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Politics : Sioux Nation -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: altair19 who wrote (159495)2/2/2009 10:33:14 AM
From: Wharf Rat  Respond to of 362693
 
Thanks. I will.
This bud's for Michael. Even tho I find his apology regrettable.



To: altair19 who wrote (159495)2/2/2009 12:49:34 PM
From: SiouxPal  Respond to of 362693
 
Like really. He's basically a bit nerdy when not swimming, and the pot probably makes him feel better.



To: altair19 who wrote (159495)2/2/2009 3:19:25 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 362693
 
Citadel Said to Return 4.75% in January; First Gain Since June

By Saijel Kishan

Feb. 2 (Bloomberg) -- Citadel Investment Group LLC, the Chicago-based hedge-fund firm whose largest funds lost about 55 percent last year, in January posted its first gain in seven months, according to an investor.

The Kensington and Wellington funds, which together manage about $9 billion, returned an estimated 4.75 percent, said the person, who asked not to be identified because the information is private. Hedge funds lost about 1.2 percent in January, according to the HFRX Global Hedge Fund Index.

Citadel made money on wagers in stocks, macro and convertible-arbitrage strategies, the investors said. The firm generated profits as the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index of the largest U.S. companies declined 8.6 percent. U.S. Treasuries lost 3 percent, according to Merrill Lynch & Co. indexes.

“It’s taken a while for the larger hedge funds to exit losing strategies,” said Adam Sussman, director of research at Tabb Group LLC, a New York-based adviser to financial-services companies. “It’s difficult for them to make adjustments to their portfolios overnight.”

Katie Spring, a Citadel spokeswoman, declined to comment.

Citadel’s loss last year was its second since Kenneth Griffin, 40, started the firm in 1990. In December, Citadel limited investor withdrawals, a step also taken by rivals including Fortress Investment Group LLC and Tudor Investment Corp. as the industry produced its worst annual performance on record.

The Kensington and Wellington last rose in June, gaining about 0.8 percent, according to the investor.

Hedge funds, private and largely unregulated pools of capital, lost an average of 18 percent globally last year, according to Chicago-based Hedge Fund Research Inc.

To contact the reporter on this story: Saijel Kishan in New York at skishan@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: February 2, 2009 15:00 EST



To: altair19 who wrote (159495)2/2/2009 3:53:20 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 362693
 
Phelps Made a Mistake, But His Handlers Made It Worse /

By John Feinstein
Special to washingtonpost.com
Monday, February 2, 2009; 12:09 PM

Michael Phelps screwed up. Of that, there is no doubt. He went to a party in Columbia, S.C. in November and got caught on camera taking a hit on a marijuana bong. Someone sold the photo to a London tabloid and it ran in the newspaper this past Sunday.

Yup, he made a mistake.

He made the kind of mistake a lot of 23-year-olds make. After living as disciplined a life as any human being has lived for most of 10 years, he let loose after his epic eight-gold-medal performance at the Beijing Olympics. The case can be made that no athlete in history has been more entitled to party than Phelps.

So, he partied. And, somewhere along the line he forgot that when you are Michael Phelps and you have become the world's most recognizable athlete, the rules aren't the same as they are for other 23-year-olds. You aren't allowed to make the same mistakes that others are allowed to make.

If a normal 23-year-old gets caught smoking marijuana these days, it's a misdemeanor and, if you're a first-time offender, you're apt to get fined and told not to do it again. Phelps doing it becomes a story heard round the world.

It would be nice to report that the people who represent Phelps rode to the rescue and minimized the damage. Unfortunately, that's not the case. According to the story in the London tabloid that bought the photo, an employee of Octagon -- the firm that represents Phelps -- attempted to bribe the newspaper into not running the photo.

The paper, The News of the World, reported that Octagon's Clifford Boxham offered the paper Phelps's services as a columnist for the next three years and as a host at events on behalf of the newspaper and also offered to get some of Phelps's sponsors to buy advertising in the newspaper.

The paper goes on to quote Boxham as saying, "It's seeing if something potentially very negative for Michael could turn into something very positive for The News of the World."

Tabloids like The News of the World are famous for wild exaggerations and anonymous quotes that are clearly made up. In fact, the story that accompanies the photo is filled with anonymous quotes from people at the party in Columbia and over-the-top claims that Phelps could be banned from swimming for four years because of marijuana use. That's flat-out wrong and the quotes are designed to ramp up the "scandal" of Phelps's behavior.

But the Boxham quote rings absolutely true. It's on the record and it comes from someone the paper knows is backed by a boatload of lawyers -- so there would be significant risk to puts words into his mouth that didn't come out of it.

Which brings us to this question: What were the Octagon people thinking?

Whatever any of us think about agents, most of them are smart guys. So how could they not know the oldest saying in the Book of Screw-Ups: "The cover-up is always worse than the crime." (See Nixon, Richard)

Phelps smoking dope and getting caught may be dumb, but trying to cover it up is beyond stupid. His crime isn't just a misdemeanor legally, it's a misdemeanor in the court of public opinion. In fact, it isn't as bad as Phelps's other post-Olympic mistake, when he pleaded guilty to driving while impaired in 2004, not long after the Athens Olympics.

Phelps handled that situation perfectly -- perhaps because there wasn't any chance for the Octagon folks to try the cover-up route. He apologized for his mistake, made no excuses -- even though his blood-alcohol level was 0.08 percent, right at the legal limit -- and volunteered to speak to school kids about drinking as part of his sentence.

On Sunday, Phelps issued an apology -- which was a good thing -- but even it smacked of corporate overplay.

"I engaged in behavior which was regrettable and demonstrated bad judgment," Phelps said in an Octagon-released statement. "I'm 23 years old and despite the successes I have had in the pool, I acted in a youthful and inappropriate way, not in a manner that people have come to expect from me. For this, I am sorry. I promise my fans and the public -- it will not happen again."

Read that again and decide if one word of it came out of Phelps's mouth. Sure, statements always have a certain formality to them -- not to mention they usually seem like cop-outs for people who don't want to answer questions -- but Phelps doesn't even come close to talking like that. "I acted in a youthful and inappropriate way?" How about something like, "I messed up, I'm truly sorry. I know I let a lot of people down and I know my mom and my coach are going to kill me for this."

That's the way Phelps talks. He's too old to be called a good kid anymore, but he's a nice young man whose work ethic has had as much to do with his extraordinary success as his natural talent. If he had been quoted in the initial story as saying he was sorry instead of Boxham being quoted (and, by the way, Boxham is just the out-front guy for Octagon; you can bet Phelps's agent Peter Carlisle and everyone in the firm's upper echelon was involved in this), the issue would have been defused right away. It wouldn't have gone away completely, but it would not have gotten the kind of play it is now getting with all the various governing bodies jumping in to cluck about how disappointed they are in Phelps.

The worst part of the cover-up is that Octagon was clearly concerned with one thing: how would this affect Phelps's endorsement contracts. No doubt they were worried that some companies might invoke some kind of "morals clause," the kind that exist to protect companies if someone they have signed as a spokesman gets into serious trouble. Kobe Bryant and Sprite is a perfect example of this kind of thing.

Chances are pretty good that most of Phelps's companies will stick with him because he's a big-ticket item who hasn't done anything seriously wrong. Let's be honest: If these two transgressions -- the '04 drinking and driving charge and this -- are the worst things Phelps ever does, he will have lived a pretty admirable life.

What Phelps should do now is understand that Octagon has controlled him too tightly. When he made the media rounds following the Olympics, he sounded scripted, constantly going back to the line about wanting to help to build swimming as a sport through his foundation. That's an admirable goal and there's no doubt that Phelps wants to do all that.

But when an interviewer asks you what the coolest thing you've done since the Olympics, you don't revert to the foundation answer. The guess here is Phelps's instinctive answer -- whether it was about meeting some gorgeous woman or a celebrity he thought was cool or posing for the cover of Sports Illustrated a la Mark Spitz -- would have been a lot better than his scripted answer about the foundation. Even in his book, Phelps sticks to the script to the point where it frequently reads like a 228-page press release.

I've spent extended time with Phelps on just one occasion, and that was when he was a 17-year-old phenom just beginning to emerge as a real star. He was instantly likeable: self-deprecating, with a good sense of humor.

The people at Octagon, in their zeal to make every buck they can possibly make, have tried to turn him into Captain America, the symbol of all that is right with sports and the USA. They need to lay off and just let him be who he is: a well-raised young man who, like a lot of well-raised young people makes an occasional mistake

Michael Phelps has done extraordinary things in a swimming pool. Out of the pool -- as the Octagon statement acknowledges -- he's a young man still learning how to deal with the white-hot spotlight of mega-fame.

There's nothing fundamentally wrong with that. As long as the people you pay to help you grow and learn don't make things worse by trying to cover up when you make a mistake.

We all make mistakes. Half the battle is owning up to them. Phelps has now owned up to this one. It's too bad his agents weren't smart enough to advise him to do so right away.



To: altair19 who wrote (159495)2/2/2009 6:49:35 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 362693
 
Phelps avoids hot water with sponsors - for now

google.com

MILWAUKEE (AP) — Michael Phelps doesn't seem to be in much hot water with his sponsors despite being photographed inhaling from a marijuana pipe. From apparel company Speedo to luxury Swiss watchmaker Omega, several sponsors are standing by the 23-year-old swimming phenom — at least for now — and have accepted his public apology. Other big companies, like Visa Inc., Subway and Kellogg Co., aren't talking yet.

Experts say if Phelps doesn't stick to the straight and narrow, he could hurt his chances at future endorsements. And there's no guarantee he won't be dropped quietly once the furor dies down.

Phelps, who won a record eight gold medals at this summer's Olympics in Beijing, acknowledged "regrettable" behavior and "bad judgment" after the photo appeared Sunday in the British tabloid News of the World.

The paper said the picture was taken during a November house party while Phelps was visiting the University of South Carolina.

Phelps handled the situation well by apologizing and saying he regretted his actions, said John Sweeney, director of sports communication at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's School of Journalism and Mass Communication. Phelps went a step further and promised "it will not happen again."

In 2004, after the Athens Games, a then-underage Phelps was arrested for drunken driving. He pleaded guilty, apologized and again said he wouldn't make the same mistake again.

Sweeney said if Phelps is caught transgressing a third time, he could stand to lose many sponsorships — and the public's trust. For now, the public and his sponsors could look past it. After all, he said, President Barack Obama has acknowledged using marijuana and he still got elected.

"My prediction would be that this will pass," he said with caution. "If it does happen again, it'll be twice the story and it will hurt him."

Swiss watchmaker Omega said Phelps' actions were a private matter and "nonissue" while Speedo called Phelps a "valued member of the Speedo team."

Sports performance beverage PureSport's maker, which tapped Phelps to be spokesman for its first national advertising campaign, also said Monday that it stands by him but it said it does not condone his behavior.

"We applaud the fact that he has taken full and immediate responsibility for his mistake and apologized to us, his fans and the public and we support him during this difficult time," said Michael Humphrey, chief executive of Human Performance Labs.

Hilton Hotels Corp., whose relationship with Phelps dates to 2007, likewise stuck with him.

"We continue to support Michael Phelps as an athlete whose numerous athletic feats outshine an act of regrettable behavior," the statement said.

But former sponsor Rosetta Stone, the foreign-language tutorial vendor, which had a one-year deal with the athlete that ended Dec. 31, did not like the news.

"We do not condone his activities and are disappointed in his recent judgment," Rosetta Stone said in a statement.

Both AT&T Inc. and PowerBar nutrition bar makers Nestle SA, two other big sponsors, quietly ended their relationships with Phelps at the end of 2008. Neither company would comment on the photo or describe the duration or value of their contracts.

Companies are getting pickier about their marketing and sponsorships amid the recession, when they need to get the most impact for what money they do spend on marketing, said Joe Terrian, assistant dean in the college of business at Marquette University.

It makes sense that, say, Speedo and PureSport would continue to support Phelps because their products are ones that he uses for his sport, Terrian said. But companies with products not directly linked to athletics, like foodmaker Kellogg and credit card company Visa, may not see him as kindly.

Terrian said that, given the 2004 incident, sponsors may look to cut their ties soon.

"Do you want to risk those sponsorship dollars when money is really, really tight?" he said. "I think that some of them will think twice."

Visa, Kellogg, Subway and 505 Games did not immediately return multiple messages left by The Associated Press seeking comment.

A spokesman at sports marketing agency Octagon, which represents Phelps, said the athlete is taking this seriously.

"He has spoken with his sponsors to personally apologize. We are encouraged by their support," the spokesman said.

Terrian said Phelps's sponsors could be looking in their contracts for so-called 'morality clauses' — ways that they can back out of deals if certain instances happen. Those became more widespread after Los Angeles Lakers star Kobe Bryant was charged with rape in 2003. Those charges were dismissed.

More companies could choose to end their relationships with Phelps quietly. And those whose ads he stars in could publicize such a move as evidence of "their goodwill and social responsibility," Sweeney said.

But Sweeney said companies may be willing to overlook indiscretions depending on how prominent an athlete is. A minor indiscretion could get a minor athlete tossed from a sponsorship, but it could take a bigger incident to bring down a bigger athlete, he said. Considering Phelps's unique accomplishment, sponsors still may want him.

"There's only one of him," Sweeney said of Phelps. "There's only one person with eight gold medals, and there's probably going to be one for a long time."

-AP Sports Writer Rob Harris in Manchester, England, contributed to this report.