that.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by naraht
I'm not refering to the situation where the person is under 18, but rather the situation where you have someone who is over 18, but needs a parent's signature to back up the monetary commitment.
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This is why I asked. When I turned 18, my obligations were no longer my parents'. Requiring them to sign something when I was able to make decisions on my own wouldn't have gone over well. I don't see how something like that could have been required.
I equated it to co-signing on a car. If you can't do it on your own and can't get someone to co-sign, you're SOL. I thought that was the case in Tri-Delta.