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There are 129 schools in the NCAA's Division 1 Football Bowl Subdivision. Of these, 115 have nicknames that end in "s" (like the UCLA Bruins) 19 have nicknames that involve a color (the Stanford Cardinal), and · 13 nicknames involve both a color and end in "s" (the California Golden Bears). How many teams have nicknames without a color and don't end in "s?

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Answer:

There are 8 teams that have nicknames without a color and don't end in "s.

Explanation:

This can be solved by treating each value as a set, and building the Venn Diagram of this.

-I am going to say that set A are the teams that have nicknames that end in S.

-Set B are those whose nicknames involve a color.

-Set C are those who have nicknames without a color and don't end in "s.

We have that:


A = a + (A \cap B)

In which a are those that have nickname ending in "s", but no color, and
A \cap B are those whose nickname involves a color and and in "s".

By the same logic, we have


B = b + (A \cap B)

In which b are those that nicknames involves a color but does not end in s.

We have the following subsets:


a,b, (A \cap B), C

There are 129 schools, so:


a + b + (A \cap B) + C = 129

Lets find the values, starting from the intersection.

The problem states that:

13 nicknames involve both a color and end in "s". So:


A \cap B = 13

19 have nicknames that involve a color. So:


B = 19


B = b + (A \cap B)


b + 13 = 19


b = 6

115 have nicknames that end in "s". So:


A = 115


A = a + (A \cap B)


a + 13 = 115


a = 102

Now, we just have to find the value of C, in the following equation:


a + b + (A \cap B) + C = 129


102 + 6 + 13 + C = 129


C = 129 - 121


C = 8

There are 8 teams that have nicknames without a color and don't end in "s.

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