Read the text below and answer questions 13 to 16.
Everywhere you look, people are coming out from under their pandemic rocks. The masks are off, the bars are crowded, the kids are back in school. Even New York City, home to some of the most stringent mandates, no longer requires proof of vaccination in restaurants or masks in schools.
The virus that has killed more than a million Americans and as many as 18 million people worldwide so far, according to one estimate, is still at large. Europe's relaxation of pandemic restrictions, together with a more contagious variant of Omicron, BA.2, has triggered a rise in cases and an uptick in the U.S. is expected over the next few weeks.
Which way the virus goes—whether it fades away or returns with a vengeance—is uncertain. It's clear, though, that assuming the rosiest scenario without planning for the worst is foolhardy. That is especially true in light of our history with this coronavirus, which turned more deadly in the Delta surge last summer and more transmissible when Omicron hit in January. Anyone who has any experience with infectious diseases would have to tell you not to bet against this vírus.
(Adapted from Back to Normal? by FRED GUTTERL IN NEWSWEEK 04/06/22 )
UNIRG 2022.2 - QUESTÃO 13
According to paragraph 1, in New York City
(A) the public is acting as if pandemic is over.
(B) most citizens are rather afraid of the corona vírus.
(C) law still requires proof of vaccination in restaurants.
(D) maskless students are not allowed in schools.
QUESTÃO ANTERIOR:
GABARITO:
(A) the public is acting as if pandemic is over.
RESOLUÇÃO:
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