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Foreign students find Hershey not so sweet

An unidentified student protests in Palmyra, Pa., on Wednesday over the working conditions at a Hershey Co. warehouse operated by Exel. (Associated Press)

An unidentified student protests in Palmyra, Pa., on Wednesday over the working conditions at a Hershey Co. warehouse operated by Exel.

HERSHEY, Pa. – Foreign students working at a candy warehouse protested conditions and pay Thursday, chanting on Chocolate Avenue under streetlights shaped like Hershey’s Kisses, arguing that they were employed under the guise of a cultural exchange but toil away in what amounts to a sweets sweatshop. The State Department said it was investigating.

More than 100 students gathered in touristy downtown Hershey, home to the nation’s second-largest candy maker, complaining of hard physical labor, steep pay deductions for rent that often left them with little spending money, and no cultural enrichment. They said their concerns were met with threats of deportation.

A case of students not reading the fine print or abuse by the factory that employed them?

* This story was originally published as a post from the blog "Huckleberries Online." Read all stories from this blog