Issue 101, Volume 79

Page 1

SPORTS

SPORTS

CLASS

The Cougars lost four starters at the offensive line but have enough experience to fill that void.

English teacher to publish book about humanity, gangrelated life.

New coach same scheme

Professor’s poetry speaks on past SEE PAGE 7

SEE PAGE 5

APRIL

CALENDAR CHECK: 20

Easter. Break out the chocolate rabbits and marshmallow peeps.

THE DAILY COUGAR

T H E

O F F I C I A L

S T U D E N T

Issue 101, Volume 79

N E W S PA P E R

O F

T H E

U N I V E R S I T Y

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

O F

H O U S T O N

S I N C E

1 9 3 4

ONLINE EXCLUSIVES AT THEDAILYCOUGAR.COM

VISITORS

Five elected to new Board Hadiya Iqbal Staff writer

of new aspect to Wolffest, and as the competition got closer and closer,

The University selected five alumni of the College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences to be a part of the newly created Board of Visitors. The BoV is a leadership group of private-sector opinion leaders and University advocates that serves to advance UH and improve the University’s image in Houston and throughout the region. “Prospective members are nominated by peers and are carefully selected by a nominating committee and meet with President (and Chancellor Renu) Khator and Vice President of Advancement Eloise Stuhr,” said Richard Bonnin, executive director of media relations at UH. T h e f i v e McNabb recipients were Comerica Bank Houston President J. Downey Bridgwater, Gibbs and Bruns LLP attorney Fermeen Fazal, Houston Hispanic Chamber of Commerce CEO Laura Murillo, KPRCNBC 2 news anchor Dominique Sachse and Lonestar Energy Fabrication CEO Darryl A. Schroeder. “The members of this group were selected for their expertise and excellence in a variety of fields,” said Board Chair John T. McNabb II in a UH press release. “This board is comprised of people who care about Houston and are confident that UH can play a vital role in advancing the city.”

WOLFFEST continues on page 2

BOARD continues on page 3

BAUER

Wolff students bring food to raise funds Ciara Rouege Staff writer

Wolffest may have had hundreds of students and an impressive fast-food menu, but it was not the standard eatand-meet. Beyond the napkins and condiments, the festival is an exercise of entrepreneurial persistence and business expertise. Since last semester, seniors enrolled in the Cyvia and Melvyn Wolff Center for Entrepreneurship at the C.T. Bauer College of Business have been rattling the Houston restaurant scene searching for donations and sponsorship for their booths, which will raise funds for WCE programs and scholarships. “I tried to get my team to … sell the benefits,” said entrepreneurship senior Glenn Figeroa. “One thing you have is the philanthropic mission, which you can promote through logos and an online presence.” Figeroa said securing monetary donations was the biggest challenge in the competition. Figeroa is one of eight seniors selected to lead as a team chief operating officer, and he was confident

that his staff on Team Duality will win Wolffest attendees over with its fusion menu. CEO Jennie Hemphill packed heat, bringing her family barbeque grill and all-female team, Blazing Saddles, which planned to burn the competition with its all-meat menu. “When we first began, we had a training session on how to get sponsors and that prepared everybody,” Hemphill said. The training did not equip Figeroa and Hemphill for the surprises down the road. During the great sponsorship hunt, Hemphill discovered that a sponsor was endorsing another team. She and the other CEO tried to make a deal, but it failed; both teams lost the support of a big name. Figeroa, who has more than seven years of experience and connections in the bar industry, could not have anticipated having two of his sponsors fall though due to medical emergencies. “I thought that I had everything connected. I had all my ‘i’s dotted and what not, but then it all started crumbling,” Figeroa said.

Hundreds of students filtered through Butler Plaza Tuesday afternoon in order to buy food from the numerous booths that came to UH through Wolff Center students. | Justin Tijerina/The Daily Cougar Since the clock is always ticking, many creative ideas didn’t make the schedule. “We wanted to bring some sort


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