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Duke Splits Heart of Louisiana Into Black and White

About 6 pages (1,909 words)

The Washington Post, November 15th, 1991

At Laura's Cafe, the patrons are both black and white and the black owners, Harold and Dorothy Broussard, want to keep it that way. So while serving up mounds of red beans, rice and fried chicken, they try to cajole Don Breaux, one of the black customers, into keeping his voice down as the local nightclub owner indignantly tells a small group of his cronies, "I'm looking any day to find some cross in my yard!" They all laugh, but they are quite serious. Beneath all the campaign rhetoric about more jobs, less welfare and an end to affirmative action, what David Duke really wants, really stands ...

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David Maraniss; Lynne Duke. The Washington Post, November 15th, 1991. Duke Splits Heart of Louisiana Into Black and White. Content provided by HighBeam Research.

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