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EAST VILLAGE
During the 19th century, millionaires like the Astors and Vanderbilts
had homes in East Village, but the waves of Irish, German, Jewish, Polish,
and Ukrainian immigrants who flooded into New York City in the 1900s soon
displaced the elite, who moved uptown. Since then,
the area has been home to the Beat generation of the 1950s, hippies in
the 1960s, and punks in the late 1970s and 1980s. Today it's still
a young
person's neighborhood, with its experimental music clubs and theaters
and cutting-edge fashion. New York University is in the area, so there's
no shortage of clientele here. Foodies take note: this neighborhood
reputedly
contains the most varied assortment of ethnic restaurants in New York
City, from the crush of Indian eateries on the south side of East Sixth
Street (sometimes called "Little Bombay") to McSorley's Old
Ale House, a pub that seems unchanged since it first opened in 1854.
Nearby,
in what was once the home of the Astor Library, the restored Public Theater
has been the opening venue for many now-famous plays. For more
trend-setting street life, head east toward Alphabet City (named for
avenues A, B, C, and D)- still a little rough around the edges but
with many reasonably
priced, fun, and gamut-running places to eat, drink, and shop…and,
if you're really getting into the scene, some very cool tattoo parlors. A haven
from the pressure of classes at New York University, students regularly
gather
around the Alamo at Astor Place. The Alamo is a 15-ft (4.5m) steel cube
designed by Bernard Rosenthal that revolves when pushed. Cooper Union,
a school that holds many interesting public lectures and exhibits,
was
established in 1859 just in time for Abraham Lincoln to make a campaign
speech in its auditorium. Today, Blue Man Group performs its popular
Tubes
Off-Broadway audience-participation performance art extravaganza at the
Astor Place Theater.