4w mp qF- 6B Octobr.Wedesday s 4w COFFEE Erom Page SB with protected living standards of the growers. Though fair trade is often overlooked in favor of the more accessible organic movement, it's a form of easy activism for the student looking to make a statement about workers' rights and international- ism. "Fair trade is sort of in contrast to unfair trade," said John Vandermeer, professor of ecology and evolutionary biology, "Unfair trade is where there is a power relationship where some element has more power than the other element. Trying to get that into balance, that's what fair trade is all about." coffee typically have a far better life than farmers who are not involved in it." Generally, fair trade coffee is higher quality than the typical Folgers fare. Furthermore, fair trade coffee is often intertwined with organically grown cof- fee. You're probably not going to find fair trade coffee at 7-Eleven, but if you reach for a slightly pricier brew like the coffee at Cafe Ambrosia on Maynard Street you'll get a richer and ethically produced bev- erage. But you have to look for the coffee that says "fair trade certified." Not every specialty coffee is fair trade, and chances are your Starbucks fix isn't. And it isn't always certain how fairly traded fair trade actually is since one has to trust the word of independent certifiers like TransFair. "TransFair is one organization that is Co-op bought directly from farmers. "Everyone shops at the Co-op because they trust us to sell fair trade, and we do the best we can," Harmon said. Some coffee roasters skip a couple steps in order to directly trade with farm- ers. They personally build relationships with coffee farmers and some even go so far as to fly to the actual farms. Ann Arbor coffee shops and roasters like Lab Caf6 on East Liberty Street and Mighty Good Coffee Roasting Co. on North Main Street are driving this movement forward. "Direct trade came "The r about with the need of really being able to see f .i firsthand where your coffee's coming from," fly die said Charles Tilling- these I hast, a barista at Lab Cafe. "The roasters fly and th directly to these farms, 1 and they are able to able to make sure the farm is making the best cof- sure th fee, and they pay them directly. There is no is m aki middleman so a lot of the time they're getting best c paid 50 to 100 percent more than they would and with fair trade because there's less steps in p between." pay t Even if you're miles *away from any farming dire( co-operative and can't verify that the coffee is fairtrade, buying ah fair trade coffee sends a - message to coffee roast- Tillingh ers and shops around campus that customers Lab b support the movement, according to Vander- meer. "In my opinion, drinking coffee that's fair trade is always a good idea. ... Minimal- ly, it says there is a market for it, so they should be concerned about it. If it says it's fair trade, it's worth demanding the prod- uct," Vandermeer said. At the request of students, the Univer- sity has been offering organic fair trade coffee in dining halls around campus since February 2006 with the help of Michael Lee, director of residential dining servic- es. Lee joined the University in 2005 and implemented fair trade coffee at other col- lege campuses, according the University spokesman Peter Logan.. "Providing fair trade coffee is not only an opportunity to offer quality product to campus diners, but it also is an opportuni- ty to be socially conscientious toward food providers as well as consumers," Logan wrote in an e-mail interview. But a random survey of students at Cafe ) LE C fa te )I i: h La a a Ambrosia, the Michigan Union, North Quad Residence Hall and other student hubs revealed that students are uncertain about what fair trade actually means. Stu- dents clutching cups of coffee shrugged their shoulders and admitted that they really didn't know why certain brands boasted a fair trade sticker and why others didn't. LSA senior Nora Stone said the lack of popularity of the movement is due to the typically tight student budget. "The one problem with (fair trade) is the cost is often so much higher than if I were buying sort of asters normal, free trade stuff," Stone said. "And obviously ,tly to for a poor college student, the cost is a pretty big arm s, determinate in where I shop and what I buy." y are Though Stone said she would prefer that her [ ak money went directly to the people who are actually farnm doing the work to receive a living wage as opposed to a ig the hording of funds by multi- national corporations, she dffee, admits the reality is that j it's harder to convince hey students of the benefits of buyingfair trade unless more people advocate for iem fair trade products. ly "I certainly think that awareness could be more, widespread. For people in our age group, the instinct Lrles isto go to Eroger rather ries than thna store that is acting st, Cafe in a more fair trade meth- od," Stone said. rista Vandermeer believes that if students become more cognizant of their consumption habits and the far-reaching effect their actions have on peo- ple around the world as well as their pocketbooks, they'll accept the extra cost. "There's also a personal stake in the fair trade movement as well. We do want to - at least most people I talk to and most students I talk to - want to live in a fair world," Vandermeer said. "And fair trade is part of living in a fair world. If people have to live in abject poverty and awful condi- tions so people inthe developed world, like this country, can have the luxuries they feel they deserve, that's not a fair world. That's not the kind of world most students want +olie n " Wednesday, October 12, 2011 The Statement 3 news in review Five of the most talked-about stories of the week, ranked in ascending order of actual importance 1 . Treasure-hunting company Odys- TwoAmerican economists, Thom- Israel Prime Minister Benjamin A violent protest at Egypt's Coptic Apple Inc. co-founder Steve sey Marine Exploration Inc. as Sargent and Christopher Sims, Netanyahu announced yesterday Church in Cairo on Sunday night Jobs passed away Wednesday announced the discovery of the shared the Nobel Prize in econom- a deal with Hamas that will swap ended with 24 casualties. It was afternoon in his home in Palo sunken steamship Matola in the ics on Monday for their research Palestinian prisoners for the the deadliest protest since the Alto, Calif. after a long battle with North Atlantic on Monday, The on the relationship between gov- liberation of wartime Israeli soldier, revolution that overthrew former pancreatic cancer. Jobs, age 56, British vessel was toting 19 tons of ernment policies and the economy Sgt. Gilad Shalit, who has been a President Hosni Mubarak eight was also co-founder and former silver reportedly worth $19 million. after the recent recession. prisoner of war the last five years. months ago. CEO of Pixar Animation Studios. -.--..-.- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 8 9; 10 quotes of the week from the archives "It will be the Night ofLong Knives. It will be a HotDog Heaven purging of this country." GLEN BECK, RADIO HOST, referring to the Occupy Wall Street movement and murders committed by Nazis in 1934. "There's nothing as courageous in my judgment as someone who had a leg blown of in combat overcoming the difficulties." GEORGE W. BUSH, FORMER PRESIDENT, after recanting what he misses about the presidency and how he doesn't want U.S. troops to think he does not respect them. HANNAH DOW/Daily t's the hot dog stand that's never open. The bright red building (if you can call it that) has been an icon of Ann Arbor since 1979. Jules Van Dyck-Dobo, owner of the rulesthe 23-by-8-foot hot dog shop, called Le Dog, said he wouldn't trade anything for the window on East Liberty Street. Van Dyck-Dobo was featured in The Michi- gan Daily ("Le Dog owner lives in Relish," 4/8/1986), which revealed he speaks No. 326: No. 327: No. 328: five languages, is a Spartan and a gourmet chef: His stand cooks up a mean Lob- Don't get used to Fall break is best When visiting State ster bisque. The limited time Le Dog is open allows him to concentrate on the fine dishes, this weather, Daisy for visiting cider this weekend, don't like peasant and cherry sauce, he said in the article. The revenue it makes from the Duke. Michigan mills and apple forget to mention lunch break munchies of local Ann Arbor employees is enough to keep the stand always does this. orchards - not that they didn't get afloat, despite it's three hour Monday through Friday store hours. It is closed on the weekend. In the late 80's, Le Dog sold 150 hot dogs per day. "Now you know studying. in to Michigan. why I sell hot dogs," Van Dyck-Dobo said. by the numbers coURTESY OF THE LOS ANGELES TIMES in billions of dollars, the amount Apple Inc. is in thousands of dollars, the price of Jobs's in millions of dollars, the total money Jobs worth today. Last month, it surpassed Exxon high-functioning computer he designed lost when NeXT computing and Pixaar 3 8 Mobil as the world's most valuable company. that was used to create the Internet. Animation Studios struggled financially. The roasters who purchase coffee beans from farmers are the power holders in this relationship. They have all the eco- nomic and political capital and often set prices for coffee beans that aren't suffi- cient wages for farmers' livelihoods. Fair trade strives to eliminate this "middle man" so that coffee purveyors are buying directly from farming co-operatives. "That's the basic idea, to try and get fairness associated with what we pay for 16pffee, and what the farmer gets for cof- fee," Vandermeer said. "Farmers who are involved in the fair trade movement in known for being quite fair about regulat- ing itself," Vandermeer said. "So consum- ers just have to trust that TransFair and other organizations are actually certify- ing efficiently." The People's Food Co-op in Kerrytown is known for its fair trade and organic cof- fee, but assistant manager Jess Harmon of Cafe Verde - the coffee shop in the Co-op - isn't so sure about the-effectiveness of fair trade. The People's Food Co-op still goes through coffee buyers, even though the store says it is fair trade. Harmon said she would be more comfortable if the