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Dwight Darwin Opperman (June 26, 1923 [1] – June 13, 2013) [2] was an American businessman and lawyer. He was chairman of Key Investments, a privately held venture capital firm focusing on high-tech ventures.
On June 13, 2013, the Society lost its revered Chairman Emeritus, Dwight David Opperman. In many ways, Dwight D. Opperman was the embodiment of the American dream: a man who rose from humble beginnings to build a legal publish-ing empire. Although he graduated from law school, he never tried a case or advised. a client.
Jul 17, 2009 · In 1960, he became assistant editorial counsel, and by 1964 he was managing the department. In 1968 he became company president, and later CEO and chairman. The company remained privately owned, with Opperman the major stockholder and the rest of the stock apportioned to key employees.
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Dwight Darwin Opperman (June 26, 1923 – June 13, 2013) was an American businessman and lawyer. He was chairman of Key Investments, a privately held venture capital firm focusing on high-tech ventures.
Mr. Opperman’s support of the Conference of Court Public Information Officers (CCPIO) began in the late 1980s, before the organization formally existed. Then-Supreme Court Public Information Officer Toni House asked Mr. Opperman to provide a grant to the Institute of Court
Jun 24, 2013 · Dwight Opperman, LW’51, the single largest benefactor in Drake University’s history, died on Thursday, June 13 after battling liver cancer for five months. Funeral services were held on Saturday, June 22 at Forest Lawn in Glendale, Calif.
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Jul 17, 2009 · Like with [Harry] Blackmun. Blackmun was supposed to be a very conservative justice when he was appointed. He was appointed by Nixon, too, one year after Burger. And he got to be known as a very liberal justice. He gave an Opperman lecture at Drake, and he said he didn’t change, the Court had changed and shifted away from him.