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<baseball name="Felix Frankfurter" correct="1">
    <answer label="Mike Simon">C, 1883-1963.  A backup catcher with the Pirates, and then St. Louis and Brooklyn of the Federal League, batted .225 for his career.</answer>
    <answer label="Moe Berg">C, 1902-1972.  Berg and Frankfurter were both scholars and patriots who found the best use for their prodigious talents.  Berg played 14 seasons in the majors, and was a lawyer and mathematician.  When criticized for wasting his intellect on baseball, Berg commented: “I'd rather be a ballplayer than a justice on the U.S. Supreme Court.”  Frankfurter was a complex intellectual who approached his judicial tasks with rabbinic concentration.  At Harvard Law School, where he taught, and on the bench, Frankfurter would demand reasoned discourse.  He would lecture his sometimes resentful colleagues in conference and in dissent.</answer>
    <answer label="Norm Sherry">C, b. 1931.  As a reserve catcher, played with his brother Larry with the Dodgers from 1959-62.</answer>
    <answer label="Manny Sanguillen">C, b. 1944.  Great athlete behind the plate, and a career .296 hitter, Sanguillen was involved in a rare trade in 1976 when he was sent to Oakland (with $100,000) for manager Chuck Tanner.</answer>
</baseball>
