Monday 15 July 2013

Attorneys in nashville tn Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Attorneys in nashville tn Biogarphy

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Reed Smith was founded in Pittsburgh in 1877, and since 2009 our office has been located in Reed Smith Centre, a LEED-certified workspace that helped jumpstart the modernization of the City's "Fifth Avenue Corridor," on the perimeter of Pittsburgh's Cultural District. More than 275 lawyers comprise the Pittsburgh office, making it the largest law office in the city and the largest Reed Smith office in the United States. Pittsburgh also is home to the firm's Global Customer Center, which provides service to Reed Smith's attorneys and offices around the world.
Our history in and dedication to Pittsburgh is evident in many of the Pittsburgh-based clients we proudly serve, including PNC, United States Steel Corporation, Heinz, PPG Industries, Inc., the University of Pittsburgh, UPMC, and Carnegie Mellon University, to name but a few. At the same time, we are keenly focused on technology start-ups and other entities that are looking to add to the rich tradition of innovation, transformation and entrepreneurship that have distinguished and sustained Pittsburgh over the decades. And, as our region's vast natural resources are re-establishing Pittsburgh as one of North America's energy centers, we are uniquely positioned to provide the entire spectrum of legal services attendant to that phenomenon.
"Depth" and "breadth" define Reed Smith's Pittsburgh office, as each of the firm's practice and industry groups is represented in Pittsburgh, and our market position allows us to attract and retain top legal talent. The lawyers in Reed Smith's Pittsburgh office serve clients from around the globe. In fact, Pittsburgh-based Reed Smith lawyers annually bring their vitality, dedication and acumen to 70 percent of the firm's 250 largest clients.
Our lawyers understand and embrace the civic and charitable imperatives associated with Reed Smith's prominence in the local business community. Our partners and associates serve as adjunct faculty members, mentors, volunteers, and nonprofit board and committee members. Our support of initiatives such as The Pittsburgh Promise is reflective of our commitment to Pittsburgh's future – a future that we will have a large hand in shaping and molding. And our pro bono efforts and diversity and inclusion initiatives are both extensive and acclaimed.
George Stewart (+1 412 288 7244), Managing Partner of the Pittsburgh office, would be pleased to learn about your legal needs and to discuss the capabilities of our Pittsburgh lawyers.
Our Attorneys
Barry L. Frager
Barry L. Frager, the co-founding partner of Frager Kliner, has been practicing immigration law since 1990 and has previously served as a trial attorney for the Immigration & Naturalization Service in Los Angeles, California through the Honors Law Graduate Program of the U.S. Department of Justice
From 2005 to 2007 & 2009-2011, Mr. Frager served as the national chair of the Federal Bar Association’s Immigration Law Section. For his service, he received recognition in September 2007 & September 2011 with the FBA’s Outstanding Section Chair Award.  Mr. Frager has successfully planned CLEs for the FBA to offer training to other lawyers.
Mr. Frager has experience handling matters not only in the Mid-South, but also in: Los Angeles, San Francisco, New York, Newark, Oakdale, New Orleans, Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, Harlingen and other DOJ immigration courts across the United States.
After his service with the Immigration and Naturalization Service, Mr. Frager returned to his hometown of Memphis, Tennessee where he established an immigration and general law practice there in 1994.  Mr. Frager has partnered with similar, well experienced attorneys with practices in Memphis and Nashville Tennessee and Oakdale, Louisiana in forming Frager, Sutton Haupt, PLLC; and, Springdale and Fort Smith, Arkansas in forming Frager Bush, PLLC; as well as, his practice with Mr. Kliner in Chattanooga, Tennessee
Wesley R. Kliner is the Managing Attorney of Frager Kliner PLLC. He oversees all cases the firm handles in Tennessee and Georgia as well as all federal immigration law cases of clients in Alabama, South Carolina, North Carolina and Virginia.
Mr. Kliner has had hands-on experience with all areas of civil, business and immigration law practiced at the firm, and is a veteran of state and federal employment, workers’ compensation, and regulatory and compliance law.
As a former in-house corporate general counsel for several start-up and established businesses, Mr. Kliner’s focus in the field of immigration law is helping businesses and those who want to come to the United States for business. As immigration enforcement continues to increase, Mr. Kliner has become more involved in worksite enforcement issues, including I-9 audits, e-verify and compliance assistance. In his role as general counsel he is versed in business formation, capital acquisition, corporate governance, as well as the creation of simple to complex transactional instruments.
Mr. Kliner was born in Newfoundland, Canada on a U.S. Air Force Base. He has lived in over 40 different locations across 15 states and 4 countries around the world. So, he is no stranger to living and working with people of differing cultures. Mr. Kliner was trained as a Russian interpreter in the U.S. Army and has also studied French, and Japanese and self-taught German. His diverse background allows him to understand and speak with people from diverse language and cultural groups.
Russell Shane Mainord was born and raised in Gruetli-Laager, Tennessee. Russell earned his J.D. from the University of Memphis Cecil C. Humphreys School of Law in 2008. While studying at the University of Memphis, Russell was awarded a Humphreys Fellowship (2007-2008), served as president of the International Law Students Association (2007-2008), and received a Dean’s Award of Excellency for Best Oral Advocate (2006).
Russell also received a master’s degree in Hotel Restaurant and Tourism Management from the University of South Carolina in 2004, where he served as a graduate assistant with the University of South Carolina football team in equipment management (2002-2004). Russell received a Bachelor of Arts in History with an emphasis in American History from the University of the South (Sewanee) in 2001. While at Sewanee, Russell was a member of the Order of Gownsmen Honor Society (2000-2001), served as a student representative for student government (1998-1999), and served as a student equipment manager (1997-2001).
Russell has a love for sports and the outdoors. He has served as a high school teacher and girls volleyball coach (2004-2005), a ranger’s aid at the South Cumberland Recreation Area (2001), a volunteer baseball coach for Dixie Boys Baseball at the Gruetli-Laager Recreation Area (2001-2002), and has stayed active in community sports.
Battle Of Chattanooga Summary: The Battle Of Chattanooga, Tennessee, was an important Union victory in the The Civil War. The city was a vital rail hub that, once taken, became the gateway for later campaigns in the Deep South, including the capture of Atlanta and Sherman’s March to the Sea. A Confederate soldier called the Battle of Chattanooga "the death knell of the Confederacy."
Following the Battle of Chickamauga in September 1863, when Major General William S. Rosecrans’ Union Army of the Cumberland routed back into Chattanooga, General Braxton Bragg positioned his Confederate Army of Tennessee on the heights above the city: Lookout Mountain to the south, Missionary Ridge to the east, and—interdicting Union supply lines—on Raccoon Mountain to the west. Bragg did not have adequate troop strength, nor did he efficiently position the men he did have, to entirely cut the Army of the Cumberland off from resupply, but the siege was effective enough to starve to death hundreds of artillery horses in Chattanooga and to reduce the soldiers there to half rations.
Morale among Bragg’s soldiers had been diminished by his failure to follow up on their stunning victory on Chickamauga Creek; it was similar to the Kentucky campaign of the previous autumn, when his men won a tactical victory at Perryville only to have Bragg order them to withdraw back into Tennessee. The thorny general’s abrasiveness and his actions after Chickamauga, or lack thereof, had also alienated many of his subordinates. Several of his key officers, buttressed by Lieutenant General James Longstreet, whose corps was on loan to Bragg from the Army of Northern Virginia, petitioned Confederate president Jefferson Davis to relieve Bragg of comman
Attorneys in nashville tn Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images                                                    2013

Attorneys in nashville tn Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Attorneys in nashville tn Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Attorneys in nashville tn Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Attorneys in nashville tn Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Attorneys in nashville tn Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Attorneys in nashville tn Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Attorneys in nashville tn Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Attorneys in nashville tn Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Attorneys in nashville tn Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Attorneys in nashville tn Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

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