<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<baseball name="Arthur J. Goldberg" correct="3">
	<answer label="George Crowe">1B, b. 1923.  Former Negro Leaguer was an All-Star with the Reds in 1958, then traded to the Cardinals where, as Stan Musial&#8217;s backup, he led the NL with 17 pinch hits in 1959.</answer>
	<answer label="Lou Limmer">1B, b. 1925.  An outstanding minor-leaguer, but never succeeded in hitting major league pitching; played only 209 games in the bigs.</answer>
	<answer label="John Olerud">1B, b. 1968.  Solid hitting first baseman is one of the few players in the history of the game to regularly wear a batting helmet, rather than a cloth cap, while playing in the field.</answer>
	<answer label="Mike Epstein">1B, b. 1943.  Like Goldberg, Mike Epstein played three seasons in the Washington major leagues: Epstein with the Washington Senators and Goldberg with the Supremes.  Esptein's moniker--Superjew--could easily apply to Goldberg, an up-from-poverty labor lawyer and first-in-his-class Northwestern graduate, who helped merge the great labor organizations of his day, the AFL and the CIO.  John Kennedy appointed him Secretary of Labor and then nominated him to the Supreme Court.  He stepped down, reluctantly, after only three years on the Court when Lyndon Johnson asked him to serve as US Ambassador to the United Nations.</answer>
</baseball>

