c8 VANCOUVER (CP) — The design of buildings, streets, neighborhoods and towns can either encourage or discour- age crime, say supporters of the theories of Crime Pre- vention Through Environ- mental Design. Those theories are already being applied to the town of CASTLEGAR NEWS, November 18, 1981 Police have found that there are fewer crimes in apartment buildings which allow residents to see the main entrance. They also known that bur- glaries are more likely to oc- cur on streets in a grid pattern, There seem to be fewer burglaries ont streets Tumbler Ridge, a which doesn’t yet exist. Before the first street is paved and the first house is constructed, the RCMP, the B.C. municipal affairs min- istry and a Simon Fraser University professor are de- veloping plans to discourage crime. “As far as I know, Tumbler Ridge is unique,” said Pat with there is less through traffic and residents are more likely to spot strangers. In the jargon of the crime prevention theory, there are “symbolic barriers” that de- fine the border between pub- lic and semi-private spaces such as the inner courtyard of a condominium. If a stranger crosses these bar- riers, are more an professor in the criminology department of Simon Fraser University. “Nowhere else in North America has crime preven- likely to confront him or phone police. Brantingham said crime can be reduced by 30 per cent if such measures are applied. The itional costs in- tion through envir design been applied to the development of a whole new town.” The joing efforts are aimed at B.C.’s newest “instant town,” being built for the northeast coal development and expected to have 5,000 residents by 1985. OPPORTUNITY UNIQUE S.Sgt. Jack Hest, the RCMP's crime prevention co-ordinator for about 120 B.C. detachments, said Tum- bler Ridge is a unique op- portunity for an “experimen- tal laboratory.” “This was our chance to sit down with de- volved in applying the mea- sures are small if a com- munity is originally designed with the theories in mind, said Mrs. Brantingham. Gary Paget of the munici- pal affairs ministry said that in Tumbler Ridge, the gov- ernment hopes to avoid some of the social ills that plague rapidly-expanding resource industry towns in B.C. He said in new resource towns, populations are tran- sient and unstable. Drug and alcohol abuse is rampant and wife beatings are more com- mon. Cc i 1 signers and planners at the planning stage, to make them aware they can reduce crime,” Hest said. Two of the leading Can- adian academics doing work in the field of Crime Pre- vention Through ‘Environ- mental Design are Brant- ingham and her husband Paul, also an associate pro- fessor in Simon Fraser's criminology department. Some deal But no SPOKANE, WASH. (AP) —Would you mail $1 to a stranger if he promised to send you back $2. Residents of Spokane wouldn't buy that pitch last week when it ran as a news- paper classified ad. George T. White said Thursday he placed the ad “out of desper- ation.” The 30-year-old unem- ployed handyman said he had hoped to get a “mailbag this high” full of envelopes con- taining $1 bills. He got none. The ad read: “I would like to borrow $1 from someone with a $2 return. No bull!” It ran for eight days and dir- Pp in Tumbler Ridge have tried to create “identifiable neighbor- hoods” which people will think of as their own. There will be four such neighbor- hoods, each focussed around an elementary school. Within these neighbor- hoods will be sub-neighbor- hoods, which will comprise clusters of housing units. The planners have de- signed a concentrated town takers ected investors to mail their greenbacks to a box number. “I'm trying to prove my honesty and ability to repay,” he said. “I just wanted to get enough money to get an idea going. I was hoping there would be a better response, but then I didn't really ex- pect to get rich.” He said he had hoped to receive “probably about $20,000 to build an energy plant on my own design. It’s using air in a different way, in a way that a lot of people don’t think will work.” “I know there’s another way of producing energy cheaper. Fined for aiding friend in arson WINNIPEG (CP) — Kara- lampos Broumas, who helped to arrange a fire a year ago at a restaurant in north-end Winnipeg, was fined $6,000 when he pleaded guilty to arson. Court was told Broumas, 38, helped to hire an arsonist and paid him $1,500 to set fire to the Big Dipper Res- taurant, but he himself stood to gain nothing from the fire. Broumas did “a stupid dangerous favor for a friend,” Crown counsel Bill Morton said Tuesday. The fire caused $20,000 damage and sent another man to hospital. Morton said, “It isn't often for no profit to himself a man agrees to take part in a dan- gerous criminal activity that is subject to 14 years in prison.” Court was told the injured man, who suffered burns that left him in critical condition in hospital for weeks, has recovered and is awaiting trial for arson. Answer for Sunday Crossword Puzzle No. 974, A iw OZ OlZzini- UME Tn|>IAORE Ti! >| 1 IMIG] D| WE) ES BSCE) Bw Ones see) MiG) Fé P4te BEORUH BOOUEOH Frmmiun OOM Gak) | ims Mees MZir OF Om! VOM <> On| o|— (0) MHZ SLED OMA Agr Daim emim, nlx Answer for Sunday, November 15, Cryptoquip: WISE MODERN COUPLE OCCUPIES WELL- VENTILATED UNIT IN MULTIPLE APARTMENT DEVELOPMENT. centre. There will be a main street, but people will have to park their vehicles on the two streets on either sideof age people to walk in the street will havo entrances‘on be facing an alley. the main street, The planners hope this design will encour- town contre, % The stores on the main the two adjacent streets, so Crime prevention through environmental design police detachment that is West said the residents of more involved in community the back of the stores won't Tumbler Ridge will also see a affairs. Woolco Sale Price, ea.: Save 3.97! Men's Long-Sleeve Western Sports Shirts A. 100% Cotton. 2-dome cuffs; 2 pockets with domes. Assorted Gingham & brushed check patterns. Sizes S-XL. Reg. Woolco Price: each 11.97 Save $61 Men's Long-Sleeve Checked Sport Shirts B. Acrylic. 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C. vaV 1X4 Febs EWS Published at “The Crossroads of the Kootenays” WEATHERCAST Cloudy Sunday with a tew flurries in the ridges. Out! _ calls for sunny periods. Highs will be near 5° with overnight lows near VOL, 34, NO. 93 35 Conts CASTLEGAR, BRITISH COLUMBIA, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1981 3 Sections (A, 8 &C) Moore romps to vic Satigfied winner, Incumbent may. MacKinnon, Henne.also:in Audrey Moore celebrates with campaign workers ond syppodets! sie nimmcamtonsif MacBain tops aldermanic poll By Cas News Staff Longtime Castlegar resi- dent and well-known com- munity worker Bob MacBain topped the poll for the two-year aldermanic seat in last night’s Castlegar muni- cipsl elections. BOB MacBAIN MacBain, a 30-year resi- dent, tallied 1,428 votes to win one of three two-year spots open on council. Grey Cup today The 1981 Grey Cup game begins at’ 10 a.m. this morning on channels 9 and 13 at Olympic Stadium in Montreal. The contenders are Ed- monton Eskimos and Ott- awa Roughriders. The Eskimos, who boast a 14-1-1 won-loss-tied record, are 22% point favorites over the 5-11 Ottawa Roughriders. A pre-game forecast will be televised on channel 13 at 9:30 a.m. with CBC commentators weighing strengths and weaknesses of the two contenders. He was 78 votes ahead of his nearest opponent — Doug MacKinnon (1,350) and 250 more than third place incum- bent Carl Henne (1,158). Frank Stasila rounded out the balloting with 1,091 votes just 67 votes short of the third and final -aldermanic position. MacBain said he was deli- ghted with his victory but even more delighted in the voter turn out (57.8 per cent). “This was good because in the past we haven't really had enough people coming out and voting,” he said. Of his own victory, Mac- Bain said he was not “wildly elated”. “I didn't go into this thing to win a prize,” he said. He went in the aldermanic race Voter for what he might have to offer to Castlegar. “It would appear to me teal thing. We do Dget flooding He noted he. tackled the library. location issue “quite M, ded all now that the citizens have .the candidates who ran in accepted me and I feel really quite humble about this ELECTION ‘81 the election. He also thanked his many advisors, the elec- because the people have expressed their faith in me. “I am certainly going to do the best I can and work extremely hard for them,” he said. MacBain said he was some- what upset over the defeat of the storm sewer referendum but pleased about the app- roval of the road paving referendum. “Storm sewers are a crit- s split on referendums We'll be getting our stre- ets spruced up, but there won't be any new storm sewers. Castlegar voters last night approved the $385,00 paving referendum but rejected the $605,000 storm sewer refer- endum. The paving referendum — which will cost the average homeowner $16.73 a year for the next 15 years — was approved by 57 per cent of the voters (1,158), while 43 per cent (873) voted against. The storm sewer refere- ndum was slightly closer with 55 per cent voting against (1,116 voters) to 45 per cent in favor (903 voters). The storm sewer referendum would have seen the average homeowner pay $24.60 a year for 25 years. As it is, homeowners will start paying for the paving in 1983. * Scrutineers at the com- munity complex noted after the ballots had been counted that many ballots were spoil- ed. One unnamed ssrutineer said spoiled ballots for the sewer referendum may have been enough to “throw it over the edge”. The scrutineer said unma- rked ballots and ballots mar- ked with two Xs were the most common form of spoiled ballots. However, returning officer Ron Skillings said the spoiled ballots were actually fewer than last election. “Voters are improving,” he said. They are becoming more educated and valuing their mark more. However, he couldn't say how many votes had been spoiled until a closer count was taken. tors, the press and the radio station for their support. Meanwhile, Stasila said he was “quite happy with the results”. He noted it was his first time running and he placed just 67 votes back of the incumbent alderman. Stasila quoted a line from a national politician saying pol- iticians have to know how to win, lose, and win and lose with dignity. and hinted it may have been his undoing. “It was unfortunate, but that’s the way it is,” he added. Carl Henne was un- available for comment. The four-way race .was close from the outset, with the four candidates jockeying for the three available seats. About half-way through the counting, the positions start- ed to become clearer as McBain took the lead, follow- ed by MacKinnon, with Hen- ne and Stasila battling it out for the final spot. Strangely enough, not a single politician by the community complex to find out how the race was By RONNORMAN Editor Incumbent Audrey Moore was returned as Castlegar mayor by an overwhelming margin in last night’s munic- ipal elections. Moore: trounced former alderman Jim Gouk by more than 500 votes as she polled 62.5 per cent of the ballots cast. Gouk managed just 783 votes (37.5 per cent) to Moore's 1,304. The outcome seemed to come as a bigger shock to Gouk than Moore. “It caught us by surprise,” Gouk admitted after the final tallies had been confirmed. “We didn’t expect it.” He said throughout his campaign he had received strong indications of support. “But when the chips were down they just weren't there,” he said. Gouk. added that at one point in the campaign he was sure he could pull off the win. “We figured we ran a good campaign; a clean campaign,” he said. He noted he still tallied “a lot of votes” which he hopes ‘will cause Moore to analyze her methods —'“and may = cause her to change.” to work slowly to put in the |, storm, sewers. It will mean AUDREY MOOK said returning offic means “our council doing goed work.” trust that’s been hand: She said she will trust with care. She also congratulat four newly-elected alder All Gouk added he was still. glad he ran. “I-think it gives a ‘little more quality tothe election when’ genes 8 fight for: it.” °"Meanwhile, Moore: was a gracious winner. She thank- ed her campaign workers and added, “It’s superb the great number of people who got out and voted.” x Of the 3,681 eligible voters, 2,126 cast ballots — or 57.8 per cent cast ballots. That's about the same as'last year, ’ another six months “just to check. base.” “During this campaign I learned a lot of, things,"‘she said. Moore said she was “very pleased” the paving referen- dum was approved (by 57. per cent), ‘but had words of warning about the storm sewer referendum. She said council will have How we voted VOTERS VOTERS ADVANCE MOBILE COURTESY AK LZ POLL POLL Pou 7 MAYO! Moore Gouk 297 552 558 32 Henne 484 MacKinnon 573 MacBain 90 Stasila 465 ————— Calderbank 617 Franks 193 wogenees an an Ey ze the south end of the munic- Spality won't be paved as quickly because council can't | pave the streets before the torm, sewers are in place. ‘We'll just have to do a bit ‘achievements, including: the iter system and industrial though she too wasn't to firing shots at her ert. Calderbank swept to victory last night with a wave of public support. Calderbank clobbered chal- lenger Heike Franks for the one-year aldermanic seat, polling 1,506 votes to Franks’ 509. ‘luck’ of the gods,” he said.” However. he “noted incum- bents normally “stand. a ‘better chance.” Calderbank added his op- ponent had. strong views which he didn't agree with. Nevertheless, he called it - it was : He, said he was more concerned about the mayor- alty race between incumbent Audrey Moore and former alderman Jim Gouk than his own race. Gouk resigned Sept... 29 to run against Moore. ° “:He said the credit. Moore . should have received for the city’s new water system “was. going down the tubes” in the -elpetion fight, Calderbank said he was “very sorry” to see the - storm séwer referendum de- “feated ‘since the work can ‘only ‘be done by. capital contract. We just can't do the storm. sewers in “bits and ‘pieces”, he said. ~ “But,” he added, “the ‘elec- tors were not prepared to pay for it, so there it goes.”