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To: P.T.Burnem who wrote (26)5/26/1998 2:38:00 PM
From: Anthony Wong  Respond to of 1722
 
Men Around the Globe Lust After Viagra
By M.B. SHERIDAN, Times Staff Writer

Tuesday, May 26, 1998

EXICO CITY--It is a headache for world
health officials, a boon for black markets
from Mexico to Egypt and the hottest idea since
Charles Atlas promised to rescue skinny
wretches who got sand kicked in their face.

What else? Viagra.

From the slums of Cairo to fashionable villas in Milan, the world
has gone gaga over the anti-impotence pill. Worried authorities are
cautioning that Viagra can help those with real medical needs but
won't produce instant Don Juans. That, though, hasn't stopped men
around the globe from beseeching doctors for a prescription, paying
up to $800 a bottle on the black market and even flying across the
Atlantic to get the drug.

"All day long, it's 'Viagra, Viagra,' " said Juana Rivera, a
pharmacy employee in Ciudad Juarez, across the U.S.-Mexican
border from El Paso. The flood of clients seeking the drug, she said,
suggests a serious problem out there. "Perhaps the statistics on
impotence are too low."

Viagra, with runaway demand in the United States, still hasn't
arrived in much of the world. The hype has, however. That is
driving thousands to seek the pills, legally--or otherwise.
In Mexico, the frenzy over "the pleasure pill" has been so intense
that, when two newspapers recently organized an online "chat"

about Viagra, 200 people responded in one hour. "If I take it, will I
become Superman?" one demanded to know.
Men have stampeded to pharmacies, even though the drug will
not legally be available here for several weeks.


Maria Beatriz Vega, manager of a small
drugstore in Mexico City's sprawling Tepito
contraband market, claims 500 people a day request the pill. The
men, however, don't seem to be focusing on impotence, she says.

They are focusing on sexual marathons.

"The more the Mexican man has, the more he wants," Vega
explained, referring to the traditional macho culture. "Viagra is
trendy," she said, adding swiftly, "But we don't have it."

But in another stand in the crowded market, a vendor was
happy to discreetly slip a bottle of "Viagra" to a customer. The
price: 350 pesos--about $42--for 50 pills. The bottle was clearly a
fake, with a smudged, mimeographed label. When the would-be
client identified herself as a reporter, the vendor fled.
Illegal sales are thriving in other areas too. In Taiwan, men are
reportedly paying up to $60 a pill on the black market. In Turkey,
the price is $520 to $800 a bottle, according to press reports.

One of the few places where the pill is legally available is the tiny
state of San Marino, population 25,000. Viagra arrived there a few
days before its American debut in March. Within days, the hilltop
republic inside Italy was overrun by Italian men eager to check out
the sex pill.

San Marino's six pharmacies have thousands of back orders for
Viagra, available only with a prescription from a urologist or an
andrologist, a doctor who treats male complaints. San Marino's
only andrologist is getting 300 calls a day about Viagra.


Sorry, Latin lovers; he's booked through June.


talians aren't the only ones leaving the country
in search of Viagra. Englishmen have been
flocking to another tiny European state, Andorra, located between
France and Spain, where Viagra is available. Even the ocean is no
barrier to those seeking the he-man's Holy Grail: English dailies
have reported hundreds of men are traveling to New York to buy
the pill.


To judge by inquiries at doctors' offices, Viagra will sell briskly
once it becomes legally available worldwide.

In Israel, Dr. Alexander Olshnitzki said women are calling him
about Viagra, without telling the men in their lives.
"I have been approached by 20 women who claimed that their
husbands cannot satisfy their needs in bed," said Olshnitzki,
according to a report in the newspaper Maariv. "Some told me, 'I
want to put a pill in his food or in a glass of wine and make great
passionate love with him.' "

Such misconceptions about Viagra's use have worried health
authorities, who are warning that men should only use the medicine
for specific impotence problems--not to become sexual dynamos.
For cartoonists and humorists, Viagra is the best thing to come
along since Bill Clinton's social life.
One typical cartoon, in an Egyptian newspaper, showed an
elderly man laid out dead and surrounded by tearful relatives.
"What did you say was his last word?" one asks.
"Viagra."

Times staff writer Richard Boudreaux in Rome contributed to
this report. Also contributing were Janet Stobart of The Times'
London Bureau, Aline Kazandjian of the Cairo Bureau, Batsheva
Sobelman of the Jerusalem Bureau, Brinley Bruton of the Mexico
City Bureau and Times special correspondent Amberin Zaman in
Ankara, Turkey.

latimes.com



To: P.T.Burnem who wrote (26)5/26/1998 3:47:00 PM
From: Anthony Wong  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1722
 
Pfizer Inc. Maintained 'Buy' at NMSI

Bloomberg News
May 26, 1998, 11:43 a.m. PT

Princeton, New Jersey, May 26 (Bloomberg Data) -- Pfizer Inc. (PFE US)
was maintained ''buy'' by analyst Leonard S. Yaffe Md at NationsBanc
Montgomery Securities. The 12-month target price is $135.00 per share.

-- Andrew Bekoff in Princeton, New Jersey, (609)279-3652



To: P.T.Burnem who wrote (26)5/29/1998 11:31:00 AM
From: P.T.Burnem  Respond to of 1722
 
PFIZER THREATENED WITH LAWSUIT

Woman cites impotence drug in husband's infidelity
7.46 a.m. ET (1146 GMT) May 29, 1998

NEW YORK (AP) - Viagra cured a wealthy construction executive's impotence - too well, according to the woman who wants to end their common-law marriage and perhaps sue the drug's manufacturer.

Roberta Bernardo, also identified in published reports as Bobbi Burke, is suing 70-year-old Francis Bernardo for $2 million. She claims the impotence drug led him to infidelity.

The 61-year-old woman said their 10-year common-law marriage fell apart when Bernardo left their luxury condominium May 5 with a bottle of Viagra he'd had for two days.

[ROTFL]

Her complaint, filed May 15, said he left a note saying the relationship was over and boasting of his renewed vigor.

The Bernardos had sex for the first time in four years with the help of Viagra, the impotence drug that went on the market last month, she said.

The woman's attorney, Dominic Barbara, said she might file a negligence suit against Pfizer, which makes Viagra. He said the company should warn that the drug could be hazardous to marriages and offer emotional counseling along with the little blue pills.

Bernardo could not be reached for comment.