World's Tallest Ice
Cream Cone
On
May 16, 2005, Eisenhower Junior High School set a new world record for
producing the World's Tallest Ice Cream Cone. Three 9th Grade students
produced an ice cream cone that reached a height of 13.00 inches. This
record has now been accepted by World
Records for Schools and Mormon
World Records. For more information on this event, see the newspaper
article "Here's
the Scoop: Kids Aiming High," that appeared in the May 15, 2005,
edition of the Deseret
Morning News of Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.
The rules for constructing the World's Tallest
Ice Cream Cone were as follows: 1) A three-person team has twenty
minutes to make the world's tallest ice cream cone. This team must be
divided up as follows: one person scoops or spoons the ice cream from
the containers, another person holds the ice cream cone--which cannot
rest on another object, and the third person places the ice cream on top
of the cone. (Warning: Because of the potential for forstbite, it is recommended
that the person holding the ice cream cone wear a pair of winter-type
gloves.) 2) At no time during the event can any member of the three-person
team handle or touch the ice cream. Only two scoopers or spoons can be
used to transfer or manipulate the ice cream. (This rule is not violated
if ice cream drips on a team member during the record attempt. Also, no
knives or similar devices can be used to cut up the ice cream into blocks
or chunks, and no such blocks or chunks of ice cream can be placed on
the cone. 3) The ice cream used must be commercially made (not homemade)
vanilla and/or chocolate, and must remain in a frozen state in a freezer
until five minutes before the record attempt begins. The entire record
attempt must take place in an area/facility where the air temperature
is constantly 68ºF / 20ºC or higher. 4) The uniform diameter
of the top of the ice cream cone cannot exceed three inches (7.62 cm).
All layers of ice cream placed on top of the cone must not exceed three
times the diameter of the top of the cone. (For example, if the top of
the ice cream cone is three inches in diameter, then the widest layer
of ice cream positioned on top of the cone cannot exceed nine inches in
diameter.) 5) The height of the ice cream cone must be determined by independent
judges who determine the height of the ice cream cone--within an eighth
of an inch (one-eighth of an inch is equal to 0.3175 centimeter)--by measuring
the distance between the top of the ice cream cone and the top of the
tallest layer of ice cream sitting on the cone.

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