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| - The book series was first introduced in the strip from July 26, 1970, in which Charlie Brown reads one of the books to Snoopy as a bedtime story. In the strip from April 9, 1971 Snoopy can be seen reading a part of one the books, which reads, "And so the six Bunny-Wunnies said good night, and went to sleep. Their adventure was over, and all ended well".
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| abstract
| - The book series was first introduced in the strip from July 26, 1970, in which Charlie Brown reads one of the books to Snoopy as a bedtime story. In the strip from April 9, 1971 Snoopy can be seen reading a part of one the books, which reads, "And so the six Bunny-Wunnies said good night, and went to sleep. Their adventure was over, and all ended well". The books are enjoyed by other Peanuts characters too. In the strip from October 23, 1972, one of the books, The Six Bunny Wunnies Freak Out, is banned from the school library, causing Linus, Sally and Charlie Brown to become upset. Linus leads a campaign to lift the ban. In the strip from November 1, 1972, he states that the decision to ban the book was not made by the librarian or the principal but by the school board, one of the members of which is Charlie Brown's doctor. At Linus' insistence, Charlie Brown speaks to his doctor about the ban, although whether or not the ban is lifted is unclear. The Sunday strip with the first reference to the Bunny Wunny book series was later featured in an episode of The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show on October 29, 1983, after Snoopy arrives home from a school dance that he attended with Peppermint Patty.
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