News You Can Use: All You Can Eat

Unclear on the Concept

An Applebee’s restaurant in Portage, Indiana, became the site of a scuffle on Aug. 2, USA Today reported. According to the Portage Police Department, officers arrived in response to a report of a verbal disturbance. There they found Shawneesha Cobbs, 28, who had been loudly arguing with the store manager. Cobbs’ companions were under the impression that the restaurant’s $15.99 all-you-can-eat deal applied to the whole group, and when the manager explained that the deal was per person, Cobbs said the menu didn’t specify that. (It did.) The rabble-rouser then verbally assaulted another couple leaving the restaurant; that’s when she was placed under arrest and charged with disorderly conduct.

It’s Come to This

Students are headed back to school at H.E. Charles Middle School in El Paso, Texas, with a fresh restriction on the clothes they can wear, KVIA-TV reported on Aug. 2. Principal Nick DeSantis sent a letter to families stating that students would no longer be able to wear “black tops with black bottoms,” saying the look can be “associated with depression and mental health issues and/or criminality.” Sarah Venegas, executive principal for the district, backed DeSantis up: Students will be allowed to wear only blue jeans or khaki pants. Some parents don’t agree: “I don’t think we should be grouping, and red-flagging kids that just like to wear black,” said Stephanie Rascon. Mental health expert Krista Wingate suggested that educators might instead “be looking out for different signs of stress or ... anxiety.”

The Entrepreneurial Spirit

Jose Marti-Alvarez of Miami Gardens, Florida, came up with a shady plan to make some dough, Local10-TV reported. Marti-Alvarez, 55, was in court on Aug. 19 facing felony charges of running “an elaborate scheme to defraud tourists staying in the hotels of Miami Springs,” police said. He had distributed flyers to hotels near Miami International Airport, advertising “Roman Pizzeria” -a name dangerously close to Roman’s Pizzeria, which has had a loyal following in the area for four decades. Marti-Alvarez’s pizzas were delivered “bad, uncooked, sometimes in a box with a piece of raw dough,” said Jesus Roman, the real pizza man. Marti-Alvarez had been duping folks for several years, garnering bad reviews and customer complaints for the real Roman’s. Finally Roman went to the police. Marti-Alvarez was held on fraud charges, along with aggravated battery after he hit a hotel worker with his car while trying to flee.

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Go Figure! August 29

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Celebrity Extra: Keke Palmer