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The Coca-Cola Scholars Foundation (CCSF) is a non-profit organization that works on behalf and at the direction of the Coca-Cola system (including The Coca-Cola Company, the world's largest producer of non-alcoholic beverages, and its subsidiaries) to provide scholarships to some 1,400 students annually in amounts totaling over $3.4 million each year.
Bright Futures Scholarship Program; Brooke Owens Fellowship; ... Coca-Cola Scholars Foundation; ... additional terms may apply.
The Coca-Cola Company and the Hispanic Scholarship Fund 'Share Possibilities' Through Scholarship Program for Hispanic Students $200,000 in Scholarships to be awarded to Hispanic College-Bound ...
The National Merit Scholarship Program is a United States academic scholarship competition for recognition and university scholarships. The program is managed by the National Merit Scholarship Corporation (NMSC), a privately funded not-for-profit organization based in Evanston, Illinois. [1] The program began in 1955.
The four key program areas of the Congressional Award are voluntary public service, personal development, physical fitness, and expedition/exploration. The emphasis on four diverse program areas is intended to mold a well-rounded youth. These areas resemble those of the Duke of Edinburgh Awards.
Quarles co-founded Million Dollar Scholar [26] after being named a Scholar of the Gates Millennium Scholars Program, Coca-Cola Scholarship, and Dell Scholarship; Derrius competitively secured over 1.1 million dollars in scholarship awards before graduating from Kenwood Academy High School in 2009.
She is the immediate former President of the Coca-Cola Africa Foundation and the group director of the Eurasia Africa Group (EAG) for women’s economic empowerment at Coca-Cola. [ 1 ] and is the daughter of the late Tom Mboya , a Kenyan nationalist leader, and one of the founding fathers of the Republic of Kenya and the late Pamela Mboya , a ...
Pepsi was only one of scores of cola drinks when he became president, and like all the others, was making little headway against the giant Coca-Cola bottling concern. But Pepsi made $3 million in 1938, increased profits an impressive 76 percent, and saw its stock increase in value from $70 to $190 a share.