LITTLE THEATRE NEWS According to an announcement made today by Matt O’Shields, Tryon Little Theatre president, three plays will be given during the 1951-52 season. The opener will be “Hay Fever” by Noel Coward. It will be per formed at the Tryon High School auditorium Thursday and Friday, November 15th and 16th. Subse quent plays will be presented in January and later in the Slpring of next year. “The Two Mrs. Car rolls” has been selected for the January presentations and an nouncement will be made of the Spring play at a later date. Four classifications ox memoer ships will be offered this year, ac cording to Mr. O’Shields. Patron members will be entitled to two tickets for each play and member ships are available at $10 each. Patron’s names will be listed in programs. Associate memberships give the holder one ticket for each play and are sold at $3 for the season. Active memberships are available only to persons actively associated with theatre productions as actors or members of the pro duction staff. This classification sells for $1 for the season. Student memberships sell for $1.50 for the three play season. z Craig Thomas is chairman of the membership committee which 's now offering memberships for sale. The Tryon Little Theatre began operations in 1947 and since that time has produced three plays each vear. Personnel for the plays, both on and off stage, has been frawn from Tryon with the excep tion of last year’s “Night Must ^all” presentation when James Hobbs of - the Spartanburg Little Theatre was seen in a leading role. The cast of the season’s opening “Hay Fever” is now in rehearsal under the direction of Mrs. Henry Hart. HOSPITAL NEWS No new patients. Patients dis charged include Mrs. Roy Williams, and baby daughter; and Miss Mary Lockhart of Tryon. Students At Hampton Hampton, Va.—Two Tryon stu dents are among 355 freshmen on the campus of Hampton Institute, in a student body of 1206. They are ‘Fred E. Counts, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Counts; and Stanley C. McClure, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. McClure. Both completed their high school studies at Edmund Embury High. There are approximately 50 North Carolina freshmen on the campus of the “historic seaside institution.” The Bulletin in County $3; out of County, $4 per year. DUKE P,QWER COMPANY sewing, tU Ca/ttt&uU-m