(AP) — The University of Nebraska Board of Regents will consider the first tuition freeze in more than two decades when members meet in June.
President James B. Milliken says the two-year freeze is possible because of a 4 percent funding increase approved by the Legislature. The last tuition freeze was in 1990.
Officials say the freeze would save undergraduates at the four University of Nebraska campuses about $1,000.
The board will meet June 7.