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1. TIME 2017年4月24日号

For more on these stories, visittime.com/ideas DESIGN Window-shopping MiIan The Salone lnternazionale del Mobile in Milan (April 4 ー 9 ) is, in name at least, an annualfurniture fair. But it's 引 SO a showcase for materials and ideas that designers wantto make mainstream. These six pieces may augur tony trends tO come. ーー丿 . Z. DATA EXECUTIVE CLAWBACKS After years Of sales abuses came tO light last year, Wells Fargo announced on ApriI 10 that it's clawing back $75million more in pay from former CEO 」 Ohn Stumpfand formercommunity bank head Carrie ToIstedt—bringing the totalrecovered from bOth tO over $ 135 million. Here are other notable recent ta ke-backs : S505.8 MILLION CO SO ught tO recover more than halfa billion dollars in compensation and benefits from former CEO Dennis Kozlowski, and the parties settled for an undisclosed amount days before a trialin 2012. Kozlowski wasjailed on charges including fraud in 2005. S400 MILLION UnitedHeaIth Group's former CEO William McGuire forfeited over $400 million in stock options tO the SEC and his companyto settle an investigation intO options practices in 2007. (Total after repricing and penalties: $ 600 million. ) S54 MILLION Kobi Alexander, former CEO of tech firm Comverse, agreed tO settle suits with theSECandthe U. S. Attorney GeneraI's office in 2010 after investigations intO stock-option backdating. $1 止 5 MILLION The 」 . P Morgan board cut CEO 」 amie Dimon's 2012 pay in half afterthe $ 6.2 billion "London Whale ” loss. —Julia Zorthia n BRUTALISM RETURNS Lee Broom marked his studio's 10th anniversary by crafting IO brutalist grandfather clocks, each from a block of Carrara marble. HIGH YOU CAN BUY lkea collaborated with designer Tom Dixon on this modular sofa and bed, designed tO be "hacked" with add-ons and modifications. FLIGHTS OF FANCY Louis Vuitton continued its travel- inspired Objets Nomades line with furniture, including a sofa inspired by Botticelli's Venus. INVIIV•N 080NVSS31V 一 N3 の」ココ 0 9N 《 8 」山 X 一 d003 W00 工 8 3 山コお TO 代・ > ・ 8 Sf131SAS V3Yl ト N こ NO トト一コ > S - コ 0 コー 39A00V コ 3dd コ一工 d 】 1 」 3 コ dO ト」 2S 一 M00 コ 0 ・ N9 一 S30 ジ 3NS 一 0 】のト一 9 一 0 ORGANIC SHAPES The late acclaimed architect Zaha Hadid designed this waterworn- pebble-inspired cheese grater for ltalian home brand Alessi. ECO-FRIENDLY FURNITURE Quinze & Milan designed these chairs with Ecopixel, a method using special plastic shards that can be melted and recycled. UNDERCOVER TECHNOLOGY These wireless speakers from Bang & Olufsen are 引 SO decor. Together, amplifier and dampener tiles lead tO high-quality sound. HISTORY Where the Easter-egg tradition comes from Decorating them began in Britain around THE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN EASTERAND eggs runs deep. The hatching ofa chick is both 1290 , at which point the household of seasonally and metaphorically appropriate Edward I bought 450 eggs to be colored for a springtime holiday ofrebirth. But the or covered ⅲ gold leafto be distributed, according tO The S 0 れ s 可市 e Sun: A History forging ofthat link can be traced to decidedly ofthe Ritual 阨 ar ⅲ Britain by Ronald Hutton. less profound origins. To look for the beginnings ofthe And the tradition wasn't confined tO royals, as colored eggs made flashier gifts between Easter egg, start in medieval Europe. One possible origin: the strict fasting rules 0f commoners. the time, which barred eating any animal As new ideas about middle-class family product during Le nt. Hens, however, kept life formed ⅲ Europe and the U. S. ⅲ the late laying anyway. SO Christians would hard-boil 1800S , religious holidays came tO incorporate and store their eggs for later, according tO rituals for children. Easter eggs were a natural Henry Kelly, a professor ofmedieval studies fit. Soon enough they were dyed, hidden and at the University ofCalifornia, LOS Angeles. hunted by kids all over the place, including at Some ofthose eggs would be given to the poor, the White House, which held its first Easter and villagers brought them as Easter gifts EggROIl ⅲ 1878. —OLIVIA B. WAXMAN to their manoriallords. Eggs could also be brought to church as a Good Friday offering. For more ofthese stories, visit time.com/history 17

2. TIME 2017年4月24日号

彡 ) をダ TIME* VOL. 189 , NO. 15 ー 2017 0 The View Time Off The Features lraqis waitfor 和 od d ⅳ r 市砒 io March 29 ⅲ Mosul'sAqeedat neighborhood 2 ー Conversation 4 ー For the Record What tO watch, read, ロ The Battle for Mos 1 see and dO After six months offighting to 3 引 Margaret 、 retake lraq's second largest city, Atwood and the end is in sight Elisabeth Moss ByJaredMaIsin 18 discuss the TV adaptation of The Handmaid's Tale Dems Start Thinkin' 41 ー Monsters and About Tomorrow the IvyLeague lnside the gras sroots movement tO recruit new Democratic candidates 42 ー Dramatist JOhn for 2018 andbeyond Leguizamo ByAlexAltman 26 4 引 Taking on the government ln G e な辺 Life After Death ONTHE COVER: After losingherhusband, Faceb00k 4 引 JoeI Stein hacks A member oflraq's C00 SheryI Sandbergtalks frankly himself federalpolice takes about grief, death andvulnerability 0 、斤 0 日 i e position 48 け Questions for near 0 な ai れ station By BelindaLuscombe 32 abortion provider in southwest Mosul 0 れ A 司 4. Dr. Willie Parker Ph0tograph Emanuele S 砒 0 forTIME TlMEAS1a is pubIishedbYTlMEAsia(Hong Kong) Limited. TlMEPUbliShes ejghtdoub に i 、 00 、 Each 00 00M0 0f52 i ~ 、 0 00 00000 ub npti . 第 MEm 0 0 publish ー 00 00 引 0 0 00 02017Ti00 A 0 (HongKong) 凵 ed. 則ⅱ 0 0 . Re 面、 ctior 、 i00h0 に 0i0 代 0 曲 0 は 00 rmi ー i00 *. TIME 0 面物 0 Red 0d00D00g0 000 pro 、 " ted 物 0 0d0000k 00g な ati in 物 0 U. s. 0 面 in 物 00000 ⅵ 0 0h000 引 ME 0g0 " 00 朝 000 ね 0 00 ー 0 ~ 0 代 Bu ~ 000f Circu 師、一・ lfthe 0 00i0 " 0 に代 0 hat 00 0g0 " 0 00d0 、ⅳ 000d0 , " h " 000 曲 000b 、 ig0000 000 " 0 " 0 ⅳ 00 0 ~ 、 0d0dd00 、 0 曲 000Y000 ・ CUSTOM SE 0 AND 00 円 0 ~ , 四〃 0 0 , 00 " , 、一一一凵面 00 0 " , " 、 istt 0 ・〃・、、 ,. 面 , 。 " 。 0 / ~ ・ ~ 軸 0 ・、 0 0 0 、、 0 00 、 00 00 。 0 。 00 。、 0 。 00 ~ 、 0000 0 、。。 00-00 。 0-0 。。 , 00 0 但 0 00 、 0 ~ 00 " ~ 0 、。 ~ 0 但 0 。 g 0 。。 0 , 0 〃 F' 0 、 0 , 0 … 0 , 、 0 ……… 0 , 00 0 0 , 80000 川 0 ~ 00 、 000 0 , 00000 , 0 。 0 。・ , ・司。 000 。 " 0 。。 , 00000000000 ~ 00 ・ ) 。 0 、、 00 0 0 00 、。 , 0 。、 00000 00 ・・。 00 " 00 。。。 00 0 。、 ~ 。 00 。 0 ~ = ldeas, opinion, innovations TheBrief 15 ー A case for News from the し S. and umversal basic around the world mcome 引 The Trump- putin honeymoon 1 引 A new is over. WhereU. S. - contender for Russia relations go Disney's live-actlon from here bOX 0 ice Crown 引 A guide t0 1 引 The flip side factions inside the ofbillionaires' White House philanthropy ユ幻 patton Oswalt 1 引 ln MiIan, see remembers Don what's in store RickIes for the future of furniture 1 Egyptians mourn victims Of ユ引 Why Easter has 2 m sunday blasts eggs ユ引 Behind United 、 Airlines' crisis: should overbooking be illegal? Photograph Emanuele S 砒 0 Ⅲ和 r TIME 1

3. TIME 2017年4月24日号

ing through some ofthe left-behind ISIS documents in the abandoned vehicles offce. "lf you want to build a state, you have to build something, and they took everything. Today ISIS controls only 7 % of lraqi territory, down from 40 % at its peak, according t0 the lraqi military. Although it still controls Raqqa, the group's claims tO a caliphate—a territory tO hOld out as beacon to all the world's Sunni Muslims— will be in tatters once Mosul is freed. But ISIS will remain a potent movement, albeit in a different form. Already it is stepping up efforts t0 maintain its global profile with attacks far from the theater Of conflict. ln recent weeks , the group has claimed terrorist strikes in St. Petersburg, London, Stockh01m and Egypt, where dozens 0fCoptic Christians were killed as they celebrated Palm Sunday. Over time, ISIS will look less like a state and more like a terrorist group in the mold Of its forebear al-Qaeda, generating headlines not by seizing territory but through spectacular acts ofkilling. "Even as they lose territory, I think it's likely that they'll maintain relevance, by shifting strategy toward asymmetric lnsurgency, says Noah Bonsey, a semor analyst for the Brussels-based lnterna- tional Crisis Group. That goes not only for targets ⅲ the West, he adds, but also for the battlefields oflraq and Syriawhere the group made its name. "lt's not as if they're going t0 be unable t0 operate ⅲ what will still be quite weakly governed, ifgoverned at all, territory. ln Mosul, the chaos they leave behind is visible on every corner. ln the Aqeedat neighborhood, TIME was led to a heap of dead bodies sprawled ⅲ an alleyway. Women, children, two 01d men with white beards, they are 16 ⅲ all, their faces bloated with blood now, at least a week after they were killed. One lraqi federal police offcer said he witnessed the family die after triggering a booby trap. Another was certain they had been shot dead. ln its morbid details, the debate took in both the physical horrors and the mentality abroad in a country now 14 years at war. our experience, ifit's a mine, you'll see body parts everywhere. But as you can see, there are bullets every- where; ” the offcer says. "ISIS wanted t0 make an example ofthem, for others wh0 try to flee. ' 24 TIME April 24 , 2017

4. TIME 2017年4月24日号

WORLD Christians Of Egypt hit by ISIS in PaIm Sunday bombings A PAIR OF BOMB ATTACKS AT churches in Egypt killed at least 44 people on April 9 , shattering the Christian festival 0f Palm Sunday for the country's Copts, the Middle East's largest Christian community. One bomb ripped through a church in the Nile Delta town ofTanta while a suicide bomber set offhis device at an Alexandria cathe dral where Coptic pope Tawadros II had held palm Sunday services. The attacks were quickly claimed by the lslamic State, which has become a persistent menace in Egypt since an insurgent movement in the Sinai peninsula proclaimed its allegiance in 2014. ln keeping with ISIS sectarian absolutism, the Sinai militants, wh0 in recent years had killed more than 1 , 000 soldiers and police, soon expanded their targets tO include Egypt's Christian community, which makes up about 10 % of the population. ln February dozens of Christians fled North Sinai for lsmailia on the Suez Canal, fearing for their lives following weeks of attacks. Egypt's President Abdul Fattah al-Sisi declared a new state Of emergency in response tO the bombings, but he faces accusations that his government is failing tO dO enough tO protect the Christian minority. lt's a tough charge for a leader WhO promised a return t0 security and order following a military coup in 2013. —JARED MALSIN 0 0 Egyptian Coptic Christians gather 砒 the れ er 和 r blast victims ⅲ the Nile Delta city 0fTanta, れ or 市 0fCairo, 0 れ April 9 PHOTOGRAPH BYAFP/GETTY IMAGES 0 0 >For more ofour bestphotography, visittime.com/lightbox 13

5. TIME 2017年4月24日号

TheBrief THE RISK REPORT the defense ofacademic freedom (and attacks Viktor Orban is on Orban) makes for good politics. Foreign multinationals, especially those affliated turning Hungary intO ・ th CEU, wouldjoin the fight. Europe's black sheep AS things stand, however, Orban's assaults on Hungary's liberal opposition and its West- By lan Bremmer ern allies are pois ed tO inte nsify, threatening agreements that allow foreign companies tO operate in Hungary. The parliament is due tO ON APRIL 4 , HUNGARY'S PRIME MINISTER Viktor Orban scored a victory in his campaign consider a bill that would force every civil- against Western-backed institutions and society organization and foundation that companies when the parliament gave him the receives more than about $ 25 , 000 per year 0. K. to shutter Central European University from outside Hungary to be labeled a foreign- (CEU) in Budapest. The move helps Orban funded organization, a move similar tO laws tighten his grip on power and may well passed in Vladimir putin's Russia aimed at spell the end for CEU, a prestigious and minimizing "foreign financially independent institution funded influence ” inside by Hungarian-born George Soros, a U. S. the country. Unless financier who has given heavily to liberal coordinated pres- causes around the glObe. sure from inside ln Budapest, tens ofthousands ofpeople, and outs ide Hun- mainly students, marched in protest at the gary forces Orban treatment ofCEU on consecutive weekends to backtrack, he ' Ⅱ ⅲ April. But Orbanwon't be inclined t0 back ride this strategy down. His growing control of Hungary's tra- intO elections next ditional media ensures favorable coverage for sprmg ・ the government and few opportunities for This escalation the fragmented opposition tO make its case. will test the He also knows that his fellow E. U. leaders are determination of E. U. leaders to defend the far more focused on French German elec- integrity ofEuropean integration. lt's one tions, Brexit negotiations and worries over thing t0 cut deals with Putin or Turkey's Recep Rus sia and Turkey than on Hungary. ln addi- Tayyip Erdogan as they trample Western tion, he's unlikely to hear forceful complaints values within their own borders. lt's another from the White House, given Orban's out- when the leader in question is consolidating spoken support for Donald Trump and the power in a country inside the E. U. Republican Party's attitude toward Soros, a One defense strategy might be t0 strip major donor tO liberal causes and a longtime Hungary 0f its membership ⅲ the European bogeyman for the conservative grassroots. Parliament's main center-right grouping ・ ()rban has reversed course under pressure; That would allow E. U. leaders to reduce the in 2014 , he tried tO impose a tax on lnternet subsidies Hungary receives as a member traffc, but huge demonstrations and force- state. Pretty quickly, Orban would have t0 血 1 E. U. criticism forced him to retreat. lfthe choose between upholding respect for E. U. protests t0 save CEU become larger and an- values and losing the benefits that come with grier, political leaders ⅲ Europe might decide being a member ofthe club. TICKER Justice Neil Gorsuch takes his seat President Trump's Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch was sworn ln as a 」 ustice on ApriI 10 , following a tumultuous confirmation battle that deeply divided the Senate. Gorsuch filled thelate Antonin Scalia's seat after a 422-day vacancy. Ahmadinejad tries tO stage 0 return 旧 a surprise move, lran's polarizing former President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad registered tO run in the country's May election, despite being advised by Supreme Leader AyatuIlah AIi Khamenei notto stand. His candidacy is unlikelyto be approved bylran's candidate vetters. Judge: Texas voting ー 0 discriminatory A federaljudge ruled that a Texas voter-lD law that came intO force in 2013 was crafted with the intent Of discriminating against minorities WhO may face difficulties obtaining one Ofthe seven forms of 旧 required tO VOte. Anchor reports on husband's death A news anchorin lndia was reporting on a car accident when she realized her husband was involved in the crash. Supreet Kaur remained composed during the 10-minute broadcast before her husband's death was confirmed tO her offscreen. O rb an's assaults on Hungary 's lib eral opposition and its Western allies like ly will intensify DIGIT Length, ⅲ feet, Of the world's first ship tunnel, which Norway plans tO begin building in 2019 to help vessels 0i0 the stormy Stadhavet Sea; once complete, the passage will be 162 化 tall and 118 代 . wide 5 , 610

6. TIME 2017年4月24日号

The Brief 'THISLATESTTWISTINTHE CONFLICTLEAVES THEKRE. MLIN WITHA WORSENINGDILEMMA. ' —NEXT PAGE し S. Secretary ofState Rex Tillersonfaces 0 wi 市 Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov 0 〃 Apri112 President B ashar As sad for committing IN THE END, VLADIMIR PUTIN agreed tO see the envoy from the that atrocity and flatly accused Russia Of covering it up. Trump Administration. After a week ofmutual recriminations over the The punitive mis sile strike ordered war in Syria, the Russian President by President Trump against a Syrian air force base heralded a sharp tack did not snub Rex Tillerson during the U. S. S ecretary of State 's first ⅲ the White House's approach to the Kremlin. Both Tillerson and his boss Off1Cial visit tO Moscow. lnstead, Putin showed a willingness to grit his teeth insisted that Russia must revoke its support for Assad. "Putin must see and accept the U. S. attack against his ally in Syria—as long as Trump offered what a barbarian this guy is, and it's a very bad symbol for Russia with this him a way tO save face in the process. guy gas s ing children; ” Trump told the lt was demeaning enough for Putin tO welcome Tillerson on April 12 after New York Post. The Kremlin showed no sign of the accusations the visitor's country backing down. ln an interview aired on had leveled at his hosts. Poison gas Russian television at the start ofTiller- had been used to kill 叩 to 100 people son's visit tO Moscow, Putin said the on April 4 , including children, in a rebel-held town in western Syria. ln an U. S. hadviolated international law by attacking AS sad's forces without first intelligence report declassified a week later, the White House blamed Syrian proving his use ofchemical weapons. WORLD The Trump- Putin reset is dead—but don't rule 0 収 t an amicable settlement By Simon Shuster PHOTOGRAPH BY ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICHENKO 5

7. TIME 2017年4月24日号

」 0N OSSOFF DOESN'TWANTTOTALKABOUT DONALDTRUMP, THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY ORTHE NATIONALTURMOILTHAT HAS LIFTED THE 30-YEAR-0LD CANDIDATETO THETOP OFTHE POLLS Ⅲ THE UPCOMING SPECIAL ELECTION Ⅲ GEORGIA'S group called Run for Something, which launched Sixth Congressional District. But as he crisscrossed on lnauguration Day With a mission tO recruit mil- the affluent north Atlanta suburbs one afternoon in lennials to run for offce, already has 30 candidates early April, the lanky Democrat paused t0 ponder how a sleepy off-year race t0 replace Health and on ballots in races ranging from seats on state legis- latures tO city councils, and hopes that number will Human Services Secretary Tom price had turned grow t0 at least 50 by November. Flippable, which intO a national referendum on the President's tenure. "l don't know if it's a blessing or a curse, raises money for state legislative races, and the Sister District Project, which helps activists from liberal en- Ossoff said with a shrug, sitting 0 Ⅱ a white leather couch in the back 0fan offce-park studio after taping claves connect With competitive contests elsewhere, an interview With a local Vietnamese-American teamed up tO funnel $ 145 , 000 tO Delaware state sen- ate candidate Stephanie Hansen, whose victory in television program. "National political strategy is a February special election preserved Democrats' not something I have time tO think about. ” control of the chamber. There are 0ther groups de- Yet there is little question why the rookie voted t0 flipping the House in 2018 (like Swing Left), candidate suddenly has a shot to turn this patch and even one focused on recruiting scientists, math- of the South blue for the first time ⅲ nearly four ematicians and engineers ( 314 ACtion, named after decades. Since January, the anti-Trump resistance the first digits ofpi). Money is following. ln the first movement has pumped a staggering $ 8.3 million int0 quarter 0f 2017 , ActBlue, a progressive fundraising OSSOff's campaign, more than five times the average site used by many candidates, raised $ 112 million, up sum collected bywinning House candidates in recent 丘 om $ 17 million in the first quarter Of2013 , after the two-year election cycles, according tO the Center for Responsive P01itics. Some 95 % 0f that haul came last presidential contest. This is the new phase ⅲ the national pushback from out of state, as did Ossoff's field director, an to Trump's election. The jagged outrage that filled alumna 0f Hillary Clinton's campaign, and s ome 0f the Washington Mall for the Women's March and his battalions 0f eager volunteers. P011s suggest he's jammed Capit01 Hill switchboards ⅲ opposition t0 lapping a field 0f11 Republicans and five Democrats, inching toward the maJority he needs tO win the April 18 election outright and sidestep aJune runoff. Ossoff, says former Republican House Speaker Newt Gingrich, whO represented this district for 20 years, 'is today the national left's great hope. ” He may also be a glimpse ofthe Democratic Party's future. Out ofthe ashes 0fTrump's election triumph has risen a grassroots network dedicated tO restock- ing the depleted Democratic talent pool. A constel- lation ofloosely connected organizations, operating outside the party structure, have taken it upon them- selves to draft first-time hopefuls and school them in campaign mechanics, supplying everything from seed money tO sample canvassing scripts tO VOlun- teers WhO can proofread press releases over Slack. “ The S e new insurgent organizations are the future 0f the party,' says Ravi Gupta, a former campaign staffer for Barack Obama who co-founded a group called the Arena that supports new civic leaders and has commitments from more than 400 progressive activists tO run for state and 10Ca1 0 伍℃ es. The resurgent le 仕 takes many forms. A single 28 TIME ApriI 24 , 2017 RONNIE CHO, 34 Candidate fo 「 New York City Council District 2 •Worked as an lowa field orga- nizer for Barack Obama's 2008 campaign and later as a White House aide ・ Former Vice president at MTV in New York City ・ Decided tO run after Obama encouraged supporters tO dO SO during his farewell speech in 」 anuary -- 一 4 豸こ

8. TIME 2017年4月24日号

7 Questions Dr. Wi11ie Parker He grew up Christian ⅲ Alabama and became a doctor at the suggestion Of a college mentor. ln Life's Ⅳ or た , he explains why he's now an abortion provider that out Ofa sense ofcommitment tO When yo 収 first became an ob-gyn the background from which I came, ifl YO did not perform abortions couldn't make women in the South—a because YO 設 felt it conflicted with disproportionate number ofwhom your Christian prmciples. What are poor and ofcolor, which is my changed? l've been a Christian longer background—ifl couldn't make those than l've been a physician. When I chose women a priority, WhO would? a career as a women's health provider, I had t0 think more seriously, more deeply about the fact that I see women on a Abortion providers have been the regular basis who have unplanned and targets Of violence, yet YO don't unwanted pregnancies. The compassion have a bodyguard and don't wear a that welled up inside me for each bulletproof vest. DO yo fear for your life? lfl succumb to an anxiety that woman—each woman had a story, a leaves me more preoccupied with what circumstance—it came tO a POint Where can happen t0 me than the good I can increasingly it was uncomfortable tO be do, that's already a form of death. saymg no. What I believed and what I practiced began tO come intO conflict. Are women's reproductive rights HOW did yo 設 reconcile your more vulnerable now than they were before 飛 oe 仇 Wade? ln my opinion religious beliefs with your sense 0f professional obligation? My epiphany there hasn't been a day since Roe v. Wade became legal in 1973 that women came while listening tO a sermon by haven't had tO fight tO maintain access Dr. Martin Luther King. ln that sermon he described what made the Good tO this very important service. oe has been in place for 44 years, but never has Samaritan good. Someone had been robbed, le 仕 on the side ofthe road it been more vulnerable. injured, and multiple people passed that person by. They all were afraid ofwhat What will happen ifRoeis over- turned? IfRoe were tO be overturned, might h 叩 pen t0 them if they stopped t0 abortion would not become illegal in help. A person not 仕 om the community this country. But itwould go back t0 pre- described as the Samaritan stopped 1973 , when we had states like NewYork, and provided aid. Dr. King said what made that person good was his ability t0 California, Hawaii and several others reverse the question ofconcern, tO ask that legalized abortion before what will h 叩 pen to this person ifl don't the oe decision. Women stop t0 help. would have their reproductive On that particular day, while listening rights determined by their zip code. The real peril is that if tO that sermon and contemplating my role as a women's health provider, it states are left tO their own became very personal for me. I became mechanisms, in most states the person on the road having t0 respond women would lose access tO the need ofanother person—in this tO abortion services. case women asking me tO help them safely end their pregnancies. Are YO hopeful about the future Of women's Why did yo 収 decide tO provide reproductive rights? abortions ⅲ the South? When lleft If I were not hopeful Alabama at the age of 18 , I was ofthe for the future, I would mind-set that Alabama is a better place not get out ofbed every tO be from than tO be in. But increasingly day. I really believe that with my skill in abortions came the hopelessness and despair awareness Ofthe degree tO which access will become a self-fulfilling tO abortion care is limited. I decided prophesy. —ALICE PARK 48 TIME April 24 , 2017 'There hasn't been a day since Roe し Wade became legal in 1973 that women haven't had tO fight tO maintain access tO thiS very important service [of abortion]. ' 0

9. TIME 2017年4月24日号

葎第当を Mosque Of ・ Nu ル as the U. S. deals with the consequences sents a tangle Of new issues—especially tion Of ISIS rule, whose liberation pre- question is Raqqa in Syria, the last bas- ministration will need tO tackle this The next city where the Trump Ad- on another day. ” fight this exact same fight in another city crease the likelihood that you're going t0 Center for Civilians in Conflict. "You in- U. S. Army judge advocate now with the says Lieut. C010nel Jay Morse, a retired going t0 be able t0 shape the message; ” U.. S. soldiers recover pu ーれ drone after surveillance m な SiO れ over western Mosul 0 れ ApriI 6 ofits strike 0 Ⅱ a Syrian airfield on ApriI 6. U.S. -backed Syrian militias are poised on the edge ofthe city, but it remains unclear when and how they plan to take the city. The Trump Administration is also put- ting more U. S. troops on the ground in the Raqqa campaign, opening the door t0 a prolonged deployment in Syria. Mosul リれⅳ e 「 si Nineveh ruins MosuI airport ■ CONTROL IRAQI CONTROL RECENT IRAQI GAINS MosuI ・ train station M ilitary base MOSUL LI M ITS SOURCE: IHS Conflict Monitor IRAQ DETAIL 0 F AREA をふ第 23 57 , a truck driver in Dawasa, after pick- state. lt was a gang, ' says Jasem Ahmed for the lraqi offensive. "This wasn't a across the border t0 Syria as they braced Other valuables, carting their assets tenure, the jihadists seized cars and ity. Toward the end 0f their 33-month the ISIS period as a time of petty brutal- though, most Mosul residents remember For itS pretensions Of governance, lslamic State—issued license plates. among the bombed-out buildings, lie version of the DMV. Scattered outside, intO an OffIce for registering cars—ISIS's had taken over a restaurant, converting it scale Dawasa neighborhood, the militants erated areas Of the city. ln the once up- T0day remnants of its rule litter the lib- an experiment in jihadist governance. UNDER ISIS, MOSUL was a laboratory for tion still finding its feet on foreign policy. blazer, was a snapshot Of an Administra- ting with offcers in a flakjacket over his dent's son-in-law, the sight ofwhom, chat- House adviser Jared Kushner, the Presi- April 3 visit t0 Baghdad by senior White falls. The issue surely came up during the U. S. future presence in lraq after Mosul Then there's the thorny question ofthe

10. TIME 2017年4月24日号

Of another Georgia Representative, civil rights icon J0hn Lewis. But he won't say which other Democratic members ofCongress he admires and evades report- ers' questions about the party's direction. "There are many in this communitywho are concerned that thiS Administration may act recklessly, that it is dishon- est, that it is not competent; ” he says in an interview. "I share a11 ofthose concerns. But that's not what this campaign is about. ” Striving for crossover appeal is a sound strat- egy. price carried the district in November 2016 by 23 points, a landslide that was the slimmest 0f his seven consecutive victories. The army Of Republi- can candidates in the race is chopping up the con- servative VOte for now, but ifOssoff can't crack 50 % on April 18 , he may have a hard time winning a one- on-one runoff in June against a single GOP opponent. ln next year's midterm elections, few Democrats will have the benefit of a fractured GOP field or national attention. But there is no question that the base is motivated. On April 11 , a Democratic congressional C andidate running in a special election in Kansas With little institutional support lost by just seven points. Trump won the district in November by 27. TO stave 0 圧 an upset in Georgia, RepubIicans have launched a multimillion-dollar campaign to kneecap the young Democrat. They're attacking everything from his address (()ssofflivesjust outside the district with his longtime girlfriend, a medical student at Emory University) to the validity 0f his national-security credentials tO hiS inexperience (one ad features footage 0f Osso 圧 as a college student, dressed in a Star Wars costume). "lfyou get $ 10 million for a House race, you can 100k real good for a while; ” says Gingrich. "lfhe doesn't win outright 0 Ⅱ the first round, he will lose. ” But the district's demographics are changing. This enclave of leafy subdivisions and bustling malls is white, wealthy and well-educated, with swelling po ckets Of Asian and Hispanic voters and a growing community Of transplants drawn tO the strong jOb market. Trump eked out a l-point victory here de- spite scant effort from the Clinton campaign. "lt's a moderate, pragmatic area; ” Ossoff says, "with folks whO dO not identify as partisans. Under pouring rain one April afternoon, Osso 圧 arrived t0 speak at Oglethorpe University, a liberal- arts schOOl in suburban Atlanta. lnside a game room piled with pizza and campaign signs, a few dozen college Democrats listened intently as he talked about turning metro Atlanta intO a Silicon Valley Of the South and steered questions about the party's national direction back toward 10Ca1 terrain. When he was done, a 23-year-01d supporter named Ruwa Romman tried tO sum up the excitement. "Before 2017 , there weren't young Democrats. lt was a bunch ofold people; ” she explains. "I hope that he's part 0f a growing phenomenon. ロ 31 literally quivered with excitement. "We've seen the Democratic Party fall out Of power and wander in the desert for SO many years now, says steve Berman, a commercial real estate broker and local party fundraiser. "Then came Jon Ossoff, wh0 said we don't have tO wait. ” Ossoffis an unlikely prophet. lt's not only that he was producing documentary films just a few months ago. lt's that his smooth pitch tO voters doe s n't match the angry mood ofthe national movement that fueled his rise. He favors buttoned-up suits and burgundy ties and speaks in the blandishments common tO Capitol Hill, where he was once a congressional aide. "I will be at your service, and I will make sure your voice rings out in the halls Of Congress,: ” the candidate assured the packed house party. Ossoff first became a Democratic darling with a campaign pitch tO "Make Trump Furious. ” NOW that Election Day is ⅲ sight, his goal seems to be to avoid offending anyone at all. Ossoff's stump speech is laden with lines about local economic prosperity and "shared values; ” as well as stock promises t0 hold Washington ac- countable. And while one can intuit his politics— he pulled ⅲ $ 1.35 million from readers of the le 仕 - wing D aily Kos , afte r all—you might mistake him for a Republican on the basis of his campaign ads, which eschew mention ofpartisan allegiance in favor ofpromises tO work across party lines, fiX Obamacare and eliminate government waste. Ossoffworked for Representative HankJohnson, anAtlanta-area Demo- crat, andjumped intO the race with the endorsement HEATHER WARD, 21 Candidate fO 「 a sc れ 06 board ⅲ Chester County, Pennsylvania ・ Villanova University senior, ma 」 oring in accounting and finance ・ Started thinking about running for office the day after the November elections ・ "ldon'tthink age should be an obstacle, ” she says