M I University of Michigan ultra fan reveals his personal "M Den." BY JUDITH DONER BERNE I PHOTOGRAPHY BY ANGIE BAAN U-M memorabilia surrounds Ira and Brenda Jaffe in the lower-level "M Den" of their Farmington Hills home. As you enter his Farmington Hills house, the only hint of Ira Jaffe's passion for University of Michigan football is a doorbell that plays "The Victors," a song even run-of-the mill U-M fans choose for their cell-phone ring tone. Inside the Jaffe home, as far as the eye can see, is a sleek decor: white walls, contemporary furniture, modern paintings and well-placed objets d'art without a hint of maize and blue. But Jaffe, who for more than 30 years treated thou- sands of friends, family, team trainers, student managers, — B24 • NOVEMBER 2008 • JN platinum ushers — even strangers — to a food tailgate extraordi- naire before home games in Ann Arbor, cannot be denied his personal "M Den." His wife, Brenda, a graduate of Wayne State University in Detroit, has relegated his obsession to the basement, which exists in stark contrast to the cool, uncluttered upstairs. Bright maize walls, vivid blue carpeting and U-M paraphernalia from wall to wall and floor to ceiling rush the room's visitors — much like new U-M coach Rich Rodriguez would wish for his offensive line. The original inspiration for the Jaffe basement renova- tion project was simple: "We wanted our kids to bring their friends to our house," says Ira Jaffe, who graduated from U-M Law School and is founding partner of Jaffe, Raitt, Heuer &Weiss P.C. in Southfield. So when West Bloomfield architect and friend Arnold Serlin asked him what colors he should use, Jaffe said: "Make it maize and blue." It was then that his search for collectibles began in earnest. "I go to Ann Arbor before the season starts and see what's new," says Jaffe. And people who came to the tailgates, co-hosted by Dr. Mel Lester of Franklin and which fell victim to stadium construction, added to Jaffe's collection. Photos of Tom Harmon, Desmond Howard and Charles Woodson — Michigan's Heisman Trophy win- ners — are personally autographed to Jaffe. Another cherished photograph is of Anthony Carter floating on his back in the Jaffe's backyard swimming pool — taken in the days before it became illegal for players to visit the homes of boosters. Assorted Michigan hats are displayed on an overhang that runs the width of the basement, while U-M blankets 4.:.\ of various designs cover the sofas. A V.% muralist's depiction t4',., of two football play- '0 ,..,,z-----. ers looms on a set of ; ,-,,,,,-41-4;.-. N... •4, %,...4.6v 74,„, d oors. ,e611 4Atial, ''' Collections of blue and yellow birdhouses, football helmets, children's toys, old tickets and programs and Michigan-inspired puzzles and games are among hundreds of items. "I have every book or video- tape on or about Michigan ever made," Jaffe says. He is particularly proud of a 1997 National Champions jacket; a quilt that his children gave him on his60th birthday, with a different U-M memory dis- played on each of its 20 squares; and a non-football item — the shoe that Rumeal Robinson wore when he made the two free throws that sealed the 1989 U-M National Basketball Championship. But perhaps the piece de resistance is the bathroom, where visitors have no choice but to "Go Blue" beneath the U-M toilet seat, flanked by a shower door covered with U-M bumper stickers. Although both his own children, David and Sherri, attended the University of Wisconsin, Jaffe has already converted the oldest of his four grandchildren to his maize and blue ways. "The others are not fully nutty, but they have potential," he says. 6e, . c '4, - ' s • , ')