By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Many Texans expressed strong indignation Tuesday over the Lt. William Galley court-martial ver dict and some planned “sympa thy marches” to give point to their protest. Telephone calls jammed switch boards of newspapers and radio- TV stations. Some people want ed know where they could write to Galley. Others asked if they could reach him by phone. Herby Williams, a quality con trol engineer at Recognition Equipment Inc., said most of the 1,100 persons employed at his Dallas plant are angry at the verdict. “I was in the naval air service in World War II,” Williams said, “and I know what it is. Some times things come up and you can’t always explain why you did or did not do a certain ac tion. But this one looks real rotten — it stinks to high heaven. My faith in this country is dis sipating a little and this certainly doesn’t help it.” A woman with two sons in San Antonio, who did not want her name used, said: “If he’s guilty, I’m guilty, and if you pay taxes, so are you. I paid his way over there and I paid for any training he re ceived.” She said she was going to check Galley’s background to see if he had served in the ROTC Country and, if he did, she planned to pull her two sons out of the corps immediately. Ronald Mitchell, assistant di rector in a self-help program for minority groups, said in Fort Worth: “The verdict was ridiculous. If Galley is guilty, then everyone from the President on down is guilty. I mean, this cat was given orders. Mow, maybe he had had a choice—either obey orders or face a court-martial. He was caught between a rock and the hard place.” H. W. King, a detective in the Fort Worth Police Department, called the verdict “an insult to the whole nation.” “You can’t train a man to fight and then send him off thousands of miles to fight, and then when he kills someone, bring him back home and try him for murder. If he did something wrong, they should just kick him out of the Army,” said King. A former military man now in San Antonio who wouldn’t give his name, thought the whole thing blown out of proportion. “We did the same type of thing to the Indians, the Ger mans did it to us in World War II and we did it to Japan. It is one of these things where you have military and civilians mix ing in the same thing.” A woman said of Galley: “I think he is guilty of killing those people, but was he responsible for what happened? I don’t feel we’ll ever know — just the three officers involved. I really feel sorry for him as a mother . . .” Another woman called The As sociated Press in Dallas to say she has a petition with 100 names protesting the verdict and plans on sending it to the court-martial judge. Jack Almack of Lubbock said he is so incensed that he has written to Washington demand ing that his son be released from service in the Navy. Almack, an Air Force veteran himself, said he considers the Galley verdict wipes out his son’s military oath to defend the country. The insurance man said he had sent his letter to President Nix on, Vice President Agnew, Texas senators and representatives, the defense secretary, the Navy sec retary, and members of the Sen ate and House armed services committees. The Pecos Enterprise bitterly expressed indignation in a front page editorial comment. Headed “Justice? Army or Otherwise?” the Pecos editorial read in part: “The Galley verdict leaves us with a bad taste in the mouth, a sinking in the heart and a queasy stomach. Since when is a soldier court-martialed for failure to do his duty and is court-martialed if he does ? How can we ask our boys to go will reacts same way ingly to Vietnam, thousands of miles away from home, without bur full support and coopera tion?” Protest marches have been planned for Wednesday in San Antonio and for Friday in down town Dallas. The American Friends Service Committee in the Alamo city said it is inviting civilians and military personnel to march to the judge advocat generals’ of fice at Ft. Sam Houston to pro test what it called “making a scapegoat” of Galley. A spokesman claimed Galley’s “showcase trial” was “a clear attempt on the part of the U. S. military and government ... to cover up their collective and in dividual guilt regarding the issue of crimes against humanity in the war in Southeast Asia.” George Hughes Jr., an insur ance broker who is organizing the “sympathy march” Friday from the Kennedy Memorial to Dallas City Hall and back, said: “There will be no speeches and no trouble-making. This will be just a march by the concerned citizens of Dallas who feel that Lt. Galley got a bum deal.” Hughes, who served 20 years in the Army and Air Force, said he expects hundreds of veterans to join in the march. But he said they will wear civilian clothes and not their uniforms. Veterans groups reacted an grily in Houston, too. Jack Wolk, commander of American Legion Post No. 644, said he is “pretty angry” about the verdict. “I don’t like it a bit,” he said. “These things happen over and over. War is hell, that’s just the way it is. The man did the job he was told to do. They say they can’t make you obey an un lawful order, but they can sure make you wish you had.” John Danko, who commands Houston American Legion Post No. 560, said: “I think what he did was more or less justified. The soldiers there say they have more trouble with the Vietnamese people than with North Viet namese armies. The trial should not have been held in the first place.” In Austin, a housewife, Mrs. W. R. Ferrell, said, “I even think that the jury was not fully cer tain of his guilt, because they took such a long time to delib erate and the verdict of guilty was not unanimous.” “The man was sent out to do a job of search and destroy and that’s exactly what he did. He may have been guilty but he did obey orders and do the job he was ordered to do,” said Mrs. Maurice Judy, Austin. Adela Barnes, University of Texas senior in sociology, said she thought it was “unfortunate to pinpoint one man. American society as a whole is guilty be cause we are involved in this war.” Mrs. Thomas Herron, wife of a retired Air Force colonel in Austin, said she thought Galley’s conviction “is a disgrace. How can you expect people to go to war unless they follow orders?” Page 2 THE BATTALION College Station, Texas Wednesday, March 31,1}| CADET SLOUCH by Jim Fork “Don’t pay any attention to Squirt—it’s just anothtr one of his private calls!” § For all your insurance needs See U. M. Alexander, Jr. '40 221 S. Main, Bryan 823-0742 Staite Farm Insurance Companies - Home Offices Bloomington, 111, i^ednesda! Mi JO By THE When general '30 years a paint i Today, has been all sizes such a that the bewilder' tion. F* facturers Vani areavt Public* 217. T ing yc 1971. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Formal pleas for clemency, countrywide petition campaigns and angry speeches in the Con gress marked the deep reaction of many Americans Tuesday to the murder conviction of Army Lt. William L. Galley Jr., for his part in the 1968 My Lai massa cre. In Georgia, all five members of the Selective Service System’s local board 30 in Athens resigned under the lead of Chairman Pugh, who termed the Galley ver dict “unacceptable.” “Our conscience will not allow us to continue when our men are treated like that,” said Pugh, adding he hoped that other draft boards throughout the country “will follow suit” and resign. U. S. Rep. William L. Dicken son, R-Ala., said in a House speech that he had sent a tele-, gram to President Nixon asking him to pardon Galley, and a reso lution backing the petition was up for consideration Wednesday in the Alabama Legislature. A separate resolution asking for clemency was approved by the Democratic Central Commit tee in Ionia County, Mich., and another was introduced in the Illinois State House in Spring- field. At Ft. Benning, Ga., where Galley was convicted Monday of premeditated murder by a six- man court martial jury, the local Post 35 of the American Legion said it was organizing two cam paigns on Galley’s behalf — to raise $100,000 for the cost of appeals and another to collect 10 million signatures on petitions protesting the verdict. “We are recommending that everyone write his congressman, governor and the president . . .,” said Jack Deese Post 35 senior vice commander. “We are bit terly opposed to the action taken by the court-martial.” Galley’s conviction was termed “just” by Dr. Robert M. W. Kempner, the deputy U. S. prose cutor at the Nuernberg war crimes trial, who was contacted in Frankfurt, Germany. He said the case should have been tried before an international tribunal. Meanwhile, support for Galley began to emerge in several cities throughout the country. In Pecos, Texas, the Enterprise ran a front-page editorial Tues day condemning Galley’s convic tion. Radio Station WCKI in Greer, S. C., said it was playing “taps” several times an hour on the air to show its disappoint ment over the verdict. The Galley verdict was greet ed with angry speeches in Con gress. Rep. John R. Rarick, D-La., said parents in his district had called him to say they would never let their sons serve in an Army that had abandoned its fighting men. “I’ve had veterans tell me that if they were in Vietnam now, they would lay down their arms and come home,” he said. Rep. John J. Flynt, D-Ga., said the verdict constituted “a dan gerous step toward destruction of morale in the Army” and could harm efforts to establish an all-volunteer Army. Bulletin Board TONIGHT Aggie Wives Bridge Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in room 2B of the MSG. Marketing Society will hold its 1971 Sales and Marketing Clinic beginning at 9 a.m. in the As sembly Room of the MSG. Junior Class Council will meet at 7:30 p.m. in room 113 of Na gle Hall. Intervarsity Christian Fellow ship will meet at 7:30 p.m. in room 304 of the Physics Build ing. THURSDAY Canadian Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. at David and Bobby Ayres’ home, 203 Davis in Bryan, for an organizational meeting. Marketing Society will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Assembly Room of the MSG to hear Tome Gale of A. C. Neilson speak on “The Competitive Edge—Market ing Research.” Numbers in ( ) denote chan- 6:30 3 (5) Courtship of nels on the cable. Eddie’s Father 2:30 3 (5) Edge of Night 15 (12) Campus and 15 (12) Sesame Street Community (PBS) (Repeat Today of Tuesday) 7:00 3 (5) Room 222 3:00 3 (5) Corner Pyle 15 (12) NET Playhouse 3:30 3 (5) Town Talk 7:30 3 (5) To Rome With 15 (12) University Love Instructional 8:00 3 (5) Johnny Cash 4:00 3 (5) That Girl 8:30 15 (12) Soul (PBS) 4:30 3 (5) Bewitched 9:00 3 (5) Hawaii Five-0 15 (12) What’s New 9:30 15 (12) They Went 5:00 3 (5) ^ IN JCj ± ) General Hospital Thataway (PBS) 15 (12) Misterogers’ 10:00 3 (5) Final News Neighborhood 10:30 3 (5) The FBI (PBS) 11:30 3 (5) The Law and 6:00 3 (5) Evening News Mr. Jones Bingo—Weekdays at 5, BCS*TV/9. Nothing to buy. You need not be present to win. Day students ed to apply urg for OK early Men students at Texas A&M are urged to complete day stu dent permit requests prior to the fall preregistration period, re ports Ed Morris, assistant hous ing manager. Students currently living off- campus, regardless of the reason, can save considerable time dur ing the preregistration period by having their day student permits reactivated in advance, Morris said. Members of the corps who have not previously applied for the permits should see Malon South erland in Military Science Room 105. Civilian students must report to the Housing Office in YMCA Room 101. €bt Battalion Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the student writers only. The Battalioti is a non-tax- supported, non-profit, self-supporting educational enter prise edited and operated by students as a university and community newspaper. LETTERS POLICY Letters to the editor must be typed, double-spaced, and no h mbre than 300 words in length. They must be signed, although the writer’s name will be withheld by arrangement with the editor. Address correspondence to Listen Up, The Battalion, Room 217, Services Building, College Station, Texas 77843. Members of the Student Publications Board are: Jim Lindsey, chairman ; H. F. Filers, College of Liberal Arts; F. S. White, College of Engineering; Dr. Asa B. Childers, Jr., College of Veterinary Medicine; Dr. Z. L. Carpenter, College of Agriculture; and Roger Miller, student. Represented nationally by National Educational Advertising Services, Inc., New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco. The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A&M, is published in College Station, Texas, daily except Saturday, Sunday, Monday, and holiday periods, September through May, and once a week during summer school. MEMBER The Associated Press, Texas Press Association The Associated Collegiate Press Mail subscriptions are S3.50 per semester; $6 per school year; $6.50 per full year. All subscriptions subject to sales tax. Advertising rate furnished on request. Address: The Battalion, Room 217, Services Building, College Station, Texas 77843. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for reproduction of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in the paper and local news of spontaneous origin published herein. Rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Second-Class postage paid at College Station, Texas. EDITOR DAVID MIDDLEBROOKE Assistant Editor Hayden Whitsett Managing Editor Fran Zupan Women’s Editor Sue Davis Sports Editor Clifford Broyles