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R-B grad battles cancer, as brother gets deployed

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Camden Wubs, 27, was diagnosed with malignant melanoma and will be retiring from the Air Force in a few months. Camden was given a special parts upgrade for pickup truck from Duramaxtuner.com in Union. (Brett Moist – For the Northwest Herald )

SPRING GROVE – Upbeat and good-humored, two brothers, both graduates of Richmond-Burton Community High School, watched mechanics work on the white Chevrolet Silverado, talking parts and generally joking around.

Kienan Wubs, 23, had arranged the donated parts and work with Union-based Calibrated Power Solutions Inc. on Tuesday as a surprise for his brother, Camden Wubs, 27. Kienan, a sergeant with the U.S. Marines, wanted to give his brother something to smile about before he left for his eight-month deployment to Afghanistan because there’s a chance that Camden might not be there when he gets back.

Camden, a senior airman with the Air Force, was diagnosed with cancer in September 2011 while stationed at the British Royal Air Force Station Lakenheath with the 48th Component Maintenance Squadron.

One week later, he was back in the States.

At first, things seemed to be going well. Doctors told the family that the cancer was in remission, said his father, Dan Wubs. But after Christmas, tests revealed that Camden had innumerable growths in his brain.

If the medication he’s taking doesn’t work, he has three months, his father said. The medicine has a 40 to 50 percent success rate, but the family won’t know if it’s working for a month.

“It’s devastating,” Dan Wubs said.

Dan and Cheri Wubs have four children: the two sons and two daughters, Kali, 25, and Kiana, 16.

But as far as Camden is concerned, he’s going to push through it.

“I’ve become a lot closer to God and our religion, and lately I’ve just found an inner peace,” he said. “I have a confidence that I’ve never felt in my life that I’m going to beat this, and I believe that comes from my faith in God. I’m not afraid of this.”

And his brother is confident too, but he added that when he’s deployed, he tries not to think about things that are going on back home so that he stays focused.

“Cam’s a strong dude,” Kienan said. “There’s not a doubt in my mind that [he will] do what he said he was going to do.”

If the worst happens, the Red Cross can contact Kienan and bring him home, he said.

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