14 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, November 22, 1996 I "It's easler to just walk up to I an a cafe thanlnabar.In a bart'saumed you're hitting on the mn - It's Im .tantious and mo reax In a cafe." -Jim Johanson Cava Java general manager 3---Al G 60 r(c) &ii Local coffee shops offer an array of bagels, music, auras and ... coffee, Menus crowded with densely scrawled items and prices. Window casings ensconcin muffins ba els, croissants and tortes. The it 77 c81 o'upan glasses. V$ y. iianO m H iy Sta eorter inusfatins y Tracoy Harfis With numerous coffeehouses located along South University and State streets, the shops have become permanent fixtures on campus. But the popularity of campus cafes is actual- ly a recent phenomenon. Espresso Royale on South State Street, established in 1987, was the first to be built. Amer's Mediterranean Deli, Gratzi, Cava Java and Rendez-Vous Cafe were established in the early '90s, following the suc- cess of Espresso Royale. And even when it seemed the market was sated with cafes, still more cafes and bagel shops appeared this year. Kelly Christiansen of the marketing depart- ment at Caribou Cafe, which opened in July, said the combination of an affluent city with the college campus made Ann Arbor an excellent place to start the business. "We look for areas with a little higher income, and with tho college, it seemed like a good fit," she said. Jim Johanson, general manager at Cava Java, said he can charge more for a cup of coffee in Ann Arbor than in other areas because the com- munity is wealthier. "I would assume that we'd do better here than in Flint," he said. "Professional people will pay $2 for a cup of coffee -- a blue collar worker won't." But the popularity of cafes doesn't seem to be merely about economics or convenience, but rather the casual, social atmosphere inside them. Socializing Johanson said he doesn't know exactly why the cafes are so popular, but said it's not just the coffee that draws people in. "Seventy-five percent of the customers come in every day - it's the personal relationship that a lot of them appreciate." When Johanson first came to Ann Arbor, he had just quit drinking alcohol and decided to hang out in cafes instead of bars. "It's easier to just walk up to someone in a cafe than in a bar," he said. "In a bar it's assumed that you're hitting on the person - it's less pretentious and more relaxed in a cafe." But some students find that meeting people in cafes can be a distraction to studying. "I only study in cafes when I don't have to study seriously because of the noise and you're probably going to run into people," said Susan Podolsky, an RC senior. Podolsky, who used to work at a cafe, said the prices are too high. "It's very overpriced for what they're selling. A cookie for $2? I know that's pretty outra- geous." Podolski said she might consider going to a cafe instead of a bar on a Friday or Saturday night. "I would go to a cafe with someone under 21, or maybe over 21 to have a serious conversa- tion," she said. Karen Whitman, an LSA senior, also said she doesn't do particularly serious homework in coffeeshops. "1 usually just read good books in the cafe- nothing I need to have a lot of concentration for." KRISTEN SCHAEFER/Daily School of Social Work first-year graduate student Cathy Galgon studies at Caribou Coffee on South State Street yesterday afternoon. As coffee shops opened up in Ann Arbor, so did a new culture. Caribou Cafe has a cabin-like atmosphere with wilderness photographs adorning the walls and dark-stained wood tables faintly reflecting the dim light from the suspended lanterns. "We have comfortable couches and we try to; keep the temperature warm - it works well with the college students," Christiansen said.< Johanson said Cava Java is different from most cafes because it offers live music and entertainment, and also because of the empha- sis placed on employee training. "We pride ourselves in training our employ- ees," he said. "This is the busiest intersection in Ann Arbor - 3,000 people pass this intersec- tion each hour. We try to serve each customer in less than 31/2 minutes."! Bagels, which opened in February. "We got the award (best new business in Ann Arbor from The Michigan Daily) about a month after we opened, which was great." Vandepitte said most of Einstein Bros.' busi- ness is from students during the week and older people on weekends stopping in before or after chutch. But Einstein Bros. bagels faces stiff compe-- titioni from Bruegger's Bagels. just around the block. "We always have hot bagels and our cream cheese is homemade," said VickiFertloth, a manager at Bruegger's. "People like to come here because our lines move faster and they like tur' ream cheese better." A drug in every cup? Caffeine: The odorless stimulant that lurks in each coffee serving fee and limits her consumption. "I drink no more than three cups a day because that's a healthy level - so they say." Alvarez said she read a recent Harvard study that indicated that lower coffee consumption was bene- ficial not only to the quality of life, but to the existence of life. "Women who drink over three cups a day have a higher suicid rate," she said, "so I guess I'm also keeping my suicide rate down.' Alvarez said she is used to drink- ing coffee and has developed-a tol- erance that dampens its effects. "I think I'm immune to it: I don't really feel side effects unless I have four espressos or something like