Cyber Cafe Keeping Kids Out of Trouble in Easton
Cyber Cafe Keeping Kids Out of Trouble in Cyber Cafe

Keeping kids from the net of gangs. One Easton program is using the internet to do just that. http://wfmz.com/view/?id=247163
Reporter: 12-year-old Dejour Day checks his "Myspace"
page. Something he can't do at home because he doesn't have a computer
and something he can't do at school because "Myspace" is not allowed.
So instead he comes to Easton's Evangelical Church.
Dejour:
You don't have to pay, just sign up and come here.
Reporter:
From 4 to 7 every Monday and Thursday afternoon, the church's basement
becomes The Cyber Cafe. Where surfing the net is encouraged. hantel Keeps kids off the streets and have fun.
Reporter: The cyber cafe is part of Easton's Weed and Seed
program. Coordinator Paul Barber has seen cafe grow from a few kids
several years ago to now having up to 25 web browsers a session. Paul Gives kids a safe place to go to get off the streets.
Reporter The cafe is also a place where kids can. Paul
Sometimes do homework, not often but we're here in case they do.
Reporter: The cafe is a teaching tool. Here Shantel is giving
tech tips to Day. Which Barber says is a significant social step for
many of the kids.
Bo: Hopes are to expand the cyber cafe to
include local businessmen and women, who will teach tech skills,
developing a business plan and one day landing a job. Reporter:
21'st century technology to battle the century old problem of gangs. At
least the internet has "Myspace." Bo Koltnow 69 News.
In a Gangster's Paradise
How they're banging in the 'burbs
http://www.nea.org/neatoday/0804/feature1.html
You may not think you have gang members in your school. You may
think that your students aren't those kinds of kids. Maybe you think
they're too rich, too suburban, too smart, or too White.
Think again.
"If you don't think you have a gang problem, you're in the wrong
business," says Detective Javier Castellanos, a New Jersey gang
specialist, in a recent training for school staff in northern New
Jersey.
"You do," he adds firmly.
"We know it!" says a voice from the back.
For
decades, gang membership in America has been stretching out from the
inner cities of Los Angeles, Chicago, and New York, into such places as
small town Wisconsin. Past the gates in South Florida's cul-de-sac
communities, into the big houses of Washington, D.C.'s, suburbs, even
down the street from the Billy Graham Center in the most churched-up
town in this country, you will find boys and girls in gangs. And that
means you'll find them in your schools, too.