1981 in Mexico
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See also: | Other events of 1981 List of years in Mexico |
Events in the year 1981 in Mexico.
Incumbents
Federal government
- President: José López Portillo
- Interior Secretary (SEGOB):
- Secretary of Foreign Affairs (SRE):
- Communications Secretary (SCT):
- Education Secretary (SEP):
- Secretary of Defense (SEDENA):
- Secretary of Navy:
- Secretary of Labor and Social Welfare:
- Secretary of Welfare:
- Secretary of Public Education:
- Tourism Secretary (SECTUR):
Supreme Court
- President of the Supreme Court:
Governors
- Aguascalientes:
- Baja California:
- Baja California Sur:
- Campeche:
- Chiapas:
- Chihuahua:
- Coahuila:
- Colima:
- Durango:
- Guanajuato:
- Guerrero:
- Hidalgo:
- Jalisco:
- State of Mexico:
- Michoacán:
- Morelos:
- Nayarit:
- Nuevo León:
- Oaxaca:
- Puebla:
- Querétaro:
- Quintana Roo:
- San Luis Potosí:
- Sinaloa:
- Sonora:
- Tabasco:
- Tamaulipas:
- Tlaxcala:
- Veracruz:
- Yucatán:
- Zacatecas:
Events
- September 13 — By presidential decree, the Museo Nacional de las Intervenciones opens its doors in Churubusco.[1]
- October 8 – Tropical Storm Lidia strikes 23 mi (37 km) south of Los Mochis, with winds of 45 mph (75 km/h). Heavy rainfall associated with the cyclone caused moderate damage in northwestern Mexico, and at least seventy-three deaths can be attributed to the storm.[2]
- November – The Unified Socialist Party of Mexico is founded by a merger of four parties.[3]
Births
- August 6 — José Ron, soap opera actor
- December 5 – Adan Canto, actor
- December 21 – Lynda Thomas, singer-songwriter and producer
- Date unknown — Miriam Rivera, transgender model (d. 2019.
gollark: See? Inefficient.
gollark: Not that it'll ever be used, but you know.
gollark: I'm going to work on a "safe mode" toggle for the network which switches security to maximum, shuts off wireless access, disconnects autocrafting, and cuts off the P2P controller, so it can only be accessed via the dedicated terminals.
gollark: You must have a really inefficient ME network, <@404656680496791554>.
gollark: Per tick or what?
References
- "Museo Nacional de las Intervenciones" [National Intervention Museum]. INAH (in Spanish). Archived from the original on July 21, 2009. Retrieved June 8, 2019.
- Gunther, Emil B. (July 1982). <0839:ENPTCO>2.0.CO;2 "Eastern North Pacific Tropical Cyclones of 1981". Monthly Weather Review. 110 (7): 839–851. Bibcode:1982MWRv..110..839G. doi:10.1175/1520-0493(1982)110<0839:ENPTCO>2.0.CO;2.
- Barry Carr, "Mexican Communism 1968–1981: Eurocommunism in the Americas?" Journal of Latin American Studies, Vol. 17, No. 1 (May 1985), 201–228.
External links
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