Saturday, May 3, 2008

Obama and the 'Hidden Trouble' of Racism

As the volunteers and staffers packed boxes and broke apart furniture last week at Sen. Barack Obama's campaign office in Wilkes-Barre, some began to acknowledge the "hidden trouble" of racism and bigotry they encountered in six weeks of courting Luzerne County voters.

The Obama campaign has a policy prohibiting campaign workers and volunteers from speaking publicly about encounters with racism — a rule designed to keep the focus on the issues.

But one local campaign coordinator, who asked not to be identified, said the hostilities he and other Obama volunteers faced are endemic of a deep racial divide within the electorate and are harmful to the Democratic Party.

"We need to address this diversity issue," he said.

The campaign coordinator, a black veteran who fought in the Vietnam War, said he encountered flares of racism while campaigning for Obama in neighborhoods across the region — from Nanticoke and Wyoming, to Avoca and parts of Wilkes-Barre.

At one door, the campaign coordinator said, a resident told him, "I'll never vote for that black bastard."

The volunteers said biases clouded their door-to-door campaign visits and telephone calls to prospective voters.

"I wouldn't be saying it if it were one or two," the campaign coordinator said.

Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton defeated Obama in the Pennsylvania Primary on April 22 by 214,224 votes, or 9.2 percent.

She won Luzerne County by a 3-to-1 margin.

According to certified election returns, Clinton received 48,122 votes, or 74.71 percent of the Democratic ballots cast in the county. Obama won 16,022 votes, or 24.88 percent. Write-in candidates received 264 votes.

Clinton's dominance in Luzerne County appeared to be fueled by her family ties to nearby Scranton, frequent campaign trips to the area, and the strong support for her from county Democratic leaders.

Racism played a role too, the volunteers said.

"In this area there is too much bigotry," the campaign coordinator said. "We had some out-of-state people come in and the things they were subjected to, they had to go to church after and pray."

Another volunteer, who drove voters to polling places during the primary in a car marked with Obama signs, said he was subjected to a barrage of racial epithets.

"It's 2008, not 1908, but you have that attitude here," campaign volunteer Eric Graff of Fairview Township, said. "It's just a part of this area, but realistically it's a part of any area."

Obama and Clinton will continue their battle for the Democratic presidential nomination with primaries Tuesday in North Carolina and Indiana, which has similar demographics to Pennsylvania.

Obama volunteers in Luzerne County began feeling the sting of racism in the winter, as they solicited signatures to secure the candidate's place on the primary ballot, Ron Felton, president of the Wilkes-Barre branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, said.

"They were running into a lot of negative comments, racial slurs and the sort," Felton said. "I was not surprised."

"This area has problems, it has racial problems. There's racism in this area."

Dr. David Sosar, a political science professor at King's College, said race and gender biases continue to be an issue, acknowledged or unacknowledged, in nearly every part of the country.

"In any area you go, you're going to find some people, a small number like this," Sosar said. "Just as many people could be anti-woman."

Both Obama and Clinton have the potential for history as the first black or first woman Democratic nominee and — pending a victory over presumptive Republican nominee John McCain in November — the first in either of those classifications to become president.

Clinton, the former first lady and current junior senator from New York, has been a nationally known political entity since she campaigned with her husband, former president Bill Clinton, in 1992.

Obama served as a state senator in Illinois from 1997 to 2004 and won election to the United State Senate in 2004.

He had been described by newspaper columnists and radio commentators as the first "post-racism" presidential candidate — the first to break into the mainstream by simultaneously averting and transcending the traditional barriers of race that have undermined the seriousness of White House runs by previous black candidates such as Rev. Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton.

Obama proffered his message of trans-partisan, trans-racial unity in the speech that seared his name and visage into the national consciousness — the keynote at the Democratic National Convention in Boston, July 27, 2004.

"Even as we speak, there are those who are preparing to divide us," Obama said. "Well, I say to them tonight, there's not a liberal America and a conservative America. There's the United States of America. There's not a black America and white America and Latino America and Asian America. There's the United States of America."

Four years later, the racial divide still exists in the Pennsylvania and Luzerne County parts of the United States of America.

According to statewide exit polls conducted for the major television networks and the Associated Press, Clinton received nearly two-thirds of the white vote in the state, while Obama took 92 percent of the black vote.

The exit polls included results from surveys conducted at three polling places in Luzerne County, which is overwhelmingly white, but breakout figures were not released.

Of the 313,000 people living in Luzerne County, approximately 296,600, or 94.3 percent, are white and about 7,500, or 2.4 percent, are black, according to the 2006 American Community Survey conducted by the Census Bureau.

Gov. Ed Rendell, Clinton's chief supporter in the state, sparked controversy in February when he raised the possibility of racism and a racial divide affecting the voting in the primary.

"You've got conservative whites here, and I think there are some whites who are probably not ready to vote for an African-American candidate," Rendell said during a meeting with the editorial board of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

"I believe, looking at the returns in my election, that had Lynn Swann been the identical candidate that he was — well-spoken, charismatic, good-looking — but white instead of black, instead of winning by 22 points, I would have won by 17 or so," Rendell said, referring to his
Republican opponent in the 2006 gubernatorial election, the former Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver and member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Rendell's prophecy held in Luzerne County.

He defeated Swann among all voters in the county by a 35-percent margin and Clinton trounced Obama among county Democrats by nearly 50 points.

There are no black elected officials currently serving in Luzerne County, or in any of its 76 municipalities or 13 school districts. No black has ever represented Luzerne County in Congress or the Pennsylvania General Assembly.


Obama, whose mother was white and father black, acknowledged the continuing burden of racism and race relations in a March 18 speech in Philadelphia, delivered in response to a series of controversial sermons by his former pastor, Rev. Jeremiah Wright.

"Race is an issue that I believe this nation cannot afford to ignore right now," Obama said.

Obama reiterated that sentiment in an interview on Fox News last Sunday, but said racism would not have an impact on his election.

"Is race still a factor in our society?" Obama said. "Yes. I don't think anybody would deny that."

"Is that going to be the determining factor in a general election? No, because I'm absolutely confident that the American people — what they're looking for is somebody who can solve their problems."

He added later, "If I lose, it won't be because of race. It will be because I made mistakes on the campaign trail, I wasn't communicating effectively my plans in terms of helping them in their everyday lives."

The campaign workers and volunteers in Luzerne County would disagree, Felton said.

"What these people are encountering when they're going door-to-door or however these comments are coming to them, it shows you how deeply rooted racism is," Felton said.

"They don't have to do that, they choose to do that, to let these people know they have an issue with people of color," he added. "Those are years of attitudes that have developed and that's just not going to change."

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Thursday, October 19, 2006

Lady Tigers’ Smile Is Short-Lived

Connetquot 3, Northport 1 | Sam Breidenbach reached above the net and swatted a sharp kill to save the Northport girls volleyball team from defeat for at least another point, late in the fourth game against Connetquot, Monday evening. Then the sophomore middle hitter turned to senior setter Kate Kelly and let out a carefree little grin.

The Lady Tigers were down 22-24, trying to rally back after squandering a 25-11 win in the opening game. They dropped the second and third games, 22-25 and 16-25 and led 12-8 in the fourth game before falling behind 15-16.

The singular, momentary joy faded as senior Julie Long pushed a serve a few inches out of bounds, along the right sideline. The miss sealed the victory for Connetquot, 3-1.

“We have a tough time handling a team that can mentally take us out of games, it’s our weakness,” Yarusso said. “[Connetquot is] a great team, it’s nice to play a team like that this late in the season, it gets us ready for playoffs.”

The Lady Tigers stormed through the opening game, finally dominating the Thunderbirds (5-1 in League II, 11-1 overall), who have been an oppressive nemesis for the last three years. A year ago, the Lady Tigers (6-2; 7-2) lost to them in an epic five-set battle and again earlier this year, 3 games to 1.

“We were focused,” Yarusso said. “Then we got mentally unfocused.”

The Lady Tigers committed six service errors and two net violations in the final game, points that proved costly.

“They kind of beat themselves a little bit,” Yarusso said. “If we had just gone up and played volleyball, we wouldn’t have had as many unforced errors.”

The young Breidenbach, who finished with a career-high 9 kills and 7 blocks, put a spark into the senior-laden Lady Tigers after falling into a swoon of stress, self-doubt and unforced errors. She and her sister Brit, a senior, helped propel the Lady Tigers’ rally.

“We had some good things happen today,” Yarusso said. “We had our sophomore middle, Sam Breidenbach who has the game of her life, because she just doesn’t care [about making mistakes]. ”

Brit made a kill and Sam made a block to cut the Connetquot lead to 3. A net violation by the Thunderbirds made the gap 21-23. Maureen McLaughlin fired a kill to put Connetquot ahead, 21-24. Sam responded with a smiling winner of her own. Then came Long, usually a reliable server, and the miss.

“She’s a perfectionist,” Yarusso said. “She’s a perfectionist in school. She’s a perfectionist everywhere. If I were to bet my life on somebody serving, it would be her. It’s good that she did it now, in a league game, rather than in the playoffs.”


Lady Tigers Live On Defense

The Northport girls soccer team came through its most difficult stretch of the regular season, last week, winning three games in consecutive days. The Lady Tigers (6-0-1 in League II) defeated Lindenhurst 2-1 on Thursday, Commack 1-0 on Friday and Ward Melville 1-0 on Saturday.

Defense and a deep roster have been the keys to the Lady Tigers’ success. So far, this season, they have allowed only five goals while recording six shutouts. The team is so rich with talent that Coach Tom Fazio runs a rotation of 17 players during games, including the goaltenders — senior Pam Monnier and sophomore Meredith McGuire.

“All these players are really strong,” Fazio said. “The only thing that’s hard about it is that it doesn’t give players time to get a rhythm…. They’re playing and then they stop… But when you have that many players, the difference is so miniscule, how do you decide who’s going to play and who is going to sit?”



A stressful moment for Coach Anthony Yarusso, whose Lady Tigers volleyball team lost to Connetquot on Monday, 3 games to 1.



Sophomore middle hitter Sam Breidenbach, who finished with a career-high 9 kills and 7 blocks for the Lady Tigers.



Northport senior Laura Guilfoy (No. 4, center) puts a shot past a pair of Connetquot players.

Record Photos/Michael R. Sisak

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Thursday, October 12, 2006

Cougars Homecoming Win Is First Since 2000

Commack 13, Northport 6 | Six years of homecoming frustrations washed away in the cascade of ice water that poured over Coach Joe Reggio after Commack’s 13-6 victory against Northport, last Saturday.

It was the kind of orange-bucketed celebratory bath associated with championships, the kind of finger-thrusting, helmet-tapping enthusiasm reserved for titles and trophies. But for the Cougars and Reggio, who is in his first season as head coach after five as offensive coordinator, it was a raucous acknowledgment of an important step.

It was the Cougars’ first homecoming victory since 2000, Reggio’s first year on the staff. That season ended with a Suffolk County title. They have not qualified for the playoffs since.

“Typical Northport-Commack game,” Reggio said. “None of the games I’ve ever experienced with them have been easy. They’re a well-coached team. Tough kids, [they live] five minutes away and it’s always a battle for bragging rights. Thank God we came out on the winning end today. It’s been a while.”

The Cougars (2-2) rallied from a 6-0 halftime deficit with touchdowns on back-to-back drives and an interception that ended a Northport rally with 1:14 remaining.

Senior Nick Troiano broke in front of Northport senior defensive back Mike Dees and caught an 11-yard slant pass to tie the game at 6-6 with 2:31 left in the third.

Senior Josh Webb rushed 12 yards for the second score with 4:06 left in the game, culminating an 80-yard drive. Webb, who finished with 82 yards on 20 carries, scored three plays after a twisting 25-yard reception by senior receiver Matt Reggio, the coach’s son. The younger Reggio ran a quick out pattern and saw his defender cheating toward the line of scrimmage. He sprinted up the left side and made an off-balance grab while falling inside the sideline.

“We hadn’t run a deep pass like that all game, so when Matty did the out, [the defender] bit hard,” Coach Reggio said. “Then Matty makes that catch going the wrong way, right by the sideline and keeps his feet inbounds. Holy mackerel.”

The last time Commack won on homecoming, Matt Reggio was 11, fetching water for players like Bryan Tornee, who now volunteers as the team’s wide receivers coach. Matt Reggio worked with Tornee in the off-season and keeps his old jersey in a football locker at Commack High School.

After the Webb touchdown, Northport (1-3) had just over four minutes to drive for a touchdown. Dees, who got a bulk of the offensive workload as Commack senior linebacker James McDonald keyed on Northport fullback Brian Haber, rushed twice for 9 yards. Senior quarterback Cooper McGill ran a keeper for two yards and then connected with Dees for a 16-yard pass, moving the ball to the Tigers’ own 48.

Following a Northport timeout, McGill looked for Dees again, but Troiano – who had just switched inside from a defensive back spot – leaped over the receiver and made his game-saving interception.

“We knew, you can’t let anyone get behind you,” Troiano said. “The D-line helped us a lot, getting pressure on them, making them throw a bad pass. We had to make sure that [Dees] didn’t get anywhere open. He was their playmaker.”



Commack senior Nick Troiano leaps over the back of Northport receiver Mike Dees to intercept a pass thrown by Cooper McGill with 1:14 left in the Cougars’ 13-6 win, last Saturday.



Commack Phil Cirrone (No. 36) and Gary Heyman drag down Northport quarterback Cooper McGill.



Senior Mike Dees, who scored the only touchdown for Northport, makes a gain in the fourth quarter.



Commack players douse first-year coach Joe Reggio with water after a 13-6 win over rival Northport, last Saturday.


Commack homecoming queen Ashley Minogue and king Steve Intrabartola at halftime with members of the homecoming court.

Record Photos/Michael R. Sisak

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Thursday, July 20, 2006

Community Comes Out For Fire Centennial

Thousands of people lined the streets and later packed the fields behind the Suffolk Y, last Saturday evening, as the Commack Fire Department celebrated the centennial anniversary of its founding with a parade, a community barbecue and world-class fireworks display. The parade started near the intersection of Jericho Turnpike and Commack Road, not far from the site of the former hotel where weekend resident Ferdinand Freschkorn helped organize the department in August 1906. The parade continued south along Commack Road, with members from more than 40 other Long Island volunteer fire departments and ambulance squads joining in. Ken Grimball of News 12 Long Island served as the master of ceremonies and announced each department's fleet as it passed the reviewing stand on Hauppauge Road. Huntington Town Clerk Jo-Ann Raia presented Chief Mike Hertz with proclamations from both the town and the county and State Assemblyman Andy Raia (R-East Northport) announced a joint resolution of both the State Assembly and the State Senate honoring the department's milestone.


Grand Marshall Louis Fiandola, 94, rides in the passenger seat of the 1921 Model T Ford that served as the first mechanized vehicle in the Commack Fire Department's fleet. Fiandola joined the department in 1958 and has been an active member of the department for nearly half of its century of service.



Grand Marshal Louis Fiandola, 94, looks out at the crowds of Commack residents who came out to watch the parade.



Members of the department march along Commack Road.



A.J. Germaine, 2, waves an American flag at a passing fire truck as he watches the parade with his mother, Cristin. The
Germaines traveled from Lancaster, Pa. to help celebrate Commack's centennial and visit an uncle who is a member of the fire department in nearby Hauppauge.



Liz Alexander, Sargeant at Arms of the Commack Volunteer Ambulance Corps, leads a contingent of the organization's rescue workers.



Chief Mike Hertz (left) and other Commack officers watch as members of some of over 40 other departments parade by.



Dolores Warshaw of Commack cheers the paraders.



Dozens of people gathered to watch the parade at the corner of Commack Road and Hauppauge Road. One resident who lives nearby, unaware of the centennial celebration, heard sirens and thought there had been a car accident.



Fire vehicles from Huntington make the turn toward the parade's homestretch, at the intersection of Commack Road and Hauppauge Road.



Sean Coffey of Commack gives his son Liam a better view of parading firefighters. Liam's brother, Aidan, and mother, Gloria,
watch from ground level.



The celebration concluded with a fireworks display by Grucci, the world-famous pyrotechnics manufacturer based in Brookhaven.

Record Photos/Michael R. Sisak

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Thursday, July 13, 2006

Commack Celebrates a Century of Firefighting

The planned route for the Commack Fire Department’s centennial parade on Saturday night quietly twines the history of the organization’s founding with an unprecedented community celebration that includes fireworks and a barbeque.

Nearly all 136 current members of the department are scheduled to begin the parade at the intersection of Jericho Turnpike and Commack Road — the crossroads where part-time resident Ferdinand Freschkorn met with neighbors in August 1906 to discuss the formation of the department.

“Obviously for us, for the firemen, 100 years is quite significant,” Chief Mike Hertz, a 21-year veteran of the department, said. “There’s a tremendous amount of tradition in any fire department and we all take pride in it.”

The parade will continue south along Commack Road, where the members of more than 40 other fire departments from across Long Island, including East Northport, Dix Hills, Melville and Huntington, will join the procession. The parade concludes near the YMHA on Hauppauge Road, where a barbeque will be held. The fireworks, prepared by the Long Island-based Grucci family, are expected to begin at about 9:15 p.m.

“The whole idea of the anniversary is: it’s our anniversary, it’s our celebration, it’s something that’s near and dear to our department,” Hertz said. “The barbeque, the fireworks and the parade are our way of giving back to the community for all the support they’ve given us.”


Freschkorn’s Fire Legacy

Commack’s fire tradition began with Freschkorn, his prescience and his determination. Freschkorn was a native of Canarsie, Brooklyn, who visited Commack for weekends and summers, according to a narrative prepared by the department’s historian Larry Schneckenburger, a former chief who has served the organization for more than 30 years.

Commack’s population was about 300 at the time, and nearly half its land area was covered with pine trees. Forest rangers watched for wildfires, but Freschkorn, who had been serving as a volunteer firefighter in Brooklyn, advocated the formation of a fire company, the Commack Hook and Ladder Company, to protect the rest of the community.

Soon after the founding meeting, which took place at a long-since demolished hotel, Freschkorn returned to Brooklyn and negotiated the acquisition of Commack’s first fire apparatus, a horse-drawn vehicle that had been retired by the New York City Fire Department. Freschkorn stored the vehicle in a private barn in Commack until the construction of a firehouse, on the site of the department’s current Jericho Turnpike headquarters, in 1908.

In 1921, Commack acquired its first truck, a Model T Ford that is in still used as a showpiece in parades like the one that will stretch through town on Saturday night. In 1938, the boundaries of the Commack fire district were formed and in 1939 the fire company changed its name to Commack Fire Department. In 1952, a second wing was added to the firehouse and in 1964, with the onset of suburban growth, the current headquarters was built to replace the original 1908 structure.

In 1974, the first of three substations was opened at the intersection of Harned Road and New Highway, in the southern end of the fire district. A second substation was built on Elwood Road, in the western end of the fire district, in 1983 and a third on Kings Park Road, in the northeast section of the district, in 1996.

“We’ve expanded from one firehouse with two garages in it and a Model T to a headquarters and three substations,” Hertz said, marveling at the growth of the community and the department.


‘Good Fires, Bad Fires’

The department’s role and the types of emergencies to which it has responded, have changed as the community has grown from sylvan retreat to sprawling suburb. Single-family homes, strip malls and industrial parks now stand on the land the pines occupied when Freschkorn first visited Commack.

In nearly a century of operation, the department has received approximately 80,000 calls. There were planes that crashed on takeoff from the Army Signal Corps facility at Brindley Field (now a Home Depot on Jericho Turnpike), brush fires that burned along Old Northport Road and Crooked Hill Road in nearly every decade, fatal auto accidents, office building fires that trapped firefighters and industrial blazes that lingered for days.

“We’ve been to good fires, bad fires, brush fires, you name it,” Schneckenburger said. “We’ve rescued cats out of trees, we train for everything.”

• In June 1970, a fire raged for three days at the Thermx Chemical plant in the newly-built Hauppauge Industrial Park. According to Schneckenburger, the hydrants in the area were unable to pump enough water to the fire scene, so firefighters were forced to improvise and line their hose lines to hydrants up to a half-mile away.

• In 1971, firefighters were able to rescue five children from an Old Hauppauge Road home that had been fully engulfed in flames.

• In 1978, an ice storm produced 68 separate runs and sparked 3 house fires.

• In 1979, a fire tore through a row of stores in the Mayfair Shopping Center on Jericho Turnpike. The roof collapsed and several firefighters were nearly killed.

• Five minutes before midnight on Christmas Eve in 1980, the call came in that a gas explosion ripped through the Suzuki Motorcycles dealership at Daly Road and Jericho Turnpike in Elwood. Firefighters spent much of Christmas day dousing the flames.

• In 1985, 120 the department received calls in a 36-hour span during Hurricane Gloria.

• In 1995, 85 members took shifts battling the wildfires that consumed much of the Pine Barrens on the East End.

• In 2001, volunteers from Commack aided their professional brethren from New York City in the aftermath of the September 11th terrorist attacks. Commack’s technical rescue team, which is comprised of members specially trained in recovery efforts, contributed to the search through the ruins of the World Trade Center.

“We run a professional department (in Commack),” Schneckenburger said. In addition to volunteering in Commack, Schneckenburger is also a 21-year veteran of the New York City fire department. “When you take the oath to join the department, I feel like you’re joining an all-star team. You have people from all walks of life, but when you put on that uniform, you’re part of the same family.”

Schneckenburger is chronicling the history of the department in a 280-page book that will be distributed to members and local historical societies in January 2007. The final chapter will center on Saturday night’s celebration.

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Thursday, June 29, 2006

No Rain On Commack Graduates’ Parade

The personal achievements of two administrators and a rare indoor ceremony added to the allure of graduation for the nearly 500 cap-and-gown cloistered seniors at Commack High School, Sunday. Superintendent Dr. James H. Hunderfund, who began his term in the district at the same time members of the class of 2006 entered kindergarten, made his final graduation address before his retirement in September. “We came in together and we’re going out together,” Hunderfund told the graduates and about a thousands parents and guests in the school’s gymnasium. The commencement was forced inside by rain for the first time in more than a decade. Near the end of his speech, Hunderfund recognized Russell Stewart, an assistant principal at the high school who recently returned to work after suffering near death with the body-ravaging effects of Guillain-Barre syndrome, an inflammatory disorder of the peripheral nerves. Hunderfund embraced Stewart as the graduates and guests stood for an ovation. — Michael R. Sisak




Graduates toss their caps near the end of the commencement ceremony at Commack High School, Sunday. Rain forced the event into the school’s gymnasium for the first time in more than a decade.




Class Vice President Joey Teixeira (right) walks from the stage as his fellow class officers, Eileen Alexander and Eleanore Richards, look on.




Lauren Zanfini, the third to last graduate to receive her diploma in alphabetical order, acts the part of graduate and runway model in the narrow path between graduates and picture-taking parents.




Mary Jo Masciello, the President of the Commack Board of Education, addresses graduates with a retrospective on their school careers — from the elementary beginning to the prospect of college and employment.




Dr. James H. Hunderfund addresses a Commack graduation for the final time as the Superintendent of Schools. Hunderfund, who started his career in Commack when members of the Class of 2006 were entering kindergarten, plans to retire in the fall.




Hunderfund used part of his address to commend the courage of Russell Stewart, an Assistant Principal at the high school who returned after suffering near death with the body-ravaging effects of Guillain-Barre syndrome, an inflammatory disorder of the peripheral nerves. Here, Hunderfund embraces Stewart as graduates and guests stand for an ovation.




Sean Fearon receives his diploma from Commack High School principal Ron Vale.




Rachel Marano, a distinguished academic leader who spoke to her senior classmates during the ceremony, and Gunjan Kathuria in the afterglow of graduation.




Robert Thompson receives a hug from his father, also named Robert.




Amanda Csjako (center) and her family pose for a photo below a relief sculpting of the school’s mascot, a Cougar, outside the school building.




Graduate Tara Fenamore (left) and her family use a 15-year-old gateway at the front of the school as a backdrop to their graduation photos.

Record Photos/Michael R. Sisak

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Thursday, June 22, 2006

Lady Tigers Honored From County to Coast

The epilogue to Northport’s eighth girls’ lacrosse Suffolk County championship came this week, with an array of individual player honors and an inaugural team trophy that will preserve the memory of their season in perpetuity.

The team’s leading scorers Meghan Markowski and Corrine Gandolfi both received All-American honors from U.S. Lacrosse, the sport’s national governing body. Both were also named to the All-Long Island team compiled by Erik Boland of Newsday. Markowski, who will play at Brown University, led the Lady Tigers with 56 goals. Gandolfi, who is headed to Hofstra, followed with 54.

Senior Whitney Ahern (Villanova) and juniors Deb Dale and Ashley Boccio were each honored as an All-American Honorable Mention. The five nationally recognized players also earned All-County awards at the annual Suffolk Girls Lacrosse Coaches Association, Monday evening at Villa Lombardi in Holbrook.

“All the teams were there from the entire county and it felt great to know that we had two All-Americans and three All-American Honorable Mentions from one school,” senior Kelly Dunne said.

Dunne, who had a career-high six goals in a 13-12 win at Ward Melville, and senior Keri Schumacher, who controlled the draw that led to the game-winning goal in the county title win over Bay Shore, both received All-County Honorable Mention.

Senior attacker Sam Strebel (Stony Brook) and senior goaltender Carisse Bormann (Marist), earned All-Division honors. Markowski, Schumacher, Sarah Atlas, Christine Smith and Francesca Volpe were named to the Academic All-American team after maintaining a cumulative grade point average of 3.6 or higher.

“[The awards are] a culmination of all the efforts that they’ve put into the program,” Coach Carol Rose said. “For most of them, they’ve been on the team for at least three years and we’re really proud that they received these honors.”

Markowski and Gandolfi, two of the Lady Tigers’ six captains, exhibited their offensive leadership in the season opener, a 15-5 win at Sachem East on April 4. Markowski netted six goals and Gandolfi had eight assists.

The win sparked a run of eight straight wins before an 8-7 loss at Bay Shore on April 28. The Lady Tigers won their next seven games, including playoff victories over Commack and East Islip and exacted revenge on the Lady Marauders in the county final.

Last week, the Long Island Metropolitan Lacrosse Foundation recognized the Lady Tigers as the top girls’ lacrosse team in Suffolk County. Dunne accepted the foundation’s first-ever Founders Cup at halftime of a Long Island Lizards professional lacrosse game at Mitchel Athletic Complex in Uniondale. The Founders Cup is awarded like the Rutgers Cup in high school football and the Stanley Cup in professional hockey. The winning team keeps the trophy for one year

“We’re the first plaque on there, so that’s pretty cool,” Dunne said. She will play basketball at Nazareth College in the fall. “I’ve played basketball and lacrosse all this time for Northport and it’s sad to know that you won’t be able to play with these girls and for these coaches again. I’ll never forget any of the teams I played for at Northport."



Northport seniors Corrine Gandolfi and Keri Schumacher celebrate after a Gandolfi goal during the county title game against Bay Shore. Gandolfi, who finished the season with 54 goals, earned All-American honors. Schumacher received All-County Honorable Mention.



Northport senior Meghan Markowski speaks to teammates just before the start of the county title game against Bay Shore, May 31. Markowski led the Lady Tigers in scoring with 56 goals and earned All-American honors from U.S. Lacrosse.



Northport senior Whitney Ahern, seen here taking a draw in the county title game against Bay Shore, was honored as an All-American Honorable Mention.

Record Photos/Michael R. Sisak

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