Secret Service Had Warning on Moore Psychiatric Testing Is Ordered , By David S. Broder Waglalnaton Post Staff Writer , Sept. 23 — was ordered today to undergo psychiatric examination of her com- petence to stand trial on charges of attempting to assassinate Pr esident Ford. The 45-year-old woman, who fired a .38-caliber bullet at Mr. Ford on Monday, was committed to San Diego Metropolitan Correctional Center for mental tests that make take up to 60 days. A plump, matronly figure in pale blue pants suit, Moore appeared calm but did not speak during the 28- Associated Areas minute proceeding before Moore arrives for court hearing in San Francisco. Federal Magistrate Owen B. Woodruff Jr. Her court-ap- pointed attorney, James F. Hewitt, described his client outside the courtroom as "vague and disjointed." Hewitt said that her de- fense against the charge of assault on the President in the shooting incident out- side the St. Francis Hotel "more than likely will be mental illness," The former accountant remains under $500,000 bond at least until Friday, while her attorney decides whether to appeal the terms of today's commitment order. Meanwhile, law enforce- ment authorities were pur- suing leads indicating that she had purchased the .38- caliber revolver used in the attack on the President at a Bay Area gun shop just hours before Monday's in- Psychiatric Exam cident—the second assault on Mr. Ford in 17 days. Officials said the evidence indicates that 's Ordered for Moore gun control law, which re- termined to be permanently quires a five-day waiting MOORE, From Al incompetent, she'd have to. period on such gun sales, - She smiled at acquaintances be committed to a state hos- had been broken. pital." Police, alerted by a phone in the audience when she call from Moore that she entered and laughed twice A provision of California might "test the system" of when Woodruff broke the law could be a problem presidential security, had tension in the courtroom there. Hewitt said, because confiscated a .44-caliber with small jokes. it says "you can't lock her But talking to reporters up unless she's gravely disa- handgun from her on Sun- bled." day afternoon. after today's hearing, He- witt said, "I'm concerned Earlier today, another per- In her court appearance son who threatened the today, Moore sat upright, about her mental condition." Asked if she seemed "per- President's life during his with hands clasped in her tumultuous day in San Fran- lap, occasionally whispering fectly all right" when he interviewed her for three cisco was arraigned and ' to Hewitt and another pub- placed under 825,0e0 bond lic defender, Frank Bell. hours today, he replied, "I t wouldn't want to say, she's on the lesser charge of ; See MOORE, Al2, Col. 1 perfectly all right, no." "threats against the Presi.. dent" He said her conversation Benedict L. Silcio, 27, of was rambling and her un- New Orleans, who had ear- derstanding of her situation lier given his name as Ron- "vague." ald Carlo, was arrested after. Most of today's proceed- giving two employees of the ing was occupied with argu- St. Francis Hotel a note ments between Hewitt and reading, "Mission—to gun U.S. Attorney James L. down President Ford. Need Browning over conditions to have a room for awhile. fur the psychiatric examina- for three People." tion. Silcio was arrested about Hewitt lost an effort to a half-hour before Mr. Ford guarantee the presence of came into downtown San defense counsel and de- Francisco for the first of fense-chosen psychiatrists two speeches and about five, during the examination. He hours before the assassins- also failed to obtain an Lion attempt while he was leaving the St. Francis. , order barring any question- as- ing by the psychiatrists of Chester G. Moore, an the circumstances of Mon- sistant U.S. attorney, was: day's shooting. asked if there was any sus-, However, W oo dr uf pected connection between agreed that a tape recording the two incidents, and said,. would be made of the psy- "None at this time." chiatric interviews and that In a third incident, the Se- the prosecution would not cret Service reported that a be given the record of the David Eugene Salisbury of San Jose, about 50 miles mental tests until it had - been screened by the court south of here, had been ar- and the defense team. rested late Monday night, Hewitt also was successful for threatening Mr. Ford's in obtaining an order pre- life in a phone call to a local:: venting law enforcement of• telephone operator. After some initial confu-' ficials from interviewing his that client without his knowl- sion, police said today edge. the shot Moore aimed at the Hewitt said if Moore is President from her vantage' found to be mentally incom- point about 40 feet away petent to stand trait she went through a wooden would likely be sent for "a planter box and hit the side- reasonable period of time" walk a few feet in front of to a federal mental hospital, him. It then ricocheted up' probably St. Enzabeths in and struck another specta-' Washington. tor, John Ludwig, a San He defined "a reasonable Francisco cabdriver. Ludwig m as treated for an period" as six months to a was year, after which she would injury in the groin and be re-examined and If de- released from the hospital. Experts Bid Ford Curtail Traveling Firm on Gums ' Cool-Off Period By Austin Scott By Stuart Aueibach WealImitori Poet Starr Writer athliigtori Port alert Writer For the second time in 17 Fading experts on vio- days, President Ford ap- lence predicted yesterday peared determined yester- that President Ford will day to show that attempts face future assassination at- on his life will neither deter tempts and urged him to him from public appear- curtail his travel—at least ances nor change his posi- long enough to provide a tion against registration of cooling off period. handguns. 1 "I think this entire thing White House press secre- will probably run a. certain tary Ron Nessen said no cur- kind of wave like a conta- tailment of the President's gion for a while," said Dr. travel schedule and no Judd Marmor, president of White House staff review of the American Psychiatric Secret Service procedures Association and a professor are being made in the wake of psychiatry at the Univer- of the single shot fired at sity of Southern California. Mr. Ford in San Francisco "I think during this pe- on Monday. riod there ought to be He repeatedly told report- greater precautions taken." ers that the President does A California psychiatrist not intend to be a specializing in violence, Dr. "prisoner" in the White David Hamburg of Stanford House, and said no White University, went farther. House staff aides have ar- Hamburg, who studied the gued with the President 1968 assassination of Sen. against that position, Robert F. Kennedy (D-N.Y.) "The President feels that and advised Sen. George his travel and his demeanor McGovern (D-S.D.) to mod- . . . do not represent . . ify his 1972 campaign meth- flaunting himself or his of- ods, said President Ford fice in front of people who should end the random' might belong to this tiny mi- handshaking with people nority," Nessen said. "Nor who have not received seen- See PRESIDENT, All, Col. I See VIOLENCE, All, Col. 1 xperts Urge Ford fp Curtail Travel VIOLENCE, From Al cause he is the symbol of a Vt' e • government that has alien- ax cheeks and should ad- ated large numbers of ress groups only in halls in Americans. inch admission is tightly "He's the most loved and °MEI:lite& hated man in America not t. "The President certainly because of what he is but 21oes, not gain Any meaning. 'because of his position," Su 1 'exchange of information said Ottenberg. r .ideas by pressing the "It's like killing a esfi,' Hamburg said. stranger in the park The "It comes down to some victim is anonymous. He's liShttiigible exhilaration the occupier of the chair. ..incd, on the whole, that's bad "This is not a personal or presidents. It gives them conflict," Ottenberg contin- l God-like sense. It addicts ued. "It reflects the unre- ern to a high level of adu• solved tensions of the Viet- tin which no human be- nam war, the lying and g. deserves." cheating of major agencies ?F Hamburg suggested that of government and the un- Ale.problem be handled "like responsiveness of govern- olkyjacking, which was high- ment to people's needs." ,v contagious for a while," This hold especially true e said. 'Take simple secu- for Mr. Ford, he Said, who, Ay measures with those does not elicit the strong '''' oingIto meeting halls. Once emotions evoked by Presi- ere, you can have all dent John Kennedy, Sen. Ii of discussion." Robert F. Kennedy, the Rev. A- nationally known Stand• D. Partin Luther King and ford'psychologist, who asked Alabama Gov. George C. sat his name not be used, Wallace who have been as- rancientecl that the first O- sassinated or shot in the last mpt on President Ford's 12 years. e- on Sept. 5 may have. "He's well liked," said 01- yen Sara Jane Moore the tenberg, "but it's the job ffea.. for making her try he's in." 4n Monday. Phillip Zinthardo, a pro- .* "If a brief period of time fessor of psychology at Stan- elaises, it helps curtail the ford. aereed that most pople Spread. It would be an aw- think Mr. Ford is "a good fully good idea to cool it for man, personally." But he 4 while," the psychologist added that the Ford admin- sa id. istration" is underestimat- Martnor, the American ing the extent of alienation poichiatzic Association pres- in society." More and more 4lePi.. added that the Vride- people "who have nothing to WeOd publicity given to lose" feel that killing a Pres- riette Alice Promme's ap- ident is "a viable alterna- "Parent attenipt on Mr. tive" to being part of soci- lefri's life Sept. 5, may have ety, he said vurred. Moore to act. "Reports of plots by Dr. Lawrence Z. Freed- American officials to kill an, a University of Chi- foreign leaders and newspa- t a psychiatrist who was a per columnists contribute to asultant to the 1969 ,Na- this," he said. ol Zinbardo said Mr. Ford auies and Prevention of "may put his life on the iolence, said the nation line" in order to win elec- V w faces "a contagio* cf- tion as President next year. ct, a sort of emotional re- He added that going into nance." crowds to shake hands Is ....Io Dr. Perry Ottenberg, a "unnecessary and unwar- psychiatrist at the Univer- ranted." atty.of Pennsylvania, said at- We wan our leaders to erepts are being made on be strong," he said, "but we fl'esident lord's life' be- want them to be alive." g;

1-position had not changed

!midnight that he would not

fY:RESIDENT, Film AI

/does it represent a dare or 4

from the night before, when t Nessen . said Mr. Ford's

4imited number of people •

4

e-'.. „cower in the face of a

5fl.vant a dialogue between

:Ahem and their President

:eCials," Mr. Ford said.

Oind their other public offi-

. . . 'who want to take the

.7;

an egging-on of these lndi-

''

aw into their own hands."

lon't capitulate to the

Vhite-House minutes before

ant that we as a people

iduals."

e said on arriving at the

-

3

"The American people . ..

". :

'

It's. I think, Impor-

Ford Firm on Travel, Handguns

all of us."

strong in this confrontation with a limited number of best about America . . .

He brushed aside sugges- we're going to stand tall and actions of this tiny minority number of people who want

tions of a "cooling-off pe-

wrong element, a limited riod" of fewer public ap- said. cials hostages," Nessen said. pearances. people to destroy everything that's

cannot be allowed to keep tion to its conclusions, the

number, an infinitesimal

oner in his Oval Office," he

President becomes a pris- the President and other off.

' 141r. Ford ''... believes the

"lf you follow the proposi-

_

who 'don't represent

sion in that bill, cited by sion of a crime, combined "still believes" the best gun provisions contained in a bill

wise. with a ban on the manufac-

of stiff sentences for people controls are a combination the President sent to Con- who use guns in the commis-

would have kept Sara Jane getting either the gun she tween the time an individ- time it Is delivered. gress in July. Another provi- period of up to 14 days be- ture of "cheap handguns." fired or the one police con- fiscated from her a day ear- ing him a gun might not be

Nessen, is an investigating shot In San Francisco, from give the FBI a chance to

lier, Nessen refused to com-

ment.

Moore, accused of firing the

ual purchases a gun and the for any indications that sell-

probe the purchaser's record

Those are among the

Nessen said the President The next scheduled presi-

That, Nessen said, would

Asked if those provisions

safety.

tion with security people." Monday in San Francisco. travels in the Interests of

have been reports that presi-

dential counsel Philip W.

any such recommendation," and possibly other Mr. Ford to curtail his doing so. "I have not made arrive at after a consulta- quantity of exposure, num-

feelings about it and I think Buchen personally advised he said. "I understand his

termined," he said.

mally exposed to the public Midwestern areas. There

this is a decision he has to

dential trip Is Sept. 30 to

ous relation to the risk if

ber of hours, days, places, who asked not to be identi- there are people who are de- fied commented, "If any probably doesn't have seri- President was only mini-

he hasn't accepted."

White House is not review-

Buchen yesterday denied

Buchen noted that the

Another White House aide

While Nessen said the

advised him on that,

. It seems to me the

should not,

and telegrams to the White

fore the end of the month.

that of 119 telephone calls

point of view, 88 said the

series of Republican fund- around Mr. Ford creased gun control, and 13 for new procedures to come at the end of October for a President should curtail his from the Secret Service be- favored increased security ley, Idaho, yesterday that political travels, five said he aide James Falk was quoted House that expressed a ing Secret Service protec- world with the President said he expects "at least to travel to California again has not yet decided whether

and the only place we've raisers. tional as saying In Sun Val- partial recommendations"

northern California is "the tion procedures, Buchen

kook capital of the world.

by United Press Interna-

The White House reported

"I've traveled all over the

Nessen said the President

Meanwhile, presidential

23

favored in- Saw It Pointed . and I Grabbed for It"

SAN FRANCISCO; Sept. about seven feet away when "I was walking through 23 (UPI) — "I, started to ap- he also saw the .38-caliber Union Square and saw the crowd and heard the Presi- plaud and then, right tn pistol protrude from the front of me I saw the dent was going to be right chrome revolver. I saw it crowd. there," he said. pointed out there and I "I saw the gun come up, I "So I stood there. I grabbed for it." heard the noise, I saw the wanted to see the Presi- Quick action by Oliver Sip- smoke come from her dent." ple, 33, an ex-Marine who hand,'l, he said, "It seemed He did not get near the served in Vietnam, may like an hour. I ran towards front of the crowd right have saved the life of Presi- her. A hand (Sipple's) came away because "there were dent Ford Monday. Sipple from behind her and those damn demonstrators, pushed down the revolver knocked her gun hand you know. Then they went held by a middle-aged down." away and part of the crowd woman who fired a single Said Sipple, "I grabbed moved and I kept moving shot at the chief executive for the arm, to pull it down. closer to the street. as he left a downtown hotel. I lunged and grabbed the "There was the Presi- But Sipple didn't feel like woman's arm and the gun OLIVER SIPPLE dent's car, right across the - a hero. went off. ... 'I'm no hero" street from me. I could see "Leave out that Marine "A policeman told me I perfectly." probably saved the Presi- stuff," he told newsmen. agent grabbed the pistol and But he didn't notice "I'm no hero or nothing. I dent's life. He said that." Sara Moore, 45, was taken Moore until she aimed the never got any medals. Well, Patrolman Hettrich said pistol at Mr. Ford. I was in 31/2 years and now he grabbed the cylinder of Into custody for attempted "She was up front and I I'm retired on a full pen- the gun so the woman assassination. was right, like, you know, sion. Well, I have some couldn't fire another shot.1 Sipple stood in a crowd behind her. shrapnel." turned the gun towards her for 21/2 hours just to get a 7 "Then she had that San Francisco Patrolman thumb," Hettrich said. look at the President, and chrome thing and, well, I Timothy HettrIch, 26, was Then, a Secret Service became a hero. did it." found her "not of sufficient protective interest to war- Was Told want surveillance during the [remainder of the] Presi- dent's visit" to California. The service said that it Of Fears did begin a "background in- vestigation" on Moore. San Frandsen chief or. de- By Police tectives Charles A. Barca f7"-- told reporters yesterday By Peter Milus that Moore telephoned city Wadangton Post Staff WrIter police Inspector Jack O'Shea last Saturday after- The Secret Service noon. O'Shea had known her was warned Saturday by as a former police and FBI a San Francisco police informer. inspector that President According to Barca, ''she said she was thinking about Ford might be in danger going down to Stanford," from Sara Jane Moore, where Mr. Ford was sched- the woman who fired a uled to speak Sunday. shot at him in San Fran- She told O'Shea she had seen leaflets advertising 'an• cisco Monday afternoon. anti-Ford demonstration The service, however, de- planned there, Barca said, cided not to put her under and she warned him crypti- surveillance even after ap- cally that "she thought she prehensive police had stop- would test the system." ped her Sunday and found her In possession of a .44-cal- O'Shea was not sure iber revolver and more than what she meant but he felt a two boxes of ammunition. little apprehensive," Barca continued, "so he contacted In a tersely worded state- both the FBI and the Secret ment issued early yesterday Service." morning—the only official in Barca said O'Shea told the statement it would inake Secret Service, This gal the case, which has could be another Squeaky prompted calls for a con- Fromme," a reference to the gressional investigation— woman who is charged with the Secret Service would pointing a loaded pistol at say only that unnamed agents "interviewed" Moore See SERVICE, A9, Col. 2 • after the .44 was taken from her Sunday, and that they Agents Had Warning on Moore speeding downtown on a that," Barca said, "She had prove dangerous. He sched- SERVICE, From Al uled hearings starting next freeway and "hoping she been an FBI informant. She would be stopped." Mr. Ford on Sept. 5 in Sac- had never been in custody week on the protective tech- before. The President had niques of the Secret Service. While Montoya and vari- ramento. ous others in Congress were A description of Moore been through Stanford and Montoya, whose informa- nothing had happened." tion came yesteiday from critical yesterday of the Se- was circulated among Santa cret Service's performance, Clara County and other po- Federal law makes it a fel- the service, said that Moore, ony to threaten to- kill or in- when she called O'Shea, Treasury Secretary William llee when the President ap- E. Simon, of whose depart- peared at Stanford in Palo flict bodily harm on the asked the inspector to President, and like other "retain her in custody" for ,meat the service is a part, Alto Sunday; they were told came to its.defense. to look for her. law enforcement agencies, fear she would start "testing He said that an ongoing But "O'Shea was still the Secret Service has au- the system." thority to charge and arrest But Marna said he had no evaluation of the service's somewhat bothered about protective function has been this thing on Sunday, and so a person for violating the knowledge she made such 'a law. request, and O'Shea could "Intensified," and that some he called the Mission station", of this evaluation is being of the San Francisco police But spokesmen said yes- not be reached yesterday. terday the service has no There have been indica- done by an outside organiza- department," Barca related, tion, which he did not iden- "and asked them to stake other special powers that tions, however, that Moore out her house and check to would allow it in any way to half-tried to be stopped tify. see If she was carrying a detain anyone. Nor does the from shooting at the Presi- He also said "the public weapon." agency have power to keep dent. can be sure that the Secret When her car pulled into the President from going She reportedly told fed- Service will continue to op- the driveway the two offi- where he chooses, In the eral agents that she loaded erate in as effective man- cers on the stakeout came way he chooses. the revolver she eventually ner as is humanly possible over "quite casually" and In the 12 years since the used on Monday while in a free society." asked, "Do you have a gun?" assassination of President, Barca went on. Kennedy in 1963, the Secret "She said yes and handed Service has grown from 450 them her purse," which con- agents to 1,380, and its tained the unloaded .44, he budget has risen from $5.8 said. - million to $85 million. A "They took her down to part of that money goes for the station, interviewed her, a computer that maintains and cited her for carrying a the names of about 47,000 concealed weapon," a misde- persons thought to pose pos- meanor and the only offense sible danger to the Presi- with which they could dent. charge her under state and Sen. Joseph M. Montoya local law. (D-N.M.), chairman of the She was then released Senate Appropriations sub- about 4 o'clock Sunday af- committee that passes on ternoon, about the time the the Secret Service budget. Stanford ceremonies were noted in a news conference ending. yesterday that neither "O'Shea again notified the Fromme nor Moore was on Secret Service," Barca said, the list of names in the and this time the Secret agency's computer. Service went to her house, Montoya. the first to dis- took her downtown and close that Moore telephoned questioned her -- but then San Francisco police on Sat- released her. urday, complained that the "They felt there was no service "did not follow up" threat and I can understand when warned she might 1A:19 Wldnestley,Sept.24,19;5 Sara Jane Moore: A Life

...By Bill Richards and died in 1964, was a working- • ' Robert Jaffee man of modest circum- . Washington Peet Staff Writer stances. rBefore her arrest for al- Former classmates from legedly attempting to shoot her growing-up years in President Ford, Sara Jane Charlestown described her Moore• had experienced a yesterday with such words 't long and troubled personal as "bright," "very artistic," oddessy that began 45 years "a joiner who was in lots of -.4 ago when she was born in oration about any possible Charleston, W. Va., as Sara activities but very hard to MJane Kahn. get close to." She traveled a road that Robert G. Williams, who included three marriages, once gave Kahn flute les- 1four children and sharply sons, said: "She was the ucontrasting lifestyles veer- most unlikely child I have Stsinefrom affluent suburban- ever seen to develop into an pre, to hanger-on in San oddball. She was a better- rancisco radical circles, than-average musician and a Vnd to FBI informant. very quiet, shy type." This Is the picture of At an apparently young Lzt loore that began to emerge age — the circumstances are :„,.Yesterday from sources in not clear — she married a different parts of the coun. man named Sidney, or Syd- ;:try: It is a picture that still ney. Manning and had three remains clouded by contra- children. They are Sydney, ssdictory accounts of her life now 26; Janet, about 23, and Chris, about 20. ,—some* of them apparently told by Moore herself. The oldest sort, who uses For example, William J. the name Sydney Kahn now gesKetsdever, editor of the Vel- lives in Cincinnati. He told a ltyr Pioneer in Danville, The Washington Post last I night that his parents appar- aCalif., said his newspaper ently were divorced in the . learned that when Chas mid-1950s. abandoned the Moore worked at a local children and had not had iic,olintry club in 1972 and any contact with them since E(73, she listed at least 16 they were toddlers. Sydney t. LfEerent names at different Kahn said that he and his times in the club personnel brother and sister were Iles, all of them beginning United Press International raised by their maternal Rh "Sara Jane." Born Sara Jane Kahn in Charleston, West Virginia ... grandparents and that after ▪ Another bizarre aspect Olof Kahn's death, his Fof her life is the persistent grandmother remarried and way :in which she kept ap- persuaded Hearst's parents tal spokesman, Bonnie Mar- tin, as confirming that moved with the children to tiring on the fringes of to Intercede with the police Cincinnati. on his behalf. Moore was born Sara Jane 'the search for kidnaped Kahn in Charleston, W.Va. The circumstances of newspaper heiress Patricia One thread seems to run Moore's life over the next consistently through all the The name Moore, Carmel re- kiearst during the 19 months portedly said, was her moth- few years are not known. "that the Hearst case was twists and contradictions of Moore's story: she was, by er's maiden name, and she Bonnie Martin, the hosiptal ila national cause celebre. apparently began using it af- spokesman, said Carmel 4 'Moore surfaced early in almost all accounts, a woman of quickly shifting ter her divorce from the told her yesterday that he gibe Hearst story last year as doctor four years ago. understood Moore was mar- t7ia volunteer bookkeeper for moods that frequently led to ,st From other sources, The ried for a time to a man is te_effort to ransom Hearst tantrums and bitter quarrels named Aalberg. Her fourth - ugh a food giveaway with friends and coworkers. Washington Post learned that she did not come from child, a 9-year-old boy, is ,wpgram.;gram. She became associ- One of her former hus- named Frederick Aalberg. Ntatl*d. later with an ex-con- bands, Dr. Willard Carmel, a "Southern blueblood back- an internist at Kaiser-Per. ground," as was reported According to Martin, lee' aurned-radical leader, Carmel did not know Aal- sairgasequently murdered in manente Medical Center in immediately following her apparent falling out with Walnut Creek, Calif., was arrest on Monday. Instead, berg's first name. But. she added, the doctor believes , - allies, and reportedly quoted yesterday by a hospi- her father, Olof Kahn, who

5a.r0r- Like a Twisting Road

that Aalberg had been a Earlier, in late February, part-time film prod u e er 1974, Moore began her asso- and inventor employed by ciation, with the political Paramount Studios in left while working as volun- Hollywood. Spokesmen for teer bookkeeper for the Peo- Paramount said last night ple in Need program, the $2 that they were unable im- million food distribution mediately to provide inlay- program for the poor aimed former employee of that at ransoming Hearst from tame. her SLA abductors. Some Carmel apparently was news media sources, who Nloore's third husband, mar- knew Moore in this period, ried about six years ago said yesterday that she was and divorced two years ago. a press or camera "freak" During part of their mar- who seemed interested tied life they lived in a mainly in media exposure redwood-frame ranch house, and that she drifted away later reportedly sold for from the PIN program after about $83,000, in the af- It stopped attracting steady fluent Sycamore subdivision press attention. of Danville. Calif. While working with PIN, Neighbors from that per- Moore became friendly with iod, who declined to be Wilbert (Popeye) Jackson, identified, said Moore could chairman of a militant pri- be charming and person- son reform group called the able. But, they added, more United Prisoners Union. often she tended to be vola- Jackson, who had served 19 tile, quarrelsome and given years in prison, is believed to noisy, obscenity-punctua- by some sources who knew ted outbursts. Some said Moore during this time to _ she frequently telephoned have been the pivotal figure the police who sent squad in her Increased association cars to her house, but the with radical groups. cause of her complaints re- In April, 1974. Jackson mained vague. was arrested on herolit Following her divorce charges and threatened with from Carmel, Moore rented revocation of his parole. Ac- the house from him for a cording to articles circulated time. But she refused to pay in the San Francisco under, the special annual dues ground press, Moore then assessed on residents of the sought the help of Patricia Sycamore development. As United Press In'Art■estiauil Hearst's parents, Mr. and a result, a lien was placed ... married three times, had four children, many last names. Mrs. Randolph A. Hearst, to on the home and it was intercede in the successful; sold. has become a magnet for apartment apparently rent- effect to have the charges. Between September, 1972, dropped. The role of the and September, 1973, while counterculture types and ed by a couple named Paul Hearsts, if any, has never living at Sycamore, she leftist political activists. It and Joyce Halverson. After been clarified beyond these worked as an accountant was in the Mission District Moore took the apartment, articles. for the nearby Round Hill that FBI agents last week they moved across the On June 11, 1974, Jackson Country Club. There, she arrested Patricia lIearst, street. and a woman companion had frequent fights with who had been kidnaped by in June, 1974. Paul Halver- were shot to death, apparent. fellow workers and was the radical Symbionese Lib- son, a graduate student in ly as the result of a rift fired, leaving behind a pile eration Army Feb. 4, 1974, philosophy at San Francisco within radical circles. It was of unbilled accounts and un- and who subsequently had State University, spent two about this time that Moore's balanced books, other em- become a fugitive with w.-teks in jail for refusing to year-long stint as an occa- ployees of the club said some of its members. testify to a grand jury about sional FBI informant began, yesterday. It was in the Mission Dis- his relationship with Camil- but it was unclear whether Moore next surfaced in trict, too, that Moore's peri- la Hall, a 29-year-old Sym- she did so in reaction tdi San Francisco's Mission pheral but strangely per- bionese Liberation Army Jackson's murder or to the District, a predominantly sistent association with the member killed in a May, suspicion that she reported-. MPxicati-American n e i g h- Hearst case began. For more 1974. SLA shootout with Los ly encountered among leftist borhood that in recent years than a year, she lived in an Angeles police. groups that she tried to join., Ford Kin Calls For Life .Sentence LANSING Mich., Sept. 23 (UPI)—President Ford's half-brother called today for mandatory life prison sentences for per- sons who attempt to assas- sinate presidents. mem- bers of Congress or Su- preme Court justices. Thomas G. Ford, a fiscal analyst for the legislature told reporters hls initial reaction to Mon- day's attempt on the Pres- ident's life was that would-be assassins should face a mandatory death sentence. He said that while the death penalty for would- he assassins might be somewhat extreme, "I would like to see Congress enact a mandatary life sentence." seen demonstrations is Sac- ramento and San Francis- co," he said. "That's all you find in northern California —kooks with guns and placards." Falk Is associate director of the White House Domes- tic Council.