IN the harvest of news each week, much of what TIME'S editors deal with lies quite properly in the realm of the expected: a long-awaited event to be reported and analyzed, a continuing question to be updated and more thoroughly understood. Yet the spice of journalismfor both editors and readersis the unusual: a fascinating personage, a surprising relationship, a shocking conflict, an unexpected and intriguing proposition. A sampling from this week's issue:
> "Never trust anyone over 30" has become a rallying cry of today's radical youth. Yet there is one oldster the youngsters do listen toat least for now. He...