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The Los Angeles couple hadn't seen anyone sick while in Guadalajara but were nervous because of the stream of information about new cases. The two were wearing the masks because they're "just cautious," Enrique Velez said.
It was a different story for travelers heading south of the border.
"I'm worried," said Sergio Ruiz, 42, who checked in for a flight to Mexico City after a business trip to Los Angeles and planned to stay inside when he got home. "I'm going to stay there and not do anything."
In Ohio, a 9-year-old boy was infected with the same strain suspected of killing dozens in Mexico, authorities said. The third-grader had visited several Mexican cities on a family vacation, said Clifton Barnes, spokesman for the Lorain County Emergency Management Agency.
"He went to a fair, he went to a farm, he went to visit family around Mexico," Barnes said.
The boy has a mild case and is recovering at home in northern Ohio, authorities said.
In New York, Jackie Casola -- whose son Robert Arifo is a sophomore at St. Francis -- said her son told her a number of students had been sent home sick Thursday and hardly anyone was in school Friday.
Arifo hasn't shown any symptoms, but some of his friends have, his mother said. And she has been extra vigilant about his health.
"I must have drove him crazy -- I kept taking his temperature in the middle of the night," she said.
[Associated
Press;
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