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The fair also is promoting options for discounted tickets and is offering concertgoers who attend the downtown shows free admission on any day of the 17-day fair. "We believe this fair will be about healing," said Fair Commission Executive Director Cindy Hoye. While she says the fair must move on and get back to being a place where people go to celebrate Indiana tradition, Hoye noted it's important to pay respects to the victims of the collapse. A moment of silence is planned for 8:46 p.m. Aug. 13, the anniversary of the collapse. Amusement rides, games and concession stands will come to a halt, perhaps for as long as five minutes. Lindsey Lewis, 21, a Purdue University student from Greenfield who is working at the Indiana Pork tent this year, was at the grandstand with a friend the night of the collapse but left as storm clouds approached. "When that accident happened, like all of us came together and kind of grieved even if we didn't know the people," Lewis said. "And I think that's what this year is all about
-- coming together." Sam Malcolm, a farm product sales manager from Garrett who was helping his three children prepare for a 4-H hog show Thursday, said the stage collapse was terrible, but what matters now is "how you react to what happened." "It's taking what you're dealt in life and moving forward," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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