Lost 2 —4 ✓National Glass II ✓Yorkshire General II Won 4 —2 Won 6 —0 ✓Rowntrees Lost 14-44 ✓Armstrongs II ✓Clifton Hospital II Won 4 —2 Regular team members were C. A. Clegg (Board 1 ), I. P. Heavens (Board 2), C. W. Maher (Board 3), J. Demades (Board 4), W. J. Adler, 1. R. Ross, R. E. Craig. Also played: P. M. Brooker, J. H. Larcombe, P. S . Spencer, K. C. Dodd, E. J. Atha, S. D. M. Yates. Final League position: 8th out of 14 teams.
SUMMER TERM This term the Inter-House Competition was held and this was won by FINALS SEMI-FINALS 1st ROUND Manor Dronfield Grove Manor Dronfield 1 Temple School House Rise Queen's
MANOR Temple Temple
1 Queen's
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C.A.C.
ORIENTEERINNG `Quality rather than quantity' sums up the present state of orienteering. Christopher Hirst has continued to enhance his reputation in orienteering circles with some remarkable runs in classes way above his own age group, and high spots of the past year must have been his selection for British Junior Tours of Norway and Denmark during the summer of 1974, and West Germany in June 1975. Others come and go, and of these Charles Brown deserves congratulations for winning the British Orienteering Federation's Gold Award. D.H.H.
THE BRITISH JUNIOR ORIENTEERING TOUR, 1974 The British Junior Tour, specifically designed to give young orienteers an opportunity for running on the Continent, spanned a period of 19 days this year, leaving on July 15th for Norway, with the competition being the six-day international, the `Sorlandsgaloppen', and returning from Denmark on August 2nd. The group of boys and girls which I was lucky enough to join consisted of 30 orienteers from all over Britain: from Newcastle, Bristol, London, Swansea, Kilmarnock, Gordonstoun and 33