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・ Bob Wolff
・ Bob Wollek
・ Bob Wong
・ Bob Wood
・ Bob Waters Field at E. J. Whitmire Stadium
・ Bob Waterston
・ Bob Watkins
・ Bob Watson
・ Bob Watson (lacrosse)
・ Bob Watt
・ Bob Way
・ Bob Weatherill
・ Bob Weaver (footballer)
・ Bob Weaver (weatherman)
・ Bob Weber
Bob Weber (cartoonist)
・ Bob Webster
・ Bob Weeks
・ Bob Weighill
・ Bob Weiland
・ Bob Weinstein
・ Bob Weinstock
・ Bob Weir
・ Bob Weiskopf
・ Bob Weiss
・ Bob Welborn
・ Bob Welch
・ Bob Welch (album)
・ Bob Welch (author)
・ Bob Welch (baseball)


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Bob Weber (cartoonist) : ウィキペディア英語版
Bob Weber (cartoonist)
Bob Weber (born June 26, 1934), aka Bob Weber Sr., is an American cartoonist, best known for his ''Moose and Molly'' comic strip, distributed by King Features Syndicate.
Weber was born and raised in South Baltimore. His career as a cartoonist and illustrator moved into high gear in 1959, when he contributed to ''The Saturday Evening Post'' and the syndicated ''Laff-a-Day'' panels.〔(Lambiek: Bob Weber Sr. )〕〔(Sizemore, Jim. "Return of the Moose", May 28, 2008. )〕
Relocating to Connecticut, he became cartoonist Dick Cavalli's assistant on ''Winthrop''. In 1965, he launched his own strip, which began September 20, 1965, as ''Moose'', retitled ''Moose Miller'' six years later.〔(Moose Miller ) at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. (Archived ) from the original on April 16, 2012.〕 It was renamed ''Moose and Molly'' (aka ''Moose & Molly'') in 1998.〔〔 After peaking with 200 newspapers, it eventually dropped to 75 papers.
Weber lives in Westport, Connecticut, which he refers to as "Westpork".〔
Weber's son, cartoonist Bob Weber, Jr., reaches a readership of 30 million with his ''Slylock Fox & Comics for Kids'' puzzle feature. He also co-created the short-lived ''Oh, Brother!'' strip.
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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