The Michigan Daily Vol. XC, No. 20-S Ann Arbor, Michigan--Thursday, June 5, 1980 Ten Cents Sixteen Pages Condenmied killer Potts ~ our stay ATLANTA (AP) - Convicted killer Jack Howard Potts, who was to have been executed- in Georgia's electric chair today, won a reprieve last night when a federal judge issued a stay blocking the execution. Potts had fired his attorneys and dropped all appeal efforts last fall, but he changed his mind last night and said he would appeal to block his execution, scheduled for this morning. THE STAY WAS granted by U.S. District Judge William O'Kelley, who only hours before had refused to allow American Civil Liberties Union attor- neys to intervene on Potts' behalf. The Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans also had refused to issue a stay of execution. O'Kelley signed the stay after receiving word that Potts had agreed to participate in an appeal of his case. No hearing date on the appeal was set im- mediately. Potts, 35, made an 11th-hour decision rtcfmig up mtie pieces ' A Grand Island, Neb. family sifts through the wreckage that was their home yesterday after tornadoes destroyed more than 250 homes and businesses in the state's third largest city Tuesday night. See story, Page 5. SFilibuster could shatter draft registration plan to resume appeals of his twin death sen- tences for the 1975 kidnapping and murder of 24-year-old Michael Priest of Roswell, Ga. POTTS' PETITION "raises numerous constitutional questions which should be reviewed in orderly manner," O'Kelley said, adding the execution "is stayed until further order of the court." Millard Farmer, an anti-death penalty attorney from Atlanta, had rushed from the Georgia State Prison near Reidsville after 7 p.m. yesterday, shouting, "We have consent from Jackie Potts to file his appeal." In a signed statement that accom- panied the petition, Potts said he discovered he could use media atten- tion to force improvement in prison conditions. "HIS OWN EXECUTION became associated in his mind with his ability to relieve the suffering- of his fellow prisoners," the statement said. "Jackie Potts is not afraid to die," the signed statement continues, referring to Potts in the third person. "His newfound religious faith has given him the courage to face death. He has come to recognize, however, that he has taken on a lot of responsibility for his fellow prisoners. He now knows he has the courage and ability to live with this responsibility." He had previously said that while he did not want to die, he preferred that to prolonging his imprisonment through appeals. POTTS' EXECUTION, scheduled for today between 10 a.m. and noon, would have been the first in Georgia in 16 years. Farmer and colleague Andrea Young, daughter of former U.S. Am- bassador Andrew Young, had spent all day at the Georgia State Prison waiting to speak with Potts, who was huddled with his family. Attorneys familiar with the case say Potts should be able to delay his execution for at least two years by pressing appeals in state and federal courts. From AP and UPI WASHINGTON-President Carter's draft registration plan became embroiled in its last major congressional battle yesterday as opponents, lacking enough votes to kill it, began a filibuster to try to talk it to death. The Senate opened debate on a House-passed plan to spend $13.3 million to begin registering 19- and 20-year-old men at post offices this summer. AN AMENDMENT TO require registration of women along with men was promised by Sen. Nancy Landon Kasssenbaum (R-Kan.), the Senate's lone woman member. Carter has power to impose registration without congressional approval, but administration officials said he will not take the steps unleSs he gets funding for the move. No one has been registered for military service since 1975 when then-President Gerald Ford signed a proclamation put- ting the Selective Service System in "deep standby." Actual conscription ended in 1973. AS THE DEBATE opened, Senate Democratic Leader Robert Byrd said registration would be a signal to the Soviet Union and U.S. allies "of our determination to place our ar- med forces in a state of preparedness in the event of a military emergency." "Reinstitutionof military registration will demonstrate our resolve to back up our foreign policy pronouncements with military strength," Byrd said. Sen. Mark Hatfield (R-Ore.), leader of a filibuster again- st the bill, conceded opponents are "in an uphill battle" in the Senate, but said he hopes a delay will give the public time to become aroused against registration. HATFIED SAID THAT in political terms, "we have isolated the president on this issue." He noted that all of Carter's rivals for the White House, from Republican Ronald Reagan to Democrat Edward Ken- nedy to independent John Anderson, oppose registration. See SENATE, Page 14 '