Paramount Pep-O-Grams (1927)

Record Details:

Something wrong or inaccurate about this page? Let us Know!

Thanks for helping us continually improve the quality of the Lantern search engine for all of our users! We have millions of scanned pages, so user reports are incredibly helpful for us to identify places where we can improve and update the metadata.

Please describe the issue below, and click "Submit" to send your comments to our team! If you'd prefer, you can also send us an email to mhdl@commarts.wisc.edu with your comments.




We use Optical Character Recognition (OCR) during our scanning and processing workflow to make the content of each page searchable. You can view the automatically generated text below as well as copy and paste individual pieces of text to quote in your own work.

Text recognition is never 100% accurate. Many parts of the scanned page may not be reflected in the OCR text output, including: images, page layout, certain fonts or handwriting.

Page Two P E P-O-G RAMS ART EDITORS Ray Freemantle Saul Schiavone Albert Deane Editor Contributors — all members of the (^ammount-Gpzp Qlub A CLAN OF^GOOD FELLOWS" Paramount Building. N. Y. C. Vol. 4, No. 11 Sept. 11, 1928 Pep Club Reporting Committee CHAIRMAN-. Jerry Novat VICE-CHAIRMAN : Lilian Langdon. OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHER: Lewis F. Nathan. RE PORTERS: Arthur Bell, Maxine Kessler, William Gold, Florence Monson, Rose Eidelsberg, Frank Schrieber, Gertrude Vo Liner, Edward Jones, Marion Flerbert, Seymour Shultz, Lilian Stevens, Martin Carroll, Ruth Johnson, Mary Levine, Henry Spiegel, Helen Strauss, Eileen Eady, Estelle Jacobs, Rose Goldstein, Charles Eich, Sydney Cohen. Elections The nationwide injunction for every voter to exercise his, or her, privilege in the election of the next President of the United States in November should not be lost on the voters of the Paramount-Pep Club. September 25th is the day set for our voting, and it should be a matter of pride as well as one of personalexpression that we register as near to a one hundred percent poll as is humanly possible. Constitution At the last general meeting of the Club the Amendments formerly proposed for the strengthening of our Club were approved in overwhelming fashion. However, prior to this event it took a tremendous amount of cajoling and even begging on the part of the Club’s officers to have the members make themselves even only superficially acquainted with the contents of the Club’s Constitution. Following the custom of past years, the complete Constitution will be published in next month’s Anniversary Number of this magazine. Prepare yourself for another such crisis as the recent one : appropriate a spare half hour some Sunday during the winter and read the Club’s Constitution through. Not onl}^ will the reading do you good : it will show you that you belong to an even finer Club than you believed. TESS KLAUSNER, HEROINE On a recent Sunday Tess Klaussner, popular member of Paramount’s Advertising and Publicity Department, saved the life of a boy at Long Beach. We would have known naught of the details had not one of Tessie’s friends ‘lifted’ from her desk, and loaned to the editor for copying, the following letter: Dear Miss Klausner: It is as impossible to express our gratitude, as it is to repay you for what yon have done for us in saving our Paid from the waters of Long Beach. Your deed is all the more appreciated because you knew and realised fully the danger to yourself -when you accomplished it. So from the bottom of our hearts zee simply say thank you, amd may you be rehaid by a higher power for saving a life. Your friends, The Kaplans, Brooklyn, N . Y. Contributions This is practically a last call for material for publication in next month's Anniversary Number of Pep-O-Grams. Due to the size of the magazine, printing must commence much earlier. It’s a good issue to have your works published in, as calls are made for spare copies during at least the first eight months following publication. Whether you have been circularized or not you are invited to contribute. Almost anything which will interest your nextoffice neighbor at least fifty percent as much as it interests you will be counted as publishable copy. So let’s have it! — quickly, pronto and toute suite ! Vacations The growing list of Pep Club members who j are making Europe a vacation ground — as | well as those who flock off to the far reaches ; i of Canada and the middle west — proves that a i new era is dawning in the science of taking vacations. For years the taking of a vacation i ; meant going to some hectic center a few miles away, with a lot of acquaintances and a big j percentage of the bustle and clangor associated j I with the locale of one’s place of work. This j j usually meant two or three weeks of nervous ; ( exhaustion, with a subsequent ‘convalescence’ 4 of a week or more back at the office desk and j ; at the company’s expense. The new order of vacations, however, is most decisively produc, ing those features which are positively necessary if a vacation is to be at all efficacious — change of locale for the nerves, change of food for the body, change of faces for the heart and the pursuit of knowledge and information for the mind.