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The Latest: Man swept away by floodwaters, found dead

HOUSTON (AP) — The Latest on heavy rain reported across much of Texas (all times local):

7:30 p.m.

The body of a man has been recovered from Lady Bird Lake in downtown Austin about a half-hour after a man was reported to have been swept away from a flooded street.

Austin-Travis County Emergency Medical Services reported it was called shortly before 1 p.m. Wednesday on a water rescue on flood-swollen Shoal Creek on the western edge of downtown Austin. A rescue helicopter was summoned to aid in the search for the missing person.

Austin police reported they may have spotted the victim floating eight blocks downstream. A short time later, about 1:30 p.m., the rescue helicopter crew reported spotting a motionless body in the lake about a mile downstream from the creek outlet.

About 1½ inches of rain was reported to have fallen on the lake within two hours around midday Wednesday.

6 p.m.

Heavy rain reported across much of northern, western and central Texas caused widespread road closings and scattered reports of high-water rescues.

In the West Texas town of Merkel, about 15 miles (25 kilometers) west of Abilene, Police Chief Phillip Conklin told KTXS-TV of Abilene that seven people were rescued Wednesday from floodwaters. Three were rescued from an apartment complex, two from flood-stranded vehicles and a couple from their home.

Flash floodwaters washed out a Texas Pacifico Transportation railroad track near Mertzon, about 25 miles (40 kilometers) southwest of San Angelo in West Texas.

Thunderstorms in the Panhandle prompted scattered reports to the National Weather Services of funnel clouds, but no tornadoes were reported.

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10:01 a.m.

Dozens of students in the Houston area had to spend the night at school after flooded roads prevented buses from leaving and parents from reaching their children.

Most of the approximately 1,500 students at an elementary school in Cleveland, northeast of Houston, were able to leave by the end of the day after being stranded for a time Tuesday as up to 10 inches (254 millimeters) of rain swamped the region. However, the school district says about 60 students stayed overnight.

The downpour brought flooding to schools and homes as emergency personnel worked into the night to evacuate people.

The National Weather Service issued flash flood warnings. It warned that storms could continue to batter the state’s Gulf Coast with rain later into the week.

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