
Alumni of Influence
University College Alumni of Influence Award
The University College Alumni of Influence Award recognizes our diverse alumni and the exceptional ways in which they impact the College, the University of Toronto and our communities.
2018

Karen Mock is an educator, psychologist and human rights consultant, specializing in equity and diversity issues and intercultural/interfaith dialogue. Having developed the first course in multicultural teacher education in Canada and served as senior policy advisor for the development and delivery of Ontario’s Inclusive Education Strategy, she is widely acknowledged as one of the foremost Canadian authorities on multicultural/anti-racist education.
In 2001, she was appointed executive director and chief executive officer of the Canadian Race Relations Foundation, a federal Crown corporation, after serving for 12 years as national director of the League for Human Rights (ADL) of B’nai Brith Canada. Prior to that, she taught at the university level for 14 years. Mock has been qualified by the Canadian courts and human rights tribunals as an expert in human rights, discrimination, anti-Semitism, hate crime and hate group activity. She has received many awards and honours for her work, and was recently named a member of the Order of Canada.

Arlene Perly Rae was a long-time member of the United Way Board and executive committee, founding the Success by Six program. She is currently a board member of the National Reading Campaign and the Confederation Centre of the Arts in Charlottetown. She has served on the boards of Sistema, McClelland & Stewart Ltd. and the Stratford Festival, and was a steering committee member for the national Campaign Against Child Poverty. As co-chair of the YWCA’s Elm Centre Capital Campaign, she helped raise $15 million to create 300 permanent housing units for women and women-led families in Toronto, including 50 Indigenous families.
For many years, Perly Rae was the children’s book reviewer for the Toronto Star. She wrote the award-winning book Everybody’s Favourites: Canadians Talk About Books That Changed Their Lives, and has adapted two operas --The Magic Flute and Petruschka -- for the Royal Conservatory of Music, helping to introduce children to the orchestra.

As former chief executive officer of Prime Restaurant Holdings, John Rothschild led a management team that built renowned restaurant brands such as East Side Mario’s, Casey’s and Bier Markt. With more than 65,000 employees, the company became an industry leader in the restaurant business. Currently, he is a board member at CARA, which acquired Prime Restaurant Holdings in 2013.
Rothschild has also been extensively involved with University College, having spent many years as a mentor in the college’s Career Mentorship Program. He has chaired the committee that selects U of T’s Moss Scholar -- the University’s highest honour for undergraduates. He currently sits on the boards of several Canadian companies and has won numerous honours and awards, including the 2003 Ernst & Young Ontario Entrepreneur of the Year, and the Ivey Business School’s 2008 Distinguished Alumni Award.

A leading scholar of North American politics and society, Mildred Schwartz’s work has effectively established the study of Canadian politics as a central concern to Canadian and American social research. At the beginning of her career, she served as a lead investigator in the first election survey of Canadian voters. In the 1960s, Schwartz began to probe questions that remain important to researchers and citizens today, such as: Are Canadians divided in significant ways along the lines of region and language?
In 2003, Schwartz won the Citation for Distinguished Scholarship in Canadian Studies from the Association for Canadian Studies in the United States. In 2010, the American Political Science Association created the Mildred A. Schwartz Lifetime Achievement Award that recognizes scholars who have made significant contributions to the study of Canadian politics throughout their career. Schwartz is currently a Professor Emerita at University of Illinois at Chicago and Visiting Scholar at New York University.

Ivan Semeniuk has translated his passion for science to a career as a journalist and educator. As the science correspondent for the Globe and Mail, he has distinguished himself as a national voice on all things related to the world of science. His work requires a breadth and depth of scientific knowledge and an ability to present information in a way that resonates with readers.
Prior to his career in journalism, Semeniuk served in a variety of roles at the Ontario Science Centre, Discovery Channel, New Scientist, and Nature Publishing Group. He has received numerous awards and honours, including being named the 2015 Laureate of the Sanofi Pasteur Medal of Excellence in Health Research Journalism. In 2016, he was awarded the Fleming Medal and Citation from the Royal Canadian Institute for Science for his outstanding reporting and work to educate people about science-related topics.

As a highly skilled and accomplished entertainment lawyer for some of Hollywood’s most well-known celebrities, William Sobel is internationally respected for his ethics and honesty in guiding his clients' artistic careers. Over the past three decades, he has represented some of the world’s most famous musicians, including Michael Jackson, Aretha Franklin, Prince, Dolly Parton, Bon Jovi and Miley Cyrus -- to name but a few. He has also expanded creative rights for film artists through his representation of director Martin Scorsese and award-winning screen talent, such as Mickey Rourke, Salma Hayek, Kurt Russell, Val Kilmer and Whoopi Goldberg. His behind-the-scenes work continually ensures that artists' interests are represented and their contributions well-protected.

Well-known for her work as an author and award-winning literary journalist, Edna Staebler gained national renown for her cookbook series, Food That Really Schmecks, featuring Mennonite recipes, stories and anecdotes unique to the Kitchener-Waterloo region. In addition to her cookbooks, Staebler was a regular contributor to a number of publications including Macleans, The Toronto Star, Canadian Living, and Saturday Night. She also published various other books that explored unique communities and people from across Canada. Staebler served as president of the Canadian Federation of University Women from 1943-45, and was a member of the Toronto Women’s Press Club, the Media Club of Toronto, the Canadian Author’s Association and the Writers’ Union of Canada. She was made a member of the Order of Canada in 1996.

Award-winning actor, writer and comedian, Paul Sun-Hyung Lee is one of Canada’s most successful and inspirational talents. He is the star of the CBC comedy series, Kim’s Convenience, which originally began as a play debuting in 2011 at Toronto’s Fringe Festival. The play continued to attract a great deal of attention with showings in Halifax, Toronto, Montreal and New York. Lee plays Mr. Appa Kim, both onstage and onscreen, a role for which he won the Toronto Theatre Critics’ Best Actor Award in 2012, and Best Actor in a Comedy Series by the Canadian Academy of Screen and Television in 2017. He has also been nominated twice for the Dora Mavor Moore Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male in a Principal Role.

Dr. Laurence Watkins’ medical focus has centred on education around cardiovascular disease prevention. He has been a vocal advocate for health disparities across the United States and the Caribbean and has served as a consultant to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, authoring the section on Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease of the Secretary’s Task Force on Black and Minority Health. He was also a member of the co-ordinating committee for the National Cholesterol Education Program from 1985 to 1995, helping to develop guidelines for lipid management. While Watkins retired from clinical practice in 2016, he has continued working with various agencies to help improve heart health in the Caribbean.

Jim Williamson is a long-time contributor and producer behind some of Canada’s most well-known television programs. He began his career with CTV’s Canada AM program and, from there, moved to the CBC where he worked on The Journal, The National, and Disclosure. For several years he was an executive producer in documentary production, and has more recently worked in the current affairs division as executive producer of CBC’s The Fifth Estate, an award-winning investigative journalism show. In 2010, the Governor General presented the program with the Michener Award for meritorious public service journalism. In 2014, the show also won an Emmy Award for its documentary Made in Bangladesh. He has personally won nine Gemini and Canadian Screen Awards. Williamson is also a past member of the UC Career Mentorship Program, and has been a speaker at the college’s public lecture series.
2017

Diana Bennett is an artist, former teacher and arts administrator who has worked to establish the role of the arts in Ontario throughout her long and distinguished career. A former senior executive with TVOntario, she has sat on a number of corporate and volunteer boards, including the University of Toronto Art Centre (now the Art Museum), the Toronto Arts Foundation, Canada Publishing, the Toronto Stock Exchange and the Granite Club. A member of the Ontario Society of Artists, she works in mixed media and sculpture and is represented by Walnut Contemporary gallery in Toronto.

Gerald Caplan has had a distinguished and varied career in politics and international development. A former associate professor in the Department of History and Philosophy of Education at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at U of T, he served as director of development agency Cuso’s Canadian volunteer program in Nigeria. Caplan led the advocacy office for the City of Toronto’s public health department before becoming national director of the New Democratic Party of Canada. He is the author of The Dilemma of Canadian Socialism, The Betrayal of Africa and Rwanda: The Preventable Genocide. He speaks widely about African development issues and genocide and his writing has appeared in the Walrus, the Toronto Star, and the Globe and Mail.