Asked by tt

Read this excerpt from an MLA-formatted paper.

In 2001, a group of students and parents in Texas took a school district to court contending that the school's mandatory uniform policy violated First Amendment rights. The Fifth Circuit Court ruled that the school's policy was constitutional and that students had failed to show that the policy suppressed free expression (ACLU).

Look at the Works Cited below and then select the article that belongs to the citation.


Abutaleb, Yasmeen. "School Dress Codes Aren't Just for Students


a. Anymore." USA Today, 30 July 2012, www.usatoday30.usatoday.com/ money/media/story/2012-07-17/teacher-dress-code. Accessed 4 May 2016.


Barron, James. "News Business Lags at High Schools, Too." The New York


b. Times, April 2010, www.cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/04/27/news-business-lags-at-high-schools-too/ _php=true&_type=blogs&_r=0.

Accessed 30 April 2016.


c. Student Press Law Center. "The Hazelwood Decision and Student Press."


Scholastic.com, 2014, www.scholastic.com/teachers/article/hazelwood-decision-and-student-press. Accessed 30 April 2016.


d. American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). "All Dressed Up and Nowhere To Go:


Students and Their Parents Fight Uniform Policies." American Civil Liberties Union, 4 Nov. 1999, www.aclu.org/free-speech/all-dressed-and-nowhere-go-students-and-their-parents-fight-school-uniform-policies. Accessed 4 May 2016.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
d. American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). "All Dressed Up and Nowhere To Go: Students and Their Parents Fight Uniform Policies." American Civil Liberties Union, 4 Nov. 1999, www.aclu.org/free-speech/all-dressed-and-nowhere-go-students-and-their-parents-fight-school-uniform-policies. Accessed 4 May 2016.