The Asian reporter. (Portland, Or.) 1991-current, October 07, 2019, Page 19, Image 19

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE ASIAN REPORTER
October 7, 2019
C O M M U N I T Y
n Page 19
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
3301 SE Belmont St.
Portland
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
Home Entertainment
For Rent/Sale/Lease
For Rent/Sale/Lease
For Rent/Sale/Lease
For Rent/Sale/Lease
PACKING & SHIPPING FRANCHISE
Excellent business opportunity in Eu-
gene area. Turn-key franchise opera-
tion in high-traffic shopping center.
5,000. Call Bill: (541) 654-2201.
HOME ENTERTAINMENT
INSTALLATION
BAR + PROPERTY
Rare opportunity!
S.E. 82nd Avenue LOTTERY
Mike Chapin, Broker, First Class
Property Group, (503) 939-3681
<www.1stcp.com>
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.
FOR SALE
Grass-raised beef
REAL ESTATE
GRASS-FED BEEF FOR SALE
Cattle raised in Newberg, Oregon.
Beef available in ¼, ½ or whole cow
& processed by a butcher in Portland.
For pricing, details, and to learn the
next date for available meat, please
call (503) 980-5900.
JAPANESE
RESTAURANT
FOR SALE
For Rent/Sale/Lease
OFFICE FOR LEASE
<www.hibachi-
restaurant-for-sale.com>
For a private showing, contact
EM Realty Group, Naoko
Angelicus, (503) 999-8429.
600-square-foot office space for
lease. Located across from PCC Cas-
cade on N. Killingsworth Street. For
details & information, call (503)
312-5224.
BIG VALLEY
SUTHERLIN
1350 E. FIRST AVE.
SUTHERLIN, OR 97479
TERRACE
MANOR
1051 E. CENTRAL AVE.
SUTHERLIN, OR 97479
Now accepting applications
for federally funded housing
wait list for those who are
62 years of age or older or
disabled of any age. 1- and
2-bedroom units with rent
based on income when
available. Income and
student restrictions apply.
Project phone #:
(541) 459-1686
TTY: 1-800-735-2900
<suth@viridianmgt.com>
Now accepting applications
for federally funded housing
wait list. 2-bedroom
units with rent based on
income when available.
Income and student
restrictions apply.
Non-smoking property.
No pets allowed.
Project phone #:
(541) 223-4962
TTY: 1-800-735-2900
<tman@viridianmgt.com>
Equal Housing Opportunity
Equal Housing Opportunity
Free Used Newspapers
FREE NEWSPAPERS!
LOOKING FOR
A NEW CAREER?
SUBSCRIPTION
COUPON
Does your garden or yard need weed
protection? Are you an art teacher
who has upcoming papier-mâché
projects? Are you a dog owner train-
ing a puppy? Does your business
need packing material? First come,
first served! Please call (503)
283-4440, ext. #, or e-mail
<news@asianreporter.com>.
Check out
The Asian Reporter’s
Northwest Job Market
advertising section
on pages 18 & 19 or visit
<www.asianreporter.com/
nwjobmarket.htm>.
Have The Asian Reporter delivered
directly to your home or office and
receive a $5.00 discount.
See page six for subscription
options and an order form.
Expiration date: October 31, 2019
Discount applies to new subscribers
SURFING THE WEB?
Check out jobs, news,
past stories, lists of community
groups, and more on our site:
<www.asianreporter.com>
2020 ADVERTISING RATES & ORDER FORM:
Phone: (503) 283-4440 * Fax: (503) 283-4445 * E-mail: ads@asianreporter.com
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
q Display Space (Asia, Ed-Op, Community, A.C.E. sections)
$24.00 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
$24.00 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 $24.00 per column inch; Text/Fax deadline: Friday prior to the next issue by 2:00pm
q Line Ad (up to 35 words):
o $24 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: <ads@asianreporter.com>
For Visa, Mastercard, or American Express payment only:
Name (as it appears on the card):
TYPE OF CARD (circle):
Exp. Date:
Card Number:
VISA
Mastercard
American Express
Zip Code & Address of Cardholder:
Security Code:
WAIT LIST OPEN at
KATERI PARK
APARTMENTS
3640 SE 28th Ave.
Portland, OR 97202
Water, Sewer &
Garbage Paid!
2-, 3-, & 4-Bedroom Units
CALL NOW: (503) 233-4701
TTY 711
Income Limits Apply
Equal Housing Opportunity
<www.cascade-
management.com>
Want to place an advertisement?
Just fill out the order form on
this page, then e-mail or fax it.
Large chunk of border wall
funding diverted from tiny Guam
Continued from page 9
ment of Marines on
Okinawa to Guam, and
that the U.S. government
commitment to the realign-
ment plan is unchanged,”
then-defense
minister
Takeshi Iwaya told re-
porters in early September.
Discussions to reduce the
U.S. presence on Okinawa
began in the mid-1990s
after the rape of a 12-year-
old Okinawan girl by three
U.S. servicemen sparked
mass demonstrations. The
allies in 2006 said they
would send Marines to
Guam by 2014, a deadline
that slipped as they revised
plans.
Although
Okinawa
makes up less than 1% of
Japan’s land space, it hosts
about half of the 54,000
American troops stationed
in Japan and is home to
64% of the land used by the
U.S. bases in the country
under a bilateral security
treaty.
Jeffrey Hornung, a re-
searcher at the RAND Cor-
poration, a public-policy re-
search institute, said even
before the latest develop-
ment,
some
Okinawa
residents were frustrated
with the lack of progress in
moving the Marines.
“The fact is, the longer
that the projects on Guam
are delayed, that means
the longer that there’s not
going to be any forward
movement on some aspects
of moving the Marines off
Okinawa,” Hornung said.
“And this all comes from
taking money to build a
border wall.”
Diverted spending also
will affect the Air Force,
including $45.1 million for
two projects to update
70-year-old
munitions
storage.
The Air Force has been
rotating bombers — the
B-2 stealth bomber as well
as the B-1 and B-52 —
through Guam since 2004
to compensate for U.S.
forces sent from the
Asia-Pacific region to fight
in the Middle East. In 2017,
the U.S. dispatched a B-1
bomber from Guam to the
Korean peninsula as a
show of force after North
Korea accelerated its ef-
forts to test intercontinen-
tal ballistic missiles and
expand
its
nuclear
weapons program.
Project documents say
existing facilities won’t
adequately support the
mission of the 36th
Munitions Squadron on
Guam. They say upgrades
are needed to correct a
faulty door design, address
earth cover lost during
typhoons, and house new
long-range air-to-ground
precision missiles.
U.S. representative Ed
Case, a Democrat from
Hawai‘i who sits on the
house appropriations sub-
committee for military
construction, said he’s con-
cerned the administration
diverted so much from
Guam, given the island is
key to the nation’s defense
posture in the Pacific.
But he said re-awarding
these funds in another bud-
get would set an “incredibly
dangerous precedent.”
“That is a very difficult
situation because these are
priority projects. However,
if we simply said yes to this
president on that basis,
which he is very much
hoping that we will do, then
we have essentially said to
him and any future
president that congress’
role as the responsible
branch of government for
appropriations no longer
counts,” Case said.
Associated Press writer
Mari Yamaguchi in Tokyo
contributed to this report.