Conference
Highlights:
Prentice
Stout invited NMEA members to meet at the Kingston Campus of The University
of Rhode Island, “mix old traditions with new experiences, and
enjoy the southeastern New England Coast with NMEA friends, old and
new.”

Left:
Conference mug. Right: Conference Program.
Photographs
by Susan Leach Snyder
Conference coordinators
Sandra Ryack-Bell (MA), Phil McLaren (MA), Mickey Cohen (NY) and many
other Southeastern New England Marine Educators (SENEME) put together
a full schedule. The theme: “The Magic of the Northeast”
was emphasized throughout the conference.
Concurrent
Sessions during the week were listed in a series of “tracks”
which enabled participants to select the presentations which were the
most beneficial to their interests and needs. Tracks included: Narragansett
Bay Symposium, Teacher Training, Classroom Activities, Curriculum, Aquariums
& Museums, Field Trips, Humanities, and Earth Sciences.
The NMEA Board held
its meeting on the day preceding the conference.
The first day of the conference
began with NMEA Committee Meetings and registration. These events were
followed by a World of Water Poster Session, Mr. and Mrs. Fish’s
“Welcome to the Northeast” presentation, and a banquet and
Sea Music Festival. The festival featured sea chanteys and old-fashioned
New England contra dancing.
Day two began with Welcome
Addresses, and a Keynote Address. The Keynote Speaker, David Fierra
(Director of the Water Management Division, Region I, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency), spoke of the importance of combining human resources
to tackle environmental problems. Following the Keynote presentation,
there were Concurrent Sessions, lunch, more Concurrent Sessions, dinner
at the dining hall, and an evening at Mystic Marinelife Aquarium.
Day three was devoted to
half and full day field trips. Full day trips included sailing through
the waters of the Mystic River and Long Island Sound aboard The
Argia (a 56-ft. replica of a 19th-century schooner), visiting Mystic
Seaport and Mystic Marinelife Aquarium, going on a whale watch, visiting
Block Island, and visiting Woods Hole. Half day trips included taking
a trip to Norman Bird Sanctuary, canoeing Great Swamp, learning about
coastal geology of Rhode Island, participating in a research cruise
aboard the Enviro-Lab research vessel, touring the University
of Rhode Island Graduate School of Oceanography, touring the Point Judith
Fisherman’s Cooperative to learn about the fishing industry, visiting
tidepools at Sachuest Point, visiting the Frosty Drew Nature Center,
canoeing the Narrow River, and snorkeling in tidepools at Blacks Point.
At 6:00, the Seafood Sampler of Trash Fish Specialties took place in
the dining hall. The final event of the evening was the NMEA Auction
and Raffle. At the end of the Auction, Gene Williamson (OR) was the
proud owner of the PIKE. He paid $210 for the privilege of keeping the
Pike until the 1988 conference.
The last day of the conference
included Concurrent Sessions and the Stegner Memorial Lecture. Dr. Kenneth
P. Sebens, Director of Northeastern University’s Marine Laboratory
at Nahant, presented “Rediscovering the Gulf of Maine.”
The Stegner Lecture was followed by the presentation of the World of
Water Awards. Sue Gammisch (VA) and Sharon Meeker (NH), organizers of
the World of Water program that year, handed out the 1987 W.O.W
awards to the students and presented a one-year NMEA complimentary
membership to each sponsoring teacher. Next
came the NMEA Annual Membership Meeting. At the meeting, incoming President
Rick Tinnin (TX) received the gavel and tie from outgoing President
Millie Graham (GA), and one of Tinnin’s first acts was to honor
retiring Executive Director Prentice Stout with an Honorary Life Membership
and an unofficial three-foot-long bow tie, autographed by conference
participants. Tinnin stated, “Prentice’s leadership and
stewardship have molded NMEA into a strong, viable organization and
we thank him for that.” The conference ended with Sea & Swap,
and a sunset dinner cruise on Narragansett Bay aboard the Bay Queen.
The conference committee
had thought of everything. They even set up a variety of special tours
for the families of NMEA conference participants during the conference.
These included a trip to Boston, a trip to Scarborough Beach and Sandhill
Cove, and a visit to the Lloyd Center for Environmental Studies on the
Slocums River and Buzzards Bay in Massachusetts.
All in all, more
than 300 people attended this conference, including eleven young scientists
(World of Water winners) and their teachers/mentors, who were guests
of NMEA.