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<baseball name="Benjamin N. Cardozo" correct="2">
	<answer label="Pasqual Perez">RHP, b. 1957.  Known for his flashy demeanor on the mound, once got lost driving to a game in Atlanta&#8212;when he played for the Braves&#8212;and missed his first start with the team.</answer>
	<answer label="Hack Wilson">OF, 1900-1948.  Named to the Hall of Fame in 1979, his 190 RBIs in 1930 is a big league record that has never been even approached by other sluggers.</answer>
	<answer label="Ryne Sandberg">2B 3B, b. 1959.  Cardozo's eloquent pen in his chambers and Sandberg's elegant play in the batter&#8217;s box and at second base join these two all-time greats.  Sandberg was league MVP in 1984, and won a Gold Glove in every season from 1983 to 1989.  In 1986, he set an NL record for second sackers with only five errors and a .9938 fielding percentage.  Cardozo&#8217;s prose reads more like poetry than turgid legalese.  His Storrs Lectures at Yale, which were published as The Nature of the Judicial Process (1921), are still required reading for students of the law and political science.</answer>
	<answer label="Earl Weaver">Mgr, b. 1930.  This fiery Baltimore Orioles skipper, who won 1480 games in his career, was known to turn his cap backwards while &#8220;discussing&#8221; his concerns with umpires.</answer>
</baseball>

