The CFM equipped 37's all have prominent decals on the fan cowls that show the exclusionary zone around the inlets, it's 14 feet with the engine @ idle, the decal is a glypf of a human form in a red circle and a diagonal line across the person and the circle as well as a picture of the engine and a red exclusionary semi-circle around the inlet end of the decal with all the usual things FKIA's don't read like 'stay out' 'extreme danger'.
The vehicle you are referring to rresi is called a tug with a tow bar, the usual procedure is to 'push back' with the hydraulics turned off so the NLG can pivot for sharp turns while pushing back, then after given the 'all clear' by the person on the headset, the crew turns on the hydraulics. Turning the pumps on with the tow bar attached could (and usually does) cause the NLG to snap to centered up and could (and has) busted the towbar.
Many years ago @ KSEA, a NORTHWEST ORIENT 727 (hows that for some time ago?) was being pushed back on a nasty dark Winter evening, the guy on the com headset after clearing the crew that the towbar was off and the nose steering knuckle was reattached, slipped on some ice, fell down and knocked himself out when his head hit the cement. The airplane taxied away, went to the end of the runway and put the coals to it, on rotation the #3 engine fire warning went off along with a loss of power, the airplane crew secured the engine, circled and landed. While this was going on in the air, someone noticed the poor ground guy laying on the ramp and they hauled him off to the airport emergency room still unconscious. When they looked @ the #3 engine they discovered the extermly long ground com cord snaked up over the top of the right wing and found the chewed up headset in the first several stages of the engine.
You'd be amazed at how far away from the inlet on a 'classic' 737-200 during engine trims an old, weak JT8 can suck in a medium sized bird like a Crow or Robin, nor how quickly it can do that.
