the University Concourse
Volume III, Issue 2
October 28, 1997
Table of Contents

Send this article to a friend


This piece is part of a larger section called 'Questions, comments and continuing conversations'.
To see all of that section, click on these lines.

About households (1)

I was happy to receive the latest issue of the Concourse in the mail recently. While attending Franciscan University of Steubenville, the Concourse was practically the only extra reading I allowed myself to have time for. I always found extremely insightful and truthful articles in your paper that dealt with many issues which were often overlooked or ignored by the majority of the student body and the administration.

I applaud you on your most recent article on households. I myself was part of a large household that almost fell apart because of it was trying to conform to Student Life standards. I considered dropping out when it became a regimen of commitments and formats which if not attended brought much resentment. At one point, it was causing so much stress to my academic, social and even my spiritual life that I wished I could have been counted among the proud who boasted of never succumbing to household charms. However belonging to a household was overall a beneficial experience, and I made friends I will treasure the rest of my life. Student Life might mean well, but unless it stops trying to make every household fit into its mold, it will be the end of individual household identity and healthy household simplicity.

Thank you and the Concourse staff for you sincerity and honesty.

Catherine Blum

Catherine Blum (sister of '97 grads Mary and Joe Blum) received an Associates Degree in theology from FUS in 1997. She now lives with her family in Largo, Florida, where she works as a librarian. She hopes to enter the religious life next Fall.


Related Articles:
• How not to help households, Kathleen van Schaijik (III,1)
  • About households (1), Catherine Blum (III,2)
• About households (2), Gregory M.A. Gronbacher (III,2)
• An outsider's perspective on the household problem, Matt McGuiness (III,2)
• An alum's perspective on households, Christopher P. Wright (III,2)
• What were households meant to be?, Kathleen van Schaijik (III,5)
• A thought about what might be behind the household problem, Martha L. Blandford (III,6)
• Student Life Office's image tarnished by failure to respond to thoughtful criticism, Susan C. Fischer (III,6)
• A final thought on the household issue, Kathleen van Schaijik (III,6)


[back to top]

© The University Concourse, October 28, 1997