Students working in Narayan Hosmane’s lab get hands-on experience and a new title: ‘cancer researcher’
Good Chemistry By Tom Parisi The adjacent laboratories on the third floor of Faraday Hall are cluttered with flasks, beakers, vials, nozzles, funnels, old centrifuges and newer high tech, digital-dial equipment. They are typical college-level chemistry labs, but as Lauren Kuta will tell you, what happens here is far from ordinary. Kuta, of Carol Stream, is a junior at NIU, yet she works alongside graduate students and post-docs. She takes direction from the professor who taught her introductory chemistry course. At the course’s end, he invited her to become part of his research team. The invitation was an honor by any measure. Just about every student in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry knows, or knows of, Professor Narayan Hosmane. Good-humored and gregarious, you can often hear him coming down the hall. And he’s the type of professor who students don’t forget. At the start of some classes and to the delight of students, Hosmane pays homage to the periodic table, recognizing its role in forming the basis of nature. Even in large lecture halls, he knows many students by name. His lessons spark both laughter and learning, and he encourages students to call him on his cell phone with their questions.
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Northern Now