Sovi.AI - AI Math Tutor

Scan to solve math questions

QUESTION IMAGE

since 2006, what has the national collegiate athletic association banne…

Question

since 2006, what has the national collegiate athletic association banned? * 2 points
○ the use of native american logos and mascots during its postseason tournaments
○ the use of african american logos and mascots during its postseason tournaments
○ the use of asian american logos and mascots during its postseason tournaments
○ the use of latin american logos and mascots during its postseason tournaments

some tribes approve of certain native american mascots. what evidence * 2 points in the text supports this claim?
\before every home football game at florida state university, a student portraying the famous seminole leader chief osceola gallops down the field on the back of an appaloosa horse named renegade.\
the national collegiate athletic association (ncaa)-the organization that regulates college sports-has banned the use of native american logos and mascots during its postseason tournaments since 2006.\
\both the seminole tribe of florida and the seminole nation of oklahoma said they liked fsus nickname, forcing the ncaa to rethink its stance against mascots-at least as far as the seminoles were concerned.\
\oftentimes, when a video camera is panning an audience at a football game, we see a young person with a painted face wearing a huge headdress, steve densen, a member of the chickasaw tribe told senior edition.

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

The NCAA banned the use of Native American logos and mascots in postseason tournaments since 2006. Evidence for some tribes approving of certain Native American mascots is that the Seminole Tribe of Florida and the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma liked FSU's nickname, causing the NCAA to rethink its stance regarding Seminoles.

Answer:

  1. the use of Native American logos and mascots during its postseason tournaments
  2. "Both the Seminole Tribe of Florida and the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma said they liked FSU's nickname, forcing the NCAA to rethink its stance against mascots-at least as far as the Seminoles were concerned."