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In learning so many odd and entertaining tidbits about Adelphi, I just knew I had to share some of the finds.

An Adelphi trading card sold with Murad Cigarettes, starting in 1914.

By Janine Perez ’14

As an Adelphi tour guide, it is my job to learn as much as possible about our Universityto answer even the most obscure questions from families. I’ve given more than 100campus tours and am rarely stumped. In addition to giving tours, I also write pressreleases as a student writer in Adelphi’s Office of Public Affairs. So I know a lot aboutAdelphi.

Or, I thought I did until one day last spring when my manager in the public affairs officeasked me to go to the ѿTV Archives to do research for an assignment.I had no idea that Adelphi even had an archive, let alone where it was. Imagine myembarrassment.

Bemused by my stammering shock, my manager kindly escorted me to ResidenceHall A and showed me the sign above a side entrance that prominently reads “AdelphiUniversity Archives.” I felt silly. I must have walked by that sign hundreds of times andnever noticed it.

Humbled, I activated the intercom beside the large steel door to gain access to thesubterranean trove. Pamela Griffin, the administrative assistant, ushered me in. I wasthere to find some specific material for an article, but I quickly became fascinated withthe mysterious books, papers and objects crammed into drawers and shelves.Professor Eugene Neely and his fellow archives and special collections faculty and staffknow a great deal about the scores of materials they curate and are more than willing toshare their knowledge with anyone seeking it. After poking around a few times (with theexperts’ help, of course) I learned so many odd and entertaining tidbits about Adelphi, Ijust knew I had to share some of the finds.

One collection that piqued my interest was a group of miniature trading cards, eachone approximately 2 inches long—about the length of my index finger. The cards werepart of the Murad Cigarettes College Series 51–75 issued in 1914. Originally, therewere 150 cards representing athletics at various colleges. Of all the colleges in thecountry, Adelphi—then a college based in Brooklyn—was one of the ones selectedto be featured in the deck. In the archives is a collection of 21 of the cards, includingthe Adelphi card with a white-clad tennis player and others that showcase VanderbiltUniversity and the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn.

Far more shocking than an Adelphi trading card sold with a pack of cigarettes was anitem that I never thought I would see on this campus—a football. I knew that Adelphionce had a football team, but a pigskin was the last thing I was expecting to see in theUniversity Archives. This isn’t just any football; it’s a winning one. Literally bursting atthe seam from being thrown, kicked and tackled, it is a symbol of Adelphi’s 1948 winagainst Hofstra University. It’s nice to know that even in ’48 we had a rivalry strongenough to entice us to keep the football even after we got rid of the football team.The third item that caught my eye was positively otherworldly and wholly unexpected.It’s a souvenir-sized model of the 1969 Grumman Lunar Landing Module from Apollo11. Apparently, these now-rare models are coveted by collectors, and it’s easy tosee why. The miniaturized version of that famed spacecraft intrigued me. The reasonAdelphi has this is linked to Swirbul Library. Leon Swirbul ’59 (Hon.), the formerpresident and one of the six founders of the Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation,served on Adelphi’s Board of Trustees for only about two years before he passedaway. After his passing in 1960, the Grumman employee contribution council electedto donate funds raised from fellow workers to the new Adelphi library, in Mr. Swirbul’smemory. When the library was completed, Grumman donated this original model to theUniversity.

We have a bevy of surprising and intriguing items in the archives. I can’t wait todiscover more of the objects hiding in the shelves beneath Residence Hall A. Make anappointment and take a look for yourself.

This piece appeared in the Fall 2012 edition.

For further information, please contact:

Todd Wilson
Strategic Communications Director
p – 516.237.8634
e – twilson@adelphi.edu

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