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Thanksgiving
Dinner!
Xaltemba
Thanksgiving Menu
Thursday, November 27, 2008
Seatings
5:30 pm & 7:30 pm
$200 per Person
Traditional Thanksgiving Roasted Turkey
served with homemade gravy
Sides
Dressing
Pecans, granny smith apples, fresh mushrooms and thyme
Green Beans
Fresh green beans stewed with garlic, onion and vine ripe tomatoes
Sweet Potatoes
Baked with Macintosh apples and brown sugar
Corn Soufflé
Fresh corn off the cob sautéed with onion and baked
Potatoes Isabelle
Riced potatoes and steamed
carrots, butter and cream
Salad
Crisp fresh spinach tossed with pomegranate, mandarin orange slices,
roasted pine nuts,
Manchego cheese croutons served with warm bacon and citrus vinaigrette
Homemade Cranberry Sauce
Dessert
Fresh baked pumpkin pie topped with hand whipped Chantilly cream
PayPal Expands Service to Mexican Peso San Jose Business
Journal
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Silicon Valley - Online payment service PayPal Inc. said Tuesday it
expanded into Mexico.

The arm of San Jose-based eBay Inc. (NASDAQ:EBAY) said Mexican buyers
will be able pay for online purchases using their credit cards or bank
accounts with pesos as currency.

The peso is the first Latin American currency to be added to the PayPal
system. PayPal also enables payments in the U.S. dollar, Canadian
dollar, Australian dollar, euro, British pound, Japanese yen, Chinese
yuan, Czech koruna, Danish lrone, Hong Kong dollar, Hungarian forint,
New Zealand dollar, Norwegian krone, Polish zloty, Singaporean dollar,
Swedish krona, Swiss franc and Israeli new shekel.

PayPal is now accepted in 190 countries around the world, and the
company said users in Mexico can now shop at retailers that include
including, Mixup, Sears, Match.com, Blockbuster, Best Day Travel,
PlazaVIP, and PC en Linea.

“PayPal’s goal is to provide consumers a secure, fast and convenient way
to pay and get paid online and to give online shoppers in Mexico more
places to shop quickly and securely,” said Fernando Moreno, director of
PayPal Latin America. “The launch of PayPal Mexico is a significant step
towards our next phase of growth
Scholar Finds Mayans' Buried Highway Through Hell
Mark Stevenson – Associated Press
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Tzibichen Cenote, Mexico — Legend says the afterlife for ancient Mayas
was a terrifying obstacle course in which the dead had to traverse
rivers of blood, and chambers full of sharp knives, bats and jaguars.
 Now a Mexican
archaeologist using long-forgotten testimony from the Spanish
Inquisition says a series of caves he has explored may be the place
where the Maya actually tried to depict this highway through hell.
 The network of
underground chambers, roads and temples beneath farmland and jungle on
the Yucatan peninsula suggests the Maya fashioned them to mimic the
journey to the underworld, or Xibalba, described in ancient mythological
texts such as the Popol Vuh.
 "It was the place
of fear, the place of cold, the place of danger, of the abyss," said
University of Yucatan archaeologist Guillermo de Anda.
 Searching for the
names of sacred sites mentioned by Indian heretics who were put on trial
by Inquisition courts, De Anda discovered what appear to be stages of
the legendary journey, recreated in a half-dozen caves south of the
Yucatan state capital of Merida.
 Archaeologists
have long known that the Maya regarded caves as sacred and built
structures in some.
 But De Anda's
team introduced "an extremely important ingredient" by using historical
records to locate and connect a series of sacred caves, and link them
with the concept of the Mayan road to the afterworld, said archaeologist
Bruce Dahlin of Shepherd University, who has studied other Maya sites in
the Yucatan.

The Associated Press followed de Anda and his team into the caves,
squeezing through tiny, overgrown entrances and rappelling down narrow
shafts and slippery tree roots.
 There, in the
stygian darkness, a scene unfolded that was eerily reminiscent of an
"Indiana Jones" movie — tottering ancient temple platforms, slippery
staircases and tortuous paths that skirted underground lakes littered
with Mayan pottery and ancient skulls.
 The group
explored walled-off sacred chambers that can only be entered by crawling
along a floor populated by spiders, scorpions and toads.
 To find Xibalba,
De Anda spent five years combing the 450-year-old records of the
Inquisition trials the Spaniards held against Indian "heretics" in
Mexico.
 The
Spanish were outraged that the Mayas continued to practice their old
religion even after the conquest. So they used the trials to make them
reveal the places where they performed their ceremonies.
 Time after time,
the defendants mentioned the same places — but the recorded names
changed over the centuries or were forgotten.
 Armed with clues
from trial records, the archaeologists asked locals for caves with
similar-sounding names or coordinates that would place them nearby.
 The Mayas used
the sinkhole caves, known as cenotes, as places of worship and
depositories for sacrificed humans. Many cenotes still contain pools
that supply villages with water. The best-known is the broad, circular
pool at the ruins of Chichen Itza.
  The cenotes De
Anda found were drier, better hidden and farther from villages. They
seem to have had a special religious significance because even as the
Maya were forced to convert to Christianity, they still traveled long
distances to worship there.
 Among De Anda's
discoveries are a broad, perfectly paved, 100-yard underground road, a
submerged temple, walled-off stone rooms and the "confusing crossroads"
of the legends.

"There are a number of elements that make us think that this road is a
representation of the journey to Xibalba," De Anda said. "We think it is
no coincidence that the road which comes out of the crossroads leads to
the west," the direction described as the way to the afterlife.
 At the center of
one of the underground lakes, De Anda's team found a collapsed and
submerged altar with carvings indicating it was dedicated to the gods of
death.
 In some
of the chambers, it is almost impossible to move without slashing one's
skin on stalactites and stone formations projecting from the walls and
ceilings, leading De Anda to believe they are a representation of the
feared "room of knives" described in the Popol Vuh.

Bats are depicted
in the ancient texts, and visitors have to duck to avoid swarms of them.
There's the "chamber of roasting heat" which indeed leaves visitors
soaked in sweat. Cool currents of surface air penetrating some caves
feel almost frigid, just like the legend's "chambers of shaking cold."
 While De Anda has
not yet encountered a specific "jaguar chamber," jaguar bones have been
found in at least one cave.
 Subterranean
"roads" interrupted by deep pools of water may signify the rivers of
blood and pus.

But why go to the trouble of reproducing hell? "Perhaps it was to
demonstrate power," De Anda speculates, or to give the living an idea of
the terrors they would meet en route to paradise.
 Clifford Brown, a
Florida Atlantic University archaeologist who has worked in the region,
agrees that the Mayas saw the cenotes as a portal to the underworld.
 "Everybody has
heard of the cenote of sacrifice at Chichen Itza, but it's less widely
recognized that it was part of a generalized cenote worship that existed
at many sites," Brown said.
 "There are a
number of sites in the lowlands where there are caves right underneath
the principal temples, palaces and pyramids, which are thought to
represent a religious 'access mundi,' where you have the pyramid
representing the heavens, and the caves representing the underworld
underneath."
SPORTS
For Team Mexico, the bobsledding is all uphill
These guys are unlikely sports icons. They rank somewhere
between 28th and 32nd in the world. They were "Cool Runnings" before Disney
decided to make a movie about bumbling Jamaican bobsledders…..More
Internacional beats Chivas in Sudamericana semis
Nilmar Da Silva and Alex scored second half goals to lead
Brazil's Internacional past Chivas 2-0 on Wednesday in the first leg of their
Copa Sudamericana semifinals series…..More
Tickets ready in Mexico for World Classic baseball
The Organizing Committee of the World Classic
in Mexico City on Thursday announced the tickets for the World Baseball Classic
2009 will be on sale on Monday. …. More
Mexico beats Ecuador in U.S. exhibition
Vicente Matias Vuoso scored on a header in
the 4th minute of injury time, lifting Mexico to a 2-1 exhibition victory over
Ecuador on Wednesday night at Chase Field, the home of the Arizona
Diamondbacks….. More
Soccer-Guadalajara in danger of early
exit in Mexico
Guadalajara, Mexico's most popular club, were
left facing an early exit from the Apertura championship after losing 2-1 at
Puebla on Sunday… .More
Soccer-Eriksson confident of Mexico's
World Cup qualification
Mexico coach Sven-Goran Eriksson, under
increasing pressure following three matches without a win, said he has no doubt
his side will qualify for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa….. More
Darts winners this week . Every Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Crazy
Nelly's
Veterans Day Golf Winners

Men's Day winner below

WEATHER

SAN Pancho Weather www.sanpanchoweather.com
Weather in Mexico
Currency


Eric Nice Plays Mateja's every Thursday afternoon.
Mexico
Spends $1.5 Bln to Hedge Falling Oil Prices
Julie Watson - Associated Press
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Mexico City - Mexico, the third-largest
supplier of oil to the U.S., has spent $1.5 billion since July to hedge against
falling oil income and protect public spending for 2009, Treasury Secretary
Agustin Carstens said Thursday.

The government bought so-called put options to sell 330 million barrels of
Mexican crude, about a third of its current estimated annual output, for $70 a
barrel, indicating that the oil-exporting country doubts its oil will
consistently top that price next year.

The move guarantees Mexico at least $9.5 billion in extra income if its oil
stays below $70 a barrel, Carstens said. But if its crude sells for more, the
country could lose.

Oil is Mexico's biggest source of foreign income, and revenue from state oil
monopoly Petroleos Mexicanos, known as Pemex, accounts for nearly 40 percent of
federal spending.

While such hedging is common, Mexico this year spent at least 2.5 times more
than it has in the past to cover potential price declines - exposing the depth
of its concern over the impact of falling oil prices, said Allyson Benton, a
Mexico analyst at the Eurasia Group consultancy in New York.

Congress approved Mexico's 2009 budget on Wednesday, boosting spending by 13
percent to jump-start its slowing economy amid the global financial crisis. The
budget, which includes a 1.8 percent deficit, the country's first in years,
assumes crude prices of $70 a barrel.

Mexican crude closed Thursday at $41.72 a barrel, Pemex said. West Texas
Intermediate, a benchmark crude commonly used to cite global oil prices, was
trading around $59.48 a barrel.

Fitch Ratings lowered its sovereign credit outlook for Mexico to "negative" on
Monday, citing the potential effect of a U.S. recession, reduced capital flows
and decreased oil income.

But the Treasury Department has said a stabilization fund containing $5.6
billion in windfall oil income will help Mexico maintain spending throughout the
economic downturn.

Mexico began its current wave of hedging at the end of July, signing derivative
contracts with "extremely credible" international financial institutions,
Carstens said, declining to disclose their names.

"They're great traders," Phil Flynn, an analyst at Alaron Trading Corp., said of
Mexico, noting the country had hedged exports earlier this year, selling at near
record levels.

"If the economy continues to slow, they're looking like geniuses" in 2009, he
said.

It wasn't clear if other oil-exporting countries have sought to lock in higher
prices with similar hedges, in case they continue to slide in coming months.
Many might hesitate to disclose such bets give the political cost of losses,
analysts said.

Pemex produced about 2.8 million barrels of crude a day between January and
September, exporting 1.4 million.


go to 2009 Calendar
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