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Peterson: Forgoing caution to ride escalator

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Back to escalators. I grew up in South St. Paul, Minn., which once was home of the world’s largest stockyards. If you don’t think that’s a point of pride, well, you don’t know cattle. Our high school teams were called the Packers, an apt description. This was in an age when stockyards and the attendant processing companies were called “packing plants,” not “slaughterhouses,” as was the case around the turn of the century. Certainly, we did not want to call our teams the Slaughterers. Cattle were moved by Packers. No, not those Packers, the ones in Green Bay.

Then we moved to the Iowa countryside, which is what most of the state is, and I worked on farms. We shuttled cattle into the back of trucks to be taken to auction.

Which reminds me of escalators. People just kind of naturally line up to feed into the escalator, without even needing fencing to guide them. It’s nothing like climbing stairs or entering an elevator, where people come from all directions like ants. I feel like an Angus at the foot of an escalator.

I remember the first escalator I was on, and there were too many of us kids to count, and we were on our way to see Santa Claus at Dayton’s in St. Paul, and we were wearing coats and mittens, and we were warned seriously about the dangers of escalators, which were ready to tear off an arm or suck you and so much as a shoelace underneath the steel teeth at the top. I’ve always had a vivid imagination, so it didn’t take much to be terrified. It was one stairway you didn’t have to climb to heaven.

I kept my hands to my sides and feared the end of the escalator, where the steps mysteriously disappeared, to jump over the steely bar of teeth crossing the threshold to the safety of the next floor.

Today, I welcome the sight of the escalator at the Governor That Wasn’t Imprisoned Transportation Center in Chicago. But I’ve been noticing the emergency stop knobs lately, and that concerns me. Certainly, people don’t lose life and limb on these things. I don’t remember reading about any bad deaths or limb-ripping Injuries in the papers caused by escalators.


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