The University of Texas at Austin is one of the five largest
universities in the country, and currently nearly fifty thousand
students attend the university, which is home to the U.T. Longhorns.
Most of the students live in the U. T. campus area, which encompasses an
area from Interstate 35, which runs along the eastern perimeter, to
Lamar Boulevard, which circles the western edge of the campus, including
numerous fraternity and sorority houses. The campus also extends to
Martin Luther King to the south and the campus itself is just a mile or
so north of the State Capitol Building and the Capitol complex. The
northern edge is roughly around 27th Street, and among these fours
borders are some of the most interesting sights in the Austin area.
There
are many nice apartment buildings, condominium projects and single as
well as multiple family dwellings in the campus area, with prices
affordable enough for new students and nice enough for faculty, grad
students and the more affluent. There are many "commune style" homes in
the area, which require the residents to share the chores, bills, meals
and other expenditures and are very affordable due to the shared
financial input of the inhabitants, but don't offer quite as much
privacy as a traditional apartment complex. However, these residences do
offer more of a home like atmosphere, which appeals to the newer
students. Many of the commune-style homes, apartments, condos,
sororities and fraternities are situated within a block or two of "the
Drag", which is how the students refer to Guadalupe Street, the major
thoroughfare through the campus area. North of the University of Texas
is the neighborhood of Hyde Park which some students can on occasion
find a house to rent. But since Hyde Park has become a more desirable
neighborhood over the last 10 years rents can be expensive. If
students go a little farther north they find the North Loop neighborhood
where rents are a little more affordable.
The east side of "the
drag" skirts the western edge of campus proper, which includes the U.T.
Tower, student union, various education halls, and the West Mall, where
campus related political gatherings are held outdoors. Many students
can be found reading, walking to and from class, or eating on the steps
and benches which are strategically located in the west campus area, or
at many of the food kiosks and stands, which feature ethnic fast foods
of all kinds, especially many oriental and Indian foods.
Students
of all nationalities attend U.T., and all of them can find regional
cuisine in the area, even on the campus itself, with the Texas Union
offering a wide selection of meals, drinks and snacks. The other side of
"the drag" encircles an area which is full of shopping boutiques,
churches, student centers, restaurants, bookstores and one of the
largest assortments of street vendors in the Austin area. The street
vendors sell a little bit of everything, but seem to specialize in
silver jewelry and Indian clothing, as well as hats, shirts, other
clothing items, music, posters and memorabilia. These items are usually
quite inexpensive, and a vast selection of styles, colors, and regional
favorites can be found in the numerous stalls full of merchandise which
line the west side of Guadalupe Street. There are also ice cream shops,
pinball parlors, and many clubs, some of which offer live music.

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