From The Tribune staff reports
TRUSSVILLE The 2021 Trussville City Fest Committee has announced this year’s official theme and preliminary plans for the city’s premier community event.
Trussville City Fest 2021: Better Together will celebrate the reuniting of families and friends following a year of pandemic restrictions and distancing. Presenting sponsor for the event is the Trussville City Schools Foundation.
Scheduled for Saturday, Sept. 11, the festivities will begin with a 20th anniversary observance of the 2001 attack on America at the Veteran’s Memorial at 9 a.m. The city’s new Veterans Committee, led by Chad Carroll, is organizing the ceremony.
2021 Trussville Beautification Award winners announced
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Trussville City Council: Linden Street reopens, downtown plaza awaiting building materials
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Sherman Williams is the archetypal heavyweight nearly man. There’s excuses. There’s pride. There’s genuine hard luck. Best of all there’s lessons aplenty for the fighters he now guides through the hardest game. By Oliver Fennell
LIKE many former fringe contenders, Sherman Williams has a lot of “what ifs”. What if the scores had been different in certain fights? What if he’d been given more notice for others? What if Evander Holyfield had answered the bell for the fourth round? The Bahamian heavyweight reckons he was robbed several times in his career, but never more so than the night he locked horns with a legend and learned sometimes you just can’t win – even when your opponent verbally surrenders.
For the second year in a row Yom HaShoah, or Holocaust Remembrance Day, was commemorated virtually by the Holocaust Museum & Center for Tolerance in Rockland County.
During the annual Yom HaShoah Commemoration at the Rockland County Courthouse, local leaders in the legal community highlighted the importance of the justice system in our democracy, and why we must never forget the Holocaust.
Despite the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, the event was not going to be canceled under any circumstances, said attorney and longtime chair of the event, Paul Adler. We felt it was important, that just as the mass says never forget, never again, that we would never forget to remind those that it would never happen again, Adler said.