-TI Clark bitterly denounces U.S. administrations' Jranian policies Simple operation, AP h*t* Politics have necessitated this transformation of Misha, official mascot of the 1980 Moscow Olympics (left) to Misha, all-American teddy bear. R. Dakin and Co. of San Francisco, the U.S. manufacturer of the cuddly bear, has replaced its five-ringed Olympic belt withta red, white, and blue T-shirtiemblazoned with a U.S. hockey player. ACLU attempts to block execution of condemoned murderer- From AP and UPI TEHRAN, Iran - Former Attorney General Ramsey Clark went before a conference on "American crimes" yesterday and bitterly denounced his country's policy toward Iran under current and former administrations, the aborted hostage rescue mission, and the deposed shah. But he also appealed for the im- mediate release of the 53 American hostages and said he would gladly trade places with any one of them if it would help resolve the seven-month-old crisis. CLARK, AN activist lawyer who ser- ved as attorney general under President Lyndon Johnson in the late 1960s, told delegates attending the con- ference: "I am so sure it is imperative that the hostages be released now, so important to the fulfillment of the Iranian revolution which it is damaging in a hundred ways, so important to the in- dividual rights of the hostages and so important to peace on earth, that I offer today to take the place of any hostage if that will help resolve this tragic crisis." Amid heckling from Iranian officials in the audience, Clark said the seizure of the American hostages was "under- standable" but wrong because it only offered the "powers of imperialism a delicious excuse to intervene" further in Iran. HE CHARGED that Richard Nixon, Henry Kissinger, and former CIA director Richard Helms were the "real enemies ... the real imperialists" and said it "might be different" if Iran were holding them hostage instead of "53 lit- tle people." Others among the 10-member U.S. delegation in Tehran led by Clark said they would try to arrange meetings with Iranian revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and Iranian President Abolhassan Bani- Sadr. Iranian Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh said he would meet with Clark but "not enter into negotiations with him." ON MONDAY, the State Department expressed concern that "travel to the conference might be misconstrued as our acceptance of the stated premise of the meeting - which is the claim that the United States committed aggression against Iran." Department spokesman Hodding- Carter called the conference a "propaganda circus." The Americans attended the con- ference in defiance of a Justice Depar- tment ban issued last month on travel to Iran. If tried and convicted in the United States of violating the ban, the 10 Americans could be sentenced to 10 years in prison and fined $50,000. President Carter sent Clark and Senate staffer William Miller to Iran just days after the hostages were taken last Nov. 4, but they were refused entry into the country. Clark had met with Khomeini during the Iranian religious leader's exile in France. 0 ATLANTA (AP) - The American Civil Liberties Union asked a federal judge yesterday to stop convicted mur- derer Jack Potts from going to the elec- tric chair this week. Demonstrators at the governor's mansion protested plans for the state to conduct its first execution in' 16 years tomorrow. POTTS MET with friends and attor- neys in his death row cell at the Georgia State Prison at Reidsville. Later, anti- death penalty lawyer Millard Farmer emerged from the meeting and said there had been no change in Potts' decision to "get it over with." U.S. District Judge William O'Kelley of Atlanta set a hearing for today to consider a "next friend" petition filed by the ACLU naming Rev. Murphy Davis as the friend. O'Kelley will con sider whether Davis qualifies asa friend of Potts, and whether he is competent to waive legal action on his behalf. O'Kelley said that if he finds Davis qualifies as a "next friend" and that Potts is incompetent, he would have to grant at least a temporary stay of execution. Potts, 35, was convicted of murder and kidnapping and sentenced to death in 1975 in connection with a crime spree in which Roswell, Ga., mechanic Michael Priest was shot and killed. Last fall, Potts fired his attorneys and ended all appeals in his case, saying he was prepared to accept the death penalty. 4 Diggs resigns with a 'clear conscience' WASHINGTON (UPI)-Rep. Charles Diggs (D-Detroit) resigned from Congress "with a clear conscience" yesterday, a day ,after the Supreme Court refused to overturn his conviction on mail fraud and payroll padding charges. Diggs announced his surprise resignation in brief letters to House Speaker Thomas O'Neill and Michigan Gov. William Milliken. Diggs, 57, the senior black member of Congress, had The CONSER VA TOR Y STEAKS are all U.S. Grade A Choice Attuned to your good taste M-Sat.11-9 516E. Liberty - , , nxt t said earlier he would retire at the end of his term in January. DIGGS, WHO WAS elected to Congress in 1954, faces a three-year prison sentence. He said Monday shor- tly after the high court's decision to let the conviction stand that he would seek a reduction in sentence and probation. Diggs refused to see reporters after his resignation, but issued a statement assuring his constituents in Detroit that services would be provided throughout the remainder of the year from offices in both Detroit and Washington. "I leave Congress with a clear con- science, and with deep appreciation for the historic role I have been privileged to play for the past 26 years on behalf of the disadvantaged, both here and abroad," he said. Diggs was overwhelmingly elected to a 13th term in the House in 1978 shortly after his conviction. After the trial, however, he stepped down as chairman of both the House Foreign Affairs sub- committee on Africa and the House Committee on theDistrict of Columbia. FORMER U.S. ATTORNEY General Ramsey Clark speaks yesterday in Tehran at the international conference on U.S. intervention in Iran. Clark said ih itod bhelrigso exha ygepldoesffvi-.ang M.the-33American-hostages if it would help resolve the 214-day standoff.