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Oppenheimer was born in New York City to Peter Oppenheimer and Muriel Wolfson. [2] She has two older brothers. [3] Her brother David is also a lawyer. Oppenheimer is a granddaughter of businessman Harvey C. Oppenheimer and Amy Vorhaus. She is named after her grandmother, who had died shortly before her granddaughter was born.
After graduating from law school, Kathleen worked as an attorney at a private law firm, Clendenen & Lesser, [13] in New Haven, Connecticut, while her husband, David Townsend, attended Yale Law School. [14] In 1982, she was admitted to the Massachusetts bar, [15] and worked as a law clerk for U.S. District Court Judge A. David Mazzone. [16]
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David B. Oppenheimer (New York City, 18 March 1950) is a clinical professor of law at Berkeley Law. [1] He is the director of the Berkeley Center on Comparative Equality and Anti-Discrimination Law and the faculty co-director of the pro bono program.
Whitney returned to Oppenheimer in 2004, where she researched banks and brokers as a managing director. She resigned from Oppenheimer on February 19, 2009, to establish her own firm, Meredith Whitney Advisory Group (MWAG), where she produced company-specific equity research on financial institutions and analyzed the sector's operating environment.
Katherine "Toni" Oppenheimer, Oppenheimer's second child, was born in 1944 in Los Alamos, New Mexico, while her father and other scientists worked on developing the atomic bomb.
After five days of release, the inextricably linked “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer” have reached notable theatrical milestones, with ticket sales for Greta Gerwig’s fantasia romp crossing ...
Lansdale felt that Oppenheimer was a loyal American citizen and was outraged by his treatment. [4] In 1972, Lansdale moved to Essex Farm in Anne Arundel County, Maryland. For a time he commuted to Cleveland, but eventually shifted to Squire, Sanders and Dempsey's Washington, D. C. office, remaining with the firm until he retired in 1987. [1]