Harry Reid wishes 'every day' to have
George W. Bush back, says he'd be 'Babe Ruth' compared to Trump
Harry Reid (left) delivered a scathing attack on President Donald Trump
in a new interview (Associated Press)
Former Democratic leader Harry Reid has unleashed a blistering attack on
Donald Trump.
Reid, who has repeatedly slammed the president, renewed hostilities and
even managed to spin his dislike of Trump into some unexpected praise for a
former political adversary.
“In hindsight, I wish every day for a George Bush again,” Reid told
CNN’s Dana Bash.
"There's no question in my mind that George Bush would be Babe Ruth
in this league that he's in with Donald Trump in the league. Donald Trump
wouldn't make the team," Reid said.
Reid famously sparred with President Bush during his administration
calling him a “loser” and a “liar”, making his admission even more cutting
toward the current President.

Reid, who is fighting pancreatic cancer and left office in 2017, was
asked by Bash if ‘there was anything he thought the President was doing right?’
“I just have trouble accepting him as a person,” Reid replied. “So
frankly, I don’t see anything he is doing right.”
Not one to take an insult lying down, President Trump quickly shot back
on Twitter.

“Former Senator Harry Reid (he got thrown out) is working hard to put a
good spin on his failed career. He led through lies and deception, only to be
replaced by another beauty, Cryin’ Chuck Schumer. Some things just never
change!” Trump tweeted.

Reid also gave some advice to Democratic presidential candidates who are
seeking to take on President Trump in 2020.
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"The candidates running need not talk about how bad President Trump
is, they just need to talk about what's good for the country,” Reid said.
“Everyone knows, even those people supporting knows what problems he
has.”
02
Historic Yankees contract signed by
Babe Ruth sells for nearly $300,000
Imagine if Babe Ruth were a free agent today.
A historic 1932 contract signed by Ruth -- in which he was forced to
take a pay cut with the New York Yankees -- was sold at auction for nearly
$300,000 on Friday, according to auctioneer RR Auction.
The Bambino settled for $75,000 -- a $5,000 decrease from the
previous year because of the Depression, which factored into baseball's
revenues. His contract included 25 percent of the net receipts from
Yankees exhibition games.
“Ruth’s Depression-era contract provided an unprecedented historical
look at the Game of Baseball — especially considering Manny Machado’s just
signed deal worth $300 million, the richest free-agent contract in baseball
history, ” said Bobby Livingston, executive VP at RR Auction.
For comparison, the copy of the Red Sox part of the deal that sold Ruth
to the Yankees auctioned for close to $1 million in 2005.
Hall of Famer Babe Ruth. (Photo: Handout)
03
Babe Ruth’s legacy lives through his
family in Las Vegas Valley
ulia Ruth Stevens’ room is adorned with images of the American legend.
To most, the man in the photos is among the greatest to ever play
baseball. She calls him “Daddy.”
Babe Ruth, the American icon, posthumously received the Presidential
Medal of Freedom last year, but for months the medal sat mostly undisturbed on
the floor of Tom Stevens’ home in the Las Vegas Valley. Now it is on display in
a museum across the country as a gift from the family earlier this month.
“It does no one any good hidden under couches and things like that, so
the obvious place for it is the Babe Ruth birthplace museum in Baltimore,” said
Stevens, who is Ruth Stevens’ son.
The medal is the latest in a series of donations the 66-year-old
engineer has made in The Great Bambino’s memory, but much of the family’s
effort to preserve the legend comes through sharing stories about George Herman
Ruth when he wasn’t on the baseball diamond.
A lifetime of stories
Julia’s face lights up at times when she speaks about her father, who
adopted her after marrying her mother in 1929. She is his last-surviving
daughter.
“He’d always stick his head into my room after he got up (and) he’d say,
‘You want to have breakfast with me?’” Ruth Stevens said. “And I’d always say,
‘Of course!’”
Ruth would frequently make a breakfast he called the “hole in one” — a
piece of toast with a hole cut out of the middle to make room for an egg. But
it wasn’t his favorite dinner.
“Steak,” she said, giggling.
Golden Mylar balloons from her 102nd birthday hang next to a colorful
Peter Luke painting of Ruth on the wall of her room at an assisted living
facility. The memories of her father are starting to fade as she ages,
requiring Tom to chime in with reminders of stories he’s heard throughout his
life, such as the way the slugger ordered takeout Chinese food.
“And what would he ask for?” Tom said to his mother.
“A bottle of that ink!” Julia said, referring to soy sauce.
What Julia knows of the Charleston and the foxtrot, she learned from
Babe Ruth, mostly at the Hotel Des Artistes in Manhattan, she said.
I think as long as there’s baseball, there will probably be Babe.
Tom Stevens, grandson
The two bonded over dinners in Greenwich Village, radio programs and the
circus at Madison Square Garden.
He also taught her golf (it didn’t go well) and bowling (that went
better).
“Well, I always tried to beat him, not that I ever did,” she said. “He
was a good bowler. Very good. As a matter of fact, I always thought to myself,
‘Whatever sport there is, polo or anything, Daddy always knew how to do it and
do it well.’”
Julia Ruth Stevens talks about her experiences growing up with her famed
father.
On Dancing
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On Bowling
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On Exercise
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On What He Means To Her
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But he didn’t teach her baseball, Julia said.
Tom helped his mother recall her earliest memory of her father: Ruth
giving her a wristwatch when she was a young girl.
“And it was just thrilling for me to have something like that because
there weren’t that many around,” she said.
But while roughhousing on the couch with her dad one day, the crystal in
the watch broke.
“And I started to cry because it was the first watch that I ever had,”
she said. “And Daddy says, ‘Don’t worry about it, don’t worry about it, I’ll
buy you a new one.’ And that’s the way he was about things.”
In 1934, Julia joined Ruth on a trip to Japan with a team of all-stars
for her high school graduation gift. Ruth extended the trip with Julia and her
mother to go sightseeing across Asia and Europe, said Tom, who was born years
after Ruth’s death in 1948.
“The trip to Japan and the stay there was probably the most wonderful
time of my life,” Julia said. “For one thing, they did leave Daddy alone so
that he could do the things that he wanted to. They didn’t crowd around him and
he loved that.”
While the family was staying in a suite at a luxurious hotel, a man in a
kimono knocked on the door, Julia recalled with some help from her son. The
man’s sleeves were filled with baseballs for Ruth to autograph, Tom said.
Tom speaks fondly of stories he heard of Ruth acting as a showman when
carving a Thanksgiving turkey, or carefully adding icicle decorations to the
Christmas tree long after everyone else lost interest.
Tom said it rankles his mother, who was 12 when she was adopted by Ruth,
to be referred to as Ruth’s stepdaughter.
He recalled how Ruth came through when Julia, as a young adult, was sick
in the hospital with strep throat. She needed a blood transfusion, and Ruth
proved to be a match, Tom said.
“She said as far as she was concerned, between being adopted and the
transfusion, ‘I’m his daughter, period,’” Tom said.
Tom’s home is decorated with photos of Ruth, his grandmother Claire, and
Julia the day her father walked her down the aisle for her wedding. It would
look like a normal collection of family photos if not for the famed
ballplayer’s visage.
Perpetuating a legacy
Camera flashes snapped intermittently throughout a packed Yankee Stadium
on Sept. 21, 2008. Julia, wearing a navy Yankees jacket, clutched Tom’s arm as
they walked to the infield, waving to an eruption of cheers.
“As the stadium’s history began with a Ruth, it’s only fitting that we
close Yankee Stadium with a Ruth,” the announcer’s voice echoed through the
stadium.
Ahead of the Yankees’ departure to their newly built baseball cathedral,
Julia threw the final ceremonial first pitch in “The House That Ruth Built.”
It was one of many ceremonial experiences for Tom and Julia, who have
tossed first pitches, presented trophies, and commemorated Ruth at events. The
family history has placed Tom in the presence of prominent athletes,
celebrities and four U.S. presidents, he said. Julia still receives fan mail
from baseball fans looking to connect with The Sultan of Swat.
“The only way, really, that I could possibly pay him back is to help
perpetuate his legacy,” Tom said. “I think as long as there’s baseball, there
will probably be Babe.”
Julia spoke of her special relationship with fans in a biography posted
on the Babe Ruth League website about her 2018 induction into the league’s
International Hall of Fame.
“I think people feel when they meet me they are touching a part of
Daddy. I know it is really him they admire, and it is a wonderful feeling for
me to know they are connecting to a part of him through me,” she said in the
league biography.
Julia’s age makes it difficult for her to travel to events now, and the
days of media interviews are behind her.
But after game days at Yankee stadium to watch Ruth play, her travels
abroad, and growing up beside a legend, experiencing the extraordinary and the
mundane, Julia said she knows she has lived a full life.
“And it was all because of Daddy,” she said.
Contact Blake Apgar at bapgar@reviewjournal.com or 702-387-5298. Follow
@blakeapgar on Twitter.
Babe Ruth Statistics
George Herman “Babe” Ruth played for three Major League Baseball teams
during his career: the Boston Red Sox (1914-1919); the New York Yankees
(1920-1934) and the Boston Braves (1935).
• Batting average: .342 (10th in MLB history)
• Home runs: 714 (3rd in MLB history)
• Hits: 2,873
• RBI: 2,213 (2nd in MLB history)
• Slugging percentage: .690 (1st all-time)
•On-base percentage: .474 (2nd all-time)
• Pitching W/L record: 94-46
• ERA: 2.28
www.baberuth.com/stats
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