HEALTH CHALLENGE AND PASSION FOR DISCOURSE LEADS PART-TIME BUSINESS
INSTRUCTOR JEFFREY MOSKOW TO CREATE $1 MILLION ENDOWMENT IN PARENTS' NAMES
Donation
establishes and maintains topical speaker series set to begin Oct. 16 with New
York Times writers Maureen Dowd and Alessandra Stanley
LAS VEGAS
September 29, 2008 When Jeffrey Moskow teaches his current business topics class
and reviews The Wall Street Journal with college seniors, all other worries fade
away even the cancer he is battling. Moskow and his students discuss a wide
range of topics from Social Security and Facebook.com to the New York Jets and
the financial crisis on Wall Street. The class combines opinion, humor and
personal experiences. However, the cancer diagnosis prompted Moskow, a part-time
instructor at the UNLV College of Business, to question if and how the class
would continue. He wanted a way to create a public discourse outside of a
classroom that would spark conversations among students and give them
opportunities to ask questions, seek answers and learn about the world around
them. At the same time, he wanted to honor the people who influenced him the
most.
Moskow, 60, thought of his parents, who were intellectually curious
and who enjoyed lively debates. He also thought of his college days at The
Wharton School of Pennsylvania and the University of California, Irvine, where
notable guests lectured frequently and students were excited to see prominent
names on campus. Moskow wanted to create the same tradition at UNLV. His
donation of $1 million to start a speaker series is an ideal way to accomplish
his goal, Moskow says.
Jeff Moskows impact as a teacher and as an advocate of
lifelong learning has a much greater impact than any dollar amount could have,
said Paul Jarley, dean of the college of business. We are moved by Jeffs courage
and his generous donation. Business affects many facets of our lives and having
speakers from various disciplines gives students a great way to see how each
field is related to another.
Established in the names of his parents, the
Morris and Sylvia Speaker Series and Las Vegas Business Forum endowment kicks
off during homecoming week on
Thursday, Oct. 16 with New York Times
columnist Maureen Dowd and television critic Alessandra Stanley. Their
presentation begins at
10 a.m. in the Student Union Theater and is open
to students and faculty.
Moskow, who has taught at UNLV for five years,
continues to teach a 50-minute class four times a week this fall while
undergoing medical treatment for kidney cancer.
About Maureen
Dowd
Maureen Dowd is a Pulitzer-Prize winning columnist for The New
York Times opinion page. Before her career as a columnist, Dowd was the Times
White House correspondent and metropolitan reporter. She has reported for The
Washington Star as a sports columnist, metropolitan reporter and feature writer.
She also reported for Time Magazine.
About Alessandra Stanley
Alessandra Stanley has been a television critic for The New York Times for
the last five years. Previously she was the papers bureau chief in Moscow and
Rome. Stanley has also worked for Time Magazine, beginning as a stringer in
Paris and was later assigned to the Los Angeles and New York bureaus. She also
worked in the magazines Washington bureau where she covered presidential
campaigns and The White House.