Highlights
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For 25 years, The Charles Millican Legacy Society has supported scholarships, research and academic programs that open doors for students and fuel the future.
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Through planned gifts such as bequests and retirement plan designations — which accounted for nearly one-third of all charitable support to UCF in 2025 — donors ensure the university’s impact reaches far beyond today’s students.
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Students like biomedical sciences major Thiago Maillo and electrical engineering major Shannon Hankinson are turning that generosity into momentum, conducting research, gaining hands-on experience, graduating debt-free and pushing toward what’s next.
For 25 years, members of The Charles Millican Legacy Society have shared a powerful belief: investing in UCF is ultimately an investment in students and the lives they’ll lead.
Through planned gifts such as bequests, estate plans and retirement assets, society members extend opportunity far beyond a single generation. Their support fuels scholarships, research and academic programs that prepare students to meet the evolving needs of industry and community.
In 2025 alone, planned gifts accounted for nearly one-third of all charitable support to UCF.
The society is named for UCF’s founding president, Charles Millican, a visionary who built the university with the future firmly in mind. During his tenure, Millican transformed 1,227 acres of Central Florida scrubland into an institution designed to support the space race and prepare students for careers in engineering and computer science. He championed what would become the Central Florida Research Park and helped shape UCF’s enduring ambition to reach for the stars.
Today, that vision lives on through more than 500 members of The Charles Millican Legacy Society — and through the students whose futures are shaped by their generosity.
A World of Possibility
Thiago Maillo’s path to a bachelor’s degree wasn’t linear — but it was driven by something unwavering: the pursuit of greater opportunity.
After his first year studying medicine at the Universidad Nacional del Litoral, Maillo realized he wanted a different future. He saw higher education in the United States as the place to build it. Just three months after applying to Valencia College, he moved to Florida and later transferred to UCF through DirectConnect.
“Scholarships have made all the difference. They’ve made it possible for me to achieve my dreams.” — Thiago Maillo, biomedical sciences major
Today, he’s a Burnett Honors Scholar and biomedical sciences major on the neuroscience track, with a minor in psychology. He’s conducted research at the Applied Cognition and Technology Lab, completed an internship with ThinkNeuro and serves as an undergraduate teaching assistant in Genetics and Embryology. He’s also found community as president of the Argentinian Student Association.
“Being at UCF was my goal from the start,” says Maillo, who plans to pursue a doctoral degree in cognitive neuroscience. “I love being a Knight. Scholarships have made all the difference. They’ve made it possible for me to achieve my dreams — and pave the way for my two siblings to follow in my footsteps.”
Reimagining What’s Possible
Shannon Hankinson didn’t follow the traditional path to UCF — she created her own.
A Tampa native and single mother of two, Hankinson spent years leading teams at Target before realizing that success and fulfillment aren’t always the same. Determined to change course, she saved money, left her job, earned an associate degree at Eastern Florida State College and transferred to UCF, becoming the first in her family to pursue a four-year degree.
“Donors made it possible for me to build a future that reflects my values and supports my family.” — Shannon Hankinson, electrical engineering major
Now a senior electrical engineering major, she has seized several opportunities at UCF. She completed two semesters in the Lockheed Martin College Work Experience Program, joined the Society of Women Engineers and works as a research assistant in UCF’s Radiation Effects Exploration Laboratory. There, she studies semiconductor reliability, hardware design and embedded systems under Assistant Professor Enxia Zhang. Through the Scalable Asymmetric Lifecycle Engagement program, she also gained hands-on experience with the U.S. defense sector.
This spring, Hankinson will graduate debt-free — supported by scholarships, research funding and a fellowship that’ll carry her directly into a UCF master’s program. A doctorate is next.
“One of my goals was to show my children that it’s never too late to do what you want to do with your life,” Hankinson says. “Donors made it possible for me to build a future that reflects my values and supports my family.”
A Lasting Legacy
On May 2, UCF celebrated the 25th anniversary of The Charles Millican Legacy Society. The milestone coincides with UCF’s Go For Launch campaign, which builds on the university’s commitment to accelerating student success, advancing research and driving societal impact.
“… support from … our Charles Millican Legacy Society members [continues] to power our innovators, educators and researchers …” — Rod Grabowski, senior vice president of Advancement and Partnerships
“This university was founded to serve the next great frontier — America’s space race — and it’s support from dedicated individuals like our Charles Millican Legacy Society members that continue to power our innovators, educators and researchers as they move that mission forward,” says Rod Grabowski, senior vice president of Advancement and Partnerships and CEO of the UCF Foundation. “From driving the latest advances in AI to creating next-level immersive experiences and sparking breakthrough medical research, UCF is building a future others have only imagined — one that this society’s namesake would be proud to see.”
Maillo is forging new frontiers for his family. Hankinson is showing her children what’s possible when you start again.
They aren’t outliers. They’re what happens when students with extraordinary drive meet extraordinary support.
This is the true legacy of UCF, of Millican and of the society members: students with the confidence to go further, supported by those who believe they can.