AP Photo/Evan Vucci
President Bush flies aboard Marine One above flood damaged areas during a tour of Midwest flood damage, Thursday, June 19, 2008, above Iowa City, Iowa.
AP Photo/Evan Vucci
President Bush, right, talks with Iowa City Mayor Regenia Bailey during a tour Midwest flood damage, Thursday, June 19, 2008, in Iowa City, Iowa.
AP Photo/Kevin Sanders
Jacob Willmott, left, of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, tears apart the cashier's counter at Jim's Foods after floodwaters receded, Wednesday, June 18, 2008, in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. The White House is asking Congress for $1.8 billion in emergency disaster aid for the flood-ravaged Midwest.
AP Photo/Seth Wenig
Women throw a flood-damaged piece of furniture onto the growing mounds of garbage sitting curbside in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Wednesday, June 18, 2008. Flood victims were told to separate items into piles such as appliances, scrap metal, wood debris and hazardous waste such as paint products, weed killer and cleaners.
AP Photo/Seth Wenig
Piles of water-damaged items line the streets in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Tuesday, June 17, 2008. Floodwaters had dropped enough that officials let hundreds of people return to their damaged homes and businesses.
AP Photo/Seth Wenig
Employees and friends of the Cedar Rapids Piano Lounge help to remove debris from the basement bar in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Tuesday, June 17, 2008. Business owners were allowed downtown Tuesday to start the cleaning and inventory process.
AP Photo/Seth Wenig
Keely Wells ferries bottles of liquor out of the Cedar Rapids Piano Lounge past drying bar stools and sand bags in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Tuesday, June 17, 2008.
AP Photo/Seth Wenig
Keely Wells waits for another load of debris while helping to clean out the destroyed Cedar Rapids Piano Lounge in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Tuesday, June 17, 2008.
AP/The Gazette, Courtney Sargent
Michelle Homing stands in the doorway of her front hallway as her son Stephen Horning, 16, walks out of their bathroom of their home of 13 years in Cedar Rapids on Tuesday, June 17, 2008. Residents of Cedar Rapids continued returning to their homes on Tuesday as entry teams checked neighborhoods for hazards caused by massive flooding in the eastern Iowa city.
AP/The Gazette, Courtney Sargent
A garage sits off its foundation and leans up against a tree in northwest Cedar Rapids on Tuesday, June 17, 2008.
AP/The Gazette, Courtney Sargent
Floodwater residue streaks the inside of McKinnon's Barber Shop in northwest Cedar Rapids on Tuesday, June 17, 2008.
AP Photo/Seth Wenig
Brothers Rick, right, and Tom Hobson and sisters-in-laws Pat, third from right, and Rhonda Hobson embrace just after Rick and Rhonda Hobson arrived from McLaurin, Miss. with a trailer full of flood relief supplies in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Tuesday, June 17, 2008. Tom Hobson, is organizing the effort to help his flooded hometown of Cedar Rapids, which sent supplies and equipment to Mississippi following Hurricane Katrina.
AP Photo/Seth Wenig
Shawn Kiene looks over a water-logged yearbook to see if it is salvageable while cleaning out the first floor of her house in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Tuesday, June 17, 2008. Behind Kiene, on the wall, the flood level is visible where the water stripped the dark stain from the wood. Some residents were allowed back into their houses, those still covered in water remain off limits.
AP Photo/Seth Wenig
Julie Kiene pauses on her porch while cleaning out the first floor of her house in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Tuesday, June 17, 2008.
AP/Dispatch, Gary Krambeck
Gerald Fallon, a neighborhood volunteer, helps Clella Porter throw out her flood damaged clothing from her house in the watertown area of East Moline, Ill., after flood waters receded there.