Archives for April 2, 2025

Supporting Aspiring Physicians

By Susan Houston Klaus

Conversation with Ruth Scott Inspires Couple to Establish Scholarship Fund

Sue and Roy Brunz know well what a gift to the University of Nebraska Foundation can do. For many years, they have supported the University of Nebraska–Lincoln in areas close to their hearts.

 A conversation over breakfast in Palm Springs a few years ago with Ruth Scott led the Brunzes to extend their support to a new area: the University of Nebraska Medical Center College of Medicine. Ruth Scott, along with her late husband, Bill, is one of the most transformative donors in the University of Nebraska’s history. The Scotts’ generosity has benefited students, faculty and programs across all the University of Nebraska campuses. For UNMC, just a few examples of their giving include the Ruth and Bill Scott Student Plaza; the Munroe-Meyer Institute; the College of Nursing facility in Lincoln; the Frederick F. Paustian Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center; and the Douglas A. Kristensen Rural Health Education Complex in Kearney.

Sue and Roy Brunz, both Nebraska natives, are 1973 UNL graduates and University of Nebraska Foundation Trustees. Sue is from Lincoln. Roy grew up in rural Oxford, attending kindergarten through eighth grade in a one-room country school with no running water.

Sue earned an education degree in speech pathology and audiology; Roy earned his degree in civil engineering. After relocating to the Dallas, Texas, area after they married, Sue worked as a speech pathologist and later as an elementary school principal. Roy began his civil engineering career with the Texas Department of Transportation and later became an owner of a transportation consulting firm with multiple offices in Texas. Graduating from the university is an achievement neither of them takes for granted, Sue said. Something her father told her on graduation day has always stayed with her.

“I am the youngest of three children in my family, and I was the third one to graduate from UNL. I don’t think I’ll ever forget my dad telling me that it was one of the most important days of his life because he witnessed all three of his children getting their college degrees, an opportunity that he never had,” she said. “I will remember that all of my life.”

Over the years, the Brunzes have shown their appreciation to UNL by creating and supporting several scholarship funds for the UNL College of Engineering and College of Education and Human Sciences.

Both Roy and Sue remember chatting with Ruth Scott before the program that morning in California.

“I went into the breakfast meeting not knowing who was who, and so we sat beside Ruth,” Roy said. “Then the program started, and everybody there from the medical school was saying, ‘Thanks, Ruth, for all your help on doing this and that and everything.’”

That’s when Roy put the name and the face together. After the event, he was motivated to find out more about what the Scotts were doing to support UNMC.

“Talking with Ruth, and then Dr. [Jeffrey] Gold, [president of the University of Nebraska System], “it all made sense to me that we need to help the medical community and Nebraska as much as we can,” he said.

Sue talked with Ruth that day about their shared teaching degrees from the university and was impressed by the impact the Scott family’s philanthropy has had on medicine.

“I think that’s what resonated with me in visiting with her,” Sue said. “Their donations have provided such advancements in health care and everything else, not just in Nebraska. That has an effect globally on finding cures for various diseases that we don’t have cures for yet.”

The Brunzes were inspired to create a scholarship fund for students in the UNMC College of Medicine so aspiring health care professionals can continue their education and forge new discoveries and treatments.

“Hopefully it will provide students with the financial support to complete their medical degrees. That’s number one,” Roy said. “And hopefully it creates more doctors to either go into research or specialization in various fields of medicine.”

There will always be a need to educate more physicians to develop cures for existing as well as new diseases, Sue said.

“I can’t think of a better way to donate money than for more doctors and research to develop those cures,” she said.

“Talking with Ruth, and then Dr. Gold, it all made sense to me that we need to help the medical community and Nebraska as much as we can.”

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Seeing a Future in Rural Nebraska

By Robyn Murray

Donor Support Encourages Promising Students to Stay in Nebraska

Holden Mundorf is in his third year of college, but he’s already a senior at the University of Nebraska at Kearney. A business administration major from Valentine, Mundorf got ahead with college credits in high school and then worked all through his summer breaks to complete his coursework. He’s working fast, because he’s got big places to go.

“I’d like to start out as maybe a county commissioner and work my way up,” Mundorf said. “Governor is probably my end goal, but maybe a U.S. senator.”

Mundorf has already proved himself to be hard-working, a top student and a budding leader. He was class president in high school and president of the National Honor Society; he completed his associate degree at Northeast Community College with a 4.0 GPA and made the dean’s list at UNK; and he wrestled, played football and ran track and cross country in high school.

Mundorf’s skills and experiences were recognized when he was awarded the Ron & Carol Cope UNK Scholarship, which is provided to select students who demonstrate leadership potential and high academic achievement. But in addition to recognizing the hard work he has put into his academic career, Mundorf said the scholarship relieved a significant financial burden.

“It was a very big relief to get the scholarship,” Mundorf said. “I will graduate this spring semester with next to zero debt from my undergrad, which has helped tremendously.”

Mundorf plans to pursue his master’s degree after graduation and then his juris doctorate. He hopes to serve as an attorney in a city such as Lincoln or Omaha before moving back to Valentine.

Holden Mundorf is a senior at UNK majoring in business administration.
Holden Mundorf is a senior at UNK majoring in business administration.
University of Nebraska Foundation Trustee Jerry Catlett said working with interns from UNK’s College of Business and Technology makes him think “Nebraska is going to be OK.”

Plans like those give Jerry Catlett, a business leader and University of Nebraska Foundation Trustee, hope for the future. A 1982 graduate of UNK, then Kearney State College, Catlett has made outright gifts and a planned gift to support UNK’s College of Business and Technology. He wants to support the college in encouraging more young people to live and work in rural Nebraska.

“The opportunities are there,” Catlett said. “For rural Nebraska kids to stay here, we’ve got to get them to go to school here. And, sometimes, financial help is what it takes.”

Catlett said he felt it was important to give back to his alma mater, which provided the foundation for his career. A successful banker in Bruning, Nebraska, Catlett is thankful to several instructors at UNK who prepared him for the business world, which at the time was struggling with high unemployment.

“It was very helpful to think about what the reality was,” Catlett said. “It laid the foundation about hard work and also that you have to continue to learn or you won’t get ahead.”

Like Mundorf, Catlett grew up in a small rural Nebraska town. His family had a farm in Custer County, and his father traded in cattle. When Catlett was in high school, his parents became ill, and the expenses tore through their life savings.

“That leaves a mark,” Catlett said. “But it teaches lessons, too.”

Catlett’s parents encouraged him to further his education, believing it to be a means of leveling the playing field and a source of opportunity.

“I’ve had lots of great mentors, my parents being two of them,” Catlett said. “Other family members, my siblings, my football coaches, a lot of people in business and the community. They weren’t doing it for the notoriety. They were doing it because they were good people, and I hope that they saw some potential and wanted to encourage me to do better.”

Catlett took those lessons to heart. Guided by his faith and with the support of his wife, Jill, who he said “has inspired me to be a better version of myself,” Catlett made it a priority to give back to the next generation — not just financially but by helping to set up internships through his professional connections and at Bruning Bank.

“I’m so impressed with how smart and focused these students are,” Catlett said. “I see bright futures for them.”

Mundorf has also gained internship experience while at UNK. Last summer, he interned at U.S. Cellular – Huskerland Communications in Valentine. UNK’s College of Business and Technology prioritizes internship experience for students and was recognized as “best in class” by peer institutions in the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business. In the 2023-2024 school year, the college placed a record-breaking 145 students in internships across sectors.

Catlett, who also supports Loper Athletics and the Trustees Fund for the Future, said if financial support and real-world opportunities help promising students like Mundorf, they are worth the down payment.

“When you meet those kids, you think, ‘Yeah, this was a good investment,’” Catlett said. “Helping these kids with scholarships and internships is going to be really good for them and really good for Nebraska.”

“When you meet those kids, you think, ‘Yeah, this was a good investment.”

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