| Rescue workers in the California town of La Conchita 
 have recovered 10 bodies from houses crushed in a mudslide Monday. 
 Flooding in other parts of the state has killed at least nine people in 
 two weeks of record rainfall. Eight people remain missing in the small 
 coastal town of La Conchita.
  After working through the night, emergency workers discovered the 
 bodies of a mother and her three daughters early Wednesday, dashing the hopes of a father who 
 had been digging through the rubble with the firefighters.
  Rescuers used sensitive microphones and fiber optic cameras in their 
 search for signs of life under the debris. By early Wednesday, no sounds 
 had been heard for 24 hours, but Ventura County Fire Chief Bob Roper said 
 workers would continue searching empty spaces until they exhaust all hope 
 of finding survivors.
  "Once we know there are no more voids and we're not getting any sounds, 
 then we'll start making the decisions to go into recovery mode," he said.
  10 people were injured Monday as a wall of mud crashed down on the 
 small coastal community 100 kilometers northwest of Los Angeles. 15 houses 
 were destroyed and 16 were damaged.
 California Governor Arnold 
 Schwarzenegger toured the neighborhood Wednesday and praised the hundreds 
 of rescue workers on the scene.
 "They have been working around the clock and they've been using 
 state-of-the-art equipment in order to find survivors. So far, they have 
 rescued 10 people."
  Two weeks of rain, which ended Tuesday, broke a century-old record, 
 dropping more than 40 centimeters of rain on Los Angeles, more than the 
 region normally gets through the whole winter. Among the fatalities was a two-year-old child who 
 slipped from her mother's arms into raging floodwaters.
 The storms 
 have also caused flooding that destroyed homes in Arizona and Utah and 
 heavy snowfall that blocked roads in mountain communities from California 
 to Colorado.
 
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