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Crownpoint / Eastern 406 312,000 15 Lake Valley Beʼekʼid Halgaii: Crownpoint / Eastern 306 84,000 15 White Rock: Tséłgaii "White Rock" Crownpoint / Eastern 76 110,000 15 Tsé Íí’áhí (Standing Rock) Tsé Ííʼáhí "Standing Rock" Crownpoint / Eastern 641 74,104 15 Littlewater Tó Áłtsʼíísí: Crownpoint / Eastern 427 64,962 15 ...
Crownpoint (Navajo: Tʼiistsʼóóz Ńdeeshgizh) is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) on the Navajo Nation in McKinley County, New Mexico. The population was 2,900 at the time of the 2020 census, [3] up from 2,278 in 2010. [4] It is located along the Trail of the Ancients Byway, a designated New Mexico Scenic Byway. [5]
Aneth Chapter House Tuba City Chapter House. A chapter is the most local form of government on the Navajo Nation. The Nation is broken into five agencies. Each agency contains chapters; currently there are 110 local chapters, each with their own chapter house. [1] Chapters are semi-self autonomous, being able to decide most matters which ...
According to a news release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of New Mexico, Ryntana Yazzie, 34, a member of the Navajo Nation, pleaded guilty to the involuntary manslaughter ...
Kin Ya'a (Navajo: "tall house") is a Chacoan great house and the center of a significant Ancestral Puebloan outlier community. It is located near Crownpoint, New Mexico on the Dutton Plateau, 25 miles (40 km) south of Chaco Canyon.
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."
Crownpoint High School is a public high school in Crownpoint, New Mexico. It is a part of the Gallup McKinley County Schools district. Its attendance boundary includes Crownpoint and Borrego Pass .
After expanding the school's mission, the Center was renamed Crownpoint Institute of Technology in 1985. The institution was designated a land-grant college in 1994 alongside 31 other tribal colleges. [2] In 2006, the Navajo Nation Council approved changing its name to Navajo Technical College. The institution's name was changed once more in ...