Dr. Roger Jackson is not only one of Canada’s most heralded athletes and for more than four decades has worked to raise the sights of Canada’s academic, medical and Olympic endeavours.
Jackson graduated from UBC with an MPE in 1967 after having become nationally recognized as a rower with UBC’s Eights and UBC’s Pairs, combining with teammate George Hungerford in the latter to win an unexpected gold at the 1964 Tokyo Olympics. He was Canada’s flag-bearer for the 1968 Olympics continuing to row for Canada at the 1972 Olympic Games.
With his gold in 1964, he and Hungerford were the toast of the nation while being awarded the Lou Marsh Trophy as the Canadian Athlete of the year – with Rick Hanson the only other UBC athlete to receive this prestigious honour.
Roger went on to doctoral studies at the University of Wisconsin to achieve a PhD in Biodynamics. He then undertook a year of post-doctoral study at the University of Copenhagen. A year later, he represented Canada at the Munich Olympic Games, marking the end of his career as an Olympic competitor and the beginning of a new chapter in his life.
Jackson became involved with the Olympic movement as he co-ordinated the 1976 Olympics’ Game Plan as director of Sport Canada. He was chairman of the advisory board for the 1988 Calgary Olympics and was president of the Canadian Olympic Association from 1982 until 1990.
Roger continued his quest in physical education and Kinesiology as he became dean of the Faculty of Kinesiology at the University of Calgary. He is also the founder and Director of the University of Calgary Sport Medicine Centre, which not only bears his name but has grown in influence and comprehensiveness.
Dr. Jackson has a most impressive list of honours and acknowledgements including: the BC and UBC Sports Halls of Fame, UBC Alumni Achievement Award, Canada’s Sports Hall of Fame, the Canadian Olympic Hall of Fame, the IOC Olympic Order and the Order of Canada. In 2005, he was appointed Chief Executive Officer of Own the Podium 2010.
Alumni, UBC
UBC’s Physical Education (Kinesiology) faculty has been the career launching pad for many well-known coaches, teachers and athletes. Reid Mitchell proved to be a good example in addition to being one of the originals.
In fact Reid not only was a member of UBC’s inaugural Physical Education graduating class of 1949 but also the winner of the 1949 Bobby Gaul Award for his spirit, leadership and outstanding play with the basketball Thunderbirds. It was the previous year, 1948, that Reid played for the UBC team that won the Canadian basketball Olympic qualifying tournament. UBC’s victory meant Reid and his ‘Bird teammates, coached by Physical Education director Bob Osborne, were Canada’s basketball representatives at the 1948 London Olympics.
Following graduation Reid taught and coached at West Vancouver High School (his father was a long serving teacher and principal at the school) then in 1959 returned to UBC to teach in Physical Education. He would be here at UBC the same time as a fellow West Vancouver physical education teacher and the future director of UBC’s Women’s Athletics, Marilyn Pomfret.
Dr. Mitchell continued his significant teaching career at UBC and on many occasions helped young students launch their careers while serving as a role model. He was also an integral component of the BC High School Boys Basketball Association as it grew in the 1950s and 1960s, serving as its president.
Reid Mitchell, one of UBC and West Vancouver’s “icons”, passed away in 2012 and in a recent article in the North Shore “Outlook”, columnist Len Corben tells the entertaining story of how Reid in 1956 was the founder of West Vancouver High School’s distinctive tartan colours and its school nickname.
Written by Fred Hume, UBC Historian
Alumni, UBC
1993 Kinesiology and Education graduate Manny Sobral has taken a most unique path among those who have graduated from UBC. Born in Spain, Manny’s family emigrated to Canada when he was 5 years old. At age 13 in an attempt to shed weight, he started boxing at the gym at Hastings & Main. By age 20, as an amateur boxer, he had won five gold medals representing Canada at international competitions. He was three times Canadian Amateur Champion and had represented Canada at the 1988 Olympics in Seoul, another of UBC’s unheralded Olympians. His 126 amateur bouts included 40 knockouts and only nine losses.
At age 25 as a teacher in the Burnaby school system and later in Vancouver, Manny turned professional and between 1996 and 1998 was Canadian Super Welterweight champion. During the 1990s he fought some of the world’s best welterweights and at one time was ranked in the top 10 in the world.
In 2002 at age 34, Manny retired from pro boxing with a 29 – 2 record and in addition to his Masters of Education degree co-founded Westcoast Promotions which has successfully promoted professional and amateur boxing events on the lower mainland. He has also promoted athletic charity events as well as World Police and Fire Fighter Games boxing events.
Boxing was and is perhaps Manny’s first love but his teaching is right up there as well as he says “ . . . I love and find (it) fulfilling.” In the words of the president of Boxing Canada “(Manny) is an example of how sport can shape the individual.”
Today Manny, through his sports experience and personality, is referred to as a successful esteem builder and educator of youth at risk.
Written by Fred Hume, UBC Historian
Alumni, UBC

Ken Winslade is one of UBC’s all-time basketball greats and is also considered one of the lower mainland’s best city administrators.
A native of New Westminster, Ken graduated from UBC Physical Education as the top student of his 1960 class. Not only a top student during his five years at UBC but also an All-Star guard with both the UBC Jayvees and Thunderbirds. In 1959/60 Winslade was labelled a “demon on defense” yet emerged as the Western Canada scoring champion earning league MVP honours. The following season the UBC captain was again both scoring champion and league MVP, compiling twice as many votes as his nearest rival.
The ‘Birds these two years fashioned a combined 23-1 record with Winslade winning the 1961 Bobby Gaul Award as UBC’s male athlete of the year.
Since attaining his Masters Degree from UBC, specializing in recreation, Ken has been a high school teacher and coach, the Recreation Director for the City of New Westminster, the city’s Administrator of Parks and Recreation and the City Administrator for New Westminster.
Ken has also been an active volunteer with the BC High School Boys Basketball Association serving over 20 years as its Tournament Championship Director and as Assn. Executive Director.
In 1996 Winslade was inducted into the UBC Sports Hall of Fame and in 2006 inducted into the Basketball BC Hall of Fame.
Written by Fred Hume, UBC Historian
Not many UBC Kinesiology graduates have pursued a career in baseball and be honoured with induction into the Canada Baseball Hall of Fame. In fact only one KIN grad fits that complete description and he is 1968 graduate John Haar.
As a student at UBC Haar can be considered one of the Blue & Gold’s greatest athletes. He was a record-setting T-Bird soccer player on some great UBC teams. As a Varsity football player he was pursued by the BC Lions and actually received a contract offer to play for the Dallas Cowboys. But Haar’s best sport was baseball as he played on UBC’s baseball team during the 1960s under coach Frank Gnup.
After winning the Bobby Gaul Award in 1968 Haar was one of the few Thunderbirds of the era to pursue a professional baseball career playing in both the Yankee and Giants organizations. This evolved into coaching and the establishing of Canada’s National Baseball Institute which helped launch the professional careers of several local baseball players.
In 1999 Haar was inducted into the UBC Sports Hall of Fame, later the Burnaby Hall of Fame and in 2007 received induction into the Canada Baseball Hall of Fame located in St. Thomas, Ontario. John remains a baseball lifer, it’s in his blood and he has many interesting stories to tell. He continues to serve baseball in his early 70s as a major league scout.
Written by Fred Hume, UBC Historian
Alumni, UBC
UBC’s Physical Education faculty has been home to many of BC’s best basketball players. One such student, a graduate in Education with a 1973 Physical Education (Kinesiology) degree, is Joanne Sargent. While playing for the Blue & Gold between 1968/69 and 1972/73 she starred on three Canadian champion teams, two of those UBC teams are inductees in the UBC Sports Hall of Fame and the Basketball BC Hall of Fame. That is three national champions in four Varsity years! Joanne also was a member of Canada’s national team from 1970 through 1976 competing for Canada in the 1976 Olympics. In fact, in the 1976 Olympics, she set an Olympic Games basketball record for most assists in a single game, a record that stood for twenty years.
For more than ten years after graduation Joanne played Senior ‘A’ basketball winning several Canadian championships, a Canada Games team gold in 1975 and more MVP awards (a reported eleven) than she can recall. Moreover, she and her teams won three more gold medals at Masters and Seniors Tournaments in 2005, 2009 and 2010.
Basketball has been an integral part of Joanne’s life in addition to careers as a television Production Assistant and a TV News Director Assistant. As a player her hard work and intense competitiveness have helped inspire others and has translated into her induction as an athlete into the Okanagan Sports Hall of Fame, the UBC Sports Hall of Fame, the Basketball BC Hall of Fame and in 2014, the BC Sports Hall of Fame.
Written by Fred Hume, UBC Historian
Alumni, UBC
One of BC’s outstanding athletes of the 1970s and 1980s, P.E. (Kinesiology) alumna, Erminia Russo has forged an impressive career in the sport of volleyball. Erminia graduated from high school in Kelowna and in her first year on UBC’s volleyball team, she was a starter who quickly evolved into a three-time Canada West All-Star and All-Canadian. She was considered by her UBC coaches to be the team leader in addition to offensive statistical leader. According to coach Sandy Silver, “Erminia was strong in all aspects of the game . . . had a winning attitude and excellent poise.” In 1985 Erminia made Canada’s national team and played for Canada for eight years. According to Silver, she was “the quarterback of the team,” an experience climaxed by her appearance in the 1986 Olympics. All this as she completed her BPE at UBC in 1989. During the 1990s Erminia played professional volleyball in France, was one of Canada’s top beach volleyball players and embarked upon a coaching career. For two years she coached the University of Western Ontario volleyball team then from 1997/98 through 2000 was the successful head coach of UBC’s women’s team. She took UBC to the CIS finals in 1998 winning both Canada West and CIS Coach of the Year honours that year. In 1999 Erminia was honoured with the UBC Alumni Association Outstanding Young Alumnus Award and in 2007 was inducted into the UBC Sports Hall of Fame. Now married to former UBC football player and CFL coach Noel Thorpe, Erminia lives in Montreal where she continues to promote the game of volleyball and can be seen on television as an articulate Canadian volleyball analyst.
Written by Fred Hume, UBC Historian
Alumni, UBC
Dean MacKinnon, UBC Physical Education graduate of 1966, took his degree to the classroom teaching in the Vancouver school system until his recent retirement. But he is perhaps better known for his outstanding 40 year career as a local basketball referee.
While a student, Dean played basketball under coach Hugh Marshall at John Oliver high school then attending UBC played on the Thunderbird rugby team. He was a pretty fair athlete which is required when refereeing high school basketball games, a career he began around age 30. Dean was an official at high school provincial championships, university contests plus refereed at Canada Summer games.
Later he became more involved as a referee for wheelchair basketball competitions and was named the sports’ Official Of The Year in 2000, 2005 and 2010. In 2003 he was recognized nationally with the “Wink” Willcox Award for his stellar work as an official in basketball, including the Wheelchair variety.
In 2013 Dean joined another UBC alumnus Tim Frick as inductees into the Basketball BC Hall of Fame.
Written by Fred Hume, UBC Historian
Alumni, UBC
Physical Education graduate Clyde Griffith is a pioneer on two fronts: he is among the first graduates of UBC’s Recreation program while at the same time was one of the students who in the late 1950s came to UBC from the West Indies. This unique period of UBC history – from the mid 1950s through the mid 1960s – saw a primarily white campus introduced for the first time to Caribbean students who numbered approximately 200. These were the pioneering and accomplished “international” students who spawned UBC’s International House.
Clyde, from Trinidad, was part of this unique period, first enrolling in Medicine then realizing physical education and recreation were his passions. Also a noted musician, Clyde graduated from UBC in 1964 – he was International Student of the Year in 1962 – and quickly found his fellow alumni not only assisted his career but became life-long friends.
Griffith had a distinguished career in recreation as he was the first Recreation Director for the cities of Delta and Surrey and for over 20 years was Recreation Consultant for the BC provincial government. He was involved in many special projects including the Canada Summer and Winter Games and Commonwealth Games.
Griffith, who has a Masters in Community Development, also contributed to the community through authoring “The Black History Resource Guide,” documenting the contribution of black pioneers in BC.
Clyde has received many honours, among them recognition for his work with UBC’s International House and inclusion in “Who’s Who in Black Canada” and says his “ . . . driving desire is to give something back to my community.”
Written by Fred Hume, UBC Historian
Alumni, UBC
Carole Bishop, born and raised in Vancouver, graduated from UBC with a BPE (Kinesiology) in 1973. However it is her career as an athlete and as a clinical psychologist that frames this UBC alumna as somewhat unique.
In her profession she has been an adjunct professor at UBC, an associate professor at SFU and the co-ordinator of graduate clinical psychology at Vancouver General Hospital.
In her athletic life, Carole was a heralded volleyball player and coach. In 1966 at age 16, Carole became the youngest Canadian to play at the international level. She didn’t play for UBC but while attending this university did play for Vancouver Senior ‘A’ club teams winning ten national volleyball championships in addition to being a member of Canada’s national team through 1978. With the national team, Carole competed in the Olympics, Pan-American games, World championships and North American championships. In European tournaments she was the MVP in 1975 and 1976, the latter year she was ranked the fourth best setter in the world.
Carole also coached club teams to four Vancouver city titles and even coached gymnastics, winning a Vancouver championship in 1981.
To this day Carole remains a friend to UBC and is an inductee in the BC Sports Hall of Fame.
Written by Fred Hume, UBC Historian
Alumni, UBC