INDEX
INSIDE
Vol. CIII, No. 14 © 2021, The Heights, Inc. www.bcheights.com Estalished 1919
THIS ISSUE
NEWS...........A2 ARTS..............A6 METRO..........A3 S P O R TS . . . . . .A7 MAGAZINE...A4 OPINIONS....A9
www.bcheights.com
Monday, October 4, 2021
Chestnut Hill, Mass.
MAGAZINE
SPORTS
Professors navigate the transition back to the classroom after a year and a half of remote instruction.
BC falls short to Wake Forest, losing a hard fought game 3-2.
A8
A4
JUST SHORT.
ETHAN OTT Asst. Sports Editor
CLEMSON, S.C. — Boston College football quarterback Dennis Grosel looked downfield from the Clemson 36-yard line with 1:48 left on the clock. BC was down by six. He needed a perfect drive. Alec Lindstrom snapped the ball, and soon it was in Zay Flowers’ hands at the 49-yard line. On the next play, Grosel hit Travis Levy, who quickly darted out of bounds. Then he did it again, and again. Five completions later, Grosel found himself on the 11-yard line with a first down. Lindstrom snapped the ball, but this time it sailed through Grosel’s hands and landed on the turf. A few confusing seconds later, the refs signaled back downfield and Clemson had possession. Death Valley erupted in an 80,000-strong wall of noise as a destitute BC walked off the field, helpless without any timeouts remaining. The scoreboard flashed 19–13, Clemson.
See Clemson, A7 COURTESY OF AP PHOTO
COURTESY OF AP PHOTO
COURTESY OF AP PHOTO
NEWS
METRO
Underage Students Cost Boston Restaurant Its Liqour License MEGAN KELLY News Editor A restaurant in downtown Boston will lose its liquor license for one week this month after investigators caught underage Boston College students drinking alcohol and not wearing masks at a party in April. According to a report from the Commonwealth’s Alcoholic Beverages Control Commission, investigators arrived at Servia, a modern Eastern Mediterranean
restaurant located on State St., on April 9 and saw approximately 21 “youthful looking individuals,” many with drinks in hand, standing by the bar. Upon entering the establishment, the students began to “scatter” to the back of the restaurant, the report said. “Investigators then walked to the back of the establishment and entered the dining room where they observed individuals exiting, trying to exit the premises, and/or attempting to hide from the investigators,” the report reads.
An investigation by the commission found that the restaurant violated four Massachusetts COVID-19 regulations by allowing employees and patrons to remove their masks inside the restaurant. The commission is also charging the restaurant with seven counts of underage drinking, all of which were BC students aged 19 and 20. Servia’s liquor license suspension will begin on Oct. 18 and last through Oct. 24.
See A2
PHOTO COURTESY OF ELLEN ISHKANIAN
Community Resource Dog Leo Joins NPD See A3