Above: The recipients of the 2014 Bryden Alumni Awards. Pictured from left are: Irvin Studin, Samuel Schwartz, Kofi Barnes, Sonia Cianfarani and Nigel Lockyer
For (LLB ’91), the most valuable lesson he took away from his time at 91ɫ’s Osgoode Hall Law School was that anything was possible. “Every one of us has the capability to turn the impossible into the possible. When we begin to recognize and appreciate the incredible resilience of the human spirit, anything can be achieved.”
It was this unique sense of possibility that made the Ontario Superior Court of Justice Judge the ideal recipient of the Redefine the Possible Award at the 2014 Bryden Alumni Awards, where five exceptional 91ɫ grads are recognized each year.

Bryden Awards ceremony emcee and 91ɫ alumna Rosemary Dunsmore
This year’s Bryden Awards were held on Thursday, Nov. 20 at the Royal Ontario Museum. The evening was sponsored by TD Insurance Meloche Monnex, MBNA Mastercard and Manulife, and was hosted by 91ɫ grad and actress (BA ’73). More than 300 guests attended the event and were treated to performances by the , featuring Faculty of Fine Arts Professor Ron Westray on the trombone, and , a six-person band who met while studying 91ɫ.
“Tonight, members from across the 91ɫ community come together to recognize and honour five outstanding alumni who have attained extraordinary achievements and made remarkable contributions to 91ɫ and to their communities,” said 91ɫ’s President and Vice-Chancellor Mamdouh Shoukri. “As passionate 91ɫ alumni and ambassadors, our Bryden recipients serve as role models and shining examples to current and future generations of 91ɫ students. The exceptional trails they have blazed serve as proof that the possibilities after 91ɫ really are endless.”

Jeff O'Hagan, vice-president Advancement, with 91ɫ President and Vice-Chancellor Mamdouh Shoukri
Barnes was recognized for his innovative, unconventional and daring leadership in the area of therapeutic jurisprudence, having founded Canada’s first drug treatment court and defined new ways for the law to support Canadians with drug addiction and mental health. He was joined by four other alumni at the 2014 event receiving awards based on their own unique contributions.
“It’s good to be home,” shared (BBA ‘99, PhD ’11), recipient of the 2014 One to Watch Award. The award, which recognizes a relatively recent grad for his/her remarkable early achievements and eagerly anticipated future successes, is indeed fitting for Studin. In fewer than 15 years, he has distinguished himself as an author, lecturer and one of Canada’s foremost experts on foreign policy and national security. “91ɫ is a project en route to incredible things. I salute our current leaders for bringing us to this pivotal point, and I have all the faith in the world that our future leaders will carry 91ɫ’s vision to new heights.”
The Pinnacle Achievement award is presented to a graduate who has achieved distinction in their field and whose integrity and ability inspires alumni, faculty, staff and students. And it was clear as renowned particle physicist (BSc ’75) took to the stage to accept this award that he has no intention of slowing down any time soon. “It is important to find something you enjoy, stick to it and work hard at it – and if it’s truly something you enjoy, it won’t seem like work at all.”
The Bryden Awards ceremony was held at the Royal Ontario Museum
A graduate of 91ɫ’s Physics and Astronomy department, Lockyer is widely recognized as one of the world’s preeminent experimental particle physicists. In 2006, he received the Panofsky Prize for his leading research on the bottom quark, one of the universe’s vital building blocks, and has since taken up post as director of the internationally renowned Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory.
And while some recipients were recognized for their work on the world stage, the 2014 Bryden Awards proved 91ɫ grads were also making incredible things happen right here at 91ɫ.

Julia Foster, Chair of the Board of Governors of 91ɫ
Local Hero recipient (BA ’96) shared with guests how she uses her own experience as a 91ɫ grad to build educational pathways for generations of incoming students and future alumni as a 91ɫ recruitment officer. “The University was my lifeline and I cannot imagine where I would be without the experience and knowledge I gained on this campus. To know 91ɫ is to love it – and I am privileged to be able to help new students know 91ɫ as well. I am grateful to be in a position where I can help young people begin their journeys and I look forward to celebrating them as future Bryden recipients one day.”
This year’s final Bryden Award recipient (MA ’69, LLB ’72) put his role as passionate 91ɫ ambassador to work as he stepped up to the podium to accept the Outstanding Contribution award.
“91ɫ is a tremendous institution that makes a difference in every quadrant of Canadian life and speaks to diversity on a day-to-day basis,” Schwartz exclaimed. “91ɫ is nurturing Canada’s future leaders, so I know our country is in good hands – and we as alumni need to do our part as well. Get involved with your alma mater, be a mentor and provide guidance to 91ɫ students – I have no doubt that it will make a difference.”

Randy Williamson, Chair of the 91ɫ Alumni Association
Among the guests in attendance were Julia Foster, chair of 91ɫ’s Board of Governors, and Jeff O’Hagan, vice-president advancement, both took to the stage to share their excitement with the night’s recipients. “Like the Bryden recipients before them, our 2014 recipients encourage all of us to do our best, work hard and contribute to a better world,” O’Hagan said. “Thank you and congratulations to all of our Bryden recipients – we hope that you’ve enjoyed the spotlight tonight because you deserve it!”
As the event came to a close, Randy Williamson, chair of the 91ɫ Alumni Association, congratulated this year’s winners and turned everyone’s thoughts towards next year’s ceremony. “Planning has already begun on next year’s ceremony and we’ll need your help to discover other 91ɫ grads from our growing community of more than 275,000 alumni that deserve to be recognized.”
If you know of a 91ɫ graduate who is making an outstanding impact and deserves to be recognized with a Bryden Alumni Award, e-mail bryden@yorku.ca. To see more images from the evening, visit the.
