Paul Aizley

BIOGRAPHY AND MORE

Paul grew up in Boston and prefers the Nevada desert to the cold and bustle of the northeast. In fact, he often says that he “can’t even enjoy the views in New England because all those trees are in the way.”

He came to Las Vegas (and to UNLV) in 1968 by way of Arizona, Washington state and Arizona again. Paul is proud to say that he has been in all 50 states — he beat out his best buddy in this competition because his buddy was afraid to fly.

Today, Paul and his wife, Sari, have five grown children, ten grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. His hobbies include foreign travel, hiking, cooking, movies and live theatre.

UNIVERSITY EDUCATION

l • Harvard University, B.A.

l University of Arizona, M.S.

l Arizona State University, Ph.D.

l University of Washington, Graduate Studies

SUPPLEMENTAL EDUCATION

l Grievance & Contract Administration training

l Paralegal Certification

l Banking practices related to Fair Housing and the Community Reinvestment Act

l Metro's Citizens Police Academy

l Travel agency school

l Dealers school

EMPLOYMENT — Current and Previous

l Mathematics professor (current)

l Dean, Extended Studies & Summer Term at UNLV

l Administrative assistant to 2 UNLV presidents

l Summer blackjack dealer on the Strip

l Outside sales representative for Prestige Travel

A HISTORY OF LEADERSHIP

l Founding chair, Nevada Fair Housing Center (dealing with consumer protection matters related to affordable housing)

l Developed the UNLV Center for Lifelong Learning for retired and semi-retired residents

l Past State president, Nevada Faculty Alliance (an affiliate of the American Association of University Professors)

l Current president of the UNLV chapter, Nevada Faculty Alliance

l Twice elected to chair the UNLV Faculty Senate

l Co-founder and past president of CLASS! (a non-profit organization that has served the high school students of Clark County since 1994)

l Member of the UNLV Public Safety Committee

l A candidate committed to helping Nevada resolve its budget woes



Paid for by the Committee to Elect Paul Aizley