Residents comfort each other, as floodwater from the South Skunk...

Residents comfort each other, as floodwater from the South Skunk River floods neighborhoods in Colfax, Iowa. (Aug. 11, 2010) Credit: AP

One person was missing after raging floodwaters swept three cars off a road near Des Moines early Wednesday, and hundreds of people were forced from their homes in several communities as rivers rose.

In Ames, Iowa State University’s basketball arena had 4 to 5 feet of water in it, while the football stadium was ringed by sandbags stacked by players who hoped to protect it.

Emergency crews found 10 of the 11 people in the cars washed off the road between Altoona and Mitchellville about 4 a.m. by the storm-swollen Mud Creek, said A.J. Munn, the emergency management director for Polk County. They had been clinging to trees and hanging onto logs, and four were taken to the hospital.

The fast-flowing waters hampered efforts to find the final  passenger.

“Divers can’t enter the water because it’s too dangerous. It’s moving too swiftly,” Munn said.

Doug Phillips, a division chief with the Polk County Sheriff’s Office, said the creek is usually only 3 feet deep and 10 feet wide. Now, divers checking the water as they wait for it to recede can’t touch the bottom using 6-foot poles.

Early Wednesday morning, “it looked like a river,” Phillips said. “I  mean, it was horrendous.” Thunderstorms have hit Iowa for three consecutive nights, sending rivers and creeks rolling over their banks. The National Weather Service said 2 to 4 inches of rain fell on central and eastern Iowa over night, with up to 6 inches in some spots.

Several hundred people were evacuated from their homes in Ames early Wednesday and sandbagging was under way, after 3 to 5 inches of rain pushed Squaw Creek and Skunk River over their banks in the city 30 miles north of Des Moines, Fire Chief Clint Petersen said.

In some spots, water was up to car windshields.

“This is a particularly dangerous situation,” he said.

The floor at Hilton Coliseum, Iowa State’s basketball arena, was  covered with water, school spokesman John McCarroll said. It was too soon to know how much damage had been done, he said.

Jack Trice football stadium was still dry, surrounded by sandbags  football players had stacked as a precaution.

But the parking lot between the two stadiums, where tailgaters party  before games, was flooded.

“I hope they get it cleared out by football season,” student Sam  Stonehocker said.

The Iowa Department of Transportation closed Interstate 35 just  south of Ames, and both lanes of U.S. Highway 30 in the area were closed.

Elsewhere in Ames, Howe’s Welding and Metal Fab had several feet of water inside it, even though the owners had been sandbagging all night. Piper Wall, whose husband owns the business, said it was difficult to assess the damage while the water remained, but it appeared worse than in 1993, when much of the area was  underwater.

“It will be when all this comes out and all the mud that remains and the machining tools and electric stuff that’s not high enough,” Wall said. “In 1993, it was $150,000 and this year it’s higher.” A few blocks away, the Meadowland Mobile Home Park had flooded and some residents were evacuating.

Get the latest news and more great videos at NewsdayTV Credit: Newsday

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Get the latest news and more great videos at NewsdayTV Credit: Newsday

Sean 'Diddy' Combs indicted ... Can LI roads withstand more flooding? ... Legacy of 8-year-old's cancer fight ... Get the latest news and more great videos at NewsdayTV

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