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SUNY Maritime's Dr. Richard Burke & UNO Dr. Bahadir Inozu Dr. Bahadir "Baha" Inozu looks like your typical, distinguished college pro- fessor: introspective, intelligent and congenial. Except for the fact that he bought a new suit out of dire need, he arrived at SUNY Maritime College last month with only three days of survival supplies-the most he could gather, as he evacuated from New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina. Dr. Inozu heads the University of New Orleans (UNO)'s School of Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering, but, because of Katrina, is a visiting pro- fessor at Maritime. He describes the waterfront campus as "a quiet and friendly place," and the support he receives from Dr. Richard Burke, Chairman of Maritime's Department of Engineering and other faculty "helps make the unknown less difficult." Dr. Inozu's journey to Maritime first began by way of a flight to Houston, then to stay with friends in Goshen, Indiana. "Once the flooding took place, it became shockingly apparent that it would be awhile until I could return." Dr. Inozu, still disheartened by the dam- age to his condo complex, especially "the irreplaceable and beautiful bayou trees," is grateful to be alive and knows of countless other painful losses of life, property and upheaval among his fellow Louisianans. Inozu found his way to friends in New York and solicited the aid of Dr. Bulent Yener, associate professor, Department of Computer Science at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI). Dr. Yener and his team helped Inozu set up an emergency website for UNO's Naval Architecture students at the Computer Science Department of RPI, so that they could get in contact with him. Many UNO faculty members lost everything, while Inozu fortunately had his laptop with him. With the generosi- ty of RPI's servers and resources, he began immediately to communicate online in an effort to find his displaced students. UNO set up a "war room" at Louisiana State University's Baton Rouge campus, employing a web site, phone bank, laptops and cell phones in a furious bid to keep UNO alive. About one-third of UNO's Lakefront campus was damaged by Katrina. UNO officials hope to offer a mini-session of classes by December. UNO is offering about 80 percent of its courses online. About 800 displaced students showed up for a rally For successful operation even in extreme conditions, you rely on a skilled crew and solid technology. When you can depend on them, missions are accomplished as required, on schedule. An offshore support vessel is a large-scale investment. That is why it must be reliable and operationally dependable, and it must repay the investment as forecast. And that is why it must also cope with any conditions. Azipod propulsion means maximum operational reliability for offshore support vessels. It provides superb powered control, even in conditions where other offshore support vessels steer a course for a sheltering harbour. Over one million hours of Azipod operation with record on-hire time and unsurpassed proven reliability. www.abb.com/marine Reliable power with superb control Circle 200 on Reader Service Card Gulf of Mexico Resources Guidebook MARITIME REPORTER AND ENGINEERINGNEWS November 2005 Gulf Coast Resources Guide 61 Southern Hospitality in the Bronx MR NOVEMBER 2005 #8 (57-64).qxd 10/28/2005 9:59 AM Page 61