Week of Monday, November 8

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Monday, November 8, 2021

The Student Voice of California State University, Fullerton

Volume 110 Issue 12

Dabke Night brings dancing, food and community

The audience gathered at Becker Amphitheater for Dabke Night. (Jessica Benda / Daily Titan)

Southwest Asian and North African students hosted SWANA week’s final event. JESSICA BENDA Asst. Editor

CSUF’s Becker Amphitheater swapped the usually empty seats for music, dancing and a welcoming community for the highly anticipated

Freedom Dabka Group performed on Thursday at the Becker Amphitheater. (Jessica Benda / Daily Titan)

Dabke Night. Southwest Asian and North African students, commonly known as SWANA, hosted the lively finale for this year’s SWANA Week on Thursday, which featured a performance by Freedom Dabka Group. The evening kicked off with Persian kabobs, rice and veggies, followed by a Dabke performance and a group dance lesson. With loud music and a crowd of 150 students, it easily caught the eyes

of passing students who wanted to join in. Dabke Night was SWANA Week’s fourth and final event, which initially began with a Monday SWANA Breaky, which featured traditional breakfast foods from throughout the SWANA region. Guest speaker and YouTuber Saby Hesri led the second day with a conversation about SWANA in the media, followed by the third day’s calligraphy workshop and the

Gregory Pongetti, the living collection curator of the Arboretum, said the Arboretum made necessary sales in an online ordering format. Volunteers would fulfill orders and stage the plants for convenient curbside pickups. The Arboretum staff intends to continue selling plants online as well as more in-person events in the future, Pongetti said. Pongetti said 25% of the necessary funds came directly from Cal State Fullerton’s budget. Preparations for the event are year round. Staff and volunteers propagate plants and collect seedlings from the Arboretum to care for at the nursery,

Pongetti added. Harriet Bouldin, the development manager, said that outside of raising funds for the Arboretum, which costs $4,200 a day to operate, the event was intended to bring attention to California native plants. “The overall goal is to help people learn more about the value of native plants and how easy it is to grow here because it’s the climate they’re used to,” Bouldin said. Bouldin also said that people should support the Arboretum as it plays a crucial role in global plant conservation.

Dabke Night finale. The week was the payoff of two months of work by the SWANA planning committee, headed by the SWANA club’s president and founder Mary Chammas. Chammas, a fourth-year international business major, said she only knew a few people when she was putting together the committee. “It’s bringing people together, like the SWANA planning committee didn’t even know each other, and look,

now they’re literally all standing together talking to each other. Just bringing the community together, different schools together,” Chammas said. Maysem Awadalla, second-year political science major and SWANA club marketing chair, said the committee put their heart and soul into planning the week. SEE MUSIC

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Fullerton Arboretum restarts in-person plant sales post-pandemic Museum Center resumes events

The event had nearly 200 types of plants available for sale. ADRIANA LOPEZ Staff Writer

The Fullerton Arboretum held its first in-person sale since its COVID-19 closure on Friday and Saturday. Arboretum members and Titan Card holders had exclusive access to the first day of the sale, as well as a 10% discount on all plant purchases during the twoday sale. The second day of the sale was open to the general public. During the peak of the pandemic,

SEE GARDEN

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Fullerton City Council approved a $151,771 grant. Since reopening, Janet Buzan, president of the board of trustees, said that it is a constant struggle to regain the museum’s records and access to the building. “Our foundation was ripped out from underneath us, so not only do we have exhibits that are open and we’re planning, but we are getting all of those things that were taken from us back,” Buzan said.

ANGELO ESPINOZA Staff Writer

The Fullerton Museum Center reopened its doors this past July and is now offering multiple events and art exhibits for the Fullerton community. The museum was at risk of closing its doors for good in March 2020 due to being defunded by the Fullerton City Council and the COVID-19 pandemic. In June, the Fullerton museum requested financial support, and the

SEE EXHIBIT

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Week of Monday, November 8 by Daily Titan - Issuu