Serving The Willistons, Albertson, Herricks, Mineola, Roslyn Heights, and Searingtown
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Friday, October 21, 2016
Vol. 65, No. 43
ELECTION GUIDE
TOWN EYES HIKING LEGAL SMOKING AGE
SUOZZI TOUTS INDEPENDENCE
PAGES 35-46
PAGE 3
PAGE 6
TRV Tax Revolt Party
LWVNC Voter Guide 2016,
a publication of the League
of Women Voters of Nassau
County. Reprinted with permission.
Remembering a mayor who shaped village Edward Smith, namesake of Lions Club, inducted to Wall of Honor BY N O A H M A N S K A R Edward Smith was good friends with John DaVanzo, a longtime Village of Mineola trustee, and Lou Sanders, founder and publisher of the Mineola American. Smith, a former village mayor and president of the Mineola Chamber of Commerce and Lions Club, joined them on the village’s Wall of Honor on Tuesday, a tribute to his “selfless” public service, said Matthew Smith, his son. “All three of these men helped shape our village for decades to come,” village Mayor Scott Strauss said at Tuesday’s Mineola Chamber of Commerce meeting. “All three led by not just words, but by their actions.” Smith was chosen as this year’s Wall of Honor inductee after his death last September at age 92. The Chamber of Commerce started the Wall of Honor last year as a way to recognize people who have “steadfastly given of them-
selves for the betterment of our village,” Strauss said. In 1955, Smith founded Smith & DeGroat Real Estate in Mineola, which is now a prominent Long Island real estate firm run by Matthew Smith. Steve Ford, a past chamber president, said he remembers Smith selling him the building for his Willis Hobbies store 17 years ago. Smith spent 22 years on the Village Board, including 10 as mayor from 1975 to 1985 and another 12 as a trustee. Strauss said he remembers seeing Smith run board meetings as a boy and admiring the way he “owned the room.” “He guided the village in progression for decades to come with a steady hand,” Strauss said. “... All through my adult life and certainly as mayor, I looked back and said, ‘I remember what Mayor Smith did then.” Continued on Page 63
PHOTO FROM MINEOLA SCHOOL DISTRICT
Glitter Germs Hampton Avenue School students used glitter to learn how germs spread in a class activity. See photo on page 55.
School tours aim to show need for fixes in Herricks BY N O A H M A N S K A R Herricks school district officials will lead three tours next week to show residents exactly what a major package of building projects would fix.
The tours on Oct. 26, 28 and 29 will give residents a closer look at the smaller “health and safety” improvements and larger renovations included in the district’s $29.5 million capital initiative in ad-
vance of a Dec. 6 bond referendum, said Fino Celano, the district superintendent. “Just like if you own a home, there are always improvements and projects that Continued on Page 63
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