From MTSU News- By
all accounts, she had a deep passion to fly. Family and friends of Middle
Tennessee State University alumna and UPS pilot Shanda Carney Fanning
(pictured) want to honor that passion by establishing a scholarship in her
memory.
A Lynchburg, Tenn., resident and Shelbyville, Tenn., native,
Fanning was one of two pilots killed Aug. 14 when their United Parcel Service
airplane crashed in Birmingham, Ala. She was 37.
Like many, best friend Whitney Dix, also a pilot and currently a dispatch manager with Southwest Airlines in Texas, was devastated by Fanning's death. But Dix is determined to keep her memory alive by spearheading a drive to establish a scholarship at their alma mater - The Shanda Carney Fanning Aviation Memorial Scholarship.
-Shanda Carney Fanning-
Fanning graduated from Shelbyville High School before going on to earn her bachelor's degree in aerospace administration from MTSU in 1999. Her husband, Brett, works in distribution at the Jack Daniels Distillery in Lynchburg.
"I want to give back to the aviation community and keep
her memory and love of aviation alive," Dix said.
Amy Hardin, development director with the MTSU College of
Basic and Applied Sciences, explained that a minimum of $25,000 must be raised
to endow the scholarship, which would be awarded annually to aviation students
studying within MTSU's nationally known aerospace program. Hardin said Dix
approached her with the scholarship idea following the memorial ceremony for
Fanning.
"This scholarship is very important to me because Shanda was
my best friend for 18 years and I want her name to live on at MTSU,"
Dix said. "We shared a love of aviation and our alma mater. MTSU and the
Aerospace Department were a huge part of who we became as
individuals and ultimately shaped our lives, our friendship and our
careers."
Dix has begun contacting organizations interested in donating to the scholarship fund, which is being managed by the MTSU Development and Foundation Office.
Hardin said details on the scholarship guidelines are still being finalized, but the goal is to begin awarding it for the 2014-15 academic year. The long-term goal is to increase the award to the university's Centennial Scholarship level, which requires a $100,000 endowment. Source: Jimmy Hart, MTSU News