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 Q15:ce 
 According to the passage, which of the following resulted from the Lone Wolf decision? 
   
 
 The Supreme Court took on a greater role in Native American affairs.
 Native American tribes lost their legal standing as sovereign nations in their dealings with the federal government, but their ownership of tribal lands was confirmed.
 The federal government no longer needed to conclude a formal agreement with a Native American tribe in order to carry out policy decisions that affected the tribe.
 The federal government began to appropriate tribal lands for distribution to non-Indian settlers.
 Native American tribes were no longer able to challenge congressional actions by appealing to the Supreme Court.
 
 E当然对,但感觉C也对。特别是认为C对的时候就不往下看E了。C的问题在哪里? 
   
  In its 1903 decision in the case 
           of Lone Wolf v. Hitchcock, the United 
           States Supreme Court rejected the 
 Line          efforts of three Native American tribes 
   (5)         to prevent the opening of tribal lands 
 to non-Indian settlement without tribal 
 consent.  In his study of the Lone 
 Wolf case, Blue Clark properly 
 emphasizes the Court’s assertion 
  (10)        of a virtually unlimited unilateral power 
 of Congress (the House of Represen- 
 tatives and the Senate) over Native 
 American affairs.  But he fails to note 
 the decision’s more far-reaching 
  (15)        impact:  shortly after Lone Wolf, the 
 federal government totally abandoned 
 negotiation and execution of formal 
 written agreements with Indian tribes 
 as a prerequisite for the implemen- 
  (20)        tation of federal Indian policy.  Many 
 commentators believe that this change 
 had already occurred in 1871 when— 
 following a dispute between the 
           House and the Senate over which 
  (25)        chamber should enjoy primacy in 
 Indian affairs—Congress abolished 
 the making of treaties with Native 
 American tribes.  But in reality the 
 federal government continued to nego- 
  (30)        tiate formal tribal agreements past 
 the turn of the century, treating these 
 documents not as treaties with sover- 
           eign nations requiring ratification by the 
 Senate but simply as legislation to be 
  (35)        passed by both houses of Congress. 
           The Lone Wolf decision ended this 
 era of formal negotiation and finally 
 did away with what had increasingly 
 become the empty formality of obtain- 
 ing tribal consent. |