posted on July 30: McMaster bids warm farewell to Harvey Weingarten
 
                    
                [img_inline align=”right” src=”http://padnws01.mcmaster.ca/images/Harveyfarewell.jpg” caption=”Harvey Weingarten, President George”]His farewell was bittersweet.
Harvey, I know that you keep telling me that no one is 
irreplaceable, but I doubt that you will be replaced.
Those remarks, by associate vice-president academic Fred Hall, 
summed up the feelings of many people who attended a 
farewell reception for University provost and vice-president 
academic Harvey Weingarten earlier this month.
Weingarten becomes 
href=”http://www.fp.ucalgary.ca/unicomm/news/newpres.htm”>president of the University of Calgary on Sept. 1. (See Daily 
News story on 
href=”http://dailynews.mcmaster.ca/story.cfm?id=925″>his appointment.)
People come along in times of need. McMaster needed Harvey 
Weingarten in 1996 and he helped lead us through difficult times 
to some truly outstanding achievements, remarked President 
Peter George. Now the University of Calgary is in need — and 
Harvey will rise to the occasion, I have no doubts.”
George called the day a bittersweet one for McMaster. “This is a 
day of mixed emotions. On the one hand there's a sense of 
pride, so proud of one of our own, one of McMaster's best, being 
recognized as just that and recruited elsewhere because of his 
enormous capabilities, while at the same time there's a bit of an 
empty and perhaps even an envious feeling, that another 
university will reap in the future the benefits of Harvey's wisdom, 
his intellectual spirit and his passion for university life,” 
remarked President George.
Weingarten joined McMaster's department of psychology in 
1979. He has taught both undergraduate and graduate students 
in a number of areas of psychology including behavioural 
neuroscience and the controls of eating and its disorders. His 
research has earned him international renown and numerous 
grants.
He served as chair of the department for three years before 
being named dean of science in 1995. A year later, he took up 
the post of provost and vice-president academic, where he was 
responsible for all academic programs and the 1,100 full-time 
and sessional teaching staff within the University's 49 academic 
departments and six Faculties.
During his term in office, he led the institution through a period of 
significant academic and administrative change and institutional 
renewal. He was instrumental in the development of several key University documents such as 
href=”http://www.mcmaster.ca/pres/dir3.htm”>Directions (I, II, 
and III),  a planning document developed by senior 
administrators which set out the academic priorities and 
purpose of the institution and defined the University's mission, 
vision and goals.
During his five years in office, Weingarten set McMaster on a  All republished articles must be attributed in the following way and contain links to both the site and original article: “This article was first published on McMaster News Archive. Read the original article.” 
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course for continued excellence in research and scholarship, 
established principles and priorities for resource allocation, 
supported new programs and initiatives for institutional renewal, 
helped to create a more student-focused university and 
developed an 
                
         
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