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1. TIME 2017年4月3日号

W H E N Y 〇 CJ SET THE STAGE F 〇 R LEGENDS, Y 〇 CJ ' V E M A D E H IS 丁〇 RY. Flhis watch is a witness tO the greatest moments in go 圧 Traditions that have become timeless. And Tiger's first MaJor victory 20 years ago. Worn on the wrists of those who make the Masters legendary. lt doesn't just tell time. lt tells history. トへ 020 レ ツ、ぐをい OYSTER PERPETUAL DAY-DATE 40 ROLEX

2. TIME 2017年4月3日号

TELEVISION Antiheroines are resplendent in 数 0 ots Brown F ⅲ卍 headsfurther back in time than Downton Abbey's 1910S , and tries on 。 ess innocent role 0 By DanieI D'Addario IN 1763 LONDON, THE OPENING sequence ofHulu's new series Harlots informs us, 1 in 5 women iS a sex worker. lfanything, this figure seems 10W once the show plunges viewers intO a world so relentlessly focused on the flesh trade that it's a wonder Georgian London had any other industries at all. TWO rival madams, Samantha Morton's earthy MargaretWells and Lesley Manville's pretentious Lydia Quigley, sit atop this world. And their rivalry provides the engine for a compelling drama. The p air share little aside from enmity: Lydia teaches herworking girls French and pockets their money, celebrating the finer things in life while profiting from the prurient. Margaret's style, by contrast, is more saloon than s alon. Her trade tends toward the rougher-edged, with one glittering exception—her daughter Char10tte (DowntonAbbey's Jessica Brown Findlay), who is sought after by London's wealthy patrons. And yet as Margaret seeks tO raise much-needed capital, she eventually finds herselfforced t0 sell 0ff the virginity 0f Char10tte 's younger sister Lucy (Eloise Smyth). lt's a tragic decision, and one whose complexity Morton sells brilliantly. Many viewers first became acquainted with the actor through her intense, (This is a lavish period drama, from the understand that prostitution is bOth a haunted performances ⅲ石〃 ori 収 cast's towerlng W1gs tO their prime opera rough business and one that gives rise Report and 加 America. Here, she has boxes. ) There's a tendency tO deliver tO interesting storie s. After all, TV has traded her androgynous alien qualities thuddingly obvious moments ofexpo- done much the same with the mob, the for an exhaustion atjust hOW hard the sition amid all the finery. lt feels like an drug trade and Madison Avenue. Har10ts life ofawoman on Earth can be. She unnecessary course correction tO bring provides tWO intnguing antiheroines gives Lucy a pair ofunflatteringly ornate viewers ensorcelled by the costumes who get the great acting challenge of yellow shoes t0 help entice potential back tO the realities ofthe sex trade. facing down enstential threats. B0th buyers. When Lucy says they don't fit, But viewers have been primed to face a temperance movement, not tO Margaret retorts, "Make 'em. ” She's mention the possibility their charges trying t0 merge mother and pimp, will stop obeying orders. This is the STREAMWORTHY benefactor and bos s. Bunions are the most promising thread in Harlots, and HarIotsjoins several Other erudite Hulu series focused on the lives least of her problems. what will likely keep you watching: the Of complicated women, including Her astringency iS a welcome check drama oflosing sight ofthe line between The Mindy Project, Casual, on Harlots' more questionable turns. The survival and exploitation. DifficuIt People and upcoming show is at once aware Of the struggles its Margaret Atwood adaptation HARLOTS releases episodes Wednesdays on characters undergo and a bit drunk on The Handmaid's Tale (April 26 ). Hulu how gloriouslykitted-out their world is. 0 43

3. TIME 2017年4月3日号

第第い TIME! 、ロ ' ロ 0 A home ⅲ spanish Trails senior Village, ⅲ zep hyrhills, F 厄 . , 0 れれ . 31 Time Off What tO watch, read' see and dO 4 田 ActorBeckyG's biggestrole 4 幻 TV dramas : photograph Fox's ShOts Fired' Christopher Hulu's 設@日0 お Morris—VIIfor TIME 4 QuickTalkwith Julie Andrews ー Movies: Jake Gyllenhaal ⅲも ; woody Harrelson ⅲ WiIson 4 引 A new novelby Hannah Tinti 4 引 8 Questions for PBS host Bruce Feiler The Features The View ldeas, opin innovations ユ引 Olympian lbtihaj Muhammad's open letter tO the President ユ 5 ー TheU. S. women's hockey team s fight for fairer pay ユ引 lnside theworld ofelite sommeliers ユ羽 The thorny history 0f cherry blossoms ユ 8 巨 00 super healthy and filling foods 3 ー conversation 4 ぽ or the Record The Brief News ″ om the し S. and around the Ⅳ 0 月 d 引 The airline electronicsban 8 llan Bremmer on hOW a stalemate is exacerbating Ukraine relations Camille paglia on free thought and free speech ユ幻 RIP guitar icon ChuckBerry, newsmanJimmy Breslin and poet DerekWalcott 12 ー German Chance110rAngela Merkel meets First Daughter lvanka Trump TlMEAsia published 引 ME ia ( HO Kor 回 L 加 . 引 MEpub 00i td ~ 0 issues• E h 00 ~ ⅳ 00f52 i 00 引 0 00 00000 ub ⅱ 0. 引 MEm 引 pub h 0 0 0 0 issues 02017 石 00 ia (Hong 03 Lim . 則 00 ~ . Repr 0 面 00 i00 加に 00i0 曲 0 0 ⅱせ 00 rmi i prohibited. 引 MEa 面物 0 Red B00 0 0 印 000 Ot ted 新 00 t0d0000k 00g び 0ti00 inthe し S. and i0t2080 ⅵ 0 、 w わ 000 引 MEma 幻冊 c ⅳ cu tes. MembecAudit Buræu of Ci000 i00 = 50 一 = げせ圄ⅲ ~ 0 に代物 at " " 0 云 ~ 00g ー 0u0 , " h " 000 曲 " 面ⅱ ga 00 " " 0 " 0 ⅳ 00 00000t d00 0 曲 in 0 00. C TOM 駅 s に EAND 旧第 0 . 24 / 7 、 , 加ー 000 ー 0 , 回 000 曲ー、わ / / ・・ " 面ー 0 0 , 0 / " 0 . php. You " 0 0 0 " 訓 000 C " 0 00 に 00 C00000t 0040 ″ 30 , - れ 00 00 旧 852 ) 312 & 56 0 te Time 0 ( Ho 03 L 部 , 3 〃 0 対 ~ ー , 、 0 0 ~ , 979 R d , 50 叮 B 可 , HO コ 000 ー 0 , 新 0 00000 ・ 20 030- 始 .00 , 00012066 & 236 00 Dia り 002 与 1 ・ 27FA 始 gO'Minato-ku,T1 01056227. 0i0f000ti0000d 0t00 , HO 0a0 、・ ( 800 ) 3 、 2 & 5169.00 ⅵに面ーー / ~ 0 航 . = 旧 f0000 、 i00 訓 ab に 0 、せ 00. ・ ' 物塢 - け 00. To 00q00000000 00 0 、、ⅵ忙 0000P 面 0. -. M = we 00k0 08 of 000 ⅲ、 ~ 訓 ab 厄 0 00 ~ 00000 " 0 000. 恥 000f0000 、 " ~ ~ 面 0W00 ~ 0 、 , 00 ー 0000 ~ 0C000000 rvi 0C00t00 引 MEA 引 0 Ho 00d 0 、 inSi 0800 面 Hong ng. Si 0800M0 ( p ) NO. 077 / / 2015. Ma は ia KKDN 0 瞰 00 S6 6 / 0 ・ / 、 0000 ・ . 2 TIME April 3 , 2017 The state Of Truthiness How fact-challenged president DonaIdTrump delivers deliberate and strategic lies tO control the national debate ByMichaeI Scherer 20 C ountering Nor 亡 Korea As KimJongUn races t0 build a nuclear-missile arsenal' TIME asked top intelligence and diplomatic experts what the U. S. and Chinacan dO t0 stOP him 28 Trailblazers seniors are findingthat mobile- home parks make splendid retirement ByKarI 巧 c た 34 ロ

4. TIME 2017年4月3日号

MOVIES Woody HarreIson turns a scowl upside down in W SO れ GRAPHIC NOVELIST DANIEL CLOWES SPECIALIZES IN A KIND ofcockeyed pessimism, a somber-funny worldview that acknowledges how crummy and stupid people can be, only t0 swing around t0 a kind ofgrudging humanism. That's the principle at work ⅲⅣ 0 れ , directed by Craig J0hnson (The SkeIeton Twins) and adapted by Clowes from his 2010 novel. Woody Harrelson plays the title character, a loner who shares his cluttered apartment with just one Other creature, a wi Ⅱ丘 11 fox terrier named Pepper. Whenever Wilson opens his mouth, the wrong thing tumbles out—and no one wants tO hear it. But ifWilson is a royal pain, he's also piercingly lonely. When he reestablishes contact with his ex-wife Pippi (Laura Dern), a onetime drug addict who's struggling t0 straighten out, he learns that he has a daughter, Claire (lsabella Amara), now a teenager. Pippi gave her up for adoption as an infant. Dazzled by ・ lt's something this newfound fatherhood, WiIson you hope for in sets out tO connect with Claire. But a character, that because this is Clowesland, almost you can just nothing goes right ・ throw him intO a W 0 れ is often wryly funny, situation and he though it t00 Often gives in tO glibness. (The marvelous character surpnses you. ' actor Margo Martindale appears DANIEL CLOWES, in the ⅲ a small role, but the scene, built New 洳「 ke ら on writing the around her character's 100ks, only Ⅳ〃 son screenplay scores points 0ff her. ) ln the end' it's hard not t0 feel for Wilson as Harrelson plays him. Heavy horn-rimmed glasses frame his perpetual scowl 0f consternation; he's like bewildered thundercloud. But once in a while, when something goes right, he cracks a nutty gap- toothed smile and you see through t0 his soul. Hell may be other people, but they're all we've got ・ Director Malick shapes Mara, Fassbender 0 〃 d Gosling into 0 equilateraltriangle ofdesire MOVIES Tiny dancers abound in SO れ 9 tO SO れ 9 IN CASTING ROMANTIC HEROINES, DIRECTOR Terrence Malick favors slender wraiths who are easily picked up and twirled around by their moony-eyed beaux. If this is your idea of romantic bliss, don't miss Song t0 Song, ⅲ which the wrenlike—and exceedingly twirlable— Rooney Mara plays Faye, an aspiring songwriter who's torn between two lovers and feeling like a fool. Michael Fassbender's Cook is a rich Austin music-biz playboy who might help her with her so-called career. (NOt that we ever see her working. Once or twice she straps on a guitar, though she clearly has no idea how t0 play the thing—it dangles there like Flavor Flav's clock. ) But Faye's real love is goofball swain BV (Ryan Gosling), a moderately successful singer- songwriter wh0 happens t0 be a close friend of Cook's. Loving both of them is breaking all the rules, though it's easy t0 see why they're entranced by her. She's winsome, drifty, characteristically Malickian. C ate Blanchett, tall C001 and self-possessed, ShOWS up for a scene or two, but apparently she's t00 hard t0 li 化 Song tO Song features every stylistic trick in the MaIick playbook: skies dotted with lustrous clouds , characters murmuring their deepe st thoughts in voice-over ()I forget what I am. Whose I am. ” ), birds and butterflies flitting around like silent, restless witnesses. Song to SO れ g is slightly less pretentious than Malick's last 61m , the 2015 sigh ofennui Knight 0fCups, though it features just as many miniature actresses. MaliCk alumnu Natalie Portman shows up here tOO, as a waitre ss turned trophy wife. She's so petite and darling, youjust want t0 scoop her up. And sure enough, someone does. —S. Z. Harrelson iS “ bumbler with heal ・ [ in Wilson 当 45

5. TIME 2017年4月3日号

$ 64K $ 325K have been built at a higher grade since my husband is the same way. He doesn t a federal standard was imposed in the wanderyet. l'm the only one who's stable late 1970S , and the 8.5 million units the Rita crosses her fingers. "Let's hope it holds. " Back in the golf cart, Gearsbeck Census Bureau counts as mobile homes (also called "manufactured housing ” ) confides that Rita 'just went through a whole bout of cancer. So we stopped in run the gamut, 丘 om single -wide "park models ” tO $ 200 , 000 modular ranches. With the sister, as we dO. ” But any will answer the senior urge tO Failing health is simply a fact 0f life, downsize an empty nest and tO stretch and as with other challenges, from parent- a fixed income. A 2014 Harvard report hOOd tO combat, shared adversity tends tO found a third ofthe nation's "older adult ” create a web that in moments ofneed can population, or nearly 20 million house- be leaned upon. holds, spend over 30 % of their income live in a normal community, and you don'treallyknowanybody; ” says Heid- on housing (the threshold for "over- man, in the clubhouse of Grand Horizons, burdened"). ln 9.6 million of those house- holds, spending on housing reaches more the most upscale park in Zephyrhills. lt feels like a subdivision, with homes sell- than 50% 0f income. At Sleepy Hollow residents take a cer- ing for about $ 150 , 000. There's a parking tain pride ⅲ frugality—it's possible t0 area for the (smaller) motor homes that residents take on trips, but you can't live spend less than $ 1 , 000 a month—andjoke 0 0 、 0 0 、 0000 000 、、 0 00 0 、 000 、 0 、 0 ・ 00 : in one here. NOt even single-wides are - about the airs put on at 0ther parks. You lowed. Homes mustbe double-wides; sev- hear about Betmar Acres, with its Spanish moss, tWO swimming POOIS, new courts factory an hour away, which residents typ- for pickleball (a game played at close quarters across a net) and 1 , 700 hom. es. icallyvisitto select the features theywant. A home takes three days t0 make and "lt's big enough that you don't get t0 at least six weeks tO install. Heidman tOOk know everybody, so everybody doesn't the $ 1.4 million he got for his waterfront know your business; ” says Judi Gears- home ⅲ Bonita Springs and bought five beck, 0 Ⅱ a park tour that, at every turn, 10ts, plus one for his own house. lt has a puts the lie tO her statement. "Here comes fireplace, spatub and walls made ofShee - pretty much the man-boy ofthe park' ” she rock, none 0fthatPlasticine finish. There s announce S as a fit man in shorts strides no escaping the spring ⅲ the floor that past Memory Lane, Betmar's memorial tO tells you it's a trailer, but it's a fair trade deceased residents. "He's not quite 60. Calvin Hall, 59 , pauses to brightly for what comes with it: neighbors he's explain that he and his husband first sure about from the background checks all residents must pass, and a んⅡ sched- bought a lake house in Floral City 15 ule of activities to fight boredom, which years ago. But their 叩 prehension about is what he dreads most about retirement. the isolation ofliving so remotely proved "That's it: Companionship. Fellow- greater than their apprehensions about ship. Whatever you want t0 call it,: ” says and appreciation at being 100ked after. living ⅲ a mobile home ("lt was the Heidman. “ S 矼事” addsJim Leitzke, who parkliving reminds BethPalmer ofher stigma ” ) and coming out as a same-sex couple. There was acceptance all around. is next to him ⅲ the clubhouse, which fills years in Africa; She was a missionary ln a up as midday approaches with the smell 0f "I would live here year-round' ” Hall says. village 0f300 in Sierra Leone. "You'dwalk tacos. There's a defibrillator on the w 砠 . outside, and there wasyour neighbor; ” she Gearsbeck resumes the tour, point- ing out the park's one and only over- 'When that ambulance pulls up,: ” Leitzke says. "You had that comfort 0f someone grown property, her own corner 10t, and says, going tO be someone around always being there. ” For snowbirds, the the swimming pool a couple put ⅲ "for to look after my place while l'm gone ・ comparison iS With their summer lives ln their dogs. ” She slows to hail a man on an He knows because he's done it for oth- Michigan or Pennsylvania. "Dropping by? Not in Ohi0!" says Barb Stein, who has adult tricycle ("pete recognizes everyone ers. "We don't all have both oars in the been coming t0 Sleepy H0110w since the bytheirvoice, because he doesn't see very water, and we're not all rowlng in the 1980S. "But here people are constantly well ” ) and makes her first ever visit to the same direction; ” says Heidman. "But we park's library. Behind the counter is a fa- are 砠 aging. That's the one thing we have dropping by ・” There may be an element Of social miliar face. "Rita has a sister; ” Gearsbeck ⅲ common. Ofthe five lots that I have sold 呈 leveling at work in trailer parks—the in the past year, three 0fthe buyers have notes. "Sometimes she'll wander. I found welcome kind. NOt everyone comes 仕 om her one day in the park. ' been ⅲ the hospital. SO we all are well the same background, but there is a umty "Yeah, we're looking into ahome,: ” Rita aware that the grim reaper is very close ⅲ what they now share. M0bile home s says, with no air Of complaint, "because tO us. We're 1 in it together. " 39 IOK AVERAGESALE PRICE OF ハ NEW MANUFACTURED HOME IN 2013 NUMBER OFBABY BOOMERS RETIRING EACH DAY AVERAGE SALE PRICE OF NEWSINGLE- FAMILYHOME IN 2013 0

6. TIME 2017年4月3日号

his decision to invest, billionaire Sam Zell declared, "We like the oligopoly nature of our business. This is where the 01d folks come in. With a bit of ready cash—in Florida, usually between $ 20 , 000 and $ 40 , 000 per lot—park residents can throw in together and buy the park they live in. And if the cash is not ready, loans are available, either from banks or from nonprofit Resident Owned Communities USA, based in New Hampshire. The reasons tO dO this are excellent. ln most states, a mobile home is taxed as avehicle, and loses value the same way a car does. lt becomes a "home,: ” however, once itS owner buys the land it stands on. And at that point, its value can appreciate. The transformation is instant and al- most magical, like slipping a shoe on Cinderella. Trailer parks immediately go 仕 om being nominal clusters of tran- SientS tO being communities Of owners deeply invested ⅲ where they live. The legal mechanics are the same as when ten- ants buy their apartment building, form- ing a CO-OP or condominium. Residents then hold their fate in their hands and as- sess themselves only what fees are nec- essary for upkeep. ln Florida parks, the monthly fee runs $ 100 t0 $ 150 a month. T0day more than 700 ofthe state's 5 , 000 mobile-home parks are resident-owned, almost all of them by seniors. After the housing market crash of 2008 , when the bursting bubble reduced the value 0f some traditional homes by half or more, mobile homes in resident- owned parks held far more oftheirvalue, droppingby only about 30 %. Think about that. Manufacturedhomes, the "tin cans ” is ⅲ her 80S , usually raises her blinds. Residents ofBetmar Acres or "wobbly boxes ” of yore, proved stur- The morning the blinds stayed down, shuffleboard 0 n. 26 ; thepark's monthly newsletter れ as 11 pages 可 dier in the marketplace than homes Shrinerwent over. Turns outthe neighbor activities, including "shuffle んれ ch ” built with concrete blocks or pressure- had forgotten to raise her blinds, but her treated pine. lt made sense only tO those daughter, six hours away, was deeply whO live in them. "lt's not the house thankful for Shriner's checking ⅲ . 'We that held up the value; ” says Brian Heid- take care ofeach other,: ” Shriner explains man, WhO retired 仕 0n1 a career in real ⅲ the clubhouse, where the afternoon estate tO a resident-owned park. "lt's the activity is portrait photographs. The park publishes a member guide, not that community. 'TraiIer parks can people don't know everyone already and be thought 0f as SIZE DOESN'T really matter. Nor does in- Whom tO inquire after. come. I spent time at three Zephyrhills "You 0. K. , Linda? ” Shriner asks a gated communities woman stepping outside a screen door. semor parks—one rich, one huge, one not for people whO very rich at all. Same story everywhere. Recently widowed, Linda pauses for a ln Sleepy H0110w, Peggy Shriner, 75 , beat in the doorway, registeringwhat she's aren't SO wealthy.' glances out her window each morning at being asked. Her answering nod commu- 8 : 30 , by which time her neighbor, who nicates b0th affrmation—yes, l'm 0. K. ー CHARLES M. BECKER, Duke University 38 TIME ApriI 3 , 2017 SH リ種 MEMbERS SWEEP COURTS 田 R [ PLAY DO WALK COURTS 6 Ⅳ印 P AFTER 3 GAMES CHILDREN 削馴 P [ 地 0 ァ 5 e 櫨 R 日贐 は OF - BALI 第 : タ 0 ド 3

7. TIME 2017年4月3日号

DIED Derek Walcott Titan ofpoetry W ・ HEN DEREK WALCOTT won the Nobel Prize for Literature ⅲ 1992 , TIME called him the "Bard of the lsland Life. ” lt was an apt description, marrymg his devotion tO his native St. Lucia with his passion for English, the colonizing tongue that both agitated and animated him. Over time, Walcott's short poems ()A Far Cry From Africa; ” "The Sea ls History ” ) became iconic, as did his epic, book- length poems (Omeros, Tiep010's 胤 ou れの . He even made time for impressive work as a playwright and watercolorist. AIthough he trotted the globe, his life and work remained tethered tO his Caribbean home—and the rhythm, beauty and power ofwhat he called "that grey vault,: ” the sea. —SARAH BEGLEY 0 Berry was widely regarded as 0 可市 e greatestguitarists ofalltime though ElViS, as a S010 singer, was Chuck Berry my initial inspiration, Chuck was the Rock 'n' roll icon man with the guitar and the lyrics that gave life and meaning t0 the new By CIiffRichard wave that will always be referred to as rock 'n' roll. I WAS IN MY EARLY TEENS WHEN I first heard "Rock Around the Since those heady days, there Clock ” by Bill Haley and His Comets, have been a number 0f guitar-playing "Heartbreak Hotel ” by Elvis and singers, and I would bet all of them "school Day ” by Chuck Berry. America would pay homage t0 Chuck. ()O those was pounding us in the U. K. with a ofyou under the age 0f 30 or even 40 new sound and new faces, and we were and who play in a band: Chuck Berry is loving it! essential listening. ) There was no one like Elvis. l've always felt that I was fortunate tO have been born intO a genuine But there was definitely れ 0 one like era Of change in music—we seemed Chuck Berry. t0 jump from Frank Sinatra t0 Elvis Richard iS an award-winning British musician and and Chuck overnight—and even philanthropist DIED 》 Robert SiIvers, DIED founding and longtime Martin McGuinness, editor ofthe New York Northern lreland's former Review ofBooks, at 87. Deputy First Minister, at 66. Once an lrish 〉 Chuck Barris, creator RepubIican ArmyIeader, and host Of he helped negotiate the numerous hit GOOd Friday Agreement in TV game shOWS, 1998 , paving the way to including The peace after decades Of GongShow and The violence. Dating Game, at 87. MERGED U. K. telecom giant Vodafone's lndia unit with rivalldea CeIluIarin a $ 23 billion dealto create the country's largest cell phone carrier. PROMOTED QUIT Uber's president 」 e 竈 Geisha WiIIiams, as the head Of PG&E, making Jones,less than seven months after hejoined. her the first female 」 ones tO Reuters CEO in the energy company's history that the "beliefs and as well as the first approach tO leadership that guided his career Latina CEO of a were "inconsistent" with Fortune 500 his experience at the ride- company ln the U. S. sharing company. IMMIGRATION: JOHN MOORE—GETTY IMAGES: WALCOTT: HORST TAPPE—GETTY IMAGES; BERRY: FRANS SCHELLEKENS—RED FERNS/GETTY IMAGES; BRESLIN: YVONNE HEMSEY—GETTY IMAGES; BARRIS: RON TOM—NBC/GETTY IMAGES

8. TIME 2017年4月3日号

8 Questions Bruce Fei1er The best-selling author who walked the HOIY Land talks about The First 石 0 じ e Story, married priests and the BibIe's ringmg endorsement Of sex Last year's tWO most acclaimed films YO 収 write that we have s 亡 the M00 れ聽 9 れ tan 臧 0 0 0 れ subverted po ⅲ亡 ofAdam and Eve: they were the Other love story central tO West- tWO people w 0 loved each Other through passion and pain. Should ern society: the HoIIywood romance. we 夏 disobey G0d on 0 r first dates What should we reconsider about that tale? That being in love is not a t0 b ー臧 an eternal relationship? Adam and Eve are victims ofthe ChOice we make once; it's a ChOice we greatest character assassination the make multiple times. ln Adam and Eve , world has ever known. And when you the first key moment is not when they go back to the story, you find the first meet. lt's when Eve eats the fruit and decides to go back to Adam, and Adam commandment that GOd gives in the entire Bible is to Adam and Eve: Go chooses companionship over duty— forth and multiply. They are called by that's the second choice. When they GOd tO succeed. The story is not one Of leave Eden, that's the third choice. After their son Cain kills their son Abel, that's disobeying G0d. lt's about obeying the larger message, which is making the the biggest choice: showing resilience tO relationship work. have another child and 血 16 Ⅱ God's man- date. What's the most loving moment in 日 am 0 れ ? After he's cheated, after their Why has Eve shouldered the blame son has been killed ⅲ a duel. ln "lt's when Adam was right there, taking Quiet Uptown ”—l've listened to that abite om the same fruit? Because organized religion got 01d 0f the song maybe 500 times, and it wasn't story— and by organized religion, I mean until I went back after this book that I heard the last lyric, "Forgiveness, men. lt has been weaponized essentially tO keep down women. ln the story, Eve can you imagine? ” lt's an act Of is the first independent woman. imagination, an act ofcommitment and ultimately an act oflove to re- choose someone after a diffcult What 鹵臧 your reinvestigation Of time. That choice is much harder 亡 e creation reveal tO yo 観 abO 亡 gender? Genesis introduces the idea and more important than the first. ofgender fluidity: G0d creates this ungendered human in G0d's image. e ⅱ on t0day 0ften used as That suggests that the first creation has a barrier—against the threat male and female inside them. Of terrorism or as a reason tO 取 Ot provide someone a service. What about sex? The entire point Of What dO yo make of that? We all have tO get over that thing our mom the story is fulfilling God's mission t0 be told us: "Don't talk about politics fruitful and multiply. The story needs them tO succeed, and we need sex for and religion in public. ” The majority ofpeople have yearnings and big that success tO happen. questions and want tO believe, but SO want tO coexist with people with whom The Pope recently raised the they disagree, with whom they may also possibility Of allowing married men be sharing a bed or a table or a child. tO serve as priests. What might they Those ofus who are open-minded have understand that celibate priests don't? Anybody who has struggled tO claim the microphone. tO make their own relationship work will be more empathetic to somebody Coding class or Bible study? whO is struggling with an enormous I have daughters who love math. lt's pain point: how t0 tell a story with harder tO tell them that there's more another person. Love iS co-creation wisdom in the ancient world than through co-narration. The “ CO - ” is on the computer. SO, Bible study. central tO that. —NATE HOPPER 48 TIME ApriI 3 , 2017 'lt's an act Of magination, an act Of commitment and ultimately an act of love tO re-choose someone after a dffcult time. ' 0 0 0 」 AVIER SVRVENT FOR tlME

9. TIME 2017年4月3日号

For feeling good while getting around, it's pretty hard t0 beat the mild glide 0f a golf cart. But the residents 0fSleepy H0110w M0bile Estates wake each day determined tO try. "GOOd morning! ” "lt's a great one, isn't it? ” "lt's a great one. Every soul Larry Myott encounters on a SCOOt around Lazy LOOP, the narrow main drag 0f the 154-home trailer park, has a hand raised ⅲ welcome and a hello as warm and clear as the Sky overhead. On the January morning I rode shotgun, the chipper well-wishers included the guy who, the night before, lost the election and lost it tO Myott. lt is as if the entire enclave—the pool, the smooth black pathways, the clubhouse, a11 devoted to the exclusive use Of residents at least 55 years ofage—glides on a thin film ofsome invisible and frictionless fluid. Maybe cooking 0il. Possibly BS. "Oh, it's bullsh-t; ” says Myott, who at 73 has given the matter some thought. Resolute good cheer iS a conscious choice, he believes, grounded in the realitythat physically looms in front ofthe residents: a miniature lighthouse at the park entrance, its base paved with bricks bearing the names ofneighbors who have died ( 11 last year). Forget it's there and the road outside takes you past a hospital, a nursing home ("with memory care ” ), a hospice and, Off First Avenue, a cemetery. Life, in otherwords, is to be embraced while it still hugs back. Not everything has to be absolutely perfect. "N0b0dy says, ' l'm going to retire to Florida and live in a trailer park,"' says Bill Gorman, WhO manages business affairs for Sleepy Hollow and 10 other parks. "They say, 'l'm going tO move tO Florida and play golf, go to the beach, enjoy life. ' ” The trailer? The trailer is what makes everything else possible. Even if you've never saved for retirement, equity in a "stick house ” ()s trailer folk call ordinary 36 TIME ApriI 3 , 2017 homes) means you can sell it and pick up a mobile home for a fraction of the price. Peggy and Don Shriner paid $ 6 , 000 for a fixer-upper 16 years ago and now spend half the year in SIeepy HoIIow, one of 150 trailer parks for seniors in Just the eastern half of Pasco County, a formerly rural section of central Florida that lately is playing the role once performed by CaIifornia: showcase for the future. HOW will we live in our golden years ? AS well as we can, for as long as we can, which at the bare means avoid- ing institutional care—nursing home S, as - sisted living, hospitals—as long as possi- ble. The goal is what gerontologists call aging in place , ” and in a world that still holds a few h 叩 py surprises, one of the h 叩 piest is that trailer-park life turns out tO be a superior way tO achieve it. Neighbors are close and look after one another. Asphalt paths invite strolling. The cribbage tourneys , b ingo and pot- luck dinners that cram page after page of the park newsletter shift loneliness from a default OfOld age tO a conscious decision. "And Ⅱ 0 stairs! ” exults Hank Van- dergeld, 70 , chalking his cue stick at the Sleepy Hollow clubhouse, a modest affair in a modest park populated by retirees wh0 insist they could not be happier tO be there. "Save your money; says Vandergeld. "When you're 55-plus, you can come live in one ofthese places. " "That's the trouble; ” he adds, after sinking the eight ball, which makes him laugh. "People don't save. ” They do not. The queasy-making economic reality ofmost U. S. households is almost tOO dire tO face. SOCial Security is good for only so much. Pensions are nearly a thing ofthe past. And left t0 themselves tO provide for their retirement, most Americans have proved unequal tO the task. One in three has not put aside a thin dime toward retirement, acc ording tO a 2016 survey. Nearly 6 in 10 have saved less than $ 10 , 000. But all is not lost. About 60 % of U. S. households own a home. And the sale of a home opens the door to the possibility of trailer-park life. If that possibility happens not t0 be one a lot of people have in mind for themselves, what is aging except acceptance Of the less-than- foreseen? ln a series Of accommodations tO the inevitable, a mobile home may be just one, albeit the kind that actually keeps a roof over your head. And by the accounts of those already living, quite happily, ⅲ the parks, they may turn out tO have more going on than is readily apparent tO outsiders, sort of like aging ・

10. TIME 2017年4月3日号

TheView BOOK IN BRIEF Forks, N. D. "Women shouldn't have to choose between their passion and having a family; ” she says. "They should be able to do both. ” Across all fields, median earnings for full-time female workers ⅲ the U. S. are 80 % ofwhat men make—and sports stars are no exception. Last year five members Ofthe U. S. women s soccer team, the defending World Cup champions, filed a wage- discrimination suit against the sport's national governing body, arguing that the players receive about a quarter Ofthe compensation their male counterparts make despite being more successful on the field and a draw on TV.. such fights have been waged by tennis stars for decades. After Billie Jean King threatened t0 sit out the 1973 U. S. Open, the men's and women's winner for the first time each tOOk home the same $ 25 , 000 bonus.Wimbledon became the last 0f the sport's four Grand Slams to offer equal prize money ⅲ 2007 , after pointed lobbying 仕 om Venus Williams. "How did we get equal prize money? ” says Stacey Allaster, former president and CEO ofthe Women's Tennis Association. "Ultimately it's the athletes' VOice, the athletes' power. ” Even SO, some lower- level tournaments continue tO Offer more money tO the men's draw,. The pay gap for tennis stars may not be the most urgent wage divide in the nation, but by using their perch t0 fight for a larger principle, female athletes have the potential to shift the national debate. "These athletes are role models,: ” says B0bbi Thomason, a senior fellow at the Wharton SchOOl of the University of Pennsylvania. "They pave the way for women in the workplace to fight for what's fair. ” The women on the U. S. hockey team aren't demanding the seven-figure contracts Of their counterparts on the men's team, wh0 play profes- sionally ⅲ the National Hockey League. They simplywant a fairer deal from USA Hockey, one that recognizes the equal work they put intO their jobs and the results on the ice: back-to-back silver medals and a consistent rank as one Ofthe world's top teams. The players alSO want equal investment in girls' hockey programs and more marketing and promotion tO grow the women's game. With the boycott threat as leverage, the players made progress during a marathon negotiating session with USA Hockey on March 20. If they do get a fairer deal, they say it will be the result Of not only their specific case but alSO a social climate that has changed significantly since King spoke out at the U. S. Open. "The women that are standing up for thems elve s are making history, says Meghan Duggan, a member 0f the team since 2007 , drawing a line 仕 om her team's fight tO recent protest efforts like the Women's March. "And it's a good time t0 be on this side ofhistory. ロ 16 TIME April 3 , 2017 ln defense of 'bad' wine WINE AFICIONADOS TEND TO SCOFF AT che 叩 , mass-produced bottles—in part because the Wine inside iS Often augmented with various powders, Oils, salts and concentrates tO make it more palatable t0 the average drinker. But ⅲ her new book, Cork Dork, Bianca BOSker points out that such chemical manipulation has always been part of winemaking. FOI' centuries, even the fine st winemakers have added ingredients like egg whites or sulfur dioxide to lmprove a W1ne S flavor and prevent it from spoiling. The fact that mass producers use more manipulation doesn't make their WIne bad, Bosker argues; it raises the bar for all wines. What sommeliers consider "bad ” wine, she explains, is "really wine that [tastes] good, at least tO large numbers ofwine drinkers. ” ln 2015 , for example, Americans spent almost $ 2 billion on just five brands of mass- market wines: Barefoot, Sutter Home, Woodbridge, Franzia and Yellow Tail. —SARAH BEGLEY VERBATIM 'We have a very healthy marriage, and we got there by dOing therapy when we needed it. ' KRISTEN BELL, actor, on the importance Of working through maritalissues; She married actor Dax Shepard in 2013 引 A N C A B 0 5 K E R 0 A 響ー N ー・をー、一 0 AOV ーすリ第一 4M0 物 0 ! 当 0 ・一一 5 V ー SOMN を、 ・一 0 ー 0 ー T ー第を・気 響日 0 A リ GH 了当いを「 0 費す A ー 1 を 、第ト ~ , 帳・い CHARTOON Click-bait costume drama “丁凱子 roo 川” e 淞 5 row 川恆 5 why! 1 昭凱 rd ” 9 山 P 35e5 凱 c 長 . Aappens 月子 will 3 、。 cro+che+y を yo 川 d ! 丁リ帚 25 h 叩 0 8 wi[l 川 e yo 久石 子行肥計 ocr y ! de 子子 eis 0 Top 10 を皿 p . .8 will JOHN ATKINSON, WRONG HANDS