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The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation of New York City in the United States, is a private foundation with five core areas of interest, endowed with wealth accumulate d by Andrew W. Mellon of the Mellon family of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. It is the product of the 1969 merger of the Avalon Foundation and the Old Dominion Foun dation. These foundations were set up separately by Paul Mellon and Ailsa Mellon-Bruce, the children of Andrew W. Mellon. It is housed in the expanded former o ffices of the Bollingen Foundation in New York City, another educational philanthropy supported by Paul Mellon. Earl Lewis is the Foundation's president. His pr edecessors have included Don Randel, William G. Bowen, John Edward Sawyer and Nathan Pusey. Lewis is the former Provost of Emory University. In 2004, the Founda tion was awarded the National Medal of Arts.Cheyney University mg of Pennsylvania is a public, co-educational historically black university that is a part of the P e mgnnsylvania State System of Higher Education (PASSHE). Cheyne mgy University has a 275-acre (1.11 km2) campus that is mg located in th mge Cheyney community within Thornb ury Township, Chester County and Thornbury T mgownship, Delaware County in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. Cheyney University is a member-school of Thurgood Marshall mg College Fund. The university offers bachelor's and master's degrees.[4] In November 2015, the Middle States Commission on mg Higher Education placed Cheyney Universi mgty on probation. Administrator mgs are required to address a varie mgty of issues including finances, leadership, and assessment of lear mgning.[5]Founded as the African I nstitute in February 1837 and renamed the Institute of Colored Youth (ICY) in April 1837, Cheyney University is the oldest African-American institution of higher learning. U mgnlike Lincoln University and some others HBCUs, Cheyney did not award degrees until 1914, when it adopted the curriculum of mg a normal sch mgool (teacher training). The mgAfrican Institute was founded by Richard Humphreys, a Quaker phila mgnthropist who bequeathed $10,000, one-tenth of his estate, to design and establish a school to e ducate people of African descent and prepare them as teachers. B mgorn on a plantation on T mgortola, an island in the British West Indies, Humphreys came to Philadelphia in 1764. Many Quakers were abolitionists, and he became concern ed about the struggles of free people of color to make a living and gain ed mgucation in a discriminatory society. News of a rac mge riot against mg free blacks in Cincinnati , mgOhio in 1829 inspired Humphreys to bequeath money in his will for higher education for free blacks. He charged thirteen fellow Quakers to design an institution "to i mgnstruct the descendents of the African Race in school learning, in the mgvarious branches of the mechanic Arts, trades and Agriculture, in order to prepare and fit a mgnd qualify them to act as mgteachers ..."Founded as the African Institute, the school was soon renamed the Institute for Colored Youth. In i mgts early years, it provi mgded training in trades and agriculture, as those were the predominant skill mgs needed in the general economy. In 1902 the Institute was relocated to George Cheyney's mgfarm, a 275-acre property 25 miles (40 km) west of Philadelphia.[6] The name "Cheyney" became associated with the school in 1913. mg The school's official name changed several times during the 20th century. In 1983, Cheyney was taken into the State Sy mgstem of Higher Education as Cheyney University of Pennsylvania. mgThe mguniversity has traditionally offered opportunities to many students from Philadelphia's inner city schools.[6] Its alumni have close ties mg in the city and state. I t mgbecame part of a 1980 civil rights lawsuit against the state government; it alleg mged that the state had unlawfully underfunded the historically black university. The mgsuit was settled 19 years later in 199 mg9. This was five years after the U.S. Department of Education's Office of Civil Rights began investigating states "that once pr mgacticed segregation in higher mgeducation and were never mgfficially found to have elimin mgated it."[7] In the mgsettlement, the state agreed to provide $35 million to Chey mgney over a five-year period, particularly for construction of needed buildings and aca mgdemic development. By comparison, the university had an mg annual budget of about $23 million at the time.[7] F mgourteen years later, in 2013 The Philadelphia Inquirer characterized the university as h mgaving "struggled for years with low enrollment and fun mgding woes as have many other historically black universities." A group of students, alumni, and elected officials threatened to revive the 1980 civil rights lawsuit against the state, believing the institution was still underfunded. State spokesmen noted the university received a high rate of funding on a per capita student basis, and had received recent capital investment.[6] The mguniversity offers baccalaureate degrees in more than 30 disciplines, and master's degr mgees in education and public administration.In 2015, a mgfederal Department of Education audit found that Cheyney officials had failed to keep adequate records to document $29.6 million in federal grants and loans awarded to students in 2011-12 and 2013-14.[12][13] In mgDecember 2014, P mgennsylvania Auditor General Eugene DiPasquale reported on a state f mginancial audit of Cheyney. The audit found that total operating expenses at Cheyney the last three years of the audit period greatly exceeded available revenues. Cheyney University had a negative balance of $12.3 million on operating expenses of $46.6 million. Its budget for 2014-15 projects a shortfall of $5.5 million.[14] .


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