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<b>Bruce P. Golden</b> is as [[M.I.T.]] and [[Harvard Law School[]-educated attorney and jazz trumpet and fluegelhorn player.  Upon graduation from Oak Park and River Forest High School with highest honors, he received scholarship offers from both [[Brown University]] and M.I.T. and matriculated at the latter. During his first year he was asked to join the Honors Electrical Engineering program known as Electrical Engineering and Science, a curriculum created for as M.I.T. describes it, the most brilliant and promising students. He graduated with High Honors and continued at M.I.T. with a grant from the [[National Institute of Mental Health]] for his Master’s Degree to develop reading machines for the challenged with Professor Samuel Mason and Professor Beddoes of the University of Vancouver.  His thesis, “Auditory Displays for Direct Translation Reading Machines,” was cutting edge and the precursor of today’s more sophisticated devices.  
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<b>Bruce P. Golden</b> is an [[M.I.T.]] and [[Harvard Law School]]-educated attorney and jazz trumpet and fluegelhorn player.  Upon graduation from Oak Park and River Forest High School with highest honors, he received scholarship offers from both [[Brown University]] and M.I.T. and matriculated at the latter. During his first year he was asked to join the Honors Electrical Engineering program known as Electrical Engineering and Science, a curriculum created for as M.I.T. describes it, the most brilliant and promising students. He graduated with High Honors and continued at M.I.T. with a grant from the [[National Institute of Mental Health]] for his Master’s Degree to develop reading machines for the challenged with Professor Samuel Mason and Professor Beddoes of the University of Vancouver.  His thesis, “Auditory Displays for Direct Translation Reading Machines,” was cutting edge and the precursor of today’s more sophisticated devices.  
    
Despite having fellowships offers for doctoral and post-doctoral work, he left M.I.T.’s  [[Cognitive Information Processing Group]], to go to Harvard Law School.  His seminal paper, “Materiality under Rule 10b-5 of The Securities Exchange Act of 1934,” was written under the tutelage of [[Professor Louis Loss]]. He spent a year working with a top secret clearance with Northrop Corporation working on Electronic Countermeasure systems for the B-1A bomber and then went to work at the prestigious law firm of McDermott, Will and Emery, Chicago, Illinois, where he became a junior and then senior partner.
 
Despite having fellowships offers for doctoral and post-doctoral work, he left M.I.T.’s  [[Cognitive Information Processing Group]], to go to Harvard Law School.  His seminal paper, “Materiality under Rule 10b-5 of The Securities Exchange Act of 1934,” was written under the tutelage of [[Professor Louis Loss]]. He spent a year working with a top secret clearance with Northrop Corporation working on Electronic Countermeasure systems for the B-1A bomber and then went to work at the prestigious law firm of McDermott, Will and Emery, Chicago, Illinois, where he became a junior and then senior partner.