DEI and Kannapolis at odds over Earnhardt tribute:

Dale Earnhardt’s widow has asked city officials in Kannapolis to stop using the late driver’s name and likeness on materials associated with a statue and park until they get her approval. George Taulbee, an attorney representing Teresa Earnhardt and Dale Earnhardt Inc., said Monday he asked officials with the Dale Earnhardt Tribute to end all use of fund-raising fliers and billboards until the materials have been authorized. “We’re hopeful this can be resolved because everybody wants the statue and the park to be an appropriate memorial to Dale,” Taulbee said. “But materials that display his name and image require approval before they are used, and that approval has not been obtained.” Taulbee, of the Charlotte-based Alston & Bird, said Teresa Earnhardt and DEI support the statue and park but don’t want organizers of the tribute using new materials to promote it until she signs off on them. Taulbee most recently expressed the widow’s views in a Jan. 6 letter to Kannapolis leaders and Atlantic American Properties, which owns the site where the Dale Earnhardt statue and tribute center are located. At odds are materials such as a card soliciting donations for the planned park that shows a photo of the driver wearing sunglasses and a NASCAR uniform. Billboards along nearby interstate highways also use the Earnhardt image to advertise the tribute. City Manager Mike Mahaney said the city of Kannapolis has hired an attorney to help with the copyright and trademark issues.( ThatsRacin.com/AP )(1-13-2003)