"Male"@en . "Sly Cooper: Thieves in Time"@en . "Bob as he appears during Sly Cooper: Thieves in Time"@en . "Bob Cooper was an early editor of Star Wars titles at Dark Horse comics after the company attained the license in the early 1990s. Cooper was the second editor of Classic Star Wars, which reprinted and reformatted the Star Wars daily newspaper strips into comic book form, starting with issue 8 in April 1993, through to the end of the series with issue 20 in June 1994. On Classic Star Wars, he was preceded as Star Wars editor by Anina Bennet and followed by his assistant editor Peet Janes. He was also editor of Tales of the Jedi: The Golden Age of the Sith and The Fall of the Sith Empire sub-series of comics, which dealt with the ancient Jedi 5,000 years before A New Hope, and which were prequels to the already successful Tales of the Jedi comics set 4,000 years before ANH. He was also editor of the Star Wars: A New Hope - The Special Edition miniseries, which was a re-adaptation of the first Star Wars film into comic format\u2014the first adaptation had been done by Marvel Comics in 1977; and of Star Wars: Empire's End, the finale to the Dark Empire series. As well as Star Wars: Droids - The Protocol Offensive. He also edited the adaptations of the Star Wars novels of the Thrawn trilogy, Heir to the Empire (co-edited with Ryder Windham), Dark Force Rising, and the Last Command (co-edited by Peet Janes). He also edited the novel follow-up Star Wars: Shadows of the Empire - Evolution both with Peet Janes. He co-edited Star Wars: Tales of the Jedi - Redemption with Dave Land."@en . . . . . "Bob Cooper"@en . . . . . . "Bob Cooper, born November 13, 1935 is a former NASCAR driver from Gastonia, NC. He competed in sixty-four Sprint Cup Series events in his career, spanning from 1962 to 1969. Cooper never competed in a full season and as such never had the resources to put together a lot of good results. In his 64 starts, he would only earn eight top-tens. The best of those were a pair of sevenths, the first coming in 1961 at Spartanburg and the other coming in 1967 at Beltsville. However, his best points finish was a 37th place effort in 1963."@en . . . "Robert Cooper"@en . "\"Bob\" Cooper was the first known Cooper in history, living in Gungathal Valley in the year 10,000 BC. He used a large wooden stick with a bone hook on the end that has a rough similarity to Sly Cooper's modern Cooper cane, and used his thieving abilities to provide food as the leader of his tribe. He was voiced by Patrick Seitz."@en . . "__NOEDITSECTION__ Image:Information-silk.png|Character Template rect 0 0 20 20 Staff Template desc none Bob Cooper Real Name Unknown First publication Unknown"@en . . . "Patrick Seitz"@en . . "Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania"@en . . . "Los Angeles, California"@en . . . "Bob Cooper"@en . . "Deceased; affected by timeline"@en . . "Bob Cooper was an early editor of Star Wars titles at Dark Horse comics after the company attained the license in the early 1990s. Cooper was the second editor of Classic Star Wars, which reprinted and reformatted the Star Wars daily newspaper strips into comic book form, starting with issue 8 in April 1993, through to the end of the series with issue 20 in June 1994. On Classic Star Wars, he was preceded as Star Wars editor by Anina Bennet and followed by his assistant editor Peet Janes. He was also editor of Tales of the Jedi: The Golden Age of the Sith and The Fall of the Sith Empire sub-series of comics, which dealt with the ancient Jedi 5,000 years before A New Hope, and which were prequels to the already successful Tales of the Jedi comics set 4,000 years before ANH. He was also edit"@en . "Bob Cooper, born November 13, 1935 is a former NASCAR driver from Gastonia, NC. He competed in sixty-four Sprint Cup Series events in his career, spanning from 1962 to 1969. Cooper never competed in a full season and as such never had the resources to put together a lot of good results. In his 64 starts, he would only earn eight top-tens. The best of those were a pair of sevenths, the first coming in 1961 at Spartanburg and the other coming in 1967 at Beltsville. However, his best points finish was a 37th place effort in 1963. He made his final career start in 1969, recording a 44th place finish at Charlotte Motor Speedway, before hanging up the helmet."@en . . "Would you like to contribute material for this article? Click the edit tab above to open the editing window. Then replace this text with your own."@en . "\"Bob\" Cooper was the first known Cooper in history, living in Gungathal Valley in the year 10,000 BC. He used a large wooden stick with a bone hook on the end that has a rough similarity to Sly Cooper's modern Cooper cane, and used his thieving abilities to provide food as the leader of his tribe. He was voiced by Patrick Seitz."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "__NOEDITSECTION__ Image:Information-silk.png|Character Template rect 0 0 20 20 Staff Template desc none Bob Cooper Real Name Unknown First publication Unknown"@en . "Cooper, Bob"@en . "1925-12-06"^^ . . "Prehistoric raccoon"@en . . . . . . . . "__NOEDITSECTION__[[Category:Year of Death - ]]"@en . . . . . "1993-08-05"^^ . "Giant bone"@en . . . "Would you like to contribute material for this article? Click the edit tab above to open the editing window. Then replace this text with your own."@en . . . "Writer; Editor"@en . . . . "__NOEDITSECTION__[[Category:Year of Death - ]]"@en . . "c. 10,020 BC"@en . . . . . "Spear-cane"@en . . . .