Page Three Wednesday, June 23, 1976 THEMCHIGAN-DAILY Bail hearing set for VA suspects By GEORGE LOBSENZ A bond hearing for the two nurses charged with poi- soning and murdering patients at the Ann Arbor Vet- erans' Administration (VA) Hospital last summer will open tomorrow in the Detroit courtroom of U. S. Dis- trict Court Judge Philip Pratt. YESTERDAY, defense attorney Thomas O'Brien filed a motion asking that the tough bail conditions set for his clients - Leonora Perez, 31, of Evanston, Ill., and Filipina Narcisco, 30, of Ypsilanti - be relaxed. Perez abd Narcisco are being held in Washtenaw County Jail in connection with the suspicious series of breathing failures which resulted in the deaths of at least 11 patients at the hospital last summer. Last week, a federal grand jury brought a 16-count indict- ment against the two nurses. Narcisco and Perez worked in the intensive care unit of the hospital during the outbreak of breathing fail- ures. They stand accused of the murder of s patients and the poisoning of 10 others. They have also been charged with conspiracy to commit murder. Perez is being held in lieu of a $50,000 bond, while Narcisco was denied any bail whatsoever by U. S. Magistrate Barbara Hackett in her arraignment last Thursday. IN A HEARING before Pratt on Monday, O'Brien termed the bail ruling.excessive and unnecessary, and called six character witnesses to the stand to bolster his claims. After hearing the testimony, which O'Brien called "all very up-beat and favorable," Pratt delayed his ruling on the bail question until tomorrow. O'Brien said the bail appeal "made mention of the restricted budget and means of the two women and asked that bail affordable for them be offered." The attorney would not say what he considered an "af- fordable" bond for the two suspects. In a sidelight, a small controversy was kicked up before Monday's hearing when O'Brien asked Pratt to issue a protective order restraining the FBI or any other government agents from contacting the women without presence of counsel. O'BRIEN CHARGED in his motion that FBI agents had violated his clients' rights on numerous occasions by threatening and intimidating them in an attemplt to obtain confessions, even though the agents knew the two nurses had retained counsel. To illustrate, the lawyer pointed to an incident that took place last December - two months after the women retained O'Brien's Ann Arbor law firm. "Last December, FBI agents served a subpoena on Miss Perez in Chicago that asked her to appear before the grand jury," he said. "And in the process of doing this they threatened her ,trying to get a confession." O'Brien continued, citing an incident during Nar- cisco's arrest: "WHILE BEING held, Miss Narcisco was questioned about substantive conversations she had had with her lawyers," declared O'Brien. "It's clearly unconstitu- tional to go in and interrogate someone when you know they're being represented by counsel." "Our position is that we categorically deny every- thing alleged in the motion," said Richard Delonis, Assistant U. S. Attorney. "We're not going to nit-pick on this. We're just not going to give a response to See BAIL, Page 6 Dems propose House audits WASHINGTON A) - Democratic lead- ers yesterday proposed a monthly ac- counting of every House employe's pay and duties as one way to prevent the kind of payroll-sex scandal that hit Rep. Wayne hays.r A package of recommendations ap- proved by the Hloule Democratic leaders Y also would remove the power of the Ad- ministration Committee to inc'rease mem- hers' allt'wanes for staff and travel. HAYS, 65, recovering from an over- a dose of sleeping pills, resigned the com- mittee's chairmanship after Elizabeth Ray charged that he kept her on its pay- roll for $14,000 a year to give him sex. v ". The Democratic leaders also nomi- nated Rep. Frank Thompson (D-N.J.) to succeed Ilays. Thompson tried two years afro to unseat Hays as chairman. 'he recommendations if a three-man task force, which were approved by the leadership's Democratic Steering and 'tlicy Committee, also would end memc- " bers' abiilty to draw up to $11,000 in ''is. fur statiasetry and travel. T'IASK FORCE C'hiirman David Obey (D-Wis.) said the recttmimiendti ns g t S fir --.a rca rabtle i takit e, Ctin S ' n fr a Id s c c n t l e u t i r n t i "The only way yt t goingtItt get fl accouIttabilit-," b Ob 'tild rertters, "is tt reqtire every mmber is he leaves the louse to be aecom anttied ty ta rist anid c top tid I doi't thitik thI I is pos 'ible." W The Deiitocratic leaders reportedly ap- proved 12 of the 13 Obey task force rec- AP Photo ommendations by voice vote and with little opposition BUT THERE was a fight on one, which loe Mazour and friend Chico take a spin through Nelson, Neb., on Mazour's Obey said would eliminate the Adminis- motorized bicycle. Chico doesn't contribute much in the way of energy, but it's See DEM, Page 10 always nice to take a snack along on those long country rides. Your future It's all in the cards /'t . Kamikazee car Startled onlookers thought it was some kind of a joke whe'it a motel owner's little electric car started whizzing artiund the motel's parking lot by itself with flames spewing out of it. But the owner, James Baughn, grimly rea- lieed that it was no laughing matter as he watched his $3,000 Sebring Citicar drive unattended from his Salem, Ill., motel parking lot into a neighbor's back- yard, spreading flamnes across the grass and shrubs. The car, which had caught on fire in the ot and started moving by itself, appiarently sought some kind of retribution for its own destruction as it turned around in the neighbor's yard. headed back toward the motel parking lot, and struck another car. Engulfed in flames by the time firemen arrived, all that wis left of the kaiakazee ve- hicle was a pile of scrap metal sitting i a pool of battery acid by the tittle the blaze was plt out.- Not just a toy Sailor, a l-yearild doliphin whoit had entertained tlosandils ti the i q l Cj iitil of Niagara "alls, USA, died Monday - done in by a toy octopus. Surgery was being attempted to remove the object from the matnmttl's stomach when he had a cardiac arrest early in the oper- ation. "He just couldn't take the oper- ation," said Jobn Barclay, general man- ager of the aquarium. "You wouldn't believe what we have found in the pool," Barclay exclaimed. "Wallets, rings, eyeglasses, purses, cameras, hats, gloves, coins, even dentures." Dentures? We can just see the headlines now - 'Man's Teeth Sink Fish", inspiring Peter Benchley's fothcoming bestsel- ler, "Gutms". Happenings the Commission for Women meets today at noon in the Regents room of the Administration Bldg . . . The Peo- ple's Bicentennial Commission is pre- senting The Return of the Pink Panther tomorrow at 7:00 and 9:00 in MLB Aud 3 . . . Trying to cut that grocery bill down? Join the Hilalian Family Food Co-op. Order now at Trotter House . Weather or not Skies will be partly cloudy today, with highs in the lower 80's. There is a chance of rain tonight, as the mercury will dip to the upper 50's. By STEVE KLINSKY The time is near midnight. At a small, private table hidden in the' shadows, a candle flickers. The only sound is the slap and rush of -cards being shuffled and dealt-cards like Death, Lust, and the Fool. "The Magus covers the Prince of Cups," you are told. "The cards are good." SOME WEIRD dream born of grade B movies and cold pizza? Not quite- for Detroit Tarot card reader Dan Wieme, it's just another night of honest labor. Wieme is the resident soothsayer for Detroit's exclusive L'Espriit disco- theque. He has a clientele that in- cludes such local luminaries as 'auto magnate Henry Ford. A stylish man in his mid-twenties with long brown hair, Wieme seems worlds apart from the old stereotype of the gypsy fortune teller. He is the nation's only male professional Tarot card reader, and one of the youngest and most successful readers in the business. THE EXACT origin of the Tarot deck (long employed in fortune tell- ing), is not known, Wieme says. The cards were used b ythe ancient Egyp- tians, and may have once been asso- ciated with fertility rites. Possession of the cards was at one time a capital offense, but their use continued, giv- ing birth to conventional playing cards along the way. Tarot cards have even figured in the literature of T.S. Eliot, Lawrence Durrell, and others. Wieme admits there are really no magicial properties in the Tarot deck itself. The secret, he says, lies not in the cards but in the reader. The pro- phecy in Tarot card reading is really a form of telepathy, according to Wieme. The reader probes the sub- conscious of the subject by using the cards as a medium. Sensitivity, not magic, is responsible for the revela- tion. See YOUR, Page 7