Visiting Writers Series ends with Grosholz poetry reading APRIL 22.1994 — THE DECREE — PAGE 3 By CECILIA LYNN CASEY North Carolina Wesleyan Col- Jege ended the 1993/1994 Visit ing Writers Series by welcoming . ^mily Grosholz to the Pearsall Library on April 6. t Grosholz’s poems cover a wide range of topics, from her husband and children, her travel Abroad, and her studies of phi losophy. Her manner was soft, goothing and gentle which worked against the reading. Reading po- "ems such as “Reflections in the Transfmite” and “Nietzsche in the Box of Straws,” her voice and manner loses the attention,^}^}; in terest of those who are less de voted to her work. However; she has a wonderfully quiet way of ' looking up and then glancing at the ceiling to emphasize a line or word, which made her a bit more fively. « Most of her poetry is acces sible to non-philosophers, and she says herself that “15 years later I hope my poems are not so ab stract, so philosophical.” Her poem “The Return” is a good mix- ttire of thought and verse. > Starting with a quote from IQerkegaard’s Fear and Trem bling, the first line begins “the Review gesture of resignation/ as the knight of fedth/ turns his hand like a calyx back/ from the bloom on lassc’s check/ shows that no illu sion blunts his pain:/ death lies on the rock./ Yet somehow Abraham regains/ the life he laid aside: what floods/ the empty circle of his arms?” Then later in the same poem, “So the poet to her inventions./ so the mother to her child:/ take, creature, your own true future^ its shape no longer moans and hides/ in me, but wakes in you. And when that one/ pull on the globed/ mantle of its own inten- tionsy what does the sad creator welcome theny what rushes into the hollow of the heart?” And the last stanza, “So the bereft, abandoned, blindy cry to their lost inheritorsy go, you are not ly The creatures flee and constitute the worldy the dance begins againy the solid world, the moving worldy It is the world that enters in.” “The Return” has subtle im ages such as the moon pulling back the coves of earth which are the waves washing over the sand at work to make the poem under standable to everyone while pos ing questicHis like what rushes into the hollow of the heart, and “Blind Galileo, father of the moon..., what filled the dark horizons of your sight?” which makes the reader think about concepts like what is there beyond our reach and inside ourselves. Grosholz is a good poet be cause she is able to capture the mystery of philosophy and all its ' “Whys?” and connect it to lines > such as “What filled the dark ho rizons of your sight?/ The dance of fire and stone/ in order through i the sky” which shows that there is the possibilities of having an answer to the “whys” through the ? use of language. She lets her lan guage suggest the answers, or even just celebrate the questions. Also her ability to talk about her life with her husband and chil dren in a way which makes her life familiar and comforting makes her stand out as a success ful poet In “West Wind r she takes what could e potentially bor ing and if not careful an almost lewd subject, laying next to ha- POET VISITS — Poet EmOy Grosholz visited Wesleyan on AprO 6 in a reading of her works at PearsaU Library as flie final ofTering of the year through the Visiting Writers Series. husband, and turns it into a emo- non and a state we all wish to know and enjoy. “Who would wake from such a real/ and rami fying dream? I switch the tongue/ of our alarming clock from lark/ to nightingale, and wait with open eyes.” It is sad that with the high qual ity of the poems that the reading was on the slow side. She did not have in mind what she wanted to read and floated off the track more than once. If someone wanted to go to the Visiting Writers Series for the first time, she might be a bad place to start in terms of get ting and holding interests. Insurance industry wants liberal arts grads Traditionally, the'multifeMfeti dollar insurance industry has been agood home for liberal arts gradu ates who are frequently hired di rectly out of college into manage ment training programs in the ar eas of customer service, market ing, and administrative areas. Among the insurance carries who actively recruit on college c^puses are such giant coipo- -«te employers as Aetna (48,000 ejnployees nationwide). Metro politan Life (54,000), Prudential (100,000), State Farm (58,000) and Travelers (32,000). . Why do insurance companies l^e to hire non-business majors? According to Lorenzo Pace, Aetna’s administrator of college relations, the “flexibility” dem onstrated by employees with lib- e^ arts degrees makes them de sirable. In fact, over the past few years Aetna has increased its hir ing of these employees and today hkes about equal numbers of busi ness grads and liberal arts grads. At the Chubb Group, a diversi fied group of insurance carriers with 65 offices in North America and 19 overseas, liberal arts grads are valued for their superior writ ing and analytical abilities. Cheryl Kozak, ^Qrporate staff recruiter for The Travelers Insur ance Co., says the communica tion skills that liberal arts gradu ates bring to the company are a key asset. “They can see the bigger pic ture. They’re creative and not so specialized, and they bring new ideas,” she says. Liberal arts grads are hired by Prudential because of their innate “thinking skills,” said Joyce Gold stein, vice president for adminis tration, who believes “liberal arts grads have a much better founda tion than technical people.” Ironically, many liberal arts grads don’t even consider a ca reer in the insurance industry. “I think there are a lot of mis conceptions about who we are and what we do,” says Aetna’s Pace. “Often times, the liberal arts ma jor sees us as insurance salesmen, meaning tliat’s the only type of career area we offer.” In a company as large as Aetna, which manages assets of more than $90 billion, there are numerous employment (q)portu- nities in such diverse fields as human resources, law, public af fairs, communications, marketing, information systems, or training. That’s in addition to conventional insurance jobs in underwriting, loss control, and claims. Because it makes good busi ness sense to keep their clients healthy, insurance companies tend to be enlightened about what keeps their eniployees happy as well. Insurance companies were among the first to offer such in novations as employee wellness programs, on-site fimess centers and childcare faqjlities, matemity and pa^tal l^ves^, work-at- home arrangements, flexible woric schedules, sabbaticals, and ccm- tinuing education and training programs. What does a beginning job in the insurance industry pay? Lib eral arts graduates can ejqxsct to earn between the mid-$20,000s and low $30,000s the first year, plus generous benefits, which can range in value between $5,000 and $10,000 annually. There are also opportunities for rapid advancement Fot ex ample, Metropolitan Live offers a ^t-track career path called the Management Associate Program (MAP). The two-year training program offers new hires the chance to try out different disci plines through six-month hands- on work assignments. The vast majority of MAP participants (depending on the year, as much as 75 percent) are liberal arts graduates from a wide range of majors, including anthro pology, religion, East Asian his tory, psychology, urban studies, French linguistics, political sci ence, and 19th-century English literature. In a study of several hundred corporate employes, two distinct prototypes emerged: progressive and non-progressive. Progressive companies were characterized by innovative pro grams, such as quality control circles and flexible work sched ules; in general they strived to improve wo± conditions on an on-going basis. It was part of the company’s “corporate culture.” SeniOT management of these com panies was dominated by liberal arts graduates and not too sur prisingly, these companies taid to hire more liberal arts gradu ates and promoted them faster than non progressive companies. The “perfect employer” does not exist. All companies have their positives and negatives. But as a whole, insurance companies tend to be progressive.