■. i April 22, 2004 NEWS IRIEFS by James Richards Staff Reporter >US CRIME Campus Police received a call a Mills Hall resident saying a 1 of unidentified people en- her room without her knowl- /Vpril 20. Campus Police are abating the incident as a non- i entry burglary. ]ampus Police investigated an 16 vandalism of a Housing behind Founders Hall. The Mazda’s passenger window _ leen smashed with a cinder |k. |l Campus Police reported a k and forgery case on April 15 ■\ iriE two unidentified residen- lljtudents. The case remains un- [nnvestigation. ^ILLE ■ I'he two finalists interview- Asheville police chief met dl police officers Monday after- « [ in a private session at the ville Civic Center. ,111 City Manager Jim Westbrook decide between Rocky Mount We Chief William Hogan and ' iijel, Md., Police Chief David ‘ [core to replace retired ChiefWill farino. ILEIGH . 1 Even though he’s out of the ;esidential race, John Edwards ; on North Carolina’s first-ever ■ Jwide Democratic caucus. CiHofficial results from 100 lunties gave Edwards more than ffeixent of the total vote among (e|candidates, according to the BOciated Press. ;;Massachusetts Senator John jm'was second with 27 percent. April 17 vote will determine h candidates get delegates for emocratic National Conven- ^^CIGALPA, HONDURAS M Honduras announced April would withdraw its 370 sol- fe from coalition forces in Iraq, iduras cited spiraling violence iressure created by Spain’s de- m to remove its forces as rea- for leaving. uin commands troops in Iraq other Spanish-speaking na- is in the coalition: Honduras, i^lvador, Nicaragua and the Do- p|can Republic, according to the ^iciated Press. Stationed in central Iraq, Hon- ®3n soldiers performed peace- ®ing duties including clearing opes and providing medical care. After days of negotiation, the pS'-led coalition in Iraq agreed rtl 19 to end the military stand- Falluja, if civic leaders can ^ade insurgents to turn in their y Weapons. Sporadic violence Hues despite the fragile truce lluja, west of the Iraqi capital dad. * President Bush announced pi 19 he would nominate John Negroponte, now the U.S. am- jador to the United Nations as jassador to Iraq when sover- is turned over to Iraqis June ,'.1 he U.S. Senate must confirm '^/lomination. An electronic processing service s computer malfunctions caused thousands of overcharged Wal-Mart customers nationwide who paid with Visa or Master Card. However, the Wal-Mart on Tunnel Road in Asheville (right) is yet to receive any reports from customers affected by the malfunction. Malfunction overcharges Wal-Mart customers A computer problems result in 800,00 overcharged transactions BY Terri Fisher Staff Reporter The electronic processing service, First Data Corp., encountered a computer mal function that overcharged more then 800,000 transactions at Wal-Mart stores na tion wide between March 31 and April 2. Transactions were initially double or triple charged when customers used their debit or credit cards. “Anyone who conducted a transaction with a Visa or MasterCard on March 31- should check their statements,” said Staci Busby, spokesperson for First Data. By April 19, the cause of the malfunc tion had not yet been identified, but the in vestigation continued, according to Busby. “People need to check their bank and credit card statements regularly,” said Busby. “We hope that the problem is cleared up so that nobody is overcharged and nothing shows up on their statements.” Wal-Mart employees were forewarned about the possible overcharging, according to Denita Gallion, a senior management stu dent and Wal-Mart employee. “The credit card issue began around March 31 and April 1. They sent the cash iers a notice saying that some customers may be over charged if they used a Visa or MasterCard,” said Gallion. “They said that it wasn’t a Wal-Mart prob lem, that it was the credit card company. They also said that it wasn’t only at Wal- Mart.” Immediately after the overcharges. First Data opened a new fiscal week with stock prices actually rising. Greenwood Village- based First Data shares rose 24 cents on the Monday following the malfunction, to close at $43.29 per share. As one of the largest electronic commerce and payment services worldwide, First Data serves approximately 3.5 million merchant locations, 1,400 card issuers and millions of consumers, providing the ability to pur chase goods using virtually any form of pay ment. “Personally I don’t know of any particu lar customers that were affected,” said Gallion. Representatives from the Wal-Mart on Tunnel Road were not able to say whether any of their customers were affected. Man agers said they have no record of complaints. Why Spain blamed the Basque BY Lauren Abe Staff Reporter After the bombing of commuter trains in Madrid in March, the Spanish government regarded the Basque terrorist group responsible, according to the Economist. “When I heard about the bomb ing of the commuter trains in Madrid, I was scared it was the Basque,” said Liz Laxague, a junior French major. “However, the people arrested have no connection to ETA.” The Basque are a group of Span ish people who live in the northern part of Spain and the southern part of France. In 1959, Basque activists against the Francisco Franco’s dic tatorship formed the ETA, which stands for Euskadi ta Askatasuna, ac cording to the Council on Foreign Relations. “When two hundred people died in the March 11 train bombings, the Spanish government blamed it on the Basque,” said John Gant, assistant professor of Spanish. “Most of the Spanish knew the Basque were not responsible for the bombings because the Basque never kill that many people at a time.” The ETA is the military wing of the Basque independence movement. It is considered a terrorist group as it resorts to kidnappings and bombings targeted at police forces and govern ment officials in a pursuit for inde pendence, according to the Council on Foreign Relations. “The Spanish people knew that this is not how the Basque operated,” said Gant. “The Spanish people re- Liz Laxague sented the president’s actions, so they voted for the socialist party.” The Spanish gov ernment blamed the ETA for the train bombings. However, evidence surfaced indi cating that an Islamic terrorist group, such as al-Queda, may be re sponsible for the at tack, according to CNN. “The terrorists at tacked Madrid because the former president supported Bush and sent Spanish troops to Iraq,” said Gant. “A lot of the other countries in Europe did not support Bush.” The newly elected Socialist Tim Love LAURA COWAN STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER leader, Jose Luis Rodriquez Zapatero, criticized former Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar’s support for Bush and the war in Iraq and decided to pull the troops out of Iraq because coalition forces are not placed under U.N. control, according to CNN. The historical Basque community consists of seven prov inces, four in Spain and three in France. The Basque have their own language, culture, icons and heroes. Their goal is to unite under a com- See basque on page 10 —™ '■Mi •: • UNCA proposes new parking lot I aSSt * ■': MAX TAINTOR/photo editor UNCA held a meeting April 20 about plans to clear out the area near the corner of WT Weaver and Broadway (above) for a new parking lot. Many students and locals attended the meeting and shared their concerns about destroying the forested area. BY Adam McMullin Staff Reporter Nearly 200 concerned students and UNCA neigh bors met April 20 to discuss a parking lot the university proposes to build on school property near the corner of WT Weaver and Broadway. “We’re trying to solve some of our short term parking issues that are com ing to a head,” said Stephen Baxley, Director of Facilities Management and planning at UNCA. The University must ad dress the lack of parking, due in part to construction, as soon as possible, accord ing to Baxley. “We also have the burden of success,” said Baxley. “Last year we had the larg est freshmen class and pro jections are still on to have a good size class this year and we’re trying to get ahead of some of our parking prob- See parking on page 10 U.N. inspectors investigate Iran BY Amanda Edwards Staff Reporter U.N. nuclear inspectors entered Iran April 12 after weeks of delay attempting to verify whether the country’s nuclear program serves a legitimate purpose or if it is in position to create atomic weapons. “The United Nations should be in there,” said Joe Telegen, a jun ior creative writing major. “It is im perative that the United Nations know what weapons exist and where, but Iran should not be held up to a higher standard than coun tries that we have to try to get along with for political reasons. No one knows exactly what capabili ties any of those countries have. Any country, including the United States, with nuclear capacities and an aggressive government is auto matically a threat to the world.” A month ago, Iran barred in spectors after the United Nations’ regulatory agency for nuclear is sues, International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), released a report stating that Iran had not lived up to its reporting requirements re garding the use of its nuclear pro gram. Iran’s failure to report the ma terial facilities and activities in question concerns U.N. inspectors most, according to the report. Iran’s IAEA Safeguard Agree ment requires the country to pro vide the agency with information “concerning nuclear material sub ject to safeguards under the agree ment and the features of facilities relevant to safeguarding such ma terial.” Iran claims that they use their nuclear program solely for the pro duction of energy, but uncertain ties about Iran’s program increased last year when the IAEA reported that inspectors found radioactive uranium particles that are enriched to a weapons-grade level, higher than what Iran requires to fuel a nuclear reactor. Enriched uranium can be used for either atomic en ergy or to make bombs. “There is no room for error with atomic weapons,” said John Mitchell, a senior history major. “If the world waits for these weapons to fall into the wrong hands, the consequences could be greater than we can conceive.” The U.N. team will be focus ing the inspections on the Natanz Uranium Enrichment Plant and the Isfahan Nuclear Technology Center. A series of meetings with Iranian officials will also take place. Earlier this year, Mohammed El Baradei, director of the IAEA, vis ited the Natanz facility and discov ered that the plant had been equipped with 160 new gas cen trifuges, accor4ing to an IAEA re port. Centrifuges are rotating de vices that can selectively separate See IRAN on page 10