THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1992 ONE MILLION IN ONE YEAR 30 PAGES THIS WEEK Winston-Salem Chronicle 75 cents i 'The Twin City's Award-Winning Weekly" VOL. XVIII, NO. 39 Teaching discipline Home-school coordinator work ing with parents and students. PAGE A3 Were they guilty or entrapped? Opinions differ on fairness of trial Sumler Hair st on ? By SHERIDAN HILL Chronicle Assistant Editor Former alderman Patrick Hairston emerged from a federal courthouse last Thursday after a jury of five whites, six blacks and one Asian-American found him and Mack, Sumler await verdict By SHERIDAN HILL Chronicle Assistant Editor Mack A heavy thunderstorm raged outside the federal courthouse in Greensboro Monday and the Rev. Lee Faye Mack began to weep as her daughter-in-law, Belita Martin Mack, answered questions from prosecutor Doug Cannon. For the past seven weeks. Rev. Please see page A2 consultant Rodney Sumler guilty on 20 counts of political corruption, and muttered, "Only in America." Hairston's not the only one who thinks he didn't get a fair trial. Emo tions are running high in the com munity: some see the investigation, Please see page A6 Feds investigating lending institutions ? More than 266 banks nationwide tar geted for evidence of discrimination in mortgage loan applications WASHINGTON (AP) ? More than a dozen banks, including some in Texas, have acknowledged feder al regulators are scrutinizing their lending records for evidence of dis _ crimination against minorities, The Wall Street Journal reported todays The Treasury Department's Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the regulator of national ly-chartered banks, confirmed last week that it had targeted 266 banks for investigation based on data showing they turned down mort gage loan applications from blacks and other minorities far more often than applications from whites. Spokeswoman Ellen Stockdale said today it is the policy of the comptroller's office not to identify banks under investigation. Bank? acknowledging to the Journal they have been asked to explain their rejection rates are: ? First City Bancorp of Texas Inc. ? First Interstate Bank of Texas. ? Banc One Texas and Banc One Mortgage Co. in "Tfcxas, Bank One Lexington (Ky.), and Bank One Cleveland, all subsidiaries of Banc One CofpTGf Columbus, Ohio; ? Hibemia National Bank, New Orleans, which has branches in Texas. Using a computer to scan 1990 mortgage loan data, released last October by the Federal Reserve, the Journal identified 105 banks with widely disparate rejection rates for whites and minorities. Fifteen of them, responding to a Journal sur vey, confirmed their lending poli cies axe under investigation. However, some of the 15 dis puted the data and others attributed the disparity to an aggressive effort to solicit applications from minori ties. Please see page A3 I III II? i I? Hi I T*w>-y ?l> *<B?B'*blrd'?-?v> vlaw on the shoul dMt of Chris Cotoman at tho Fun/Famlty Award* program. 'Keep our centers open' residents urge committee ? Alderman Larry Womble and resi dents pleaded with city's Finance Committee to reconsider budget cuts already in concrete, but weife here tonight to try to keep the cement from hard By SAMANTHA McKENZIE Chronide Stall Writer Alderman T airy Womhle and South want residents made a plea to the city aldermen's Finance Com mittee Tuesday night not to close Morningside Recreation Center. Four recreation centers ? all located in the black community ? face reductions in budget and ser vices in the city's proposed 1992-93 budget. A public hearing was held at the committee's Tuesday meeting. The four centers include: Morning side, Kingston Green, North Hills, and Northampton. The next meeting will be held next Tuesday, May 26, when a final decision will be made on the budget "We're going to fight this," said Womble. "It seems like this is m m lljp-'" M kw f -v* * if "There is a clear need for these cen ters. I am a product of a recreation center. It kept me off the streets," he said, adding that the shut-down of the centers may force the children to hang out on the streets. "Whenever there is a decision Please see page A2 Jackie Teal ON THE AVANT-GARDE p playtag doggie when thU very loud crash. tUk ? - - -* .-liL: fa- *:? : --a ?-< g ? m m > we fusnea into tno Dearoom ana xouna large ptecetof giaatJjpiayodaB over the floor. Tliis bad tne looic oi * very serious accident lit tne midst of itiliAm lj ji *?? - |Um4 . ImmI a t n t? ? li I ? i 01 wnom JOiew j^ iOiDctning naa gone temoly wrong. Apparently, "Mister Dog's" leg, the three year-old cousin, had been tied to the babbie gum machine inorier to keephim pfllfora wHIe. But Mister Dog didnft want to nit Hedidn't want to be still. He wanted to go around the bouee bademg " wcvii", wn<>f. woo t" But Miner Dog wasn't old enough to untie himself from the baMppnin machine. The boys weren't hart, thank God, but now, unless one of them could And the appropriate Please see page A6 . jjfejfcji ' Word on the street . . . A Alderman Larry Womble found innocent . . . Patrick Hairston and Rodney Sumler convicted . . . Here's what people say about the verdict ?* - %. ' 'V'?-" 2 w . r ? 1 WM' ? 1P11PB i I thought everyone would get off. I donl think the (innocent) verdict on Womble will damage his credibility in the black community, even though they tried to use those tactics to do just that. It's hard to argue that it was an unfair verdict, just by the makeup of the jury. They made a sound decision based on the given facts. (But) this type of lobby ing happens all the time in Washington. 9 - Bobby Brown, 41 i I feel like they were all set up. The (white) guy who already showed prejudice should not have been trust ed. Womble obviously pre sented his case better than the other two. I definitely believe that if they were white there would have been a dif ferent verdict. There seems to be two sets of laws, a writ ten law and an unwritten law, and the unwritten law mostly applies to blacks. 9 i Nationwide black officials, I feel, are being targeted. We basically still live in the good or boy system, where (whites) can do whatever they want to do and get away with it. I actually know Womble and I feel he was innocent all along. I didnl know the others personally. I donl know their integrity. It was left up to the hands of the court system and justice was served. 9 - Robert Lana, 36 - Beatrice Weaver, 60 TO SUBSCRIBE, CALL 722-8624, JUST DO IT! i I dont even understand how and why Womble got off free. Honestly speaking I thought they were all guilty. They were on trial because they did something wrong ? black, white, yellow, purple ? I dont care what color you are if you did it. I dont think (Mack) will get off either. If they had to go through it all over again, and serve the public, they shouJd do it the right way. 9 - Wanda Frazlar, 30 ( It was satisfying to see one black walk away. If you're crazy enough to get caught up in it, then you got what you paid for. You cant set a man up who isnt doing anything wrong. Obviously they were doing something they shouldn't have been doing. But they'll probably just get probation. There are enough people in jail. They just wanted them to know, we're watching you. j - Jay Johnaon, 32

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