from his home ⅲ Los AngeIes's Laurel Canyon, lt's just the record company, and the Beatles, trying t0 make money out 0f it. As far as l'm concerned, you just don't touch it—it's like the Sistine Chapel. Well, why would you? lt can only be for the money. TO be fair, the Beatles' decision-makers—cur- rently McCartney, Starr and their bandmates widows, Yoko Ono and Olivia Harrison—have Often taken the road less lucrative. There has been only one compilation, the 30 million- selling 1 , since 1973. They resisted the blandish- ments of iTunes for a decade. And Sgt. 22 its elf ran on the altruistlc notion that including an exlsting single on an album would b e unfair tO the fans, because they d be paying for the same song twice—which meant leaving out Straw- berry Fields Forever" and "penny Lane,' two of the band's very greatest hits. The new 印 2 may be motivated less by money than by something else Emerick men- tions: McCartney s perfectionism. "paul was like the muSICian S muSICian, ' he says. Whereas J0hn would accept 95 percent and say, 'That'II dO, Paul would want 110 percent. There'd be "WHEREAS JOHN WOULD ACCEPT 95 PERCENT, PAUL WOULD WANT 110 PERCENT. ” ( * .631 ) ・ G 日 OM を 1 を ! one error somewhere, he'd hear it, and dO it again until we got it right. The first stereo mix 0f2 印 2 was rushed, done in maybe three days," Emerick once said, while the mono mix tOOk three weeks. The case for the new mix is that it tries tO correct that—fixing a whole host oftiny infidelities. "lt's like archaeol- ogy, ” Giles Martin says. At Abbey Road today, it's all about the Beatles. On the zebra crossing, a family of four tounsts poses for the inevitable picture, led by a girl of about 10. ln the front yard, the BeatIes stand like a receiving line, life-size cutouts in their p ど 22 uniforms—a neat twist on pop artist peter Blake's cover ShOO も at WhiCh every famous face was a cutout, except the four ofthem. lnside, black-and-white photos line the walls, showing the stars who have shone here: Amy Winehous e , Que en, Kate Bush—but mostly the Beatles. ln the canteen, they re on the wall again, in their sults and ties, having tea at two melamine tables pushed together—Rmgo, George and Paul on the far side, with John at one end and A LITTLE HELP FROM OUR FRIENDS: Scenes from Beatlemania, including ( ね「 left) Ringo with engineer Geoff Emerick, WhO won a Grammy f0 「 Sgt. Pepper; (top right) The BeatIes in 1967. N E W S W E E K 57 M AY 2 6 , 2
E E K E N D C U L T U R E ′ T R A V E L A N D 0 T H E R G 0 0 D N E WS 第十・ー
Newsweek MAY 2 6 , 2 017 / v 0 L . 16 8 / N 0 . 19 ー N T E R N A T ー 0 N A L 18 Kenya AViolent Vote France Party Politics 24 「 a 可 Stepmother Tongue 26 GOP Cirque du Comey STAR TREK: The Mount Everest base camp trek is one Of the most popular routes in the HimaIayas. lt's no stroll in the park but includes one: NepaI's Sagarmatha NationaI Park. 22 : イ物を第第をま N E W W 〇 R L D COWS A M00 With a View Devices The Siri Killer Diseases Nobody Has to Die 53 Beverages Pop Goes the World 46 48 50 F E A T IJ R E S W E E K E N D D E P A R T M E N T S Anniversary Sgt. Pepper's LoneIy Hearts Club Band 60 Books The Fly Fisher; Kwame Kwei- Armah; Howard 」 acobson The Screening Room The Wizard ofLies 63 Radar Rei Kawakubo 64 Parting ShOt 'llona With Her Daughter, MicheIIe, 4 , Moscow 54 引 G S H 〇 T S The 800-Pound Bearin the Room lt's now Vladimir Putin's world, and the West is just trying t0 survive in it. 切窺″ 0 在 , e ″ 28 Dover, EngIand FalIing Star Gatineau, Canada DunkTank Pyongyang, North Korea Launch Fresco Miami Shaken 4 5 6 34 The ThriI ト Seekers Express The ultimate world tour for sports fans ranges from Oahu to base camp at Mount Everest. 06 ん d な 62 7 PA G E 〇 N E 12 PoIitics Tuesday Afternoon Massacre 17 South Korea KiIIingThem With Sunshine COVER CREDIT: PHOTOGRAPH BY SEAN GALLUP/GETTY Newsweek 0SSN2052-1081 ) , is published weekly except one week in 」 anuary, 」 uly, August and October. Newsweek (EMEA) is published by Newsweek Ltd (part of the 旧 T Media Group Ltd), 25 Canada Square, Canary Wharf, London E14 5LQ, UK. printed by Quad/Graphics Europe Sp z 0.0. , Wyszkow, poland FO 「 Article Reprints, Permissions and Licensing www.旧 Treprints.com/Newsweek FOR MORE HEADLINES, GO TO NEWSWEEK ℃ OM 1 N E W 5 W E E K M A Y 2 6 , 2 017
N E W W 〇 R L D D I S E A S E S B E V E R A G E S E D U C A T 1 0 N GOOD SCIENCE COWS S 0 C 工 A L D E V I C E S A M00 WITH A VIEW Give cows what they want : more pasture BY DOUG MAIN 十 MILKING 灯 : PETA argues that allowing dairy cows n10 「 e pasture time helps alleviate their stress. 当 @Douglas_Main HOW ARDENTLY dO COWS love going out tO pas- ture? Quite a lOt, it seems. As detailed in 立れ - 右 c R or な , rese archers came up with a scheme tO measure hOW driven COWS were tO either eat or go out t0 pasture. The team, led by Marma von Keyserlingk and Daniel Weary at the University of British Columbia, steadily increased the amount Of force it tOOk for a COW tO open a door that led to 応 od or pasture. The majority of the cows pushed equally hard t0 get t0 応 0d or t0 get outdoors. They noted that the COWS were much more mterested in gomg outside at night, and once outside, many ofthem lay on the ground t0 sleep. (Von Keyserlingk says it may be uncomfort- ably hot outside during the day—the study was conducte d ⅲ the summer—and that the COWS pre - fer tO stayinside, where it is COOler in the daytime. ) Fewer than 5 percent Of cows ⅲ the United States spend a majority Of their time in pasture, and 80 percent never see a blade Of grass, von Keyserlingk says ・ Surveys ofdairy farmers suggest that many would like t0 let their cows out t0 pas- ture but worry that it would re duce the amount Of milk they produce, Weary says. However, work done by the group shows that animals wh0 spend N E W S W E E K 47 M A Y 2 6 , 2 017 the night outside produce the same amount Of milk. Thus, letting HoIsteins out in the evening is any easy way t0 improve the well-being 0f cows without sacrificing milk production. James Drackley, a professor Of animal sciences at the University Of lllinois not involved in the study, notes that it doesn't say anything about the welfare Of cows whO don't go outside. There are many reasons for keeping COWS indoors, he says— for example, inclement weather and predators. lt's unclear why COWS prefer tO be alfresco, but one reason they seem tO enJOY it is that grass is softer than the floors ofpens, which are Often con- crete. Pasture also allows them tO move freely and exercise. past research by the team shows that COWS let outside don t eat less than "insiders, suggesting that eatmg gras s isn't a prime motiva- tor, at least for one group ofCanadian cows. people for the Ethical Treatment 0f Animals opposes dairy farming on the basis that it mis- treats COWS, and in a 2009 report, the Humane SOCiety argued that providing regular access to pasture and suitable high-fiber diets could help alleviate the health, stress, and behavioral problems associated with confinement. ”ロ
NOT SO GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY: President Donald Trump didn't seem to foresee th e firestorm that would ensue 0 e 「 canmng FBI Director James Comey, whO was leading the bureau's Russiagate investigation. NEWSWEEK 13 MAY26. 2017
S 0 U T H K 0 R E A を K E N Y A SPY TALK P 0 L I T 工 C S G 0 P F R A N C E I S R A E L TUESDAY AFTERNOON MASSACRE to think removing FBI D1rector President Donald Trump seemed James Comey would be a clean kill. He was wrong JAMES COMEY talked t00 much. He talked t00 much about Hillary Clinton's emails. And then he talked t00 much, t00 late, about the Russians and Team Trump. BOth exercises got him fired. President Don- ald Trump and his most rabid advisers—among them self-proclaimed dirtytrickster Roger Stone, according tO some accounts—felt they had an opening t0 take down Comey. They thought it would be a cle an kill , just like their immigration executive orders. Again, they were wrong. You can see their reasoning: During his May 3 testimony before the Senate Judiciary Com- mlttee on Russian subversion in the 2016 elec- tions, Comey was drawn intO an exchange with the panel's RepubIicans, during which he vastly, and unaccountably, exaggerated the number 0f emails Clinton's aide Huma Abedin copied to the home computer of her disgraced husband, Anthony Weiner.When ProPublica got wind that the FBI was preparing to supplement" Comey s testlmony with a correction, Team Trump saw their mome nt tO take him out. lndeed, the speed with which the Justice Department published its detailed rationale for firing Comey suggested that somebody allied with Trump had teed up ProPublica for the hit. Within hours of the published story, the admin- istration released a memorandum from l)eputy Attorney General ROd Rosenstein that went on and on about Comey's bumbling handling ofthe Clinton case. There was no mention, Of course, of the FBI director's probe into Team Trump s connections tO Kremlin operatives and oligarchs. "Almost everyone agrees he made mistakes" ⅲ the Clinton case, wrote Rosenste1n, a career pros- ecutor in b0th the George 、Ä.J. Bush and Barack Obama administrations. lt is one of the few lssues that unites people ofdiverse perspectives. Attorney General Jeff Sessions, wh0 supposedly 当 @SpyTalker BY JEFF STEIN N E W S W E E K 12 M A Y 2 6 , 2 017
A GENERAL DYNAMICS COMPANY JETAVIATION 0 es Basel Zurich FUTURE 。グノ 50 、 Y E A R S ReveaIing the JetAviation Many Services ー One 」 et Aviation Celebrating ou 「 50th Anniversary and Beyond in 2017 MRO, Refürbishment, Completions, FBO, Aircraft Management, FIight Support, Charter, Staffing. AVIATION JETAVIATION A GENERAL DYNAMICS COMPANY JET WWW. Jetaviation.com E 1961
'WAIMEAUAY, OAHU, HAWAII 、 ALTHOUGH IT'S the oldest of the big-wave surfing competitions, the Eddie is probably still the most prestiwous and danger01-É. lt's a ト 0 the one aptly named f0 て Hawa11an surf legend Eddie the first officiallifeguard at Wa1mea, whO rode waves and made rescues no one else would even try. The event that now honors him is distinguished from Other major pro competitions by its requirement that swells measure at least 20 feet before the world's bestsurfers even pull on their wetsuits. ln the Eddie, the waves W1n much more Often than not, wiping out one rider after another, until someone catches the lip 0f a wave just right, survives the drop into the pipe, then disappears in the crashing spray and somehow comes out Ofthe whOle thing not JllSt alive but triumphant. N E W S W E E K 35 M A Y 2 6. 2 0 17
F E N W A Y AL EAST ー 2 3 4 5 ( 第 20 こ、 . KC 、し」 53 34 ー 旧 BO 引 KÅ引 - 36 2 SINCE 1898 お一日 A STRIKI BAY 48 40 5 0 45 -TIMORE 39 48 00 Membership. Forlife: リ AÄ 厭 S ⑨ 5 ロ H ロ L A R S Beth lsrael Deacone Medical Center STARTER を CLOS IASS 54G Ⅷ T 当」、試、人 . し、 . 3 マ 匪⑨ S ⑨ F ロ凵 N DATI ロ N 0 pha ー 04M 人 Y 26 2017 E K
THE THRILL-SEEKERS EXPRESS THE ULTIMATE WOR し 0 TOUR FOR SPORTS FANS RANGES FROM OAHU TO BASE CAMP AT MOUNT EVEREST B Y R 0 B ド [ E 0 E R clock but from the buzzer that always sounds on teams, on arenas, on athletic careers. The best way to see all your treasured athletes and ven- ues is in person, ofcourse, but this quick round-the-world fantasy trip, adapted from The Sp な B たもなた 101 税 g んな E 怩リ Sp な Fa れ S ん 0 See B ビビ C ん R リ 0 by Rob FIeder and Steve Hoffman (HarperC011ins, May), offers, in pictures and a few words, a tempting glimpse and a goad t0 action. There's still time left on your clock' but it's always running. AN ANONYMOUS sports fan once said, "Life iS not mea- sured by the number 0f breaths we take but by the places and moments that take our breath away. " OK, I don't know ifthe guy who said that was a sports fan ()r even a guy), but I do know that for those ofus who love sports, the thrill of seemg an epic event or storied arena can be close tO the meaning 0f li . We fans are thrill-seekers. We are also memory collectors—memory hoarders, tO be more precise, and as we check items 0 代 our bucket lists, those checks become prized mementos. And our personal sports bucket list becomes an lmpatiently tapping toe: Time's a-wastin. The long goodbyes 0fDerek Jeter and K0be Bryant over the past few years, and the final bell for Muhammad Ali and Gordie Howe, remind every fan that the 01d saw, wait till next year, is not always the best advice. The urgency Ofa sports bucket list comes not just from our own ticking G 〇 LDEN STATE WARRIORS ORACLE ARENA, OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA HOW DO you turn a perennial sad-sack franchise intO the greatest shOW in hoops, a team that fills everyvenue it plays, at home and on the road? Simple: You buy the G01den State Warriors for $ 450 million, as the current owners did in 2010 , then rebuild your roster based on the conviction that the 3-point sh0t is a weapon that's been grossly underused in the NBA. ln successive drafts, you scoop up Stephen Curry (shown here), Klay Thompson and Draymond Green tO exploit the advantage s and minimize the vulne rabilitie s of long-range firepower. Add a few more complementary pieces and there you have it: a team that won a champi- onship in 2015 , defended it with an unprecedented 73-win season, then added Kevin Durant, one 0f the world's top five players, tO the mix this season. Easy game, right? 当ロ・ 000 に目朝・をを = N E W S W E E K 34 M A Y 2 6 , 2 017