By donatiing to non profit outlets so they wont have to pay taxes
        
             
        
        
        
U were put to work every day so it was tough
        
                    
             
        
        
        
The National Indian Youth Council (NIYC) differed from the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI) because the NIYC used harsh rhetoric and direct action strategies.
<h3>What is NIYC?</h3>
- The National Indian Youth Council, Inc. (NIYC), the second-oldest Native American nonprofit in the United States, was founded in 1961.
- NIYC served primarily as an Indian environmental organization in the 1970s, bringing numerous cases on behalf of Indian communities opposed to milling, uranium mine, and strip mining on their property. 
- For stopping the $6 billion coal gasification plants on the Navajo Reservation, NIYC received respect on a global scale.
- The National Indian Youth Council committed all of its efforts to making the future of our Indian People better.
- The NIYC aims to advance Native American public education and employment training, inform the public about their issues, support religious freedom, and boost political engagement.
Learn more about political organizations here:
brainly.com/question/17145092
#SPJ4
 
        
             
        
        
        
C. Chief<span> administrator</span>
        
             
        
        
        
First of all, a <em>supply curve</em> is a chart in Economy that shows us the relation between Price and Quantity of a certain good or service. Several factors may cause this curve to shift to the left or right, e.g.: An increase of customers' purchase power, the decrease of the need for a certain product by the population, and so on...
a. Resource prices rise is another example, and would cause the supply curve to shift to the left. As with it, the final price of the products that depend on this given resource for their production, would rise, hence causing their buyers to purchase fewer quantities of them.
b. If a quota is placed on a good, it would also cause this good's final price to rise, hence causing the consumers to buy less, hence shifting the curve to the left as well.
<em>Note: </em>Of course, these are assuming that the goods in question are <em>non-essential </em>goods. That is, people may choose to buy less of them. In case of essential goods (like toilet paper, or electric power for example), people would still consume it regardless of changes in price! And in that case, the curve would stay still, or even shift slightly to the right, upon a price rise.