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1. TIME 2017年10月16日号

Nation AFTER THE MASSACRE WILL THE DEADLIEST MASS SHOOTING 爪 MODERN AMERICAN HISTORY CHANGE THE DEBATE OVER GUN RIGHTS? BY PHILIP E [ リ 0 訂 , HALEY SWEETLAND EDWARDS AND CHARLOTTE ALTER/LAS VEGAS PHOTOGRAPH BY MATT STUART FOR TIME

2. TIME 2017年10月16日号

"My mom always used t0 say, lnspire 0 generation. —Gabby Douglas, 0 ケ川 c 4 川 2 れ川れ 4 計 F 旧 STS TIME ( リ第 し 0 0 8 00 ・ 0 0 ン製・ 0 ・ し 0 を O W00e0 Wh0 A00 Changing The World 」第一 Z 朝 ( 朝一い 0 00 に 0 日 し 0 O lnspiring interviews with and photographs 0f groundbreaking women 石 e companion book to the extraordinary TIME. com proyect includes profiles 0f more than 40 women whO have challenged convention and are setting a new course for the world. AVA ILA B L E W H E R E V E R B 0 0 K S A R E S 0 L D A N D F R 0 M M E. S H 0 P. C 0 M TO explore the full series, visit TIME. com/Firsts L I B E R T Y S T R E E T ◎ 2017 Time c. Books. TIME is a registered trademark of Time 旧 c. , registered in the U. S. and other countries

3. TIME 2017年10月16日号

The Rest ls History Books く Ulysses S. Grant, circa 1865 ゆ re his rise tO the White House Best-selling biographer Ron Chernow finds his timeliest subject yet By リ ROt れ ma れ ABOVE THE ENTRANCE TO GRANT'S TOMB IN NEW YORK CITY, FIGURES representing Peace and Victory frame an inscription. The slogan's brevity belies the diffculty of the idea: LET US HAVE PEACE. On a recent afternoon, the biographer Ron Chernow perched on a nearby bench to discuss his latest offering, Grant, a sweeping study ofthe CiviI War general and U. S. President whose body lies within that monu- ment. Gazing up at North America's largest mausoleum, Chernow recalls that Walt Whitman dubbed Ulysses S. Grant and Abraham Lincoln the two "towering maJestic figures ” Of the Civil War. "Most living Americans can't understand why someone like Walt Whit- man would have talked about UIysses S. Grant in the same breath," Cher- now says. "lfthey came up here, I think most ofthem would be startled. ” For a man whO studies the past, Chernow has a knack for connecting with the present. Titan, his John D. Rockefeller biography, emerged in time tO draw comparisons tO Bill Gates, amid antitrust complaints facing Microsoft. And AIexander Ham 翫 0 had a modern message for Lin- Manuel Miranda, whose musical 日 am 0 れ has enthralled the nation. Chernow chalks up his track record as one for "the annals of dumb luck, but Grant has the potential to be his timeliest book yet. PHOTOGRAPH BYERIKTANNER

4. TIME 2017年10月16日号

MUSIC Tom Petty's wisdom changed American music forever TOM PETTY, WHO PASSEDAWAY ON Oct. 2 at 66 after suffering cardiac arrest, felt like part ofthe rock firmament in a way that was different from your PauIs, your Micks, your Anguses. Both solo and with his storming b acking band the Heartbreakers, Petty specialized in a loose-limbed style ofrock that grooved as it felt utterly human. His formidable catalog, which spans the biting "Refugee" and the dreamy "Free Fallin', ” encapsulates a particularly American ideal—it's music for the open road that chews 0 Ⅱ humanity's foibles in away that doesn't short-circuit its pleasure. Hailing from Gainesville, FIa. Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers re- leased their self-titled debut ⅲ 1976. "American Girl; ” which closes out the album, has in the 40 years since its release become a classic-rock radiO staple. The song updates the idea 0f American f01k, incorporating rock's muscle and swagger even as petty 's lyrics keep it utterly grounded ⅲ workaday humanity. Petty's biggest successes, though, were born Of tenacity and a strong belief in his work. To his dismay, Petty said his label initially rejected his 1989 solo debut, Full M00 れ Fever. But he persevered, and the record was rele ased, producing a clutch 0f classic-rock staples—including the breezily resolute "I Won't Back Down," which perfectly encapsulates the effect his distinctive style and in- dependent spirit had on American rock. —MAURA JOHNSTON Bouquets 0 れ d candlesframe Petty's star 0 れ the 日 0 wood Ⅳ 0 慊 0fFame ⅲも OS Angeles 0 Oct. 2 PHOTOGRAPH BY AARONP—BAUER- GRIFFIN/GC IMAGES For more ofour bestphotography, visit time.com/lightbox 11

5. TIME 2017年10月16日号

TheView 第物 'ARE YOUREALLYIN CONTROL OF YOUR OWNMIND?' —NEXT PAGE An emerging criminal investigation has embroiled college teams, coaches 0 れ d companies governme nt-backed reminder Of the THE CRIMINAL COMPLAINT UN- veiled in late September contained all hypocrisy at the heart ofbig-time A corruption sorts Of unsavory details about college college sports. probe intO The NCAA, which governs most basketball's underground economy: five-figure bribes t0 coaches, six-figure intercollegiate sports in the U. S. , re- college OOPS quires that athlete s maintain their ama- payouts t0 high school players and teur status in order tO play. That means their families, and the alleged com- exposes more plicity 0f employees at some 0fthe na- they can't accept any compensation beyond an athletic s cholarship and a tion S most prominent universities. than shady meager cost-of-living stipend, or profit The 10 defendants "allegedly ex- deals from their likeness in any way. ploited the hoop dreams of student- The NCAA and the colleges where athletes around the country; ” said Joon these athletes play, however, are free H. Kim, the acting U. S. attorney for t0 cash in. And boy, do they: Under the Southern District ofNew York. Armour is paying UCLA roughly The FBI opened a tip line, and offlcials $ 18.7 million per year t0 be its exclu- suggested more bombshells t0 come. sive shoe and apparel sponsor; the COI- lt was a public service but not lege Football playoffsold its broadcast only ⅲ the ways federal investigators rights for more than $ 7 billion over 12 intende d. lndeed, the lasting legacy years; while TV rights for March Mad- Ofthe probe intO the corruption Of nes s , the men's basketball tournament college hoops may turn out t0 be a SPORTS By Sean Gregory S39VbNl ト 39 15 PHOTOGRAPH BYJOE ROBBINS

6. TIME 2017年10月16日号

The Brief 'JAPANIS LEADING THE WAYIN THIS KIND OFRECYCLING. ' —NEXT PAGE Gorsuch, lastFebruary, ⅶ市 SenatorMitch McConnell,left, 0 れ d Vice PresidentMike Pence, right oral argument, according tO Adam IN ITS NEW TERM, WHICH BEGAN ON Feldman, who runs a blog tracking Oct. 2 , the Supreme Court will How Neil Supreme Court data. Gorsuch doesn't consider many pressing questions. Gorsuch iS fit the mold Of previous newcomers Can a baker refuse t0 make a wedding tO the bench. By the court's unwritten cake for a same-sex couple? Can states shaking up rules, new members are Often seen redraw districts to help a political more than they are heard. "I think he party? And does Justice Neil Gorsuch the Supreme has ruffled some feathers on the court; ” talk too much? says Garrett Epps, a professor at the lt didn't take long last spring for Court University 0fBaltimore Sch0010fLaw. the newest member O f the court tO He is as serting himself in Other ways make hiS presence known. Gorsuch, a too. ln his first month on the bench, conservative nominated by president Gorsuch wrote as many separate opin- Trump, wh0 was confirmed in April, ions as Justice Elena Kagan—who waitedjust 10 minutes before asking joined the court before Gorsuch— his opening question at his first oral wrote in her first tWO terms. ln one, a argument. Over the next hour he fired 7-2 decision about statutory interpre - O 仕 21 more, POSing more queries tation in which he and Justice Clarence during his debut than any ofhis eight Thomas were the only dissenters, Gor- colleagues did at theirs. He blew past such did not mince words. "lfa statute Justice Sonia Sotomayor S preuous needs repair, there's a constitutionally record Of15 questions at her first NATION By Tessa Berenson S39VVNl A トト 39 、ト SOd N019Nー工 SVM 3 エト 5 PHOTOGRAPH BY MELINA MARA

7. TIME 2017年10月16日号

/ を 1 を DATA WHERE ARE KIDS BULLIED? Morocco has one Of the lowest rates Of bullying among children ages 13 tO 15 , according tO the initiative Know Violence in Childhood. Here, the share of kids from a range Of countries WhO say theywere bullied: 16 % Croatia 1 % Morocco FIRED UP Firefighters jOin demonstrators in Barcelona on Oct. 3 during a daylong strike in the northeastern region Of CataIonia tO protest Spain's violent crackdown on people attempting tO VOte in a disputed independence referendum on Oct. 1. Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont has threatened tO declare independence after the vote, a move that could provoke Spain tO suspend home rule in the region. Photograph by Manu Fernandez—AP/REX/Shutterstock OPEN QUESTION The issue has divided lawmakers since 2004 , when then prime MinisterJohn Howard Australia has its say changed the Marriage Act t0 define marriage as on same-sex marriage being between a man and a woman. Twenty-one bills related to same-sex marriage have failed in the AUSTRALIANS ARE VOTING IN A NATIONWIDE ま poll on legalizing same-sex marriage, called the parliament since then. The fragile Liberal-National governing coalition, popular in conservative Marriage Law Postal Survey. Opinion polls suggest the result, expected on NOV. 15 , will be ⅲ favor 0f areas, iS split 0 Ⅱ the issue between reformers and traditionalists. Turnbull has backed a yes vote but mamage equality, but hurdles remain before that has shied away from taking a can be legalized. maJOr role in the campaign. POSTAL VOTE On Sept. 12 every WIDE BACKING Australia is one Australian wh0 has registered ofthe few developed nations yet tO vote was se nt a ballot ask- tO legalize same-sex marriage, ing, "Should the law be changed in spite 0f the maj ority 0f polls tO allow same-sex couples tO since 2007 showlng Australians marry? ” The governme nt, led in support. Yet this vote might by Prime Minister Malcolm not resolve the question; TurnbuII, has promised a vote in this poll, unlike normal on the issue in the parliament Australian elections, voting isn't by the end ofthe year ifthe ma- compulsory and anything less JOrity ofvoters opt for yes. But An estimated than a stellar turnout could strengthen LGBT activists point out that lawmakers 9.2 mi 伍 0 れ e 叩 opponents ofsame-sex marriage in the are not bound tO VOte along the lines Of had voted ⅲ the parliament. —TARAJOHN what the country says it wants. Ⅳ as 可 Oct. 3 WORLD 26 % U. S. 30 % Germany 47 % Peru 74 % Samoa

8. TIME 2017年10月16日号

し 190 , NO. 15 ー 2017 2 ー Conversation 4 ー For the Record News 斤 om the し S. and around the Ⅳ 0 「 / d 引 NeiI Gorsuch acts as ifhe's been on the U. S. Supreme Court foryears 引 Spain faces a constitutional criSiS with Catalonia 8 llan Bremmer: The danger of tinkering with the lran deal ユ例 Remembering rocker Tom Petty ユ 2 llndia's deadly culture wars 1 引 China wants tO lead the charge on battery manufacturing The Brief The View ldeas, opinion, innovations 1 引 What athlete s stand tO lose as the feds probe NCAA basketball coaches ユ引 Canadian Thanksgiving's A. merican roots 1 引 Bjarke lngels designs a campus for Dubai's space program The Features American Tragedy The deadliest mass shooting in recent U. S. history renews questions about drawing the line on gun rights Philip Elli0tt 0 れ d H Sweetland Edwards 18 Puerto Rico's Future Maria laid waste tO the U. S. territory but also gave the troubled island a chance at a fre sh start ByKarI c た 28 Breast-Cancer Awareness HOW care iS becoming more personalizedByAlice Park and Alexandra Sifferlin 36 Ron Chernow's Grant The biographer discusses his new bookonthe 18thU. S. President B. ア 0 市 ma れ 40 Time Off What tO watch, read, see and dO 4 引 Q&A with Blade れれ er sequel director DeniS Villeneuve 4 The 0 d “ Project, a magic kingdom 4 引 WiII & Grace returns to the small screen 50 lJennifer Egan's latest novel 5 ー Susanna Schrobsdorff: How to help victims of mass tragedies 52 ー 6 Questions— illustrated—by cartoonist ROZ Chast A ~ 0 〃 waits near 0 damaged bridge ⅲ Morovis, 2 . on Oct. 1 Photograph Andres Kudacki forTIME ONTHE COVER: The deadliest mass shootings in modern American history, based on a database collected by MOth er Jones; ・ the incidents date back to 1982 and include on ツ indiscriminate shootings that occurred in public places TIME Asia is published 可 TIME Asia (Hong Kong) Limited. TIME publishes eight double issues. Each counts as two of 52 issues in an annual subscriptlon. TIME may 引 so publish occasional extra issues. ◎ 2017 Time Asia (Hong Kong) Limited. AII rights reserved. Reprcxiuction in whOle orin wt wlthout wntten EHmission is prohibited. TIME and the Red Border Design are protected 物「 ou trademark registration in the U. S. and in the where TIME m a 乙 circulates. MemtH, Audit Bureau Of Circulatlons. Su地0h2博: lfthe postal services alertusthatyourmagazine is undeliverable,we have no 和「ⅱ ga も on unlesswe receive acMrected addresswithintwoyears. F 24 / 7s ⅵ , 池 am 0 浦′ e a s 回 0 ′ 9 online, pleæ v 忙徹 / / 、、 w. 朝引äsu . / ′ⅵ 8. p わ p. You may 引 SO email our Customer Services Center at eれqⅵ村儕@物ne田ね.* 0 「 call ( 852 ) 312 & 5688 , orwrite tO Time Asia (Hong Kong) Limited, 37 / F, Oxford House,Taikoo PIace, 979 King's Road, Quarry Bay, Hong Kong.ln 」 apan,these aree れ 4 ⅵ村角れ le れ 00E0 「 0120666236 (Free DiaI) 0r2-51-27FA ね go , MinatO-ku,Tokyo 1056227. A 部 t : Forinformation and rates, HongKongTeIephone: ( 852 ) 312 & 5169. Orvisit: 廿h冶航0.com/n面ねk肥 Reprint: lnformation is available at ine. 0 ゾれ肥 / hep . To requestcustom reprints, ⅵ sit ゼれ lerep .8 皿 Mailinglist: We make a ⅲ on ofour mailing list available to reputablefirms. lfyou would prefer that 、肥 not include your name, please cnntact ou 「 Customer Services Center. TIME Asia is edited in Hong Kong and printed in Singapore and Hong Kong. Singapore MCI ( 円 NO. 06 〃 08 / 2017. Malaysia KKDN permit no. PPS 676 / 03 / 2013 ( 022933 ).