Difference between revisions of "L. Jerome Stanton"

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(October 10, 1910 – June 10, 1993)
  
Associate editor of [[Street & Smith]]'s [[prozine]], ''[[Astounding]]'', in the 1940s.
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'''L. Jerome “Jay” Stanton''' was associate editor of [[Street & Smith]]'s [[prozine]] ''[[Astounding]]'' in the 1940s. After [[World War II]], he joined the [[New York]] [[sf community]] and worked as an assistant to [[John Campbell]] on the science magazine ''[[Air Trails and Science Frontiers]]''.
  
 
He married [[Carol Pohl|Carol Ulf]] (later Pohl).
 
He married [[Carol Pohl|Carol Ulf]] (later Pohl).
  
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[[Fred Pohl]] wrote of him: “Jay was a far kinder organism than the rest of homo sapiens. If there were any areas of greed, or rage, or regret anywhere in his soul I never saw them betray themselves in acts.”
  
{{person | born=????}}
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{{person | born=1910 |died=1993}}
 
[[Category:pro]]
 
[[Category:pro]]
 
[[Category:US]]
 
[[Category:US]]

Revision as of 13:33, 21 July 2020

(October 10, 1910 – June 10, 1993)

L. Jerome “Jay” Stanton was associate editor of Street & Smith's prozine Astounding in the 1940s. After World War II, he joined the New York sf community and worked as an assistant to John Campbell on the science magazine Air Trails and Science Frontiers.

He married Carol Ulf (later Pohl).

Fred Pohl wrote of him: “Jay was a far kinder organism than the rest of homo sapiens. If there were any areas of greed, or rage, or regret anywhere in his soul I never saw them betray themselves in acts.”



Person 19101993
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