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Field Trips and Educational Tours for Teachers and Students | Questions? Call 1.888.310.7101
Day 1 Hello New York | Meet your tour director |  | Walking tour of Midtown, Rockefeller Center, St. Patrick's Cathedral, F.A.O. Schwarz, Trump Tower, Times Square, Grand Central Station |  | Empire State Building & Observatory visit The third-tallest building in the world (only the Sears Tower in Chicago and the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur are taller), the Empire State Building rises over the Manhattan skyline like a throne. Admire its Art Deco curves up close as you ascend a quarter of a mile skyward to get New York's best aerial view. From the top, you'll see the Monopoly-board patchwork of skyscrapers, hotels, apartments, and parks that make up the city. Note that the tallest buildings cluster in Midtown -- this section of the island has the strongest foundations, making it the only area where skyscrapers won't sink into the harbor.
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| Day 2 Downtown New York | Ferry boat to Ellis Island & Statue of Liberty The statue, a joint venture between the U.S. and France, was commissioned to honor the 100th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence and the friendly Franco-American relations established at that time. Once a gallows field for convicted pirates, Ellis Island became a federal immigration station in 1892. In the years that followed, Ellis Island saw roughly 12 million immigrants pass through its halls to enter the United States of America. In 1965 Lyndon B. Johnson declared the island part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument, and in 1990 it was reopened as the Ellis Island Immigration Museum, which today attracts over 2 million visitors per year. Over 40% of American citizens can trace their family heritage to Ellis Island! |  | Lower Manhattan Walking Tour Tour Lower Manhattan, where industry, immigration, and colonial history converge. As the symbol of Western capitalism, Wall Street's modern traders bristle with cell phones, PDAs, and other modern tech accessories. This area's original traders, however, were Dutch colonialists, who gave the street its name by building a wall here to protect themselves from British settlers. Nearby Trinity Church, once the tallest building in the city, holds the grave of Alexander Hamilton and other Revolutionary luminaries who helped shape the emerging United States, and thousands of immigrants, who shaped the modern country, came in through Battery Park, the immigration entry point for the city until the operation moved to Ellis Island. , Ground Zero, site of the World Trade Center attackAs Daniel Libeskind's design for the World Trade Center site slowly materializes, new hope and peace are infusing lower Manhattan. See the site where the original towers stood and where countless family members, friends, and sympathetic strangers paid their respects to those killed in the September 11th attacks, and witness the new plans for the future businesses, public space, and memorials that will soon stand here.
|  | Trinity Church, Wall Street, South Street Seaport |  | Guided Sightseeing Tour See the essentials of New York City on a tour with an experienced local guide. Stroll past the chic shops and art galleries of Greenwich Village and SoHo, and soak up the Bohemian style of the East Village. Then score authentic New York City pizza and knock-off designer sunglasses in Little Italy and Chinatown, respectively. The combination of each neighborhood’s ethnic enclaves creates the complex culture so characteristic of New York City. , Greenwich Village, East Village, SoHo, Chinatown & Little Italy |  | Optional Jazz Performance $45 |  | Optional Broadway Show $75 If it sings and dances, laughs or cries, you'll find it here. The range of Broadway's theatrical productions, from Shakespearean tragedies to sequins-and-feathers musicals, is immense, and the glitter, hype, and talent draw audiences from around the world. See some of the biggest theater America has to offer on one of its most famous streets. |
| Day 3 Uptown New York  | NBC Studios guided visit Take a tour of the NBC studios, led by an NBC Page. Begin at the NBC Sharp History Theatre, where you'll learn about the history of NBC and its transition from radio to television. Then, walk through the studios of some of NBC's most popular and venerable television programs like The Today Show, Dateline NBC, NBC Nightly News, Late Night with Conan O'Brien, and Saturday Night Live. |  | Metropolitan Museum of Art visit The Metropolitan Museum, known to New Yorkers as the MET, houses a vast permanent collection of over two-million works of art, as well as cutting-edge feature exhibitions from the world’s most prominent artists. Tour the museum’s grand halls, drawing inspiration from the masters. Highlights include European Paintings, Modern Art & Photography, and The Costume Institute, as well as the stunning traditional works of Egypt, Ancient Greece and Rome, Asia, Oceania, and the Americas. |  | Walking tour of Central Park Take a walking tour of the most famous park in the United States. With over 800 verdant acres located smack-dab in the middle of bustling Manhattan, Central Park has been a bucolic oasis amidst the towering buildings of urban New York. Your local guide will lead you through the park, as you make your way past bikers, rollerbladers, and the occasional horse-and-buggy! And don't forget to watch out for one of Central Park's most famous year-round residents, Pale Male, the red-tailed hawk that calls Central Park his home. , Cherry Hill, Strawberry Fields, Belvedere Castle, Delacorte Theater |  | Madison & Park Avenues |  | Broadway Show |
| Day 4 United Nations | Visit the United Nations New York has always been the embodiment of the American melting pot, and nowhere is its ethnic and national diversity more on display than in the United Nations Building. The 18-acre complex is officially international territory, with six official languages (Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Russian, and Spanish), its own postage stamps, and an enormous staff representing over 200 countries. See the chambers where the UN councils meet and learn more about the UN's peacekeeping and diplomatic goals and history. |
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