The essentials of college life, circa 2014, overflowed the oversized laundry carts at the University of Minnesota on Monday, as freshmen began to squeeze into their dorms for the fall semester.
Flat-screen TVs. Microwaves. Futons. Someone even brought a lounge chair.
But an army of volunteers in yellow T-shirts — mostly older students — kept the carts moving with cheerful efficiency.
"How many do you need?" one young woman asked Kim Kampsen, of Rogers, who was helping her daughter Alyssa, 18, move into Centennial Hall.
"Two, at least," Kampsen said.
The young woman surveyed the girl's belongings spread out on the lawn. "I can give you three."
By the time classes start next week, more than 7,000 students will be living on the U's Minneapolis and St. Paul campuses, including 88 percent of the freshman class, according to university officials. In fact, so many have requested campus housing that about 165 students will end up in what the U calls "expanded housing" — living in modified study lounges or doubling up in single rooms. "The demand for housing is high again this year," said spokesman Steve Henneberry.
For the new freshmen, the U has packed this week with events to help them acclimate to campus life: get-togethers, concerts, mini-seminars and free tickets to Thursday's opening game of the Gophers' football season.