2024-2025 Awards Program
Undergraduate Scholarships & Graduate Fellowships - $1000 ($500/semester)
Applications are DUE to your department chair by Friday, March 8, 2024
Undergraduate Application Graduate Application
Award notifications will be mailed the week of April 24, 2024
Contact: Jared Ludwig
Undergraduate Application Graduate Application
Award notifications will be mailed the week of April 24, 2024
Contact: Jared Ludwig
Criteria
- Graduation date no sooner than May 2025
- Accumulative GPA of 3.5 or greater
- Fall 2024-2025 UNL full-time junior, senior, graduate student, or Certificate of Full-Time Graduate Status enrolled in as a primary major in one of the following Biotechnology or College of Engineering Degree Programs:
Sample Biotechnology Degree Programs
Agronomy and Horticulture
Animal Science
Biochemistry
Chemistry
Complex Biosystems
Entomology
Food Science and Technology
Microbiology Program
Nutrition and Health Sciences
Plant Pathology
School of Biological Sciences
School of Natural Resources
Veterinary and Biomedical Sciences
Sample College of Engineering Degree Programs
Agricultural Engineering
Architectural Engineering
Biological Systems Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Civil Engineering
Computer Engineering
Computer Science
Construction Engineering
Construction Management
Data Science
Electrical Engineering
Environmental Engineering
Mechanical Engineering
Software Engineering
- Milton E. Mohr Scholarships and Fellowships are renewable, but you must reapply.
- Students will be selected on their academic performance and potential for accomplishments in their specific field.
About the Program
The Milton E. Mohr Scholarship and Fellowship Awards Program was established in 1989 for students in the College of Engineering or Biotechnology degree programs. Th e scholarships and fellowships are made possible through an endowment to the University Foundation.Milton E. Mohr (1915-2000) was described in his lifetime as “...engineer, inventor, entrepreneur, corporate leader” and was instrumental in providing key leadership to young adults. In 1938 he graduated, highest in his class, from UNL with a bachelor of science degree in electrical engineering, and in 1959 UNL awarded him an honorary doctorate of engineering.
UNL does not discriminate based upon any protected status. Please see go.unl.edu/nondiscrimination.