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"The motorcycle guys rolling across the state on their way to Sturgis, this would be a nice detour," he said. "Or a bus tour going from Sioux Falls to Memphis or down to Branson, this would be a perfect stop off on the way." A $15 million expansion plan calls for tripling its 23,000 square feet of gallery space, improving the entrance and revamping the vast archives where music scholars can peruse the thousands of instruments and documents not on public display. The limited space has not only prevented instruments from getting their proper display, but also has hampered curators' efforts to find creative and hands-on ways to program and teach visitors and school groups. The plan recently earned a federal seal of approval with the awarding of a $500,000 challenge grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, whose chairman Jim Leach called the facility "a national treasure." Cleveland Johnson said the museum is shifting its focus from acquisitions to developing programs to get the attraction better known around the country. "I'm tired of being the best-kept secret," he said. "I'm over that. I'm ready to be the best-known musical instrument museum and not the best- kept secret. "These instruments will take us in that direction, will take the veil off, I hope, for much of the American public." ___ Online: National Music Museum at the University of South Dakota in Vermillion, S.D.:
http://orgs.usd.edu/nmm/
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