The Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXVII, No. 43-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, July 14, 1977 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Filipina Narciso walks out of the US Courthouse in Detroit yesterday with her Ed Stein and Laurence Burgess. Narciso and Perez were convicted by a federal attorney, Thomas O'Brien, right, followed by Leonora Perez and her attorneys, jury of poisoning patients at the VA hospital. Jury finds VA mN nurs es guilty By KEITH B. RICHBURG Special to The Daily DETROIT-Filipina Narciso and Leonora Perez Were found guilty yesterday of pois- oning six patients at the Ann Arbor Vet- eran's Administration (VA) Hospital dur- ing the summer of 1975. A jury of nine wo- men and three men, aftera record break- ing 94 hours of deliberation, also found both nurses guilty of conspiracy. Narcisco was aquitted of one poisoning BULLETIN A massive power blackout hitrNew York City, and much of the state last night, sending people scurrying for candles and flashlights. The power went out at 9:34 p.m., and was still out at mid- night when we went to press. Some scattered' lighting remained on in the city, and officials' said the blackout was not the same magnitude as the famous 1965 power failure that plunged much of the East Coast into darkness. See story, Page 10. count, and found not guilty of the only murder charge in the indictment. THE TWO nurses remained silent and emotionless while the judge's clerk read the jury's verdict. The defendants made no statements following their convictions, but Perez was later overheard to say "I just can't believe it." Reactions to the convictions ranged from shock to disbelief in the 13-week-old trial which swarmed with controversy. The Phillipine Nurses Associaion (PNA) has planned a demonstration this morning in front of the federal building in down- town Detroit to protest the verdict. ATTORNEYS for both sides held news conferences following the announcement of the v e r d i c t. Assistant U.S. attorney Richard Yanko, making the first statement in the packed pressroom, said he felt con- fident of getting a conviction all along. Yanko also said he would have a state- ment later this week, possibly to reveal the motive for the-crimes. The prosecutor was asked whether the convictions meant Narciso and Perez were See VA, Pageelt7 " Nurse resigns: Locals sad, angry, surprised By RON DeKETT At 10:36 a.m. yesterday, in a hushed courtroom, the VA jury foreman announced a guilty verdict for two Filipino nurses-a verdict which hurled the University community into stunned disbelief and forced at least one Veterans Administration Hospital nurse to resign. "I just felt it was unsafe to work under the present ad- ministration because nurses were unprotected from changing hospital policy," Registered Nurse (RN) Judy Polacheck ex- plained. "I'M AFRAID there is going to be a witch hunt for more nurses and I don't want to be one," she said. Associate Nurse Patricia Thomas announced she also intended to resign because she felt the verdict was a frame- up. Immediately after the verdict became public, VA Hos- pital Chief of Staff Martin Lindenauer threw a curtain of security around the hospital. See LOCALS, Page 7