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Traditional Tiger Idolization
Trinity idol Reagan Wilkins wins Trinity talent competition with original song.
20
So we think we can dance?
Sofia Villarreal previews slew of upcoming Trinity dance events.
22
First home meet goes swimmingly
Get the details of the Tigers’ swim ming team defeat of UTPermian Basin.
Halloween Issue Pages 9-12
theTrinitonian Volume 112, Issue 10
Sexual assault forum draws student groups On Oct. 28, SGA, students and the dean discussed intoxication vs. incapacitation by James Godfrey NEWS REPORTER The Student Government Association and the office of the dean of students held a forum to discuss the distinction between intoxication and incapacitation at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 28, in the Fiesta Room. The forum featured proposed statements from a number of student organizations which were used as points of discussion during the forum itself. “I’m interested to see what thoughts students will bring forward and what will come of the discussion,” said David Tuttle, associate vice president for student affairs and dean of students, before the forum.
see FORUM Page 6
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Serving Trinity University Since 1902
• October 31, 2014
Trinity hosts ISIS panel
“There are a set of activities, a set of relationships, a set of demands that are being made, not in the context of a resistance to extremism, but in the context of the rough-and-tumble of everyday governance.”
At the end of WWI, the agreement of a unified Arab state was dead...these borders were ultimately arbitrarily drawn, but what is important is, because of the borders, there was an inherent instability in these states.”
“I thought it was essential to open up the conversation to the rest of the campus—to bring in others—because I know everyone has questions.”
Tahir Naqvi
Sussan Siavoshi
Habiba Noor
Habiba Noor, Tahir Naqvi and Sussan Siavoshi alongside students Lauren Schroeter, Andrew DuBois and Adam Lakani discuss the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria in light of international attention. by Courtney Shikle NEWS REPORTER On Wednesday, Oct. 22, Trinity’s department of religion hosted a panel about the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS). The panelists were Habiba Noor, visiting assistant professor of religion; Tahir Naqvi, assistant professor of sociology and anthropology and urban studies; and Sussan Siavoshi, chair and Una Chapman Cox distinguished professor of political science. photos by Sarah Thorne
see PANEL Page 3
University spirit logo changes to refresh image following trademark issues with Detroit Tigers
New spirit logo aims to improve reflections of campus climate and continued marketing initiatives by Courtney Shikle
NEWS REPORTER Trinity University released the new spirit logo for varsity athletics on Friday, Oct. 24, which will replace the former Trinity spirit logo.
Trinity could not trademark the old logo due to similarities between it and the logo of the Detroit Tigers. “In 1913, Trinity University hosted the Detroit Tigers summer baseball camp. That is where the name ‘Tigers’ for Trinity came from,” said Charles White, vice president for information resources, marketing and communications. Later, when Trinity tried to trademark the spirit logo, the Detroit Tigers objected, saying it looked strikingly
similar to their own spirit logo. “The tiger is in a kind of downward, slinking stance and it is weaving its way through the letters, and the Detroit Tiger is doing a very similar pose,” said Jeanna Goodrich Balreira, associate director for creative services. “The interesting part of it is we never told them or reminded them that they had summer camp in 1913, assuming no one would be alive who would possibly remember that. So we continued to seek the trademark and deal with
their objections,” White said. However, about four years ago, someone created a Twitter account using the Trinity spirit logo. “We objected to the person using our logo because what they were doing was bashing Trinity. They had some issue with Trinity and they were angry about something. They kept making these crazy allegations and we wanted them to stop,” White said. But when the university tried to stop the person from using the logo, they found that it was not trademarked,
and they could not legally stop anyone from using it. “That is when we first realized we didn’t have a trademark, and we decided that we needed something that we could trademark,” White said. “Besides the fact that we could not get it trademarked, it is just a little bit outdated and way too complicated of a logo to serve simple, modern purposes that logos and graphics are serving nowadays,” Balreira said.
see LOGO Page 4