Saturday Evening Post Year 1975 Magazine Back Issues
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- How You Can Be A Skinny Epicure
- Jimmy Connors, Kurt Vonnegut Jr.
- Earl Butz: Who Speaks For America?
- What Is Your Cancer Risk?
- The Dog - Man's Marvelous Shadow
- Thous Shalt Not Kill George Wallace
- Gordie Howe & Sons: Hottest Shots On Ice
- Billie Jean King Sex Power & Politics In Washington
- 200 Years Of Girl Watching In The Saturday Evening Post
- The PSE Could Prove Your Innocence
- Jim Murray On Golf's Money Men
- Older Women, Younger Men - Why Not? Policewomen In Action
- Cowboy Hall Of Fame
- The Story Of R. Sears & A. Roebuck
- The Eagle: Our Surviving National Symbol
- A Nathaniel Hawthorne Story
- The Custer Love Story
- Christmas Tales TV Game Shows
- Dr. Edward Teller On Nuclear Energy
- Climbing Wyoming's Grand Tetons
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The Saturday Evening Post is an American magazine, currently published six times a year. It was issued weekly under this title from 1897 until 1963, then every two weeks until 1969. From the 1920s to the 1960s, it was one of the most widely circulated and influential magazines within the American middle class, with fiction, non-fiction, cartoons and features that reached two million homes every week. The magazine declined in readership through the 1960s, and in 1969 The Saturday Evening Post folded for two years before being revived as a quarterly publication with an emphasis on medical articles in 1971. As of the late 2000s, The Saturday Evening Post is published six times a year by the Saturday Evening Post Society, which purchased the magazine in 1982. The magazine was redesigned in 2013.