Photos

Ron Koopmann

Joe Rebstock of Naperville was recently named the 2007 Employee of the Year at the Westmont-based McCrone Group, an internationally recognized microanalysis company. Rebstock is also a faculty member at the College of Microscopy, which is a hosting forensic summer camp for junior and senior high school teachers in August.

  

Yellow Pages

By Annie Reed, areed@mysuburbanlife.com
Posted Jul 08, 2008 @ 03:02 PM

The Hillside Strangler, the Gospel of Judas and the Shroud of Turin are a few of the analysis cases that have passed through the doors of McCrone in Joe Rebstock’s tenure with The McCrone Group.

As senior research scientist at the internationally recognized material analysis laboratory in Westmont, Rebstock has worked on some headline-grabbing cases.

Though he often solves problems for big-name companies, most of his job deals with objects on a small scale. The scanning electron microscope Rebstock often works with can see particles 25 to 30 nanometers in size — that is 10 to the negative ninth power. The diameter of a human hair? About 10 to the negative sixth power.

“We’re often referred to as the laboratory’s laboratory,” Rebstock said, because many facilities do not have the capability to go that small.

In June, Rebstock was named McCrone’s Employee of the Year for 2007 for his blend of technical skills, leadership and dedication.

“Joe represents the very best in the materials analysis area,” said Don Brooks, McCrone Group president and CEO.

Rebstock has begun sharing his expertise with others as a faculty member in McCrone’s relatively new microscopy learning center, part of the College of Microscopy.

By 2010, Brooks said the college plans to offer a master’s of microscopy degree, which would be the first in the nation.

This summer, the College of Microscopy is helping some middle and high school science teachers bring forensic instruction into their own classrooms.

College of Microscopy’s Forensic Camp

WHAT To help high school and middle school science teachers develop forensic science lessons to use in their classrooms
WHEN Monday to Friday, Aug. 4 to 8
FOR MORE INFORMATION Call (630) 887-7100 or go to mccrone.com

“Forensics is increasing in popularity (in schools), but there’s no budget for it,” said Tom Schaefer, a Wisconsin high school biology teacher who led a microscopy camp at McCrone earlier in the summer that demonstrated how teachers could use daily household items like Kool-Aid in their experiments. “It’s not what you have, it’s what you know.”

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