In its Near v. Minnesota decision of 1931, the Supreme Court ruled that
A) the state government could not use prior restraint to shut down an outspoken newspaper.
B) a school newspaper was not a public forum and could be regulated "in any reasonable manner" by school officials.
C) states had the power to use prior restraint broadly, but the national government did not.
D) a CIA agent could not publish a personal memoir without clearing it through the agency.
E) states were prohibited from publishing newspapers because that amounted to government censorship of the press and constituted the establishment of a government
monopoly.
Answer: A