Exactly. It's damn-near impossible to put together a test of this nature without some mistake in the process -- either a typo, or an assumption by the person writing the question that's "obvious" to him / her but not to someone reading the quesiton independently, or just a "I'm sure I checked both C and E on the answer key when I filed the test".
So, if your goal is 100%, just enter answer E (or whatever it is).
Now, having said that, it's entirely possible that my understanding of the rule is flawed and that C (or whatever) really is not one of the rules allowing a warning. I hope that the NCAA answer key provides reasoning and explanations (and not just rules references).
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