8A - Thursday, September 4, 2008 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com I I MegaBus driver arrested on DUI charges in Southwest Michigan AMER SANDS AMER'S Company offers rides from Chicago to Ann Arbor for as little as $1 By JENNA SKOLLER Daily StaffReporter A 51-year-old MegaBus driver en route to Ann Arbor was arrest- ed Monday in southwest Michigan after failing a series of sobriety tests. Michigan State Police pulled over driver Kenneth Lewis of Coach USA's MegaBus line on eastbound I-94 just outside Ben- ton Township after seeing the bus swerving and speeding, police said. They arrested Lewis after he failed sobriety tests administered at the scene. He is being held at Berrien County Jail awaiting arraignment, police said. State troopers then escorted the bus to a truck stop, contacted MegaBus, and instructed the com- pany to bring another driver to transport the bus and its 30 pas- sengers to their destinations in Ann Arbor and Detroit. The bus was a shuttle travel- ing from Minneapolis to Detroit with a stop in Chicago. The MegaBus line offers heavily- discounted rates, making the line popular with University students. LSA sophomore Elise Wanger, returning to school from home, was on another MegaBus making the trip from Chicago alongside Lewis's bus. Wanger said her bus had to turn around about one hour outside Ann Arbor so the driver of herbus could act as a representative of MegaBus and speak with the police. Wanger said the bus's passengers waited at a rest stop for about two hours until a new driver arrived to trans- port the extra passengers. The bus arrived in Ann Arbor around 5:15 p.m., three hours after its scheduled arrival time. The legalblood alcohol limit for someone operating a commercial vehicle like a bus is significantly lower than the standard alcohol limit - .0015, compared with .08. Lewis tested between .06 and .07, said Sgt. Ken High of the Michi- gan State Police Department, plac- ing him well above the legal limit. Dale Moser, chief operating officer of Megabus.com, said Coach USA has a zero-tolerance policy regarding alcohol con- sumption. "This is unacceptable behav- ior," Moser said. "We do not accept our drivers consuming any type of drugs or alcohol, and we will do all we can to prevent it from happening in the future. The safety of our passengers has always been and will always be our top priority." Lewis has been suspended from his position at MegaBus, but the company won't decide whether to keep him until after an internal investigation. Moser said this is the first drunk driving incident in Coach USA's 35-year history. "I am hoping this one incident does not surface as a reflection of the company," Moser said. "We will take a hard focus on ensuring this does not happen again and will implement pro- cedures to mitigate future inci- dents." Wanger said the incident gave her a negative impression of the bus line, which she had used in the past. "It was my third time taking MegaBus, and probably my last," Wanger said. US Gov't: Cocaine, meth use dropped in 2007 MAX COLLU NS/Daily Amer Bathish, swoer of Amer's Mediterranean Deli on State Street, sands the outside of his establishment to apply a new fin- ish to the word workr US confirms raid inside Pakistan Report finds young adults used less as drugs became scarce WASHINGTON (AP) - Cocaine and methamphetamine use among young adults declined significantly last year as supplies dried up, lead- ing to higher prices and reduced purity, the government reports. Overall use of illicit drugs showed little change. About one in five young adults last year acknowledged illicit drug use within the previous month, a rate similar to previousyears.But cocaine use declined by one-quarter and methamphetamine use by one-third. Drug use increased among the 50-59 age group as more baby boomers joined that category. Their past month drug use rose from 4.3 percent in 2006 to 5 per- cent in 2007. "The baby boomers have much higher rates of self-destructive behavior than any parallel age group we have data from," said John Walters, director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy. Walters, 55, is a boomer himself. The National Survey on Drug Use and Health, being released Thursday by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, is based on inter- views with about 67,500 people. Overall, about 20 million people 12 or older reported using illicit drugs within the past month. Marijuana was the most popular by far, with 14.4 million acknowl- edging use of marijuana in the past month. Among adolescents, age 12 to 17, drug use dipped from 9.8 percent in 2006 to 9.5 percent last year, continuing a five-year trend. Their use of alcohol and cigarettes also fell during the same period. "The earlier youuse drugs, alco- hol and cigarettes, the more likely you are to have a lifelong problem," Walters said. Much of the progress in curbing drug use occurred between 2002 and 2005. Critics of the nation's drug policies warned not to read too much into the latest numbers. "Use of marijuana and other drugs naturally fluctuates and if you look at long-term trends, cur- rent rates are smack in the middle of the range they've been in for decades," said Bruce Mirken of the Marijuana Policy Project, which advocates the decriminalization of marijuana. "There is simply no evidence that current policies ... have made any difference." A World Health Organization survey of 17 countries this year* showed that people in the U.S. were more likely than people else- where to have tried illicit drugs. The U.S. tied New Zealand for the highest rate of marijuana use and far outpaced other countries on cocaine use, the survey found. The U.S. report measured drug use over the past month, while the WHO's looked at drug use over a lifetime. The WHO survey concluded: "The use of drugs seems to be a feature of more affluent coun- tries. The U.S., which has been driving much of the world's drug research and drug policy agenda, stands out with higher levels of alcohol, cocaine, and cannabis, despite punitive illegal drug poli- cies as well as a higher minimum legal alcohol drinking age than many comparable developed countries." More than half the people who tried drugs for the first time in 2007 used marijuana, according to the U.S. survey. The rate of new marijuana users came to about 6,000 people a day. The overall rate of illicit drug use dropped from 8.3 percent of those 12 and older to 8.0 percent in 2007. Walters also acknowledged concern about nonmedical use of prescription pain relievers among young adults. He urged parents to have more awareness of where they keep their prescriptions and to throw them away when the drugs are no longer needed. The survey, which also exam- ined mental health, indicated that 24.3 million people 18 or older experienced "serious psychologi- cal distress over the past year." It stressed the link between men- tal health and substance abuse, noting that adults expetiencing depression within the past year were more than twice as like to have tried illicit drugs during that time than other adults. Pakistani gov't says American forces caused 15 deaths ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) - American forces launched a raid inside Pakistan Wednesday, a senior U.S. military official said, in the first known U.S. ground assault in Pakistan against a suspected Taliban haven. The government condemned the attack, saying it killed at least 15 people. The American official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of cross border operations, told The Associated Press that the raid occurred on Pakistani soil about one mile from the, Afghan border. The official didn't provide any other details. Pakistan's Foreign Ministry protested saying U.S.-led troops flew in from Afghanistan for the attack on a village in the country's wild tribal belt. A Pakistan army spokesman warned that the appar- ent escalation from recent foreign missile strikes on militant targets along the Afghan border would furth'er anger Pakistanis and undercut cooperation in the iar against terrorist groups. The boldness of the thrust fed speculation about the intended target. But it was unclear whether any extremist leader was killed or captured in the operation, which occurred in one of the militant strongholds dotting a frontier region considered a likely hiding place for Osama bin Laden and al-Qaida's No. 2 leader, Ayman al- Zawahri. U.S. military and civilian offi- cials declined to respond directly to Pakistan's complaints. But one official, a South Asia expert who agreedto discuss thesituationonly if not quoted by name, suggested the target of any raid like that reported Wednesday would have to be extremely important to risk an almost assured "big backlash" from Pakistan. "You have to consider that something like this will be a more- or-less once-off opportunity for -which we will have to pay a price in terms of Pakistani cooperation," the official said. Suspected U.S. missile attacks killed at least two al-Qaida com- manders this year in the same region, drawing protests from Pakistan's government that its sovereignty was under attack. U.S. officials did not acknowledge any involvement in those attacks. But American commanders have been complaining publicly that Pakistan puts too little pressure on militantgroupsthat are blamed for mounting violence in Afghanistan, stirring speculation that U.S. forces might lash out across the frontier. Circumstances surrounding Wednesday's raid weren't clear, but U.S. rules of engagement allow American troops to chase militants across the border into Pakistan's lawless tribal region when they are attacked. They may only go about six miles on the ground, under normal circumstances. U.S. rules allow aircraft to go 10 miles into Pakistan air space. The raid comes at a particularly sensitive time for the Pakistan government which is trying to overcome political divisions and choose a new president on the one hand, while the army is battling the militants on the other. In other signs of Pakistan's pre- carious stability three days before legislators elect a successor to Per- vez Musharraf as president, snip- ers shot at the prime minister's limousine near Islamabad and gov- ernment troops killed two dozen' militants in another area of the restive northwest. Pakistani officials said they were lodging strong protests with the U.S. government and its mili- tary representative in Islamabad about Wednesday's raid in the South Waziristan area, a notorious hot bed of militant activity. The Foreign Ministry called the strike "a gross violation of Paki- stan's territory," saying it could "undermine the very basis of coop- eration and may fuel the fire of hatred and violence that we are trying to extinguish." Prior to the U.S. military con- firming the U.S. raid, Pakistan gov- ernment and military officials had insisted that either the NATO force or the U.S.-led coalition in Afghan- istan -both commandedby Amer- ican generals - were responsible. A spokesman for NATO troops in Afghanistan denied any involve- Auto sales fell in Aug., but some say worst is over ment. The army's spokesman, Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas, said the attack was the first incursion onto Paki- stanisoil by troops fromthe foreign forces that ousted Afghanistan's hard-line Taliban regime after the Sept. 11 attack on the U.S. He said the attack would under- mine Pakistan's efforts to isolate Islanc extremists and could threaten NATO's major supply lines, which snake from Paki- stan's Indian Ocean port of Kara- chi through the tribal region into Afghanistan. "We cannot afford a huge upris- ing at the level of tribe," Abbas said. "That would be completely counterproductive and doesn't help the cause of fighting terrorism in the area." The Pakistani anger threat- ens to upset efforts by American comma ders to draw Pakistan's military into the U.S. strategy of dealing harshly with the militants. Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, met last week with Gen.AshfaqKayani, the Pakistani army chief. Mullen said he came away encouraged that Pakistanis were becoming more focused ontheproblemof militants using the country as a safe haven. However, Abbas, the army spokesman, said' Wednesday that cross-border commando opera- tions were not discussed and he reiterated Pakistan's position that its 'forces should be exclusively responsible for operations on its territory. Pakistani officials say the U.S. and NATO should share intelli- gence and allow Pakistani troops to execute any raids needed inside Pakistan. However, Washington has accused rogue elements in Pakistan's main intelligence ser- vice of leaking sensitive informa- tion to militants. American officials say destroy- ing militant sanctuaries in Paki- stani tribal regions is key to defeating Taliban-led militants in Afghanistan whose insurgency has strengthened every year since the fundamentalist militia was ousted for harboring bin Laden. But there has been debate in Washington over how far the U.S. can go on its own. Citing witness and intelligence reports, Abbas said troops flew in on at least one big CH-47 Chi- nook transport helicopter, blasted their way into several houses and gunned down men they found there. He said there was no evidence that any of those killed were insur- gents or that the raiders abduct- ed any militant leader, but he acknowledged Pakistan's military had no firsthand account. There were differing reports on how many people were killed. The provincial governor claimed 20 civilians, including women and children, died. Army and intelli- gence officials, as well as residents, said 15 people were killed. Habib Khan Wazir, an area resi- dent, said he heard helicopters, then an exchange of gunfire. DETROIT (AP) - Nearly every major automaker saw its U.S. sales drop in August, but many are see- ing signs that the worst slump in recent history may have bottomed out. Most upbeat were executives from General Motors Corp., which posted a 20.3 percent sales decline from a year ago but a 31 percent improvement over July's totals. Much of the gain came from offering all buyers employee dis- counts on many models, but Mark LaNeve, GM's vice president of North American sales, said there's hope that June and July were the trough for U.S. sales. "We are very encouraged by what we saw in August. It gives us reason to think that we are start- ing to pull our way out of this," he said yesterday in a conference call with reporters and industry ana- lysts. Overall, U.S. sales fell 15.5 per- cent compared with August of last year but rose 10 percent from July's dismal figures, according to Autodata Corp. The seasonally adjusted annual sales rate for August was 13.7 mil- lion, up from 12.5 million in July, the worst month in 16 years. Chrysler LLC said its U.S. sales fell more than 34 percent last month, while Ford Motor Co. reported a 26.5 percent decline. Toyota Motor Corp.'s sales dipped 9.4 percent, and Honda Motor Co. saw a 7.3 percent slide. Nissan Motor Co. was the only major automaker to report an increase over August 2007: Its sales climbed 13.6 percent. But the increase over July buoyed most automakers, with sales executives saying that lower fuel prices were starting to ease consumers' minds. They also reported the market shiftingalittlebitbacktowardtrucks and sport utility vehicles, driven by incentives and lower gas prices. Automakers said consumer sen- timent was improving, housing price declines and manufacturing production are stabilizing, and exports continue to be strong. 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