~1j £kcian &iIaj ILI -+;1 ilfX } 1 .i i I( A)lL- I j 11,1_ LD I) T W N Y 11 I1 \P i( 1 "P HAI I )OM Ann Arbor, Michigan Monday, November 24, 2014 michigandaily.com CAMPUS LIFE Twitter CEO talks future of business RUBY WALLAU/Daily Survival Flight helicopter pilot Kim Pacsai inspects one of the team's three Eurocopter EC-155 used to transport patients. nCallA mpse of the itTlv 0 _Z14%110% 'USSurvival Flight progl ram1 In Livingston, team Among fields and scattered Eurocopter EC-155 helicopters Down the hall from the main houses, the. airport primarily operating as part of the Sur- hanger, Kim Pacsai, a Survival plays vital role for attracts small, privately-owned vival Flight program, providing Flight helicopter pilot, monitors aircraft. Late on a Friday after- medical transport of critically weather patterns across most UMHS's critically- noon, ultra-light sport planes ill patients around Michigan and of the state. At 5:30 on a Friday , illalternate landings with single- neighboring states - many of the afternoon, he is 10.5 hours into ill patients engine Cessnas under the com- patients ending their journey at his 12-hour shift - the second mand of pilots-in-training. the University Hospital where day of his 7-day rotation. By IAN DILLINGHAM The airport also plays a criti- they are able to receive specialty Looking at his computer, Pac- Daily NewsEditor cal role for the University of care not generally available in saipointsto aseriesofgreenindi- Michigan Health System. At a other health care facilities. cators overlaid on a map of the HOWELL, Mich. - Forty remote corner of the facility lies At the Survival Flight head- state. Each one represents an air- minutes from the bustling streets the Livingston County Emer- quarters, there is a self-described port or hospital helipad - green of Ann Arbor - two miles north gency Medical Services building, "firehouse mentality." The only means the weather is favorable of I-96 - the Livingston County where a maize and blue helicop- difference is that this "firehouse" to fly. Except for a couple isolated Airport is encased with stillness, ter can be seen on the tarmac. is responsible for more than spots in the northwest corner of soothed with the faint hum of Livingston is home to one of 200,000 square miles of popu- the lower peninsula, the weather propellers. the University's three leased lated areas. See FLIGHT, Page 3A After speaking at 13 commencement, Costolo offers advice to students By HILLARY CRAWFORD DailyStaffReporter He's back. Twitter CEO Dick Costolo, a University alum and speaker at the 2013 Spring Commence- ment, spoke Friday at the Ross School of Business in an event sponsored by Business frater- nity Phi Chi Theta. In Blau Auditorium, Busi- ness senior Max Yoas, the vice president of Phi Chi Theta, and Costolo sat across from each other in armchairs on stage, creating an interview-esque setting. Yoas asked questions for the first half hour, followed by a question and answer ses- sion with the audience. Costolo discussed the grow- ing potential of e-commerce and ad units, his management style and his previous career in improvisation comedy and run-ins with actor Steve Carell. Although scattered, each topic drew from ideas related to risk- takingand pursuingpassions. After graduating from the University inl1985 with adegree in Computer Science end Com- munications, Costolo said he moved to Chicago to pursue a career in improvisational comedy. Looking back at his days spent in the classroom, he recalled being the "last person in my computer science classes to become CEO one day." Costolo, originally from Royal Oak, Mich., said he used to worry that people would judge him for not entering a traditional career following graduation. "If you live your life trying to do what is expected of you you'll be frozen on the stage of your own life," Costolo said. "If See TWITTER, Page 2A CAREERS Internships in Detroit attract many students CLOWNiN' AROL Quicken Loans draws 17 percent of interns from the University By THERESE BREUCH For theDaily As students begin filling out applications for summer intern- ships, or attending one of the University's career fairs, one Detroit-based company presents a range of options for them. Over the past three summers, Quicken Loans, the nation's sec- ond largest mortgage lender, head- quartered in Detroit, has taken approximately 17 percent of their interns from the University, mak- ing it one of the highest repre- sented colleges in last summer's internship program. Quicken College Recruiter Ali- sha Roberts interned for the com- pany in the summer of 2011. When she started, the program was com- prised of 200 students; it has now grown to over 1,000 interns each summer, with 173 of them coming from the University Interns have been placed in wide variety of settingsowithin the company, including accounting, information technologyand mort- gage operations. Quicken Loans and its chair- man and founder, Dan Gilbert, have gained attention as har- binger of Detroit's revitalization efforts. In August 2010, the com- pany moved its headquarters and 12,000 employees from a Detroit suburb to downtown, accounting for a major portion of the 85,000 people working in the central business district. Costing about $1.3 billion, Gil- bert has updated more than 60 properties in the city. "Thegoalhereistomakedown- town Detroit nothing less than an attraction and destination for both residents and visitors alike," wrote DanGilbertin aMarch2013 e-mail, Detroit Free Press report- ed. "I think the coolest thing is being apart of the comeback story," Roberts said. When Roberts first moved to Detroit, she said there weren't See QUICKEN, Page 2A ROBERT DUNNE/Daily Interarts junior Daniel Ghastin performs at the "Queens and Clowns" show, a free performance of a self- described circus, at the Duderstadt Video Studio on Saturday. CAMPUS LIFE alaeeconomic outlook topic of confernce NATIONAL AWARD Engineering grad student wins Rhodes scholarship Among 877 U.S. nominations, David Moore one of 32 selected for honor By SHOHAM GEVA Daily StaffReporter Engineering graduate stu- dent David Moore was named a 2015 Rhodes Scholar, the Rhodes Scholar program announced Sat- urday. He was nominated in Septem- ber by University Provost Mar- tha Pollack. Out of 877 American nominees by universities and col- leges nationwide, 32 were chosen to be scholars, according to the program's website. Moore's efforts in improv- ing the lives of people with dis- abilities and advancing medical research were spotlighted by the program, which funds studies for scholars at Oxford University in England across a variety of disci- plines. As a part of his coursework, See RHODES SCHOLAR, Page 3A 3 Potential job Friday. Sponsored by the Univer- growth, GDP sity's Research Seminar in Quantitative Economics, the urge debated event featured 13 presenta- tions focusing on the U.S. By LEA GIOTTO economy on the first day and Daily StaffReporter Michigan's economy on the second. e University hosted its Daniil Manaenkov, RSQE Annual Economic Out- assistant research scientist, Conference in Rackham and Rackham student Mat- hitheater Thursday and thew G. Hall, RSQE forecast- ing team member, gave the conference's first speech, which covered the country's economic outlook for 2015 and 2016. "We expect that 2015 will be the year when U.S. econom- ic growth will finally acceler- ate meaningfully," Manaenkov said. He said he expects the overall economic growth, See CONFERENCE, Page 3A Th 62nd look Ampi WEATHER Hl:35 GOTA NEWS TIP? Call 734-418-4115 or e-mail TOMORROW LO: 19 news@michigandaily.com and let us know. NEW ON MICHIGANDAILY.COM In defense of Spotify MICHIGAN DAILY.COM/BLOGS INDEX NEWS ........................ 2A ARTS.............A.....5A Vol CXXIV, No. 33 SUDOKU............... 2A CLASSIFIEDS............,...6A 2014The MichiganDaily OPINION.....................4A SPORTSMONDAY......... 1B michigondoily,com 4 A,