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<baseball name="Robert H. Jackson" correct="3">
	<answer label="Dwight Gooden">RHP, b. 1964.  Because his curve ball was so devastating, it earned the moniker &#8220;Lord Charles&#8221; to distinguish it from other pitchers who merely threw &#8220;Uncle Charlie.&#8221;</answer>
	<answer label="Ferguson Jenkins">RHP, b. 1943.  Named to the Hall of Fame in 1991, the same year as Rod Carew and Gaylord Perry, he won 20+ games and struck out over 200 batters six years in a row.</answer>
	<answer label="Ralph Kiner">OF 1B, b. 1922.  Named to the Hall of Fame in 1975, his career 14.11 at-bats to home run ratio trails only McGuire and Ruth.</answer>
	<answer label="Rod Carew">1B 2B, b. 1945.  Brandeis once observed that Solicitor General Jackson was so skilled that he should be given the position for life.  On the Court, Justice Jackson was a great opinion writer, delivering his arguments in clear,  persuasive language.  The suppleness of his mind is matched by Carew&#8217;s smarts on the basepaths, and sweet swing&#8212;he hit over .300 in 15 consecutive seasons.  Both players overcame adversity to produce during crunch time: Jackson fought an illness to stay in the lineup for Brown (1954), while Carew rebounded from injury in 1979 to help the Angels win their first division title.</answer>
</baseball>

