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Torreon Chapter House is located 26 miles (42 km) southwest of Cuba on NM Highway 197. It is 67 miles (108 km) northeast of Crownpoint. The motto of Torreon Chapter House is "Serving the Governmental needs of the Torreon/Star Lake Chapter Residents."
Montoya is from Torreon, Sandoval County, New Mexico and is HashtÅ‚'ishnii (Mud clan) and born for Ta'neeszahnii (Tangle clan). [3] Her maternal grandfather is KinÅ‚ichii'nii (Red House clan), and her paternal grandfather is Táchii'nii (Red Running into Water clan). [4]
Chapter officials operating out of a Chapter House register voters who may then vote to elect Delegates for the Navajo Nation Council or the President of the Navajo Nation. The following table contains chapter names, chapter names in Navajo, a rough literal English translation, population, and land area estimates.
Incumbent Vice President Myron Lizer did not seek re-election, instead running for U.S. House in Arizona. Nez and Abeyta advanced to the general election, as did the challenging ticket of construction manager Buu Nygren and Torreon/Star Lake Chapter President Richelle Montoya. Nygren and Montoya won the general election by a 6-point margin, and ...
Torreon, Torrance County, New Mexico This page was last edited on 30 December 2019, at 16:49 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...
Torreon was resettled in the Spring of 1841 by Nino Antonio Montoya and twenty-six other farmers under a grant from the Prefect of the Central District of New Mexico. [2] The Torreon Grant was named after the defensive towers [3] built at Manzano 6.6 miles to the south, and consisted of an area approximately three miles east–west by six miles ...
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The council is composed of 24 district delegates, or councilors, chosen by direct election, who represent 110 municipal chapters within the states of Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah. Delegates must be members of the Navajo Nation and be at least twenty-five years of age. Delegate offices are at the Navajo Nation governmental campus in Window Rock.