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As of last weekend, Mr. Chafets' tome had become the No. 1-selling non-fiction book in the Detroit area, and supporters as well as the curious showed up Sunday at Metro News. Dena Greenberg of Detroit, who came with her husband Irving, said of the book, "He didn't mislead us. What we read was correct and proper —and heart- breaking, for me." "I grew up downriver, in Allen Park," said Larry White of Plymouth. "I like the candor with which he portrayed Coleman Young." Margaret Golden of Birm- ingham said she and her family had recently moved to Michigan from Massachusetts. Her hobby is collecting autographed books, but she expected to gain insights about the area from the book because "he's a native and I'm not." About 50 copies of Devil's Night sold Sunday at Metro News, according to manager Sue Weiss, bringing sales since the book's release three weeks ago to over 150. Earlier Sunday, Barnes & Noble in Rochester Hills sold approximately 100 copies of the book during Mr. Chafets' signing. Things got warmer for Mr. Chafets on Monday when protesters picketed WXYZ- TV (Channel 7) while he was appearing on "Kelly & Company." The studio au- dience booed when he was introduced, although only one of 80 persons there had read Devil's Night. Appearing on the TV show with Mr. Chafets were Detroit News columnist George Cantor and Rev. Wendell Anthony of Detroit. Rev. Anthony had organized a black community boycott of the Detroit Free Press and Channel 7 this year, alleg- ing that they only portrayed negative images of Detroit. Rev. Anthony's criticism of Mr. Chafets on "Kelly & Company" included blasting him as an outsider no longer associated with Detroit. Rev. Anthony said that Detroit would be a better place if it received the $3 billion each "I like the candor with which (Chafets) portrayed Coleman Young." Larry White year that Israel receives from the U.S. government. Rev. Anthony's remarks were called Jew-baiting by Mr. Cantor in a front-page column in Tuesday's Detroit News. Mr. Chafets spent the rest of the week in New York, appearing on CBS Morning News and on CNN's "Sonya Live" with host and fellow Detroiter Dr. Sonya Fried- man. He will return to Israel on Sunday, but will appear via tape on ABC's "Prime Time Live" Nov. 8. ❑ Palestinian Stands Thal Tel Aviv (JTA) — An alleged Palestinian terrorist ordered extradited to Israel from the United States arrived here Monday aboard a regular El Al passenger flight. Mahmoud Abed Atta will stand trial for the machine- gun killing of an Israeli bus driver during an April 1986 attack by the Abu Nidal terror group in the Samaria district of the West Bank. Mr. Atta's attorneys claimed during extradition hearings in the United States that his was a polit- ical act, rather than terror- ism, and that therefore he should not be extradited. The U.S. courts decided otherwise, clearing the way for Mr. Atta's extradition two months ago. But Secre- tary of State James Baker delayed signing the extradi- tion papers. The warrant was finally signed last week by Deputy Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger, but only after the Jerusalem Post alerted Washington that it would soon lapse, the newspaper claimed. A State Department offi- cial denied the Post's story.