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starbucks
Starbucks Anywhere other than starbucks! Onlineis your best bet.
grocery stores and gas stations
well, she likes caramel lattes
Starbucks, 7-11, Target, online, etc.
To buy stocks in Starbucks Coffee Company one could try online through their bank or even through the Nasdaq site. One could also try buying Starbucks stocks through a stockbroker.
14 kinds of coffee and 4 decaf or at least that's what you can buy from their store... http://www.starbucksstore.com/products/coffee.asp
They are not old, usually only up to 3 weeks....HOWEVER it is not the same coffee you buy in a Starbucks store! SB has a whole other dist. line for grocery store sales and yes, the coffee is significantly different.
At any restaurant in the United States, you should be able to buy coffee. You can also go to StarBucks, because they are a well known brand for selling coffee.
They don`t charge for it, but they have to pay for it, so just the wireless access itself does not seem to be profitable. However, if people stay longer, buy more coffee or even go to Starbucks because they have wireless access and buy a coffee there, then yes it may be profitable.
The truth is that not many stores sell bulk coffee,but you can get some and buy some like at Dunk'in DOUGHNUTS and at Starbucks too.
Starbucks was accused of exercising unfair control over international coffee bean trade. In 2006, BBC reported that Starbucks pressured NCA or National Coffee Association to halt the trademark efforts of Ethiopian coffee beans, thereby denying Ethiopian farmers more than $80 million in earnings annually. Starbucks CEO Jim Donald and Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi had talks about the matter in November 2006, but the problem has yet to be solved. Starbucks then attempted to promote 'fair trade' by using coffee grown by farmers in third world nations. The company plans to buy one million pounds of this coffee at 'competitive' prices in its supposedly altruistic efforts to improve the living standards of third-world coffee farmers. This move is controversial, however, because this third-world coffee makes up a tiny fraction of the chain's total coffee import. Anti-Starbucks protesters say that it "seems that Starbucks can give much more than it offers."