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<baseball name="Henry B. Brown" correct="3">
	<answer label="Ryne Sandburg">2B 3B, b. 1959.  Sandburg may have been the premier second-baseman of his era; he was an MVP, and perennial Gold Glove winner and All-Star.  Brown is not in this league.</answer>
	<answer label="Ron Kanehl">2B OF 3B, b. 1934. &#8220;Hot Rod&#8221; was a hustling utility player who once vaulted a fence at Shea Stadium to catch a fly ball. Such a move would be unthinkable to the confined thought of Henry Brown.</answer>
	<answer label="Jim Finigan">3B 2B, 1928-1981. The last regular to hit over .300 for the A's in Philadelphia.</answer>
	<answer label="Al Campanis">2B Mgr Exec, b. 1916. These players worked for many years in their respective games. Brown was a federal judge and then a Justice. Campanis had a short playing career but put in 46 years as a manager, scout, and club vice-president. Both players have been marked for a single opinion. Though Brown wrote more than 450 while on the Court, he shall be remembered for authoring the infamous "separate-but-equal" doctrine in Plessy vs. Ferguson. Campanis provoked national ridicule in 1987 by suggesting to viewers of ABC's Nightline that black ballplayers lacked the "necessities" to become ML managers.</answer>
</baseball>

