10 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Monday, October 23, 1967 Protestors leave D.C. Continued from page 1 onstrations in the nation's capital. As Sunday morning dawned, the demonstrators who had kept an all night vigil numbered about 100. By noon they still totaled less than 500, but by midafternoon the crowd had grown to about 1,500 with the demonstrators circling about before the troops and shouting antiwar slogans. One unidentified youth, about 20 years old, announced he was burning his Naval Reserve identification card, declaring "I can --no longer belong to the military establishment." WEATHER The U.S. Weather Bureau predicts considerable cloudiness and warmer weather for tonight. Probability of thundershowers 20 per cent tonight, 50 per cent Tuesday. Low tonight 55 to 60. High Tuesday lower 70s. N. London demonstrations In London a mob of 4,000 demonstrators chanting anti-American slogans and hurling rocks, sticks, dirt and firecrackers battled London riot police Sunday in a wild donnybrook outside the U.S. Embassy in Grosvenor Square. The protest against the Vietnam war injured 30 of 260 policemen who ringed the building when the demonstrators struggled for two hours to get to the embassy door-steps. Police arrested 44 persons on charges of possessing dangerous weapons, causing bodily harm, assault and behaving threateningly. At the University of Wisconsin in Madison, Chancellor William Sewell announced last week that nine of the thirteen students suspended after Wednesday's bloody anti-Vietnam protest would be prosecuted. District Atty. James Boll of Dane County said he would meet today with campus and city police and sheriff's deputies to "compile facts and names" for the prosecutions. Seventy-two persons were hurt in the melee when police attempted to disperse the demonstrators protesting before a campus building where Dow Chemical Co. recruiters were conducting job interviews. Napalm manufacturer Foes of the Vietnam conflict have pickedet Dow recruiters because the company manufactures napalm for the Defense Department. Interviews have been temporarily suspended. Dow officials said, however, they were arranging interviews for the fifty students who were awaiting appointments when the violence began. About 100 more were interviewed before the protest. DUCKS AND DRAKES LONDON — (UPI)—A family doctor started something when he advertised for a mate for his pet Muscovy drake. He got a flood of replies—but from women wanting to marry him. "Dear Ducky," began one letter. FASHIONABLE NEW CARCOATS by Bus Stop 'n Wheels Don't let cold weather catch you coatless. Come In Today The Alley Shop diebolt's ___ 843 Mass. Official Bulletin THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THEATRE and THE SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS TODAY gypsy present Venezuelan Students: Interested in a scholarship? Sign up at the office of the Dean of Foreign Students for an interview with a representative of a corporation offering such awards. October 26, 27, 28, November 2, 3, 5 8:20 p.m. University Theatre Murphy Hall Pi Tau Sigma National Conference. All Day. Jayhawk Room, Union. SUA Coffee Forum. 3:30 p.m. "Rablais." John C. Lapp, Stanford U. Forum Room, Union. East Asian Lecture: 8 p.m. "America's Asia Policy: 1940's and 1960's" Lyman Van Slyke, Stanford U. Forum Room, Union. Graduate Physics Colloquium: 4:30 p.m. "Spin Wave Interaction in Magnetic Insulators." J. D. Bierlein. 332 Malott. If you see news happening— call UN 4-3646 TOMORROW P1 Tau Sigma National Conference. All Day. Jayhawk Room, Union. Pre-Law Students: Students interested in attending law school upon graduation are invited to meet Professor V. Larson, Southern Methodist University from 1-3 p.m. at 206 Strong Hall (the College Office). Humanities Lecture: 8 p.m. La Fontaine and the Estheties of Negligence." Happ, Stanford U. Swarthout Recital Hall. Reception following, Morphy Murale Louge. MEN INTERESTED IN A CAREER IN EDUCATION Find out what Mu Epsilon Nu can do for you at a smoker Tuesday, Oct. 24 in the Trophy Room in the Union. 7:00 p.m. Mu Epsilon Nu Professional Fraternity for men in Education At Enjay we like people to ask direct questions: "I feel I've been trained for responsibility. How long do I wait for it?" Responsibility is given right from the start. You add your talents and educational background to the experience of others in your group. Orientation takes less time. The result: the atmosphere that permits progress such as that of Roy Sinclair (Cornell '66) Supervisor Lubricating Oil Additives unit after 10 months with ENJAY. This unit represents $6\frac{1}{2}$ million dollars in sales per year. Or Bob Tadross (NYU'67), Technical Representative Industrial Chemicals responsible for sales of over $ _{3/2} $ million dollars per year. Giving you all the responsibility you can handle, as fast as you can handle it, is POLICY at ENJAY, the rapidly expanding chemical company involved in many broad and exciting areas of chemical products, including plastics, fibers, synthetic rubbers and many other industrial chemicals-manufactured in plants and marketed through 16 sales offices nationwide. Want more direct answers to your direct questions? There'll soon be men on campus who can give you these direct answers, or write: RECRUITING COORDINATOR ENJAY CHEMICAL COMPANY ...the domestic affiliate of worldwide Esso Chemical Company 60 West 49th Street, New York, N.Y. 10020 An Equual Opportunity Employer (M/ P)