Anthony Otrembiak
Anthony Otrembiak, a ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø retiree, died February 1, 2005, at his home
                                       in Milton, N.Y.  
Born January 15, 1914, in Chicago, Anthony was six when his family moved to Czechoslovakia,
                                       where he remained until 1938. Upon his return to the United States, Anthony worked
                                       at the 1939 New York World’s Fair, started his own chandelier business, and worked
                                       at the Navy Depot in Scotia. He also served as a medic for the cavalry of the Czecho
                                       Slovak Army and the U.S. Army.
In 1953, Anthony began his career at ºÚÁϳԹÏÍøâ€”first as a boiler man on the
                                       Scribner campus, then as a maintenance mechanic. He also provided assistance with
                                       audio-visual technology. He retired in 1978. Anthony is remembered for his part in
                                       extending the faculty tuition waiver to all full-time staff members, with the support
                                       of several members of the foreign languages department. His daughter, Monica Varley,
                                       was the first child of a non-faculty employee to graduate from ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø, earning a
                                       degree in nursing in 1972.
Anthony was a 4-H leader and a member of Adirondack Squares, Southern Adirondack Bee
                                       Keepers Association, Saratoga County Cooperative Extension, American Legion, and St.
                                       Joseph’s Ladies Guild.  He spent hours in his flower gardens, farming his land and
                                       raising farm animals, and he frequently joined his sons at the Saratoga Farmers Market,
                                       where they sold plants and produce—including honey—from the family farm. He enjoyed
                                       harness racing and trained and drove his own horses.  
He was a communicant of St. Clement’s Church on weekdays and St. Joseph’s Church on
                                       Sundays, where he was an extraordinary minister of Holy Communion and often brought
                                       Eucharist to the sick.
Anthony is survived by his children, Mary Beth Wing, Monica Varley, John, and Stephen,
                                       a member of ºÚÁϳԹÏ꿉۪s Media Services/CITS staff; son-in-law, Jack Varley; daughter-in-law,
                                       Nancy Osberg-Otrembiak, secretary in American Studies and Liberal Studies; grandchildren,
                                       step-grandchildren, and several nieces, nephews, and cousins.



