WONDERFUL People Needed for She Got Bike

Hello All,

As some of you may know, She Got Bike is scheduled for September 14th and we would love to have some of you as volunteers.

We need people for a variety of positions and Deb Taylor is coordinating all volunteers this year so she will be your contact person.

AND (here’s where the begging comes in) …. We have run into an unusual situation: Many of our volunteers from last year are going to be away during She Got Bike – so, if you’ve helped out before and you ARE in town – we really need you! AND if you’ve never volunteered and would like to help out – we really need you too!

All you need to do right away is respond to this post and let me know if you’re available on September 14 and if you are willing to help us out.

Then we’ll get back to you with all the details.

THANK YOU SO MUCH!

Susan O. & Deb Taylor
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Aggressive driver in Georgetown

[This is a good example on what to do when you encounter a person that I would say is recklessly endangering lives.]

On Aug 5th, 2008 at 6:29 PM, I encountered an aggressive driver who came up behind me on 39th St NW and started revving his engine. I had taken the lane and was traveling with traffic which was stop and go through all of the stop signs on 39th St. About 30 seconds later he completely ran me off the road into cars parked on the side and passed me at a high rate of speed nearly striking me and another cyclist who was traveling more slowly ahead of me.

The driver sped off blowing through the next few stop signs to get away but I quickly caught up with him when he got boxed in at a red light and took out my iPhone and started taking pictures of his van. Despite being out of breath I was able to get in a couple of good photos of the driver and his license plates.
key way lock driver

A half hour later when I got home I called 311 to report the incident to police. They sent an officer out to my house and took a report. I printed out some of the pictures I had taken earlier and the officer radioed the tags and a description of the driver into headquarters. The officer said they where operating in “all hands on deck” mode so all officers would be on the lookout for the van and pull the driver over and check his ID if they spotted him.

The officer said that was all he could do. There was no incident number and he didn’t even take my name. The officer was glad that I wasn’t hurt. I simply wanted to report the incident and create a paper trail in case his driver would hurt someone in the future.

https://www.natwilson.com/stuff/aggressive_driver/keyway_lock_service/

ARREST: Attempt Bicycle, 34th & St. Paul Sts.

Please distribute the report below from JHU Security dated 08/05/08 on to interested persons.

On – Campus

ARREST: Attempt Bicycle Theft / CCTV Observation – Wolman Bike Rack — On August 5th at 4:26 AM, a security systems specialist observed a male on a CCTV camera attempt to cut a U-Bolt lock from a bicycle secured to the bike rack in front of Wolman Hall. The suspect was stopped and detained by a campus officer until the arrival of Baltimore Police where he was arrested and charged with trespassing, possession of burglary tools, disorderly conduct and making false statements to a police officer.

Salem
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Cycling Back Around

By David Montgomery Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, August 2, 2008; Page C01
This is the summer of women on bicycles riding around town free as anything, wearing long dresses or skirts, sandals or even high heels, hair flowing helmet-free, pedaling not-too-hard and sitting upright on their old-school bikes, the kind with front baskets where they put their laptops, and handlebars that curve gently back in a bow shaped like the upper line of someone’s perfectly drawn red lipstick.
They never appear to sweat. They make you think you are in Paris or Rome. No, they make you think you are in a movie about Paris or Rome.
This is the summer of men rolling down 14th Street NW with briefcases in the grocery pannier, ties flipped back over the shoulder by the breeze, wingtips inserted into toe clips. In the movie version, they would return home at day’s end with a baguette under one arm and maybe a bouquet of flowers. Instead, their left hand grips the handle of a Whole Foods bag while their right presses a cellphone to the ear.
This summer in Bicycle Washington, it’s back to the future. Old bikes are back, new bikes look old. The riders, too, seem sketched from another age.

"Somewhere along the line, we made biking a hobby and a sport instead of a way to get around," says Alexandra Dickson, an architect who commutes from Southwest Washington to her downtown office on a blue Breezer Villager that she calls Babe, after Babe the Blue Ox. "I’d like to see it get back to being a way of getting around."
Shopping by bike, she says, "feels more like an adventure than a chore." The other day, she tied a milk crate to her rack, biked to a hardware store on Pennsylvania Avenue and carried home a flat of flowers on the crate.
Riding to the office, sometimes "I wear heels and skirts," she says, "and I’m not the only girl in town who does. It’s like, Why not? I’m not running. I’m just using the pads of my feet. . . . People need to see bikers dressed like that, so they can say, ‘I can do that.’ "
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She says: "When you first take off your training wheels, the first excitement of being allowed to ride to school — that was the first level of freedom. I think that’s something you never lose."

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