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LEHIGH VALLEY WEATHER

SALISBURY HIGH SCHOOL

Back in the mid-1990s, Salisbury High School science teacher Paul Koba found himself with more turkeys than his family could consume at Thanksgiving dinner, after he was a recipient of extra birds as a winning bowling tournament competitor.

Koba wondered if the extra turkeys might be able to provide practical examples of the simple machine principles he taught in his senior physics classes. Thus was born the idea of the turkey toss tradition which has involved his students for two decades.

Koba offered extra class credit to his students who would put in the outside-the-classroom effort to design and build simple machines capable of tossing an annually used frozen turkey the furthest distance on an athletic field Nov. 23. While the record toss covered the better part of a football field a few years past, Koba established an eight-foot minimum toss for the competition as one of the few rules for the students to achieve.

He left the concepts on how to use simple principles of machines to the competitor’s own design and build ideas. That has lead to some impressive collaborative and cooperative teamwork over the years, Koba said.

“When we get out here and see the work these teams have put into this annual pre-Thanksgiving tradition, it serves not only to instill school spirit, but it provides practical everyday examples of concepts that might otherwise just be textbook learning,” Koba said. “When the young people are left to their own devices, they can supplement their own learning experiences with hands-on applications they otherwise might not have.”

PRESS PHOTOS BY JIM MARSHThe first of three Salisbury High School physics class teams, using simple machine principles, launch a well-used frozen turkey Nov. 23, at the school's annual traditional pre-Thanksgiving “turkey toss”competition. Launching the winning toss are, from left, seniors Ethan Heydt, Mahlon Reihman and James Hadinger. Although the toss did not soar much more than the minimum