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Brown Cafe UPS Forum
UPS Retirement Topics
68 -19 = 49
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<blockquote data-quote="Babagounj" data-source="post: 5948077" data-attributes="member: 12952"><p>When I was hired as p/t ( '76 ) , one was required to be attending college.</p><p>If you left college, then you got canned.</p><p>I worked with some who stayed in college until the schools kicked them out for never graduating.</p><p>I was one of those.</p><p>Around that time some of the schools in Boston had told UPS that they were not allowed to do any more recruiting of their students. Too many burnouts.</p><p>By the early 80's, many times the p/t midnight shift (12-3a ) was forced to work the preload ( 12-9a ) because UPS was so short handed.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Babagounj, post: 5948077, member: 12952"] When I was hired as p/t ( '76 ) , one was required to be attending college. If you left college, then you got canned. I worked with some who stayed in college until the schools kicked them out for never graduating. I was one of those. Around that time some of the schools in Boston had told UPS that they were not allowed to do any more recruiting of their students. Too many burnouts. By the early 80's, many times the p/t midnight shift (12-3a ) was forced to work the preload ( 12-9a ) because UPS was so short handed. [/QUOTE]
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