C E L E B R AT ー N G C ー N E M A. ln the art of film-making, it's the smallest details that bring a world to life. 〇 nl メ when every detail is just right can the audience be truly immersed. Rolex is proud tO recognise the art and craft Of film-making, and to have been a part Of some Of cinemas 1 れ OSt iconic moments. lt doesn't Just tell time. lt tells history. A SHOTIN 下日 E DARK ROLEX 0 ~ を 1 を R P を一 uA し DA す写・ uST SPEED 28 OYSTER PERPETUAL DATE 」 UST 41 ROLEX
TheView BOOK IN BRIEF where she planned t0 study history or American studies. ln a personal statement appended to her applic ation, Jones addre s s ed her past, explaining that she had a psychological breakdown after experiencing abandonment and domestic violence and that she had repeated those patterns with her son. NOW, She wrote, have made a commitment to mys elf and him that with the time I have le 仕 , I will live a redeemed life, one of service and value tO others. ” Although Harvard's reviewers looked on Jones' application favorably, two professors flagged it for review, and the university decided against admitting her. One professor told the New York Times that he worried she had soft-pedaled her crime. After Jones' story became public on Sept. 14 , many seemed t0 agree. "N0b0dy cares about the disabled child," said one disability activist. "lt's all about the poor parents. ” Others noted she had served less than halfher sentence. "Abusing and killing a young child is not washed away by 20 years in prison; ” said a commenter. "lt is, and rightly should be, a burden carried for life. But we should forgive Jones. Not just because she served time and should get tO re-enter society,. N0t just because she turned her life around, against considerable OddS, in America's confounding and dysfunctional incarceration system. And not just because studies have demonstrated time and again that a toxic childhood like Jones' has a deep impact on the mental health of those who endure it. Mostly we should forgive Jones because continuing tO punish a woman for something heinous she did as a teenager will not help that woman's murdered child in any way. lt will not bring him back or make his life more precious. Nor will it help future Brandons. Jones is in an unprecedented position tO shed light on some of America's thorniest problems: HOW can we make Tramc jam causality 100n prisons better? HOW can we break the generational cycle ofincarceration? What can we do to help our most vulnerable kids and parents? 仆帚 c 加十 A 、 V01 an With Jones' scars and sins can address these problems from a unique standpoint. She 川 0 Ⅵ 5 should be given a chance to do so. If she fails to make a difference, she will join a list of smart and able people who have not been able to figure out these issues. But she can't even try if she isn't absolved, if she doesn't get a clean slate and a clear shot. What Jones did was horrible, but forgiveness is not just for those whose S1ns are mild. None Of this means that Harvard or any other institution had tO admit her. Universities have the right and duty to put together the class they feel best about—and she will learn plenty at NYU. Jones won't much notice a loss. Harvard, on the other hand, might. 18 TIME October 2 , 2017 Emotion, the great manipulator IN THE AGE OF BIG DATA, IT'S EASY TO assume that cold, hard facts can drive change. NOt SO fast, argues cognitive scientist Tali Sharot, whose new book, The lnfluential Mind, explores how emotion tends tO overpower reason When it comes tO human decision- making. Consider a study that found that people were more likely to donate tO a medical fundraiser when it had a photo of a young woman smiling in the sunlight, rather than a picture Of a person suffering in a hospital bed. Although the sick- looking patient may need more help, it's hard for TALISHAROT people t0 imagine that patient having a happy ending; the smiling picture evoked hope, which is a greater motivator. "lfwe want to affect the behaviors and beliefs 0f the person in front of us,: ” sharot concludes, "we need to ... go along With hOW their brain works. ” —SARAH BEGLEY VERBATIM 'We should go get a checkup the same way we go tO the gym … instead Of waiting for something tO go wrong. ' KATE WALSH, whO has played a doctor on Grey's Anatomy and Private Practice, on what's she's learned about the importance Of preventive care since being diagnosed with a brain tumor in 2015 TH E INFLUENTIAL MIND ReveaIs About 0 町 Powe+ を , Ch 新 geOt 缸ハ。 4 を / にににはを CHARTOON 0 子 e ” 0 凱 ds willspeed 仆帚 c ro 凱 dwo 黻 SIOWS 帚行 c メ ロ JOHN ATKINSON, WRONG HANDS
THEBROADSHEET ー TODAY— "凵〇 ve the blend 〇 f inspirati 〇 n, practical ad\/ice, and fascinating St 〇 ries ー might 〇 therwise miSSI" Beth 〇〇 mst 〇 ck, GE Vice Chair THEBROADSHEETREADER RISE. THE BROADSHEET BrainstormHeaIthDaiIy ・ 0ataSheet い既 00a ⅱ y ・ raceAhead ・ TermSheet ・ TheWorId'sMostPowerfulWomen Subscribe T0day! F 〇 RTUNE ℃ om/newsletters CopyrightåJ 2017 Time c 、 FORTUNE@ and the FORTUNE newsletters are trademarks of Time 旧 c.
Nation でぬ e り emoc ′ 0 お ' Dilemmas A 0 ーー 0 E 0 PA R TY 0 E B AT E S 打 S F U 1 U R E BY PHILIP E い 011 / YOUNGSTOWN, OH ー 0 LIKE VIRTUALLY ALL DEMOCRATS, TIM RYAN IS no fan 0f Donald Trump. But as he speeds through his northeastern OhiO district in a silver Chevy Suburban, the eight-term Congressman sounds almost as frustrated with his own party. Popping fistfuls ofalmonds in the backseat, Ryan gripes about itS fixation on divisive issues and itS "demonization ” Of business owners. Ryan, 44 , was briefly considered for the role 0f Hillary Clinton's running mate last year. NOW he sounds ready t0 brawl with his political kin. "We 're going t0 have a fight,: ” Ryan says. "There's no question about it. ” That fight has already begun, though you'd be forgiven for missing it. On the surface, the Democratic Party has been united and energized by its shared disgust for Trump. But dig an inch deeper and it's clear that the party is divided, split on issues including free trade, health care, foreign affairs and Wall Street. They even disagree over the political wisdom of doing deals with Trump. Every party cast out ofpower endures a peri0d Of soul-searching. But the Democrats' dilemma ILLUSTRATION BY BEN WISEMAN FORTIME
TheBrief Dispatch A nervous Japan gets ready for a ね取 0 t om を e Nor 亡 Korea crisis By CharIie CampbeII/Sakura City THE BANSHEE WAIL OF THE EMERGENCY SIREN REVERBER- ates across the sch001 field, conjuring a primal fear even before the words "Missile launched! Missile launched! ” crackle over the loudspeaker. Two dozen men, women and children—many wearing bonnets and wet neck towels in the blazing sunshine— scamper across the expanse ofshingle before squatting down IOW with arms covering heads. "We haven't got a nuclear shelter or even strong buildings, SO this is all we can dO,: ” says Nakamura Takashi, an offcial 0f Sakura City inJapan's central Tochigi prefecture, who helped organize the missile-defense drill at Kamimatsuyama Elementary Sch001 on Sept. 10. "The government says you have a much higher survival rate ifyou crouch rather than stand up. North Korea's pursuit ofnuclear weapons that are c 叩 able of striking the continental U. S. has caused outrage in Washington, provoking Pre sident Donald Trump t0 threaten "fire and fury like the world has never seen" in response. But it isJapan that lies on the front line. North Korea loathesJapan because Ofits colonization Ofthe Korean Peninsula prior t0 World War Ⅱ . While North Korean leader KimJong Un has more than 1 , 000 pieces ofartillery pointing at South Korea, the 22 ballistic missiles the regime has tested since Februarywere all fired towardJapan, whose capital, T0kyo, lies just 800 miles from Pyongyang. "The four islands ofthe [Japanese] archipelago should be sunken into the sea by the nuclear bomb ofJuche; ” Pyongyang said in a Sept. 14 statement. Juche is the ideology 0f self-reliance pioneered by K1m II Sung, the country's founder and grandfather of the current leader. "Japan is no longer needed tO exist near us. THE MOST RECENT MISSILE passed overJapan on Sept. 15 , following an earlier one on Aug. 29. Both went over the northern island of Hokkaido before splashing into the Pacific Ocean. They set offemergency sirens across huge swaths 0f the country, including S akura, a rice -farming community Of 44 , 000 people a couple ofhours' drive north 0fT0kyo. Besides the sirens, smartphones beeped in umson and television stations suddenly cut tO an ominous black screen with bOld white script warning Ofa possible missile attack. For the few minutes until the all-clear signal sounded, residents wondered whether their world was about to end. "lt was scary, ' says kindergarten teacher Atsuk0 Murakami, 44 , who took part in the missile-defense drill. "ljust huddled together at home with my two young daughters watching the TV for updates. ” Japan'S fears have grown more acute since North Korea conducted its sixth nuclear test on Sept. 2. The 120-kiloton explosion was about eight times the ferocity ofthe bombs that devastate d the cities Of Hiroshima and Nagasaki at the e nd of WorId War Ⅱ . Nuclear fallout is not hypothetical forJapan's 127 million people, and certainly not ⅲ Sakura, 75 miles 12 TIME October 2 , 2017 from the Fukushima nuclear plant Students in that went intO meltdown following an 0 た i れ OShi1 れ in earthquake and tsunami in 2011. Sakura westernJapan, was evacuated after that catastrophe, cover 市 e 汁 heads and people still worry about radiation during 0 Sept. 6 contamination in local crops. safety drill Japan's history and propensity for severe seismic activity means disaster preparedness is treated with the utmost seriousness. The threat 丘 om North Korea has heightened these existing concerns. Other than the missile drills, people ⅲ Sakura practice crawling through a smoke -filled te nt, get dragged around an earthquake-simulation chamber and abseil down the school's three-story white facade. Volunteers hand out steaming bowls OfmiSO soup brimming with pork belly and root vegetables. "We added missile- evacuation drills because ofthis current North Korea situation,: ” says Sakura Mayor Takashi Hanatsuka. "Because when the alert happened on Aug ・ 29 , we didn't know what to do. ” Japan S government iS alSO at a IOSS for how tO respond tO North Korea's
Part of Ryan's pitch has been to put away the pitchforks and modulate the tone. "We cannot be a party that is hos- tile tO business. We need those business- people t0 hire our people, who just want a shot,: ” Ryan fumes. "We can be busi- ness-friendly and still be progressive. And while it puts him at odds with some peers, such arguments have alSO won him some unlikely fans. "The smart guys ⅲ the Democratic Party, they understand what's going on. [Ohi0 Democratic Sen- ator] Sherrod Brown gets this. Tim Ryan gets this," Trump's former chiefstrategist Stephen Bannon told 60 Minutes' Char- lie Rose in an interview that aired 0 Ⅱ Sept. 10. "The only question before us: ls it going to be a left-wing populism or a right-wing populism? ” ON DEMOCRAT who has found a happy middle ground is Ryan's colleague Brown, who is campaigning for his third term ⅲ 2018. He's tough on trade but hardly a protectionist, as progressive as Warren but willing to work with fellow Ohioan ROb Portman, a Republican Senator, to write legislation tO address their state's opiOid crisis. Brown recognizes that the shifts influencing his colleagues can change from state tO state. "Demograph- ics are not changing dramatically in Ohi0. They are changing ⅲ C010rad0 and Vir- ginia and Arizona and Nevada and North Carolina," Brown says, "and making those states more Democratic. ' Ohi0 is experie ncing a different kind ofupheaval. ln Mahoning County, home tO Youngstown, Hillary Clinton won just shy 0f50 % ofthe vote; Obama carried 63 % four years earlier. ln Trumbull County ~ next door, where Ryan lives, Trump be- came the first Republican tO win since 1972. OveralI, Trump won 44 % 0fthe vote in Ryan's district, four years after Mitt Romney captured just 36 %. "Our mem- bers didn't know better, unfortunately, 舅 and they did vote for him; ” says Tony DiTommaso Jr ” secretary-treasurer Of Western Reserve Building Trades, a coor- dinating body for 7 , 500 unionized work- ers in northeastern OhiO. "They wanted a change. They didn't care what it was. ” One only needs to look at the shuttered mom-and-pop businesses dotting Ryan's district tO see why VOters were inclined tO listen tO Trump s promises.Which is why ; Ryan is pushing plans t0 bring high-speed W 0 ea 臧 the り e ーれ OC ′ atS ? The race for 2020 is already under way. Here's a IOOk atthe emerging field: e ′ 0 t 飛 e ↓ OE BIDEN, BERNIE SANDERS, ELIZABETH WARREN Each is a liberalicon with national name recognition, devoted supporters and a robust financial network 、 waiting tO spring intO action ifthey decide tO run. で e 9 S KAMALA HARRIS, JULIAN CASTRO, ERIC GARCETTI NOW a Senator, HarriS was California's top cop, and she has drawn plaudits fo 「 her tough questions in hearings and willingness tO work across the aisle. Castro iS a former mayor Of San Antonio and Housing and Urban Development Secretary. LOS Angeles Mayor Garcetti brings big-cityleadership experience. Together the triO reflect the growing diversity that the party counts among its strengths. で e Senators KIRSTEN GILLIBRAND, AMY KLOBUCHAR, JEFF MERKLEY Progressive and pragmatic, they're tough tO pick out Of a crowd but Klobuchar's proximity to the rounds in lowa, while Senator, is making the MerkIey, Oregon's 」 unior of bold-name Democrats. unburdened by the baggage committed tO public service. Each is highly regarded and intelligence in Afghanistan. Buttigieg worked in naval South Bend, 旧 d. , Mayor い Marine captain in lraq. congressman, was a a Massachusetts Army Captain. Moulton, state Kander retired as an Former Missouri secretary Of PETE BUTTIGIEG SETH MOULTON, JASON KANDER, で e Veterans command respect. state and Gillibrand's donor list lnternet tO the farming communities and tO recruit tech giants tO the cheap real estate in local cities and towns. On a Friday in late July, Ryan was pad- ding through the Basilica of Our Lady of Mount Carmel's annual ltalian festival in Youngstown. Simmering red sauce was heaped on polenta, and elephant ears lay- ered with powdered sugar were matched with mostaccioli showered with ground Parmesan from plastic tubes. lt was a throwback tO a time when church socials defined communities. "These are my peeps,' Ryan says tO Ⅱ 0 one in particular as voters swarm him. "He doesn't forget where he came 丘 om , ” says Robert Rodkey, 71 , after saying hello t0 Ryan. “ U ⅲ 0 れ isn't a word for him. lt's a way of life. Now if only the Democrats would follow him. If Ryan has bigger ambitions to lead, he is not alone. A shadow campaign for the 2020 nomination is quietly taking shape in early-nominating states like lowa and New Hampshire. Some 0f the most interesting names are unfamiliar ones. Senator Jeff Merkley 0f Oregon and Pete Buttigieg, the mayor of South Bend, lnd. , visited lowa in early Septem- ber t0 check in. Jason Kander, the former Missouri secretary OfState WhO iS viewed as a rising party star, recruited a Sanders aide tO stake out territory in lowa and has announced plans tO open Off1ces for his voting-rights group ⅲ five states. The lowa steak fry, previously led by former Senator Tom Harkin, iS an annual rite Of passage for Democratic presidential hopefuls and will draw Ryan, Bustos and Representative Seth Moulton 0f Massa- chusetts in September. "We have the next generation ofDem- ocraticleaders. We need t0 li 仕 them up ⅲ the public eye; ” says Stephanie Schriock, president 0f Emily's List, a group dedi- cated tO electing women whO support abortion rights. "This is not a party Of one leader. lt's just not. ” Back in Youngstown, you can see the wheels spinning ⅲ Ryan's head. He sees a role for a Midwesterner WhO can con- nect with the working-class voters whO t00k comfort ⅲ Trump's rage. lndeed, he thinks the Democrats' future depends on it. "We can get the party back on track,: ” Ryan says as his SUV rolls away from a meeting with OhiO union chiefs. "Some- one's going tO figure this out. Someone needs tO. ロ 33
HOW tO Be Happy TIME Bring more jOY intO yourlife with this Special Edition om the Editors Of TIME EDITION SPECIAL 0 0 THE SCIENCE OF HAPPINESS じ Learn hOW gratitude, mindfulness and money affect how happy you are Simple tricks tO bring more happiness intO your life right now @PLUS: 14 ways t0 jump forjoy! 0 0 NEW DISCOVERIES FOR MORE 丿 OYF LIFE Pick up your copy in St025 tOdaY 0-00 ~ わ 000 000 at A00 = 00-0000 f00 shop.time•con TIME ◎ 2017 Time c. BOOks. TIME is a registered trademark Of Time c. , registered in the U. S. and other countries
、を第みツ 4 Democratic What tO watch, read, The New Refugee Crisis Congressman see and dO Tim R 0 れ visits The forced exodus ofRohingya 0 れ eighborhood 45 ー TV: Star Trek's Muslims stains the legacy 0f in Youngstown, enterprising prequel Oh 0 〃ル 22 Myanmar's leaderAung San Suu Kyi and three new By Elizabeth Dias 22 」 ingoistic shows Photograph 妙 M た Hartman A Party Divided 48 ー Movies: Emma forTIME stone inBattle Of The Democrats have lost ground the Sexes; Angelina at all levels ofgovernment, J01ie's First They and there are bitter arguments KiIIedMy Father over how they should rebuild 50 ー Books: Alice PhiIip EIIiott 28 McDermott's latest novel Shots in the Dark lnside the for-profit company 52 Questions for trying t0 fight crime by listening t0 mother! director gunshots ByJosh Sanburn 34 Darren Aronofsky M apping the Future Genetic testing Offers newhope for newborns with conditions that stump doctors ByAlice 20 ⅸ 38 Time Off The Features The View 4 ー From the Editor 5 ー Conversation 6 ー For the Record ldeas, opinion, innovations ユ引 The troubling case 0f a grad student who killed her son ユ The humble origins Ofthe pumpkin- spice craze 20 ー Test-driving avalue-minded electric car 2 幻 Away forward on the North Korea cr1SIS ロ The Brief News from the し S. and around the Ⅳ 0 月 d 引 Trump's speech to the U. N. signals a new era 9 ー Hamas takes a step away from isolation 10 lWhat's in the GOP's new health care bill 12 lJapan readies for fallout in the shadow ofNorth Korea S nuclear pursuits ユ 4 ー More than 30 ON THE COVER: years after a historic Photograph earthquake, Mexico Da れ Kitwood— iS struck again GettyImages TIME Asia is published 可 TIME Asia (Hong Kong) Lim1ted. TIME publishes eight double issues. Each counts as two of 52 issues in an annual subscnptlon. TIME may so publish cmasional extra issues. ◎ 2017 Time Asia (Hong Kong) Limited. AII rights reserved Reproduction in whOle or in part without written permission is prohibited. TIME and the Red Border Design are protected through trademark registratlon in the し S. and in the countries where TIME magazine circulates. Member, Audit Bureau of Circulations. Su c : lfthe serviæsalertusthatyourmagazine is undellverable, 、肥 have nofurtherobligation unlesswe receivea corrected addresswlthintwoyears. CUSTOMERSERVICEANDSUBSCRIPTIONS: ー 24 / 7 ′ⅵ 00 , am a 5 0 博謝ー肥 , —ⅵ s わ / / 物 w. せ tnæリ . / ′ⅵ 8. p. You may 引 so email our Customer Services Center at *.com 0 「 c 訓 ( 852 ) 312 & 5688 , orwrite to Time Asia (Hong Kong) l_imited, 37 / F, 0 0 「 d House,Taikoo 日 e , 979 Kings Road, QuarryBay, Hong Kong.ln 」 apan,these are enqリ財時角paれ@せineおね.8n10r012066け236 (Free Dial) 0 「 2- 1-27FAtago , Minato•ku,Tokyo 1056227. Advertising: For information and rates, Hong KongTeIephone: ( 852 ) 312 & 5169. OrVlSit: 廿ine伽0.com/府冶引ak肥 Reprint: lnformation is available at ゼme.com/せme./肥pけれお. TO request custom reprints,visit せ*けれ.com/ MaiIingIist: We make a ofour mailing list available to reputablefirms. lfyou would prefer that 、肥 not include your name, please cnntact our Customer Services Center. TIME Asia is edited in Hong Kong and printed in and Hong Kong. MCI (P) No. 06 〃 08 / 2017. MaIaysia KKDN no. pps 676 / 03 / 2013 ( 022933 ). 2 TIME October 2 , 2017
NAPO [ に ON - BONAPAR す E イ i769-182-1 ) ヨ (. ON - に BREGUETCLIENT—WWW*BRFGUET.COM ~ 硬“駅前 l)epuus レ 75
々。を " 0 00 れ ル 0 襯 0 〃 " c ん色 4 あ des ん。ト。 五。勗 6 。行。 なん 0 。 ed ア 4 住ぉ