
Meeting Schedule
Grilled chicken w/ red pepper sauce
Vegetarian lasagna
Tossed salad, 2 dressings
Steamed broccoli
Squash medley
Herb roasted potatoes
Rolls and butter
Apple pie
Double chocolate cake
Coffee, tea and water
Cost: $16 for members and $8 for students
7:00 p.m. Lecture
ExComm will meet immediately after the lecture
Reservations: Please email Jim Schmutz at jschmutz@swu.edu with your name and affiliation to make your dinner reservation. Dinner reservations must be made no later than 5 pm on Tuesday, March 10th!
Please Honor Your Reservations!
ABSTRACT
Glitter as Forensic Evidence
Bob Blackledge
Locard's Exchange Principle states, "Every contact leaves a trace." When these traces involve an exchange between a criminal, victim, and crime scene, there is the potential that they may help to establish a common association. Well known examples of such trace or associative evidence are hairs, fibers, paint chips, and broken glass fragments. Although not as well known, we will see that in many respects "glitter" is the ideal contact trace. Today, glitter may be found in every possible variation of cosmetic products. Glitter is also in widespread use as material for arts and crafts; it is used as decorative material on items of apparel, and it is incorporated in numerous clear plastic commercial products. This presentation will tell you what glitter is; how it is made; the many ways it varies; how it may be found and collected from crime scenes and evidence items; and the many ways it can be characterized and distinguished from other glitter samples. The talk will conclude with several brief case histories (including photomicrographs and infrared spectra from the actual evidence) where glitter was important associative evidence.
This Month's Speaker

Bob Blackledge
Robert (Bob) D. Blackledge received his BS (chem.) from The Citadel in 1960 and his MS (chem.) from the University of Georgia in 1962. Starting with the Florida Department of Law Enforcement's Tallahassee Crime Lab in 1971, Bob worked in forensic science for over thirty years. Stops along the way included eleven years with the U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Laboratory-Europe, back during the Cold War when there was a crime lab in Frankfurt, Germany. Bob's final stint was as the Senior Chemist with the Naval Criminal Investigative Service Regional Forensic Laboratory-San Diego from 1989 to 2006. The author or co-author of roughly forty journal articles and book chapters, his interests are wide-ranging but his special passion is trace evidence. Reports of his research have been published in the FBI's Law Enforcement Bulletin, the FBI's Crime Laboratory Digest, the Journal of Forensic Sciences, Science & Justice, Forensic Science International, Forensic Science Review, Microgram Journal, and Analytica Chimica Acta. He is the editor for, "Forensic Analysis on the Cutting Edge: New Methods for Trace Evidence Analysis", published by Wiley-Interscience in Aug. 2007
Linking Science, Art and Poetry
Chemists Celebrate Earth Day (CCED) Haiku contest
The Western Carolinas section of the American Chemical Society (WCACS) is proud to participate in the ACS sponsored Chemists Celebrate Earth Day (CCED) Haiku contest. Specific details on the contest are available through the attached PDF or by directly linking to the ACS Chemists Celebrate Earth Day (CCED) site (www.acs.org/earthday). John Kaup (Clemson University) is the CCED Coordinator for WCACS and specific questions about this contest can be directed to him (jgkaup@clemson.edu). WCACS will accept up to three (3) entries per grade category per school. The grade categories, as indicated on the contest form, are K-2, 3-5, 6-8 and 9-12. Entries must be received by April 3rd to be considered for the national contest. Local section volunteers will judge the submissions based on the criteria indicated in the contest guidelines and will forward one winning entry in each of the four grade categories to the national contest.
PDF File with contest information
Submission should be sent to the following address:
ACS Haiku contest
Attn: John G. Kaup
Clemson University
Department of Chemistry
Clemson SC 29634-0973
Thank You Sean O'Connor
At our November meeting Sean O'Connor resigned as our secretary due to time constraints. Please join me in thanking Sean for his diligent work as our secretary this past year. Alice Claggett has been appointed to fill his unexpired term.
Call for Outstanding Senior Awardees
The Western Carolinas Section of the American Chemical Society will hold its annual Outstanding Seniors Award dinner on April 16, 2009 in the Townes Science Center on the Furman University Campus. We request that you identify your institution's Outstanding Senior Chemistry Major. If your department has not already received a copy of the Awardee Information Form or wants additional information please contact Tim Hanks at tim.hanks@furman.edu or at (864)294-3373. Each Outstanding Senior will receive a certificate and a gift from the Section.
All forms should be submitted by Friday, March 20.
ACS 237th National Meeting Salt Lake City, Utah
On January 12, 2009, registration opened for all attendees to register for the ACS 237th National Meeting to be held in Salt Lake City, UT, March 22-26, 2009. Early registration fees started on January 12, 2009, and will last through February 23, 2009. More information about the meeting is available at www.acs.org
The Webmaster's Plea
Our Webmaster, Dwayne Grassie, would welcome your "press releases" about activities that you believe would be of interest to our section. As he says so eloquently on our web site, "without active members reporting the activities of the section to me there would be no web site because there would be nothing to report." Dwayne can be reached at: MAG-IT@charter.net
ELECTED OFFICIALS 2009
OF
WESTERN CAROLINAS SECTION ACS
Congratulations!

Dianne Earle
2008 SERMACS High School Chemistry Teacher of the Year
Dianne Earle is the 2008 winner of the Outstanding Teaching Award for the Southeast Region of the American Chemical Society! This is a great honor both for Dianne and the Western Carolinas Section. The award will be presented at an Awards Luncheon on Thursday, November 13, in Nashville at the 2008 SERMACS meeting. Congratulations to Dianne!
Dianne has been a very enthusiastic high school chemistry teacher for almost thirty years and the recipient of eight teaching awards, including the Western Carolinas Section Teacher of the Year awards in 1985, 1991, and 2007. In 2003 she was honored as Teacher of the Year by the South Carolina Association of Chemistry Teachers. Dianne was nominated for the Presidential Award for Science Teachers for 2007. Dianne teaches Honors Chemistry I and Advanced Placement Chemistry II at Boiling Springs High School.
She is a member of the National Science Teachers Association, Western Carolinas Section of the American Chemical Society, South Carolina Science Council, Palmetto State Teachers Association, Division of Chemical Education of the ACS, Delta Kappa Gamma Society International, South Carolina Association of Chemistry Teachers, South Carolina Academy of Science, and National Mole Day Foundation. She has served as president of Delta Kappa Gamma and is currently the secretary of SCACT. She has been a Master Teacher at the AP Chemistry Summer Institute at Furman University and was on the 2002 Advanced High School ACS Test Committee.
Comments from Dianne
I feel very honored and humbled to be receiving this award. Correct me if I am wrong, but the last time someone from WCACS won this prestigious honor was in the late 1970s or early 1980s. It is wonderful that the WCACS Section had such confidence in my abilities.
Chemistry affords the opportunity to reignite that sense of wonder in the adolescent child. What other discipline integrates the wonders of the universe with reasoning processes and uses mathematics as a tool?
I hope to teach my students more than facts in chemistry. I want them to see relationships. How is the structure of the atom related to bonding? How is bonding related to properties of matter? How are properties of matter related to the world we see?
SERMACS 2008
Astracts and meeting information can be found on the the meeting website:
http://www.sermacs2008.org/
Western Carolinas Meeting and Speaker Itinerary
2009
| Date |
Speaker |
Title |
Host Site |
| March 17, 2009 |
Robert D. Blackledge |
Glitter as Forensic Evidence |
Southern Wesleyan University
Central, SC
|
| April 16, 2009 |
Awards Night |
College Posters and Section Awards Night |
Furman University, Khort Commons |
| September 15, 2009 |
Donald M. Burland |
How the sausage is made: US Science Policy |
USC Upstate Tentative |
| October 20, 2009 |
TBA |
Green Chemistry and Coal |
TBA |
| November 2009 |
TBA |
TBA |
TBA |
THE SECTION NEEDS YOUR HELP!!!
The Western Carolinas Section of the American Chemical Society urgently needs the help of each of its members in helping us recruit new Section Affiliate members. We would like to request that each member print out or copy the following invitation and present it to as many persons as possible who have an interest in chemistry:
AN INVITATION
|