PARIS - Police loosed water cannons and tear gas on rioting students and 
activists rampaged through a McDonald's and attacked store fronts in the capital 
Saturday as demonstrations against a plan to relax job protections spread in a 
widening arc across France. 
The protests, which drew 500,000 people in some 160 cities across the 
country, were the biggest show yet of escalating anger that is testing the 
strength of the conservative government before elections next year. 
At the close of a march in Paris that drew a crowd of tens of thousands, 
seven officers and 17 protesters were injured during two melees, at the Place de 
la Nation in eastern Paris and the Sorbonne University. Police said they 
arrested 156 people in the French capital. 
Four cars were set afire, police said, and a McDonald's restaurant was 
attacked along with store fronts at the close of the march. 
Tensions escalated later Saturday as about 500 youths moved on to the 
Sorbonne, trying to break through tall metal blockades erected after police 
stormed the Paris landmark a week ago to dislodge occupying students. The 
university has become a symbol of the protest. 
Police turned water cannons on the protesters at the Sorbonne and were seen 
throwing youths to the ground, hitting them and dragging them into vans. 
"Liberate the Sorbonne!" some protesters shouted. "Police everywhere, justice 
nowhere." 
In an apparent effort to set fire to a police van serving as a blockade, 
protesters instead torched the entrance of a nearby Gap store, apparently by 
accident, engulfing the small porch in flames. 
With commerce snarled in some cities, people asked whether Prime Minister 
Dominique de Villepin would stand firm on implementing the change that he says 
is needed to encourage hiring. The usually outspoken leader was silent Saturday. 
Protest organizers urged President Jacques Chirac on Saturday to prevent the 
law from taking effect as expected in April. 
The group issued an ultimatum, saying it expects an answer by Monday, when 
leaders will decide whether to continue protests that have paralyzed at least 16 
universities and dominated political discourse for weeks. 
"We give them two days to see if they understand the message we've sent," 
said Rene Jouan of CFDT, France's largest union. 
The law would allow businesses to fire young workers in the first two years 
on a job without giving a reason, removing them from protections that restrict 
layoffs of regular employees. 
Companies are often reluctant to add employees because it is hard to let them 
go if business conditions worsen. Students see a subtext in the new law: make it 
easier to hire and fire to help France compete in a globalizing world economy. 
Youth joblessness stands at 23 percent nationwide, and 50 percent among 
impoverished young people. The lack of work was blamed in part for the riots 
that shook France's depressed suburbs during the fall. 
Protests on Saturday reached every corner of France ¡ª most of them largely 
peaceful ¡ª with organizers citing 160 marches from the small provincial town of 
Rochefort in the southwest to the major city of Lyon in the southeast. 
In Marseille, extreme leftist youths climbed the facade of City Hall, 
replacing a French flag with a banner reading "Anticapitalism." Police used tear 
gas to disperse them and made several arrests. 
Police also fired tear gas at a protest in Clermont-Ferrand, a central city 
where 10,000 people marched and about 100 youths threw beer cans and other 
projectiles at a building. 
The Paris protest march was the biggest, attracting some 80,000 people, 
according to police. Organizers put the number at 300,000. 
Widespread discontent with the government has crystalized around a new type 
of job contract that Villepin says will alleviate France's sky-high youth 
unemployment by getting companies to risk hiring young workers. 
Critics say the contract abolishes labor protections crucial to the social 
fabric. 
"Aren't we the future of France?" asked Aurelie Silan, a 20-year-old student 
who joined a river of protesters in Paris. 
Government spokesman Jean-Francois Cope insisted on the need for a "spirit of 
dialogue." 
"The hand is extended, the door is open," he said on France-3 TV network. 
However, he limited dialogue to "improving" Villepin's plan ¡ª not withdrawing 
it. 
Waves of red union flags topped the densely packed crowd in Paris, which 
overflowed into side streets and stretched more than 3 1/2 miles under bright 
sunshine. 
"Throw away the job contract, don't throw away the youth!" chanted a group of 
students shaking tambourines. Many wore plastic bags to illustrate their feeling 
that the new law reduces young people to disposable workers. 
Some demonstrators became violent as the march ended. Youths set a car on 
fire, smashed a shop window, trashed a bus stop and threw stones, golf balls and 
other objects at police. Police responded with tear gas during skirmishes that 
lasted several hours. 
Chirac has pushed Villepin to act "as quickly as possible" to defuse the 
crisis, but has backed the contested measure. 
On Friday night, a group of university presidents met with Villepin and 
called on him to withdraw the jobs plan for six months to allow for debate. 
Failure to resolve the crisis could sorely compromise Villepin, who is 
believed to be Chirac's choice as his party's candidate in next year's 
presidential election.