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  2. Herbert Irving - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbert_Irving

    Co-founding Sysco Namesake of Columbia University Irving Medical Center Herbert Irving (November 5, 1917 – October 3, 2016) was an American businessman, philanthropist, and art collector.

  3. CFS Continental - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CFS_Continental

    To help finance the A.E. Staley acquisition, Tate & Lyle pre-sold CFS Continental to the foodservice giant Sysco for $360 million. Not forgetting the owners had to give over 50% of their profit to taxes and debt. Sysco generated sales of $3.7 billion (1987) and CFS Continental generated sales of $2.4 billion (1987).

  4. Sysco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sysco

    Sysco Corporation (short for Systems and Services Company) is an American multinational corporation involved in marketing and distributing food products, smallwares, kitchen equipment and tabletop items to restaurants, healthcare and educational facilities, hospitality businesses like hotels and inns, and wholesale to other companies that provide foodservice (like Aramark and Sodexo).

  5. Richard J. Schnieders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_J._Schnieders

    Schnieders began his career in the meat department of a regional grocery store, before moving on to sell meat for a national company, and later serving as the general sales manager for a foodservice distributor. He began working for Sysco in 1982, joining an executive management program at the company's Memphis subsidiary. [1]

  6. Global Trade Item Number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_Trade_Item_Number

    The Global Trade Item Number (GTIN) is an identifier for trade items, developed by the international organization GS1. [1] Such identifiers are used to look up product information in a database (often by entering the number through a barcode scanner pointed at an actual product) which may belong to a retailer, manufacturer, collector, researcher, or other entity.

  7. Federal Stock Number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Stock_Number

    The National Stock Number was the same number as the FSN, plus the two-digit National Codification Bureau (NCB) "Country Code" added between the FSCG code and the item code. The US government added the code numbers "00" in the place of the NCB digits to all FSN numbers to create compliant American NSN numbers.

  8. NIGP Code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NIGP_Code

    The NIGP Code can be accessed in several ways. The most common is via the NIGP Code web search tool, the NIGP Living Code, which hosts a search engine for the Code for end users. The site also has a download section, which provides for end user download of the entire codeset or modifications to the codeset since the last download by the user.

  9. NATO Stock Number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NATO_Stock_Number

    An NSN on the tag of a pair of trousers. A NATO Stock Number, or National Stock Number (NSN) as it is known in the U.S., is a 13-digit numeric code used by the NATO military alliance, identifying all the 'standardized material items of supply' as they have been recognized by all member states of NATO.