Page 6 October 18, 2017 Gifted School Protests Closure C ontinueD from p age 3 web page: www.sunlanlighting.com E-mail: lightlady@transport.com 3901 N. Mississippi Ave. • Portland, OR 97227 503.281.0453 Fax 503.281.3408 BUSINESSGuide $5.00 TEES CLUBS FAMILY REUNIONS SCHOOL CLUBS BUSINESSES SCREEN PRINTING Seasonal Clean Up Special! E-Waste • Car Towing Appliances • Debris Scrap Metal • Recycling 503-762-6042 971-570-8214 ABLE ARM Reycling Double J Tires Advertise New & Used Tires with diversity in Overstock & Used Tires $20 & up Priced To Sell All tires mounted & balanced on the car, out the door – no additives. Free stock wheels w/ purchase of any new or used tire limited to stock on hand 30 years in business 2 locations to Serve You 6841 NE MLK, Portland 503-283-9437 4510 SE 52 nd & Holgate 503-771-1834 (503) 545-3160 The Portland Observer BUSINESS GUIDE Call 503-288-0033 ads@portlandobserver.com the move as a form of displacement and gentrification. Some Access parents also expressed disinterest in the move, saying the school on North Gaintenbein Avenue was too small for their first through eighth grade students. Access is currently located in the former Rose City Park school in northeast Portland, which is be- ing prepared to be reopened as a neighborhood school as part of a massive refiguring of schools for the east side of Portland adding two new middle schools, includ- ing the former Harriet Tubman Middle School in north Portland. A new proposal would dissolve Access’ 335 student body into several schools beginning in the 2018-19 school year. Students chanted “we need Ac- cess, don’t split the Atoms” (the Atoms are the school’s mascot) as they waved signs in green school t-shirts during Monday’s protest. Jennifer Ellis, the school’s par- ent-teacher association president, said the Access focus option pro- gram, which caters to “talented and gifted” students was designed to work best when their students are under one roof. “Access is an alternative pro- gram serving students who have highly accelerated learning needs and who have demonstrated a need for a cohort-driven approach to supporting their social/emo- tional development,” Ellis said. The PPS board is set to vote on the proposal to split up Access on Oct. 24. Supporting Writers of High Merit Samiya Bashir and Rene Den- feld, two female Portland writers of high merit, have been honored with academic fellowships and a cash award of $20,000 by the Regional Arts and Culture Coun- cil to sustain or enhance their creative process. Bashir brings her poetry off the written page in multi-dis- ciplinary projects that involve video art, sculpture, installation and performance. She is a wom- an writer of color who actively provides creative opportunities for other writers. The council’s fellowship panel also recognized her for writing that speaks to her specific experience as a queer, first-generation Somali-Ameri- Samiya Bashir Rene Denfeld can poet/maker, yet is accessible to wide audiences. Denfeld is a novelist who grew up in north Portland and whose social justice work examining is- sues critical to our times, includ- ing poverty and child abuse, is at the heart of her writing. She has authored nonfiction books, es- says and her second novel, “The Child Finder” was released this September by Harper.