Saturday Evening Post Back Issues
- (Saturday evenings) Specials on desserts
saturday evening
- A past issue of a journal or magazine
- (Back Issue (magazine)) Back Issue is an American magazine published by TwoMorrows Publishing, based in Raleigh, North Carolina. Founded in 2003 and published eight times yearly, it features articles and art about comic books of the 1970s to the 1990s.
- (Back Issue) Any periodical other than the most current issue. Libraries and other institutions often store back issues of periodicals for historical purposes.
- Just Shoot Me! is an American television sitcom that aired for seven seasons on NBC from March 4, 1997 to August 16, 2003, with 148 episodes produced. The show was created by Steven Levitan, the show’s executive producer.
back issues
- A starting post or winning post
- the position where someone (as a guard or sentry) stands or is assigned to stand; “a soldier manned the entrance post”; “a sentry station”
- A goalpost
- military post: military installation at which a body of troops is stationed; “this military post provides an important source of income for the town nearby”; “there is an officer’s club on the post”
- A long, sturdy piece of timber or metal set upright in the ground and used to support something or as a marker
- affix in a public place or for public notice; “post a warning”
post
Forty Years and Still Lots to See
In 1969, the Beatles gave their last public perfomance on the top of Apple Records, the last issue of the Saturday Evening Post, Richard Nixon becomes President of the United States, the debut of the Boeing 747, Dave Thomas opens the restaurant that began the Wendy’s franchise, Wal-Mart incorporates, Monty Python’s Flying Circus first airs, Sharon Tate and friends are murdered by the "Manson Family", Woodstock Festival is held and on July 20, 1969, Neil Armstrong becomes the first man to walk on the moon. How time slips by so quickly…
Out of college, money spent
See no future, pay no rent
All the money’s gone, nowhere to go
Any jobber got the sack
Monday morning, turning back
Yellow lorry slow, nowhere to go
But oh, that magic feeling, nowhere to go
Oh, that magic feeling
Nowhere to go
One sweet dream
Pick up the bags and get in the limousine
Soon we’ll be away from here
Step on the gas and wipe that tear away
One sweet dream came true today
Came true today
Came true today (yes it did)
-The Beatles
Pard
I found this ad in the May 8, 1948 issue of Saturday Evening Post.