Dan Wolf (publisher)

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Dan Wolf (May 25, 1915 - April 11, 1996) was a New York writer, newspaper editor, and media entrepreneur, best known as one of the founders of The Village Voice.

Wolf was born and raised on the Upper West Side of New York City and graduated from George Washington High School. He was drafted into the army as an infantryman in the Pacific theatre in World War II, where he was assigned to aerial intelligence in Papua New Guinea.[1]

Wolf studied psychology at The New School, where he met Edwin Fancher, a future co-founder of the Village Voice, while waiting to register for classes.[2] He met Norman Mailer, another future co-founder, through Jean Malaquais, who taught at The New School. Fancher and Mailer were also World War II veterans; the experience of seeing combat motivated the development of an 'alternative' newspaper with the goals of free thought and speech.[3][4]

In 1955, he married Rhoda Lazare, a social worker who was a friend of Mailer's sister, with whom he had two children, Margaret and John.[5][6] He died in 1996 at the age of 80.

At The Village Voice

Life after the Voice

References

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