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    Today\'s Events
    • Leo Schmied at Tremont Tavern, 10pm
    • Wild Ocean in 3D at IMAX 3D Theater
    • Downstream at Bud's Sports Bar, 10pm
    • Mike Speenburg at The Comedy Catch, 7:30pm
    • James Legg, Silver Lions 20/20, Oxford Cotton, Mark Holder at JJ's Bohemia, 10pm
    • “Explorations in Steel” by Julie Clark at In Town Gallery, 11am
    • Nick and the Dragonslayers at Mudpie Restaurant, 11:30am
    • A Night To Remember 2010 at Chattanooga Convention Center, 8pm
    • "Earth" at Warehouse Row, 12pm
    • Opening Reception for "Recent Landscapes" at Warehouse Row, 6pm
    • Chris and Reece at T-Bone's Sports Cafe, 10pm
    • Moonshoes Mumsy, The Hearts in Life, Sanity's Edge, Kelly Lockman at Club Fathom, 7:30pm
    • Peer Pressure at Club Fathom, 10pm
    • Creative Discovery Museum’s Exhibit “Good For You” at Creative Discovery Museum, 10am

    Tomorrow\'s Events
    • "Peter Pan" at Tivoli Theatre
    • Mystery of the Red Neck Italian Wedding at Vaudeville Cafe , 8:30pm
    • Sweet Adelines, Region 23 "Six Minutes to Fame" Convention at Chattanooga Convention Center
    • Bloody Sacrifice, Apocalyptic Visions, Double Barrel Democracy at Ziggy's Package Store, 8pm
    • "Jellies: The Living Art" Exhibition at Hunter Museum of American Art, 10am
    • Mystery of the Nightmare High School Reunion at Vaudeville Cafe , 6pm
    • Mike Speenburg at The Comedy Catch, 7:30pm
    • Creative Discovery Museum’s Exhibit “Good For You” at Creative Discovery Museum, 10am
    • "Earth" at Warehouse Row, 12pm
    • "Twenty Original American Etchings" at Hunter Museum of American Art
    • New Death Sensation, Declare your Victory, Permillisecond, Failing the Fairest at Club Fathom, 7:30pm
    • Abbey Road Live at Rhythm & Brews, 10pm
    • Bluegrass Pharaohs at Market Street Tavern, 10pm
    • Dave Kennedy at Tremont Tavern, 10pm

    Later Events
    • “Explorations in Steel” by Julie Clark at In Town Gallery, 11am
    • "Recent Landscapes: Lawerence Mathis" Exhibition at Warehouse Row, 12pm
    • Hubble in 3D at IMAX 3D Theater
    • Mike Speenburg at The Comedy Catch, 8pm
    • "Still Lifes from the Permanent Collection" at Hunter Museum of American Art
    • Sweet Adelines, Region 23 "Six Minutes to Fame" Convention at Chattanooga Convention Center
    • Wild Ocean in 3D at IMAX 3D Theater
    • Creative Discovery Museum’s Exhibit “Good For You” at Creative Discovery Museum, 10am
    • "Talk Portraiture" Exhibition at Shuptrine Fine Art Group
    • "Twenty Original American Etchings" at Hunter Museum of American Art
    • Chattanooga Blues Festival at Memorial Auditorium, 8pm
    • "Earth" at Warehouse Row, 12pm
    • "Jellies: The Living Art" Exhibition at Hunter Museum of American Art, 10am

    Ask A Mexican: X Marks the Gabacho

    Written by Gustavo Arellano
    October 15, 2009 – 10:37 am


    Dear Mexican,
    An uninsured wetback just hit my car and totaled his. He had no insurance and no license, but did have a nice cell phone. I asked him if he was okay in my limited Spanish, but he did not ask about me or my children. He was handcuffed and taken away to be booked for one hour to get his real ID. This incident will cost me hundreds of dollars even with my insurance. My insurance company tells me 60% of accidents in California are with uninsured Mexican drivers. Why don’t they just take buses like I did when I couldn’t afford a car?
    — Stranded with no Rental Insurance

    Dear Gabacho,
    Yeah, you really care if the man that rammed into you was okay when you smirk at his cell phone and call him a wetback (and real pronto, readers: please eliminate that word from your Rolodex of Racism. Like “beaner,” it’s so 1950s. Use “wab” or the cooler-sounding Spanish translation, mojado). Cry me a pinche río. Also, your insurance agent no sabe what they’re talking about sobre the figures you provided. The Insurance Research Council’s Uninsured Motorists, 2008 Edition estimated only 18 percent of Californians drive uninsured; the 1998 study, California’s Uninsured, by the Policy Research Bureau of the California Department of Insurance did determine 35 percent of Latinos had no insurance but didn’t bother to figure out whether they caused the majority of accidents. Both studies showed that the rate of insured drivers in California and the United States had actually increased over the years, so that figure your agent gave you was just to soothe your frayed gabacho ego—it simply has no basis in fact or statistical projections.  Finally, with regards to your actual question: uninsured Mexicans drive cars the same reason uninsured non-Mexicans do—the buses are too overcrowded with Mexicans.

    Dear Mexican,
    I live outside of Tucson, Arizona, a big city only about 50 miles north of the la frontera.  Every year, we celebrate the birthday of the town, and always a major enter of attraction is our dear and famous Spanish mission built by the Padre Eusebio Francisco Kino, a Jesuit extraordinaire of German extraction, along with uncounted native Tohono  O’Odam. This mission is named Mission San Xavier. It is always, and I do mean ALWAYS pronounced: San Ha-Veer, very heavy with the H. So, why do teachers who have students with the name Xavier always pronounce it Zay – Vee – Irr?  (Or does my question go the other way around)?
    — Old Native Just Asking

    Dear Gabacho,
    For being a self-proclaimed native of the Old Pueblo, you sure are a pendejo.  Father Kino was of Italian extraction (though born in the Austrian Empire), and the full name of the mission is San Xavier del Bac, named after Society of Jesus (better known as the Jesuits) founder St. Francis Xavier (so named because he was from the town of Javier in the Basque country).  As to your pregunta: you’re just hearing the Spanish and English pronunciations. The English version of the letter x almost always sounds like the letter z at the beginning of words; la letra x at the beginning of Spanish words is almost always aspirated like the letter j. Of course American teachers will pronounce Xavier as Zay-vee-Irr, the same way they turn Guillermo into Billy, but I think the question you have is why the velar fricative took hold for x en Español and not in English. La respuesta: while the English were going through their Great Vowel Shift toward the end of the Middle Ages, los Españoles decided to follow their own route to ensure confusions among future generations of gabachos—just another grievance alongside the Reconquista and uninsured Mexicans, you know?

    Ask the Mexican at themexican@askamexican.net, myspace.com/ocwab, find him on Facebook, Twitter, or write via snail mail at: Gustavo Arellano, P.O. Box 1433, Anaheim, CA 92815-1433.


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