The Asian reporter. (Portland, Or.) 1991-current, January 04, 2016, Page Page 15, Image 15

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    THE ASIAN REPORTER
January 4, 2016
C O M M U N I T Y
n Page 15
C L A S S I F I E D S
THE ASIAN REPORTER CAN BE PICKED UP ON THE FIRST & THIRD MONDAY EACH MONTH AT MANY LOCATIONS, INCLUDING:
Uwajimaya
10500 SW
Beaverton-Hillsdale
Hwy., Beaverton
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES
Tin Seng Trading
H Mart
Lily Market
Vieng Lao Market
8350 SE Division St.
Portland
13600 SW Pacific
Hwy., Tigard
11001 NE Halsey St.
Portland
1032 N Killingsworth
St., Portland
DISCUSSION
GROUP
PROFESSIONAL
SERVICES
SEEKING FELLOW
CATHOLICS
INTERPRETERS
NEEDED!!
Mausoleum Crypt
FOR SALE: MAUSOLEUM
SIDE-BY-SIDE CRYPT
Mausoleum side-by-side companion
crypt for sale at Finley Sunset Hills
Memorial Park in covered terrace
area (mausoleum site LEB, row 6,
spaces F & G). This area is sold out!
$11,000 OBO. Cash only. Seller pays
transfer fee. (Transaction takes place
at the Finley office.) For info, call Jack
Brown at (503) 880-9029.
Established in 1970s.
A 3,000 +/- Sq. Ft. store on
2.4 acres in Cougar, WA.
Contact: Steve Mack at
(360) 823-5131 or Gordon
Lewis at (360) 823-5108
Coldwell Banker Commercial
HOME
ENTERTAINMENT
INSTALLATION
Need stereo & HDTV set-up
for the perfect home theater
surround sound? We can do it!
Great prices, expert service!
Call Digital Connections at
(971) 853-2576.
Party Rentals & Supplies
FREE
YOU’RE INVITED
PARTY RENTALS
Used Newspapers
Serving Willamette Valley wine coun-
try & elsewhere. Tables, chairs, lin-
ens, china, satin overlays, serving
items, and more! For info, call (503)
857-2706 or visit <www.yourinvited
partyrentals.com>.
FREE NEWSPAPERS!
Does your garden need protection for
winter? Are you an art teacher who
has an upcoming papier-mâché pro-
ject? Are you a dog owner training a
puppy? Does your business need
packing material? First come, first
served! Call (503) 283-4440, ext. #
or e-mail <news@asianreporter.
com>.
Check out our
Community and A.C.E.
calendar sections,
on pages 10 and 12.
OFFICE SPACE
FOR LEASE
600-square-foot office space for
lease. Located on N. Killingsworth
Street, across from PCC Cascade.
For more information,
call (503) 312-3224.
SURFING THE WEB?
Check out jobs, news, past
stories, lists of community
groups, and more online:
<www.asianreporter.com>
Home Entertainment
Thank you, in advance,
for supporting our advertisers!
WANT TO KNOW
WHAT EVENTS
ARE HAPPENING
THIS MONTH?
For Sale/For Lease
CUSTOM BUILT TRAILERS,
TRAILER PARTS, AND
CUSTOM FABRICATION
Commercial truck to RV toter conver-
sions. Custom built service bodies to
fit every need. We specialize in class
8 Volvo conversions. Contact:
That Trailer Guy
(503) 481-9754
<www.thattrailerguy.com>
FOR SALE
SUPER
SUCCESSFUL
CONVENIENCE
STORE WITH GAS,
BEER & WINE
AND STRONG
INSIDE SALES
REAL ESTATE
Custom Fabrication
who want to address the confusion
and disunity in the church.
Call Larry: (503) 970-9282
Telelanguage Services is hiring
individuals fluent in English and
all Asian dialects. Well-paid,
flexible hours, exciting opportu-
nity. Earn $$$ while helping your
community. Call:
(503) 535-2173
PHC is now
accepting applications
for Affordable and
HUD properties for
all bedroom sizes in
Portland, The Dallas,
and Albany, Oregon.
Income
restrictions apply.
For details about all
properties, visit our website:
<www.phcnw.com/
services/hoisuing/affordable
-housing-portland-or>
Advertise in The Asian Reporter!
Simply fill out the order form
on this page and send to:
<ads@asianreporter.com>
PHC Housing
5312 N.E. 148th Ave.
Portland, OR 97230
(503) 261-1266, ext. 238
2016 ADVERTISING RATES & ORDER FORM:
Phone: (503) 283-4440 * Fax: (503) 283-4445 * E-mail: ads@asianreporter.com
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$20.00 per column inch; Reservation deadline: Wednesday prior to the next issue by 1:00pm
q Special “Business Card” Display Ad:
o $65 per issue
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Hong Phat
Supermarket
101 SE 82nd Ave.
Portland
TOWERING INFERNO. A fire runs up some 20 stories of a build-
ing in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, on New Year’s Eve. The fire broke
out in a residential building near Dubai’s massive fireworks display.
(AP Photo/Jon Gambrell)
New Year’s Eve skyscraper fire
in Dubai smolders into 2016
Continued from page 16
The Address would have
been a prime spot for
viewing
the
midnight
fireworks display, centered
at the nearby Burj Khalifa,
the world’s tallest building.
The Address boasts a
luxury hotel with nearly
200 rooms, along with more
than 600 residential units.
Rentals of a one-bedroom
can run $70,000 per year.
The fire started around
9:30pm on Thursday and
raced up the sides of the
building. Still authorities
went ahead with the
fireworks show.
More than 12 hours later
on Friday morning, Dubai
firefighters
largely
watched the fire from the
ground, unable at one point
to use a water hose on a
ladder truck. They later
regained water pressure
and resumed spraying the
building.
Restaurants
nearby opened for busi-
ness, but served limited
menus as civil defense
officials cut natural gas to
the area.
By the afternoon, the
blaze had largely died
down, but small fires were
still
visible
burning
through some windows,
sending smoke into the air.
Dubai Civil Defense said
the fire appeared to have
started on the 20th floor
terrace, according to a
statement by the govern-
ment media office. Wit-
nesses who saw the blaze
start said they believed it
began on the building’s
ground floor.
Around 1 million people
had been expected to gath-
er around the Burj Khalifa
skyscraper to watch the
fireworks. Dubai’s econo-
my depends heavily on
tourism, and New Year’s is
one of the busiest seasons,
drawing
people
from
around the world to watch
the fireworks that the emi-
rate puts on at the world’s
tallest tower, as well as the
sail-shaped Burj Al Arab
and over a manmade palm-
shaped island.
Dubai-based
Emaar
Properties, which built the
Burj Khalifa, the Address
Downtown, and other sur-
rounding
developments,
declined to immediately
answer questions about the
fire posed by The Associ-
ated Press. It did issue a
statement praising author-
ities “for their immediate
and professional support.”
“An investigation is
ongoing and details will be
provided once they are
ascertained,” the state-
ment said.
Lt. Gen. Sheikh Saif bin
Zayed Al Nahyan, the
UAE’s
deputy
prime
minister
and
interior
minister, also praised first
responders to the blaze for
“the success of the rescue
operation” in comments
published by the state-run
WAM news agency.
But challenges remain as
Dubai has faced a series of
recent tower fires. In
February, a similar blaze
spread along the external
cladding of Dubai’s 86-
story Torch tower, one of
the world’s tallest residen-
tial buildings. There were
no serious casualties in
that fire. In October, anoth-
er fire broke out in a high-
rise residential tower in the
Emirati city of Sharjah.
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