the federal agency that constructed most of the water treatment infrastructure on the Navajo Nation, only builds infrastructure to address water’s safety — not odor, color or taste.
Going on a Navajo-led tour of this ... The New York Times The distinctive color of the clay used in construction lent its name to our last stop on the tour, White House Ruin.
NAVAJO NATION (AP) — Emptiness paints the vast ranges and rugged mountains of 22 Native reservations speckling Arizona, sculpting daily life, culture and even politics in nearly a quarter of the ...
Navajo Nation President Buu Nygren submitted his quarterly State of the Navajo Nation report to the Navajo Nation Council while attending a meeting at the White House to discuss the appointment of ...
HALCHITA, Utah (AP) — After a five-year wait, Lorraine Black and Ricky Gillis heard the rumblings of an electrical crew reach their home on the sprawling Navajo Nation. In five days' time, their home ...
John Kinsel Sr. sat in the front row for the photo, on the far right side. It was 1942, and he was a fresh-faced teenager, having graduated from St. Catherine Indian School in Santa Fe just a few ...
Navajo Nation Vice President Richelle Montoya attended the first day of the Navajo Nation Council's fall session Monday with a report detailing the work she has been engaged in, just days after ...
John Kinsel Sr., one of the last remaining Navajo Code Talkers who transmitted messages during World War II based on the tribe’s native language, has died. He was 107. Navajo Nation officials in ...
He was among the last surviving members of a group that transmitted a code, crafted from the Navajo language, that U.S. forces used to confuse the Japanese. By Alexandra E. Petri John Kinsel Sr., ...
These conclaves include respected elders from Navajo, Hopi, and White Mountain Apache tribes. “They’ll look around, maybe, but they’ll be like, ‘Of course it’s our decision. It’s no ...
Oct. 20 (UPI) --John Kinsel Sr., one of the last remaining Navajo Code Talkers who sent coded messages for the U.S. military during WWII through their tribe's unwritten language, has died.
He was approached by a white man who started questioning him in Navajo. The man turned out to be World War I veteran and former missionary Phillip Johnston, who came up with the idea of building a ...