Club Fest blown away by number of interested students By Maruja Rosario Copy Editor mxr3oo@psu.edu Penn State Harrisburg holds an annual ritual that involves all the pomp, circumstance, and charms of both Bush and Kerry’s campaign trails com bined. It is known as Club Fest, the one time when stu dents, both new and mature, can see all the clubs that PSH These Sigma lota Epsilon members are using candy to entice students to check out their table and possibly join their honors fraternity. This club permotes interest and acheivment in the field of managament. . Members from Chi Gamma lota Veteran’s Fraternity (XGI) pose together for a quick picture between recruiting members druing club test. XGI works to help Military members and veterans make the transition from military to college. Photo by Kathryn Herr degree in English Education, Jaster began her teaching career. For fourteen years in Cape May, New Jersey, she taught all levels of children, from honors to compensatory, in grades B th to 12 th , always including Shakespeare in the curriculum. “I’ve taught this stuff to my compensatory eight graders and they got it,” said has to offer and should one (or a few) pique their inter ests, sign up to participate. This event is often the one chance clubs are given to recruit members using any means possible. Some clubs enticed students with candy or free pencils, while others used catchy posters and signs. This year’s Club Fest ran Jaster during a Shakespeare lec ture at PSH. While teaching, Jaster also coached softball and directed the literary magazine, honors society, and the junior high school newspaper. During her stay in Cape May, Jaster became a loyal fan of the Atlantic City Boardwalk Bullies, a 3 r division professional ice smoothly, even with the weather attempting to sabo tage the annual festivities. The rain decided it would be best to leave PSH alone, though it did send strong winds that forced the clubs to pin down their posters and make sure their freebies did not blow across Vartan Plaza, where Club Fest is normally held. From Shakespeare to South Park JASTER cont. from i hockey team. Jaster really loves the game of ice hockey, and though true to her Bullies, the Philadelphia native is also a fan of the Philadelphia Flyers. Another result of her Cape May residence includes a love of relaxing on the beach and eating gyros, her favorite food. Here in Middletown, Jaster can be spotted at the Gateway restaurant having breakfast, for Jaster said she is a sucker for “greasy spoon joints.” After Cape May, Jaster spent three summers studying in England with the Royal Shakespeare Company to receive her Master’s degree from Fairleigh Dickinson University. Despite ridicule from peers, Jaster left teaching in 1994 to get her Ph.D. in English Literature, with a concentration in Renaissance studies, from the University of Maryland. True to her nature, Jaster did most of her research for her Ph.D. in the Folgers Shakespeare Library. photos byKathryn Herr These enviornmentalists take a break from agressive recruiting durng Club Fest. Their club peromotes awarness of enviornmental issues. They were lucky enough to get a good table at Club Fest; right up front and across from the busy SGA table. Members from all campus clubs put on thier best efforts to recuruit members to join them. Club fest give students the chance to see what clubs are offered at Penn State Harrisburg and get a feel for what they might clubs they might enjoy. It was just after receiving her Ph.D. that Penn State Harrisburg got a hold of Jaster. Although she had job interviews all over the “I really enjoy the exchange of ideas with stu dents. I like to see them get excited about this stuff” -Dr. Margaret Jaster country, Jaster felt a strong pull to Pennsylvania and to her fami ly. “My mother prayed me into this job,” Jaster said. “I don’t think the Lord ignores old ladies’ prayers.” Jaster received tenure in 2001 and was promoted to Associate Professor of Humanities and English at PSH. Her favorite part of teaching at PSH is in the classroom. “I really enjoy the exchange of ideas with students. I like to see them get excited about this stuff,” she said. English 200 W and 444 are the classes she enjoys teaching most. “I really love my 200 W course because the students get to think in new ways. That’s very exciting for me,” she said. However, Jaster said she could do without the committee meet ings and the paper grading that all professors have to deal with. She took a sabbatical from teaching from 2002 to 2003 to accept a fellowship from the Folgers Shakespeare Library to research clothes in the Renaissance, a favorite topic of Jaster’s. In the event that Jaster has spare time, she uses it to go hik ing, attend theater and art muse ums and collect antiques. She also enjoys old Universal mon ster movies, especially mummy movies. “I’m not embarrassed to say I enjoy some T.V.,” said Jaster. She is an avid viewer of South Park, which she relates to Shakespeare with ease, and Reno 911. “I love anything Canadian, especially hockey players,” she said. She is currently renovating her Victorian home, which is proving to be a love-hate project. Jaster also has an appreciation for clas sic rock and soft jazz. Janis Joplin’s Greatest Hits is currently spinning in her CD player. “My taste in music probably ends at 1975, mostly the stuff I’ve always loved,” said Jaster. Jaster is always busy with one thing or another. She is involved in many scholarly events, such as Folgers Shakespeare Library seminars, the Annual Medieval and Renaissance conference at Villanova University and various colloquia. It is a far cry from the blue collar atmosphere she began her life in. However, as Jaster said, “I knew what I want ed to do and I didn’t let others talk me out of it.”