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		Shutdown sojourn: Free museums, music for 
		furloughed U.S. workers 
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		 [January 19, 2019] 
		By Barbara Goldberg 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - It may not put a meal 
		on the table for furloughed federal employees, but some U.S. museums and 
		symphonies are supplying food for the mind in free admission for workers 
		affected by the longest partial federal government shutdown in U.S. 
		history.
 
 With the shutdown in its fourth week with no end in sight, cultural 
		institutions from Massachusetts to Oregon are moving to help unpaid 
		federal workers spend some of their otherwise idle hours with loved ones 
		enjoying art, science history or music.
 
 Museums in at least 27 states, along with at least 19 orchestras, 
		offered free admission to federal workers who have unpaid time on their 
		hands. Institutions range from The Metropolitan Opera in New York to the 
		San Diego Air & Space Museum, home of the Apollo IX Command Module, 
		which helped pave the way for man to walk on the Moon.
 
		 
		
 Nearly 200 furloughed employees have taken advantage of an offer from 
		the Philadelphia Museum of Art, which waived its admission fee for each 
		furloughed worker plus one guest, said museum spokesman Norman Keyes. 
		Fine art highlights at the museum, whose front steps were made famous in 
		the "Rocky" movie series, include Van Gogh's "Sunflowers" and an array 
		of Rubens and Renoirs.
 
 "Museums can offer a place both to get away from the fray and to 
		recharge, and to gain perspective," Keyes said. "It will not solve the 
		shutdown crisis, but it can help build positive experiences during a 
		difficult time."
 
 Chicago's Museum of Science and Industry has also waived admission fees 
		for each furloughed worker plus two guests for the duration of the 
		shutdown. Star attractions include a German U-Boat submarine seized in 
		1944, the only one captured during World War II. It is the length of a 
		city block, the museum boasts on its website.
 
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			Tourists walk towards the Philadelphia Museum of Art in 
			Philadelphia, February 12, 2015. REUTERS/Charles Mostoller/File 
			Photo 
            
 
            Symphonies from Boston to Akron, Ohio, offered no-cost concert 
			tickets to ease the stress of wondering when your next paycheck will 
			be issued.
 "Great music has the power to inspire, reduce stress and ease 
			burdens," said Joseph Giunta, who conducts the Des Moines Symphony.
 
 "We invite federal employees to join us as our guests for an 
			upcoming Masterworks concert," said Giunta, noting each worker was 
			offered two tickets which otherwise sell for $20 apiece or more.
 
 Much of the federal workforce lives in or around Washington, D.C., 
			but these people may be out of luck. That is because premiere 
			cultural institutions such as the Smithsonian's museums, galleries 
			and zoo, which are always free to the public, remain closed to all 
			for the remainder of the shutdown.
 
 (Reporting by Barbara Goldberg in New York; Editing by Scott Malone 
			and David Gregorio)
 
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