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A paint by numbers portrait of workers

MILWAUKEE, March 14 (UPI) -- The typical U.S. worker skips breakfast, drives a car to work, parts their hair in the middle and has had a date with a co-worker, a national study found.

CareerBuilder said Thursday that in a survey of 3,991 workers conducted from Nov. 1 to Nov. 30, 2012, almost a quarter of respondents, 23 percent, indicated they do not eat breakfast before heading off to work.

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Under the breakfast category, 31 percent said they ate cereal, 19 percent fruit or eggs, 18 percent oatmeal and 16 percent toast.

Eighty-three percent indicated they took a car to work. Thirty-four percent said they parted their hair in the middle -- compared with 23 percent on the right and 30 percent on the left. For 14 percent, this question was moot, as they indicated they were bald.

Forty-three percent said they dressed in a "business casual" manner and 39 percent said they ate their lunch at their desks every day.

Thirty-eight percent indicated they had at some point in their careers dated a co-worker, CareerBuilder said. The beverage of choice at happy hour after work was beer -- 38 percent -- followed by water, which was named by 31 percent of respondents.

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Given the many distractions at work, from music to cellphones to attractive co-workers, the survey found that 38 percent of respondents felt they felt they put in a full 8-hour day at work.

Twenty-one percent indicated they worked for seven hours out of their scheduled time and 18 percent indicated they really worked six hours out of the day. Eleven percent indicated 5 hours was spent productively, while 12 percent indicated actual work took up four hours of their working day.

The survey was conduced by Harris Interactive. The results had a margin of error of plus and minus 1.55 percentage points.

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