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The situation was quiet on Friday at Lovedale FET College in King Williams Town today where more than a hundred students and lecturers were arrested following a two-day strike.
Provincial police spokesperson, Major Ernest Sigobe, says 24 lecturers were among the 128 people arrested on Thursday on charges of public violence and intimidation.
They will appear in court on Monday.
Sigobe says students at Lovedale's Zwelitsha College also took to the streets on Friday morning but soon returned to class.
The protests reportedly started when students learned that they would not be receiving full bursaries from the National Student Financial Aid Scheme.
Lovedale has called an urgent meeting on Monday at 10 for parents and guardians where information on the Financial Aid Scheme will be provided.
Meanwhile, Walter Sisulu University says the National Student Financial Aid Scheme had allocated 293-million rand to the university.
The statement today came in response to a statement by the Democratic Alliance Youth which claimed that WSU students were still waiting for their student loans, eight months into the academic year.
WSU spokesperson, Angela Church, says students who signed have signed applications may not all be successful in receiving funds as there is a limited supply.
"The NFSAS has already allocated during 2012 an amount of R293m to WSU, all of this money has already been dispersed to students who have been successful in qualifying for loans or bursaries. There will be no further allocations for this year, because the scheme cannot address the financial needs of all students" Church said