009437 Locally owned LUBE, OIL, FILTER DOWNTOWN 1320 Willamette 485-2356 2975 West 11th 344-0007 • Chassis Lube • New Oil Filter • Up to 5 Qts. 10W-30 Kendall Oil • Clean Front Window • Vaccuum Front Floor Boards Kendall MOTOR OIL NHW IN TH£ PflOTfCTlOM 3/4 or 1 -ton & Extra Cab Trucks Additional Appointment necessary Most light cars & trucks OPEN Sundays 013209 Become a member of the University of Oregon Student Orientation Staff. Help first-year ducks get their feet wet in college life with events during IntroDUCKtion and Week of Welcome. As a SOS member you will receive up to $1200 and 3 upper-division academic credits. For more information contact: | Student Orientation Programs j 465 Oregon Hall ] (541)346-1159 Applications are available in 465 Oregon Hall and are due by January 28,2002 by 5 p.m. I “i taught a boy named p Sean to explore the world ^ on the Internet... to think big. People say you can't the world. But I made a nee. Just ask Sean." tHcLaurln, AmfeCorps Member WWW.AMERICORPS.OfiG n 1.800.942.26?? [1.800.833.3722 S AMERICORPS. GIVE BACK FOR A YEAR. !■“ SERVE YOUR COMMUNITY. CHANGE YOUR LIFE. Visit AmeriCorps at the Career Fair on January 30th ERB Memorial Union from 11:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Hope to see you there! NATIONAL Enron executive claims files have been shredded By William Neikirk Chicago Tribune WASHINGTON (KRT) — A for mer Enron Corp. executive said Monday that company docu ments were destroyed at its Hous ton headquarters even after the federal government began inves tigating the firm’s spectacular col lapse last fall. The startling accusation of document shredding prompted Enron’s attorney, Robert Bennett, to say that the company would immediately look into the allega tion made by former executive Maureen Castaneda in an ABC News interview. Displaying a box of shredded ma terial, Castaneda, identified by ABC as the former director of Enron’s for eign investments section, said the document destruction began after Thanksgiving and continued as late as last week in the 19th-floor ac counting office of the company’s Houston headquarters. She said she got the box of paper to use for pack ing material and that there were “a lot more” boxes like the one she showed on the air. Federal authorities and congres sional committees are already in vestigating the shredding of docu ments by Enron’s auditor, Andersen LLP, in connection with Enron’s failure. The revelations that Enron may have done the same thing added a new dimension to the bur geoning scandal. “It’s one thing to make bad busi ness decisions; it’s another thing to cover up bad business decisions,” said Ken Johnson, spokesman for Rep. Billy Tauzin, R-La., chairman of the House Energy and Com merce Committee, one of the pan els investigating the firm. “If it’s true, this is an even bigger mess than we thought.” Johnson said the committee un doubtedly would look into the new allegation and probably call Castaneda to testify. Meanwhile, the panel will hold a session Thursday to hear evidence on the shredding of documents at Ander sen, and is threatening to force a former Andersen auditor, David Duncan, to testify. Duncan has sought a postponement. Castaneda told ABC she found shredded paper with references to some of Enron’s controversial busi nesses partnerships, such as Jedi, which the firm used to hide mil lions of dollars in debt. “A lot are accounting docu ments,” she added. “You can tell be cause of the colors yellow and pink.” “I left the second week of January, and the shredding was going on un til the day I left, and I have no idea if it continues,” said Castaneda, who worked across the hall from the ac counting office. Bennett issued a statement after the broadcast, saying that “we are investi gating the circumstances of the re ported destruction of documents. In October, the company issued several directives to all Enron employees worldwide that all relevant docu ments should be preserved in light of pending litigation. If anyone violated these directives, they will be dealt with appropriately. ” The Securities and Exchange Commission began investigating Enron in mid-October, and this month the Justice Department said it had opened a criminal investiga tion. Other federal agencies are looking into various aspects of En ron’s collapse. A number of com mittees on Capitol Hill have launched their own probes. Enron’s demise has political sig nificance in that the firm was an ac tive contributor to political cam paigns, especially those of President Bush. The firm gave money to both parties and lobbied extensively for its causes in the na tion’s capital. The investigations cover not only the shredding of documents, but also the possibility of criminal behavior in the use of partnerships to hide the true financial condition of the company from investors. Some congressional Democrats also allege that the Bush adminis tration’s energy policy was heavily influenced by Enron and its top executive, Kenneth Lay. The shredding of documents also is becoming a major issue in a suit against Enron’s board and its officers. William Lerach, attorney for plaintiffs who have sued the firm’s board and its officers, said he plans to take the box of shred ded documents to federal court, according to The Associated Press. “They even shredded on Christ mas Day,” Lerach told the AP. Chicago Tribune correspondent Flynn McRoberts in Houston con tributed to this report. ©2002, Chicago Tribune. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services. King supporters favor non-violence By Dahleen Glanton Chicago Tribune ATLANTA (KRT) — Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday was cel ebrated across the country Monday in typical fashion: glittery parades, fiery ecumenical services and a proclamation signed by President Bush. But beneath the surface of this year’s tribute to King, a man who devoted his life to non-violent social change, there was a rum bling of discontent among civil rights activists who believe the war in Afghanistan is wrong. Though King supporters refused to use the holiday as a platform for their stance, there is a growing sen timent among those who believe in King’s philosophy that war under almost any circumstance is unac ceptable and that the military use of force in Afghanistan must stop. “I believe that (King) would feel the same as I do, that we would like to see our country take the moral high ground and try to bring those people to justice and address the issue of terrorism through diplomatic and law-enforcement channels rather than so much bombing and killing,” said Rev. Joseph Lowery, who co-founded the Southern Christian Leadership Conference with King. “The gov ernment has the responsibility to make the nation safe, but the means by which we respond de fines us more than what our ene mies do to us.” Since the Sept. 11 terrorist at tacks, some high-profile civil rights leaders have engaged in a delicate balancing act, weighing their long time commitment toward non-vio lence with the nation’s overwhelm ing support for the president’s call to war against those nations that support terrorism. During an ecumenical service at Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist Church, attended by First Lady Laura Bush, there was barely a mention of the war on terrorism. However, Coret ta Scott King, the civil rights leader’s widow, as well as former U.N. Ambassador Andrew Young and others have quietly stated in recent months that war conflicts with King’s teachings. King, a recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964, preached the philosophy of non-violence as a way of life. And many of his sup porters said those words are as relevant today as they were when King spoke out against the Viet nam War in the 1960s, drawing the ire of President Lyndon John son as well as many prominent African-Americans. “I thought we made progress on war, but it looks like the situation with us is getting worse,” Young, a King protege, said during a tele vised fireside chat with civil rights leaders in Atlanta in Sep tember. “Dr. King said the bombs you drop in Vietnam will explode at home. The bombs we drop on the Middle East will explode at home quicker.” On the same program, Coretta King, an acknowledged pacifist, said: “I shudder to think of the prospect of war, an endless cy cle of war is what we will be get ting into.” Lowery, who worked at King’s side during the civil rights move ment, said the slain leader would be “saddened by the fact that we still resort to so much violence both domestically and internationally.” Groups in Atlanta have protest ed against expanded racial profil ing supported by the Bush admin istration, fearing that it could be unjustly applied to blacks. In Washington, Black Voices for Peace on Monday held a five hour assembly of community or ganizers at the Metropolitan AME Church to plan a national cam paign seeking a new U.S. foreign policy promoting permanent peace and organizing support for those unemployed because of the Sept. 11 terrorist attack and the anthrax crisis. Martin Luther King III, head of the SCLC, said during a King cele bration in Knoxville, Tenn., last - week that more than 33 years after his father’s death, his goal of elimi nating racism, poverty and vio lence remains a dream. He urged Americans to observe his father’s holiday by “doing something that will uplift the dream and make the dream become a reality.” In Boston, King’s eldest daugh ter, Yolanda, told 1,500 people at the city’s largest annual MLK Memorial Breakfast, that Sept. 11 had erased racial differences — for now. “Skin color was covered by the ash of burning towers,” she said. “Perhaps the best response to this tragedy is not to go back to normal.” Chicago Tribune correspondent Glen Elsasser and Tribune news services contributed to this report. ©2002, Chicago Tribune. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services.