Rensselaer has announced that Arthur F. Golden ’66 has been elected chair of the Rensselaer Board of Trustees, Wanda Denson-Low ’78 has been elected vice chair, and Curtis R. Priem ’82 has been elected secretary, effective January 1, 2017.
“We are grateful for the wisdom and partnership of these dedicated Rensselaer graduates, who as board members, have helped to guide Rensselaer in its transformation,” said Rensselaer President Shirley Ann Jackson. “We look forward to working with them to develop our students into the leaders who will solve the great global challenges of our time. In order to do so, we must engender in them intellectual agility, multicultural sophistication, and a global view.”
Golden will succeed the Honorable Arthur J. Gajarsa ’62 as chair of the board. Golden joined the Rensselaer Board of Trustees in 2005 and has served on the Executive Committee, Investment Committee, and Audit Committee. He also served as chair of the Student Life Committee.
Golden is global co-chairman of Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP’s mergers and acquisitions practice, the senior Davis Polk partner, and for nine years was a member of the firm’s Management Committee. He is also the senior independent member of the board of directors of Emerson Electric. He regularly represents large multinational companies with respect to acquisition-related transactions; advises clients on corporate governance matters, shareholder activism, and defensive matters; and is the senior partner in the firm’s practice in competition and antitrust matters, which include domestic and international mergers and acquisitions and antitrust counseling and litigation, both private and governmental (civil and criminal).
Golden also has represented clients in various contested acquisition matters, and numerous federal grand jury investigations, including the investigations of trading practices with respect to U.S. government securities; the air cargo, vitamins, commercial tissue, and explosives industries; violations of U.S. export controls; and the “Ill-Wind” criminal investigation into fraud in the Pentagon procurement process.
Golden has successfully tried antitrust merger cases against the government and acted as one of the two lead negotiators for the U.S. tobacco industry in the effort to resolve, through legislation and settlements, the legal issues facing that industry.
After graduating from Rensselaer in 1966 with a bachelor’s degree in mathematics, Golden received his J.D. in 1969 from New York University School of Law, where he was an editor of the Law Review. He joined Davis Polk in 1969 and was elected to partnership in 1978.
Denson-Low retired in 2014 from her position as the senior vice president of the Office of Internal Governance for The Boeing Company, the world’s leading aerospace company. She was a member of the company’s executive council, and was named senior vice president in May 2007. She was responsible for the management and oversight of compliance, internal audit, ethics and business conduct, and global trade controls, which include all import and export activities for the entire Boeing Company.
Previously, Denson-Low served as the company’s vice president and assistant general counsel, leading the legal staff for the company’s $30 billion Defense and Space unit, BDS. Prior to that position, she was the vice president of human resources, responsible for the successful implementation of employee strategies and policies for the unit’s 70,000-person workforce.
She has nearly 30 years of experience in corporate law, commercial transactions, mergers and acquisitions, data rights, government contracts, and intellectual property law.
Denson-Low earned her juris doctor from Brooklyn Law School and a bachelor’s degree in chemistry from Rensselaer. She is admitted to practice law in California and Connecticut.
Priem co-founded NVIDIA Corp., a manufacturer of graphics and multimedia integrated circuits, in 1993 and was its chief technical officer from 1993 to 2003. From 1986 to January 1993, Priem was senior staff engineer at Sun Microsystems, where he architected the GX graphics products, including the world’s first single chip GUI accelerator. From 1984 to 1986, Priem was a hardware engineer at GenRad Inc., a supplier of diagnostic equipment for electronic products. From 1982 to 1984, he was a staff engineer for Vermont Microsystems Inc., a personal computer company, where he architected IBM’s Professional Graphics Adapter, the PC industry’s first graphics processor.
Priem is an inventor with approximately 200 U.S. and international patents, all of which relate to graphics and input/output systems. He graduated from Rensselaer in 1982 with a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering. In recognition of his historic $40 million unrestricted gift, Rensselaer named the Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center (EMPAC) in his honor.