The Michigan Daily Vol. XC, No. 16-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, May 30, 1980 Ten Cents Sixteen Pages Jordan off critical list Black leader survives shooting By JULIE ENGEBRECHT Specialto the Daily With wire service reports FORT WAYNE, Ind..- National Urban League President Vernon Jordan Jr. was shot and seriously wounded by a sniper early yesterday as he returned to his motel in a car driven by a female civil rights worker. Surgeons operated on Jordan for four and one-half hours. Dr. Jeffery Towles, the surgeon at Parkview Hospital who operated on the 44-year-old civil rights activist, said that eight hours after the operation Jordan's vital signs - pulse, breathing, and blood pressure - were holding steady. "WE HAVE downgraded his con- dition from critical to very serious. This does not mean he is out of danger. But it means he is weathering the post- operative period very well," Towles said. Jordan was shot in the back by an unidentified rifleman about 2 a.m. EST in the parking lot of the Marriott Inn. Hours earlier he delivered a speech at the motel critical of what he called the nation's shift to the political right. . The attack was the first on a prominent leader of the civil rights movement since the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., in Mem- phis, Tenn., April 4,1968. POLICE INITIALLY suggested that the ambush by a gunman lying in wait might have resulted from a "domestic- type thing," said police spokesman Dan Gibson, but he later ruled that out. "The domestic situation has been completely ruled out," he said last night. "Now we're going with the idea that it was an individual, possibly in- volved alone, as an isolated type -in- cident." Gibson said police in this industrial city of 175,000 were not ruling out the possibility it was a racially-motivated assassination attempt, but the Justice Department said the initial evidence indicated it was not. JORDAN CAME off the critical list Thursday evening, but doctors said the black civil rights leader is "not out of the woods yet." Police Chief Leon Wolfe said a gun- man fired two or three shots from a grassy area near the intersection of three roads about 125 feet from the spot where Jordan fell in the hotel parking lot. Wolfe said two policemen spokewith Jordan at about 5:30 p.m. EST but that See JORDAN, Page 14 NATIONAL URBAN LEAGUE President Vernon Jordan (inset) was gunned down and critically wounded early yesterday shortly after stepping out from this 1970 Grand Prix in front of his motel room at the Marriott Inn at Fort Wayne, Ind. U.S. clears agreement . to aid hin' m ar WASHINGTON (AP)-In a historic move, the Carter administration yesterday cleared the way for the first sales of military-related equipment and technology to the com- munist government of China. Defense Secretary Harold Brown made the announ- cement after extensive talks with Chinese Vice Premier Geng Biao. Brown said the U.S. government had approved export license applications for a wide range of equipment such as air defense radar, helicopters and communications gear, and the sale of computers. BROWN AND GENG stressed that the actions are significant in what they described as a "step-by-step relationship" between the two superpowers, which once were enemies on the Korean battlefield. Brown emphasized the moves did not represent the begin- nings of a formal alliance between the countries, although he said "the People's Republic of China and the United States are friends." He noted the landmark approvals do not involve the sale of weapons or arms. Other defense officials, speaking anonymously, saidsuch sales are not under consideration. BUT GENG, SPEAKING through an interpreter, seemed to imply China may later-ask to buy American weaponry. "I don't think there is such a possibility at present, but I believe there may be such a possibility in the future," Geng said. There was an atmosphere of warmth and cordiality as the two defense leaders faced reporters after about two hours of wind-up talks climaxing Geng's visit to Washington. Geng, the highest ranking Chinese defense official to visit the United States, has conferred with President Carter, Secretary of State Edmund Muskie, and some key members of Congress. The U.S. defense chief said they had "built a considerable structure on the principles which we agreed on in my visit" to China in January. Brown stressed that many details still must be worked out, "but we are considerably down the road." He and other officials ,declined to discuss numbers or dollars, although one senior official agreed sales to the Chinese probably would reach into the hundreds of millions of dollars. - There will be no direct U.S. government sales to China. Deals will be made between the Chinese government and U.S. manufacturers subject to U.S. government export licen- sing approval.