By: Maggie Powers
In a city that so often pushes its way into the future, it is important to remember the value of what’s old, even if it is hidden underneath what is new.
Maggie Powers was the 2015 Managing Editor. She is forever indebted to The Heights for sparking her love of design, sweatshirts with thumbholes, and making her realize she should have been professional and used her real name Regan all along.
By: Maggie Powers
In a city that so often pushes its way into the future, it is important to remember the value of what’s old, even if it is hidden underneath what is new.
By: Maggie Powers
Hopefully, the re-branding of Restaurant Week to Dine Out Boston will take the best parts of the event and distill them slightly so that it once again becomes an occasion that the city celebrates.
By: Maggie Powers
A mutual understanding between the administration and the students to prevent a fiasco like the Blarney Blowout in the future is the concrete, positive response needed to once again shake the “ZooMass” reputation.
By: Maggie Powers
There is something wonderfully human about Police Commissioner William B. Evans. He is far too humble for his role. He claims the hardest part of his new job as police commissioner is “finding an outfit.”
By: Maggie Powers
Love isn’t just about roses or even romance-it’s a demonstration of mutual respect, from and by men and women alike.
By: Maggie Powers
When Forrester and her husband traveled the country, she noticed cupcake and other individual dessert shops popping up in other cities, and thought to herself, “Why not Boston?”
By: Maggie Powers
Tucked away off Shawmut Ave. in the South End, Coppa offers a neighborhood feel that is difficult to come by in most of Boston.
By: Maggie Powers
Next time you’re out to eat, consider that the girl on the other side of the tray is working just as hard as you have all day. She’s probably tired, just like you are.
By: Maggie Powers
A name like Nourish Your Soul truly speaks to the larger mission behind Susan Cabana’s juice and smoothie bars.