Washington College Magazine
 
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SUMMER 2001
 
Bell Leads Conference On Coastal Seas

Wayne H. Bell is helping to set the agenda for an international environmental conference.Wayne H. Bell, director of the College's Center for the Environment and Society, will head to Japan this November to help establish international policy to protect the world's enclosed coastal seas.

Bell, with his expertise in environmental, scientific and political matters affecting the Chesapeake Bay, was tapped to serve as program planning co-chair for EMECS 2001, the Fifth International Conference on the Environmental Management of Enclosed Coastal Seas.

The conference is organized by the International EMECS Center in Kobe, established to promote the preservation of Japan's Seto Inland Sea and the world's enclosed coastal seas through international cooperation and information exchange.

The EMECS concept developed in the mid-1980s when environmentalists, researchers and policymakers involved with the Chesapeake Bay realized the Bay restoration program was being implemented with little knowledge of the information, methods and results gained by other estuarine and enclosed coastal sea programs.

Led by the late Dr. Ian Morris, former director of the University of Maryland's Center for Environmental and Estuarine Studies (now the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science), an international group was assembled to examine the strengths and weaknesses of similar estuarine and coastal sea projects.

Concurrently, Governor Toshitami Kaihara of Japan's Hyogo Prefecture had similar concerns while concluding a successful agreement among 17 Japanese jurisdictions for the environmental restoration of the nation's Seto Inland Sea. Kaihara sought to maintain the health of his region's principal coastal sea while networking with other researchers, educators and policymakers involved in the management of enclosed coastal sea environments.

"EMECS grew out of a common desire to learn from the experience of others and share what we learned for the benefit of environmental restoration programs throughout the world," said Bell.

Bell hopes to make undergraduate education in the environmental sciences an important part of the conference's discussions.

"We have discovered that studying the environment is a great way to teach science to undergraduates," said Bell.

"In order to prepare a new generation to tackle the nation's and the world's environmental problems, we have to emphasize education, not only for the public, but for undergraduates interested in becoming environmental scientists, educators and leaders."

Highlights

Commencement

Physics Building Named For Toll

Emeritus Rank Awarded

Music Major Wins Scholarship

Goalie Wins NCAA Scholarship

Internship at Harvard

Board Approves Tuition Increase

Cowperthwait Wins Art Show

Copeland $66 Million Campaign

Half-Million-Dollar Gift Received

College Names New Trustees

Sacks Addresses Creativity

"Fakespeare" at Inner Harbor

Jessie duPont Recognized

Sigma Xi Chapter Established

Men's Tennis Goes for NCAA

Coastal Seas Conference

Helen Gibson Honored

Spooky Science

Prize-winning essay: Sons of the Chesapeake

Schooner Sultana

In Search of History

Reunion Recap

Denton And Flato Elected To Board

Directory To Mail Soon

Tea Party Race Nearly Clinched

Class Notes

Faculty & Staff Achievements

Births and adoptions

Marriages

In Memoriam

Living Ubuntu

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SUMMER 2001