Thursday, September 8, 1988TThe Battalion/Page 9 entsen claims he has matured ince giving advice under Truman ^ WASHINGTON (AP) — Lloyd ^ Bentsen said he’s older and wiser 1M fian when, as a 29-year-old con- / | I gressman, he urged President Tru- Hian to tell North Korean leaders to ■withdraw invasion forces from 11 wouldijflfotith Korea or threaten them with the duty, .puclear weapons, creation^* Bentsen, now 67, a U.S. senator nentigrai the Democratic vice presidential ^Bominee, said Tuesday he wouldn’t “At the time, you have to remember, we were losing 50,000 American and the Marines were really being booted around and we were being kicked off the pen insula. So you have to put it in that time period, and at that time we controlled the bomb. ” — Lloyd Bentsen 'ioitshavf'j (’tirza ic|| ,le e on y an d tast:- In - ambsi ihingthf' heads," s; airman oj nes itgeii; Uike such a stance now if faced with a similar situation. 1 As a freshman congressman, he was among the first in what grew to a long list of public figures calling for Xlse of nuclear weapons as North Ko- Blean troops pushed American and ■Jnited Nations forces back down die Korean peninsula. I Truman at first denied even con- Kdering such an option, but in No vember 1950 he said use of atomic weapons was being considered. I North Korean troops invaded outh Korea on June 25, 1950. As te allied military position deterio- ated, Bentsen took the floor of the Blouse on July 12. is were' ■ “Whtt 1 I called for was giving oloniaj .Mhem seven days notice to withdraw Bo the 58th parallel or to use that was do i me to evacuate their principal cities we drop the bomb,” Bentsen said affeci Jr an ' nterv ’ ew on Tuesday. “That’s :, but K : - W hat 1 did -” (hey h' n ve 8 0!j :. 1 The Congressional Record re flects similar language in his floor statement. “We are fighting this battle with one hand tied behind us. Let us use everything we can to end this war now,” Bentsen said in 1950. “There are those who will recoil in horror and condemn such action. . . . My suggestion may result in my being la beled an alarmist or an extremist, but if it should result in an earlier end to this warfare and the saving of American lives, as I believe it will, then I mind not the labels.” The speech met with a show of ap proval in the House, said the edition of “Facts on File” for that week 38 years ago. Bentsen repeated his sentiments before cameras on the Capitol steps, and a film clip appeared in a 1982 documentary, “The Atomic Cafe.” Asked if he would take the same position again in the same circum stances — knowing what he knows now — Bentsen said he would not. “I must say, I’m an older and wiser man,” the Texas senator ex plained. Questions of age and judgment have been raised in the 1988 presi dential campaign by Bentsen and his running mate, Democratic presi dential candidate Michael Dukakis. They have suggested that the Re publican vice presidential nominee, 41-year-old Sen. Dan Quayle of In diana, is not seasoned enough to be a heartbeat away from the presidency. “At the time, you have to remem ber, we were losing 50,000 Ameri cans and the Marines were really be ing booted around and we were being kicked off the peninsula,” Bentsen said in the interview. “So you have to put it in the time period, and at that time we controlled the bomb.” Here’s the grim picture he painted in 1950: “The seriousness of this situation is difficult to overemphasize. With each new day, our newspapers tell of American men retreating, of our troops outnumbered and out gunned. Our forces are on a penin sula surrounded by water on three sides and by the enemy on the fourth — an enemy with a force we have underestimated, Korean allies whose strength we have overesti mated.” The Korean War was to last until July 27, 1953, when an armistice be gan. U.S. losses were put at 54,660 killed and 103,284 wounded. In explaining his stance, Bentsen said Tuesday that in 1953 then-Pres- ident Eisenhower used a threat of nuclear weapons to break a stale mate with the North Koreans in the peace talks. “Eisenhower used that same threat. . . . And that brought the North Koreans to the peace table,” Bentsen said. But Eisenhower opposed the use of nuclear weapons in Korea in 1950. Villa Maria Pawn Find the quality merchandise you want for less. Sale on TV's, VCR’s, microwaves, guitars, stereo equipment, jewelry & much more! Come in & browse. We loan top dollar on quality merchandise M-F 8:30-6 Sat 9-4 822-0658 724 Villa Maria Insurance may cover plant cleanup bill Tj I MORRISTOWN, N.J. (AP) — Diamond ■ * Bihamrock Chemical Co. began its court fight ■ .BVednesday to force more than 100 insurance || f||Bompanies to pay for cleaning up hazardous di- | V|J|)xin al a Newark plant in what attorneys say * ^Iflpuld a precedent setting effort. I The company is also seeking reimbursement from its insurers for payments to Agent Orange iictims. Socktt ■s and vidual ■ Tliis is a case involving the issue of who is ™B;oing to pay for the enormous amount of clean- * . t l*^Kps around the country in the coming years,” in- jincauo.y|j| urance company lawyer Stefano Calogero said, ifgfcalogero is involved in the case which went to Brial Wednesday. ifl At stake is the Dallas-based Diamond Sham- tetr iixbiBock’s estimated $21 million share of the $180 >n ‘^Bnillion settlement between makers of the defo- m f> "“‘Miant used in Vietnam and those who sued over its joverar effects. I The settlement was approved last July by a a S ere ? federal judge in Brooklyn, N.Y. - pnblyB Diamond Shamrock has also committed itself P5 c “> c “Bo paying at least $16 million to clean up a plant citedAi. j n Newark’s Ironbound section, where the com- •bi at (he to handlt ; to be a nd won any produced herbicides from 1951 to 1969. epending on the cleanup plan eventually adopted, the cost could increase by millions of dollars more, although neither side can give ac curate estimates. Environmental officials in 1983 found huge concentrations of dioxin, a byproduct of the her bicide production, which has been linked to cer tain cancers, liver disease and a severe skin rash known as chloracne. Gov. Thomas H. Kean declared a state of emergency in the area and the state Department of Environmental Protection and U.S. Environ mental Protection Agency took emergency steps to clean up the area. Attorneys are closely watching the outcome of the trial here, which is expected to last five to eight weeks, insurance company lawyer Robert Bates, who represents two defendants, said. It is one of a handful of such cases to go to trial and likely to be the first with a decision. It is tak ing place in a state where the most environmental insurance cases — 10 to 15 — have been filed, he said. “This is the landmark case, in some respects,” he said. DEP spokesman James Staples said, “Ob viously it has precedent-setting potential.” The insurance companies charge that Sham rock, which sold the plant at Lister Avenue in 1971 and bought it back in 1984, purposely mis led regulators and bypassed pollution controls for the sake of profit. Because the company’s action led to an “ex pected and-or intended” result, the insurers are absolved from having to provide coverage, their lawyers said. In opening axguments in the trial, insurance company lawyers said Diamond Shamrock poured thousands of pounds daily of hazardous chemicals into the Passaic River, sometimes at night. In one case, two workers were sent out in a rowboat to break up a mound of the insecticide DDT which hadn’t dissolved and was visible at low tide, charged attorney Stephen Cuyler. The dumping of herbicide chemicals into the environment was having the same devastating ef fect in Newark as it had in Vietnam, Calogero told Superior Court Judge Reginald Stanton, who is hearing the non-jury trial in a Colonial- style courtroom in New Jersey. “They’re pretty seriously exaggerating the sit uation,” Diamond Shamrock attorney William Hegarty said. “It just didn’t happen the way they say it happened.” oteri y. 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