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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 ...
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.
Navajo Times; Navajo-Hopi Observer; S. ... Tribal Business News; Turtle Mountain Times This page was last edited on 4 July 2023, at 03:07 (UTC). Text ...
The Navajo Nation is served by various print media operations. The Navajo Times used to be published as the Navajo Times Today. Created by the Navajo Nation Council in 1959, it has been privatized. It continues to be the newspaper of record for the Navajo Nation. The Navajo Times is the largest Native American-owned newspaper company in the ...
It was the first newspaper to be published in Navajo [4] and the only one to have been written entirely in Navajo. [5] [6] In April 2019, roughly 100 issues of the newspaper were digitized as a part of the University of Arizona Library's National Digital Newspaper Program and they are currently available online. [7]
In 1943 Young and Morgan became editors of the first Navajo-language newspaper, Ádahooníłígíí, published by the Navajo Agency. It was the second newspaper to be published in a Native American language, after the Cherokee Phoenix , which was founded in 1828 and published through 1834 (it was revived intermittently and began regular ...
He left Greeley to become managing editor of Navajo Times until 1987. For two years, starting in 1990, he was vice president, co-owner and editor of Navajo Nation Today. [2] In 1995, he earned his Master of Arts in journalism at Prescott College. [1] That same year, he published a children's book: Songs from the Loom: A Navajo Girl Learns to Weave.