UAF REGISTRAR TO RETIRE AFTER NEARLY FIVE DECADES ON THE HILL
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 20, 2001
Fairbanks, Alaska The University of Alaska Fairbanks will lose
one of its most valuable institutional resources when Registrar Ann Tremarello
retires next June after a nearly 50-year association with the university.
"One cant even begin to measure the incredible influence Ann
has had," said UAF Chancellor Marshall Lind. "Shes constantly
working in the background to make things better for our students."
Tremarello has seen the campus grow from less than 400 to nearly 9,000
students since she arrived on campus in 1953. She graduated with a bachelors
degree in business administration in 1957 majoring in both accounting
and management. Four years earlier, as a high school senior in Virginia,
Tremarello had hardly thought of Alaska.
She had her sights set on college in Richmond, but her plans would change
when her Air Force father received a commission at Elmendorf Air Force
Base in Anchorage. Her father thought she should be close to the family
during her first year of college, and in 1953, the Fairbanks campus was
the only institution of higher education in the territory.
"I wasnt a pleasant young lady as we drove cross-country to
Seattle and then got on a boat to come to Alaska," Tremarello recalled.
"But as soon as I got on the train to Fairbanks, I was surrounded
by other new-to-Alaska students just like me." At the end of my freshman
year, I told my dad Id stick around for another year or two, which
was good because I met my husband the next year. It worked out well."
Tremarello was an involved student during her college years. She was present for the ground-breaking of Wickersham Hall and says at that time, students thought the two-room suites with a shared bathroom were a big step in the right direction. She laughs when she says she was "just out of the picture" taken during the student ceremony to "bury tradition," a protest staged by students objecting to then University President Ernest Pattys announcement that he wanted to prohibit alcohol on campus.
"Everyone wore black and acted like it was a funeral," said
Tremarello. "The tradition stone that pops up every once in a while
is like a headstone."
It says, "Here Lies Tradition 1957," and even now student
groups who possess it have campus bragging rights for as long as
they can keep it. To this day its whereabouts remain unknown.
She began her university career as the receptionist in admissions in
August of 1957, after working for an accounting firm in Fairbanks for
two months. The registrar back then speculated that Ann would only stick
around for a year until her husband, Joe, graduated.
"Little did we know," said Tremarello. "But working with
students and faculty is very rewarding and Im fortunate to have
a job I really enjoy."
Tremarello has seen the university admissions and records office go from
paper records and punched cards to computers and Internet-based database
management during her tenure. She became UAFs chief student records
manager in 1974 and assumed the position of registrar in 1996 after a
restructuring of the Office of Admissions and Records into the Office
of Admissions and the Office of the Registrar. Before that Tremarello
was director and associate director of Admissions and Records. Today,
she adds web registration to the list of student records services she
oversees. Tremarello helped manage all but one commencement since 1958;
she admits she missed one year because she had the mumps.
In recent years, Tremarello has been instrumental in making sure things
go smoothly especially where students are concerned.
"Ann is a registrar who thinks of the impact on students as she
works with the faculty and staff on changes in procedures," said
Provost Paul Reichardt. "She has a knack for knowing what will fly
and what wont and when she needs to, shell go figure out how
to make it work."
Tremarello is ready to roll up her shirtsleeves once again this May for
the universitys 80th commencement ceremony. Tremarello says she
still has a few details to work out at the Carlson Center, where commencement
took place last year for the first time. She considered staying for her
45th year, but said she would like to spend more time with her grandchildren.
Tremarello will retire on June 30, 2002.
-30-
Note to Editors: a photo is available
upon request.
CONTACT: Ann Tremarello, Registrar at (907) 474-6244 or Carla Browning,
Public Information Officer at (907) 474-7778 or
e-mail: carla.browning@uaf.edu.carla.browning@uaf.edu.
CJB//12-20-01/02-032

