Let the Borrower Beware! : ELooIdng For A Home Mortgage? ".If it so happen that you are a black American and. want to purchase or refinance a home the chances are better than ever that you will face what has been termed "double discnmmation" because of your race and, ; because of where you choose to live. . . ' . .- . . f ,' Although outright acts of discrimination in lending; . : are much less frequent in recent years, you need only v 'talk to a black twho has tried to obtain a conventional ' (non-government insured) home mortgage to learn that race continues to play a major role in the terms of a loan that you will be offered if offered at all. To reduce the chances of racial bias, borrowers should insist upon - filing a written application with each lender they ap proach. Next, under the Community Reinvestment Act and Equal Credit Opportunity rules, you may request financial institutions to show you their loan policy state ment, which describes their service area; down payment requirements, jcurrent interest charges and other condi tions applicable to everyone. , . Because of the many different forms Of mortgages now being offered to borrowers, anyone thinking about buying or even selling a home in today's roller-coaster ! money market, would be wise to find out more about I the options open to them, or seek professional help i from independent sources. One thing is for sure; it pays ,' to shop for a loan just as you would in buying groceries. Some lenders offer better deals than other. A half point ' difference in interest rates an mean thousands of dollars more or less in the years ahead. Look for restric tions in your mortgage such as prepayment penalties, due-on-sale clauses and future automatic increases in ; monthly payments tied to cost of money indexes. Despite rules of thumb that say total housing costs should not "exceed a certain percentage of your income, ' loan underwriting still is based largely on subjective ; judgment. Lenders look at your credit history, savings habits and job stability. Some charge application fees and all will want a service charge or points for making the loan. To make your own comparisons of the total cost of borrowing, ask for the Annual Percentage Rate (APR). It is a computation of the interest rate quoted you plus all other expenses that yotfmust pay, spread over the life of the loan. A good place to begin looking for a loan is your own bank or savings and loan, where you are known. Many offer lower rates, etc., to their own customers. Other sources are mortgage banking firms who generally make FHA or VA loans and credit unions who have recently been authorized to make real estate loans. Some life in surance companies are becoming active again in single family financing. For the past forty years, jhc fully amortizing, level payment mortgage with a fixed interest rate over the en tire loan term has been the basic financing mechanism in this country. In recent years, due to inflation, use of this kind of mortgage is rapidly disappearing. Except for FHA, VA and Farmers Home loans, they are pretty hard to find. Most of the creative new mortgage in struments allow the borrower to pay less in, the early years but require larger monthly payments later on. Civil rights and consumers groups have been highly critical of these new plans. They should be thoroughly understOoMy borrowers .before taking them on. By law, lenders must explain to borrowers these new loan terms and, in some, cases, offer a choice of fixed-rate financing. . .-v.. ."..;!' : After cautiously testing the adjustable-rate mortgage . waterforH&rw-yj Board, in April, plunged in with regulations that "' remove all interest rate and principal payment restric tions for all federally-chartered savings and loan associations. The new rules will change the familiar repayment pattern as lenders begin to adjust payments as often as they want to even monthly based on changes in an interest-rate-index beyond its control. . ,. To illustrate this process, consider a. $50,000 AdJ justable Rate Mortgage (ARM) with an initial interest rate of 12, a thirty-year term and a.7.5 limit on pay ment increases. The monthly payments for principal;, and interest in the first year would be $514.(56. But the payment cap will limit the payments in the second year to $552.88, leaving $28.34 of unpaid interest each month to be added to the principal loan balance. At 1 least once every five years, the payments must be ad- justed to put back on a fully amortizing basis over the remainder of the loan term. This could require a hefty r payment increase if the loan balance has grown substan-' tially. The incomes of over half the families in the U.S. have grown at a rate less than fifteen per cent over the last several years even moreso for minorities. The nation must act to keep blacks from being priced out of the housing market altogether. There have to be better solu tions than this! Worship Service To Be Held For Atlanta Children ' n f4r-siJ ' , -J government public service outlays; then ,as produc tion keeps on rising,, the tax cuts . will allow the goods to be bought until the tax benefits are no longer sufficient to do the job at which time the military expenditures, on m ever-rising scale will be called in to stave , off economic disaster or a' depression. 1 - . . " In essence" the 'arms budget has been designated as the great . economic stabilizer for the next period of time. Ob- viously such a policy greatly tempts the military establishment to use the equipment so generously supplied by an unsuspec- -. TKCAr4cu:aT:EJ-i3 , ting nation ' . ' If the military stabilizer is" removed because the na- lion may ' fear for its biological survival: then the national economy wilt have to be restructured to compensate for the loss of this . long ; lived and dangerous ; ' economic monster, . ' ' WHITE HOUSE STAFF MERSSERS HONSHU! : Black members of the White House .staff wore recently honored for their achievement in government, at a reception in the Sanr Rayburn House Office Building In Washington, D. C. They includedlffSIvin Bradley, senior policy advisor to the President; Thaddeau Garrett, assis tant to the vice president for domestic policy; and Thelma Duggin, deputy special assistant to the deputy director of the Office of Public Liaison. Pictured (from left): Garrett; Mel Taylor, general manager of Kraft, Inc. Dairy Group; Herm Wiile, vice'presldent of urban affairs for Kraft, who provided cheese for the reception and secretary of the Business Policy Review Council, one of its sponsors; Bradley; Arthur Fletcher ranratantathra of another soonsor: and Ms. Duaain. United NaT16ns Report Waiting and Wondering By Laura Tarks Amidst gathering world anxieties about the fate of , the world the Mormon , .Church leaders, gently but firmly, came out against the MX underground missile systems being plac ed in their backyard. The MX system, they said, threatens Ihc very ex istence of world civiliza tion. Earlier the Bishops of the Anglican Church allowed that in the atomic age the doctrine of just : wars was the doctrine of1 .mad men to be resisted by the Church and the faithful. Civil disobedience 'against the mad men was 'and is permissible. In the great court yard of the Anglican Mother Church ' at Canterbury, gold and purple banners proclaim "It is the duty of every christian to fight fox peace." Feeling the interna tional heat, Secretary of State Haig was forced to agree to meet with the . .Russians, some time this , year, to start talks on arms -limitations. The heat came primarily from West Ger many, France and Italy a. where the youth and other elements of the population have taken to the streets against nuclear arms pro liferation. The European peace forces are rapidly gaining support among all segments of the popula tion. This is specially so in Britain where the conser- vative government is! following a policy of j reducing social services of all kinds while at the same time expanding the arms budget. In this context, it was! unsettling to hear the; Japanese Prime Minister, announce that his country would increase its arms production. This move will undoubtedly aid those in Japan who are now call ing for constitutional changes to permit full rearmament and the pro duction of nuclear weapons. The logic of the Reagan budget, based on supply side, (economics must rely maaness about it. In the days of our national economic innocence, from the civil War to the Great Depression, the repeated economic crises were in variably caused by the oversupply of goods for which there was too little demand; prices fell, pro fits fell and unemploy ment rose. When the Depression hit the world, economic wise men determined that the only way to revive the economy was to put money into the peoples' "pockets via public works and armaments produc tion. This worked more or less and the world was spared another depres sion. But over time, an over of money developed, causing inflation. Reagan now proposes to reverse this by cutting back on public works and public service outlays, which- would reduce the demand for goods and cause prices to fall. But now he also proposes to encourage the production of ;more goods with various incentives to business, the demand for which would come from a three-year tax cut and a greatly increased arms budget. The net result of AFuimi(w duration lessening of in- economic policies, tO nation rillP frt inrrpoH . 1 ! . 1 w . UOWU worK. LiKe me arms race, production and Reagan economics has falling i" Av- Jl 6 Look Ma, no commercials. HBO doesn't have time for commercials. We're too busy featuring over 65 different movies this summer. Box office smashes like Smokey & the Bandit (I&II). And early evening family films like Journey Back to Oz, Disney's Candleshoe and Return from Witch Mountain. Plus made for cable specials. Over 10 hours of programming every day. And what you see this summer is as sensational as what we show in the fall. Unlike the network reruns. So get ready to see summer TV like you've never seen it before. Without those annoying things you have seen before. Commercials. GALLrlTOPA-Yl Offer Expires Soon SAVE 50 on HBO Connection. din Offer Good in fabled Areas Only "Services of worship in Remembrance of the Children in Atlanta" will be held on June 10 and June 11 in the Durham County General Hospital auditorium, for the employees of Durham County Hospital Corpora tion. The services are. scheduled ai 10:30 a.m., 2:30 p.m., ( p.m. June 10. ami y a.m.. June 11. All interested persons are cor dially invited to attend. Special guest speaker will be the Honorable H.M. "Mickey"! Michaux, U. S. Attorney. Reverend William W. Easley, St. Joseph's A.M.E. Church;; Reverend Charlene Kam merer, assistant minister at Duke - University;! Reverend Layfayette Max-' well, Mount Zion Baptist i Church, Apex; and. Reverend David L., Massey, Northeast Baptist Church, will be delivering the homilies. Also assisting in the ser-, vices will- be Chaplain ; Elizabeth T. Wood,; Durham County General Hospital; Reverend! i Haywood Holderness.i i Westminster Presbyterian Church: Sister Darlene! I Orega, Lutheran Chaplain j at Duke University; and ( Reverend George F. Neal, J Covenant United Presbyterian Church. Special music will be by Mrs. Arleen Hedgepeth, accompanied by Mrs.-Lisa' Hedgepeth. . ! .. A candle light ceremony will be led by Mrs. Thelma ' B. Brown and Fred White of the Durham County, General Hospital staff. This will include the nam ing of each one of the dead or missing children and a candle will be lighted in memory of each child, followed by a tape! recorded message from, Mayor Mayn ard Jackson : of Atlanta, Georgia. , The service will be con cluded with the distribu tion of green ribbons, for those who desire to wear them by Mrs. Elaine G. 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