Answer: B. The freedom of the press guaranteed by the first admendment does not extend to school-sponsored student newspapers.
The Court held that the First Amendment did not expect schools to certifiably advance specific sorts of understudy discourse.
The Court held that schools must have the capacity to set exclusive requirements for understudy discourse scattered under their support, and that schools held the privilege to decline to support discourse that was conflicting with the mutual estimations of a cultivated social request.
Educators did not offend the First Amendment by practicing publication power over the substance of understudy discourse insofar as their activities were sensibly identified with authentic instructive concerns. According to Court, the actions of principal Reynolds met this test.