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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 “Lord Charles” to distinguish it from other pitchers who merely threw “Uncle Charlie.”</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’s smarts on the basepaths, and sweet swing—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>
