The Asian reporter. (Portland, Or.) 1991-current, October 05, 2020, Page 15, Image 15

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    THE ASIAN REPORTER
October 5, 2020
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 MONDAY EACH MONTH AT MANY LOCATIONS, INCLUDING:
Uwajimaya
10500 SW
Beaverton-Hillsdale
Hwy., Beaverton
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES
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
REAL ESTATE
REAL ESTATE
REAL ESTATE
For Rent/Sale/Lease
For Rent/Sale/Lease
For Rent/Sale/Lease
Fact check: How can I tell the difference
between the flu and COVID-19?
Continued from page 8
Need to place an advertisement?
Just fill out the order form
on this page, then fax it to
(503) 283-4445 or e-mail
<ads@asianreporter.com>.
HIBACHI
RESTAURANT
FOR SALE $299,900
<www.hibachi-
restaurant-for-sale.com>
Fixtures & equipment included.
For a private showing, contact
EM Realty Group, Naoko
Angelicus, (503) 999-8429.
FOR SALE
Grass-raised beef
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, please call (503)
980-5900.
UNITS AVAILABLE
NOW at
Accepting applications
for wait list at
VALERIE HILLS
APARTMENTS
701 N River Road
Rogue River, OR 97537
WOODVILLE
VILLAGE APTS.
199 Rogue Lane
Rogue River, OR 97537
Affordable Housing
Affordable Housing
for Seniors 62+ or
persons with disabilities
1 BED Units | Rent: $605
1, 2 & 3 BED Units:
$613 - $816
COMMERCIAL/
RETAIL SPACE
AVAILABLE
8535 SE Powell Blvd, Portland
More than 12,000 sq. ft. of
space, which can be divided.
Ideal for Grocery Store,
Cash & Carry wholesale store.
2 walk-in coolers,
1 walk-in freezer.
Lots of warehouse space.
Offices, conference room,
restrooms. Large parking lot.
Great location,
bus line, easy access.
Great for any business:
Insurance agency, restaurant,
furniture store.
Call for more details:
Office: (971) 255-1432
Cell: (503) 793-3128,
(503) 805-5981
Owner/Agent is a
Licensed Real Estate Broker
in the State of Oregon
Home Entertainment
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
Call (541) 582-2757
TTY 711
Water, Sewer &
Garbage Paid!
Laundry Facilities,
Playground
USDA Rural Development
Income Limits Apply
Call (541) 582-4872
TTY 711
Water, Sewer &
Garbage Paid!
Laundry Facilities,
Community Room
USDA Rural Development
This is an equal
opportunity provider
Income Limits Apply
This is an equal
opportunity provider
<www.Cascade-
Management.com>
<www.Cascade-
Management.com>
Accepting applications
for wait list at
Accepting applications
for wait list at
Please stay safe.
Wear a face covering.
LINN HAVEN
APARTMENTS
1220 23rd Ave.
Sweet Home, OR 97386
HILLSIDE VILLAGE
APARTMENTS
156 Montgomery Ave.
Glendale, OR 97442
Affordable Housing
2020 ADVERTISING RATES
Affordable Housing
for Seniors 62+ or
persons with disabilities
Studio, 1 & 2 BED Units
Rent: $540 - $750
FREE
Free Used Newspapers
FREE NEWSPAPERS!
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>.
Questions?
Contact The Asian Reporter’s
Advertising Department:
Phone: (503) 283-4440
Fax: (503) 283-4445
E-mail: ads@asianreporter.com
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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
Special “Business Card” Display Ad
o $70 per issue
o $190 for 3 consecutive issues (3 months)
o $330 for 6 consecutive issues (6 months)
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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
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Community Classified Page Options
Boxed Ad:
q $24.00 per column inch
Text/Fax deadline: Friday prior
to the next issue by 2:00pm
Call (541) 367-4880
TTY 711
Water, Sewer &
Garbage Paid!
USDA Rural Development
Income Limits Apply
This is an equal
opportunity provider
<www.Cascade-
Management.com>
Accepting applications
for wait list at
STONEBROOK
APARTMENTS
300 West Holley Rd.
Sweet Home, OR 97386
Affordable Housing
1 & 2 BED Units
Rent: $615 - $690
Call (541) 367-4437
TTY 711
Water, Sewer &
Garbage Paid!
USDA Rural Development
Income Limits Apply
This is an equal
opportunity provider
Name Listing (4 lines
maximum ~ about 10 words):
o $14 per issue
o $30 for 3 consecutive issues (3 months)
o $51 for 6 consecutive issues (6 months)
Call (541) 832-2635
TTY 711
Water, Sewer &
Garbage Paid!
USDA Rural Development
Income Limits Apply
This is an equal
opportunity provider
<www.Cascade-
Management.com>
TWO RIVERS
APARTMENTS –
WINSTON
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) 679-8819
TTY: 1-800-735-2900
This institution is an
equal opportunity provider
<www.Cascade-
Management.com>
Classified advertising
deadlines for our
next three editions are:
Line Ad (up to 35 words):
o $24 per issue
o $51 for 3 consecutive issues (3 months)
o $90 for 6 consecutive issues (6 months)
1, 2 & 3 BED Units:
$507 - $718
SURFING
THE WEB?
Check out jobs,
public notices,
news, past stories,
lists of community
groups, and more
on our site:
<www.asianreporter.com>
November 2 issue:
Friday, October 30, 2:00pm
December 7 issue:
Friday, December 4, 2:00pm
January 4 issue:
Thursday, Dec. 31, 2:00pm
For more information,
call (503) 283-4440,
or e-mail
<ads@asianreporter.com>.
Hong Phat
Supermarket
101 SE 82nd Ave.
Portland
diseases expert at Brigham
and Women’s Hospital and
Harvard Medical School in
Boston.
Whether you get tested
for one or both viruses may
depend on how available
tests are and which viruses
are circulating where you
live, he said.
“Right now we are not
seeing community trans-
mission of influenza, so
widespread testing for the
flu is not yet recom-
mended,” Solomon said.
Both the flu and corona-
virus
spread
through
droplets from the nose and
mouth. Both can spread
before people know they
are sick. The flu has a
shorter incubation period
— meaning after infection
it can take one to four days
to feel sick — compared to
the coronavirus, which can
take two to 14 days from
infection to symptoms.
On average, COVID-19
is more contagious than the
flu. But many people with
COVID-19 don’t spread the
virus to anyone, while a few
people spread it to many
others.
These
“super-
spreader events” are more
common with COVID-19
than flu, Solomon said.
Preventing the flu starts
with an annual flu shot
tailored to the strains of the
flu
virus
that
are
circulating. Health officials
would like to see record
numbers of people get flu
shots this year so hospitals
aren’t overwhelmed with
two epidemics at once.
There’s no vaccine yet for
COVID-19,
although
several candidates are in
the final testing stages.
Precautions
against
COVID-19 — masks, social
distancing, handwashing
— also slow the spread of
the flu, so health officials
hope continued vigilance
could lessen the severity of
this year’s flu season.
Trump’s diagnosis shows U.S.
vulnerability to the coronavirus
Continued from page 9
“I fought for freedom in
‘Nam,” Kuhn said. “I really
didn’t like it when they
stopped us from going to
church and assembling.
But people are coming
back. Everything’s coming
back. People want the real
America we fought for.”
The mood was far
different in St. Louis.
Arlene Mathis, 65, was
one of several Black
volunteers at an event
aimed at getting people to
register to vote. Nearly
everyone wore masks.
“I don’t know that we
would have to have the
president affected by this
to be awakened by it
because so many people
have died and continue to
die every day,” Mathis said.
She was hopeful, how-
ever, that Trump’s illness
would change behavior.
“It’s an indication that
nobody is immune,” Mathis
said. “It goes high, it goes
low, it goes everywhere. So
hopefully, them being
affected by it will have an
impact.”
Dr. William Schaffner,
an infectious diseases
expert
at
Vanderbilt
University, said Trump’s
diagnosis “reinforces the
notion we need a national
policy and we need
everyone to participate in
the basic preventions.”
Instead, Schaffner said,
the response “has been
subcontracted
to
the
governors, which has left
us with a crazy quilt of
approaches.”
For months, Trump has
downplayed the virus,
rarely wearing a mask,
holding large campaign
rallies, and urging busi-
nesses and schools to
reopen. Masks have not
been mandatory for White
House
staff,
despite
evidence they help to stop
the spread.
“Now, tragically, this
experiment has shown, at
the highest office of the
country, it ain’t working. It
didn’t work,” Schaffner
said.
Michaud said the nation
is experiencing “a dan-
gerous moment.”
“We have lots of schools,
universities, workplaces,
and other businesses and
institutions
reopening.
Colder weather is also on
the way, which will likely
increase the chances peo-
ple
will
congregate
together indoors,” Michaud
said.
If complacency sets in,
infections will rise.
“We’re still not doing
sufficient
testing
and
contact tracing across the
country,” Michaud said.
“For all these reasons,
we’re likely to have more
transmission in the U.S.,
not less, in the coming
weeks and months.”
Johnson reported from Washing-
ton state. Associated Press writer
John O’Connor contributed
from Springfield, Illinois.