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検索対象: TIME 2017年4月24日号
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1. 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

2. TIME 2017年4月24日号

Reviews T ⅱ eO TIME PICKS TELEVISION The third and final season of HBO drama The Leftovers (ApriI 16 ) continues its study Of life after the rapture, thiS time in a new location: Australia. PintO and Ceesay 可 star-crossed activists in 0 miniseries depicting class struggle ⅲ the し K. ⅲ the ' 70S MUSIC Singer and fiddler Lillie Mae makes her SOIO debut with Forever and Then Some (ApriI 14 ) , a honky-tonk-laced contemplation Of loneliness, produced by her bandmate 」 ack White. BOOKS Set in 2045 , Daniel Suarez's terrifyingly plausible technological thriller ChangeAgent (ApriI 18 ) explores a genetics black market where sophisticated cartels can edit human embryos. MOVIES Brie Larson and Armie Hammer star as wisecracking criminals on the run from highly disgruntled gangsters in the bullet ィ iddled action-comedy Free 日′ e (April 21 ). TELEVISION Radicals in love go GuerriUa ALL OUR RELATIONSHIPS TAKE PLACE WITHIN THE CON- text ofpolitics, but we have the luxury 0f ignoring that most ofthe time. NOt SO for Jas (Freida Pint0) and Marcus (Babou Cees (y) , fictional characters moving through very re al history stateside viewers may not know much about. On Showtime's new six-episode miniseries Guerrilla, the pair establish a cell dedicated tO fighting the government in 1970S Britain, even- tually moving from activism tO violence. ln a cruel irony, their mutual ardency forces them apart. Guerrilla provides an illuminating 100k at how the Black Power movement manifested itself across the Atlantic and hOW restrictions on lmmigration made ViOlent means seem necessary tO its members. Like creator JOhn Ridley's Other current series, American crime on ABC, Guerrilla con- descend and moves briskly through its p10t twists. The nar- rative feels perh 叩 s less important than the richly textured world the show conJures up, filled with partisans t0 various causes and differing opinions about tactics. ldris Elba shows up in a supporting role as a community actiViSt With a more incrementalist approach—the role, inherently less flashy than the show's heroes, is a shrewd deployment 0fhis star power. But the story is Jas and Marcus', and b0th PintO (best known for her role in Slumdog Mi 伍 0 〃 r の and Ceesay bril- liantly capture the intense passion ofyoung radicals. lt's easy t0 see them as unlucky and forced int0 conflict. Their fight, along with endless flitting between safe houses, magnifies the marginal differences between them. But Guerrilla depicts hOW exhilarating it is tO give one's life tO a cause. That may make them perfect characters t0 follow in a world in which politics seem suddenly ablaze. —DANIEL D'ADDARIO GUERRILLA airs on Showtime on Sundays at 9 p. m. E.T. Both Pinto and Ceesay brilliantly capture the intense passion Of young radicals

3. 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