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HomeGovernmentBusinessOsage News Editorial Board finalizes 2014 election advertising rules

Osage News Editorial Board finalizes 2014 election advertising rules

The Osage News Editorial Board finalized the newspaper’s rules for advertising for the 2014 Osage Nation Primary Election, General Election and Minerals Council Election.

It will be first come, first serve for the Osage Newsprinted publication. There will be limited space and the Osage News cannot guarantee all candidates’ ads will make the printed publication.

All advertisements, online and in print, must be prepaid. Failure to pay by the deadline will result in a candidate’s ad going unpublished, no exceptions.

For the Osage News online banner ad, each candidate can purchase up to a maximum of three weeks advertising. However, the three weeks purchased cannot be back-to-back and the Osage News has started taking reservations for the space.

If no candidate requests the online banner ad and it becomes available, candidates who have already purchased three weeks may purchase an additional week and so on. An advertising week consists of seven days, Monday-Sunday. Candidates are allowed to pick which weeks they wish to purchase for the entire election season.

Candidates are not required to advertise with theOsage News.

To reserve space for the online banner ad contactOsage News Editor Shannon Shaw Duty atsshaw@osagetribe.org or call her at (918) 287-5669. 


By

Osage News


Original Publish Date: 2013-04-04 00:00:00

Author

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Shannon Shaw Duty
Shannon Shaw Dutyhttps://osagenews.org

Title: Editor
Email: sshaw20@gmail.com
Twitter: @dutyshaw
Topic Expertise: Columnist, Culture, Community
Languages spoken: English, Osage (intermediate), Spanish (beginner)

Shannon Shaw Duty, Osage from the Grayhorse District, is the editor of the award-winning Osage News, the official independent media of the Osage Nation. She is a graduate of the University of Oklahoma with a bachelor’s degree in Journalism and a master’s degree in Legal Studies with an emphasis in Indigenous Peoples Law. She currently sits on the Freedom of Information Committee for the Society of Professional Journalists. She has served as a board member for LION Publishers, as Vice President for the Pawhuska Public Schools Board of Education, on the Board of Directors for the Native American Journalists Association (now Indigenous Journalists Association) and served as a board member and Chairwoman for the Pawhuska Johnson O’Malley Parent Committee. She is a Chips Quinn Scholar, a former instructor for the Freedom Forum’s Native American Journalism Career Conference and the Freedom Forum’s American Indian Journalism Institute. She is a former reporter for The Santa Fe New Mexican. She is a 2012 recipient of the Native American 40 Under 40 from the National Center for American Indian Enterprise Development. In 2014 she helped lead the Osage News to receive NAJA's Elias Boudinot Free Press Award. The Osage News won Best Newspaper from the SPJ-Oklahoma Chapter in their division 2018-2022. Her award-winning work has been published in Indian Country Today, The Washington Post, the Center for Public Integrity, NPR, the Associated Press, Tulsa World and others. She currently resides in Pawhuska, Okla., with her husband and together they share six children, two dogs and two cats.

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