^LOL at bum ass nicca.
Rahim, considered a student by who?
It all comes down to this:
The bank charges me an $8.99 fee (which is the non-student rate) for being able to have access to my own personal checking account, which also includes 25 transfers from my debit and/or account during that month. The monthly student fee for having a checking account is $3.45.
I signed up at the bank In February of 2007, and until yesterday, I didn't prove that I was a student. No where on paper does the bank state that there is a time limit that you can prove you are a student, but the problem was that at the time I signed up (in February), I was not attending school then because I finished my final exam in mid January (this was a point that one of bank managers brought up, but I still feel there is a way around it).
The point of me arguing against this fee is because I've been paying $8.99 since February, and since (yesterday) I did show proof through documentation I was a student, they refuse to refund or compensate the full amount of money that they owe me, and as a "favor", will only compensate three months of not having to pay the monthly fee.
So from knowing all this, and also knowing that I wasn't attending school from mid February all the until August 27th, do I still qualify as being a student? Also, does it really matter when you need to declare that you were a student to a bank as long as you were going to school, and will be attending school 6 - 7 months after?
A good point I just thought of is that most high schools run the course of ten months of a whole year. From the end of May until the first or second week of September, you are off for summer holiday, but are you still not considered a student because you will be going back to school in September (considering the fact that you were going back of course)?