04832150 Hashinger Hall's Second Scare Routs Residents The dull blast of an alarm signaled the evacuation of Hashinger Hall for a second bomb boax at 10:10 p.m. Monday. The second evacuation came only 17 hours after residents were awakened by an alarm at 4:30 a.m. Monday. THE HALL WAS quickly evacuated by all women, with the exception of student staff assistants and resident directors who searched each room in the hall, before declaring it was safe to return, at approximately 10:40 p.m. A call received through the Hashinger switchboard said that a bomb was set to go off within the hall at 10:15 p.m. By 10:45 p.m., most of the women had quietly re-entered the hall. The approximately 400 women stood in the hall's parking lot, be wildered and somewhat angered by the inconvenience. Some sat on the curb, some wandered over to neighboring Ellsworth Hall, and a few climbed up and sat on the building machinery being used to build the new over-pass. The threat occurred less than a week after Summerfield Hall, a classroom building, was evacuated for a bomb scare. The evacuation occurred Friday morning. 5 Daily Kansan Tuesday, November 16, 1965 RED DOG INN presents presents Wed., Nov. 17 Girl's Night Out FREE "The Group" Fri. & Sat. Nov. 19 & 20 "The Mercymen" foot from England Direct from England Half a small page contained the list of 13 KU graduates in 1375, but last year a complete catalog with more than 20 pages was necessary for the graduating class. Growth of KU Now on Display That's one of the examples given in the display shown at Watson Library to demonstrate the growth of KU in its 100 years. the University of Kansas, from a relatively obscure college which had to provide a high school education for its first students before it could even begin their college education," to what KU is today, widely recognized as one of the best universities in the country. IN FIVE PANELS, placed in the Class of 1938 Exhibition Gallery, students and the public can see "the phenomenal growth of The whole exhibition is made in base to a comparison between the facts in the early years and today. Two large photographs are the Ike Looks Toward Thanksgiving AUGUSTA, Ga.—(UPI)—Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower passed the one week critical phase of his heart attack convalescence today, causing doctors to increase their optimism for a complete recovery. Prospects for a Thanksgiving reunion next week with his family around his bedside at Walter Reed General Hospital in Washington appeared to be increasingly good. - ANTI-FREEZE - CHAINS - SNOW TIRES POTTER'S "66" SERVICE 1401 W.6th VI 3-9891 23rd & La. VI 3-8474 NEW Cleaners & Launderers Offers the Students IN BY 9 OUT BY 5 SERVICE. When time is important let Tops In By 9 Out By 5 service take care of your laundry problems. In addition Shirts Are Returned on Hangers and Tops offers a money back guarantee. TOPS Open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. (Monday thru Saturday) 1526 West 23rd (Next to the Pancake Man) Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers central motif of the display. In one, printed in 1908, are the sight isolated buildings which formed the campus. Beside it is a colored picture of the present campus, giving an idea of that "phenomenal growth." In another panel, there are some pages of the university newspapers. They range from the "Observer of Nature," a small monthly publication published by the Natural History Society, to the modern "University Daily Kansan,""serving KU for 76 of its 100 years." RED DOG INN presents Wed., Nov. 17 Girl's Night Out FREE "The Group" Fri. & Sat. Nov. 19 & 20 'The Mercy out' ect from England ARENSBERG'S 819 Mass. VI 3-3470