<p>Etched into America&#39;s consciousness is the United Negro College Fund&#39;s phrase &quot;A mind is a terrible thing to waste.&quot; This book tells the story of the organization&#39;s efforts on behalf of black colleges against the backdrop of the cold war and the civil rights movement.</p><p>Founded during the post-World War II period as a successor to white philanthropic efforts the UNCF nevertheless retained vestiges of outside control. In its early years the organization was restrained in its critique of segregation and reluctant to lodge a challenge against institutional and cultural racism. Through cogent analysis of written and oral histories archival documents and the group&#39;s outreach and advertising campaigns historian Marybeth Gasman examines the UNCF&#39;s struggle to create an identity apart from white benefactors and to evolve into a vehicle for black empowerment.</p><p>The first history of the UNCF <em>Envisioning Black Colleges</em> draws attention to the significance of black colleges in higher education and the role they played in Americans&#39; struggle for equality.</p>
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