Word: sabur
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...it’s all abstract and won’t do anything, but at the bottom of people’s hearts, it still rings true and can lead to more unity,” he said. Drawing on Obama’s speech, panelist Kareemah L. Sabur ’09, the community outreach director for Harvard Admissions Scholars, proposed that the solution to racial tension lies in making the black struggle part of the American struggle. “Suddenly, me helping you out is not me losing, but helping the nation,” she said...
...addition to Johnson and Yiadom, current Harvard undergraduates featured in the book include Immanuel R, Foster ‘06-’07, Kelly L. Lee ‘07, Julian D. Miller ‘07, Alexandra C. Wood ‘07, Kareemah L. Sabur ‘08, and Preston S. Copeland ‘09. Coop officials said that they were pleased to host the event and have prominently displayed “I Have Risen,” since it first went on sale earlier this semester...
...just about any language, although in Bosnian it means “relax.” It is also the name of a restaurant in Somerville’s Teele Square, just north of Davis Square on the way to Tufts. As we learned on a recent visit, Sabur embodies both associations...
...Sabur may be touted as a Balkan-inspired restaurant, but the menu owes more to Italy and Greece than Serbia and Albania (although, as any New York foodie knows, many of the best Italian restaurants there are owned by Albanians—why shouldn’t Bosnians join the game in Boston?). Still, there are some Eastern touches among the more generic—though well-executed—Mediterranean items on the menu...
...Name: Sabur Restaurant