The following was created by Trey Walker. The lab was titled "Conservation of Energy." One of the things that has truly amazed me is the time students are willing to devote to these lab covers. One of the all time greats at producing stupendous artwork that must have taken oodles of time was Trey Walker. In the cover shown below, Trey used layers of cut cardboard to generate a three dimensional portrait. Fortunately, the nose is only half an inch off the page, so the scanner was able to take in most of the detail without major distortion. Trey's use of artforms other than standard pen and pencil opened the way for other innovative souls. Specifically, Christian Heger (class of '94, I think) sculpted heads using surfboard wax (no, I can't scan them--they are big, round heads) and Josh Callahan (class of '96) used food (no, I can't scan them--the egg he broke (then plasticized onto a piece of paper for the Collision lab) became a bit gamey before I could take a picture of it, and a simular fate overtook the beans he used on the Torque lab (he titled that one TORK AND BEANS)). Trey graduated from Poly in 1993.
. . . Just wait--it's coming!
