Marshall leaves library Korean War diary WASHINGTON (AP) — Among the 173,700 items thot Thurgood Marshall gave the Library of Congress, probably the most personal is a diary he kept briefly in 1951 while on a mission to the Far East for the NAACP during the Korean War. He jotted down big things and small — the segregation he noted at a U.S. Army post and the relaxed momenta when he "swapped stories, drank whiskey" with reporters in Tokyo. The diary shows Marshall's sense of humor and curiosity about his surround ings even us he conducted a grueling probe of Army discrimination against black servicemen. The red-covered diary is among the documents that Marshall, who retired from the Supreme Court in 1901 and died last January, left to the library. In 1951, Marshall w'as legal director of the National Association for the Advance ment of Colored People, which sent him to the Far Fast to investigate numerous complaints of unfair trials and imprison ment of black soldiers in Korea. Gen Douglas MacArthur had ordered an offi cial investigation, and he also agreed to give Marshall access to Army personnel for his wparate inquiry. “Cleared Customs without difflc uIty No one to meet me." Marshall wrote of his arrival at the Tokyo airport on Sunday morning. |an U, 1951 “Asked sergeant on duly, who called his captain, who called his major, who colled his colonel. ... Northwest Airlines could not find a hotel " Finally. Marshall re< minted, an Army officer found him a hotel th.it was quiet hut far from the city 's < enter He had din ner at the officers' dub at the Army base, where he found "no segregation in club, but segregation on post In town, he noted, taxis for (npanosa residents were old and burned charcoal, while those marked " Tourist'' or For eigner" were Fords running on gasoline There were “Foreigners Welcome" signs at a numlier of restaurants On Jan. 17. in a meeting w ith an aide to Mai.Arthur and other Army brass. Mar shall said, "Everyone promised full coop eration" in allowing him to interview black prisoners in the Army slot kade near Tokyo and other matters. The diary shows the civil rights lawyer’s gregarious, playful side in the years before Lyndon B Johnson named him to the Supreme Court in 1007. when he became considerably more solemn. There's an entry for Jan 16. for exam ple. in which Marshall descrilied how he relaxed after a day of meetings with mil itary offit nils 'Went down to (press) Correspondents Club — was made a guest member and had lot of talk, with a lot of people All of correspondents had l>een to Korea at least once — swapped stories, drank whiskey, etc." And on Jan 22: "The slot machines at Press Club are real one-armed bandits Marshall wont to the Army PX com missary on Jan. 20: “Converted depart monl store — huge place everything but what you want By Sunday. Jon 21. when he worked all day in his hotel room. Marshall said his investigation was "beginning to shape up ' During bis three weeks in Tokyo, he interviewed scores of imprisoned him k soldiers wrongly convicted of i ownrdu e and other charges by i ourts martial. Beaten motorist honored before trials begin DETROIT {AH — Faded plastic flowers, a torn poster of Malcolm X and a rain streaked mural of Malice Green memori alize the corner where the 35-year-old black motorist was beaten to death seven months ago. “First Rodney King, now Mali™ Green." says a sign taped on a boarded-up build ing across the street. Separate, simultaneous trials are to Itugin Wednesday for three white police officers who witnesses say bludgeoned Green with heavy metal flashlights outside a suspected drug house last Nov. 5. Green was beaten when he failed to obey officers’ commands. The beating began as officers pulled Green from his parked car and he refused to open his clenched fist, witnesses said. Accounts of what he was holding vary — a wallet, a piece of paper, maybe drugs. Green, an unemployed father of five, died of at least 14 blows to the head. Part of his scalp was torn off. An autopsy showed alcohol and cocaine in his system. Officers Larry Nevers. 52. and Walter Budzyn, 42. are charged with second degree murder. Officer Robert Lessnau. 32. r is charged with assault with intent to do great bodily harm. Never* and Hudzvn could be sentenced to life in prison and Lessnau fat es up to 10 years if convict ed. A fourth officer. Sgt. Freddie Douglas, who is black, was charged with a misde meanor — willful neglect of duty — and is not being tried with the others All four went fired. None has publicly commented on the charges. Although nothing in a preliminary hear ing indicated race was a direct factor in the treating, "the events speak for them selves,” said (oatm Watson, executive director of the Detroit branch of the Nation al Association for the Advancement of Col ored People. The beating stunned Mayor Coleman Young, who became Detroit's first black mayor six years after a police raid set off the lfW>7 race riots Young has made inte gration of the police department a cor nerstone of his administration The case's similarity to the police beat ing of another black motorist. Rodney King, has some people concerned that acquittals in Detroit could provoke the kind of riot 1 mg and looting lint! devastated s*s turns of Los Angeles after a jury acquitted four white officers who were videotaped (mat ing King Hut community leaders and legal experts point to the striking differences between the cases as reasons violence will not break out Among them — The jury. In the first King heating tri al. moved to Sum Valley, a mostly white Los Angeles suburb, the jury was made up of 10 whites, one Asian and one Hispan ic. The Detroit juries will bo drawn from a population that is nearly 75 percent black. — Evidence. Hie inner city tensions that existed in lass Angeles well before the King beating were exacerbated by repeated tele vising of an amateur videotape of the heat ing The Detroit case has witnesses who saw the beating close at hand but nothing so publicly inflammatory as the famous video. — Official response. Detroit leaders were quick to condemn the beating. The mayor (.ailed the floating "murder." Police Chief Stanley Knox immediately suspended sev en officers. Frank, Nunn argue over gay issue WASHINGTON (AP) Son Sam Nunn says turning a blind evo to openly guv off base lifestyles fur militarv jiersonnol would !»’ equix alout to taking a hands off attitude on off-baso drug use Nunn. i hairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, reiter ated Ids opposition to a proposal by Rep Barne> h'rank that would let gay and lesbian military personnel maintain an openly homosexual lifestyle off-fmse as long as they did not dot hire their sexuality on-ltase Nunn opposes lifting the ban against gays and lesbians in tbe military. but lias said be could liye with a compromise now effm lively in place under which recruits are not questioned about their sexual preferem es when they enlist and are allowed to serve as long as they do not make an open display of their sexuality "If you took Kep Frank’s propos al and you said that nothing off base matters, you would reverse everything about the code of mili tary justice." Nunn said Sunday on NBC's Meet the /‘/css He said the hands-off policy was tried m the t‘l?Os "based on a mil itary i ourt ol appeals de< ision that off-base drug use would not be prosecuted That was a disaster for the military. It was an absolute dis aster " Nunn also responded to remarks in interviews in which Frank, who is openly gay. accused the conser vative Georgia Democrat of being "obsessed with sex” and on “an anti-gay witch hunt." "I appreciate Rep Frank trying to enhance my dull image, but in terms of the obsession with sex. Fin not in Barney's league. I would say. so I'm not trying to compete in that arena." Nunn said. The House reprimanded Frank in 1990 for his relationship with male prostitute Stephen Goble. 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