- [Narrator] This famous dinosaur is in a Pennsylvania Museum of Natural History.
The dinosaur was named for a Pennsylvania industrialist.
Do you know the dinosaur's name?
You're invited to play "The Pennsylvania Game."
Test your knowledge of the Commonwealths people, places and products.
"The Pennsylvania Game" is made possible in part by Uni-Marts, with stores in Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey, and Delaware, serving you with convenience and courtesy every day of the year.
(bright music) And by the Pennsylvania Dairy Promotion Program, promoting the taste of an ice cold glass of milk.
Milk doesn't just taste great, it's one of the all time great tastes.
♪ When it's time to make your mind up, make it milk ♪ - [Narrator] Now let's get the game started, here's the host of "The Pennsylvania Game," Lynn Hinds.
(audience cheering) - Thank you, and welcome to "The Pennsylvania Game."
We've got a fun show today because we have a fun panel.
Aren't you all a fun panel?
Let's meet a gentleman who is a writer and has made his living writing most of his life.
Bernard Asbell, Bernie welcome.
(audience cheering) And a lady who has made her living by her creativity for a Channel Four, television feature reporter, Lynn Cullen.
Lynn Cullen, welcome.
(audience cheering) And down in seat number three, the poet laureate of meteorology, Elliot Abrams, welcome Elliot.
(audience cheering) Now, I want you folks at home to play along with us.
See if you can get more right than the best score on our panel.
And we start out with a question about an old relic, let's watch.
- [Narrator] Because this dinosaur was discovered on the 4th of July, some suggested naming it Star Spangled.
Instead it was named for the industrialist who bought it and brought it from Wyoming to Pittsburgh.
Is this dinosaur named in honor of A, Andrew Mellon, B, Andrew Carnegie, C, George Westinghouse, or D, Henry John Heinz?
- Well, who brought that dinosaur to Pittsburgh?
Which of those famous, famous industrialists?
And they're all good names, and you know, you couldn't go far wrong.
It is one of those four.
You're looking so puzzled, Bernie.
- Yeah.
- You're thinking.
That's good.
Which one of those do you suppose it might be?
- I'm gonna, Carnegie was too busy building libraries.
So, as long as there were 57 bones in that dinosaur, I'm gonna go with Henry Heinz.
- Alright, okay, and Lynn Cullen.
- I'm in a pickle here.
- [Lynn] Hey, Elliot, there's nothing left for you, but all the at lifts are gone, right?
What do you say, Lynn?
- I don't know, Carnegie was awfully interested in all sorts of stuff, and coming from Pittsburgh I'm sure I'm supposed to know this, but I don't.
It's a guess, Andrew Carnegie.
- Andrew Carnegie, and Elliot Abrams.
- Well, I know Andrew Carnegie was supposed to be ironing things out all the time.
And if I'm wrong about this, I'll look back with hines casting, but let's go with Mr. Mellon.
- Andrew Mellon, they all had enough money to do it.
- I'm sure one of these is probably right.
- One of those is probably right.
We have it on good authority, it was one the question, which one?
Which one did you choose at home, and what is the right answer?
Let's see.
- [Narrator] The answer is B, Andrew Carnegie.
When it was discovered, Carnegie saw the dinosaur headlined as, "Most colossal animal ever on earth just found out West."
Carnegie scribbled, "Buy this for Pittsburgh," in the newspaper margin.
Actually all they had found was a leg bone.
Due to Carnegie's efforts, they found the fossils of two dinosaurs, and both are part of Diplodocus carnegii, or Dippy is his nickname.
On display at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh.
Dippy is 84 feet long, and weighed when alive some 120 million years ago, about 12 tons.
World leaders rushed to get a replica of the dinosaur, leading one poet to write, "The crown heads of Europe all make an awful fuss over uncle Andy and his old Diplodocus."
- Okay, Andrew Carnegie is the answer, nice going on that.
The poem, this guy was probably writing poems before you were back in the early 1900s.
So isn't that, that's an interesting thing.
You alright, okay.
Andrew Carnegie, Diplodocus carnegii.
Is it Carnegie or Carnegie?
- I thought it was Carnegie till I moved to Pittsburgh and found out in short order it's Carnegie.
- [Lynn] If you're New York, you can say Carnegie.
- [Elliot] But now the plotticus thickeness.
- The plotticus thickeness is exactly right.
And what do you know about music?
'Cause that involves poetry also.
- It's a bunch of may, set of noted discord.
- It may indeed, but that's what our next question is about.
It is a musical question.
And let's go to the next question about who wrote and who didn't write what song.
- [Narrator] Pennsylvania born, William Steffe, was an itinerate musician who specialized in writing ballads.
Steffe also wrote the music for a famous song.
Was that song A, "The Star Spangled Banner", B, "The Battle Hymn Of The Republic", C, "Hail, Columbia", or D, "America, The Beautiful"?
- Okay, which one of those did William Steffe write the music for?
"Star Spangled Banner", "The Battle Hymn Of The Republic," "Hail, Columbia" or "America, The Beautiful".
All nice songs Lynn Cullen.
- I don't agree with you.
I think whoever wrote the music to the "Star Spangled Banner" should be drawn and quartered, it really is a very difficult song.
- [Lynn] Yes, yes.
- As a matter of fact, maybe Steffe did it, let's... - You're gonna go with the Star Spangled, oh, say, can you see, Elliot Abrams?
- Well, I have no idea, but the only name that I recognize as being associated with Pennsylvania, definitely is the small town of Columbia.
So I'll just take a guess with C. - "Hail, Columbia", okay.
That leaves you with four choices, Bernie.
- Well, I agree, nobody from Pennsylvania could've written the music to "Star Spangled Banner".
So I will say, because "America, The Beautiful" is what should be our National Anthem, I will go with D. - It's a great song, D is a great choice.
A is a good choice too, I like C very much, but those might not be the right answer.
What did you pick at home?
What is the right answer?
- [Narrator] The answer is B, "The Battle Hymn of the Republic."
Julia Ward Howe gets credit for the words, but Pennsylvanian William Steffe, wrote the music for "The Battle Hymn of the Republic."
♪ Hallelujah, glory glory ♪ - It's a nice song.
Now, we can't absolutely prove that he wrote those, there's some doubt, but many historians say he gets credit for having written the music for "The Battle Hymn of the Republic."
Who wrote the words for the "Star Spangled Banner?"
It was old English drinking song called "To Anacreon in Heaven."
- The music?
- The music.
- [Lynn] Not the words, but the music.
- They were, they were drunk when they wrote it.
- Well, you can sing that song if you've got enough stuff in.
Let's see what, y'all missed that one I wanna point out, let's see what you know about sports, 'cause you're all good sports.
It's a sports question, and let's see how well we do here.
- [Narrator] Many of Pennsylvania's larger universities have played in the Rose Bowl Classic on New Year's day, with little success.
Penn State University and the University of Pennsylvania have each made one appearance, and lost.
While the University of Pittsburgh has made four trips to Pasadena, California, and come home with just one victory.
But the smallest college to ever be invited to The Rose Bowl is also from Pennsylvania, and came away without a defeat.
Was that school, A, Widener, B, Carnegie Mellon, C, Washington & Jefferson or D, Slippery Rock?
- Now this may go back a couple of years before you started keeping track of football, I grant you that, but it is a nice question and something that a Pennsylvania school can be proud of.
The question is which Pennsylvania school, Widener, Carnegie Mellon, Washington & Jefferson, or Slippery Rock, Elliot Abrams?
- I think it might have been B, but instead I'll pick C. - That's good.
- Defining a small school.
- That's good.
You probably did well on tests all throughout school.
- Okay, Bernie Asbell.
- Californican.
- How could both Washington & Jefferson be wrong?
(Lynn laughing) - Lynn Cullen.
- Well, football at Slippery Rock I know is a big todo, but I don't think it's Slippery Rock.
Carnegie Mellon was Carnegie Tech and Mellon Institute way back when, when we get... Widener, I don't know... Washington & Jefferson I think.
- You're going also with Washington & Jefferson.
Okay, we have one, two, three C's.
They're either all right, or they're all wrong.
And which did you pick at home?
Did you pick C or something else?
What's the right answer?
- [Narrator] The correct answer is C. In 1922, the Washington & Jefferson College in Washington PA, sent their team to take on the powerful wonder team from the University of California.
The W & J team was led by first year coach, Earle Greasy Neale, and was so unknown that one California sports writer quipped, "The only thing I know about Washington & Jefferson is that they're both dead."
But the squad, nicknamed The Presidents, was very much alive and shocked the nation by holding Cal to a zero zero tie, and actually out playing them, according to most observers.
W & J consisted of merely 400 male students at the time.
The team had just 19 players, and the 11 starters played the entire game without a single substitution.
Unprecedented in a Rose Bowl game.
- Must have been a fun game to watch, a scoreless tie.
But it was a moral victory at least, and not a defeat for the smallest school ever to play in the Rose Bowl.
And congratulations to all of you, but Lynn Cullen is in the lead with two right.
How you doing at home?
Let's hear it for the panel, they're doing alright okay.
(audience cheering) - [Lynn C] A moral victory.
- This brings us to another feature of our Pennsylvania game, the Mystery Pennsylvanian.
I'll be giving you panel and you at home three clues throughout the show.
And you're supposed to see how soon you can guess the identity of our Mystery Pennsylvanian.
Here is clue number one.
His famous father was a professional military leader, he was a pacifist.
When he was expelled from college, his father sent him abroad to get him away from a radical group.
When he was arrested for causing a riot, the jury found him not guilty, and the judge held the jury in contemp.
Who was this famous Mystery Pennsylvanian?
Puzzle looks on the faces of our panel.
Father was professional military leader, he was a pacifist.
When he was expelled from a college, his father sent him to Europe to get him away from a radical group.
He was arrested for causing a riot by a speech.
The jury found him not guilty, and the judge found the jury guilty of contempt for their decision.
So you just jot down any guesses you might have on line number one, and if not, you keep the puzzle looking.
We'll come back for clue number two.
And it shall be more apparent, I promise you.
Let's go now to a famous radio television thing that was founded in Pennsylvania.
And see if you know about what it was founded upon.
The question is asked much better than I can ask it.
- [Narrator] William Paley, son of a Russian immigrant founded the CBS Radio and Television Network.
He realized the potential of radio when he advertised his father's product on WCAU Radio in Philadelphia.
Paley sponsored a program named for that product, "The Miss Lapalina Hour."
Was miss Lapalina, A, a soap, B, perfume, C, cigar, or D, fountain pen?
- You know, it sounds like it could be either any one of those.
Was miss Lapalina a soap, a perfume, a cigar, or a fountain pen?
I'm just not sure about that.
Are you sure about that Bernie Asbell?
- I'm sure.
- Are you?
- The feminine gender of it certainly identifies it as a cigar.
- [Lynn] 'Cause lots of women smoke cigars.
- Sure.
- Of course.
- [Lynn] Beautiful logic, Lynn Cullen?
- Somewhere in the recesses of my memory, and some journalism class long ago, I think I learned that Lapalina was a cigar.
- That's certainly something that journalism oughta focus on, I agree.
Elliot Abrams what do you say?
- Well, I think I've missed the scent with the perfume.
I think that the same thing with the soap, and I don't think that I can trace it with a pen, but with the scent, maybe you can have a cigar, so.
- [Lynn] We have three C's again.
You guys are either all right or all wrong, it is amazing.
- But which is it?
- That's very perceptive.
- Right or wrong, is the question.
What did you select?
A, B, C or D, let's see.
- [Narrator] The answer is C, cigar.
Paley's father was a successful cigar maker in Philadelphia.
In 1925, while his father was away, he advertised with "The Miss Lapalina Hour" on WCAU Radio.
Sales increased, and when William Paley wanted to buy the Columbia Broadcasting System two years later, his father's cigar money provided the means.
CBS, the network founded on a Philadelphia cigar.
- Bet you didn't all know that CBS was founded on a Philadelphia cigar, did you?
Well, you all did know it 'cause you all got it right.
- [Elliot] C stands for cigar, right?
- We've gotta get some harder questions.
This next one is a little harder question I think.
The facts about this question are absolutely amazing.
You'll see.
- [Narrator] During the Civil War, Abraham Lincoln brought an invention that was tested in battle by John Geary of Mount Pleasant in Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania.
What invention did John Geary test, A, a Periscope for trench warfare, B, a Telescopic sight for rifles, C, a Landmine or D, a machine gun?
- Okay, John Geary, a Pennsylvanian who tested an invention during the Civil War.
Was it a Periscope for trench warfare, a telescopic sight for rifles, a landmine or a machine gun?
Lynn Cullen.
- Yes, what?
- [Lynn] We'd like a choice at this point in the game.
You're doing very well.
- I know I am, but I think I'm about to flounder.
- [Lynn] Do you?
- I just feel it's telescopic sight, even though that... - [Lynn] Is it an ESP feeling that you've got?
- Flounder is a fish you know?
- Yes, that's true.
Elliot Abrams, which letter have you selected for use?
- Well, apparently this wasn't the invention that won out, but I know they were working on the machine gun.
I think Richard Gatling actually figured it out in 1862, but maybe they were working on it there to.
- That's a remarkable fact there, Bernie Asbell.
- Well that was the decade you know, when Whitney invented the interchangeable part for guns.
It was the age of the rifle, I will go with the telescopic sight.
- Okay, we have two B's and a D. Nobody selected A, nobody selected C, unless one of you people at home selected one of those letters.
Well, which one's right?
Let's see.
- [Narrator] The answer is D, a machine gun.
They call it a Coffee Mill Gun, because the hopper and feed looked like a kitchen coffee grinder.
But John Geary of the 28th Pennsylvania Regiment, reported that it was inefficient and unsafe to operators.
The Confederate Forces did make limited use of the Williams Machine Gun.
With the many types of machine guns being invented were looked upon with deep skepticism.
The Gorgas Machine Gun invented by Pennsylvanian Josiah Gorgas, came too late to use.
Gorgas of Dauphin county, had gone South to become chief of the Ordnance for the Confederates.
Dr. Richard Gatling did perfect a machine gun, but because of his Southern origin, the military didn't take the gun seriously.
They adopted the Gatling Gun after the war.
In fact, General George Custer left his Gatlings behind when he rode off to the Little Big Horn.
General John Geary by the way, was the first mayor of San Francisco and governor of Kansas before the Civil War, and served two terms as governor of Pennsylvania after the war.
- That is the most amazing fact of all.
And what a trivia question.
What Pennsylvania governor was also the first mayor of San Francisco and also was governor of the Kansas territory?
And it was John White Geary of Mount Pleasant, Pennsylvania.
Isn't that amazing?
- That's amazing.
- Say that's amazing.
- [Everybody] Yeah, that's amazing.
- What happened was, President sent him out to be the Postmaster at San Francisco.
They liked him and elected him San Francisco's first mayor.
And he came back for the Civil War, and after the war, was governor.
- Well, he had on the job training out there.
- Yeah, that's right.
- For the big job.
- But he was quite a guy.
- [Elliot] He did leave his heart in Pennsylvania.
I think he probably, not San Francisco.
We are doing, we have three, Lynn and Elliot both have three right.
Bernie's close behind with two.
How you doing at home?
Let's hear it for our panel, they're doing okay.
(audience cheering) How so ever, they all still look puzzled about the identity of our Mystery Pennsylvanian.
So let's help them with a second clue.
Are you listening panel?
Our Mystery Pennsylvanian married a woman named Guli, and they produced seven children.
When Guli died, he married a woman half his age named Hannah, and they had seven more children.
He built his Pennsylvania home in Bucks County.
Married a woman named Guli, seven children.
Guli died, married a woman named Hannah, seven more children.
Built his home in Bucks County, Pennsylvania.
While the panel is thinking, if you at home have an idea for a question, we'd love to hear from you.
Just drop us a line in care of "The Pennsylvania Game," Wagner Annex, University Park, 1-6-8-0-2.
An idea for a question, a question, if we use your idea, when we use it, why we will be glad to give you the credits for it on the air.
We'd love to hear from you, and how you like "The Pennsylvania Game."
This next one is such a simple question, we just hesitate to ask it.
All it wants to know is, what is the State motto of Pennsylvania?
- [Narrator] Which of these State mottoes belongs to Pennsylvania, A, Crossroads of America, B, With God, all things are possible, C, Virtue, Liberty, and Independence, or D, Friendship?
- Those are all such nice mottoes.
How could you possibly pick among them?
Crossroads of America, with God, all things are possible, Virtue, Liberty, and independence, or Friendship.
Which is the State motto of Pennsylvania?
Elliot Abrams we're starting with you this time I believe.
- Well, I think that all those are excellent.
- Those are... - Good choices.
- I mean, you have a friend in Pennsylvania.
There's always Virtue, Liberty and Independence.
And with God, all things are possible.
But maybe when this was decided on, since we're the Keystone State, we're the Crossroads of America.
- [Lynn] Good logic, Bernie?
- I was looking for you've got a friend, and a friendship won't do.
I'll go with C, 'cause it's pumpus and great.
(all laughing) - Glad you recognize pomposity, Lynn Cullen.
- I know Wisconsin's motto.
- Do you?
- Eat cheese or die.
(all laughing) - And well, it should be.
You're going with... - I'm going with C, Virtue, Liberty and Independence.
- Okay, do you know at home, what is the state motto of Pennsylvania?
Well, I'm sure you've taken a choice.
Let's see if you're right or if you're wrong.
- [Narrator] The answer is C, Virtue, Liberty and Independence.
Indiana calls itself The crossroads of America.
Ohio proclaims that with God, all things are possible.
And although you've got a friend in Pennsylvania, the motto of Texas is Friendship.
Here in Pennsylvania, we have Virtue, Liberty and Independence.
- In ample supply I might add.
We've got lots of all three of those.
Your logic I thought was good.
I would've guessed crossroads too before I knew the answer to this one, 'cause it does make sense, we are the Keystone State, but evidently Indiana thinks that that's what...
This next question will amaze you.
I want you to listen carefully and believe because the facts are absolutely true, listen.
- In the early dawn of June 13th, 1942, the German U-Boat, Innsbruck, landed four Nazi agents on a Long Island beach.
Their mission, sabotage.
Among their 12 targets were several in Pennsylvania.
Which of these Pennsylvania sights was a target for the saboteurs, A, the Philadelphia Naval yard, B, Pennsylvania Railroad's Horseshoe Curve, C, The Westinghouse Torpedo Plant in Sharon, or D, The Pennsylvania Ordnance Works near Williamsport?
- Wow, wow, that's true.
There were saboteurs landed, and they did have plans to blow up some things in Pennsylvania.
And one of the things was either A, the Philadelphia Naval Yard, Pennsylvania's Horseshoe Curve, The Westinghouse Torpedo Plant in Sharon or the Pennsylvania Ordnance Works near Williamsport.
And I guess, where are we, back to you Bernie Asbell?
Which of those was on the list for sabotage?
- Well, I'm gonna try C. Torpedoes I would think would be the most, get rid of the torpedoes and you get rid of a lot.
- That's right, that's certainly true, Lynn Cullen.
- Well, I mean get rid of a few boats, you get rid of a lot too, and they were closer to Philly.
- [Lynn] You're going Naval yards, okay.
And Elliot Abrams.
- See if they were talking about West Virginia, I know that they have glass bottom boats so they can see the rest of their boats in the West Virginia Navy.
(crowd chattering) I picked the Horseshoe Curve because of the strategic, the railroad... Yeah, they were very important as well.
- [Lynn] Strategic, is the word you're striving to say okay.
- That's right, strategic.
- Let's see, we've got an, A, a B, and a C, no D. Let's see if anybody at home picked D, and what is the right answer, hmm?
- [Narrator] The answer is B, Horseshoe Curve.
The Curve was the vital rail link across the Alleghenies.
Had the Nazis succeeded in destroying Horseshoe Curve, it would've knocked out the means of getting coal from the anthracite mines of the Northeast, to the steel plants of Western Pennsylvania.
When the Horseshoe Curve opened in 1854, it was an engineering marvel.
Built by men using only picks and shovels, horses and drags, the Curve stretched out a steep grain, nearly two miles, making it practical for trains to use.
The Curve was closed to visitors during the war, rightly fearing sabotage.
Since the war, more than a quarter of a million tourists visit the great amphitheater high in the Alleghenies each year.
You can see Horseshoe Curve in Blair County, five miles west of Altoona.
- That's a neat story.
There were actually, there were eight saboteurs, four in Florida, and four in Long Island.
And they were picked up within two weeks and the FBI had all of them.
But when they landed on Long Beach, there was a young coast guard guy who discovered them, whose first name was John.
Lynn Cullen, guess his last name, quickly.
- Kennedy, I don't know.
- Cullen.
- Oh.
- That's right.
John Cullen discovered them right there, but they were gonna blow up all the locks on the Ohio River, and Horseshoe Curve was one of the big targets, okay.
We've got a little simpler question for you this time.
And it's one of your favorite categories panel, it's about Pennsylvania counties, let's watch.
- [Narrator] Of Pennsylvania's 67 counties, only three can trace their founding to William Penn in 1682.
Of the following, which county was not one of the original three, A, Philadelphia, B, Chester, C, Bucks, or D, Delaware?
- Simple little question.
Which county was not one of the original three?
Was it Philadelphia, Chester, Bucks or Delaware?
And Lynn Cullen, we get to start with you first.
And I know you love these county questions.
- Yeah, I don't, how would I know?
- [Lynn] You must be a city girl 'cause you don't like the county questions.
- I don't know much about Eastern Pennsylvania as it turns out, I don't even know if there is a Philadelphia county.
It somehow seems like there isn't, I don't know.
- You're going with Philadelphia, okay.
Elliot Abrams, which county are you going with?
Not one of the original.
- I know people in Philadelphia sometimes think that people living in Western Chester county are in Western Pennsylvania, but I'll take a guess of A.
It's like Yonkers is being Upstate New York.
- Okay, and Bernie Asbell.
- Well there's gotta be a Philadelphia county or else that would be... - I'll go with D for Delaware.
- You're going Delaware.
- Yeah, yeah.
- Delaware county, okay.
We have two A's and a D, and let's see which is the correct answer.
One of them's gotta be right I think.
- [Narrator] The answer is D, Delaware.
Penn named Philadelphia county for the word meaning Brotherly Love, Chester county for Chestershire England, and Bucks short for Buckinghamshire.
Delaware county was formed in 1789, from part of Chester county.
- There is a Philadelphia county and has been since the very beginning, so now you've learned something.
And the score is very close.
Bernie has four, Lynn has four, and Elliot has four.
- Wow, let's hear for the panel.
(audience cheering) So if you got more than four right at home, you're doing better than any of them.
Of course, they'll add their score together, - and come up with 12.
- They're cheating at home.
The last clue for the Mystery Pennsylvanian.
He was known as a religious leader, a political philosopher, a social reformer, a city planner and a conservationist.
His dream was to build a utopian society.
He lived to be 74 years old.
We gotta have some quick answers.
Does anybody know who we're talking about?
Lynn Cullen, do you know?
- Oh, I don't know.
- Is his name Fuller, - Fuller?
- And you say?
- I have no answer.
- Elliot?
- Aaron?
- You're all gonna hate yourself.
What is, who is our Mystery Pennsylvanian?
Listen to this answer.
You may have trouble believing it.
- William Penn spent less than four years at Pennsbury in the colony he founded, yet he shaped Pennsylvania as a holy experiment that was a model for America.
Born in London in 1644, his father was Britain's highest Naval Commander.
Pennsylvania was given to Penn out of debt to his famous father.
When William Penn sailed to America, aboard The Welcome, he was leaving behind a bitter history of religious persecution.
He was determined to build a society of tolerance, not only for his society of friends, but a free colony for all mankind.
That included the Native Americans whom Penn believed to be descended from the 10 lost tribes of Israel.
Penn planned a green country town with grid iron streets, and Philadelphia was built.
Penn declared the first conservation law in Pennsylvania history.
Ordering that settlers preserve one acre of trees, for every five acres cleared.
Starting with a charter of 1681, Penn moved Pennsylvania to government by elected assembly in just 20 years.
Thomas Jefferson called Penn, "The greatest Law Giver the World has produced."
Penn stayed less than two years in each of his two trips to Pennsylvania, each time returning to England to keep his colony free.
His last years were tragic.
Cheated by an associate, he spent a year in debtor's prison.
Broken in health by a paralytic stroke, he died in 1718, at age 74.
But William Penn left behind a legacy for Pennsylvanians and for all Americans.
(everybody cheering) - That's great, if it'll make you feel any better, I pretested these clues on a number of people and nobody guessed William Penn, which proves a point I guess, that he really was a great leader in this country and gave so much, not just to Pennsylvania but to America, and we don't know enough about him, we don't honor him as enough as a hero.
- Lynn, we're glad you pretested these clues, we've just protested these clues.
- Thank you all panel for being here.
Hope you had a good time, and I hope you in the studio audience did too, and you at home.
And that you will join us next time, when we all gather to play "The Pennsylvania Game," see you then.
(audience cheering) - [Narrator] "The Pennsylvania Game" has been made possible in part by Uni-Marts, with stores in Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey and Delaware, serving you with convenience and courtesy every day of the year.
(bright music) And by the Pennsylvania Dairy Promotion Program, promoting the taste of an nice cold glass of milk.
Milk doesn't just taste great, it's one of the all time great tastes.
♪ When it's time to make your mind up, make it milk ♪ (audience cheering) (upbeat music) (upbeat music continues) (upbeat music continues)
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