The Brief 'THISISA WORLDIN WHICHSIZEMATTERS. THEBIGGER THEDEVICE, THEMORE YOUCANGETIN THERE. ' —NEXT PAGE を物盟に載ーを讐。物ー込、 : 物黶・ , はをを lnvestigators suspect 砒 lastyear's lost EgyptAirfiight was downed explosives laptops and iPads tO cameras and AIRLINE SECURITY REQUIRES constant vigilance as terrorists ' tactics handheld gaming devices. Trump Administration offcials evolve with consumer technology. ln 2010 an al-Qaeda affliate in Yemen say they know 0f no specific credible tried to slip a bomb hidden inside a threat against U. S. -bound airliners. printer cartridge onto a cargo flight But they are wary of the growmg bound for the U. S. Last year a SomaIi sophistication Of terrorist groups that "continue tO target commercial airliner was nearly brought down when a suicide bomber detonated a aviation and are aggressively pursuing device concealed in his laptop. mnovative methods; ” a senior TO keep pace with the evolving Administration offcial said. According threat, the し S. government is cracking tO a U. S. counterterronsm 0 伍 ci down on gadgets in the cabin. The authoritie s are paymg p articular Department 0f Homeland S ecurity attention tO lbrahim al-Asiri, the (DHS) announced on March 21 that chiefbombmaker for aI-Qaeda im it would require pas sengers on direct the Arabian Peninsula, the group flights t0 the U. S. from 10 airports in thought t0 be responsible for the the Middle East and North Africa to 2010 printer-cartridge p10t. Other stOW devices larger than a smartphone groups in the region have copied his in their checked baggage. The new tactics. The bomb smuggled onto the restrictions cover everything 仕 0n1 Somali airliner in 2016 was claimed AVIATION Why the U. S. iS C rac king down on gadgets in airplane cabins By Zeke J. MiIIer SB トコ 3 PHOTOGRAPH BY CHRISTIAN HARTMANN
DATA 1 第第を第要響 WHEREU. S. IMMIGRANTS WORK lmmigrants made u 17 % ofthe . S. 's 161 million- memberworkforce in 2014 , according tO Pew analysis Of government data. Here, top workplaces by share Of immigrant workers: 1 TERROR IN LONDON A man is assisted after an assailant staged what authorities called a two-pronged attack on March 22. Declaring a "terrorist incident," police said a vehicle mowed people down on Westminster Bridge, whichleads tO ParIiament, where an Officer was fatally stabbed and the attacker was shOt tO death. Atleast tWO Other people were killed and 20 injured. Attackslast year in Nice and BerIin 引 SO used vehicles as weapons. Photograph by TOby Melvi 〃 e—Reuters 45 % Private households PROGRESSIVE Popular with younger German Martin Schulz, Germany's voters and the SPD's working class base, Schulz has vowed to close the gender pay gap ⅲ Germany Bernie Sanders and legalize gay marriage. A committed Europhile, he has attacked the right-wing populists wh0 have been gaining ground across the continent, calling MARTIN SCHULZ, THE FORMER EUROPEAN the anti-E. U. and anti-immigration Alternative for Parliament President, is set tO challenge Germany's Germany party a ' disgrace. ' ChancellorAngela Merkel ⅲ national elections for the country's topjob on Sept. 24. As he gears up for MAKING WAVES With Schulz in the ring, the the contest, the 61-year-01d is being compared t0 SPD has seen a surge in support, overtaking the U. S. Senator and former Democratic presidential CDU in one recent poll. But it is hopeful Bernie Sanders. Here's why. still too early to say whether the wave Will crest or continue tO EVERYMAN Schulz's Social Democratic rise. Although she has faced Party (SPD) has been in coal ⅲ 0 Ⅱ with criticism for her open-door Merkel's Christian Democratic Union policy on refugees, Merkel has (CDU) since 2013. Now the SPD hopes seen 0 a string of high-profile his everyman roots—he dropped out 0f challenges since she first high school and overcame alcoholism became Chancellor in 2005. before entering public life—and his status as a relative outsider in Ger- —TARA JOHN man politics—he spent over a de- cade at the European Parliament— く His party's poll bump 0 れ d will draw enough support for the 13 , 000 new members have bee れ party t0 govern without the CDU. dubbed the "Schulz effect ” SPOTLIGHT 35 % Textile, apparel)leather manufacturing 33 % AgricUIture 32 % Accommodation 29 % Food manufacturing
Generations Of American children have learned the apocryphal tale Of young George Washington, bravely admitting tO his father that he chopped down 亡 e cherry tree. The story sprang from a culture that wanted even its fables tO serve the ideal Of truth. By that standard, the House lntelligence Committee hearing on March 20 should have been a massive humiliation for the President, who followed Washington 228 years later. lt is rare for such hearings tO be unclassified—and thus televised—but FBI Director James Comey fO n 臧 the largest possible audience for his rebuke of the sitting President. He had given Donald Trump nearly three weeks to That is not exactly true. The New York Times walk back his incendiary tweets accusing President reported on Jan. 20 that wiretapped data had been Obama Of "wire tapping" Trump Tower during used in an investigation ofTrump's advisers, but not the campaign. If such surveillance had been done that Obama had targeted Trump for wiretapping, as through legal channels, the FBI would have known; if Trump had claimed. But he had new ammunition : done illegally, it was a scandal ofhistoric proportions House lntelligence Committee chairman Devin and the FBI should be digging into it. Either way, Nunes had just announced that he had seen Trump's accusation implicated the integrity of intelligence reports showing the President-elect Comey's bureau, which is why the former prosecutor and his team were "at least monitored" as part of felt compelled to push back as the cameras rolled. "legally collected ” information. Nunes suggested the "I have no information that supports those tweets; ” monitoring was most likely the result of"incidental Comey said. "We have looked carefully inside the collection," which occurs when a target of an FBI. The Department ofJustice has asked me to share intelligence operation, like a foreign ambassador, with you that the answer is the same. talks with another U. S. person. But Nunes never The statement was concise, direct and damn- claimed that Obama wiretapped Trump. ing. The President Of the United States had been And yet for Trump, who proceeded to read at marked as a fabulist by one 0f the top offlcials in length over the phone from a Politico article on government charge d with finding the truth. And Nunes' statement, such distinctions did not matter. yet, for the man being called out, the rebuke was "That means l'm right," he said. He also argued that nothing Of the sort. the punctuation in his original tweet meant he did 'l'm a very instinctual person, but 1 れ y instinct not mean wiretapping in the literal sense. "When I turns out t0 be right; ” Trump told TIME two days said 'wire tapping,' it was in quotes,: ” he said. later, in a 20-minute phone interview from the Oval What did he mean? Trump argued that his 0 伍 ce. The testimony, ⅲ other words, had not fazed claims about scandalous wiret 叩 s by Obama had him at all. He was still convinced he would be proved tO be viewed within the context of other assertions right. "I have articles saying it happened. ” he had made in the past, which had later come true. 0 HON J COhEY 22 TIME April 3 , 2017
TheView Nutrition How tO eat well— and still feel full By AIexandra SifferIin BY NOW YOU KNOW THE BASICS OF A healthy diet: lots of fruits and vegetables, some nuts, healthy dairy and a little fish and lean meat. But that doesn't mean you always abide by those rules—or that they're easy t0 follow. Most food choices are guided by hunger—which can lead people to make in-the-moment decisions that don't line up with their longer-term nutrition goals. ln fact, research suggests that one of the strongest predictors ofwhether a diet will be successful is how hungry a person feels while he or she is on it. That's why forward-thinking doctors have shifted their focus away from nutri- ents like fat and even carbs and instead recommend fOOdS according to their のんⅡ nutrition profile. What they've found is that many ofthe most filling foods are also the healthiest. TO pick 100 ofthe healthiest, TIME edi- 0 tors combed through government nutri- tion databases tO identify some Ofthe most satisfying, hunger-quelling foods that are also enjoyable t0 eat and easy to find at the grocery store. We focused on overall nutri- tion rather than calorie count. Nearly all the foods on the resulting list are high ⅲ protein or fiber ()r both), which isn't sur- prising when you consider that those are the two nutrients that play the biggest role ⅲ how filling a given food is, Science aside, the most satisfying fOOds you can eat are the ones that taste delicious and are simple to prepare at home. Fill your plates with foods like these and you'll take the guesswork (and calorie counting) out ofhealthy eating. Adaptedfrom the TIME ec ト ed ⅲ 0 れ b00 た , 100 Healthiest Foods to Satisfy Your Hunger. Available 0 れ Amazon 0 れ d in bookstores. The whole list is online at time.com/100-healthy. PHOTOGRAPHS BY DANNYKIM FORTIME Eggs Eat the whole th i ng, yo included 、 Pairing eggs with greens helps you absorb more Of the vegetables' nutrients. WHYTHEY'RE G000 FORYOU YoIks make the fat-soluble nutrients in eggs easierto digest, and they don't elevate cholesterol as doctors previously thought. NUTRITION Eggs contain all nine ~ 、 essential amino acids. damame One Of the best ways to enjoy edamame iS steamed, With a light sprinkling Of salt. WHYTHEY'RE G000 FORYOU Edamame, which are young soybeans, are high in filling protein and fiber. NUTRITION They're good sources Of enzymes and nutrients that fight inflammation, which can fuel many kinds ofdisease. 、い。 TIME BIackberries Nature Often gives nutrition cues with colors. Blackberries deep purple hue means they're high in antioxidants. WHYTHEY'RE GOOD FORYOU Black- berries are rich in vitamin C, which is thought tO have a ro in cancer prevention. NUTRITION Compared with other berries, they're especially high in fiber and IOW in sugar. Figs Figs, which are members of the mulberryfamily, are slightly sweetand a 0 high in fiber. WHYTHEY'REGOOD FORYOU Figs are an unlikely source Of vitamin B6, which may play a ro in energy, hormone balance and mood. NUTRITION These fruits are high in vitamin C, as well as bone- building calcium.
possibility is that this shift in behavior at the top often talks like 0 Ⅱ e. "Any negative polls are f e news," he tweeted in his third week on the j?b. will lead tO an increased skepticism among the Trump leaves 0 "Repeal The Gallup daily tracking poll of Trump's 叩 proval voters and politicians on whom Trump depends. Obamacare" ra ″ア fell below 40 % after the release of his Obamacare Reams Of social science long ago established ⅲん 0 ⅲ s ⅵ〃 e , I<: ア . replacement bill. that partisans tend tO unconsciously overlook 0 れ March 20 , the With time, Trump may find he has committed falsehoods that come from their own team, while same day top し S. being outraged by the errors Of their enemies. himselfto a strategy that will deteriorate with reu e, 0Jficials refuted his because with each passing month the American But Trump's excesses are exasperating even hiS claim 市 at he was people will be gathering their own data on his habits fellow Republicans. Senate majority leader Mitch wiretapped and tactics, and what they yield. They will decide McConnell has stepped up his warnings about whether it's true, as Trump has promised, that health Trump's tweeting, telling one conservative outlet that it "takes attention away ” from his party's care COStS are lower and everyone has wonderful insurance. They will fact-check his pledge ofmillions accomplishments. Trump isn't moved. "Mitch is a wonderful man; ” the President told TIME. "Mitch of new manufacturing jobs. They will see whether their incomes rise and their taxes fall, whether will speak for himself. ” But other Republican members 0f Congress Mexico pays for a giant wall. "ln the end, residents have become more bOld in voicing their concerns. aren't allowed tO get away with excuses ” explains Bill Galston, a presidential scholar who worked in "There's a 10t Of distractions; agrees Senator Jerry Moran 0fKansas, whose state gave Trump 56 % ofits the Clinton White House. "They pay a price for the votes. "ljustwould say that truth is foundational. lt's promises they make. ” This is a truth that no one yet important in public life, and a11 ofus need t0 do what has been able to tweet away. we can tO tell it the way the facts are. ” Representative Before he got off the phone, I tried one more carlos Curbe10 0fFlorida agrees: "The White House time tO get Trump tO answer a question about and the President have tO understand that there's a the risk t0 his reputation caused by false and cost tO all Of this. This country needs a government ever changing utterances. Once again, he would not accept the premise. "Hey, 100k , ” he said. "I that it can trust. ” Ultimately, democracy needs facts t0 allow can't be doing so badly, because l'm President and for public debate and provide a check on abuses you're not. ” AS a factual matter, the last part Of this Of power. "Truth has a despotic character; ” statement is indisputably true. And with that, he philosopher Hannah Arendt wrote ⅲ a 1968 essay graciously said goodbye and went back t0 running on the subject. "lt is therefore hated by tyrants wh0 the affairs of the most powerful country ⅲ the rightly fear the competition 0f a coercive force they world. —With reporting わツ SAM FRIZELL, ZEKE 第 cannot monopolize. ” Although Trump is a tyrant MILLER, PRATHEEK REBALA 0 れ d CHRIS WILSON/ only in the minds Of his most fevered critics, he WASHINGTON 27 4
RUSSIA AND T TRUMP CAMPAIGN On March 20 , FBI Director 」 ames Comeyconfirmed thatas partofthe federal probe intO Moscow's operation againstthe 2016 IJ. S. election, FBI agents are "investigatingthe nature Ofany links between individuals associated with the Trump campaign and the Russian government, and whether there was anycoordination between the campaign and Russia's efforts. " He declined tO elaborate. Whatwe know, sofar,from the public record: T U M P ' S P 0 P CARTER PAGE CAMPAIGN ADVISER 旧 March 2016 , Trump identified Page, a former investment banker who has done business in Russia, as a campaign adviser. The following 」 u Page gave a speech in Moscow in which he criticized U. S. foreign policy tO Russia. White House advisers have cast him as a peripheral figure in Trump's orbit.ln a March 8 letter tO Senate investigators, Page said he "spent many hours in [Trump] campaign headquarters" in 2016. He has denied any wrongdoing and says he is the victim Ofa smear campaign. ROGER STONE ADVISER The veteran GOP consultantand longtimeTrump confidant admitted tO communicating with Guccifer 20 , a hacking group thatclaimed responsibility for leaking a stOlen trove Of Democratic National Committee documents in the 2016 campaign. Stone called his contacts with the group "completely innocuous ” and denies having any connections to Russia. Stone recommended that Trump hire Manafort, his former lobbying partner,to help secure the GOP nomination. JEFF SESS ー 025 A7TORNEY GENERAL 旧 hiS confirmation hearings, Sessions to 旧 former Senate colleagues that he "did not have communications With the Russians" during Trump's campaign. But on March 1 , the Washington POSt revealed that Sessions had met twice with Moscow's envoy KisIyak while serving as one Of Trump's top 2016 advisers. Amid calls for hiS resignation, Sessions recused himself om any probe intO Russia's election meddling. Sessions said he did not mean tO mislead. PAUL MANAFORT CAMPAIGN CHAIRMAN Manafort was Trump's campaign chairman duringthe pivotal conclusion ofthe Republican primaries and the start Ofthe general election. He was pushed out Ofthe campaign over concerns about hiS consultancy work on behalf Of ousted Ukrainian strongman Viktor Yanukovych— whO was backed bythe Kremlin. White House press secretary Sean Spicer sought tO play down Manafort's ties tO Trump, saying he played a very limited ro for a very limited amount oftime. Manafort has denied any wrongdoing. MIKE FLYNN NATIONAL SECURITY ′ ADVISER FIynn was fired on Feb. 13 after misleading the Vice President about hiS conversations with Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak. Routine intercepts Of KisIyak's calls overheard FIynn discussing U. S. sanctions on Russia while President Obama was sti 旧 n Office. According tO documents released by the House Oversight Committee, Flynn was 引 SO paid 0 ー S33 , 000 tO speak at a gala for Russia's state-run broadcaster RT. The U. S. intelligence community says RT'S English-language arm serves as a propaganda outlet in the West. FLYNN. MANAFORT, SESSIONS, KISLYAK, PUTIN: GETTY IMAGES; STONE 】 REUTERS; PAGE: AP T H R U S S 夏 A N S VLADIMIR PUTIN PRESIDENT U. S.law enforcement and intelligence services concluded that Putin ordered an escalating campaign Of influence operations targeting the 2016 U. S. election. The goals, according tO a 」 anuary consensus assessment by the intelligence community, were tO undermine U. S. democracy, weaken HilIary CIinton and, if possible, help Trump win the White House. The campaign included hacking, fake news and Other propaganda. SERGEY KISLYAK AMBASSA DOR A well-known figure in Washington, KisIyak regularly interacts with politicians Of bOth parties. Asked at a November event about allegations Of Russia's election meddling, he said, " に is ourjob tO understand, tO know people, bOth on the side Ofthe Republicans and Democrats. 24 TIME April 3 , 2017
The Brief Viewpoint A 'fractious' feminist decries the ruthless thought police stifling free speech on campus By CamiIIe PagIia HISTORY MOVES IN CYCLES. THE PLAGUE OF POLITICAL correctness and assaults on free speech that erupted in the 1980S and were beaten back ⅲ the 1990S have returned with a vengeance. ln the U. S. the universities as well as the mainstream media are currently patrolled by well-meaning but ruthless thought police, as dogmatic in their views as agents ofthe Spanish lnquisition. We are plunged once again intO an ethical chaos Where intolerance masquerades as tolerance and where individual liberty is crushed by the tyranny of the group ・ The premier principles of my new book, Free Women, Free Men, are free thought and free speech—open, mobile and unconstrained by either liberal or conservative ideology. The liberal-vs. -conservative dichotomy, dating 仕 om the split between le 仕 and right following the French Revolution, is hopelessly outmoded for our far more complex era 0f expansive technology and global politics. A bitter polarization Of liberal and conservative has become SO extreme and strident in bOth the Americas and Europe that it sometimes resembles mental illness, severed from the common-sense realities Of everyday life. My dissident brand 0f feminism is grounded ⅲ my own childhood experience as a fractious rebel against the suffocating conformism Of the 1950S , when Americans, exhausted by tWO decades Of economic instability and war, reverted tO a Victorian cult Of domesticity that limited young girls' aspirations and confined them ()n my jaundiced View) tO a simpering, saccharine femininity. IN 1991 , New York Newsday published my op-ed on date rape, which remains the most controversial thing I have ever written. ln it, I argued that women tOday (then as now) were misusing the freedom that my generation had fought for, and won, by not accepting personal risk. I wrote at the time that young feminists are deluded: they come from a protected, white middle-class world and expect everything to be safe. Women infantilize themselves when they cede responsibility for sexual encounters tO men or tO after-the- fact grievance committees, parental proxies unworthy Of true feminists. My baby-boom generation demanded and won an end tO such parietal rules, and it is tragic indeed how so many 0f today's young women seem t0 long for a return Of those hovering paternalistic safeguards. SYNDICATED IN REGIONAL NEWSPAPERS from coast tO coast ⅲ haphazard truncated form, the op-ed caused a huge backlash. There was a coordinated campaign, evidently emanating from feminist groups in the Midwest, tO harass the president of my university with demands for my firing. That article, Often reprinted in freshman-composition course packs at state universities, caused me endless trouble を DISSIDENT WOM FEMINISM feminism. wave for second- groundwork and laying the convention female shattering role in her pioneering due creditfor never received Streisand has "Barbra ro models: feminist icons as cites certain bOOk, PagIia 旧 her new 圧 MEN throughout the 1990S. lt led t0 picketing and protests at my outside campus lectures and tO my own walk- offs ()o avoid fisticuffs) from Austrian and British TV talk shows and even from the stage of Queen Elizabeth Hall in London. I still stand by every word of my date-rape manifesto. AS a career college teacher, I want our co ddling, authoritarian universities tO ehd all involvement With or surveillance Of students' social lives and personal interactions, verbal or otherwise. If a crime is c ommitted, it should be reported t0 the police. Otherwise, college administrations should mind government colonies, ruled by educational mission and become college s have ab andoned their regulation ofstudent life? American grotesque surveillance and over- campus speech COdes as well as the has supported rather than protested it possible that today's academic le 仕 law may properly intervene. HOW is hate crosses over intO action that the as the freedom tO love. lt is onlywhen freedom tO hate must be as protected ofauthority by a repressive elite. The 1960S , which resisted encroachments authentic populist revolution Ofthe Speech Movement represented the antiestablishment stance Ofthe Free moment for my generation. The I entered college. lt was a cardinal CaIifornia, Berkeley, in 1964 , the year Savi0, erupted at the University 0f by a fiery ltalian American, Mari0 T FREE SPEECH MOVEMENT, led the classroom. facilitating and funding education in their own business and focus on 9 Camille 20g 0 was adapted. Copyright ◎ 2017 妙 Men 伊 an 市 eo れ ) , 介 om which this 可市 e new b00 た Free Women, Free pag 0 is afeminist and the author strong men. a wary alliance ofstrong women and responsibility, can only be built upon by a courageous code ofpersonal An enlightened femimsm, animated has no place in a modern democracy. dictates. This despotic imperialism Offcious bureaucrats enforcing federal
TheBrief THE RISK REPORT Russia wants tO ensure that ・ (Jkraine Kiev and the Kremlin remains Within itS orbit, because the IOSS of Ukraine to the West would be the final face narrowing indignity ⅲ a chain 0fpost—C01d War options in Ukraine humiliations. Still, Russia can't invade the rest ofUkraine, because Russian losses By lan Bremmer might well undermine Russian President Vladimir putin's support at home. The cost Of occupymg Ukraine, a nation of about IN UKRAINE, THINGS HAVE TAKEN ANOTHER turn for the worse. ln January, Ukrainian army 42 million people, is also far beyond Russia's veterans began an unoffcial blockade of rail means. lnstead, Putin has kept Ukraine traffc intO the country's breakaway eastern unstable tO force provinces tO protest their government's its governme nt tO We're getting willingness t0 d0 business with the pro- give the breakaway closer tO Russian separatists holding power there. provmce S— and, On March 15 , Ukraine's President Petro the moment by extension, the Poroshenko, anxious tO regain control of Kremlin— a vetO when Moscow the situation and t0 keep the confidence of over Ukraine S will move tO his supporters , made the blockade offcial. national foreign and formalize Separatists remain defiant. Russia is trade policies. trade and reportedly recognizing travel documents from Many elected econonmc the breakaway provlnces for entry into Russia, Western offcials links with the and we're getting closer tO the moment when want to defend separatist Moscowwill move tO formalize trade and Ukraine from Rus- territories economic links with the separatist territories. Sian manipulation, ln other words, the Ukrainian stalemate but they don't want has deepened. Ukraine has fallen behind to bear the costs ofdefending a country their Western neighbors like PoIand and Hungary citizens don't care about. over the past 25 years. A higher standard of The stalemate is also becoming more living depends on closer engagement with expensive for b0th Russia and Ukraine. The Europe, but peace and security still demand blockade could shave another 1.3 percentage stable relations with Moscow. This puts points 0ffUkraine's beleaguered economy. Poroshenko in a bind. The conflict with On the Russian side, poor prospects for 0i1 Russia has killed about 10 , 000 people, and prices will force the Kremlin to think hard Poroshenko knows that many Ukrainians about the wisdom Of investing large sums would denounce any move to shift the rest in Ukraine's breakaway provinces for the 0fthe country toward Europe by simply indefinite future. accepting the independence 0f Ukraine's Something's got tO give, but it has never breakaway provinces as a surrender tO Russia. been less clear what that might be. TICKER Ⅳ 0 charges ⅲ U.. S. inmate-shower case NO one will be charged in the 2012 death Of Darren Rainey, a mentally Ⅲ inmate whO died in a Florida prison after being confined in a hOt shower for tWO hours. A prosecutor's report found no evidence Of wrongdoing by the guards involved. ロⅱ s attacker had consumed drugs Blood-test results showed that Ziyed Ben Belgacem, a suspected lslamic extremist whO tOOk a soldier hostage at Paris' OrIy Airport before being shOt dead on March 18 , had consumed cocaine, cannabis and a に 0h6 before the attack. Waiterfired over residency question A waiter was fired for asking patrons at a restaurant in Huntington Beach, Calif. , fo 「“ p 「 00f of residency" when they ordered a drink. The restaurant said it would donate 10 % of that weekend's sales tO charity as an apology. Ⅳ or 田 0 リ is 30 日 d ' S happiest country Norway has been declared the happiest country in the world in a U. N. ranking. Denmark, lceland, Switzerland and Finland all made the top five,while the U. S. fell one spot from last year,to 14th place. ロ ANIMALS A rise in rhino poaching? A Czech Republic Z00 has started sawing offthe horns from its herd of rare rhinoceroses in an effort to thwart rhino poachers, who have made headlines fo 「 severalhigh-profile incidents. —Kate Samuelson SOUTH AFRICA On Feb. 20 , an armed gang broke intO a rhino orphanage in KwaZulu-Natal and removed tWO rhinos horns in front Of staff members. One rhino was killed and the other had to be euthanized. KENYA Duringthe summer of 2013 , seven rhinos were killed by poachers in a series Of coordinated attacks within the space Ofone week in national parks and wildlife sanctuaries across Kenya. FRANCE 旧 March, poachers broke intO ThOiry Z00 , near PariS, overnight and killed a 4-year-oId white rhino,then hacked offhis horn. Police are investigating the incident. ANIMALS: GETTY IMAGES
TheBrief ROUNDUP by aI-Shabab, another aI-Qaeda-Iinked group ・ Egyptian offcials revealed in December that traces Of explosives were found on the bOdies Of passengers aboard an EgyptAir flight that went down last May en route from paris tO Cairo. Security experts say forcing passengers to check personal gadgets will limit the sorts ofmaterials and triggering devices would-be bombers might use tO mask an explosive. While carry-on bags are screened by conventional X-ray machines, checked baggage goes through more-thorough explosive- detection systems. ln addition, says Jeffrey price, an aviation-security expert, it's harder for a terrorist t0 detonate explosives in the cargo hold, which would require a timer or a trigger device based on barometric pressure. For now, domestic flights are unaffected by the new restrictions , and it is not likely that offcials will take away passengers' smartphones next. Security experts say smaller gadgets pose less Of a threat because they can't conceal as much explosive material. lt's for this reason that passengers are restricted tO carrying no more than 3.4 oz. 0f liquids, creams or gels int0 the cabin. "ThiS iS a world in WhiCh Size matters; ” says Bennet Waters, a counterterrorism expert and former DHS offlcial. "The bigger the device, the more you can get in there. ” While offcials say the security concern is real, critics suggest the Trump Administration has imposed the new policy in service tO Other motivations. U. S. legacy airlines have been complaining foryears about encroachment from foreign flag carriers like Etihad and Emirates 0 Ⅱ long-haul routes t0 the U. S. Meanwhile, the lingering controversy over President Trump's stalled ban on travelers from six Muslim-maJority countries has made CiVil libertarians suspicious. Hina Shamsi, director ofthe ACLU's National S ecurity Proj ect, argue s that the new crackdown on gadgets is driven by prejudice, because the 10 alrports covered are in predominantly Muslim countries. "Given the Administration's already poor track record; ” Shamsi says , "this policy sends a signal ofdiscriminatory targeting. When the U. S. changes its airline-security standards, foreign partners typically do the same. But among the allies with whom the U. S. has shared the intelligence behind the gadget crackdown, only the U. K. has so far followed suit. Canada says it is still studying the move, while German authoritie s s aid they aren't currently considering similar measures. lt may be a sign that Trump's crackdown on Muslim immigration has made it harder for allies tO trust his Administration's assessment ofglobal security threats. —With reporting KATIE REILLY/ NEW YORK 0 れ d MAYA RHODAN/WASHINGTON ロ TIME ApriI 3 , 2017 6 A new race tO the moon A group Of European engineers called PTScientists has announced plans tO make the first unmanned, private moon landing sometime in 2018 on SpaceX's FaIcon 9 rocket. Here are Other initiatives tO return to the moon: NASA NASA is studying the possibility of accelerating the development Of its Space Launch System—a giant rocket 0 being built tO transport people tO Mars— tO take a crew Of astronauts around the moon on its first flight as early as 2018. TICKER Malibu becomes 0 sanctuary city MaIibu's city council VOted 3-2 tO approve a measure prohibiting the use of the CaIifornia city's funds and resources tO help the federal government enforce immigration laws, thus declaring MaIibu a sanctuary city. The move was inspired by Malibu resident and actor Martin Sheen. Ghanaian youths die under ate げ 0 Ⅱ AtIeast 19 people, including 13 high school students, died after a storm caused trees tO fall on them while they were swimming at the Kintampo waterfalls, a populartourist site in Ghana's Brong-Ahafo region. 440re grandparents than ever ⅲ the し S. Grandparents make up a larger proportion Ofthe U. S. population than ever before, according tO new Census Bureau data, accountingfor 37 % Of adults ages 30 and older in 2014. Long-Iost リ an Gogh paintings on view TWO van Gogh paintings stolen from the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam in 2002 have been put back on display without their originalframes.ltalian police discovered the artworks behind a false wa 旧 n a fugitive's villa last September,. 0 0 BLUEORIGIN ◎」 e 幵 Bezos wants an Amazon-Iike ◎ delivery service in orderto enable "future human settlement ” on the ◎ surface. His space company, BIue Origin, hopes tO delivergearfor 0 habitats and lunar experiments by mid -2020. ROSCOSMOS Russia's space agency said last year it is looking tO build a manned moon station based on CO War—era research. NO deadline has been set fo 「 the 12-person base. 0 DIGITS ROUNDUP: ILLUSTRATIONS BY CARRIE GEE FOR TIME; DIGITS: JUSTIN TALLIS—AFP/GETTY IMAGES Weight, ⅲ carats, Of the Pink Star, expected tO become the most expensive diamond e auctioned when it goes up for sale in Hong Kong on April 4 t is predicted tO fetch about S60 million 5960
C onversation ronment and future genera- THE NEW WAVE tions (I have grandchildren). YOUR MARCH 13 REPORT ON the Next Generation Lead- Remember, With age comes ers was SO optimistic—such life experience and some a relieffrom your recent COV- wisdom. Noah is a bright erage Of a dictatorial presi- guy and I admire him, but dent's policie s and his like - don't count the old folks out minded followers. just yet. Mina Ⅵ Singh A. M. Doro 市ッ Miner, SYDNEY GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. KEEP UP THE FIGHT JUST BECAUSE AMERICANS have an ignorant chief execu- AS I READ NANCY GIBBS' ED- tive WhO believes science iS itorial "ln Defense of an a hoax, Trevor Noah should Open, Fair and Free Press ” not stereotype the "older [March 13 ] , I was heartened by the response t0 the White value in a "filter that turns generation ” as accepting BUSH WISHES TO BE LEFT the status quo and not car- House S exclusion Of certain your face intO a corncob that tO live out his days in peace ing about environmental is- news outlets, until I read and quiet, with no ramifica- spits popcorn from your sues because they won't be that “ TIME will not attend mouth when you talk. ” Dumb tions accruing 仕 om the hor- around much longer. Wh0 regular daily briefings ifthe conversations, indeed. GO rors he'S committed. Some- does Noah think can be cred- White House is excluding thing is amiss when that is read a book. ited with discovering the cri- some reporters. ” ls this not Valerie Emmerich, acceptable. I find it a dis- sis, providing objective data exactly what Trump wants ? grace tO promote the idle BROOKLINE, MASS. and warning civilization Of Perhaps the response should musings Of one WhO insti- the impending doom? I 'm be attendance at every op- gated such ongoing carnage FRESH CANVAS a 61-year-01d baby boomer portunity With even more in- in the world as he did. Hitler RE "THE ART OF WAR- with parents in their late tense and vigorous que stion- riors ” [March 13 ] : George also painted, and I must say, 80S , and we couldn't be ing and an insistence that W. Bush says, "I wanted he was the better artist. any more disturbed by the the White House answer the tO dO justice with my lim- B. S. Pitt, consequences 0f Donald questions being asked. DO ited talent tO my subjects— AMSTERDAM your jobs, please. Americans remarkable people who sac- Trump S recent moves tO relax Obama's E PA regula- still have government "by the rificed for our country. ” His tions and his seeming failure talent was certainly limited people ” and you, dear press, SETTING THE RECORD STRAIGHT ln "Moscow Cozies t0 comprehend the planet's are our first line of defense. long before he took up paint- Up t0 the Right ” (March 20 ) , we changes. Grow up, Noah, ing, and the world continues Rebecca Newhall, mistakenly said that Alexander Tor- shin attended an ApriI 2016 speech and quit patting yourself on to feel the deleterious ef- COLUMBIA, MD. by then candidate Donald Trump at the back for your youthful fects. The men and women the Center for the National lnterest. who joined the so-called egocentrism. THANKS BUT NO THANKS He did not. ln "Celebrity Squabbles for the Ages ” (March 13 ) , we incor- Beth HirschfieId, warrior ranks didn't sacrifice RE "SNAPCHAT FACES THE rectly stated the year in which 01- Public ” [March 13 ] : Many for their country; they sacri- CHICAGO ivia de Havilland snubbed her sis- thanks t0 Joel Stein for en- ficed for the hubris of Bush terJoan Fontaine afterwinning an Oscar. lt was 1947 , not 1942. Fontaine lightening me as tO what and hiS cromes. I AM ONE OF THE "OLD PEO- won ⅲ 1942 , when bOth she and ple ” Noah referred to, and I Sn 叩 chat is all about. But 10e Lewandowski de Havilland received Best Actress actually care about the envi- somehow, I fail to see the nominations. DURANGO, COLO. NEXT GENERATION LEADERS 場い紀月 TALK TO US SEND AN EMAIL: letters@timemagazine.00m Please dO not send attachments Send 0 letter: Letters tO the Editor must include writer'sfull name, address 0 d home telephone, may be editedfor purposes 可 c ⅱ or space, and should be addressed to the nearest ofice: HONG KONG - TIME Magazine ers , 37 / F , Ox ′ d House, Taikoo PIace, 979 King's Road, Qu Ⅳ Bay, Hong Kong; JAPAN - TIME Magazine Letters, 2- 1-27F Atago, Tokyo 10 6227 , Japan; Please recycle this magazine and EUROPE - TIME Magazine せ e 博 , PO Box 63444 , London, SEIP 5 日 , UK; remove inserts AUSTRALIA - TIME Magazine e , GPO Box 3873 , Sydney, NSW 2001 , Australia; and samples NEW ZEALAND - TIME Magazine し e ers , PO Box 198 , ShortIand St. , AuckIand, 1140 , New ZeaIand 肥 recycling FOLLOW US: facebook.com/time @time (Twitter and lnstagram)