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For his part, Carlos Zárate Serna, no longer undefeated, returned to the bantamweight division, where he made two controversial defenses. The first, against John Kohjo Mensan, was controversial because the challenger was alleged to be 45-2 coming in but was 1-4 instead. Zárate easily won this fight by a third round knockout on March 10, 1979. [3]
Ramón Gómez de la Serna (1888–1963), writer, dramatist and avant-garde agitator Luis de Góngora (1561–1627), lyric poet considered to be among the most prominent Spanish poets of all time Beremundo González Rodríguez (1909–1986), Galician writer and politician
Jesús Carlos Zárate Serna (born May 23, 1951) is a Mexican former professional boxer who competed from 1970 to 1988, and held the WBC bantamweight title from 1976 to 1979. Zárate was voted Fighter of the Year by The Ring magazine in 1977. Zárate was ranked #21 in The Ring's list of 100 greatest punchers of all time.
Carlos Zarate may refer to: Carlos Zárate Fernández (born 1980), Spanish cyclist; Carlos Zárate Serna (born 1951), Mexican boxer; Carlos Isagani Zarate (born 1967), Filipino lawyer, activist, and politician; Carlos Serrano Zárate (born 1998), Paralympian swimmer from Colombia; Carlos Zárate Jr. (born 1988), boxer from Mexico
The most elusive voice of this generation, and arguably, unclassifiable within this group was the novelist Ramón Gómez de la Serna who carried the narrative experiments of Unamuno and Valle Inclán to absurd extremes, such as in his 1923 novel, El novelista, where varieties of plays with narrative subjectivity result in chapters envisioned ...
Nigel Glendinning [20] relates many of the motifs to the tradition of the carnival, [8] a line of research suggested by Ramón Gómez de la Serna. [ 8 ] [ 21 ] Glendinning observes that one of the carnival traits is that of subversion of everything that represents authority.
It also has a lot more to say than your typical campus novel – you'll read about the Dream Act, ambition, sex, gender, classism, family dynamics, immigration and so much more in just over 200 pages.
The boxing fight between Mexicans Carlos Zárate and Alfonso Zamora, respectively the WBC and WBA World Bantamweight titleholders, was known as The Battle of the Z Boys.Held in Inglewood, California, on April 23, 1977, the bout was not recognized as a unification fight by either of the sanctioning bodies without any specific reason given for withholding the sanction.