Coffee in Seattle

Should Starbucks Ban Guns From Its Coffee Shops?

Starbucks says guns are no longer welcome in its cafes, though it is stopping short of an outright ban on firearms. The coffee chain moved away from its neutral stance on guns in its stores Wednesday, publicly requesting that customers not bring weapons into its coffee shops. The company’s CEO Howard Schultz says customers who […]

Starbucks to Open First Shop in Coffee Rich Colombia

Arts, Culture & Media

What Starbucks says about America

Facing the rest of your life

Arts, Culture & Media

High Cost Diplomas Lead to Low Wage Jobs

The World

Starbucks Challenging Germany’s Kaffeehaus

A Portland, Oregon native now living in Berlin wonders why in the world Germans would buy coffee from the Seattle-based Starbucks chain. As Miriam Widman reports, Starbucks is pledging more stores but isn’t doing as well as they’d hoped.

The World

Takeouts: Washington, Starbucks, your responses

CONGRESS TAKEOUT: We speak with our Washington correspondent Todd Zwillich about how Congressional Democrats are regrouping on health care reform in the wake of losing the Massachussetts Senate race. MONEY TAKEOUT: Starbucks was hit hard by the economic crisis, closing hundreds of stores across the country. New York Times reporter Louise Story explains why things […]

The World

Dusting yourself off after a layoff

More than half a million Americans lost their jobs last month alone leaving a lot of those unemployed to wonder where they’ll end up next. The Takeaway talks to two people about how they’ve bounced back after being laid off.

The World

SOS! (Save our Starbucks!)

Starbucks seem to be everywhere, but for some communities, getting one means your town has ‘made it.’ That’s why, when the company announced the closing 5 percent of its stores across the nation earlier this month, some cried out, ‘Save our Starbucks!’ Chicago Tribune restaurant critic Phil Vettel about the campaign to keep them open.

The World

Romania’s growing pains

The World’s Aaron Schachter reports from Bucharest that Romania’s housing market is booming, and consumer spending is high, but analysts there are worried that it may all come crashing down.