Neal & Harwell has added attorney Marisa Garcia as an associate in its litigation practice group.
Garcia (pictured) graduated from Belmont University College of Law in May, according to a release. She was an editor of the
Belmont Law Review and a member of the Belmont University board of advocates. Garcia also worked as a summer associate with Neal & Harwell and held additional positions with the Tennessee Attorney General’s Office and the Tennessee Department of Commerce & Insurance during school.
Prior to law school, Garcia was a member of the U.S. Air Force.
“We are thrilled to add Marisa to our litigation team at Neal & Harwell,” Chief Administrator Ronald Harris said in the release. “With her many talents and work ethic, we know that she will be a most effective advocate for our clients.”
Southern Illinois Salukis vs Austin Peay Governors December 12 Preview, Game Time, Matchup Statistics espn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from espn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Queen and Country Graham Hillard
The new season of
The Crown, Netflix’s peerless depiction of the second Elizabethan age, contains exactly one sympathetic character. Michael Fagan, an out-of-work painter on the verge of a mental breakdown, famously scaled the walls of Buckingham Palace on a summer evening in 1982. As played by the terrific Tom Brooke, Fagan makes his way to the queen’s bedroom and awakens her for a chat about the plight of the underclass. Plaintive, breathless, and more than a little disappointed by the shabbiness of the place, Fagan is a nonthreatening figure, the sort of bloke who might wheedle a free pint in a Clerkenwell pub. What he wants is something to which nearly everyone in her majesty’s orbit can relate: to be, at long last, understood.