Don't hate the new Honduras Why the international fit over the president's removal is absurd SEE PAGE 5 Wilco loosens up Jeff Tweedy apes The Beatles and has some fun on new album SEE PAGE 9 SPORTS Finding the ultimate fan A Daily Sports Editor's quest to find a mentor for the tame student section SEE PAGE 11 INDEX Vol. CXIX, No. 143 t @J2009Tfhe Michigan Daily michigandaily'"om NEW S ........................... 2 OPINION ............................... 4 CLASSIFIED ............ 6 ARTS ............................ 9 SPO RTS ................................11 A crowd of family and friends gathers on Main Street to watch the Ann Arbor Jaycees 19th Annual Fourth of July Parade on Sat- urday. The parade featured a stream of muscle cars, entertainers, two Army hummers and 19th-century bicycles. Unemployment hits A2 Weekly Summer Edition ANN ARBOR PARKING Solar- powered oparking DDAhopes newpay system will make parking easier By TORREY ARMSTRONG Daily StaffReporter There is no need to save quar- ters to fill parking meters any more. The Ann. Arbor Downtown Development Authority has introduced an initiative to make parking in Ann Arbor easier and more efficient with the instal- lation of 25 new e-park stations on Main, Liberty, Maynard and State streets. The new machines were introduced on June15. Ann Arbor is now among the several cities - including Seattle, Milwaukee, Detroit .and New York - that use the electronic payment machine technology. The e-parks will cover nearly 150 parking spaces. Some of the mainbenefitstomotoristsinclude the option to pay with cash, debit or credit cards and the ability to add time to a parking space by phone. Joe Morehouse, DDA deputy director, said the machines are powered entirely by solar pan- els, which save the equivalent of 3,400 9-volt batteries in energy per year. Plans to add extra machines around the city are on hold See METERS, Page 2 Stu( We ForL ta ands finding an unpr With in Mic applied places, clothin: struggli "I ha and the but I'm "If I se dent employment I'll fill out an application, but other than that my job search has really b site posts 1,061 slowed down." Brichta's troubles are hardly fewerjobs unique. University students look- ing for summer employment face a By ERIC CHIU competitive job market still reeling Daily StaffReporter from the current economic down- turn. SAsophomore Marie Brich- In May, Michigan's unemploy- most cash-strapped students, ment rate hit 14.1 percent - the a job this summer has been highest in the nation. Though un- recedented challenge. employed students are not included unemployment on the rise in this figure, Lynne Sebille-White, higan, Brichta - who has senior assistant director of em- I to work at more than 30 ployer relations at the Career Cen- ranging from restaurants to ter, said in an e-mail interview that g stores, since April - is still high unemployment for adults has a ing to find a job. strong effect on employment pros- aven't had much luck so far, pects for students. job market discourages me, "Those who had full-time jobs still looking," Brichta said. who are finding it difficult to find e a hiring sign, I'll go in, and a new full-time position may take part-time or temporary positions, leaving less of these open for stu- dents" Sebille-White wrote. She added that the economy causes a trickle-down effect on spending, which reduces employ- ment opportunities. "When the economy sours, peo- ple cutback on spendingand leisure activities, which decreases retail sales, (and the) number of people dining out or traveling, which causes those industries to cut back on their hiring, leading to fewer jobs for students, too' In a report release last week, University economists predicted the state will lose more jobs by the end of 2009 than in any other year since the 1950s. The report esti- mated about 310,700 will be lost - triple the amount calculated in See UNEMPLOYMENT, Page 2