UH student joins effort to hold off rising river
By John Windrow
Advertiser Staff Writer
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One University of Hawai'i medical student is giving his all in the battle against devastating floods in Iowa.
Stephen Chun, 25, a third-year medical student at the John A. Burns School of Medicine, is among those bagging and piling sandbags as the floodwaters have thousands of people in Iowa seeking higher ground.
Chun, who has been working on a research project about pancreatic cancer at the University of Iowa at Iowa City, is part of the effort to hold back waters from the Iowa River.
"The main shopping section of the city is 5 or 6 feet under water," he said in a telephone interview last night. "A thousand volunteers turned out today and yesterday to fill and stack sandbags. We're going to lose some buildings at the university. We've been removing books from the library. We are taking in patients at the university hospital from Cedar Rapids and towns that are flooded out all over the state."
Chun, a Punahou School graduate who was born in Hawai'i, said the volatility of Midwestern weather has amazed him.
"We were out sandbagging today," he said. "And it was bright sunshine, hot, about 80 degrees. Suddenly, the temperature dropped about 20 degrees in almost no time. It rained and then it started hailing. The sky turned green and the tornado sirens were going off. We saw a funnel cloud coming at us and we all had to go inside, but fortunately it didn't hit us."
He said at times the effort seems futile, and compared trying to stem the flooding to treating a rapidly spreading cancer.
"I don't know the exact measurements but it seemed like the river rose 2 or 3 feet in just a few hours. We're trying really hard, desperately hard to save things, to fight this," he said, "but, gosh, look at the odds. A thousand people stacking sandbags but it still looks like we're going to get flooded. Entire cities are being flooded."
He said people in Iowa City have opened their homes to others who have been flooded out. "I really admire the way people have gotten together," he said.
Chun's next worry was getting back to Honolulu for classes by June 23, but he said school officials had told him not to be concerned if he missed the start of class.
Reach John Windrow at jwindrow@honoluluadvertiser.com.