Union College News Archives

News story archive

Navigation Menu

Mallach Volunteering to Reunite Kosovo Families

Posted on Jun 4, 1999

Jordanna Mallach, a veteran of international relief work in places like
Guatemala and the Ukraine, this month finds herself filling a humanitarian need just a few
miles from where she grew up in Maplewood, N.J.

Mallach is in Fort Dix, N.J., at the center of an international human drama in which
several thousand Kosovo refugees hold vigil over CNN awaiting a glimpse of a loved one.
Unfortunately, for most, that glimpse never comes.

Enter Jordanna Mallach, who is volunteering with a Red Cross tracing unit, interviewing
newly-arrived Kosovo refugees about missing family members. The information is shared with
other camps and relief organizations in the hopes that families can be reunited.

“You're sitting across from the desk and listening to their horrific stories.
You give them a tissue, hold their hand and try to be as warm as you can.”

The refugees are at different stages of dealing with the trauma of the war, she says.
Those newly arrived are preoccupied with getting health care. Some are dealing with the
trauma of fleeing their homes or losing loved ones. Those who have been there a while are
dealing with boredom. “It's really hard on the kids when it rains,” Mallach
says. “But kids are kids and they usually find something to play with.”

The experience has bolstered Mallach's opinion of the relief organizations dealing
with the emergency, particularly the Red Cross, she says. “Everyone recognizes what
they are involved in and they take a special pride in what they're doing.”

She says she also has been impressed by Army personnel, many of whom she sees playing
for hours with the kids, or doing a full shift of outside duty the pouring rain.

Mallach, one of 72 Red Cross volunteers at the base, brings her knitting with her.
“All the women come up to me to show me a different way of knitting,” she said.
“They are looking for people to talk to.”

Mallach says she is struck by the socioeconomic range of the refugees, which runs
counter to her preconception than many were rural poor. “Some of these people are
doctors and lawyers who left three bedroom houses. Some of them had servants and
chauffeurs. Some of them were upper class members of society.”

She also has been surprised by the size of the families, many of which include extended
members like cousins, aunts and uncles.

There are nearly 4,000 refugees at Fort Dix, with planeloads of up to 450 arriving
every few days. Most are expected to stay for up to four weeks until they can move
elsewhere with American relatives or be placed with resettlement agencies.

CNN, the all-news network, is a centerpiece as families watch reports for a glimpse of
someone they know. Mallach says she also tunes in at the end of the day. “It's
strange to come home and see my day on the news.”

Mallach, a political science major who plans to graduate next year, deferred her
admission to Union for a year to work at a mission in Guatemala. On leave from Union this
term, she has just returned from one month in Cherkassy, Ukraine, where she volunteered
with a relief organization teaching school and coordinating a feeding program for the
elderly. She also has done relief work Israel, and traveled in China and Taiwan.

Read More

Calendar of Events

Posted on Jun 4, 1999

Thursday, June 3, 12:30 to1:30 p.m.
Reamer Center Patio.
Concert of original works by students of Prof. Tim Olsen's “Jazz Workshop”
class.

Saturday, June 12, 3:30 to 4:45 p.m.
Nott Memorial.
Reccption for graduates and families with President Roger Hull.

Saturday, June 12, 5 p.m.
Memorial Chapel.
Baccalaureate commemoration.

Sunday, June 13, 10 a.m.
Library Plaza.
Commencement.

Through June 13.
Mandeville Gallery.
“The Cusp,” senior art show.

Through June 13.
Social Sciences Lounge.
Photographs by Michalena Skiados '99 from 1998 anthropology field study in Barbados.

Read More

Prof. Wineapple is NEH Fellow, Again

Posted on Jun 4, 1999

Brenda Wineapple, the Washington Irving Professor of Modern Literary and
Historical Studies, has received a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship to
continue work on a biography she is writing on Nathaniel Hawthorne.

This is the second NEH Fellowship she has received. The first came in 1986-87 in
support of her first biography, Genêt: A Biography on Janet Flanner about the New
Yorker
correspondent who chronicled 20th-century
Paris.

Among her awards, Wineapple also has received a Guggenheim Fellowship, an American
Council on Learned Societies Fellowship, a Hertog Fellowship from the Columbia University
Writing Program, a Ball Brothers Foundation Fellowship from Indiana University, and a
Donald C. Gallup Senior Fellowship from Yale University.

She also is author of Sister Brother Gertrude and Leo Stein (1997).

It has been a challenge, she says, to write about “someone canonical” like
Hawthorne, but adds that the project has given her “a certain kind of freedom.”
Enough is known about Hawthorne that she doesn't have to convince anyone of his
importance or put his life into context, she explains. And unlike Janet Flanner and
Gertrude and Leo Stein — subjects of her first two biographies — Hawthorne is
“more dead,” so there are no living contemporaries to interview.

Hawthorne descendants, however, have supplied a wealth of information, much of it
unseen, including a trunk-full of letters to and from the 19th-century author.

Read More

Let it Rain

Posted on Jun 4, 1999

Bring on the rain. This year, we're ready.

Commencement will be outside, in Library Plaza, rain or shine, and the Commencement
committee has done a few things to make sure everyone stays dry (or cool).

There will be limited seating in the Nott Memorial with closed-circuit television of
the ceremony. There also will be shade/rain seating under two large tents alongside the
Nott Memorial.

In case of rain, there will also be indoor seating in Memorial Chapel, Old Chapel,
Olin, and two rooms each in Social Sciences and Humanities. All rain locations will have
TV coverage of the Commencement.

And for those who choose not to take shelter from the rain?

Break out the ponchos. Guests will have access to clear plastic ones. Graduating
seniors get same, but with a distinctive Nott logo on the front.

Read More

Fond Farewell Set For Seniors

Posted on Jun 4, 1999

Daniel J. Kelmanovich and Edward Valochovic will be co-valedictorians at
Commencement on Sunday, June 13, at 10 a.m. in Library Plaza

About 620 students are to receive degrees with the Class of 1999. The College will
award 471 bachelor's degrees, 146 master's and two doctorates.

Raymond V. Gilmartin '63, chairman, president and CEO of Merck & Co, a leading
pharmaceutical company, will be honorary chancellor and deliver the main address. He is to
receive an honorary doctor of laws degree.

Gilmartin, a native of Sayville, N.Y., earned his B.S. in electrical engineering from
Union, where he was class president in his junior and senior years and was named
outstanding engineer in his class. He spent three years as development engineer wit
Eastman Kodak Co. before entering Harvard Business School, where he received his M.B.A. An
active participant in health industry affairs, he is chairman of the board of the
Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of American and chairman of ValleyCare Corp., a
community-based hospital in New Jersey. He has been a trustee of Union College and served
on the board of associates of Harvard Business School.

Raquel Millman is to deliver the student address.

President Roger Hull will host a reception for seniors and their families on Saturday,
June 12, at 3:30 p.m. in the Nott Memorial.

The Baccalaureate Commemoration is Saturday, June 12, at 5 p.m. in Memorial Chapel.

Read More

Frequent Flier Miles Donated

Posted on Jun 4, 1999

Joan Gould '76 of Scotia has made an unusual donation that folks in
Becker Hall hope will inspire other alumni who spend lots of time in the air.

She has donated some of her frequent flier miles so that Bill McCumber, a guidance
counselor at St. Mark's School in Dallas, Texas, can fly up to check out the campus
on July 12.

Lilia Tiemann, alumni admissions program coordinator, is making the arrangements.

Read More