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Ag Secretary Perdue in Pella

US Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue was in Pella Monday afternoon (4/29) touring the Vermeer plant.  Perdue was pleased with the way Vermeer has continued its productivity after a tornado last July did major damage to the campus.

“This is the best of America here.  What people like the Vermeer people do is pick up, they don’t wait for people to come help them, but many people did, fortunately. But they just get it done.  They plan, they have the people and the spirit to recover and that’s what we’re going to see happen here.”

Perdue also spoke about the US/Mexico/Canada agreement and how it is an improvement on the old North American Free Trade Agreement, or NAFTA.  Perdue’s trip to Iowa also included a visit to the Corteva Agriscience Mendel Greenhouse in Johnston.

Newton company pays for safety violations

A Newton company that builds wind turbine blades has settled with state regulators following an investigation into workplace safety violations.

The Des Moines Register reports that TPI Composites didn’t acknowledge any wrongdoing in the settlement with Iowa Occupational Safety and Health Administration signed last month.

The settlement requires TPI to restrict employee contact with hazardous chemicals, eliminate fall dangers and alter how the factory stores combustible liquids. The company has adopted new polyethylene suits to protect workers against the chemicals.

Iowa regulators gave TPI until Aug. 31 to fix all of the residual safety hazards.

Iowa OSHA levied nearly $155,000 in fines against TPI last year due violations including fire dangers, airborne contaminants, improper record keeping, fall hazards and a shortage of adequate protective gear for employees.

Hafner takes honors at Grinnell Invitational

In boys’ high school golf, Oskaloosa’s Austin Hafner was medalist at Monday’s (4/29) Grinnell Invitational.  The senior shot a one over par 71.  Pella won the meet with Grinnell second and Oskaloosa third.  The Indians are off until next Monday (5/6) and the Little Hawkeye Conference meet at Indianola.

Tuesday (4/30) in high school golf, Oskaloosa’s girls play Dallas Center-Grimes and Grinnell in Grinnell, and PCM’s boys have their conference tournament at the Tournament Club of Iowa in Polk City.

Police: No indication driver killed on bridge was targeted

WATERLOO, Iowa (AP) — Police say there’s no indication a woman who was fatally shot while driving over a highway bridge in northeast Iowa was targeted, and they’re seeking the public’s help in determining if the gunfire came from nearby woods.

Micalla Alexis Rettinger was shot about 2:30 a.m. Sunday as she drove over a wooded area along the Cedar River in Waterloo. The shot shattered the driver’s side window of her Jeep and hit her neck, then hit one of her two passengers.

The 25-year-old former University of Northern Iowa softball player pulled over and died. The injured passenger was taken to a hospital.

Police are offering a $6,000 reward for information and seeking surveillance or trail camera video from the area.

Investigators want to know if someone was hunting near the river.

Chris Stapleton Has A “Game Of Thrones” Cameo

“Game of Thrones” fans may not have realized but Sunday night’s episode featured a cameo from Chris Stapleton. The singer, a huge fan of the show, played a fallen Wildling-turned-White Walker outside Winterfell.

Apparently Chris was such a fan he had his management call about getting him a part. “I was like, you know, I would gladly fly to wherever in the world just to be a small part and get to watch that show going down,” Chris, who traveled to Northern Ireland for his cameo, shared. “They were gracious enough to let me come participate that way.”

This day in 1999: Jo Dee Messina makes her acting debut

Today in 1999, Jo Dee Messina appeared on CBS TV’s Nash Bridges as “Tammy McGraw.” In the episode, Nash was trying to track down a group of female robbers, whom he suspected as being manipulated by their jailed husbands. In the process, he goes to Jo Dee’s character for help. Besides acting in the show, Jo Dee also performed her hit single, “Lesson In Leavin’.”

Two Oskaloosa men arrested in Missouri

Two brothers from Oskaloosa were arrested in northeast Missouri after they were allegedly in a stolen plumbing truck.  18-year-old Brent Nelson and 20-year-old Travis Nelson were arrested last Thursday morning (4/25) near Sublette in Adair County.  The local sheriff’s department got a 911 call about two men picking up tools and a large tool box near the intersection of Highway 63 and Route AA.  It was determined the two were in a plumbing truck that had been stolen from the Knoxville area.  Both men are being held in the Adair County, Missouri jail on $10,000 cash only bond.

Drake Relays results

It was a successful weekend for local athletes at the Drake Relays.  Tyson Vander Linden of Lynnville-Sully was second in the boys’ 400 meter hurdles and sixth in the 100 meters.  Kalen Walker of EBF was 15th in the 100 and did not qualify for the finals.  Oskaloosa’s boys’ 4 by 400 meter relay team of Aaron Blom, Casey Hill, Brayden VanKampen and Carter Huyser finished sixth in that event, setting a school record.  That same foursome also came in sixth in the distance medley, again setting a school record…and breaking a record that had stood since 1936!  Individually, Oskaloosa’s Carter Huyser was fifth in the 400 meters.  In the boys’ discus, Blake Veenstra of Pella Christian placed 7th, Kody Huisman of Pella was 8th and Pella’s Nick DeJong was 9th.    Payton Schauf of Sigourney was 13th in the discus with Oskaloosa’s Casey Hill 20th.  And Joe Simon of Grinnell was 4th in the 800 meters.

Looking at the girls’ competition, Ottumwa’s Allison Bookin Nobisch was third in the 800 meters, and her twin sister Grace was 8th in that race.  Allison also placed fifth in the 400 meters.  Summer Barthelman of Sigourney was fourth in the girls’ 400 meters and third in the 400 hurdles.  Pella’s Elsie Thoreson was sixth in the 400 hurdles.  In the girls’ high jump, Oskaloosa’s Emma Kelderman, Shelby Conger of Montezuma and Anne Guest of Ottumwa tied for 19th with jumps of 5 feet even.  Ottumwa was third in the girls’ 4 by 800 relay, Pella finished 12th in the girls’ 4 by 200 relay, and in the girls’ shot put Friday, Allison Van Gorp of Pella Christian was 18th in the preliminaries and did not qualify for the finals.

Jewish community will ‘stand tall’ after synagogue shooting

By AMY TAXIN and CHRISTOPHER WEBER

POWAY, Calif. (AP) — Eight-year-old Noya Dahan had finished praying and gone to play with other children at her Southern California synagogue when gunshots rang out. Her uncle grabbed her and the other children, leading them outside to safety as her leg bled from a shrapnel wound.

“I was scared, really, really scared,” said Noya, recalling how the group of children cried out of fear after a gunman entered Chabad of Poway on Saturday morning and opened fire. “I didn’t see my dad. I thought he was dead.”

The onslaught on the last day of Passover, a Jewish holiday celebrating freedom, wounded Dahan, her uncle Almog Peretz and the congregation’s rabbi. The attack killed beloved congregant Lori Kaye, 60.

Authorities said the 19-year-old gunman opened fire as about 100 people were worshipping exactly six months after a mass shooting in a Pittsburgh synagogue.

Rabbi Yishoel Goldstein said he was preparing for a service and heard a loud sound, turned around and a saw a young man wearing sunglasses standing in front of him with a rifle.

“I couldn’t see his eyes. I couldn’t see his soul,” Goldstein said. He raised his hands and lost one of his fingers in the shooting.

And then, Goldstein said, “miraculously the gun jammed.”

In the moments that followed, Goldstein said he wrapped his bloodied hand in a prayer shawl and addressed congregants gathered outside the building, vowing to stay strong in the face of the deadly attack targeting his community.

“We are a Jewish nation that will stand tall. We will not let anyone take us down. Terrorism like this will not take us down,” Goldstein recalled telling the community.

Authorities said suspect John T. Earnest had no previous contact with law enforcement and may face a hate crime charge in addition to homicide charges when he’s arraigned later this week. He was being held without bail, and it was unclear if he had an attorney.

Police searched Earnest’s house and said he was also being investigated in connection with an arson attack on a mosque in nearby Escondido, California, on March 24.

There were indications an AR-type assault weapon might have malfunctioned after the gunman fired numerous rounds inside, San Diego County Sheriff William Gore said. An off-duty Border Patrol agent fired at the shooter as he fled, missing him but striking the getaway vehicle, the sheriff said.

Shortly after fleeing, Earnest called 911 to report the shooting, San Diego Police Chief David Nisleit said. When an officer reached him on a roadway, “the suspect pulled over, jumped out of his car with his hands up and was immediately taken into custody,” he said.

Goldstein described Kaye as a pioneering founding member of the congregation and said he was heartbroken by her death. He said the attack could have harmed many more people had the shooter turned toward the sanctuary where so many were praying.

“Lori took the bullet for all of us,” the rabbi said, his hands wrapped in bandages. “She didn’t deserve to die.”

He said that Kaye’s physician husband was called to tend to a wounded worshipper and fainted when he realized it was his wife.

Friends described Kaye as giving, warm and attentive to community members on their birthdays and when they were sick. A wife and mother, she loved gardening and made delicious challah for her family and friends, said Roneet Lev, 55.

When the gunfire erupted, another worshipper, Shimon Abitbul, said he immediately placed his 2-year-old grandson on the floor and waited for a break in the shooting to grab the boy and sprint away.

Abitbul, who was visiting from Israel and staying with his daughter and her family in Southern California, said he was still coming to grips with the carnage.

“All of us are human beings,” he said. “It doesn’t matter if you are Jews or Christians or Muslims.”

Peretz, who was wounded in the leg, said he turned around after hearing gunfire and saw the shooter standing by the door. He grabbed his niece by the hand and carried out another child.

He then saw a group of children and got them running, “I tell them, ’go this way, go this way,” said Peretz, who is visiting from Israel.

Gore said authorities were reviewing Earnest’s social media posts, including what he described as a “manifesto.” There was no known threat after Earnest was arrested, but authorities boosted patrols at places of worship Saturday and again on Sunday as a precaution, police said.

A person identifying himself as John Earnest posted an anti-Jewish screed online about an hour before the attack. The poster described himself as a nursing school student and praised the suspects accused of carrying out deadly attacks on mosques in New Zealand last month that killed 50 and at Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life synagogue on Oct. 27, in which 11 people were killed.

“It was a hate crime, no doubt about it,” national security adviser John Bolton said on “Fox News Sunday.” He said investigators have not seen any connection between the suspect and other extremist groups.

California State University, San Marcos, confirmed that Earnest was a student who was on the dean’s list and said the school was “dismayed and disheartened” that he was suspected in “this despicable act.”

Goldstein said President Donald Trump called him to share condolences on behalf of the American people.

The White House acknowledged the call. “The President expressed his love for the Jewish people and the entire community of Poway,” Deputy Press Secretary Judd Deere said in a statement.

On Sunday night, hundreds of people gathered at a park for a vigil to honor the victims.

People at the community park near Chabad synagogue in Poway held candles and listened to prayer in Hebrew. Leaders asked community members to do acts of kindness to remember Kaye.

Poway Mayor Steve Vaus said he would stand with the community, and Rabbi Goldstein said seeing the crowd come together provided consolation.

“What happened to us, happened to all of us,” Goldstein said.

___

Weber reported from Los Angeles. Associated Press writers Elliot Spagat in Poway and Daisy Nguyen in San Francisco contributed to this report.

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