Anderson .R campaign sets up shop here By SARA ANSPACH Amidst art fair crowds, street vendors and bargain hunters, the unobtrusive headquarters for John An- derson's campaign on N. First Ave. officially opened shop yesterday. In the small dingy room that will serve as the main office for the independent candidate's campaign in Washtenaw, Monore, and Lenawee counties, state Campaign Coordinator Lorraine Beebe told reporters that college students can make the difference in the coming election. "YOU CAN make the difference. And why shouldn't you make the difference? It's your future," she said. The office has already received phone calls from* about six students interested in volunteering for the campaign, according to the headquarter's volunteer staff. Beebe said the campaign's current main thrust is to win three-tenths of one per cent of the vote in the August fifth primary so Anderson's name can appear on the November ballot. UhYMkhIigdn Udl-Thursdby; July 24, 1980-Page 5 THE STAFF WILL conduct a voter education project to let Michigan residents know that to vote for the Anderson Coalition Party in August means sacrificing their vote in local Democratic and Republican primaries. Anderson will announce his vice-presidential can- didate and platform sometime after the Democratic Convention in New York, said Beebe. She said the presidential candidate may visit Michigan sometime around the first of August-directly prior to the state's primary. Anderson will need approximately 5,000 votes if his name is to be placed on the November ballot. "I always run a little scared," said Beebe, although she added the campaign hopes to get many more than 5,000 votes in August. Ann Arbor is a key area for Anderson support, said Beebe. When signatures were collected last spring to get Anderson's name on the August primary ballot, Ann Arbor residents contributed more than residents from any other part of the state, she said. positive reviews fr~om many By JOYCE FRIEDEN Whether they came from Ann Arbor or elsewhere, most persons interviewed yesterday on the opening day of the Art Fair had positive things to say about the event. "The fair looks more extensive than it did last year," said Toledo resident Marcia Kirsher. "I ALWAYS have a good time, and this is my tenth Art Fair visit," said University alumnus Bill Nevers, now a Detroit-area resident. "It looks more crowded than it did last year on the first day." State Street area artists felt that business was going well. John White of the Ann Arbor Photography Club was busy selling photographs of the campus in front of Quarry Photo on State St. "The big sellers so far have been pic- tures of the football stadium and the Law School library. "Business is better than last year," he continued, "but that may be because after three years of experience, people in the club are getting better at picking out display pictures that people are at- tracted to." "EARRINGS AND rings are the big sellers here," said Julie Hennessy, who was minding a jewelry booth on South Main St. Graduate student Bob Lieberman said he has a strategy for finding good deals at the Art Fair. "Buy clothes on the first day of the Fair, when you have the best selection," he suggested, "and buy the art on Saturday when merchan- ts are pricing down to get rid of everything." Lieberman has been attending the Art Fair since he was ten years old. "I remember when it was only two blocks on State Street and two on South University, and there was no art, only sales," he said. "It's certainly grown since then." REFRESHMENT and food vendors were doing a brisk business. Spinach pies and baklava were big sellers at the Wolverine Den booth on South Univer- See ART, Page 8 AT qr.CW I I MRFP.ER