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After the Second World War the Section of Ophthalmic Optics lay within the Department of Applied Physics of the Welsh College of Advanced Technology, always known as 'Welsh CAT'. Cardiff students were particularly active in student politics and had been prime movers behind the formation of the British Optical Students Association (BOSA) in 1962 although as the Optician journal commented, 'this association is more concerned with educational than political affairs...it is mentioned because from students will emerge tomorrow's opto-politicians'.
A past student remembers:
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| Arlbee House, Cardiff |
I still have the invoice for my first year's tuition fees which came to £84 and seven shillings. Two pounds of this was a 'caution deposit' from which laboratory breakages were deducted. We all bought ophthalmoscopes and retinoscopes out of necessity rather than choice. I was lucky in that I got an equipment grant from my local authority. They cost 15 guineas each and a trial frame (which I still use) £3.17.6. The head of the ophthalmic optics section was Mr T.S.P. Tuck who was a physicist with an excellent lecturing style. He taught us physical optics and always lectured without notes. Biological subjects were taught by Mr Williams and Mrs James from the Biology Department.
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| Ron Williams, 1967 |
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| A still from 'The Pirate Optician' (1966) |
For the first term I lived in digs, with the widow of a dispensing optician in north Cardiff. In January 1966 I got a place in the newly opened wing of the Traherne Hall. A number of my fellow optometry students lived there. There was an extremely active social life...we had the Welsh Optical Students Association which arranged lots of events, dances (Eye Balls), bowling, talks by visiting speakers and sporting events with other ophthalmic optics colleges. Our year also produced an 8mm film 'The Optician's Nightmare' [a copy has been deposited in the BOA Museum] produced in two parts and shown at the 1966 and 1967 dinner dances. This featured one staff member, Gerald McGinty, as the 'Pirate Optician'.
I graduated in July 1968 and this was the first degree ceremony held by UWIST so there were students present from previous years who had completed the course and passed the 'graduateship' examinations, but who had had to wait for the grant of university status. For my Pre-registration year I obtained a position at Oxford Eye Hospital where I received a very good training under the guidance of the senior optician, Edward Allen.
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| "The Sheds", 1970s |
In the 1970s the insalubrious accommodation at UWIST, three huts, was popularly known as the 'sheds'.
A past student remembers:
When Roger Anderson from Ulster arrived as an undergraduate in Cardiff in 1983 he was worried:
"Being a naive young boy from Northern Ireland, a place with a very bad press at that time, I wasn't sure how I would be accepted on 'The Mainland' but there was no problem; it was all the Celts against the English!"
In fact most of his class mates seemed to be English, close to half of them female, a fact which surprised him. His personal tutor was Maggie Woodhouse, "one of the best teachers I ever had and someone who was equally at home in a scientific conference or a student night out". He enjoyed studying ocular anatomy and "understanding what a complex and unique organ the eye is. I'm still discovering". Facilities were good for the time though computers didn't really figure in the course anywhere and that was something he had to teach himself at a later date. There were times, however, when his class tried to avoid difficult work:
"Richard Earlam scared us all to death, paricularly in oral exams. His great passions were welding and kit cars; if you could get him onto one of those topics the exam period passed without any questions actually being asked".
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| The department at UWIST, 1985 |
UWIST merged with the University of Wales, Cardiff in 1988. The department is now the School of Optometry and Vision Science at Cardiff University and is the only optometry 'School' in the UK. By 2006 it was taking seventy new students a year. It moved again, this time into new purpose-built premises on Maindy Road, costing £20 million, in Summer 2007.
Find out about studying optometry at Cardiff today.