Copyright 1995(c) JUST THE FACTS, MA'AM By Patsy Sauls-Quaile I look out the window and the land is flat and spotted with pine trees. There is no floor show and I wonder if I should have gone with a Lauren Bacall retrospective instead, but then I remember why I'm here. I'm a reporter. That's why I'm here. And I've managed to position myself at the rear, near the restroom, with a clear view of my traveling companions. And boy are they wei... uh, unique. Originally, the idea was to travel in the wake of Charles Kuralt who was on the road for so very long... check up on the Kuralt stories and bring America 'the rest of the story' like Paul Harvey. Imagine my disappointment when the first story I followed up on -- Chester Durand, who had saved the largest ball of string in history, proved such a disquieting experience. You'd think Chester would have been smarter than to position his collection on an incline, wouldn't you? He took it well, though. As he watched string unwind into the valley next to his farm, he simply muttered, "Easy come. Easy go." The sight of a man's dreams stringed to death was enough to persuade me that Charles may have been on the cutting edge of something one could only fall off the face of the earth by pursuing. Life is ugly, though, and I collected my thoughts and sought to salvage something, deciding ultimately that commentary on my fellow man would be a worthwhile journalistic endeavor. So, here I am. On the Bus. Society is class-conscious when it comes to buses. Nobody who is anybody rides them. In the schematic of mankind, there is a subtle demotion attached to bus riders. Perhaps not so much bus riders who ride twice a day,... to work and home, but certainly to those who ride buses from geographical site to site... like from California to Maine. These are the deadbeat dads and loose women who don't maintain voter's registrations. This is the fascinating scum on chicken soup, which is scooped off and ignored. Until now. I, Wesley Edgar, inquisitive investigative reporter, am the only one who saw the clear gap in information. Only I recognized the need to complete the cycle... fill in the gaps between "On The Road With Charles Kuralt" and "The Rest of the Story with Paul Harvey." I saw, and I rushed to serve, but that terrible string incident put me off. I don't have my own motor trailer. I have neither a microwave nor ready access to a shower, but, as I often tell myself, deprivation is the animus of a good reporter. Charles had it soft, but I've got it hard... and I like it that way. "So..." I say conversationally, popping open my laptop computer and preparing to record another personal story of one of the little people, "what's your story?" I ask the ill-kempt passenger next to me. "Get away from me, you fruitcake," says the scruffy, bearded figure with slouch hat pulled low over his eyes. Ah. A live one. END