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The Daily Tar Heel

Brian Gaither


The Daily Tar Heel
News

Teachers face same issues

While the state budget saved more than 1,600 teaching jobs, teachers are entering the new school year with still fewer colleagues and fewer supplies than before the budget crisis. The North Carolina budget is at its lowest in 14 years, and the money allocated for education has become restrictive. N.C.

The Daily Tar Heel
News

N.C. leaders prepare for possible oil spill effects

While the BP oil spill leaks an estimated 35,000 to 100,000 barrels a day, people in North Carolina are preparing for possible effects it might have on the state’s coastline. Experts expect the damage to the state’s coast to be minimal, but the spill has entered the state’s politics. “It will probably just be a nuisance and not much of an environmental consequence to North Carolina,” said Rick Luettich, director of UNC’s Institute of Marine Science. N.C.

Sara Isaacson repels during a Tar Heel Battalion training exercise in 2007. Courtesy of Sara Isaacson.
News

UNC student ?ghts ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’

As a cadet in the UNC ROTC, senior Sara Isaacson believed in the seven army values.But it was her commitment to those values, she says, that resulted in her removal from the program and cost her $79,000 in repayment of her federal scholarship to serve in the ROTC at UNC.

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News

Lewis backs former rival

Chapel Hill lawyer Ken Lewis went from losing in the North Carolina Democratic primary to serving as campaign chairman for the primary’s winner.N.C. Secretary of State Elaine Marshall added Lewis as her campaign chairman for the June 22 runoff against Cal Cunningham and potentially to defeat incumbent Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., come November.

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News

NCSU partners with French school

The Triangle region and its universities are expanding their horizons into international business with a foreign university moving to the Centennial Campus at N.C. State.The French business school SKEMA will bring students to learn American business by capitalizing on the opportunities in the Research Triangle Park.

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