ゾ SUMMER MOVIE PREVIEW A fresh hit 0f ' 90S nostalgia Landline, a comedy about tWO sisters (Abby Quinn, below, and 」 enny Slate) coming Of age in New York City in the 1990S , nails the vibe with the help ofthese studiously curated artifacts andline (JuIy 21 ) 3 20 Peak bad behavior 1. Boom box Like the landline, a relic of decades past 2. CD collection A selection that likely included NataIie Merchant, whO is featured on the soundtrack 3. WaIl-to-waII carpeting The "crappy, comfy gray synthetic carpet" that director GiIIian Robespierre recalls from childhood 4. The Robin Byrd Show A popular, semipornographic late-night cable-access program 5. VHS tapes SisterAct and Little Women 6. BIockbuster Video mug From the glory days of the brick-and-mortar movie イ ental chain 7. T 「 0 do The originalfidget spinner Out of frame Posters Of the Beastie Boys and Sonic Youth, RO 〃 ing Stone covers ofWinona Ryder, Courtney Love and Liz Phair, and Gund teddy bears KILLER BACHELORETTES Ⅲ Rough Night, girlfriends on a bachelorette weekend in Miami start with choreographed dance moves and a smidge ofcocaine atthe club. Things get out of hand when: The stripper arrives GIRLSTRIP: UNIVERSAL; FUN MOM DINNER: MOMENTUM; LANDLINE: AMAZON; ROUG 工 NIG 工 T, T 工 E EMO 」一 MOVIE. SPIDER_MAN: SONY; ILLUSTRATIONS BY CARRIE LAPOLLA FOR TIME WOMEN GONE W に 0 旧 Girls Trip college friends in New Orleans zip-line across Bourbon Streetand flash P Diddy. Things get out Of hand when: They hallucinate on 200- year-o wormwood absinthe Charlize Theron as a multitalented murderer Theron isn't afraid tO get her finely pressed white coat dirty in Atomic BIonde. More resourcefulthan 」 ames Bond, more lethalthan 」 ason Bourne, she uses anything handy in a fightto maim her enemies 4 om 引 0 de ( 加ツ 28 ) 22 H OT PLATE MOMMY DRUNKEST 旧 Fun Mom Dinner, moms escape diaper duty with a trip tO the cannabis dispensary, ' 90S karaoke and inappropriate flirting. Things get out Of hand when: Adam Levine shows up 側 g わ Night (June 16 ) ・ G ルゆ ( 加ツ 21 ) ; un Mom 0 e ′ ( へ g : 当わ STILETTO CORKSCREW BACKPACK GARDEN HOSE 48 TIME May 29 , 2017
S U M M E R M OV ー E P R EV IEW JUNE Sinister style in period drama My Cousin 飛 ac れ el Rachel Weisz's character ⅲ the adaptation of Daphne du Maurier's best-selling novel is a puz- zle: a widow WhO iS either an innocent victim or a treacherous killer—・ or maybe whatever's in between. The time period Of the bOOk is also ambig- uous, which let the film's creators decide on one for themselves. Costume designer Dinah COIIin says setting the film ⅲ 1840 meant they could avoid the stiff crinolines that became popular a decade later as well as the "hilarious " big sle eves Of the previous decade. "You want something much more elegant," COIIin says. Especially when you're trying tO dress a riddle, wrapped ⅲ a mystery, inside an enigma. gM Cous Rachel June 9 0 Poignant illustrations by a come dian 回 Knock-down, drag- 0 ut rivalries MAN VS. WOMAN Beatriz at Dinner, an earth- loving healer (Salma Hayek) trades verbal barbs with an earth- leveling developer ( 」 Ohn Lithgow) at a dinner party. TO ー強 Cruise's death- (and age-) defying stunts ltwas Tom Cruise's idea tO film a plane crash in zero G for TheMummy.. The 54 ッ ea ト 0 shOt the scene on a plane that NASA astronauts had dubbed the Vomit Comet. "When Tom hears, ・ That's not possible,' he goes, ・ Youjustcommitted yourselfto it,'" says director Alex Kurtzman. Here arethe numbers behind the set-piece sequence: he Mummy(June 9 Demetri Martin not only wrote, directed and starred in his movmg new comedybut so illustrated it. HiS interstitial dra 、 Mings punctuate the storyofa man namedDean (Martin) and his father (Kevin KIine),who mourntheloss ofDean's mother and pursue romance onparallel tracks. pean (June 2 ) MY COUSIN RAC 工 EL: 「 OX SEARC 工 LIG 工 T; DEAN ( 2 ) 】 CBS; BEATRIZ AT DINNER: ROADSIDE ATTRACTIONS; APES: 20T 工 CENTURY 「 OX 】 AN INCONVENIENT SEQUEL: PARAMOUNT; WONDER WOMAN: GETTY IMAGES;ILLUSTRATIONS BY CARRIE LAPOLLA FOR TIME 0 0 Cf) ー Q Q 0 0 < o E 30 , 000 22 0 THESHADOW OF DEATH Dean does everything he can to escape the cloud Of grief over him, from flying across the country to lookingfor a new love. Butthe more he avoids reality, the more the Grim Reaper clings to his shadow. Number Of feet the plane dropped SHOWING DEATH THE 000R Dean learns that grief is best navigated not through avoidance but confrontation. Only once he has acknowledged the pain he wants tO escape can he begin tO move on, little by ⅱ e. 44 TIME May 29 , 2017 MAN VS. CLIMATE CHANGE 旧 An lnconvenient Sequel, a follow-up to his 2006 Oscar winner, former Vice President Gore continues his environmental crusade. Seconds of weightlessness for each flight— the time tO get the shOts right Number of stunt doubles for Cruise, whO didn't lose his lunch eatriz at 0 加 e ′ (June 9 ) ・ War fo ′ the Planet 0 ′ the Apes ( 」 u ツ 14 ) ; 4 00 ve ⅲ e t Seque (JuIy 28 Number Of takes. The crew rode the plane 16 times in a row いいⅵ℃ e a day for two days
JUNE SUMMER MOVIE PREVIEW Another big friendly giant 0 b0 b0 9 The hulking creature at the center Of the fantasticalfilm 0 町 a is friendlier than she may seem. FoIIowing his trippy Snowpiercer, Korean director Bong 」 00n - hO spins atale Ofa younggirl ()n Seo Hyun) and her strange, shy pet, Okja, whO attracts the attention Of a zoologist ( 」 ake GyIIenhaaI). When a vain CEO played by a creepy-as-ever Tilda Swinton sweeps up Okja and takes her tO New York, the girl sets out tO save her. As child- creature bonds go, this story— and its concept art—trend more toward Pan's Labyrinth than Free Wi 〃 y. The Netflix film 引 SO bridges international waters, dialogue switching between Korean and English. 0 町 a (June 28 ) 16. The mistress Of gore A Girl Ⅳ 0 s 亶 ome AIone Night director Ana LiIy Amirpour's second film, The Bad Batch, begins with cannib als' cutting 0 代 a girl's limbs (Suki Waterhouse). .The scene sets 、 the tone for a movie about misfits dumped in the desert by the government. ー lt was inspired by Amirpour's watching her orthop edic - surge on father saw 0 a patient's leg as a child. "lt 、 was him with plastic goggles sawing a man's leg 0 with a hacksaw,just like in the film. There 's no modern gadget," she says. "lt 's j ust a man sawing." Her dad consulted as she wrote, saying, "lf I were ⅲ the desert, I would saw it 0 burn the amputated nub and then put ash on it tO keep out infection ゞ ' The Bad Batch (June 23 ) Sofia Coppola's latest focuses on ahouseful ofladies during the CivilWar. But they're no Little Women. The residents ofa girls' boarding school—the headmistress (Nic01e Kidman), a teacher (Kirsten Dunst) and a young pupil (Elle Fanning)—take ⅲ a wounded Union soldier (C01in Farrell) and end up battling for his sexual attention. (lt's a remake ofthe 1971 classic starring CIint Eastwood. ) As the plot darkens, so do Coppola's signature visuals. "ln the beginning it's very romantic; ” she says. The director used a lOt offlorals and pastels t0 create "a so 代 , feminine world. ” Slowly, it transforms intO Southern GOthiC. For inspiration, Coppola looked to portraiture 仕 om the period, WiIIiam EggIeston photos and the ' 70S nature photography that informed her 1999 breakout, The 巧 r. れ Suicides. "There's alot about powerbetween male and female dynamics; ” she says ofthe new movie. "ln The Virgin Suicides, the women don't make it. But in this one they take charge ofthings. ” 4 he Begulled (June 23 ) T 工 E BEGUILED: FOCUS FEATURES; OK 」 A 】 NETF 匚 ILLUSTRATION BY CARRIE LAPOLLA FOR TIME Baby Driver's insane chases AnseI EIgort plays a getaway driver with an iPOd full of rad tunes and no fear of death. The physics Of one marquee stunt—EIgort transports three bank robbers through a narrow alley full of deadly traps—have never been seen on film, says stunt driver 」 eremy Fry. Here's how they pulled it 0 幵 : Baby Driver (June 28 17 lnflation, in lb. per SC4. 111. , Number tO keep Of takes the tires TOtaI hours of prep from gnppmg the road Angle Of t00 much rotation— in and out Of the stunt Speed, in miles per hour, at which Fry ini tiated the stunt; he came out dOing about 30 m. p. h. 46 TIME May 29 , 2017
AUGUST S U M M E R M OV に P R EVI EW The Da Tower's layered meanings After a deca de Of uns uccessful a ttempts, Stephen King's landmark series is becoming a movie starring 旧 Elba and Matthew McConaughey. The story? complicated. Here's a guide: PubIished: Seven books, from 1982 to 2004 Genres: Fantasy, western, SCi-fi, horror Summary: Roland Deschain (Elba) is the last Of a knightly order Of cowboys, known as gunslingers,living in the semimagical universe Mid-World. His quest: tO hunt down a villain named the Man in Black (McConaughey) and reach the mystic Dark Tower. A boy from ourworld, 」 ake, begins havingvisions Of Mid-World that pull him intO Deschain's mission. 円 ot themes: Fate, loss, family, death Literary motifs: BibIicaI names, water, technology SymboIs and meanings: The number 19 (omens), the Horn Of EId (redemption), the Dark Tower (power, evil) References: Robert Browning's poem "ChiIde Roland tO the DarkTower Came ・ The Lord Ofthe Rings; The Good, the Bad and the Ugly; Harry Potter; Arthurian legends he Dark Ⅳ e ′ Aug, 4 patti Cake$s genius 巓 OW Aussie DanieIIe Macdonald became a Sundance darling as Patti, an aspiring rapperwho spins allusion イ ich rhymes, like the one below, about escaping her life in New 」 ersey. attl Cake$ Aug. 18 田 29. Aubrey Plaza, unhinge d She 's a little bit terrifying. PIaying a lustful nun (The Little Hours) and a stalker ⅲ smudged mascara (lngrid Goes West), Plaza has a tendency tO roll her chestnut irises, which gleam with the p ossibility Of detonation, tO the apex Of their sockets. lt's a qualitY she honed as April Ludgate, the misanthropic municipal cog on Parks and Recreation. She once threatened tO SCOOP out a slacking intern's eyes with a melon baller, then gingerly kissed hiS nose and slapped his face. This is Plaza's sense Of humor, more than any given character. And yet, at just the right moment, humanity can Ⅱ 00d those eyes. Menace, but with mercy close behind. The リせ Hours (June 30 ) ; lngrid Goes West (Aug. 11 ) の lt's the 0k0 GO hard the swagger is Viagra の新 : 玩 g い立 匿 Jaggeg ⅲ a Jaguar I pull strings like Santana at the Copacabana in a pink bandanna I wax that ass like a Brazilian I make a million hits ④ 知@k寒贏おmー e q リ el'm fresh tO death Or till l'm filthy rich Big&onedjoan e BIack Heart ④ is the ish Live from the black shack like a Tamp ax We up ⅲ this bitch . 1. A Ritz cracker is a lowbrow snack with a highbrow name, a paradox that resonates with the artist. Cracker is 引 SO a derogatoryterm for a white person. 2. "ROII stoned" refers tO driving while high, and Patti alludes tO the Rolling Stones' Mick 」 agger because she feels like a rock star. 3. Patti invokes gangsters: AI Pacino's Scarface legend Tony Montana and fictional New 」 ersey mafioso Tony Soprano. 4. Rick Rubin co-founded Def 」 am Records, and his name doubles as a term for curvy women, like Patti, which derives from the paintings Of Sir Peter Paul Rubens. 5. Rocker 」 oan 」 ett's band is the BIackhearts, and Patti feels her own heart is black because she doesn't care what Other people think. 6. Another nickname for Patricia, Patti's full name. T 工 E DARKTOWER 】 COLUMBIA; LEAPI 】 T 工 E WEINSTEIN CO ニ ILLUSTRATIONS BY CARRIE LAPOLLA FOR TIME The triumph of animated ballerinas "lsn't it strange that there hasn't been an animated film focused around ballet? ” asks TedTy, director ofanimation 0 Ⅱも e 叩 ! , which is exactly that. Maybe it's because animating ballerinas is a challenge, especially in making sure moves don't 100k “ t00 perfect ” and therefore stiff. Tyworked with retired dancer Aurélie Dupont and studied the iconic Edgar Degas statuettes "to get a feeling ofhowtheirbones lay and h0 they stand and their weight, the difference between an adult and ayoung girl. ” The hardest step to animate : the fouetté, a turn involving arepeatedwhipping motion 0fthe leg. "They canlookvery mechanical ifyou don't put an intention behind it; ” Ty says. "E ach character's dancing has tO reflect their own personality. ” eap! (Aug. 30 50 TIME May 29 , 2017
necks run $ 1 on special. Between shifts recently, TJ Bray and Kyle Beaman set- tled intO a booth there tO unwind. Bea- man, 62 , worked in quality control at Rexnord, while Bray, 33 , started working at Carrier 15 years ago, one day before his high school graduation. A year ago, Bray thought he would be the one out of a jOb. Carrier's parent company, United Technologies (UTC), announced plans tO close its lndianap- Olis plant and move its jObs tO Monter- rey, Mexico. Then Trump got involved. At campaign rallies, the candidate re- lentlessly hammered the company as a j ob killer, turning Carrier into a symbol of the devastation he said globalization had wreaked on the nation's workers. After Trump was elected, UTC, which has done billions of dollars in business with the Department Of Defense, agreed tO keep union jObs in lndianapolis in ex- change for a tax-incentive package and; presumably, an end t0 the President's bar- rage. "I am thankful t0 the President for what he did; ” says Bray. But even grateful workers worry that their paychecks may not survive futur rounds ofautomation or COSt cutting. Tor rie Bennett, a 13-year plant veteran, sa the mood at Carrier now "is like being in an ugly relationship. They've said they want tO leave you. SO you're on guard. ' Trump's intervention reinforced the expectation that he can prevent Other companies from moving manufacturing jobs overseas. Asked what he would say to the President ifhe had the chance, Bea- in a statement. But the company, which man, who worked his last day at Rexnord in April, is frank: "Can you help us? lfyou netted $ 68 million ⅲ the 2016 fiscal year, noted that "diff ℃ ult decisions are a part can't help us, be man enough t0 tell us. A lot ofpeople are banking on this. Donald oftoday's business environment. TO be a viable company that contributes tO eco- Trump, can you save us? ” nomic growth, we must meet customers needs with high-quality products at com- But that 、ⅵⅡ not revive an entire way AMERICA'S MANUFACTURING roots reach back almost to the dawn of the of life ⅲ the Midwest—or address the petitlve prices. host ofknotty economic, social and politi- nation. Samuel Slater, a cotton spin- If Trump's Carrier deal was a reminder ner's apprentice from England, opened of how the bully pulpit could be used to cal issues that come with its demise. "The what's considered tO be America's first make the private sector bend, Rexnord's blue collar life is all l've known; ” Bousum closure shows itS limits—and Offers a says, drawing from his glass of whiskey. textile factory in Pawtucket, R. I. , in 1790. lesson in the challenges Of reversing a 'How the hell am I going to survive? ” Nine children pushed foot treadles to global economic trend decades in the make spindles 0f yarn. From that tiny making. When Trump tweeted about V V WORKPLACE has a third place, operation grew tens ofthousands Offac- Rexnord again, on May 7 , he said the deal where colleagues go tO celebrate a pro- tories making everything from the ce- tO leave the country was made during his motion, toast a retirement or simply ment lining the Erie Canal tO the tracks predecessor's Administration, and alluded blow off steam. For many at Carrier and for the transcontinental railro ad tO the Rexnord, that place is Sully's, a sports bar assembly-line M0del Ts that ushered in t0 levying "big" taxes on the Mexico-made across from the Carrier plant, where long- the automobile age. goods the company will sell ⅲ the U. S. 」一製当」 4 主麕雪ヨーを目 = After 58 ア ears ofmanufacturing bearings at this をれ west 加 d 0 0 石 s , Rexnord is moving its operations tO Monterrey, Mexico る 3
を THE JOBS THAT WEREN'T SAVED Nation A mile fronp the Carrier plant President Trump helped keep open, another factory is moving tO Mexico and putting 300 Americans out Of work By Sean Gregory/Indianapolis PHOTOGRAPHS BY INZAJEANO LATIF FORTIME
Deep bags sag 取 er Brian Bousum's eyes as he Sips whiskey a 取臧 water in a 取臧 ' apartment 0 取 a recent Sunday evening. Fifty-one years 0 ー , he has s e 取亡亡 e past 亡 WO decades operating screw machines an setting 0 取 earing ー a 取亡 0 取亡 e west e Of 夏取 ia 取 a20 s , a mile from 亡 e Carrier factory made famous by President Trump. を 上 For a guy who didn't go t0 college, he says, the work is hard tO beat: the union offeredjob security and enough overtime t0 make up t0 $ 75 , 000 ayear, a salary that enabled him to buy his own home with an in-ground POOI. Bousum's son jOined him at the plant after graduating from high school. By the end of the summer, however, they'll both be out of a job. Rexnord, a $ 1.9 billion company based in Milwaukee, is closing the lndianapolis plant and moving itS operations tO MexiCO. There, labor costs about $ 3 an hour, rather than the $ 25 Rexnord pays its longest-serving union employees in lndiana. The 1 れ ove will put more than 300 Americans out of work. Before that happens, some 0f the workers here are taking advantage Of Rexnord's Offer Of an extra $ 4 tO $ 10 an hour tO train their Mexican replacements. Others are tOO pained and tOO proud. The outsourcing Of America's factory jobs is nothing new, ofcourse. Since 1999 , the nation's manufacturing workforce has dropped 28 % , from 17.3 million jobs t0 12.4 million, as companies flee tO coun- tries with cheaper labor costs. Between 2001 and 2016 , the U. S. had a net loss 0f nearly 54 , 000 manufacturing businesses. ln those that remain, more and more work 32 TIME May 29 , 2017 is being done by robots and advanced computers, which are usually overseen by engineers, programme rs and Others With at least four-year college degrees. "This is a runaway train; says An- thony Carnevale, director 0fthe George- town University Center on Education and the Workforce. "ln the end, technology and global markets improve productivity and benefit all of us. Sadly, it hurts some Ofus even 1 れ ore. DonaId Trump promised t0 make the pain stop, and he owes his election in part tO the Midwestern factory workers who believed he would make good 0 Ⅱ the pledge. "I absolutely got sucked into this message; ” says Rexnord machinist Gary Canter, 46 , wh0 has started delivering pizza for Papa J0hn's three nights a week tO SOCk away extra money before his im- pending layo 圧 For Bousum, the rationale was simple: "I voted for Trump based on the fact that he could save our jobs. ” They had reason t0 hope in early De- cember, just weeks after Trump's victory, when the President-elect announced a deal with nearby heating- and cooling- equipment manufacturer Carrier tO keep 1 , 100 j0bs ⅲ lndianapolis rather than move them t0 Mexico (although some 300 Of those "saved ” jObs were はドイトま三ご dianapolis community," Rexnord said our associates, their families and the ln- Sion and we understand itS impact on "This has been a very dffcult deci- false hope; ” Donnelly tells TIME. prieve is unlikely. "I don't want tO create President, cautions that a last-minute re- who has discussed the closure with the Joe Donnelly, a Democrat from lndiana, is pressing ahead with its move. Senator More than five months later, Rexnord country. NO more! ” tweeted. "This is happening all over our Of its 300 workers; ” the President-elect Mexico and rather viciously firing all plan. "Rexnord Of lndiana is moving tO had already announced its relocation turne d his ire toward Rexnord, which slated t0 move). The next day, Trump white COllar positions that were never
By 1943 , ⅲ the midst 0fWorld War Ⅱ , nearly 4 ⅲ 10 0fAmerica's nonagricultural workers were employed in manufactur- ing, producing steel, ships and aircraft for the U. S. war effort; later, such work- ers produced homes, cars and air condi- tioners for the ascendant postwar mid- dle class. The jobs were often steady and unionized, the pay good, and the require- ments rarely more than a high school di- ploma and a solid work ethic. But all that started t0 die ⅲ the early 1980S. Some 19.5 million Americans held manufacturing j0bs in 1979 , an all-time down t0 about 16.7 million. By 2024 , ac- cording tO projections from the Bureau Of Labor Statistics, Just 7.1 % Of Americans will work in manufacturing. The reasons are many, but the prime culprits are globalization and automation. ln 1991 , China accounted for 2.3 % 0fthe world's manufacturing exports. ln 2001 , the country joined the World Trade Or- ganization, and by 2013 , China's share 0f global exports was 18.8 % , according t0 a 2016 study in the A れれ u Review 0fEC0- nomics. countrie S such as Mexico and the Philippines have also increased their ex- ports. Labor in these markets tends tO be substantially cheaper than in the U. S. , and trade deals like NAFTA make it easy for American companies tO produce goods ⅲ far-flung locales. TO economists, however, America S shrinking manufacturing j obs have le s s to do with free trade than with robots. The U. S. still produces world-class air- planes, car parts and heavy machin- ery. Companies Just need fewer people tO make them. The result, according tO the Brookings lnstitution, is that whereas it tOOk 25 jObs tO generate $ 1 million in manufacturing output in 1980 , tOday it takes just 6.5 jobs. Many of the nation's factories are more productive than ever, and there is growing demand for work- ers in so-called advanced manufacturing roles. From 2013 tO 2015 , 132 , 000 such jobs were added, according t0 Brookings ・ But these positions increasingly re- quire specialized technical training after high school, with preference often going tO those with degrees in science, technol- 0 engineering and math. And the work will be less about fitting pieces together manually than overseeing the rob Ots that do it. Today, according t0 research from 34 TIME May29, 2017 ・ DO れ Zering, Rexnord's u ⅲ 0 れ rep, 砒 the United Steelworkers も oc 1999 ゞ he's worked 砒 the companyfor 44 ツ e 肝 s the Boston Consulting Group, robots per- form about 10 % Of manufacturing work around the world. By 2025 , they are pro- jected t0 account for about 25 %. "High- skill workers in factories will be managing processes; says DavidAutor, aprofessor ofeconomics at the Massachusetts lnsti- tute of Technology (MIT), "rather than showing off manual dexterity. Autor's research shows that Ameri- can workers WhO lOSt their manufactur- ing jobs as a result of trade shocks, like competition from Chinese imports, are likely to make less money and collect more disability benefits over the ensu- ing decade. He predicts a similar fate for the women and men at Rexnord. "Unless they get very lucky, there won't be an- other employer out there saying, 'Great, I can use a few more ball-bearings guys, says Autor. Even the rescued Carrier jobs may be vulnerable. ln an interview about the deal with CNBC in December, UTC chairman and CEO Greg Hayes said a $ 16 million investment tO automate tasks in the plant would ultimately reduc e the workforce. And the company is moving ahead with the closure 0f another plant in Huntington, lnd. , which workers had 0 House Speaker Paul Ryan, as part of the on domestic sales and imports favored by cluding the bo rder adj ustment tax, a levy his Rexnord tweet, has Trump backed in- has been in place since 1994. Nor, despite agreement among the three nations that want tO re negotiate the sweep ing trade not t0 terminate NAFTA, though he does ers 0fCanada and Mexico, he has agreed mies. And after consulting with the lead- between the world's two largest econo- the value Of the strategic relationship manipulator, a sign that he recognizes longer publicly calls China a currency Sive stances on trade. The president Ⅱ 0 has softened some Of his most aggres- the nation S economic carnage, Trump But after pledging to put an end to ofbusiness-friendly Cabinet Secretaries. ln addition, he has appointed a number tions in the name ofspurringJ0b growth. and workplace safety reporting regula- rolled back Obama-era environmental Australia and Japan. The President also ment among a dozen countries including Partnership, the 2016 free-trade agree- pulling the U. S. out 0f the Trans-Pacific most notable move on trade has been SO far, the Trump Administration's Reagan, Clinton and George 、 M. Bush. workplace commissions under Presidents town's carnevale, WhO served on national Ⅱ 0 easy way out 0f this; ” says George- some 700 people will be laid 0 圧 deal. When it shutters by early next year, hoped would be included in the Trump