Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, July 21, 1976 City ready for Art Fair onslaught By LOIS JOSIMOVICH Sculptors comb their studios and attics for the polished and transfigured bits of clay and metal that will sell the fastest. Painters touch up ornate pos- ters advertising their master- pieces of modern line and color. Townspeople dream of hot egg- rolls and tea under a dusty maple on the Diag. And meanwhile, as prepara- tions for an Ann Arbor sum- mer's four most crowded, chao- tic and colorful days reach a frantic peak among Art Fair participants, there is another, less noticeable undercurrent of activity here. THE CITY'S administrators and merchants-those who run Ann Arbor and those who keep it running -- are getting ready for the onslaught of some 250- 300,000 culture-starved people. "There'll be enough people to fill the football stadium a couple of times," according to one Chamber of Commerce spokes- person. But they aren't going to be in the stadium. They're going to be on the streets, and in the rows of narrow stores that line them. "IT'LL BE mob city here," sighs Pizza Bobs' m a n a g e r Andre Cynkin. Then, with a laugh, "The strain on my mind and body will be severe-it hap- pens every year--but I'm look- ing forward to it, in some ways." On State St., Liberty and South University, where the main clusters of booths will be, book store owners are preparing stacks of weighty tomes for sidewalk sales, and other sales- persons are following suit with their own wares. "It's a good time for us," says Tom Borders of Borders Book Shop. "People who work here like to get outside for a while," he adds conversationally. "THE BIG PROBLEM is rain. Every year we have some kind of horrible storm." The annual Art Fair thunder- storm is anticipated by the art- ists, who drape their booths in giant plastic shrouds that flap in the wind like sails on a gale- ridden sea. But it usually comes as a surprise to the visitors, and they dash like herds of lemmings toward shop doors left open in the inevitably sultry July weather. The heat and the crowds make the fair a great annoy- ance for many store owners and workers. Said one sales clerk, who wished to remain annoy- mous, "If I had my choice I'd be way out in the country, but I have to work." TOM DRAKE, who runs the South University Food Mart, also finds the four days "a lot of hassle," because so many people come in just to buy pop that they get in the way of other customers. Also, Drake refuses to raise his prices for the fair as other merchants do, and claims he gets "a lot of flak." But for a lot of other store- owners, this event will be a chance for some fun. Discount Records on State St., for exam- ple, is planning to bring some live music out on their section of the pavement, in the shape of "Longhorn," a local band, and a jazz group called "'2-5-1." Fred Kreye, owner of the Village Apothecary on South University, looks forward to the Art Fair because the artists have become his friends over the years. "THEY'RE VERY nice peo- ple, those artists," he says, Kreye, and other South Uni- versity store-owners like Jim Marron of Camelet Bros. cloth- ing store, let the people who run booths in their vicinity leave things in their stores overnight. In return, the artists often give them tokens of appreciation-a vase, a painting, a hanging plant, or maybe a small sculp- ture. Not surprisingly, the crowds that shove and squeeze their way around the mounds of art objects will also be jamming all the local restaurants, bars and hotels. Campus Inn, the Bell Tower, even hotels as far out of town as the Briarwood Hilton are expecting "a lot of exhibitors, but a lot of visitors too" for the week of the fair-- especially in terms of 'walk-ins.' OF COURSE, there will be traffic and parking problems because of all the out-of-town- ers. The police are re-routing some traffic in bottleneck areas, but no additional parking space will be created. Cars will be towed and fined as usual-al- though, because of the extra work this causes, "it's revenue that is really unwanted," ac- cording to traffic coordinator Harry Kerr. Police will be ready for other possible problems connected with the Art Fair, such as theft. "We will have officers up there to assist people as we can," said Capt. Kenneth Klinge. He indicated there will be a "Community Van" at the cor- ner of South and East Univer- sity streets to deal with thefts, lost children, and other prob- lems. See ANN, Page 17 WILKINSON LUGGAGE DOWNTOWN ON THE PROMENADE 327 S. 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