There's been some doings lately at the University of Toronto, the fertile soil from whose grand old professional faculties the Clapham Omnibus hath sprung. President Bobby Birgeneau, the superstar expat the school wooed, with much fanfare, from MIT a couple of years back recently accepted the top job at Berkely. This was a tremendous blow to the momentum of a school that has had a pretty good run over the last decade or so, but it looks like the powers that be are prepared to make the best of it. The governing council responded on Monday by naming a rather august interim president: newly retired Supreme Court Justice Frank Iacobucci. Justice Iacobucci, or Iac Daddy as he's known around here, has been an extremely influential fixture on the Canadian jurisprudential scene for the last decade or so (he was on the high court for 13 years, but took a few years to get warmed up) and his moderate, consensus-building approach to some serious, fabric-of-society type issues has made him a favorite of the Clapham Omnibus. We also dig the fact that he was a law & economics scholar before being elevated to the bench and, just as importantly, is reputed to be a Blue Jays fan.
Also over at the ol' U, Toronto Life Magazine (For those of you stateside, think New York Magazine , but written by the staff of one of those free magazines you get on airlines.)did an interesting, if a little fawning, Profile of Roger Martin, the Dean of U of T's Business School.
Why is the Omnibus troubling our readers with all this? well, for one thing, it's our blog and we never promised it was gonna be good. But more importantly, if you're interested in the whole "how is Canada going to compete in the information based global economy" debate, which the Lord Chief Justice Carbunkle is, then U of T, the Country's biggest University, is worth paying attention to as, among many other things, a bellwether for how the country is doing in what Birgeneau himself called "the global brain redistribution". Both Birgeneau and Martin were considered big scores for the University and the Country, albeit Birgeneau considerably more so. Both of them did a good job,although in this case Martin's impact was far more noticeable. Birgeneau took off when a better job came along. Martin seems committed to finishing what he started (i.e. turning Rotman, the once floundering business school, into one of the worlds' top ten). Is there a lesson in all this? probably not. As with most things around the Omnibus, it's true here that you win some, you lose some.