THE ASIAN REPORTER December 18, 2017 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 Tin Seng Trading H Mart Lily Market Lao Vieng Market 8350 SE Division St. Portland 13600 SW Pacific Hwy., Tigard 11001 NE Halsey St. Portland 1032 N Killingsworth St., Portland Hong Phat Supermarket 101 SE 82nd Ave. Portland BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES FOR SALE REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE Grass-raised beef For Sale/For Lease For Sale/For Lease For Sale/For Lease For Sale/For Lease PACKING & SHIPPING FRANCHISE Excellent business opportunity in Eu- gene area. Established packing and shipping retail franchise for sale. Turn-key operation in high-traffic shopping center. $5,000. Call Bill: (541) 654-2201 GRASS-FED BEEF FOR SALE Cattle raised in Newberg, Oregon. Beef available in ¼, ½ or whole cow & processed by Portland butcher. For details, please call (503) 980-5900. FOR SALE BY OWNER 4 BR/2.5 BA home in great neighbor- hood with living room, family room, formal dining, office, walk-in closet, vaulted ceiling, 2-car garage, 4-car parking, Jacuzzi & shed. 16423 NE Thompson Street, Portland, Oregon. Only $420,000. Call (503) 984-4839. PROFESSIONAL SERVICES LUCRATIVE RECREATIONAL MARIJUANA BUSINESS SEEKING INVESTOR Thank you, in advance, for supporting our advertisers! Custom Fabrication BEAVERTON BEAUTY SALON FOR SALE $25,000 plus inventory. Well-established, successful salon in perfect condition. Great high-traffic location. Favorable lease. Solid client base. E-mail: . CANBY VILLAGE APARTMENTS 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. Phone: (503) 283-4440 * Fax: (503) 283-4445 * E-mail: ads@asianreporter.com n n n n n n n n q Display Space (Asia, Ed-Op, Community, A.C.E. sections) $22.00 per column inch; Reservation deadline: Wednesday prior to the next issue by 1:00pm q Special “Business Card” Display Ad: o $70 per issue o $190 for 3 consecutive issues n n n n n o $330 for 6 consecutive issues (3 months) n n n n q Northwest Job Market/Bids & Public Notices section $22.00 per column inch; Text/Fax deadline: Friday prior to the next issue by 2:00pm n n n n n n n n n q Community Classified Page q Boxed Ad q $22.00 per column inch; Text/Fax deadline: Friday prior to the next issue by 2:00pm q Line Ad (up to 35 words): o $22 per issue o $51 for 3 consecutive issues o $90 for 6 consecutive issues q Name Listing (4 lines maximum ~ about 10 words): o $14 per issue o $30 for 3 consecutive issues o $51 for 6 consecutive issues q Prepayment required with Line Ad, Name Listing & Business Card. q Add $1.00 per issue per line for bold headings (Line Ad & Name Listing). q Add 25¢ per word per issue after 35 words (Line Ad). q All advertisements must be submitted in writing; no phone ads accepted. Main classification: Run date(s): Ad type (circle one): Display ad Business Card Total ad cost: Box ad Line ad Name listing ad Name: Address: City/State/ZIP: Phone: Fax: E-mail: Ad copy (attach a separate sheet if necessary): Mail, Fax or Deliver with payment to: Asian Reporter Classifieds, 922 N Killingsworth Street, Suite 2D, Portland, OR 97217-2220 Fax: (503) 283-4445 * E-mail: For Visa, Mastercard, or American Express payment only: Name (as it appears on the card): TYPE OF CARD (circle): Exp. Date: Card Number: VISA For ad info, call (503) 283-4440. FREE LIST OF HOMES IN S.E. PORTLAND List includes Bank Foreclosures, For Sale by Owners & Homes Not on Internet. 3br/2ba, $350k - $500k. To Receive FREE List, call 1-888-966-9165. ID# 2140. The Year of the Dog begins February 16, 2018. The Asian Reporter’s Lunar New Year special issue will be published on Monday, February 5, 2018. Display advertising space reservations for this issue are due Monday, January 22 at 5:00pm. Salvage team sinks fishing boat off Hawai‘i reef Continued from page 7 2018 ADVERTISING RATES & ORDER FORM: n 2103 SE 130th Ave., Portland 8 bed, 3 bath, 2,144 sq. ft. Rent $4,500. Ready for move in. Call: (503) 805-5981 CHRISTY COURT 189 N.W. Glenhart Avenue Winston, Oregon Now accepting applications for federally funded housing. 1, 2 and 3 bedroom units with rent based on income when available. Income restrictions apply. Project Phone: (541) 671-2851 TTY: 1-800-735-2900 “This institute is an equal opportunity provider.” 488 NW 6th Ave. Canby, OR 97013 Phone: (503) 266-4434 TTY: 711 Subsidized apartment homes may be available. Income restrictions apply. This institution is an equal opportunity provider and employer. Professionally Managed by Guardian Management LLC Home Entertainment Fax your ad to (503) 283-4445. Located in a busy shopping center in Beaverton, Oregon The business also includes al- terations and shoe repair sec- tions. Call for details: (503) 780-4094 or (971) 409-3806 GROUP HOME/ ADULT FOSTER CARE Mark you calendar! CUSTOM BUILT TRAILERS, TRAILER PARTS & 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, . To learn details, call Emily O: (818) 930-8590 HIGH VOLUME DRY CLEANERS FOR SALE - $69,900 Mastercard American Express Zip Code & Address of Cardholder: Security Code: Hawai‘i, the loophole carved out to support one of the state’s biggest indus- tries exempts commercial fishing boat owners from the rules enforced almost everywhere else. The recently introduced Sustainable Fishing Work- force Protection Act would close the loophole that has allowed the Hawai‘i fleet to employ the workers. A banner reading “end slave-like labor in Hawai‘i longline fishery” had been placed on the beach near the wreck by an activist from the Turtle Island Res- toration Network, which has filed a complaint with the Inter-American Hu- man Rights Commission. Dylan Bedortha, the group’s advocacy associate who set up the sign, for- merly worked as a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration observer in Hawai‘i’s longline fishing fleet. He said the condi- tions he saw on the boats as a federal employee made him change his career path. “It took me a couple of years to really let all that sink in and see what was actually going on on some of the worst boats that I was on,” Bedortha said. “I decided to take a different direction and step into the conservation side of things.” The commission is an autonomous body of the Organization of American States and works to protect human rights. The U.S. is a member. The complaint asks the commission to determine the responsibility of the U.S. government for hu- man-rights abuses against foreign workers in Hawai‘i. Most of the foreign workers aboard the Pacific Paradise were from Vietnam, Indonesia, the Philippines, and Kiribati, and they were not part of the regular crew. Officials said the boat was not on a fishing trip before it crashed. The boat is owned by Honolulu-based TWOL LLC. The company’s law- yer, Bryan Ho, a longtime fishing industry attorney, has declined repeated requests for interviews. The 20 men were at sea for at least 12 days before the vessel crashed, the minimum time it would take to get from American Samoa to Hawai‘i, accord- ing to fishing industry experts. Once rescued, they met U.S. customs officials and were escorted to a pier in Honolulu to begin work on other boats. Another fishing vessel with foreign crew mem- bers, the 57-foot Jane, took on water and capsized about 110 miles off Hawai‘i’s Big Island on November 27. The crew sent a mayday call and got into a life raft before being rescued by another fishing vessel. U.S. foresaw a costly victory in war with North Korea — in 1994 Continued from page 7 Korea that prompted the North to attack the South, he said. “An all-out war with North Korea, nuclear war, even if China and Russia did not enter,” Perry said, “could still entail casualties approximating those of World War I or even World War II.”