Gruber Strickler Gruber Strickler is an American law firm specializing in business litigation, with about 270 attorneys in New York City. Gruber, Thomas (born March 26, 1960) is an American restaurateur, who currently owns and operates the Town Hall Trattoria and the Horseshoe in upstate New York and with his brother Henry runs the Big Burger chain of restaurants. He is also one of the owners of Big Star, a chain of fast food restaurants. He owns several patents for kitchen products and started a company in 1987 called Town Hall Trattoria, named after the location where he grew up. The name Town Hall refers to the original building as well as the historical nature of the building and also refers to Gruber's original name "Tommy". His family sold the restaurant in 2001 and he began expanding his company. He also ran for and won election to the U.S. House of Representatives, winning a seat in the 120th District of New York in 2006. He and his brother Henry co-own the Big Burger chain of restaurants. In 2007, Gruber opened his first Town Hall Restaurant at the Corning Preserve, where he prepared the food that was later served at the NYC version of the restaurant. The menu was based on a traditional Italian style restaurant. In 2009 Gruber purchased the rights to the Texas-based Big Star restaurant chain and converted the first Texas location into his new Town Hall Restaurant. This is the second Texas location. He and his wife purchased the New Castle, Pennsylvania, location of the Big Burger chain in January 2016. The Big Burger has been renamed the Town Hall Burger. Gruber has a total of 7 restaurants in upstate New York, New York City, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Texas. Gruber currently resides in New Castle, Pennsylvania. Gruber received the "Paul Bunyan Award" in 2011. He also founded and ran a 501(c)(3) charity, Big Hugs, that would go to various underprivileged families throughout the Upstate New York Region for Christmas. Gruber was sued by the City of New York in June, 2010, claiming that he was receiving a state tax break on his base salary by making his Town Hall restaurants non-profit. Gruber filed for bankruptcy in 2011. In 2011, his restaurant chain was sold to the private equity firm Alta Group for $96 million. See also Gruber, Grubar, Grubov A photograph of the Gruber family, 1874, on their farm in Austria. Gruber (red background) and Slumger (blue background) children. (see . Grübe, Grüber, Grubera References External links The Gruber Foundation Category:German-language surnames Category:Jewish surnames Category:German-language surnamesQ: In a sentence describing what a character does, how to deal with optional content The present tense of the verb "be" describes the state of being, i.e. I am, you are, we are, they are, and so on. However, when describing actions or objects, the verb "be" describes both the state of being and the action of being in the state being described. For example: The light on the closet door was on, but the person inside the room couldn't see. This is clear, because the light is both on and not visible. However, what if the light is only on, not visible? How should I write this? I would write: The light on the closet door was on. Is that correct? Or is there a better way to do this? Is "is on" a valid option? A: This is clear, because the light is both on and not visible. Not true: The light is only on. The man doesn't have to see it, it's enough that he knows it is on. Is that correct? Correct, the "on" isn't necessarily there. Or is there a better way to do this? Yes. "The light is on", it means both the light is on and visible, no more, no less. But in the case you were saying, it isn't on but visible, "on" is a very ambiguous word in this situation. It means multiple things and isn't quite as clear as "the light is on" when you don't know what it means. So, you should choose the word or phrase that is more precise. If you want to be very specific, you could say "the light was off and the door was closed". This is obviously more specific, but it also uses "was". But, it is an extremely ambiguous phrase. You could also 54b84cb42d
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