THE NEW HAKAT A 141 303sittsist David Duke Will Run In Primary t illOtzte CUISINE LIVE ENTERTAINMENT (Formerly Nipponkai) This Weekend, Fri. & Sat. Night, 9 p.m.-1 a.m. PROUDLY BRINGS YOU "OVERTIME BAND" International Music Russian, Hebrew, German, Italian, Armenian, American AUTHENTIC JAPANESE DINING Lunch and Dinner • 15 Years in Business • Banquet Room Available • Open 7 Days, Serving Lunch and Dinner • Serving Cocktails • Carry-Out / Catering Available Featuring Elegant Cuisine at Reasonable Prices In An Atmosphere of Gracious Warmth • Private Japanese Booths • Sushi Bar • Cocktails, Including Sake r Open 7 Days Lunch: Mon.-Fri. 11:30-2 p.m. Dinner: Mon. -Sat. 5:30-10:30 p.m. Sunday 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. • 737-7220 Fax: 737-7223 32443 Northwestern Hwy. Between Middlebelt & 14 Mile • Jj ; 111. 0 L 'COUPON I 1 BUY ONE DINNER GET ONE 50% OFF Not good with any other offers. 50% off dinner of equal or lesser value. Dinner only, everyday, 6-10 p.m. Expires August 31, 1996. Orchard Mall, Orchard Lake & Maple Roads West Bloomfield (810) 737-6688 otaali shkehaniA SHUCK The Perfect Gift... (RAW BAR & GRILLS • CAJUN MENU • OYSTERS • SHRIMP ° GOURMET BURGERS A MOST POPULAR WHITEFISH DINNER $9.99 A Subscription To Fri (810) 474-8484 •FOR CARRY OUT • PARTY INFO MUIRWOOD SQUARE SHOPPING CENTER DRAKE ROAD AT GRAND RIVER • FARMINGTON HILLS riff Kai Ur-NI I 111° / 0 OFF "TAL DINE IN Bia OR CARRY•OUT The Jewish News lJ (810) 354-6620 C3) SZECHUAN, HUNAN & CHINESE CUISINE -,:3N • "— A—A I ExPires 8-31-96 (Excludes Lunch Specials) I W6 2 eking ii. irde24 k APPIkiak &Pare 15 _s 12 Mile APPLEGATE SQUARE L29815 NORTHWESTERN HWY, At Inkster —I —I Teleg raph HOURS: MON.-THURS. 11 a.m.-10:30 p.m. I FRI. &SAT. 11 a.m.-11 p.m. I SUN. 12 Noon-10 p.m. 13 Mile 353-789 Need to get away from it all with a great vacation? After Check out the mom MID 0141Z(TOtti 120 in our Classified Section In a kind of political summer rerun, former Klansman David Duke announced that he will run in the September c.—\ primary for the Senate seat being vacated by Sen. J. Bennett Johnston, D-La., who is retiring. In his 1990 battle against Mr. Johnston, Mr. Duke, a Republi- can, won 44 percent of the to- tal vote and more than 60 percent of the white vote. Last week, anti-Duke forces were worried about the possible entry into the race of Rep. Cleo Fields, a black Democrat. That could have divided the anti- Duke vote in the state's unusu- al open primary. But Mr. Fields decided not to run; the front-runners now are former state Treasurer Mary Landrieu on the Democratic side and Rep. Jimmy Hayes for the GOP. Mr. Duke's platform is sim- plicity itself; his 10-point pro- gram includes a halt to "forced integration" and both legal and illegal immigration and an "end c\ to discrimination against white people." The federal government, he writes in his home page on the World Wide Web, "has become our greatest enemy. It discrim- inates against the very heritage of Americans who founded our nation. It promotes racial dis- crimination against whites in jobs, promotions, scholarships and student aid, and union ad- mittance." Just in case he didn't make his point, he adds this: "I'll fight for our American traditions, our Christian traditions and our Southern honor." He predicted that he would be vigorously opposed by "the liberal media ... and a host of New York City ultra-lib- erals." Jewish politicos, having been through serious Duke scares be- fore, once again are scrambling for an effective political re- (--\ sponse. "The problem is a familiar one," said an official with one major Jewish group. "Once he declares his candidacy, most Jewish organizations are effec- tively prohibited from attacking him because of our nonprofit status. We have to rely on the grass-roots groups in Louisiana that have mobilized against him in the past, and we have to hope that the Republican Party does everything in its power to make sure he's not seen as a 'legiti- mate' candidate." But Louisiana politics are un- (_/ predictable, this source said, and the mood of voters remains ex- plosive.