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THE CAT'S OUT OF THE BAG: PUMA ADS IGNITE PROTEST

          The use of six high school athletes in 60-second TV ads
     for Puma and its newest basketball shoe "has ignited protest
     from Chicago administrators," according to USA TODAY's
     Carolyn White.  Jim Flynn of the IL High School Association
     said that the athletes retain their eligibility since they
     "can serve as models in commercials and ads as long as
     they're not using their school uniforms."  But J.W. Smith,
     Exec Dir of Physical Education and Health for Chicago Public
     Schools, and "other school administrators" have adopted a
     new bylaw saying that in the future, student-athletes in
     Chicago's public schools "will lose their eligibility if
     they appear in endorsement ads."  Puma N.A. President Jim
     Gorman said the administrators are "missing the point" of
     the spots: "We checked with all the federations, everybody
     gave us the green light.  The kids weren't paid anything,
     not even given footwear, not even given lunch.  This wasn't
     about promoting Puma.  It was about promoting the kids." 
     J.W. Smith "disagreed" with that assessment: "Those amateur
     athletes had on Puma shoes, Puma shirts, everywhere you
     looked there was Puma" (USA TODAY, 6/11).
          SHAQ-SHU: In L.A., Randy Harvey reports that Shaquille
     O'Neal's agent, Leonard Armato, is "reluctant to elaborate"
     on negotiations with Reebok, whose apparel deal with O'Neal
     expires this month, but that the "general idea is that
     O'Neal will manufacture his own shoes."  Armato floats one
     possible scenario where O'Neal would "produce his own
     signature brand, and, by becoming the middle man, sell them
     for a relatively reasonable price" (L.A. TIMES, 6/11).
          

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