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The Navajo-Hopi Observer is a weekly newspaper serving the Hopi and Navajo nations and the city of Flagstaff in northern Arizona. References
Native Times News, (formerly the Oklahoma Indian Times) [56] [57] The Native Tribe of Kanatak (Native Tribe of Kanatak) Wasilla, Alaska [58] Navajo-Hopi Observer, Flagstaff, AZ; Navajo Times, (Navajo Nation), Window Rock, AZ, founded in 1959 [59] News from Native California, intertribal magazine, Berkeley, CA
This newspaper, printed entirely in Navajo, was produced by the Bureau of Indian Affairs rather than the tribe itself. [9] In 1959, the Navajo Tribal Council started publishing the English-language Navajo Times, the first daily newspaper published and owned by a tribal nation.
Families living on tribal lands are 1,200 times more likely to live in homes ... At least 66% of Navajo and Hopi tribes use wood to heat their homes. ... told CBS News the crackle of burning wood ...
Navajo cultural advisor George R. Joe explains the painful history, and present-day controversies, that shaped his work on AMC crime drama 'Dark Winds.' Stereotypes. Taboos.
Native News Online; Navajo Times; Navajo-Hopi Observer; S. Smoke Signals (newspaper) T. Tribal Business News; Turtle Mountain Times
The Navajo Times – known during the early 1980s as Navajo Times Today – is a newspaper created by the Navajo Tribal Council in 1959; in 1982 it was the first daily newspaper owned and published by a Native American Indian Nation. [2] [3] Now financially independent, it is published in English; its headquarters are located in Window Rock ...
Hopi also occupy the Second Mesa and Third Mesa. [9] The community of Winslow West is off-reservation trust land of the Hopi tribe. [citation needed] The Hopi Tribal Council is the local governing body consisting of elected officials from the various reservation villages. Its powers were given to it under the Hopi Tribal Constitution. [10]