Tennesseejoe:
As diagrammed, and as others have said, this bank is an elementary one; no spin need be applied, just center ball, and a firm hit. You'll regret leaving that bank for a good One Pocket player, as both pdcue and mdavis228 allude to. Even some of today's 9-/10-ball players won't shy away from this bank, and will go for it, because it's considered a high-percentage shot.
Now if the object ball were a bit closer to the rail (e.g. as an example of randyg's theorem, "If the cue ball travels the same distance the object ball travels then a natural kiss could occur"), this bank is still make-able without a kiss, by using a tip/tip-and-a-half of center outside english (center righthand, in this case), reducing the cut angle slightly on your aim, and hitting HARD. The outside english, combined with the hard speed, will scoot the cue ball to the right, and the hard speed will shorten the bank angle (nullifying/canceling the outside english's tendency to lengthen the bank angle), as well as compressing the object ball into the cushion to give the cue ball more distance/chance to get out of the way.
mdavis228's info is spot-on for crossover banks (i.e. crossing the face of the object ball with the cue ball). There's a well-known crossover bank of this nature in One Pocket, where the object ball is against the cushion of the long rail, about half a diamond (or even less!) from your opponent's pocket (the upper left pocket, in your Wei table diagram). The cue ball's near the foot spot, and with a very firm hit, you can cross the face of that object ball, compressing it into the cushion, and have the cue ball "escape" in time for the object ball to spring off the cushion, and go rocketing into your pocket (the bottom left corner pocket in your Wei table diagram). The key is a center ball hit, hit HARD. I know the first time I personally saw this bank performed years back, my eyes just about popped out of my head -- I thought it was a "lucky high-speed double-kiss," or that something was wrong with the cushions on that table to allow that seemingly physics-impossible shot to happen. (I thought that shot would be a "definite scratch into my opponent's pocket" cutting the object ball like that to get the angle needed for the cross-the-face bank to work. I was obviously wrong.) I later learned to master that shot as I cut my teeth on the great game of One Pocket. I personally can make that shot a very high percentage of the time when the object ball is very near the knuckle of my opponent's pocket on the long rail -- no scratch.
Kudos to randyg, Dale ("pdcue"), and mdavis228 for the great info!
-Sean