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<baseball name="Stephen G. Breyer" correct="3">
    <answer label="Cecil Cooper">1B DH, b. 1949.  Career .298 hitter who saw action in five All-Star games.</answer>
    <answer label="Andres Galarraga">1B, b. 1961.  The “Big Cat” bounced back from cancer to post big numbers in the 2000 campaign.</answer>
    <answer label="Raphael Palmeiro">1B OF, b. 1964.  Swatted 569 round-trippers in his 20-year MLB career.</answer>
    <answer label="Jim Rice">OF DH, b. 1953. Modesty and pragmatism unite these two players. Breyer, like Rice, proved soft-spoken. And on defense, Rice adapted well to his environment, using shots off Fenway's Green Monster to entice runners into trying for a double, before gunning them down at second to their disbelief.  Such adaptive behavior can be seen in Breyer's jurisprudence, which according to one Court-watcher can be labeled "liberal judicial restraint."  While Breyer prefers to defer to the elected branches and the people, he realizes that because these institutions and citizens are fallible, the Court should assert itself when need be.  This loosely parallel's the governing philosophy of "New Democrat" Bill Clinton, the president who appointed him to the bench.</answer>
</baseball>
