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1. TIME 2017年10月2日号

From the Editor TIME's Second Century HANGING ABOVE MY DESK IS A LETTER from the editors 0fTIME t0 my grandfather. An immigrant who fled Nazi Germany in the 1930S , he, like so many Others Ofhis era, was introduced t0 America through the pages 0f this magazine. NOW and then, he returned the favor by introducing TIME 's editors tO some OfhiS own ideas—in this case with a dispatch ()n rhyme!) pointing out that they had erred in using the word WhO instead ofwhom on a recent cover. TIME acknowledged in response that, grammatically speaking, it was "skating on very thin ice ” but noted, citing H. L. Mencken, Noah Webster and Do's, Don'ts 0 d Maybes 可 E h Usage, that traditions change. Change happe ns t0 be a tradition at TIME. This publication has gone from black-and-white to color; from a lightly sketched cover to its famous red border; 仕 om print to radio to 61m (winning an Oscar along the way) t0 the web. lt moved from New York City to CIeveland and back. lt supported, through the thinnest ofveils, Dwight Eisenhower for President and then 20 years later, in its first editorial, urged Richard Nixon tO resign. Over the past four years, led by my friend and predecessor Nancy Gibbs, TIME has changed more than at any Other time in its history. Like SO much Ofthe world cover, our business is in rapid transformation—and we are transforming with it. TIME 's news operation now stretches not only around the world but around the clock, as j ournalists from Hong Kong t0 Washington to London deliver every hour what we had for the previous nine decades delivered mostly once a week. Ten million people watched our live coverage O n electio n night, thanks tO a video team that has earned Emmy nominations tWO years in a row. What began as a print magazine maile d tO TIME October 2 , 2017 4 9 , 000 subscribers in 1923 reaches an audience Of 100 million across a11 our platforms today. And yet there are essential constants, beginning with the passion and commitment Of our journalists. They fly airplanes through eclipses, drive trucks intO hurricanes, don hazmat suits tO track deadly viruses and board boats in dangerous waters tO tell the stories Of refugees. Equally enduring is our commitment tO fairnes S and accuracy. There are , as there should be, many policies and agendas; exploring them is our mission. But there iS only one set of facts. ON 0 TIME'S traditions iS an editor's letter, in which new occupants ofthis job—there have been 18 all together— introduce themselves and their priorities tO readers. I am a student ofhistory, a believer that "the past is still real and present,: ” as Peter Taylor put it in his Pulitzer-winning novel no better place tO work—no ultimately decided there was in law and in diplomacy, I hometown. After earning degrees A Summons tO Memphis, set in my environment that values debate and ide as more fully—than a newsroom. HaIfway through my 15 years at the Wall Street JournaI, I le 代 its い 0 Washington bure au tO launch a series Of sections and sites. I have always loved being part of the search for new ways tO tell stories and reach readers. This is what drew me to TIME, an institution that began with a small entrepreneurial team ofjournalists whO "fitted easily into three taxis, according t0 a company history, and has informed, challenged and— so important in this world—amused readers ever S1nce. lfyou haven't yet, I urge you t0 ex- plore some of the multimedia j ournal- ism my colleagues have been doing at time.com/firsts, time.com/findinghome and time.com/eclipse.You can expect more ofthis kind ofwork from us ⅲ the coming months and years, even as our weekly magazine continues tO prove more relevant than ever With stories like this week's feature on Democratic disarray by Philip Elliott and Elizabeth Dias' look at Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi's inaction amid allegations ofethnic cleansing ⅲ Myanmar. AII ofus at TIME take seriously our roles as storytellers and our obligation tO ensure that this institution thrives intO its second century. We also take seriously our commitment tO you. I hope that, like my grandfather and so many readers like him through the decades, you'll continue to let us know hOW dO ing. @EFELSENTHAL EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Edward Felsenthal,

2. TIME 2017年10月2日号

Conversation THE WRONG GOALS RE "KID SPORTS INC. ” [Sept. 9 ] : l'm sure that in the U. S. , putting your children in sports is Often about prestige and money, trying t0 ん旧Ⅱ the American Dream and having a more successful child than your neighbor's. Your article included no deeper insight int0 how the children themselves feel about all the sports-related travel, and hence a lack of time for a normal social life. I wish parents would act according tO their children's interest instead Ofin hopes Of getting them a s cholarship. A wunderkind is rare, but you cannot force a miracle. MichaeI CoIberg, HAMBURG YOURARTICLE SAYS THAT "intense early specialization in a single sport increases the risk of inj ury, burnout and depression. " That does not sound like a recipe for a healthy childhood. What happened t0 children playing sports just for fun, for getting exercise and for learning tO Win and lose as a team? Or are we merely experiencing a "professionalism ” Ofthat well-known psychologic al phenomenon ofparents trying tO relive their largely imaginary sporting opportunitie s through their children? Eric A. Ferrel, GENEVA TALK TO US SEND AN EMAIL: letters@timemagazine.00m Please dO not send attachments FOLLOW US: facebook.com/time @せ me (Twitter and lnstagram) OUT OF BOUNDS RE “ 8 QUESTIONS ” [Sept. 9 ] : You seemed t0 have run out ofrelevant and interesting questions for ten- niS Star Garbifie Muguruza, when you asked her if she could picture herselfplay- ing a tournament while preg- nant as Serena Williams did. An impressive young tennis champion with the world at her feet and yet you de- fault tO a boring and sexist question about an entirely theoretical aspect 0fher ん - ture personal life. Yawn. Yet another female athlete being reduced t0 this sort 0f dull, gender-biased, ovary- focused ' journalism. ” S. Boeuf, TOULOUSE, FRANCE AN APT PUNISHMENT RE "HONG KONG JAILS ITS First Prisoners ofCon- science ” [Sept. 9 ] : Your cov- erage on Hong Kong's politics has never been exempt from a biased view that is character- istic Ofthe general Western media. C alling the offenders prisoners ofconsclence completely disregards the fact that imprisonment was an apt punishment for their crime Ofan unlawful assem- bly that led to injuries for sev- eral s ecurity guards. TIME is critical 0fPresident Trump's failing tO condemn those re- sponsible for violence in the Charlotte sville tragedy, and I hope it could apply the same standard Of intolerance Of violence When it comes tO Hong Kong. HONG KONG Henry Tsui, other people. This coloniza- ries already long inhabited by colonized (robbed) territo- low travellers then violently tremists, Puritans, whose fel- motley bunch of religious ex- U. S. was partly founded by a ⅲ the way she intended. The she is right, but perhaps not the dreams Ofour founders; ” "this serial reckoning with Nancy Gibbs writes about the grain in America. When ceptional, that it goes against intolerance and racism iS ex- sumption, overall, that this Your coverage implies the as- extremist hatred in the U. S. for spotlighting the reality of FaiIed? ” [Aug. 28 ] : Thankyou ceed Where the President RE "WILL THE NATION SUC- HATE 粮 AMERICA tion, this destruction Of civili- zations, was a racist genocide. There are no inherited Sins, for people or nations, but let's be honest about how the U. S. was born. Adam W ha ESPOLLA, SPAIN HAVING READ THIS PRO- foundly disturbing issue, l'm le 代 feeling as ifthe true colors ofPresident Trump, and the country he leads, are being exposed. The history les S ons in the vanous article S were incredibly helpful from a European perspective (with xenophobia 0 Ⅱ the rise here), but there was a significant omission in your selection ofperspectives: the voice Of Native Americans. What is their view on the ultimate irony that every white person in America IS an uninvited immigrant? Richard Thomas, PORTHCAWL, WALES 1 、一 4 、、物ー朝 0 第を Send 0 letter: Letters tO the Editor must include writer'sfull name, address and home telephong may be editedfor purposes 可 cl i 収 or space, 0 should be addressed t0 the nearest ofice: HONG KONG - TIME Magazine ers , 37 / F , Ox House, TaikOO PIace, 979 Kings Road' Quarry Bay, Hong Kong; JAPAN - TIME Magazine 地 e 博 , 2- 1-27F Atago, TOkyo 10 6227 , ね n ; EUROPE - TIME Magazine ers , PO BOX 63444 , London, SEIP 5 日 , UK, AUSTRALIA TIME Magazine ers , GPO BOX 3873 , Sydney, NSW 2001 , Australia; NEW ZEALAND - TIME Magazine ers , PO BOX 198 , ShortIand St. , Auckland, 1140 , New Zealand Please recycle this magazine a れ社 remove inserts and samples before recycling

3. TIME 2017年10月2日号

、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

4. TIME 2017年10月2日号

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

5. TIME 2017年10月2日号

Time O Pop Chart ◆魯 画一プ当 A new phOtO Of Prince's 旧 badge on Rick 」 ames' tour in 1980 surfaced, showing that the singer—at the beginning Of his career—already identified as a "star. MuraIs by British street artist Banksy have appeared in central London near a new exhibition Of work by 」 ean-MicheI Basquiat. One mural bears that artist's signature crown image. Selena Gomez revealed that, tO treat her lupus diagnosis, she underwent a successful kidney transplant, with a kidneydonated by a friend, earlier thiS summer,. 'SO now, more great roles for women, please!' NICOLE KIDMAN, accepting the Emmy Award for Best Limited Series as a producer Of HBO'S BigLittIe Lies, in which she 引 so starred 多 0 を The celebrity-staffed Hand in Hand telethon raised 側 S44 million for hurricane relief, thanks tO support from stars like Oprah, George CIooney and Stevie Wonder. TIME'SWEEKLYTAKE ON WHAT POPPED 粮 CULTURE Swiss toilets in ー、 three restaurants (and one bank) were found to be mysteriously cloged with tens Of thousands of dollars' worth of wads Of cut-up cash, to the confusion Of officials. Jon Cooper ・ @joncoopertweets Sarah Huckabee Sanders even looked habitually pissed when she was a teenager!l guess having @GovMikeHuckabee as your dad does that tO you. の一Åト 139 エ工 dO 'NVVNOIY -13 ョ 0 ト - 一乂 SMO 乂「 V トくを 3 トト一 MI 1Sdd コ一工 d :LNV89VISNl 【 73W09 一 NO 一ト 0 コ工 :30NlBd :dV :HAOldS 'ASYNV8 Actor and model EmiIy Rata 」 kowski said herlips and breasts were PhOtOShopped on the cover Of French magazine Madame 日 ga ′ 0 without her permission. An Emmys bit in which host Stephen CO 物 e 杙 brought former White House press secretary Sean Spicer onstage was received poorly, with many criticizing the show's playfultreatment Of Spicer's tenure in the Trump Administration. An 0 phOtO Of actor Busy Philipps in Freaks and Geeks was misidentified on Twitter as President Trump's current press secretary, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, causing PhiIipps tO decrythe error as"fake news. By Raisa Bruner, Cady Lang and Megan McCluskey EMMYS 51

6. TIME 2017年10月2日号

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.

7. TIME 2017年10月2日号

Time 0 Reviews Stone as King, Carell as Riggs: class act vs. chauvinist showboater 、 ' 第澪コ one glamorous de ath stick perched elegantly between tWO fingers. At the time, Big T0bacco's sponsorship Ofa sports event raised few eyebrows. But j ust being yourself could de- stroy a career. On the circuit, the married King (Austin StoweII plays her loyal hus- band) meets and falls for a young hairdresser (Andrea Riseborough). Their affair's tentative start is one ofthe movie's most graceful fea- tures: the tWO flirt cautiously in a club, cushioned by the sound 0fTommyJames and the Shondells' "Crimson and CIover; ” a song as んⅡ offrag- ile promise as a secret WhiS- pered into a pillow. The performances in BattIe 可市 e Sexes, agile and perceptive, keep the game alive every minute. Carell plays Riggs more as an affable, unenlightened boob than a villainous creep. And although the incandescently ミ、 0 今 elfin Stone doesn't much resemble King—wh0 always looked both refined and C alifornia-friendly— she nails King's thoughtful directness. She also captures King's marvelous antelope saunter, the casual grace this superb athlete radiated when she wasn't running for the b 砠 . Battle ofthe Sexes isn't a laundry-list account Of everything King would later come t0 fight for, including LGBT rights. lnstead, it's the story ofa woman, already a world-famous athlete, who didn't yet know how much more she'd become. lt's easy tO say, "You've come a long way, baby. ” Here's someone whowalked, or sprinted, every Ⅱ lile. MOVIES Venus and Mars duke it 0 t on the tennis court By Stephanie Zacharek ANY WOMAN WHO HAS NEGOTIATED A SALARY OR RAISE IN the past five years ()r the past 50 ) might feel a shiver 0f recognition watching Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris' buoyant peri0d piece Battle 0fthe Sexes. ln 1973 , aging tennis legend Bobby Riggs, hoping to recapture the spotlight by crowing that he could beat any female player, challenged the muchyounger—and, because ofher gender, much less well paid— champ Billie Jean King t0 a match that would become legendary. King won several victories that day: she triumphed over the posturing ofinsecure sexist dudes everywhere and also made an over-the-net le 叩 toward pay parity for female athletes and for working women everywhere. Dayton and Faris (Little Miss Sunshine) trace the events leading t0 that dazzling showdown, along the way capturing sparks ofwhat King and R1ggs werelike as people and as public personalities. Riggs (Steve Carell) is a player long past his prime, with his big ego perpetually bruised. He's also a compuls ive gambler who is flailing in a faltering marriage ・ (His probably too-patient wife is played by a regal Elisabeth Shue. ) Emma Stone plays King, then one ofthe top-ranked female players, who was fully aware ofhow much larger the men's purses were. With the help 0fWorld Tennis magazine founder and go-getter Gladys Heldman ()n exquisitely bras sy Sarah Silverman), she founds the Women's Tennis Association, whose first key event is the inaugural Virginia Slims tourn- ament, held in Houston. After clinching the sponsorship, Heldman sweeps in, waving one ofthose all-too-seductive cigarette packs in the faces ofthe players assembled for the tour. "You do the tennis, I'II do the smoking," she tells them, 48 TIME October 2 , 2017 BATTLE OF T 工 E SEXES: 20T 工 CENTURY FOX; KINGSMAN: GILES KEYTE—20T 工 CENTURY FOX; FIRST T 工 EY KILLED MY FAT 工 ER: NETFLIX KING FOR A DAY—OR SO HE THOUGHT Although Riggs was riding high before his momentous 1973 match against King, he'd say afterward, ・ 'I never could get over her head. ロ

8. TIME 2017年10月2日号

SHOTS FIRED Nation 】 SST SST PHOTOGRAPH BY MARK MAHANEY FOR TIME

9. TIME 2017年10月2日号

Milestones DIED DIED Bonnie Stanislav Petrov AngeIo Co 旧 War hero Trailblazing journalist STANISLAV PETROV, THE retired offlcer ofthe Soviet BONNIE ANGELO, WHO Air l)efence Forces Whose escaped society-page death at the age 0f 77 was duty at her hometown announced on Sept. 18 , did Winston-Salem, N. C ” not enjoy discussing the day newspaper tO write he averted a nuclear holo- cover stories for TIME caust. Maybe he was tired Of during a pioneering ca- giving interviews about the reer that spanned three cameo he played ⅲ the his- decades at the maga- tory ofthe Cold War. What- zine, died on Sept. 17 ever the reason, he balked at 93. As White House at being called a hero when correspondent, She re- he took a call from TIME ⅲ ported onWatergate August 2015. "Chush! ” he and Nixon's resigna- said, in Russian. "Nonsense! tion, then became the I was just doing myjob. ” first woman tO run That job was on the SO- TIME's London bu- viet early-warning system t0 rule out the possibility of alarm was false. Much later, reau in 1978 , where code-named 0k0 , or Eye, false alarms; ” Petrov said. it emerged SOViet satellites She covered the rise whose function was tO de- "And that day, the satellites had mistaken the sun's re- 0fMargaret Thatcher tect the launch Of an Ameri- told us with the highest de- flection in clouds for the and the wedding of can nucle ar attack. Having gree Of certainty that these start Of a missile salvo. Prince Charles and helped design and install the rockets were on the way. That day in 2015 , rela- Lady Diana Spencer. A command center, petrov was tions between the U. S. and beloved and respected lt was up tO Petrov tO at the controls on the night confirm the incoming at- Russia were again in decline, colle ague , Ange10 had 0fSept. 26 , 1983 , when the tack tO his superiors, whO and Petrov s aid he saw the energy and good humor sirens inside the masslve would then launch a retal- world tumbling back toward that masked a steely bunker just south ofMos- iatory strike while the U. S. these types of standoffs that determination tO gain COW began tO wail. missiles were still in the air. could result in a catastro- equality for women The Oko system's satel- The chances it was real were phe not by design but by ac- journalists, a struggle lites were alerting the Rus- “ 50-50 , ” he recalled. "But cident. "The slightest false she led as president of sians to the launch of a U. S. I didn't want to be the one move can lead tO colossal the Women's National ballistic missile, followed responsible for starting a consequences; ” he tOld Ⅱ le. Press CIub. ln 1998 , 111 quick succession by four third world war. ” So he told "That hasn't changed. ” she was awarded the others. "We built the system his commanders that the lnternational Women's —SIMON 、 SHUSTER Media Foundation's lifetime achievement award. —JERROLD SCHECTER 第 鶯 S39VL•Nl Åト 139 、 NO 一ト 03 ココ 00 S39Vb•Nl 3 」コ - ー z 一つ OIHVN 】 0 コ 39NV 畄一ト HO 」 AYSNOHO 30NVX3 コ】 > 0d13d collaborator, at 91. World War through DIED >Archivist Nancy 2012 , at 99. >Jake LaMotta, the Hatch Dupree, a U. S. former world middle- FILED citizen whO withstood weight boxing champion RetaiIer Toys "R ” Us extremists and whose memoirinspired for bankruptcy, as foreign occupations the 1980 film Aaging shoppers switch tO in Afghanistan forfive Bu 〃 , at 95. online and discount decades tO chronicle >CuIt actor Harry stores. The largest toy- Kabul's history, at 89. Dean Stanton , sta r store chain in the U. S. >AccIaimedjournalist Of Big Love, Alien secured a $ 3 billion LiIIian Ross, who wrote and Repo Man, and loan tO keep its 1 , 600 fo 「 the New Yorker from frequent David Lynch stores open over the holiday season. PUT UP FOR SALE Music magazine RO 〃加 g Stone, in the same week it turned 50. Owner and founding editor 」 ann Wenner said hiS company iS exploring strategic options. 11

10. TIME 2017年10月2日号

THETEST LIFETIME Medicine Newborns with maladies doctors can't explain face bleak od NOW genetic testing is providing answers—and h 叩 e BY ALICE PARK PHOTOGRAPHS BYJOHN FRANCIS PETERS FOR TIME