OXFORD â In their first season under new head football coach Lamont Robinson, J.F. Webb experienced a plethora of challenges and ultimately settled for a 1-6 record.
Robinson said that having to put together a program in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic hindered J.F. Webb from establishing cohesion but he also attributed some of the struggles to the overall youth on his team.
âThis was a learning experience,â Robinson said. âWe had some high expectations but we only had six seniors and ended up playing a lot of sophomores and freshmen. A lot of those kids didnât have any meaningful varsity experience but they had the opportunity to get that experience this spring.â
Latinxs and the Adventist Nonsense of Segregation
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December 15, 2020
Francisco Fuentes, a janitor at Kodak, the film company in Rochester, arrived in Upstate New York in the 1960s during a migratory wave flowing from Puerto Rico. Before reaching Rochester, he settled in Brooklyn, New York, with his family, wife, two daughters, and two sons. Drawn by the kindness of a Spanish language Seventh-day Adventist Church in Brooklyn, part of the Greater New York Conference (the white conference), the family converted to Adventism. Hearing of better-paying jobs in Upstate New York, Fuentes took another leap in his migratory trek. In Rochester, the family found the Jefferson Avenue Seventh-day Adventist Church of the North Eastern Conference (a Black conference), which they joined.[1]