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Anson Phelps Stokes (philanthropist)
Works
Works Stokes wrote these works: Memorials of Eminent Yale Men, 2 vols. New Haven, Yale University Press, 1914. Tuskegee Institute — The First Fifty Years, 1931. Art and the Color Line: An Appeal made May 31, 1939, to the President General and Other Officers of the Daughters of the American Revolution to Modify the Rules so as to Permit Distinguished Negro Artists such as Marian Anderson to be Heard in Constitution Hall, Washington, 1939. "Introduction" to Encyclopedia of the Negro; preparatory volume with reference lists and reports, by W. E. B. Du Bois and Guy B. Johnson, prepared with the cooperation of E. Irene Diggs, Agnes C. L. Donohugh, Guion Johnson, et al. New York: The Phelps-Stokes Fund, Inc., 1946. Contributor, Negro Status and Race Relations in the United States, 1911-1946; the Thirty-Five Year Report of the Phelps-Stokes Fund, New York: Phelps-Stokes Fund, 1948. Church and State in the United States, three volumes, 1950.
Anson Phelps Stokes (philanthropist)
Notes
Notes
Anson Phelps Stokes (philanthropist)
External links
External links Official Phelps Stokes Website Anson Phelps Stokes Autograph Collection (MS 402). Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library. Category:American Episcopal priests Category:Philanthropists from New York (state) Category:Yale University alumni Category:1874 births Category:1958 deaths Category:Writers from Staten Island Category:Writers from New York City Category:Members of Skull and Bones
Anson Phelps Stokes (philanthropist)
Table of Content
Short description, Early life, Career, Personal life, Works, Notes, External links
Sameer Group
Short description
The Sameer Group of Companies, commonly referred to as the Sameer Group, is a large conglomerate, based in Kenya, with operations and subsidiaries in neighboring African countries.
Sameer Group
Overview
Overview The group is involved in industries including: agriculture, manufacturing, distribution, high-tech, construction, transport and finance. The company's offices are located in Nairobi, the capital city of Kenya, and the largest metropolitan area in that country. The shares of stock of some of the group's subsidiaries are listed on the Nairobi Stock Exchange.
Sameer Group
Subsidiary companies
Subsidiary companies , the Sameer Group subsidiaries include, but are not limited to the following companies: Sasini Tea & Coffee, Nairobi, Kenya Sameer Agriculture & Livestock Limited, Kampala, Uganda - Dairy Processing (Sold to Brookside Dairies in May 2015). Sameer Industrial Park Limited, Nairobi, Kenya Sameer Business Park Limited, Nairobi, Kenya Sameer Africa Limited, Nairobi, Kenya - Manufacture of tires. Formerly "Firestone East Africa Limited Ryce East Africa Limited, Nairobi, Kenya Yansam Motors Limited, Nairobi, Kenya Swift Global Kenya Limited, Nairobi, Kenya Kenya Data Networks Limited, Nairobi, Kenya - Information Technology Company Infocom Limited, Kampala, Uganda - Internet Service Provider Eveready East Africa Limited, Nairobi, Kenya - Manufacture of batteries Ryce East Africa - Engineering Division, Nairobi, Kenya Equatorial Commercial Bank, Nairobi, Kenya Equatorial Investment Bank Limited, Nairobi, Kenya Savanna Coffee Lounge, Nairobi, Kenya VLCC East Africa, a joint venture with VLCC of India, specialized in healthcare, fitness and wellness.
Sameer Group
See also
See also Economy of Kenya List of conglomerates in Africa
Sameer Group
References
References
Sameer Group
External links
External links Website of Sameer Group Category:Companies based in Nairobi Category:Conglomerate companies of Kenya
Sameer Group
Table of Content
Short description, Overview, Subsidiary companies, See also, References, External links
Lynching of Cordie Cheek
Short description
James Cordie Cheek (1916 – December 15, 1933) was a 17-year-old African-American youth who was lynched by a white mob in Maury County, Tennessee near the county seat of Columbia. After being falsely accused of attempting to rape a young white girl, Cheek was released from jail when the grand jury did not indict him, due to lack of evidence. The county magistrate and two other men from Maury County abducted Cheek from Nashville, where he was staying with relatives near Fisk University, took him back to the county, and turned him over to a lynch mob. The mob mutilated Cheek and murdered him by hanging. A grand jury declined to indict anyone for the murder of Cheek.
Lynching of Cordie Cheek
Lynching
Lynching Cordie Cheek lived with his parents in Glendale, a small community just south of the county seat of Columbia in Maury County. Cordie's mother Tenny "worked for many years as a cook, maid, midwife, and nurse" for the Moores, a white family who lived nearby. Tenny arranged for her son to help doing chores around the Moore household. Henry Carl Moore, nineteen years old in the winter of 1933, was two years older than Cordie. Friction began to develop between the two young men and, on one occasion, they had come to blows after a dispute over payment due to Cordie and his mother. On November 16, 1933, Cheek was chopping wood for the Moores. As he brought a load into the house, he accidentally collided with Henry's twelve-year-old sister, tearing her dress. Incensed, Henry paid his younger sister one dollar to claim that Cordie had tried to rape her. Following the allegations, Cheek was arrested and placed in jail first in nearby Pulaski and eventually in Nashville, where he was taken out of concern for his safety. A Maury County grand jury eventually declined to indict him on the charge of attempted rape, or for any other lesser crime, due to lack of evidence, and he was released. Once freed, Cheek went to stay in the home of his uncle and aunt, who lived at the edge of the campus of Fisk University in Nashville. A mob formed in Maury County, traveled to Nashville, and abducted Cheek, taking him back to Maury County. Among them were C. Hayes Denton, county magistrate, whose car transported Cheek; Bert Erwin, and Bob Hancock. After they returned to Maury County, a white lynch mob formed. The white community was told of the impending lynching and assembled to watch. Cheek was forced to climb a ladder; white men put a blindfold over his face and a rope around his neck, strung from a cedar tree. The men exposed his genitals and castrated him. One man, allegedly Bert Erwin, used a pole to push the ladder away from Cordie's feet, causing him to be hanged to death. The onlookers, including women and children, cheered and passed around pistols, firing them into the air in celebration. Following the lynching, prosecutors intended to indict six suspects for the murder of Cheek, but a grand jury declined to file charges.
Lynching of Cordie Cheek
Aftermath
Aftermath The lynching of Cordie Cheek reverberated across the South. Students and administrators at Fisk University were angered and alarmed, not only for the event but because he had been abducted nearby. Noted historian John Hope Franklin, then a student at Fisk, recalled: Those of us who had remained in Nashville over the Christmas holidays were obsessed with discussing the Cordie Cheek lynching. Indeed, the entire remainder of our junior year was shadowed by this tragic event. There were investigations, interviews, and other actions. The conclusion that many of us reached was that if it could happen to Cordie Cheek, who had been seized within three blocks of the Fisk Chapel, it could happen to any of us. In his 1934 essay, "Cowards from the Colleges," Langston Hughes commented that Cheek "was abducted almost at the gates of the University." In spite of various protests and calls in Nashville for justice, Gail Williams O'Brien writes that, "Maury County officials, along with a number of leading citizens in the community, closed ranks to block indictments against the alleged lynchers, and neither state nor federal forces overcame their resistance."O'Brien (1999), 84 In his Pulitzer Prize-winning book Devil in the Grove: Thurgood Marshall, the Groveland Boys, and the Dawn of a New America, Gilbert King theorized that the outrage from the lynching of Cheek was one of the factors that catalyzed the resistance of blacks in the Columbia, Tennessee race riot of 1946, noted nationally as the "first major racial confrontation" of the postwar era.
Lynching of Cordie Cheek
Representation in other media
Representation in other media The lynching of Cordie Cheek is the subject of Sandra Seaton's play The Bridge Party, which is anthologized in Strange Fruit: Plays on Lynching by American Women.Seaton, Sandra. The Bridge Party. Perkins, Kathy A. and Judith L. Stephens, eds. (1998). Strange Fruit: Plays on Lynching by American Women. 320-65. The plot of The Bridge PartySeaton, Sandra. (2004). The Bridge Party. connects the 1933 lynching and the 1946 race riot in Columbia. Ruby Dee appeared in a 1998 production of the play at the University of Michigan.
Lynching of Cordie Cheek
See also
See also Lynching of Henry Choate
Lynching of Cordie Cheek
References
References Category:1933 in Tennessee Category:1933 murders in the United States Category:African-American history of Tennessee Category:December 1933 in the United States Category:Deaths by person in Tennessee Category:Lynching deaths in Tennessee Category:Murdered African-American people Category:Maury County, Tennessee Category:People murdered in Tennessee Category:Race-related controversies in the United States Category:Racially motivated violence against African Americans Category:Child murder in Tennessee
Lynching of Cordie Cheek
Table of Content
Short description, Lynching, Aftermath, Representation in other media, See also, References
Chalongphob Susangkarn
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redirectChalongphob Sussangkarn
Chalongphob Susangkarn
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Howard Street, Sheffield
Short description
thumb|right|The Howard Hotel at the bottom of Howard Street thumb|right|Hallam University's Owen building and Hallam Square Howard Street is a street in the city centre of Sheffield, England. It provides a short link between Sheaf Square and one of the great road arteries, Arundel Gate. The street was pedestrianised in 2005 so as to provide safe haven to pedestrians using the railway station. Howard Street is paved all through in granite. The top end of Howard Street was pedestrianised in the late 1990s and transformed into Hallam Square. Hallam Square is a half amphitheatre shaped plaza with seating and a water feature. To the bottom end of Howard Street is the Howard Hotel, a half timbered public house, An Artists Collective/Gallery and shop called the Silverworks that showcases local artists and sells their work, artists include Patrick Amber, Cassie Limb and Gordie Cavill, there is also Hallam University's Science Park. Along the southern side of the street are terraced houses.
Howard Street, Sheffield
References
References
Howard Street, Sheffield
External links
External links Historical view of Howard Street. Panoramic view of Hallam Square. Category:Sheffield City Centre Category:Streets in Sheffield
Howard Street, Sheffield
Table of Content
Short description, References, External links
Portal:Cuba/Featured quote/Day 19
cquote
The concluding sentences of a four hour speech made by Fidel Castro in his own defense in court against the charges brought against him after leading an attack on the Moncada Barracks in 1953.
Portal:Cuba/Featured quote/Day 19
Table of Content
cquote
Wikipedia:Version 1.0 Editorial Team/Linux articles by quality
User:WP 1.0 bot/Historical
Wikipedia:Version 1.0 Editorial Team/Linux articles by quality
Table of Content
User:WP 1.0 bot/Historical
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April 18, 2025
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<noinclude>{{Log}}</noinclude>, April 19, 2025, Renamed, Assessed, April 18, 2025, Assessed, April 15, 2025, Reassessed, April 14, 2025, Reassessed
Agglutination Metal Festival
Short description
Agglutination Metal Festival was an Italian metal festival held annually in Basilicata, among the towns of Senise, Chiaromonte and Sant'Arcangelo (Potenza). Born in 1995 as an event to promote emerging groups, it was one of the first metal festivals in Italy and one of the most long-lived metal events in Europe. It has hosted bands such as Overkill, Cannibal Corpse, Venom, Mayhem, Stratovarius, Carcass, Exodus, Gamma Ray, Dark Tranquillity and Marduk. Among the Italian bands that performed at the Agglutination are Rhapsody of Fire, Bulldozer, Necrodeath, Stormlord, Labyrinth and Theatres des Vampires. Due to the containment measures against the COVID-19 pandemic, the festival was not scheduled in 2020 and 2021. The festival took place in 2022 and 2023 but was discontinued in 2024.
Agglutination Metal Festival
Lineups
Lineups
Agglutination Metal Festival
1995
1995 August in Chiaromonte Marshall and other local bands
Agglutination Metal Festival
1996
1996 August in Chiaromonte White Skull, Lost Innocence and other local bands
Agglutination Metal Festival
1997
1997 12 August in Chiaromonte Overkill, White Skull, Megora, Aggressive Fear, In Human Memories, Deleterio, Black Sunrise, Flash Terrorist, Stormlord, Lost Innocence, Harem, Funeral Fuck
Agglutination Metal Festival
1998
1998 11 August in Chiaromonte Athena, Undertakers, Lacrima Christi, Heimdall, Glacial Fear, Inchiuvatu, Hastings, Aura, Memories of a Lost Soul, Unthory, Black Sunrise, Funeral Fuck
Agglutination Metal Festival
1999
1999 13 August in Chiaromonte White Skull, Moonlight Comedy, Ahriman, Tenebrae Oburiuntur, Obscure Devotion, 3rd, Terremoto, Kiss of Death, Pino Miale
Agglutination Metal Festival
2000
2000 12 August in Chiaromonte Domine, Vision Divine, Undertakers, Glacial Fear, Stormlord, Art Inferno, Arcadia, Steel Cage, Humanity Eclipse, Eden Shape
Agglutination Metal Festival
2001
2001 11 August in Chiaromonte Ancient, Thoten, White Skull, Secret Sphere, Highlord, The Black, Natron, Schizo, Glacial Fear, Requiem K626, Brazen, Enemynside, Dark Secret, Rainy Night
Agglutination Metal Festival
2002
2002 12 August Chiaromonte Destruction, Vicious Rumors, Drakkar, Undertakers, Stormlord, Heimdall, Infernal Poetry, Holy Knights, Adimiron
Agglutination Metal Festival
2003
2003 9 August in ChiaromonteVader were scheduled to perform before Virgin Steele, but they missed their plane Virgin Steele, Labyrinth, Theatres des Vampires, Beholder, Fire Trails, Elvenking, Marshall, Rosae Crucis, Mantra, Requiem K626, Hunchback
Agglutination Metal Festival
2004
2004 12 August in Chiaromonte Iron Savior, Marduk, Crystal Ball, Novembre, Centurion, Thy Majestie, Rain, Nameless Crime, Disguise, Walkyrya
Agglutination Metal Festival
2005
2005 13 August in Chiaromonte Mayhem, Freedom Call, Necrodeath, Mesmerize, Schizo, Valiance
Agglutination Metal Festival
2006
2006 10 August in Chiaromonte (cancelled)Planned for 10 August in Chiaromonte but cancelled because of heavy rain Vision Divine, Sinister, Majesty, Dark Lunacy, Marshall, Pandaemonium, Kragens, Aleph, Infernal Angels, Megawatt
Agglutination Metal Festival
2007
2007 thumbnail|Gamma Ray at the Agglutination Metal Festival 2007 11 August in Sant'Arcangelo Gamma Ray, Infernal Death, Golem, Kaledon, Dark Lunacy, Fire Trails, Tankard
Agglutination Metal Festival
2008
2008 9 August 2008 in Sant'Arcangelo Dark Tranquility, Vision Divine, Dismember, Domine, Metal Gang with Pino Scotto, DGM, Savior from Anger, Denied, Nefertum
Agglutination Metal Festival
2009
2009 10 August in Sant'Arcangelo U.D.O., Vader, Extrema, Fabio Lione, Forgotten Tomb, Fratello Metallo, Trick or Treat, Ecnephias, Symbolyc
Agglutination Metal Festival
2010
2010 thumbnail|Cannibal Corpse at the Agglutination Metal Festival 2010 9 August in Sant'Arcangelo Cannibal Corpse, Korpiklaani, Pino Scotto, Handful of Hate, Airborn, Marshall, Ver Sacrum, Solisia
Agglutination Metal Festival
2011
2011 20 August in Chiaromonte Bulldozer, Majesty, Bömbers (feat. Abbath), Node, PTSD, Tyrannizer Order, Aura, Stige
Agglutination Metal Festival
2012
2012 thumbnail|Rhapsody of Fire at the Agglutination Metal Festival 2012 25 August in Chiaromonte Dark Tranquillity, Rhapsody of Fire, Rotting Christ, Ecnephias, Vexed, Lunocode, Poemisia, Twilight Gate, Ghost Booster
Agglutination Metal Festival
2013
2013 10 August in Senise Overkill, Stratovarius, Marduk, Eldritch, Folkstone, Heavenshine, Blind Horizon, Rebürn
Agglutination Metal Festival
2014
2014 23 August in Senise Carcass, Entombed A.D., Belphegor, Buffalo Grillz, Elvenking, Eversin, Sinheresy, Lehman
Agglutination Metal Festival
2015
2015 9 August in Chiaromonte Obituary, Edguy, Inquisition, Necrodeath, Forgotten Tomb, Arthemis, Feline Melinda, Carthagods
Agglutination Metal Festival
2016
2016 21 August in Chiaromonte Therion, Exodus, Taake, Fleshgod Apocalypse, Nanowar of Steel, Dewfall, De La Muerte, Real Chaos
Agglutination Metal Festival
2017
2017 19 August in Chiaromonte Venom, Sodom, White Skull, In.Si.Dia, Assaulter, Gravestone, Ghost of Mary, Memories of a Lost Soul
Agglutination Metal Festival
2018
2018 19 August in Chiaromonte Death SS, Pestilence, Folkstone, Necrodeath, Witchunter, Ad Noctem Funeriis, Circle of Witches, Rome in Monochrome
Agglutination Metal Festival
2019
2019 17 August in Chiaromonte Napalm Death, Death Angel, Carpathian Forest, Strana Officina, Carthagods, The Black, Scream Baby Scream
Agglutination Metal Festival
2022
2022 6 August in Senise Asphyx, Nargaroth, Vanexa, Fulci, Sailing To Nowhere, Napoli Violenta, Funeral, Mirko Gisonte, Eyelids
Agglutination Metal Festival
2023
2023 12 August in Chiaromonte Carcass, Nocturnal Depression, Sacrilege, Plakkaggio, Xenos, Essenza, Coexistence
Agglutination Metal Festival
References
References
Agglutination Metal Festival
External links
External links Official website Category:Heavy metal festivals in Italy Category:1995 establishments in Italy Category:Music festivals established in 1995 Category:Sant'Arcangelo Category:Culture in Basilicata
Agglutination Metal Festival
Table of Content
Short description, Lineups, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2022, 2023, References, External links
Diplomatic title
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redirectDiplomatic rank
Diplomatic title
Table of Content
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Category:Alumni by university or college in the United States
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Category:People by university or college in the United States United States
Category:Alumni by university or college in the United States
Table of Content
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Portal:Cuba/Featured quote/Day 21
cquote
Soviet premier Sergei Khrushchev, when asked in 1961 whether Fidel Castro was a communist or not.
Portal:Cuba/Featured quote/Day 21
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Template:By-elections to the 52nd UK Parliament
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File:IPKat screenshot small.JPG
Summary
Summary A screenshot (small version) of the IPKat weblog, taken on 7 March 2007.
File:IPKat screenshot small.JPG
Licensing
Licensing
File:IPKat screenshot small.JPG
Table of Content
Summary, Licensing
Grønsund
Short description
Grønsund is a strait in Denmark separating the island Falster from the smaller islands of Møn and Bogø. Grønsund is also the name of a locality on the northeast coast of Falster from where the ferries to Møn used to operate. Grønsund Ferry House was built in 1731 and listed in the Danish registry of protected buildings and places in 1950.
Grønsund
Geography
Geography Grønsund's maximum depth is at approx. 20 metres and the width is between 1 - 4 km. Storstrømmen channel is situated to the west and Stege Bugt lies to the north between Zealand and Møn. A ferry crosses the channel in the summertime from Stubbekøbing to Bogø island. Grønsund has several shallow areas, i.e. near Bogø, and has a strong and alternating current.
Grønsund
Environment
Environment Both submersed and riparian vegetation is rich, and the sound is an important breeding area for wildlife and fish. Many shore birds, including cormorants, mute swans, greylag geese, pintails, shovelers, eiders, avocets, several species of waders, as well as gulls and terns are breeding in the area. The porpoise lives in the area.
Grønsund
History
History thumb|Map detail from the 19th century Grønsund on Falster was already in the Middle Ages used as a hubn for ferry service to Møn. A building known as Borrehuset was constructed at the site in 1705. It was replaced by Grønsund Færgegård in 1731.
Grønsund
Oil spill
Oil spill On March 29, 2001, the oil tanker Baltic Carrier collided with the bulk carrier Tern in the western Baltic Sea, near the naval border between Germany and Denmark. 2700 tons of bunker oil leaked from the cargo tanks into the sea, affecting the Danish shoreline, especially Grønsund.
Grønsund
Sources
Sources Environment report, The “Baltic Carrier” Oil Spill. Status and management of important areas for breeding birds at the coasts of Storstrøms County, Denmark. Countrymen by Bo Lidegaard
Grønsund
See also
See also Geography of Denmark Category:Straits of Denmark Category:Straits of the Baltic Sea
Grønsund
Table of Content
Short description, Geography, Environment, History, Oil spill, Sources, See also
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Jason Glenn
Short description
Jason Lydell Glenn (born August 20, 1979) is an American former professional football linebacker who played in the National Football League (NFL) for the New York Jets, Miami Dolphins, and Minnesota Vikings from 2001 to 2006. He is the younger brother of retired NFL cornerback and New York Jets head coach Aaron Glenn.
Jason Glenn
Early life and college
Early life and college Jason played youth football in the same league his brother Aaron did, the Humble Area Football League HAFL. Glenn attended Chester W. Nimitz High School in Houston, Texas. Glenn began his college career at Texas A&M as a safety, but significant increases in size and strength made him better suited for the linebacker position, which he began playing his sophomore year. He was an All-Big 12 Conference first-team selection as a senior in 2000 despite suffering a season-ending knee injury. He finished his college career with 167 tackles (107 solo), 11 sacks, 22 passes deflected and 33 tackles for losses and was one of the Aggies' fan favorites as well as a vocal leader on and off the field. He was selected a third-team All-American by the Associated Press.
Jason Glenn
Professional career
Professional career Glenn was selected by the Detroit Lions in the sixth round of the 2001 NFL draft. Glenn played in the final 15 regular season games of 2001 as rookie with the Jets and finished fifth on the team in special teams tackles with 17. He played in an AFC wild card game at Oakland on January 12, 2002, and had one special teams tackle. He played in all 16 of the 2002 Jets' games. Most of his time was spent on special teams, where he ranked second on the team with 27 tackles, as well as a blocked punt and one fumble recovery. He also had a tackle and a pass deflection in spot duty as an extra linebacker. He made one tackle on defense and two on special teams in the AFC Wild Card playoff game win over Indianapolis Glenn two special teams tackles in the AFC Divisional Playoff loss at Oakland. Glenn played in 14 games in 2003 for Jets and saw his role increase significantly from his first two seasons. Although he was used primarily as the team's nickel linebacker, he did start once (game 14 against Pittsburgh) and ended up with 47 tackles on the season. In 2004, he was limited due to injury—he suffered a fractured right arm against New England and missed six games with the injury. He finished with 10 tackles (seven solo) and a fumble recovery. After signing with the Dolphins, Glenn played in all 16 games in 2005, primarily on special teams. He finished the year with 13 tackles (12 solo). Joining the Vikings in 2006, Glenn played nine games, primarily on special teams. He had eight tackles on defense including six solo, and one fumble recovery on special teams before being placed on IR on November 14 with an injured knee. He re-aggravated that knee injury during 2007 training camp and was to again be placed on the IR on August 14, 2007. That same day, Vikings' head coach Brad Childress announced that Glenn was retiring from football.
Jason Glenn
NFL career statistics
NFL career statistics Legend Bold Career high
Jason Glenn
Regular season
Regular season Year Team Games Tackles Interceptions Fumbles GP GS Cmb Solo Ast Sck TFL Int Yds TD Lng PD FF FR Yds TD 2001 NYJ 15 0 11 10 1 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2002 NYJ 16 0 19 19 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2003 NYJ 14 1 53 38 15 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 2004 NYJ 10 0 10 7 3 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 0 2005 MIA 16 0 13 12 1 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2006 MIN 9 0 8 6 2 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 80 1 114 92 22 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 3 2 0
Jason Glenn
Playoffs
Playoffs Year Team Games Tackles Interceptions Fumbles GP GS Cmb Solo Ast Sck TFL Int Yds TD Lng PD FF FR Yds TD 2001 NYJ 1 0 1 1 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2002 NYJ 2 0 3 3 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2004 NYJ 2 0 3 3 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 7 7 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Jason Glenn
Coaching career
Coaching career Jason was an assistant coach at Pearland High School in Pearland, Texas. The Oilers won the Texas Division 1 5A football title in 2010. In 2011, Jason became head football coach at Chavez High School in Houston,Texas. In 2012, Glenn was hired as assistant coach at Klein Oak High School, in Spring, Texas.Houston Chronicle Sports, August 20, 2011, High School Football Tour: 20-5A In 2017, he was named the head football coach and athletic director at Klein Oak. On July 25, 2024, Glenn was announced as The Executive Athletic Director for Austin Independent School District in Austin, Texas.
Jason Glenn
References
References