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Boy Takes "Shortcut" Between Trains near Ferry Field, April 1957 Photographer: Doug Fulton

Boy Takes "Shortcut" Between Trains near Ferry Field, April 1957 image
Year:
1957
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, April 29, 1957
Caption:
Books retrieved, he'll be on his way. "Taking a shortcut" is as old as life itself, especially where boys and girls are concerned. The element of risk often serves only to add zest to the adventure. One "shortcut" that has Ann Arbor police and Ann Arbor Railroad officials worried is pictured in the accompanying series of sequence photos by News Photographer Douglas Fulton. When the arrival of a freight train coincides with dismissal time at Ann Arbor High School, adventuresome students use this method, and some others, to get past the obstacle. The trains stop and switch cars on the tracks which run past Ferry Field. Switching involves sudden stops and starts without warning, and the fear is that someone may be thrown off balance and under the wheels. In some instances, boys have been observed crawling under trains that are actually moving. In other cases, air locks have been released, stalling trains for 10 to 150minute periods, and seals on freight cars broken. Railroad officials and police wish the homeward-bound students would cross over the Stadium Blvd. viaduct and give up the potentially dangerous "shortcut" through Ferry Field.

Boy Takes "Shortcut" Between Trains near Ferry Field, April 1957 Photographer: Doug Fulton

Boy Takes "Shortcut" Between Trains near Ferry Field, April 1957 image
Year:
1957
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, April 29, 1957
Caption:
Ready to jump down to ground. "Taking a shortcut" is as old as life itself, especially where boys and girls are concerned. The element of risk often serves only to add zest to the adventure. One "shortcut" that has Ann Arbor police and Ann Arbor Railroad officials worried is pictured in the accompanying series of sequence photos by News Photographer Douglas Fulton. When the arrival of a freight train coincides with dismissal time at Ann Arbor High School, adventuresome students use this method, and some others, to get past the obstacle. The trains stop and switch cars on the tracks which run past Ferry Field. Switching involves sudden stops and starts without warning, and the fear is that someone may be thrown off balance and under the wheels. In some instances, boys have been observed crawling under trains that are actually moving. In other cases, air locks have been released, stalling trains for 10 to 150minute periods, and seals on freight cars broken. Railroad officials and police wish the homeward-bound students would cross over the Stadium Blvd. viaduct and give up the potentially dangerous "shortcut" through Ferry Field.

Boy Takes "Shortcut" Between Trains near Ferry Field, April 1957 Photographer: Doug Fulton

Boy Takes "Shortcut" Between Trains near Ferry Field, April 1957 image
Year:
1957
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, April 29, 1957
Caption:
Throws books through, starts climb. "Taking a shortcut" is as old as life itself, especially where boys and girls are concerned. The element of risk often serves only to add zest to the adventure. One "shortcut" that has Ann Arbor police and Ann Arbor Railroad officials worried is pictured in the accompanying series of sequence photos by News Photographer Douglas Fulton. When the arrival of a freight train coincides with dismissal time at Ann Arbor High School, adventuresome students use this method, and some others, to get past the obstacle. The trains stop and switch cars on the tracks which run past Ferry Field. Switching involves sudden stops and starts without warning, and the fear is that someone may be thrown off balance and under the wheels. In some instances, boys have been observed crawling under trains that are actually moving. In other cases, air locks have been released, stalling trains for 10 to 150minute periods, and seals on freight cars broken. Railroad officials and police wish the homeward-bound students would cross over the Stadium Blvd. viaduct and give up the potentially dangerous "shortcut" through Ferry Field.

Boy Takes "Shortcut" Between Trains near Ferry Field, April 1957 Photographer: Doug Fulton

Boy Takes "Shortcut" Between Trains near Ferry Field, April 1957 image
Year:
1957
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, April 29, 1957
Caption:
Scrambles up on coupling. "Taking a shortcut" is as old as life itself, especially where boys and girls are concerned. The element of risk often serves only to add zest to the adventure. One "shortcut" that has Ann Arbor police and Ann Arbor Railroad officials worried is pictured in the accompanying series of sequence photos by News Photographer Douglas Fulton. When the arrival of a freight train coincides with dismissal time at Ann Arbor High School, adventuresome students use this method, and some others, to get past the obstacle. The trains stop and switch cars on the tracks which run past Ferry Field. Switching involves sudden stops and starts without warning, and the fear is that someone may be thrown off balance and under the wheels. In some instances, boys have been observed crawling under trains that are actually moving. In other cases, air locks have been released, stalling trains for 10 to 150minute periods, and seals on freight cars broken. Railroad officials and police wish the homeward-bound students would cross over the Stadium Blvd. viaduct and give up the potentially dangerous "shortcut" through Ferry Field.

The New York Central's new Aerotrain passes under the Huron Valley Bridge, January 1956 Photographer: Eck Stanger

The New York Central's new Aerotrain passes under the Huron Valley Bridge, January 1956 image
Year:
1956
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, January 6, 1956
Caption:
NEW TRAIN WHIZZES UNDER NEW BRIDGE: The New York Central's new Aerotrain flashes into Ann Arbor under the new Huron Valley Bridge on its maiden run from Chicago to Detroit. Hundreds of Ann Arbor residents saw the lightweight, silver speedster snake its way through the city yesterday. The train made the Chicago-Detroit run in four hours, cutting more than an hour off the regular running time between the two cities.