The Michigan Daily/New Student Edition-City-Thursday, September 9, 1993 - Page 9 Information to bank on i Ann Arbor by Jesse Brouhard Daily Staff Reporter T hen your parents walk through thebank's doorway, checkbook in hand, ready to help you open your new checking account, pray for only one thing. Pray those checks keep coming your way. Every time a check does come your way, you are forced to navigate the murky waters of banking in Ann Arbor. This is even before I begin to discuss billsandbounced checks. The firstcon- sideration when opening an account around here should always behow much money you are going to have hanging around in your account. You need money to spend money, to write checks for money and to avoid service charges on all your money. Bet you didn't think of that one. The two main criteria for opening a checking account in this town are mini- mum balance requirements and service charges on transactions such as using ATMs and writing checks. Now that we have accrued enough capital to think about banking, let's go open our checking account. Where you ask? Let me - the Michael Milken of Ann Arbor finance - lead the way. Mt- here are two types of accounts offered to people of lesser means (students) by area banks - the aptly named basic account and accounts with no service charges if aminimum balance is maintained. The sticking point when shopping around is the ratio ofminimum balance requirement to service charge per transaction. If you plan on keeping more than the minimum balance in your account then theno-service-charge account is foryou since itprovides the option of unlimited transactions. But if you know already you are the type to take out all the money by the third week of September, and you manage not to have an incred- ible amount of bills to pay, basic is the way to go in order to avoid paying a plethora of unwanted service charges. "Well there are two different types ofchecking accounts.Themostpopular one with students is the Independence Checking Account, and that one has no minimum balance requirement, but it does have a $2 monthly fee," Michigan National Bank teller Laurie Fritz said. "The monthly fee is regardless of the balance. You can write five checks (per month) and then you can use the ATM card as much as you want. "The other one has a minimum bal- ance of $300 and as long as you main- tain the minimum balance, you can write as many checks as you want, which counts still completely free." This is the common format offered around town by all of the banks. The minimum balances and service charges vary, though, in more ways than one. For some banks, the minimum bal- ance can be spread out among different accounts, allowing interest to be earned on some of the money at the bank. This has the added advantage that most sav- ings accounts have unlimited ATM ac- cess while checking accounts do not. "Our checking plans fora free check- ing, where they are not charged any- thing other than check printing, has a' $500 balance," said Sue Benfante, Comerica branch manager. "That can either be maintained in a separate savings account and then have any balance in their checking account or they can maintain it in the checking account and have it free." Many students around campus go for the basic ac- count because there just aren't that many occa- sions that call for writing checks in these days of bountiful ATMs and credit cards. If six checks per month are suf- ficient, then an- other question arises. Where is this ATM Iam go- ing to hit up daily for that $10 in food/CD/video rental/coffeeshop/ just generally wasting cash money? A TMs are the lifeblood of students these days. Why talk to a bank teller when all you really want is to get your !1 ,. _, ! _ ! __ ,_ ! _._ A 1r ___ __i !_ _tt_-- - TO "T i -! I-* relm 'TliuI " " o t /9 hat is offered = Iok fi $50 $25 $25 $50 $100 - $500 $300 $299 $299 none 10-mo. r nt $3.5/month $4/month $3.5/month $4/month $2, add. ° .33// .25 // .250// .300// .25s ea. $17.50 $17.50 $17.50 $17.50 $15.00 ~to ;;::;?$15.00 $17.50 $15.00 $17.50 $15.00 $25 $50 $25 $1,000 $100 . e# ::afd $200 $200 $300 $300/qtr $104/qtr tdckw none 4fre none none 9/ qtr #ATMso 25 11 1 2 2 iitVary $250 Vary $500 $200 .. . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . money and run to the CD store to buy your third Big Head Todd And The Monsters (Fill in the blank) album this week? There is nothing worse than having to search around town to either avoid your bank's service charge or to feel unable to withdraw your money be- cause your bank has a service charge on ATM withdrawals. Each bank has a different plan and policies concerning how you can re- ceive your money through the ever- friendly ATM machine. If you don'tneed to write any checks, savings accounts offer the advantage of free ATM access at many banks. "Our statement savings is a $200 balance where (customers) are not charged anything. If they are under $200, it's a dollar and a half a month service charge and they have unlimited ATM with that," Benfante said. This account works similarly to checking accounts at banks such as First of America and National Bank of Detroit (NBD) where a $300 minimum balance allows access to ATMs. One last reminder on the ATM front for the true penny-pinchers out there. If you don't like dishing out service charges for using ATMs owned by banks other than your own, find a bank with ATMs in the areas you frequent. Every bank in town will attempt to convince you that their machines are at great locations near Central Campus. This is not necessarily true. "Depends upon whatpartof campus you're on," Fritz said. "Central campus we have one right across from Campus Book and Supply, and then there's the one at the branch downtown. We have one at Meijers, one at Briarwood Mall and one on Washtenaw ..." First ofAmerica and Comerica seem to be in a battle similar to the cold war arms race while trying to plant the most ATMs near campus. A winner is not clear at this juncture. It only takes one near you to do the trick though, so don't panic. Iyou live your life on credit, where you go is not a big deal around here. MARY KOUKHAB/DaNy This is a rare sight in Ann Arbor - a solitary person at an ATM. University students spend an average of 72 hours per week waiting for cash. i Source:Campus Information Center Basically, all the banks offer standard Visa and Mastercards. NBD is the only bank offering debit cards at the moment, but restrictions do apply. "We offer a silver bank card, which is a debit card right out of your chec ing account. There are requirements, restrictions on that when you apply," said Linda Adkins, NBD branch man- ager. The best plan, however, is to avoid credit altogether. The feeling of getting things for free when the card slips through the cute little telephone ma- chine is false.'The bills do end up some- where eventually. Trust me, I received my parents' phone calls. --- he best thing to keep in mind, though ,when navigating the murky world of Ann Arbor banking is, even though the banks may act like they have you cornered, you can always take your $6.25 balance elsewhere if you are not treated right. MINSTREL Continued from page 7 With his three bongo drums,he lures pedestrians towards him, drawing them closer with the enchanting spell of his tricky beat, until he blurts out a catchy rhyme - "See this guy in the green and tan, Certainly looks like a handsome man, Could he help me if he can, And drop some money in the pan." Though the verses are no doubt pre-rehearsed, his beat is strong and his voice robust. EMike Caulk-akaPreacherMike. The most irreverent Christian funda- mentalistsinceJonathan Edwards, Mike makes Pat Robertson look like a sissy. His pulpit is the Diag. "Open your bibles," Mike, half facetiously, begins each sermon. The discourse that follows is invari- ably contrary to the left-wing ideolo- gies espoused by many University stu- dents. Not surprisingly, Mike has his share of detractors, who bicker to no end with the once-licentious, but now- saved Reverend. Stoney Burke - Mike's antith- esis. Half-bald and fully baked, Stoney dons pink wigs and colorful overalls and never fails to wow the flocks of students who faithfully subscribe to his, anti-authoritarian credos. There are others too. A few average guitaists, ajuggler or two, a unicyclist and a few other bible beaters. However, each has struggled to develop a persona embraceable enough tomatch the afore- mentioned legends. Easy One course leads to financial happiness. The Easy A;' from Society Bank. It's the easy, economical bank account de- signed to fit the financial needs of the college student. It features a checking service that can cost as little as $3 a month. Plus automated teller machine access, discounted rates on installment loans*' a credit card with no annual fee,*; and a student loan package* to help you handle the cost of going to school. But that's not the half of it. Easy A means you also receive your first 50 checks printed free, a specially designed checkbook cover, and other advantages. Best of all, when you're on vacation, so is your Easy A. June, July and August, there'sno monthly service fee. Yet you retain all benefits of the Easy A package year-round. So make the grade with an Easy A. Call Society Bank for all the details: (313) 994-5555. I ',;~~