Home Food City scholarship to aid incoming JMU students
Local

Food City scholarship to aid incoming JMU students

Contributors

A new scholarship endowed by Food City will help connect top graduates from western Virginia community colleges to the James Madison University College of Business.

The Jack C. Smith Scholarship, announced in late September by the Jack and Judy Smith Family Foundation, provides $5,000 annual awards to rising juniors in the COB who hold an associate degree from one of four Virginia community colleges that satisfies JMU’s general education requirements.

“This scholarship will provide a means to attract strong students from an under-represented part of the commonwealth. It will strengthen the university’s ability to support a desirable cadre of potential students, associate’s degree graduates from our state’s community colleges,” said Weston Hatfield, JMU associate vice president for development. “It will create a template for an idea that JMU hopes to replicate in other parts of Virginia to similar effect.”

The scholarship honors Jack C. Smith, an entrepreneur and former U.S. Navy engineer who grew a small market in Grundy, Va., into what is now K-VA-T Food Stores, operating more than 100 Food City and Super Dollar stores across Kentucky, Virginia and Tennessee. Smith’s son, Steve, CEO and president of Food City, is a 1979 graduate of JMU.

The four partnering community colleges are Mountain Empire Community College, Virginia Highlands Community College, Southwest Virginia Community College and Wytheville Community College.

Students at the community colleges may apply for the scholarship by completing the transfer admissions application by the appropriate deadline and declaring a major within the COB on the application.

Jack C. Smith scholars are selected by the COB in coordination with the JMU admissions office and the financial aid and scholarships office. No additional application is required. Scholars must maintain a grade point average of 3.0 to be eligible for the award.

The total value of the scholarship will be $10,000 for two years, provided the scholar maintains good standing with the university and a GPA of 3.0. Scholarship recipients also are eligible for an internship at K-VA-T Food Stores during the summer preceding his or her senior year.

 

Support AFP




Contributors

Contributors

Have a guest column, letter to the editor, story idea or a news tip? Email editor Chris Graham at [email protected]. Subscribe to AFP podcasts on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPandora and YouTube.

Latest News

FIFA world cup 2026 soccer
Etc.

Two former UVA Soccer stars competing in the 2026 World Cup

drought update
Virginia

Yes, Virginia, we’re still in a drought: 7.5 inches of rain behind, with summer heat upon us

No surprise here, that the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality is telling us today that it is continuing the existing drought advisory statuses for pretty much the entire state.

data center technology networking
Politics, Virginia

We don’t like data center tax breaks: But there’s more to it than that

The state budget is still being held up, almost entirely because Gov. Abigail Spanberger and House of Delegates Speaker Don Scott want to preserve tax breaks for developers of hyperscale data centers.

measles illustration
Virginia

VDH: Beware Amish auction in Buckingham County amid measles outbreak

Brittany Paige Sheffer Churchville stabbing incident
Local

Male stabbing victim had significant blood loss in fight ‘fueled by alcohol’

washington nationals
Baseball

NoVa native walks off Nats with grand slam to complete stunning SF comeback

staunton
Local

Staunton: New online permitting portal streamlines process for residents, developers