I'm not sure exactly what you're asking. If you want to know how to go about doing it, I have no idea - but I'm certain you'll find the information if you search online.
If you're asking whether or not it would be a good idea, I'd say most definitely. A scholarship allows a student to continue in their studies, and learning is a mitzvah - and assuming you're Jewish, you really ought to be carrying out mitzvot. What's more, as a charitable act, it's chesed too - so you're actually carrying out two mitzvot.
I'm not a rabbi myself, but I can't imagine that anyone who is one would be anything other than delighted and honoured to have a scholarship set up in their memory!
You can find out by visiting collegeboard.org and creating a profile.
No. There are many, many scholarships that are limited to minorities.
Rabban (Rabbi) Yochanan ben Zakkai (1st century CE) lived his entire life in the Holy Land, in Jerusalem, and later in a town called B'ror Chail (in his last years). His chief disciples were Rabbi Eliezer and Rabbi Yehoshua, the teachers of Rabbi Akiva. Rabbi Eliezer settled in Lod, while Rabbi Yehoshua lived in Pekiin. Rabbi Yochanan ben Zakkai was also famous for creating the Yeshivah at Yavneh (Talmud, Gittin 56b).
Yes, for centuries, both in the original Hebrew and in translation. This scholarship ranges from religious commentary (such as Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan's recent "The Living Torah," which applies original modern research to the Tanakh), to "Bible-Criticism," and everything in between.
Silicon
Objects are memory allocation for Data held inside it at runtime. So Memory need to be allocated for objects (Creating Objects) and it need to be garbage collected or deallocated to recover memory after that object no longer needed (Destroying Objects).
B. Managing memory.
Research universities.
Research universities.
Originally, it was a rabbi, a rabbi, and a rabbi walk into a bar. . .
Rabbis. Here are a few examples from the Talmud. Rabbi Yochanan ben Zakkai, Rabbi Yonatan ben Uziel, Chanina ben Dosa, Bava ben Buta, Shimon ben Hillel, Rabbi Eliezer, Rabbi Yehoshua, Rabbi Yossi haKohen, Rabbi Shimon ben Netanel, Rabbi Elazar ben Arakh, Rabbi Yochanan ben Nuri, Rabbi Akiva, Rabbi Nechuniah, Rabbi Nachum Gamzu, Rabbi Yossi Glili, Rabbi Honi Me'agel, Rabbi Abba Shaul, and hundreds of others. Each of these had large groups of disciples.
Rabbi Aaron Teitelbaum and Rabbi Zalman Leib Teitelbaum