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Kenneth A. May is the former CEO of FedEx Office, and chairman of the March of Dimes' board of trustees. In November 2011, he was appointed president of Krispy Kreme, and later in July 2014, May became President and CEO of Topgolf International, Inc. In November 2018, May joined golf entertainment company, Drive Shack Inc. as CEO.
March of Dimes Canada (MODC), officially the Rehabilitation Foundation for Disabled Persons, Canada is a registered national charity established in 2005 by Ontario March of Dimes. MODC aims to provide community-based rehabilitation services and resources across the country to people with physical disabilities.
March of Dimes is a United States nonprofit organization that works to improve the health of mothers and babies. [1] The organization was founded by US President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1938, as the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, to combat polio.
Ontario March of Dimes (OMOD) began in 1951 as the Canadian Foundation of Poliomyelitis, which funded research and provided medical and rehabilitation services to people with polio. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] As new vaccines reduced the threat from this disease, the organization changed its mandate to focus on services for people with physical disabilities ...
He took a degree in marketing at Jacksonville State University. [3] Upon graduation in 1992 he joined Burlington Northern Railroad as an operations manager, at first in Birmingham, Alabama . [ 2 ] In 1996 he joined the Illinois Central Railroad , which later merged with Canadian National Railway (CN), and in 1999 became general manager of the ...
The CEO of Canada’s second-largest publicly traded company says Canadians want their government to do all the things that President Trump is demanding — and slammed outgoing Prime Minister ...
Rethink was named Canada's Agency of the Year three times: first in November 2003 by Marketing Magazine, [11] and a second and third time by Strategy Magazine in December 2006 [7] and October 2019. [12] The agency was also ranked by Strategy Magazine as the most award-winning agency in Canada in 2008 [13] and 2009. [10]
In June 2004, Synnex Canada purchased EMJ Data Systems for $56 million. [13] As part of the deal, Estill took over as CEO of Synnex's Canadian division. During the five years that he ran Synnex from 2004 to 2009, sales for the company grew from $800 million to $2 billion.