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- a979aa5106388f498690c7162b68fce1c70882d167b8828416a1ac9997f83e54 date "November 1967".
- a979aa5106388f498690c7162b68fce1c70882d167b8828416a1ac9997f83e54 first "Jim".
- a979aa5106388f498690c7162b68fce1c70882d167b8828416a1ac9997f83e54 isCitedBy Montgomery_Academy.
- a979aa5106388f498690c7162b68fce1c70882d167b8828416a1ac9997f83e54 journal "Southern Education Report".
- a979aa5106388f498690c7162b68fce1c70882d167b8828416a1ac9997f83e54 last "Leeson".
- a979aa5106388f498690c7162b68fce1c70882d167b8828416a1ac9997f83e54 pages "13-7".
- a979aa5106388f498690c7162b68fce1c70882d167b8828416a1ac9997f83e54 quote "That is one of the difficulties in determining the impact that these all-white private schools have had on education in the South. Correspondents for Southern Education Reporting Service noted that several private schools in their respective states were organized by the underlying reasons or as an unstated but understood factor. One example is Montgomery Academy, which had desegregation as one of the issues discussed in its formation in the mid-50's. Now the school has changed its role to be that of a preparatory school...".
- a979aa5106388f498690c7162b68fce1c70882d167b8828416a1ac9997f83e54 volume "3".