Every director of college dorms has a horror story about freshman move-in day: People pulling up with overpacked rental trucks, overpacked trailers and overpacked rental trucks towing overpacked trailers. But nobody can top Charlie Strey's story: a semi.
"It was a little disconcerting to see that pull up outside the dorm," admitted Strey, assistant dean and the director of the Resident Life Office at Gustavus Adolphus College in St. Peter.
The incident happened at a previous job, not at Gustavus, where, he assured us, parents are much more level-headed. Still, it happened in Minnesota, so we're not completely off the hook in terms of group embarrassment.
In retrospect, Strey realizes that he should have seen the warning signs before the semi showed up.
"The parents called me during the summer and asked if they could send an interior designer to take measurements of the room," he said. "She did a complete makeover of it. The ironic thing was that they never talked to the roommate. He didn't like it, and they ended up taking out most of it."
Two lessons are here: Roommates should communicate with each other long before move-in day. And parents need to get a grip on their overprotective instincts.
Marjorie Savage, the parent program director at the University of Minnesota, has written the book on moving kids into dorms -- literally. It's "You're on Your Own (But I'm Here if You Need Me)" (Simon & Schuster, $16).
The over-reactive parent is understandable, she said. Many of them look at this as their last chance to take care of their children before sending them off into the cold, cruel world to fend for themselves.