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鈥淚t was so rewarding to know you were opening doors for people."

Member of 茄子视频鈥檚听听辫谤辞驳谤补尘.

Memorable professors: Robert Ernst and Birdsall Viault.

Advice to current students: 鈥淕et a good, solid liberal arts education.听 A broad background will help you to look at a problem and analyze it from many perspectives.鈥

Hooked on History

Michael Schaefer transferred to Adelphi in 1961 with a background in electrical engineering. At Adelphi, he chose to pursue a major in history, and his knowledge of and passion for the subject only grew.

Elected to the Phi Alpha Theta History Honor Society at Adelphi, Mr. Schaefer graduated with departmental honors and received the Chester L. Barrows Award in recognition of scholarly achievement. It鈥檚 no surprise that someone so in tune with the study of the past traces the milestones of his personal and professional journey as they occurred alongside important moments in history.

Mr. Schaefer鈥檚 favorite experiences at Adelphi revolved around his time in the classroom and the relationships he formed with professors. As a sophomore, he recalled sitting in government class amid the 1962 Missile Crisis. 鈥淚鈥檒l never forget it. One day my professor ended class by saying, 鈥榮ee you Monday鈥f we鈥檙e still here,鈥欌 he said.

Like many of Adelphi鈥檚 alumni, Mr. Schaefer recalled having to pass a swimming test in Woodruff Hall in order to graduate. In 1963, the Swirbul Library, a facility current Adelphi students use for research and studying, was built. 鈥淏efore that time we used to have a small library on the first floor of Levermore Hall.鈥 That same year, Adelphi College became a University. 鈥淢y diploma reads Adelphi College,鈥 he said.

He credited Adelphi Professor Viault with motivating him to explore a different location for graduate school. Professor Viault, who earned his doctorate degree in North Carolina at Duke University, and completed his dissertation while teaching at Adelphi, urged Mr. Schaefer to apply to schools in the south. 鈥淎s someone born and raised in the northeast鈥isiting the University of Virginia was one of those experiences that was just, 鈥榳ow鈥!鈥

Pursuing his master鈥檚 degree in history at UVA turned out to be a good decision for more than just the education he鈥檇 receive; it was where he met his wife, Irene, also from New York. 鈥淎t that time, undergraduate programs were all men, only nursing had women,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey were just starting to accept women to graduate school.鈥

鈥淰irginia was a whole different experience,鈥 said Mr. Schaefer. Thinking back to his years in Virginia, he recalled events surrounding the civil rights movement; President Lyndon B. Johnson coming to office following the assassination of John F. Kennedy; and Martin Luther King leading demonstrators to the steps of the capitol in Montgomery, Alabama, after marching from Selma, Alabama, in a campaign for voting rights.

After completing his master鈥檚 degree, Mr. Schaefer returned to New York, where he registered with a teacher placement agency on Long Island. He ended up taking a different avenue in education than he had originally planned. 鈥淚 was informed that there was an opening as an assistant director of admissions at New York Institute of Technology,鈥 he said. This turned out to be the first position of many throughout a long and rewarding career in admissions. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 how I got started! I liked admissions, and I kept going.鈥 He pursued graduate studies in higher education administration at Teachers College, Columbia University.

As director of admissions, he interacted with Adelphi health professions advisors, Warren Eickelberg and Charles Shopsis. Mr. Schaefer noted he was very proud that an Adelphi graduate, Thomas Scandalis 鈥82, attended NYCOM and later became its dean.

When he started at NYCOM in 1978, it was only the college鈥檚 second year in existence. 鈥淭he school was established in large measure by osteopathic physician Kenneth Riland, who was Nelson Rockefeller鈥檚 physician. Dr. Riland dreamed of establishing a school of osteopathic medicine in New York State. It was through the backing of Rockefeller and the cooperation of NY Tech that he was able to launch it,鈥 he recalled. 鈥淢r. Rockefeller and former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger both addressed NYCOM鈥檚 inaugural class!鈥

Mr. Schaefer, who retired in 2004, saw the institution transform over the course of his 26 years there. 鈥淲e started small, but grew tremendously in terms of the number of buildings on campus; the dollars raised; the number of students we admitted,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen I retired, our graduating class numbered 298.鈥 The only Osteopathic Medical School on Long Island, NYCOM is also one of the largest medical schools in the United States.

What keeps someone in the same field for an entire career? Loving what you do. 鈥淚t was so rewarding to know you were opening doors for people,鈥 said Mr. Schaefer, who recalled one trip to Cornell University, where a student told him that, before Mr. Schaefer鈥檚 visit, he didn鈥檛 know anything about osteopathic medicine, but now he wanted to pursue it. 鈥淭he best feeling was knowing I opened up doors for people, and that that made all the difference in their lives,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what it鈥檚 all about.鈥

Mr. Schaefer and his wife have two children and five grandchildren. Even the Schaefers鈥 hometown of Jackson Heights, New York, is steeped in history. 鈥淛ackson Heights is the first 鈥榞arden apartment鈥 community in the United States,鈥 he said. He is involved in community service as president of the local conference of the St. Vincent de Paul Society and with the homebound members of his church. 听When he and his wife are not enjoying their grandchildren and the restaurants in their neighborhood, they enjoy the varied cultural activities of Manhattan and traveling.

Published June 2013


For further information, please contact:

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

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