I’m not sure why I’ve always been a fan of the University of Michigan. It feels like something I was born with, like a childhood scar or a favorite song you never remember learning. Every football season I watch the Wolverines hike the ball, try to run up the middle, and immediately collide with a wall of opposing players. They gain half a yard — maybe. And still I hope for the boys to win.
I’ve got U of M foam beer holders, a big block‑M flag I hang from the house on game days, and whenever I’m around my Ohio friends, I play the Michigan Fight Song just to keep the rivalry properly seasoned.
I doubt I could ever cheer for anyone else. But here’s the thing: never in my wildest dreams could I have attended. My high‑school grades stunk like they’d been dead for years. My wallet was so empty that if you yelled into it, you’d hear an echo. I imagine those are the top two things the admissions people look for.
Had desire to learn been the criterion, I would have breezed right in. That, in my opinion, should be the true cost of admission — the hunger to know things. But desire can’t be measured, not in any way that fits neatly on a form. So the gates stay closed, and only the wallets that don’t echo get waved through.
Two years ago, in an effort to add yet another piece of Michigan memorabilia to my collection, I wrote to the University and asked them to simply write back. Just a letter, an envelope, a scrap of stationery with the big block M. They must still be thinking about it.
Z. Corwin
