Saturday, February 5, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Drak 's: A chocola te-coated link to the past Mrs. Tibbals Photography by Pauline Lubens By JANET KLEIN H, PITY THE SWEET tooth that drops by Drake's.' Chocolate covered prune bits, straw- berry cordials, moon rocks and some 300 other candy varieties - all enclosed in big glass jars - present the most culi-_ nary of dilemmas to the saccharine-in- clined customer. The shop's walls are a muddy shade of institutional green - and its hard-back, drugstore style booths create an inti- mate ambience straight out of the days of Archie and Veronica. THERE ARE NO waitresses - in fact, you pencil your own order - and even then, the service remains somewhat har- ried. "Two limeades and tuna on whole wheat," you hear as an employe clatters dishes on a small, silver tray. You then retreat to a dimly lit booth for a casual, cozy meal, punctuated by rushing em- ployes and shouted orders piercing the candy-coated air. So how does Drake's - one of the city's oldest sandwich shops - manage to maintain its popular appeal when the Macs and Burger Kings offer cheaper and quicker fare? "The first time I came in here I was scared because I didn't know how to or- der; so I left," recalls Helen Seuer, surely not alone in her fear. "Now I come often before dinner for tea," she says. ADDS ANOTHER customer, "It's a rit- ual. I come in and drool over all the dif- ferent varieties, but buy the same thing each time." Others, of course, are more adventur- ous - like Carolyn Ettinger. "I come in for the candy once a week and get a munch of a certain type -'a weekly spe- cial, so to speak." However, Drake's attraction crans- cends the chocolate covered, sugai coat- ed, lemon-drop world of candy. "PEOPLE COME for the limeades and lemonades in the summer and the pecan and'cinnamon rolls in the winter," sums up employe Cindy Kaufan. "The people are really funny," com- ments another employe. "They come in here all the time and tell us how they used to work here, or how they used to come here all the time and how they met their wives and husbands here .. . Nevertheless, Drake's real charm lies in its history and the character of its owners, the Tibbals. "IN 1949 I put these .out in celebration of our anniversary," recalls Truman Tib- bals as he flaunts large displays of pho- tos that depict the shop's evolution. Mr. Tibbals began as a Drake's dish- washer in the 1920's. Soon after, he bought the shop from the previous own- er, Mr. Drake - keeping the name be- cause "I couldn't see any sense in chang- ing it." As much a part of the Drake myth is Mrs. Tibbals - the elderly woman who has overseen the shop with her husband almost every business day for the past 45 years. "I'm sort of a jack of all trades," says Mrs., Tibbals of her role. SINCE HER husband purchased the store, it has seen a series of changes. Be- fore World War II, Drake's was a sand- wich shop which delivered until, accord- See DRAKE'S, Page 8