The Weekly Packet - April 22, 2021
The Weekly Packet - April 22, 2021
Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD
Read The Weekly Packet along with 8,500+ other magazines & newspapers with just one subscription View catalog
1 Month $9.99
1 Year$99.99 $49.99
$4/month
Subscribe only to The Weekly Packet
Buy this issue $1.99
In this issue
Beth Dickens takes the reins as Blue Hill Chamber of Commerce president, after serving on the board since 2017. Surry residents will elect one select board member and one school board member and vote on 11 warrant items at the annual town meeting by referendum vote, scheduled for Friday, April 23, from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Also inside, the Blue Hill School Board announces the last day of school as well as graduation date and plans.
Blue Hill voters approve GSA tuition request
BLUE HILL—George Stevens Academy received good news when results of the April 20 Blue Hill annual town meeting by referendum became available.
1 min
Blue Hill Public Library
The Schmidt Ocean institute’s scientific vessel, Falkor, the world’s first year-round philanthropic research vessel, is the subject of the upcoming Slaven lecture at the Blue Hill public library. The institute’s website, schmidtocean.org, streams real-time video whenever it has equipment deployed to the ocean floor.
3 mins
Eaton - Ballou
Audra Marie Eaton and William Bra den Ballou of Sedgwick were married February 12, 2021, in a private ceremony.
1 min
Michael B. Wood
After a full day of gardening with his wife, Mike Wood died on April 2, 2021, suddenly and serenely under a spring sky full of birds, serenaded by peepers, at his home in Deer Isle, Maine, after a very full life.
3 mins
The Weekly Packet Newspaper Description:
Publisher: Penobscot Bay Press
Category: Newspaper
Language: English
Frequency: Weekly
The Weekly Packet has been serving the Blue Hill Peninsula for the last five decades. It shares the stories and news of Blue Hill, Brooklin, Brooksville, Sedgwick and Surry, Maine. Steeped rich in traditions such as fishing, boat building and agriculture, the newspaper follows the lives of its people and industry while also serving as the local paper of record and reporting on the municipal and educational decisions that affect the lives of the people that call the peninsula their home. Blue Hill, with its hospital and diverse alternative health care providers, as well as its many businesses and cultural institutions, serves as a nexus for the area.
- Cancel Anytime [ No Commitments ]
- Digital Only