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HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) —
    A University of Connecticut student who went on an obscenity-laced tirade against food service workers when they refused to sell him jalapeno-bacon macaroni and cheese has apologized.
    Luke Gatti acknowledged in a 2 1/2-minute video posted online that he was drunk and said he was ashamed of his behavior.
    Gatti, a 19-year-old freshman from Bayville, New York, was due in court Tuesday on charges of breach of peace and criminal trespass stemming from his Oct. 4 outburst at the university's student union food court in Storrs, where the university is based. His mac and cheese meltdown was captured on video and has been widely viewed online.
    Police and food service supervisor Dave Robinson said Gatti was refused service because he was carrying an open alcohol container. Gatti was shown on video arguing with and shoving Robinson.
    "Nobody deserves to be treated that way, ever," Gatti says of Robinson in his apology video. "At the time I was, to say the least, very intoxicated."
    He says he was shocked when he first saw the video of his tantrum.
    "I was just watching it and saying 'Oh, my God, like what the hell is wrong with me?'" he says.
    He says he has personal problems he's addressing and what happened at the student union was a "wakeup call."
    Gatti shot the apology video, titled "Drunk UConn Student Apology Mac and Cheese," and uploaded it to YouTube on Sunday, his father, Vincent Gatti, told the Hartford Courant
    "He's a kid that made a bad mistake," Vincent Gatti said. "My son was wrong and feels terrible about this."
    Since the mac and cheese outburst, he said, his family has been subjected to a "barrage of yelling, screaming, cursing, obnoxious, horrible, hateful, spiteful people" critical of his son's actions.
    Luke Gatti says in the apology video people who want to send him packages of mac and cheese should instead donate them to food pantries.
    "There's a lot of hungry people out there," he says.
    Some UConn students have started an online fundraiser to show their support for the food service workers.
    Gatti previously was a student at the University of Massachusetts and was arrested twice last year on disorderly conduct charges, according to the Daily Hampshire Gazette. During one of those arrests, he was accused of using a racial slur against a police officer, court filings show.

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NOGALES, Sonora, Mexico (AP) —
    A California-based artist is leading an effort to paint the border fence that divides the U.S. and Mexico to make it blend in with the landscape.
    Ana Teresa Fernández and a group of 30 artists and painters began their work on the border fence in Nogales, Sonora and Nogales, Arizona, on Tuesday.
    Fernández wants to make a political statement about the border by painting it blue that it appears to be invisible.
    Fernández did a similar project in 2012 on the Tijuana, Mexico, beach, risking arrest. This time, she has permission from Mexican authorities to paint the fence from the Sonora side of the border.
    But organizers say they're not sure how U.S. authorities will respond to people using ladders on the border fence. The painting will continue throughout the day.

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HUNTSVILLE, Texas (AP) —
    No appeals are in the courts to try to delay this week's scheduled execution of a 33-year-old Dallas man for the 2001 fatal shooting of a police officer who was off-duty and working security at a club.
    Licho (LEE'-cho) Escamilla (Es-cuh-MEE'-uh) is set to die Wednesday evening for the slaying of Dallas Officer Christopher Kevin James.
    Escamilla already was wanted for fatally shooting a neighbor in Dallas when he got involved in a brawl outside the club, pulled out a gun and opened fire on police.
    James was among four uniformed Dallas officers at the scene. He was hit twice and witnesses said Escamilla shot him three more times in the head.
    Escamilla would be the 24th convicted killer put to death this year in the U.S.

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