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・ Jerry Verno
・ Jerry Seltzer
・ Jerry Sereda
・ Jerry Seuseu
・ Jerry Sharkey
・ Jerry Shay
・ Jerry Shea
・ Jerry Sheindlin
・ Jerry Sherk
・ Jerry Sherlock
・ Jerry Shipkey
・ Jerry Shipp
・ Jerry Shirley
・ Jerry Sichting
・ Jerry Siebert
Jerry Siegel
・ Jerry Sikhosana
・ Jerry Silverman
・ Jerry Simmons
・ Jerry Simmons (American football)
・ Jerry Simmons (tennis)
・ Jerry Simpson
・ Jerry Singirok
・ Jerry Singson
・ Jerry Sisemore
・ Jerry Sisk, Jr.
・ Jerry Sitoe
・ Jerry Slack
・ Jerry Slavonia
・ Jerry Sloan


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Jerry Siegel : ウィキペディア英語版
Jerry Siegel

Jerome "Jerry" Siegel (October 17, 1914 – January 28, 1996),〔Roger Stern. ''Superman: Sunday Classics: 1939 – 1943'' DC Comics/Kitchen Sink Press, Inc./Sterling Publishing; 2006〕 who also used pseudonyms including Joe Carter, Jerry Ess,〔 and Herbert S. Fine, was the American co-creator of Superman, along with Joe Shuster, the first of the great comic book superheroes and one of the most recognizable of the 20th century.
He was inducted (with Shuster posthumously) into the comic book industry's Will Eisner Comic Book Hall of Fame in 1992 and the Jack Kirby Hall of Fame in 1993.
==Early life==
Jerry Siegel was born in Cleveland, Ohio, the youngest of six children of Jewish immigrants from Lithuania, Sarah (née Fine) and Mitchell Siegel. He was preceded by sisters Minerva and Roslyn, both in Lithuania, and brothers Harry and Leo and sister Isabel.〔 His father was a sign painter who opened a haberdashery and encouraged his son's artistic inclinations. Mitchell died of a heart attack brought on by the robbery of his store, when Jerry was in junior high school. Siegel was a fan of movies, comic strips, and especially science fiction pulp magazines. He became active in what would become known as fandom, corresponding with other science fiction fans, including the young future author Jack Williamson. In 1929, Siegel published what might have been the first SF fanzine, ''Cosmic Stories'', which he produced with a manual typewriter and advertised in the classified section of ''Science Wonder Stories''. He published several other booklets over the next few years.
Siegel attended Glenville High School in Cleveland, Ohio and worked for its weekly student newspaper, ''The Torch''. He was a shy, not particularly popular student, but he achieved a bit of fame among his peers for his popular Tarzan parody, "Goober the Mighty." At about age 16, while at Glenville, he befriended his later collaborator, Joe Shuster. Siegel described his friendship with the similarly shy and bespectacled Shuster: "When Joe and I first met, it was like the right chemicals coming together."〔
Jerry Siegel married Bella, a shy 18-year-old Glenville High graduate, in 1939. Their son, Michael Siegel, was born in 1944. After several years of estrangement, Bella and Jerry Siegel divorced in 1948. Jerry Siegel married Joanne Siegel later that year. They have a daughter together, Laura Siegel.
The writer-artist team broke into comics with Major Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson's landmark ''New Fun'', debuting with the musketeer swashbuckler "Henri Duval" and the supernatural-crimefighter strip Doctor Occult in issue No. 6 (Oct. 1935).

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