Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, June 2, 1972 Memorial Dayin ilan, Mich. THOUGH MEMORIAL DAY is ostensibly a time for sober reflection, it has traditionally been associated with the pomp and enthusiasm of celebration. Milan, Michigan, on Monday was like thousands of small towns across the nation. Residents took flags out of cold storage and placed them on porches or in flowerboxes along the parade rute. Brownies and Cub Scouts and Pioneer Girls, all marching awkwardly but proudly, followed the high school band to the park-and there a local minister re- newed the call for uncompromising patriotism, reciting a tortured version of the Gettysburg Address and prais- ing "the greatest nation under the star-spangled canopy of heaven." What the master of ceremonies called the "firing squad" performed the salute. Then it was on to the cemetery. There were, however, some notable departures from the traditional amid all the Americana. Electronic walkie- talkies were used to organize the marchers; plastic wreaths were planted on the graves; young boys followed the parade, not on the usual bicycles with crepe-papered spokes, but on Hondas and Kawasakis. CONSPICUOUSLY ABSENT was the usual martial flavor of the occasion. Speakers ticked off the standard list of national patriots, but failed to include any present- day heroes--references to more recent "sacrifices for free- dom" went unuttered. The underlying cause for this war-weariness was a mystery to no one, especially to the minister who offer- ed the invocation. "Let us look at the outbreak of war," he said, "not in terms of rightness and wrongness, but as a failure of reconciliation . . . God help us out of Vietnam." Photographs and Text by DAVID MARGOLICK