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The Morning Sentinel is an American daily newspaper published six mornings a week in Waterville, Maine. Printed at the Portland Press Herald press in South Portland, Maine, it covers cities and towns in parts of Franklin, Kennebec, Penobscot and Somerset counties. The publication was run between 2000 and 2023 by MaineToday Media.
Waterville is home to one daily newspaper, the Morning Sentinel, and a weekly college newspaper, The Colby Echo. [41] The city is also home to Fox affiliate WPFO and Daystar rebroadcaster WFYW-LP, both serving the Portland market, and to several radio stations, including Colby's WMHB, country WEBB, and MPBN on 91.3 FM.
The Lincoln County News – Damariscotta, published once a week on Wednesdays; The Livermore Falls Advertiser – Livermore Falls, published once a week on Wednesdays; Machias Valley News Observer – Machias; Magic City Morning Star – Millinocket; The Maine Campus – Orono, published twice a week on Mondays and Thursdays
The trust owns 5 of out 6 daily newspapers in Maine, the exclusion being the Bangor Daily News.They own the flagship Portland Press Herald and its Sunday edition the Maine Sunday Telegram, as well as the Morning Sentinel of Waterville, the Kennebec Journal of Augusta, the Sun Journal of Lewiston, and the Times Record of Brunswick.
In particular, this list considers a newspaper to be a weekly newspaper if the newspaper is published once, twice, or thrice a week. A weekly newspaper is usually a smaller publication than a larger, daily newspaper (such as one that covers a metropolitan area). Unlike these metropolitan newspapers, a weekly newspaper will cover a smaller area ...
Many of us haven’t had to ponder the nuance of tariffs since 9th-grade history class. That is until this election season when President Trump proposed a 10 to 20 percent tariff on all goods ...
The newspaper's predecessor, the Portland Daily Press, was formed as a pro-Republican newspaper in an era when most American newspapers had strong political allegiances. [1] In the 1920s, under Guy P. Gannett's leadership, the newspaper adopted a more balanced editorial approach, and today the news and opinion sections of the paper are separate ...
He had his first poem published at age 13 in the Waterville Morning Sentinel, a Maine newspaper. [8] As a young man he enlisted in the U.S. Army in February 1946 for the duration of the war, plus six months. [9] Afterward, he earned a B.S. in 1953 from Teachers College of Connecticut (now known as Central Connecticut State University). [2]