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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- Lewis B. and Mary L. Campbell have pledged
$150,000 to establish the Campbell-Portera Endowed Scholarship
in the College of Arts and Sciences at
The University of Alabama.
The Bloomfield Hills, Mich., residents founded the scholarship
to honor and recognize Dr. Malcolm “Mack” Portera,
chancellor of The University
of Alabama System, and his wife, Olivia Portera, as well as
to recognize student leadership in the College of Arts and Sciences.
Priority of consideration is given to full-time college seniors
who have demonstrated outstanding leadership and service. Two scholarships
shall be awarded annually, one to a male student and one to a female
student.
Lewis Campbell is chairman, president and chief executive officer
of the Rhode Island-based Textron Inc., one of the world's largest
multi-industry companies. Textron has more than 44,000 employees
in nearly 40 countries and its brands include Bell Helicopter,
Cessna Aircraft, Kautex, Lycoming, E-Z-GO and Greenlee.
Campbell joined Textron after nearly 25 years with General Motors.
He held several executive positions with GM and came to know the
Porteras when he was vice president of manufacturing in charge
of GM’s Tuscaloosa Rochester Products Division.
Campbell was awarded an honorary doctor of science degree from
UA. He is a member of Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business
Advisory Board.
“Two decades ago, Mack Portera helped to change Alabama’s
economic landscape for the better with his visionary work as the
University’s vice president of external affairs,” Campbell
said. ”I was privileged to share in that economically transforming
time. Mary and I wish to pay tribute to Mack and Olivia for their
service with these scholarships and to inspire young Alabamians
to follow their fine example.”
Mack Portera worked in The University of Alabama’s office
of academic affairs and research and was executive assistant
to two presidents before becoming a UA vice president. Following
that, he served as vice chancellor for external affairs of The
University of Alabama System, and when he retired in 1996, he
launched a successful business development and strategic planning
company. His industrial development activities are credited with
attracting $5 billion of capital investment to the Southeast.
He was Mississippi State University’s president in the late
1990s and returned to UA in 2002 as chancellor. At MSU, Portera
earned a bachelor’s degree in 1969 and master’s degree
in political science in 1971. A Dean’s Scholar Fellow, he
holds a doctorate in political science from UA.
Olivia Portera’s work as a public school teacher has included
service in Tuscaloosa schools. The Porteras are natives of West
Point, Miss.
The College of Arts and Sciences is Alabama’s largest liberal
arts college and the University’s largest division, with
355 faculty and 6,600 students.
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