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By April Koral
O n a Friday evening, 15 teenagers sat around a long table looking
slightly cowed. It was the first night of the weekend program for
middle schoolers at Tribecas new community center and Bob
Townley, who has dreamed of such a center for years, was laying
down the rules.
His approach, honed during years as head of Manhattan Youth, which
opened this center at 55 Warren Street last month, was part good
guy, part drill sergeant.
"We want to make this place your place," he said. "This
is your home on Friday and Saturday nights. I suggest you start
with 20 minutes of physical fitness so you dont grow up and
look like me," he added, mocking his own hefty figure.
There were many rules, and the group didnt look happy to
hear them. "No jumping. No shouting. No foul language,"
Townley recited. "No drinks next to computers. Put away games
after using them. And no using pool sticks as swords."
The crowd then attacked the six-foot hero sandwich and cups of
apple juice. ("No soda," Townley said. "Were
going to eat healthy.")
"Any suggestions on how to make this place better?" Townley
asked, as everyone finished up dinner.
"How about dessert?" Ben Daniels piped up.
After they had cleared their plates, it was time to have fun. The
group eschewed the stationary bicycles and the shelves filled with
Monopoly, Pictionary, checkers and Scrabble, and rushed (but no
running, another rule) for the brand new pool and air hockey tables
and two computers (where they could play Diablo 2).
After about 45 minutes, some were ready for other distractions.
Nathaniel Flagg, 12, a student at St. Annes, and his friend
Jamie Green, 12, who goes to Village Community School, opened up
a brand-new wooden chess set. Lauren Bridges tried the stationary
bicycle. Theseus Roche, who will run the program, played Othello
with Marley Heit.
Halfway through the night, the center was already receiving high
marks from the kids. Zoe Lutz, a Lab Middle School student, fine-tuning
her pool strokes, said she would otherwise have been home "doing
nothing, being bored or doing homework." Patrick Birde, an
Epiphany student, said he would have been "sitting at home,
being bored or watching a movie."
Townley plans to expand the dinner repertoire beyond heroes and
pizza, and told the teens that eventually they would cook dinner
together.
"This wont just be a hangout," explained Townley,
who is planning to add activities such as lessons in computer graphics
and robotics. "It will also be a place to learn."
For more information on the middle school Friday and Saturday evening
program, call Manhattan Youth at 766-1104.
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