British families protest Falkland burial for troops The Michigan Daily-Wednesday,,June 2, 1982-Page 5 LONDON (AP)- "If I should die, think only this of me; that there is some corner of a foreign field that is forever England." The famous lines from Rupert Brooke's World War I poem "The Soldier" were quoted by a Defense Ministry official defending the burial of 19 British soldiers on the Falkland Islands last Sunday. SOLDIERS' families and comrades protested that the men were being left on a battlefield 8,000 miles from home. The troops and their commander, Lt. Col. Herbert Jones, killed in the recap- ture of Goose Green from Argentine troops last Friday, were buried on a bare hillside overlooking the British beachhead at San Carlos. Although the simple service- described by one British war correspondent as "very moving"- followed military tradition, it brought immediate outcries. THE SUN, a London newspaper that has given spirited support to the gover- nment during the conflict, led its front page yesterday with the protests under the headline: "Bring Back Our Dead Bo'ys." Cecil Parkinson, chairman of the ruling Conservative Party and a senior member of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's Cabinet, said yesterday the government would consider whether to return the soldiers' bodies to Britain for permanent burial. "There is a time-honored way of dealing with the dead soldiers, sailors and airmen," he said. "They are buried decently and promptly during the con- flict and subsequently reburied in cemeteries run by the War Graves Commission." JANE BINGLEY, whose husband, 24- year-old Lance Cpl. Garry Bingley, was among those buried Sunday, said, "I want Garry back here with us." She said that before he left for the Falklands, Bingley gave instructions that: "If I'm killed out there, I want to be buried in Aldershot . . . This is my home." Bingley's father, David, a civilian in- structor with the Defense Ministry, said, "It seems a tragedy that your son can be killed all those thousands of miles away and you can't put flowers on his grave." The ministry originally said 17 men were buried Sunday, but in the most recent report from the front, Jeremy Hands of Independent Television News said the number was 19. British troops close in on Falklands capital fContilued from Page 1) shot down one or more of the French- made Exocets. Press Association's correspondents, who are regularly briefed at the British Defense Ministry, said fewer than 10 British troopers were wounded and none was killed in the fighting for Mount Kent, but some Argentines were slain. BUT FOR THE first time since the war erupted April 2, Ar gentine com- muniques hinted at defeat. Junta member Gen. Basilio Lami Dozo, commander of the Argentine Air Force, said Argentina may have to form a new government, fueling speculation that President Leopoldo Galtieri might soon be deposed. As the war converged on Stanley for the decisive battle, the Defense Ministry in London said 250 Argentines - twice as many as first thought - were killed in last week's fighting for Port Darwin and Goose Green. SUNDAY, JUNE 6 9am-3pm POTTERS GUILD Black hole? Not quite. This interesting view of the pond at the University's Botanical Gardens is merely the result of yesterday's heavy rains. Say thevord or te number one: Uno. 1321 S. Daily ll:30-2 a.m. University HAPPY HOUR J 4Mon-Sat. 4-6 10 p.m.-i a. restaurant andbar