The evidence the author uses to support the false analogy is that college sports are just as important as bookstores.
We can arrive at this answer because:
- The author uses a false relationship between university games and university bookstores.
- He uses this to show that students who work in bookstores receive salaries, but university players don't, but they are of equal importance.
- The evidence that the author shows to confirm this relationship is that college games are as important as bookstores.
- However, both the relationship and the evidence convey an incorrect idea.
Bookstores are part of the educational system that universities should promote, university games are not. In addition, many college athletes have scholarships, while students working in the campus do so for salaries or lower funding.
You can find more information about false analogy at the link:
brainly.com/question/1235960
$6600 X 2 8 years
$13200 X 2 16 years
$26400 X 2 24 years
$52800 X 2 32 year
$105600 X 2 40 year
=
$211,200
There were opening announcements made at the beginning of the radio adaptation of H.G. Wells’s <em>The War of the Worlds,</em> but what they did not anticipate is that the listeners who tuned in half-way through the radio play would have no idea that it was only a dramatization and would believe the news-like structure which understandably caused them distress.
The production team made lots of revisions, slowing down the pace of the first act, deleting some crucial scenes that would be tell-tale signs of a fictional work, and all this contributed to panic that ensued. The following day, there was a press conference held to clear all of it up.
Moshe<span> is a poor Jew who lives in Sighet. He is deported before the rest of the Sighet Jews but escapes and returns to tell the town what the Nazis are doing to the Jews. Tragically, the community takes </span>Moshe<span> for a lunatic.</span>