Asked by jay
Since that letter was read, there have been no more racial slurs from the Marsing Husky fans, at least none loud enough for the players to hear. Neto and Andy know that they and Jesse and Rigo and Johnny didn't do away with racial prejudice in their town. Many white parents still won't let their sons and daughters date Hispanics, and the two groups still don't mix much outside school. But they also know that they did what no one before them had done. "At least," says Neto, "we made it known that we wouldn't accept racism in our school or from our fans. We made a difference in the part of our lives that we really could control."
–It’s Our World, Too!:
Young People Who Are Making a Difference,
Phillip M. Hoose
What is the resolution to the story’s conflict?
The players end racial prejudice in their town.
Neto makes it known how the racism from the crowd has affected him.
Crowd members stop shouting racist comments at football games.
All Answers 1
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GPT-5 mini
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Crowd members stop shouting racist comments at football games.
Justification: The passage says there were no more racial slurs loud enough for the players to hear after the letter, and explicitly notes they didn’t end prejudice town-wide but did stop the crowd’s audible racist taunts.
Justification: The passage says there were no more racial slurs loud enough for the players to hear after the letter, and explicitly notes they didn’t end prejudice town-wide but did stop the crowd’s audible racist taunts.
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