: arming, Saturday, January 25,1986 isl Mb WASHINGTON - From a window of one of India’s best trains, a departing passenger looks down on the holy city of Varanasi, a glorious distant sight sparkling in the rays of the rising sun. The traveler sees the sun-gilded ghats broad steps on the banks of the Ganges River and the spires of the city’s thousand temples. The splendid view is deceptive. Nothing that is holy in India is considered dirty, but Varanasi, up close, is one of the filthiest cities in the vast country. An Indian medical student, on his way to the Ganges for his ritual bath, tells a visitor that he will immerse himself in the water, ignoring the floating corpses of goats, monkeys, and an occasional beggar. “It is a question of mind over matter,” he says. Splendor to Squalor A railway trip across the Indian subcontinent, from Peshawar, Pakistan, to Chittagong, Bangladesh, is a study in con trasts; from splendor to squalor, from rugged mountains to flooded plains, from steam-powered, narrow-gauge trains to swifter wide-track diesels. The excellent train out of Varanasi, for example, contrasts with the night train from Agra to the holy city. It is filthy, even in first class. It has no bedding, food, or water. Hot cinders blow in its windows. The Indian Railways system is vast. It transports 10 million passengers a day over 38,000 miles of track, employs 1.6 million workers, and uses 11,000 locomotives. The railway is the primary reason the huge, problem-plagued subcontinent manages to operate, Paul Theroux, author of a best selling book, “The Great Railway ■ifw BLACK LT 6REY Yellow BLUE BROWN BLOOOROOT:TNBSB PAINTY ware flooubps dont db- SBPVB SOON ft BU/NT NAMB. 7NB ROOT OP 7NfS PL OUJBR PRO DU CBS ARBD-ORANOB DYB WUfCH TPB AMBRfCAN INDIANS US BP FOR CURB PAINT PUD PION66RCHILD RBN USBOITTO COLOR BAS7BR BGOSJHIS FLCXN br npraldsMApproach OF SPRING. by Inin: contrasts of people, pieces Bazaar,” writes in National Geographic. India, he writes, is one of the world’s greatest railway nations, in the number of its trains, stations, and long-distance travelers, and in the economic self sufficiency of its rolling stock. Most Roaches and Rats The rail system excels in negatives as well, with the most cockroaches, the most rats under platforms, the most forms to fill out, and some of the dirtiest sleeping cars. “In India,” Therous writes, “the railway is not merely a way of going to and from work, but rather a solution to the complex demands of the family’s life. Birth, death, marriage, illness, and religious festivals ail require witnesses and rituals that imply a journey home.” It’s easy to identify long-distance travelers in India. “They are heavily laden and always carry a big steel trunk.” Journeying families “sit on it, sleep beside it, use it for a table, and when their train draws in, they hire a skinny man to wrestle it on board.” On one leg of this trip, Theroux sat across from an Indian who was on a two-month home leave from his tedious job abroad. One of the two months, the man said, he spent on trains, riding up and down the country. Pakistani tempers were frazzled by months of drought when Therous began his trip near the base of the Khyber Pass. When the train pulled into the station at Peshawar, it was pitch dark and the temperature was 110 degrees. The travelers were craggy-faced Afghan refugees, said to number more than 3 million in Pakistan. By the time the train reached Lahore, the capital of Punjab, the o ? ORAM6E GREEK! LT. BROWN LT. BLUE LT. GREEN weather was cooler, and scattered monsoon showers had begun. At Amritsar, scowls caused by fear of drought changed to smiles as the skies blackened and opened up with the first powerful rain of the monsoon. (Theroux made his trip before violence involving Sikh separatists broke out in Punjab.) At the eastern edge of India, Theroux writes, “The monsoon that beautifies and enriches the countryside made Calcutta ugly and almost uninhabitable. Rain in India gives all buildings, especially modem ones, a look of senility. The streets were flooded, there were stalled cars everywhere, and people waded among the drowned dogs.” “Toy TrahT Trip After leaving Calcutta, however, Theroux experienced one of the most scenic segments of his travels on the so-called "toy train” from New Jalpaiguri to Dar jeeling. The narrow-gauge mountain railway, loaded with passengers and joyriders,' passes through valleys and hillsides that are “open to the distant plains, and so the traveler on the toy train has a view that seems almost unnatural, it is so dramatic.” The wonder of the ancient train, like the wonder of much else in India, "is that it still operates,” Theroux concludes. “Indian is a complex place. The phones seldom work, the mail is unreliable, the electricity is subject to sudden stoppage. There are numerous natural disasters, and there are 700 million people. It seems almost inconceivable that this country is still viable, and yet there are times when one gets glimpses of its greatness. Near the end of my Indian journey I decided that India runs primarily because of the railway.” 0 (^<\A Most animals need to sleep or rest every day lust as you do Some animals are long sleepers They don I have many enemies They are usually predators that hunt other animals for food Other animals are short sleepers They must stay awake to watch out for hungry enemies thatuould like to make a meal of them Below are pictures of fwe animals and five interesting sleep facts Draw a line from the animal to the fact that fits it -Sri (-.JT *5j«L rf __ ; A 4=-- °V 'a • 1 JJPH I 1 II »l 11' >i b V SLEEP A Usually sleeps in a hole in the ground hut may sleep in a tree B Crawls into a den and sleeps away most of the winter But unlike a true h'bernator if something dis turbs if or if the weather warms up. it will quickly wake up C Usually sleeps three or four hours at one time May sleep stand mg up or lying down D May sleep up to lb hours a day E Needs to be so alert that it never goes into a deep sleep It just takes short naps I v ) i' i i i 1 ! t ‘ 11 i •uamsuy crrf^evi