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Girls' Love Stories was an American romance comic book magazine published by DC Comics in the United States. Started in 1949 as DC's first romance title, it ran for 180 issues, [1] ending with the Nov-Dec 1973 issue. The stories covered such topics as girls worrying about getting a man, or marrying out of pressure, not love.
In 2004, after an Associated Press reporter approached the family about the story, Bob Dunbar Jr. consented to undergoing DNA tests. The results showed that Dunbar Jr. was not related by blood to his supposed cousin, the son of Alonzo Dunbar, who was the younger brother of Bobby Dunbar Sr. (the original Bobby Dunbar, who went missing in 1912). [15]
A Case for Solomon is a 2012 non-fiction, book by Tal McThenia and Margaret Dunbar Cutright chronicling the disappearance and possible recovery of 4-year-old Bobby Dunbar in 1912 Opelousas, Louisiana. [1]
The group now focused on original material by Dunbar, in association with Rubin and others. The band's early development was assisted and inspired by the success of Earth Quake, whose lead guitarist and principal songwriter was Tommy Dunbar's older brother, Robbie Dunbar. The Rubinoos often appeared as an opening act for Earth Quake in clubs ...
Look at Me Girl is the fifthteenth studio album American singer Bobby Vee, [1] and was released in October 1966 by Liberty Records. [1] The album featured the debut of Vee's backup band, The Strangers. The only single from the album was "Look at Me Girl".
The lead single of the album, Candy Girl, while being a massive hit on Black radio stateside and overseas, struggled for consistent plays on Pop radio and the video failed to crack the rotation at MTV in the U.S. despite strong sales numbers and being No. 1 on the Black Singles charts, surpassing George Clinton's "Atomic Dog" and Michael Jackson's "Billie Jean" while staving off "Beat It" on ...
Susan Maughan (born Marian Maughan, 1 July 1938) [1] [2] is an English singer who released successful singles in the 1960s. Her most famous and successful song, "Bobby's Girl" (a cover of the Marcie Blane single), reached number three in the UK Singles Chart at Christmas time in 1962. [3]
"That's What Girls Are Made For" is the debuting single for the American R&B/Soul vocal group The Spinners, released on Harvey Fuqua's Tri-Phi Records label in 1961. The single featured most of the original members of the group including original lead singer Bobby Smith and featured a very young Marvin Gaye playing drums.