Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Economics professor Bernard Malamud (above) ends a 50-year career at UNLV.

- By Natalie Bruzda

The names on the whiteboard, and their correspond­ing contributi­ons to economic thought, spanned centuries.

Professor Bernard Malamud’s tenure at UNLV is not quite as long.

The 76-year-old economics professor joined UNLV, then known as Nevada Southern University, 50 years ago, the same year that the university establishe­d the School of Business and Economics.

“We were building the university from the ground up,” Malamud said.

In 1968, a 26-year-old Malamud was working at Nabisco in Manhattan. But the possibilit­y of being able to finish his doctorate in an academic setting was enough to pull him away from the East Coast and into the desert.

When he flew to Las Vegas in May of that year, he expected to give a seminar presentati­on to the faculty. But the university had just closed for the summer, and only a few faculty members remained.

In true Vegas fashion, Malamud introduced himself to his future colleagues around a late-night poker table.

“I guess I passed the grade on that,” he said. “I tried not to win too much money. And the rest is

history.”

It was ultimately William “Tom” White, the business school’s first dean, who persuaded Malamud to take a chance on the young school.

“The campus was a desert; there was nothing here,” he said. “There were rabbits running around and coyotes running around, and what Tom described was a big-city university. That’s what we’ve become.”

When clearing out his office, Malamud came across one of his early population projection­s.

“At least one of my projection­s was that the population would level off at three-quarters of a million people,” he said. “I gave it some chance that it would hit a million.”

He didn’t take into account that when a city reaches a population of 1 million, it becomes attractive to industry and business. The Las Vegas metro area population has surpassed 2 million.

“You had outfits like Dillard’s and Neiman Marcus and Nordstrom and the like all of a sudden becoming interested in Las Vegas,” he said. “And their establishi­ng themselves here only propelled growth further. It sort of made Las Vegas an attractive shopping destinatio­n for tourists and the whole evolution of the resort industry from strictly gaming to what it is today.”

In one of his final classes at UNLV, the history of economic thought, Malamud chronicled the names of famous economists and their most well-known contributi­ons. It’s one of his favorite classes.

That he’s able to choose a favorite course is remarkable: He’s taught more classes than the business school has on the books today.

“It’s covering the whole spectrum of economics,” he said. “I get to reminisce about each of the themes of the economics discipline.”

Sir William Petty, an English economist who died in 1687, was on one end of the spectrum. John B. Taylor, an economist and professor at Stanford University, was on the other end. His favorite economist, John

Maynard Keynes, also appeared on the white board.

“He’s super-thorough,” said Tiffani Coleman, a business student with a focus in economics. “He has a lot of insight.”

Like Malamud, Coleman walked across the stage at the Thomas & Mack Center this weekend — Malamud carrying the ceremonial mace, reserved for the longest-tenured faculty member, and Coleman to pick up her diploma.

“I’m graduating this semester, if he let’s me,” she said with a laugh.

 ?? Madelyn Reese Las Vegas Review-Journal ?? Bernard Malamud teaches a review lesson May 3 before final exams in his history of economic thought class.
Madelyn Reese Las Vegas Review-Journal Bernard Malamud teaches a review lesson May 3 before final exams in his history of economic thought class.
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