The Pennsylvania Game
Sharon Stone, mycology & Lincoln's illness
Season 10 Episode 8 | 28m 14sVideo has Closed Captions
Do you know Sharon Stone's PA-related talent? Play the Pennsylvania Game.
Do you know Sharon Stone's PA-related talent? Play the Pennsylvania Game. This program is from WPSU’s archives: Information impacting answers may have changed since its original airing. Promotional offers are no longer valid.
The Pennsylvania Game
Sharon Stone, mycology & Lincoln's illness
Season 10 Episode 8 | 28m 14sVideo has Closed Captions
Do you know Sharon Stone's PA-related talent? Play the Pennsylvania Game. This program is from WPSU’s archives: Information impacting answers may have changed since its original airing. Promotional offers are no longer valid.
How to Watch The Pennsylvania Game
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship[theme music] ANNOUNCER: The Pennsylvania Game is made possible in part by-- [music playing] ANNOUNCER: Uni-Mart convenience stores, making your life easier every day of the year.
ANNOUNCER: This program was made possible by a grant from the Pennsylvania Public Television Network.
The network receives funding from the Commonwealth to provide public television for all Pennsylvanians.
ANNOUNCER: Let's get the game started.
Here's the host of the Pennsylvania Game, a man who just signed a big cable deal.
He'll soon be getting HBO.
Scott Bruce.
[applause] [laughs] Thank you.
Thank you, Wendy Williams, for sharing my life.
Thank you.
What a studio audience.
These guys are fabulous.
You folks at home, welcome to the Pennsylvania Game.
We have another exciting round for you, and we've got some great panelists.
Let's meet them right now, if we can.
Frank Schofield is the producer of the award winning late afternoon show on WINK 104 in Harrisburg.
He's also head coach for the West Shore High School Ice Hockey Team.
Please welcome Frank Schofield.
[applause] She's the assistant city editor at the Patriot News in Harrisburg.
She also writes a weekly column that gives you a piece of her mind.
If you would, please welcome Nancy Eshelman.
[applause] And as a 13-year-old kid growing up in New York, he used to sneak into Belmont Park to watch the horseracing.
Today, Fred Lipkin is director of publicity and public relations at Penn National Race Course in Granville, Pennsylvania.
When he isn't hosting a live four-hour cable television program four nights a week or juggling other work duties, he's golfing.
Welcome, Fred Lipkin.
Let's hear it.
[applause] Fred.
Hoo!
With all that long-windedness, I need a break.
Wendy, give me a question.
ANNOUNCER: Johann Conrad Beissel, a German American religious leader, founded the Seventh Day Baptists, a semi-monastic community at Ephrata in Southeast Pennsylvania.
There, he and his followers lived a celibate life of strict self-discipline and religious devotion.
Beissel banned meat, eggs, and dairy products from the community.
He believed they A, caused madness, B, harmed the singing voice, C, conveyed the animal's spirit to humans, or D, aroused sexual desires.
SCOTT BRUCE: Oh, a community and effort, though.
That's going to be a tough one.
Did Biessel believe that it caused madness, harmed the singing voice, conveyed the animal's spirit to humans, or aroused sexual desires?
[dings] Frank, we're going to you first.
I'm going to say he went with B, harmed the singing voice.
SCOTT BRUCE: Harmed the singing voice.
That is correct.
That's what I'm going to stick with.
SCOTT BRUCE: And you feel strongly about this, don't you, Frank?
I feel very strongly about this.
I like your attitude.
This is a positive thing.
OK. How about you, Nancy?
I went with C, conveyed the animal spirit.
The animal spirit's moving around.
You got a little feeling.
It's close to Halloween, maybe you got that feeling.
That could be.
All right, Fred, how about you?
I went with D. My wife's kept me off meat, eggs, and dairy for years.
[laughter] SCOTT BRUCE: That's worth a lottery ticket right there.
Pass that one down.
Fred, you're the man.
OK, we have three completely different answers.
Let's see if one of them just might not be right.
ANNOUNCER: The answer is B, harmed the singing voice.
Biessel renounced material comforts and lead a life of austere self-discipline.
But music was important to the Seventh Day Baptists.
Biessel was one of the earliest composers of American religious music.
The Ephrata Press, established by cloister members in 1746, produced the first music printed in the American colonies.
Popular publications included a collection of Biessel's many hymns, some written with up to seven harmonies.
The religious members met every day to sing in church services, expertly blending their voices like a large orchestra.
Biessel forbade meat, butter, and eggs, because he believed they impaired the vocal quality of their singing voices.
I have a note here that the Ephrata community reached its peak in about 1750, when there were several hundred members.
So there may have been something to that D answer, too.
Hard to say.
I don't know.
Wendy, bring me a new question.
ANNOUNCER: Conrad Gemmer bought an estate in Susquehanna County in 1963 to pursue his interest as a serious collector.
Today, he is among only one or two people from every state who are interested in collecting antique what?
A, apples.
B, dentures, C, unicycles.
Or D, prostheses.
SCOTT BRUCE: Well, it is, after all, the Pennsylvania Game.
[laughs] Conrad Gemmer of Susquehanna County collects antique what?
Apples, dentures, unicycles, or prostheses?
We are going to go to Nancy first.
I went with dentures.
SCOTT BRUCE: Dentures.
And I have no reason why.
I just did.
SCOTT BRUCE: Well, you don't need to.
You have a beautiful smile.
And that's a good enough reason for us.
OK, how about you, Fred?
I went with unicycles.
I don't know if you need an estate for dentures.
Wouldn't need that much room if it's true.
SCOTT BRUCE: So you need something to ride around in.
Yeah.
OK, so you were using logic again, OK. Frank, how about you?
Well, you can't keep apples.
You don't want dentures.
And the last one, whatever.
I'll say C. SCOTT BRUCE: So you'll go C. Unicycles all the way.
SCOTT BRUCE: Unicycles as well.
So we have two bike riders and a denture wearer.
And-- --absolutely no correct answers.
[groans] ANNOUNCER: The answer is A, apples.
Conrad Gemmer grew up on a fruit farm in New Jersey and has always been interested in uncovering old and unusual varieties that were being lost as commercial apple growers limited themselves to the most profitable varieties.
In 1963, Conrad Gemmer bought an estate in Northeastern Pennsylvania that contained 12 trees from an original 1860s orchard.
He spent the next 18 years moving his antique apple orchard from New Jersey to Pennsylvania by grafting.
Because many of the varieties were grafted from cuttings, one tree may now produce a dozen different kinds of apples.
Among his treasures is the oldest apple variety in the world today-- the lady apple, which dates back thousands of years.
Pliny the Elder, the Roman naturalist, described it in his writings in the first century AD.
In all, Gemmer maintains 20 acres of orchards, featuring more than 500 varieties, including the rediscovered American golden, pippin, and early strawberry.
OK. Now on a sadder note, we're very sad to report that Conrad Gemmer passed away since this question was produced.
We're very sorry, and our condolences to his family.
His estate and antique apple orchard are now for sale.
I certainly hope somebody picks it up.
Not that I know what I'd do with an antique apple myself.
But I would love to see it go on, so that would be great.
OK, time to meet our panel and chat a little bit more with them.
Shall we move on?
We're going to meet Frank.
Frank, as the producer of WINK 104's Bruce Bond in the Afternoon Show, you must have a chance to get all kinds of exciting guests.
If you had a wish list, who would you want to get on the show?
Woody Allen.
Woody Allen.
That's who I want on the show.
And absolutely no ifs and-- FRANK SCHOFIELD: Sir, if you think about it-- Yeah?
He's dating his daughter.
SCOTT BRUCE: Yeah.
OK?
There's something wrong there.
And he doesn't talk to anyone.
I want to talk to him.
Maybe stop by Michael's pub and talk to him when he's playing-- OK, I'll get him.
OK. Well, I'll pull all my strings.
I don't know if I can help you out.
OK, Nancy.
I'm interested in having you give us a piece of your mind.
You write a column of that name.
What are some of the things that you are the most opinionated about?
Just about anything.
I have an opinion on just about anything.
SCOTT BRUCE: You do?
Yeah.
SCOTT BRUCE: How about antique apples?
Well, I could.
I could.
If I ever got to see one, I might have an opinion.
What would you have done recently?
Recently, oh, I've been writing about munchkins.
Those are the little people in my life.
SCOTT BRUCE: The little people in your life, as opposed to the ones in the Yellow Brick Road.
Yeah, that's right.
SCOTT BRUCE: Ooh, well, very good.
OK, Nancy.
And Fred, sounds like horse racing was in your bloodstream from the very beginning.
You-- do you remember the first race that you ever attended?
I remember the first race.
There was a horse named and it had the same name as one of my friends Dave, and the horse won.
And if it hadn't won, I probably would have gone to another venture, another field.
But I figured, how easy was this game?
All you have to do is have a lot of friends.
FRED LIPKIN: Right.
And maybe a little bit of luck, too.
OK, how about Wendy Williams taking us to a new question?
ANNOUNCER: Eddie Cuthbert was born in Philadelphia in 1847.
In 1865, he joined the Philadelphia Keystones, playing every position except pitcher.
A true baseball pioneer, he is most noted for A, the first attempt at base stealing, B, being the first player to bunt a baseball, C, being one of the first players to appear on a bubble gum baseball card, or D, inventing many of the hand signals catchers use to this day.
SCOTT BRUCE: Ah, here's another one of those famous Pennsylvania Game questions where it absolutely could be any answer whatsoever.
Was he the first to attempt base stealing, being the first player to bunt a baseball, being one of the first players to appear on a bubble gum baseball card, or inventing many of the hand signals catchers use to this day?
Fred, all the way down to you for our first guess.
I went with C. My son likes to collect baseball cards.
That's good enough for me.
Yeah, and it's a sweet answer.
With the gum and all.
I think so.
He's a sweet kid.
Oh, oh, oh, oh, hey!
If you're going to boo, do it right, come on.
[crowd boos] They can't all be gems.
What can I tell you?
Frank Schofield, what do you think?
I think it's also the baseball card.
SCOTT BRUCE: Also the baseball card.
Yep, I'm going to go with that one.
So we have trading going on.
Nancy, what do you think?
I went with C also, and I hope they're right, because I have a son that's going to be really angry if I get it mad.
Three C's.
What does that mean, studio audience?
Everybody gets a lottery ticket.
Pass them down.
One for everybody, OK. That's two.
We have three people who've said the word C, and now let's find out from Wendy Williams if C is the correct answer.
ANNOUNCER: The answer is A. Eddie Cuthbert of the Philadelphia Keystones is credited with the first stolen base in a game against the Brooklyn Atlantics in 1865.
Although newspaper accounts made note of the novelty, it's more likely that Cuthbert's was simply the first documented stolen base in baseball.
Stolen bases held little value in the early days of baseball.
But by the late 19th century, stolen bases were as popular as they are today.
[vocalizes] Just a quick ending there, as all stolen bases are ending quick.
And now it's time to go to our scoreboard and see how our players stand.
I see Frank has a point.
Nancy has zero points, and Fred has zero points.
Giving us a pretty darn close game.
Give 'em a round of applause.
[applause] And that means it's time for our first clue in the Mystery Pennsylvanian.
Get your pens ready.
Born in Duquesne, Pennsylvania, in 1905, he studied piano as a child and led a jazz trio in high school.
Born in Duquesne, Pennsylvania, in 1905, he studied piano as a child and led a jazz trio in high school.
Write down your answers on that top line.
If you get it right on all three lines, you will, in fact, get three points.
If you change your answer, you will only get the number that you had right in a row at the end.
And everybody's got their pens going.
Everybody's got an answer now.
And that means we can ask Wendy Williams to give us a new question.
ANNOUNCER: Movie actress Sharon Stone was born in Crawford County in 1958 and grew up on a farm near Saegertown.
In 1975, the actress and former model won the 1975 Miss Crawford County Beauty Pageant.
What did she do for the talent portion of the competition?
A, recite the Gettysburg Address.
B, square dance.
C, perform one of Bette Davis's scenes from the movie All About Eve.
Or D, do a gymnastics routine.
SCOTT BRUCE: Sharon Stone.
Sharon Stone.
For the Miss Crawford County competition, this is, which, by the way, is right up there just south of Erie.
Recite the Gettysburg Address, was that her talent?
Did she square dance?
Did she perform one of Bette Davis's scenes from the movie All About Eve?
Or did she do a gymnastics routine?
Frank, we start with you.
I'm going to say she did a gymnastics routine.
SCOTT BRUCE: Gymnastics routine.
Yes, she's very active.
She's very aerobic.
She-she's-- I have to admit, I've studied her moves myself.
See?
And I think they're pretty good.
FRANK SCHOFIELD: There you go.
Nancy, what do you think?
I went with square dance.
SCOTT BRUCE: Square dance.
Just because it's a country kind of thing, you know.
And it's out in the country.
And by the way, it still involves good movement.
NANCY ESHELMAN: That's true.
So there we go.
We're still on a theme.
How about you, Fred?
I went with square dance.
SCOTT BRUCE: Square dance.
I figure they're up in the farm country doing something.
SCOTT BRUCE: Well, we have two square dancers and a gymnast.
And Wendy, tell us the right answer.
ANNOUNCER: The answer is A, recite the Gettysburg Address.
Sharon Stone grew up in Meadville, Pennsylvania, starting school in the second grade at age five due to her high IQ.
By fourth grade, she was attending a MENSA experimental program for children.
Later, she attended both Saegertown High School and Edinburgh College simultaneously.
In 1975, she won the Miss Crawford County beauty pageant in Meadville.
This got her an invitation to the Miss Pennsylvania Contest in Philadelphia.
Although she didn't win, a judge suggested to her mother that Sharon try modeling.
For three years, Sharon Stone worked as a model, studying acting at the same time.
She appeared in 15 B movies in the 1980s, eventually landing her role in the hit thriller Basic Instinct, which catapulted her to stardom.
Every one of our panelists talked about her being from the sticks out in the country.
As a matter of fact, never having the opportunity to travel as a child or teenager, she had never been on an elevator until she participated in the Miss Pennsylvania Pageant in Philadelphia at age 15.
And since then, her career has gone the same direction the elevator went, up, up, and up.
That, by the way, was submitted to us by Ron Harman of Tionesta, Pennsylvania.
Thank you, Ron.
You'll be winning a year's subscription to Pennsylvania Magazine in Camp Hill, Pennsylvania.
And now it's time for a new question.
ANNOUNCER: If you joined a mycological club in Pennsylvania, what would you most likely be doing.
A, growing mushrooms, B, writing mysteries, C, sharing mystical experiences, or D, raising white mice.
SCOTT BRUCE: Time to check the abilities of our panelists on entomology.
Word origins.
Would mycological be growing mushrooms, writing mysteries, sharing mystical experiences, or raising white mice?
Nancy, we're going to you first.
I went with mushrooms, because I've been to Kennett Square and you never forget it.
Ah.
I like the thinking there.
How about you, Fred?
I went with white mice, because I don't like them.
(LAUGHING) White mice because you don't like them?
Is there something that's bringing about bad feelings?
If you want to raise them, I don't like them.
OK, all right.
So we've got white mice and we've got mushrooms.
Frank, what do you think?
Mushrooms.
SCOTT BRUCE: Mushrooms.
Mushrooms all the way.
Two shrooms and a mice.
You got it.
OK, that's what we have.
Let's find out what the right answer is.
ANNOUNCER: The answer is A, growing mushrooms.
Mycology is a branch of botany that deals with fungi.
Pennsylvania is a leading US state in the production of milk and milk products, chickens, eggs, and apples, and is the nation's leading producer of mushrooms.
The most important centers for the production of mushrooms are in the southeastern part of the state, in Chester and Delaware counties.
In fact, some of the nation's richest farmland is found in Southeastern Pennsylvania, and much agricultural production is centered in Lancaster County.
So I've met a lot of these people in the mycological club.
And I got to tell you, it's just a real bunch of fun guys.
[laughter] Oh, that was a good one!
OK, time to check our scoreboard.
And as I see it, it's Frankie with two points in the lead by a length.
And behind him is Nancy.
One length behind her is Fred with no points whatsoever.
That's really-- SCOTT BRUCE: But they're playing a great game.
[applause] The little horse racer can be fun.
Time for the next clue of our Mystery Pennsylvanian.
Get those pens ready.
A leading jazz pianist for more than 50 years, he developed a unique playing style that became his trademark.
With his right hand, he played in a horn like style while playing countermelodies with his left.
[guessing music] Once again, born in Duquesne, Pennsylvania, in 1905, he studied piano as a child and led a jazz trio in high school.
A leading jazz pianist for more than 50 years, he developed a unique playing style that became his trademark.
With his right hand, he played a horn-like style, while playing countermelodies with his left.
Everybody seems to have their ideas down.
And that means we get to move on to another question.
ANNOUNCER: Retired police officer Terry Mattive spent a quarter of a century protecting and serving the citizens of Snyder County.
Now at the age of 48, Mattive walks a different beat.
One he envisioned walking as a boy.
What childhood dream is he now pursuing?
A, performing with his family's band playing instruments made of old farming tools.
B, leading a volunteer effort to clean Pennsylvania's creeks and streams.
C, leading group hikes throughout Pennsylvania's mountain trails.
Or D, operating a wildlife refuge for exotic animals.
SCOTT BRUCE: What childhood dream is Terry pursuing?
Performing with his family's band playing instruments made of old farming tools, leading a volunteer effort to clean Pennsylvania's creeks and streams, leading group hikes through Pennsylvania's mountains and trails, which, by the way, is a lot of fun.
Or operating a wildlife refuge for exotic animals.
And we are going to go down to Fred and try and get you a point.
What do you say, Fred?
Well, I've been doing D most of the time.
I went back to the exotic animals.
SCOTT BRUCE: Back to D. Why not?
I feel good about it, Fred.
I do.
Well, I hope you're right.
Let's find out.
Frank, what do you think?
You know, he had parrots when he was growing up, and he also had ferrets.
So this is what he wants to do.
Exotic animals.
He wants to protect them, yeah.
D. We're on a theme here.
We're on a run.
Could it be a sweep of D's?
I have D also.
Nancy gives us a D. That's three D's.
What does that mean?
Lottery tickets!
Lottery tickets!
Lottery tickets!
We're just giving them away like candy.
Now, let's find out if they can double up their fun and excitement.
Wendy, is D the right answer?
ANNOUNCER: The answer is D. Terry and Donna Mattive converted 20 acres of forested land in Penns Creek outside of State College into a wildlife refuge for abused and neglected exotic animals.
The T and D Mountain Road Menagerie has taken in dozens of malnourished, neglected, mistreated, and unwanted animals from all over the country.
The menagerie provides the animals a home where they are respected and protected.
Among the occupants are 26 bobcats, tigers, cougars, and lions.
A rather unconventional and potentially dangerous retirement.
Mattive says the animals are not pets and takes every precaution.
Still, he tells family members that in the event of a fatal accident, no, I died happy doing what I love to do.
Lions and tigers and bears, oh my!
The menagerie, which is operated solely on personal and donated funds, is open to the public for a limited time each spring and summer.
Stop by and visit it.
Put in a donation.
We'd love to see you helping to support these good things.
And now it's time to support Wendy Williams in a new question.
ANNOUNCER: On November 19th, 1863, President Abraham Lincoln dedicated a national cemetery on the battlefield of Gettysburg, where a few months earlier, more than 7,000 Union and Confederate soldiers died.
The Gettysburg Address has come to be regarded as one of the nation's finest speeches.
But few people even today know that when President Lincoln gave his speech, he was suffering from a mild case of what?
A, shingles, B, bronchitis, C, gout, or D, chickenpox.
SCOTT BRUCE: I'm not exactly certain of what the correct answer is, but I do have it on good authority that he got the disease from Sharon Stone while she was learning the Gettysburg-- [laughter] OK, what was President Lincoln suffering from?
Was it shingles, bronchitis, gout, or chickenpox?
Frank, we get to start with you.
Shingles.
SCOTT BRUCE: Shingles!
Yep.
SCOTT BRUCE: Needed a new roof.
That probably topped the hat.
Yep.
[laughs] OK, how about you, Nancy?
Gout.
SCOTT BRUCE: Gout.
Boy, these one-word answers.
Gout, we're sure.
Gout.
Shingles!
Gout!
Fred?
I'm not sure, but since he did it standing up, hopefully it's gout and it was hurting him.
SCOTT BRUCE: Hopefully it was gout?
Yeah, that it was hurting.
Well, hopefully he was able to move around and not have too much pain.
I don't know.
OK, we have two gouts.
We have a shingles.
Wendy Williams, what do we have?
ANNOUNCER: The answer is D, chickenpox.
Although the Gettysburg Address received little attention at the time, it has since come to be regarded as one of the most famous and important speeches of all time.
It began fourscore and seven years ago.
Our fathers brought forth on this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.
And ended with, "We here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain.
That this nation under God shall have a new birth of freedom.
And that government of the people by the people for the people shall not perish from the Earth."
SCOTT BRUCE: That's right.
It brings us directly to our third clue in the Mystery Pennsylvanian.
Pens ready.
Here we go.
During the 1930s big band era, a Chicago radio announcer gave him the nickname Fatha.
During the 1930s big band era, Chicago radio announcer gave him the nickname Fatha.
Born in Duquesne, Pennsylvania, in 1905, he studied piano as a child and led a jazz trio in high school.
A leading jazz pianist for more than 50 years, he developed a unique style that became his trademark.
With his right hand, he played the horn-like style, and while playing countermelodies with his left.
Everybody seems to have an answer down.
Except possibly Frank, who's wondering whether or not to even put an answer down.
But he's going to have to, and it is time to move on.
We will start with Nancy.
Nancy, if you'd hold your placard up, please.
Oh, do I have to?
SCOTT BRUCE: Oh, yes.
As it turns out, you do.
That's part of the game.
What I know-- SCOTT BRUCE: Hold the whole thing.
What I know about jazz you could put in a thimble.
SCOTT BRUCE: OK, so Rudy Vallee, Dizzy Gillespie, Dizzy Gillespie.
These are all valid choices.
They're all wrong, though.
Well, quite possibly, yes.
But we're not that picky on this show.
We like the answers.
They're very good.
How about you, Fred?
Well, these are not valid answers.
SCOTT BRUCE: Van Cliburn.
Well, now, he played piano.
That's something.
Eddie-- I saw a movie.
SCOTT BRUCE: Duchin?
Eddie Duchin.
SCOTT BRUCE: Eddie Duchin.
So you never heard of him, either.
No, no.
And it's only for a turnabout as fair play.
You never heard of my guy, and I never heard of yours.
FRED LIPKIN: I'm going to stop writing, Frank.
[laughter] He wanted to get-- he wanted to get Eddie Duchin in before it got away.
He wanted to get a chance to get Eddie Duchin in.
OK, well let's find out what Frank did finally pop down.
Well-- SCOTT BRUCE: (LAUGHING) Tommy Tune.
I started with Tommy Tune, went to Liberace, and pops gave me the Willie Stargel.
But I don't think that's right on any of them.
No.
Willie Stargel played a lot of things, but I don't think any of it was that.
OK. We're going to have to go to Wendy Williams and find out who had the right answer.
ANNOUNCER: Earl "Fatha" Hines was born in Duquesne near Pittsburgh in 1905.
He studied piano as a child, landing his first official job playing the piano at the Leader House in Pittsburgh.
It was there that he organized his first band, the Symphonion Serenaders, the first African American jazz band of that time.
1924, he moved to Chicago, becoming one of the luminaries of Chicago jazz.
His recordings with Louis Armstrong in the late 1920s brought him national recognition.
His innovative style of playing horn-like melodies with his right hand while playing countermelodies with his left were his trademark.
Hines continued to play as a soloist and in small jazz groups up until his death in 1983.
Earl Hines, a famous Pennsylvanian.
Earl Hines, Fatha Hines.
And we felt so bad that none of the panelists knew our final clue, we're giving them all another lottery ticket.
Pass them down.
Pass down the lottery tickets.
Thanks.
We felt so bad.
OK, now as I look at the final score, we go to add it up.
It looks like Fred had a point, Nancy had two points, Frank had three points.
He'll be our champion!
Three, two, one.
[applause] A fabulous job.
And now, I think we ought to go to our staid and steady announcer, Wendy Williams.
Wendy, tell them what the grand prize was today.
ANNOUNCER: Well, Scott, it's a gift basket of made in Pennsylvania goodies from JJ's Basket Delights of Mechanicsburg.
And 50 chances to win $1,000 a week for life from the Pennsylvania lottery.
That's right.
The giant basket and the lottery tickets.
Look at that.
Give him a round of applause.
It's a wonderful thing.
[applause] That's quite a basket.
We certainly had a wonderful time here on the show today.
I hope the panel had a good time.
Did you enjoy yourselves?
FRANK SCHOFIELD: Yeah.
Well, of course you did.
You won.
You should be excited, jumping up and down.
Even the people who didn't win are happy.
We all had a good time.
The folks in the studio audience were just fabulous.
You folks at home, keep on playing the game.
We love it to have you with us.
And remember, if you have a question for the Pennsylvania Game, send it to 214 Wagner Building, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802.
We love having those questions.
Bye-bye.
[music playing] ANNOUNCER: The Pennsylvania Game is made possible in part by-- [music playing] ANNOUNCER: Uni-Mart convenience stores, making your life easier every day of the year.
ANNOUNCER: This program was made possible by a grant from the Pennsylvania Public Television Network.
The network receives funding from the Commonwealth to provide public television for all Pennsylvanians.
ANNOUNCER: Meals and lodging for contestants of the Pennsylvania Game were provided by the Nittany Lion Inn, located on the university park campus of Penn State.
[applause]