Chines BEIJING (AP) - From discos to dormitories and hotels, authorities are stepping up moves to limit for- eigners' contacts with Chinese. Black sedans without license plates and full of security men have been parked outside the U.S. Em- bassy recently. Plainclothes police and surveillance cameras are being increased elsewhere to keep track of who's meeting whom. "Police are cracking down on Chinese girls who met with foreign- ers," said a clothing salesperson who limit The Michigan Daily - Monday, December 11, 1989 - Page 5 foreign contact is obliged to attend meetings where workers denounce "American imperi- alism." "It doesn't matter if you're just friends or colleagues, they'll just as- sume the girl's a prostitute," she said. The stepped-up monitoring comes amid a crackdown on prostitu- tion, increased warnings about AIDS and general wariness of associating with foreigners since the military crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in Beijing in June. The Chinese government claims the June turmoil was instigated with foreign help. In November, the Culture Min- istry canceled a planned exhibition at the French embassy of a Chinese painter, and this month police halted plans by the Foreign Correspondents Club of Beijing to show works by six Chinese artists. Western diplomats and journalists have been turned down for routine interviews and meetings by numer- ous government ministries and think tanks. A well-known "English corner" in a public park where peo- ple gathered on Sundays to practice English has also been banned. Diplomats and foreign journalists have long lived in special com- pounds with armed guards and surveillance cameras. Entering taxis are checked for Chinese, who are supposed to be screened by the guards. Mich. Review finds 2000 editions missing by Noelle Vance Daily Government Reporter Approximately 2000 editions of the Michigan Review, a monthly student publication, disappearcJ within 24 hours of the paper's dis- tribution, Review staffers said yes- terday. Stacks of the Review, which had been placed in East Quad, West Engineering, East Engineering and the Fishbowl late Wednesday after- noon, were gone by Thursday morn- ing, and staff members suspect foul play. "Usually it takes a couple of weeks [for the paper to disappear]. We only can conclude that someone who doesn't like what we said in the last issue or just doesn't like the Review took the liberty to remove all our issues," said Review Editor Marc Selinger. About 10,000 Reviews were distributed around the campus this month. Selinger pointed to two contro- versial articles in the December Re- view which the staff feels might have prompted the alleged theft. An article written about the United Coalition Against Racism accused the group of "taking the civil rights movement a step back- ward" and "making the possibility of improving race relations much more difficult." An editorial about the Palestine Solidarity Committee suggested the group was responsible for alleged misuse of Michigan Student Assem- bly funds during the joint MSA- PSC fact-finding mission to the West Bank last summer. Members of UCAR and the PSC deny knowing anything about the disappearance of the Reviews. "We believe in free speech and free expression," said Nuha Kahoury, member of the PSC. "No one in our group would ever do this," she said. Rajel Patel, UCAR Steering Committee member, agreed, saying none of UCAR's members were re- sponsible, but she did express dissat- isfaction with the article. "It took a lot of things out of context and said they were UCAR positions and they're not," she said. Selinger explained, "we're not saying they did it. It's likely some- one who was angry with those arti- cles or sympathetic with those groups." The remaining articles in the Review were not as controver- sial, he explained. "Someone's trying to censor the Review," Selinger said. "They're afraid for ideas to be out in the open, and the only way they can handle them is to censor them." Pit stop Mail carrier Joe Bronersky found in Friday in Hanford, California. a comfortable mailbox to eat his lunch I The Daily (Z~. ~>Advice Column is m coming. Cp p Write to: Help Mel d/o Daily 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, M1 48109 Call the Daily: 764-0552 Reed Jim Ponlewozik Ever- BON APPETITE at BON JUICE & SANDWICH t,--- 4 C Featuring: Falafel Hommous Baba Ghanoug & Other Gourmet Lebanese Foods 15% discount with this actd Don't Subtract Trees Duplicate on Recycled Paper .Iust say "Ecology-Pack" and get your coursepack on recycled paper for no extra cost! KOLOSSOS + .. i Fresh made juices Salads & pies Breakfast Too!! 11in the Envirvnmental Revolution! 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