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Events in the year
1976 in Mexico
.
←
1975
1974
1973
1976
in
Mexico
→
1977
1978
1979
Decades:
1950s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
See also:
History of Mexico
List of years in Mexico
Timeline of Mexican history
Contents
1
Incumbents
1.1
Federal government
1.2
Supreme Court
1.3
Governors
2
Events
3
Awards
4
Births
5
Film
6
Sport
7
References
8
External links
Incumbents
edit
Federal government
edit
President
:
Luis Echeverría
(until 30 November),
José López Portillo
(starting 1 December)
Interior Secretary
(SEGOB):
Mario Moya Palencia
/Jesús Reyes Heroles
Secretary of Foreign Affairs
(SRE):
Alfonso García Robles
/Santiago Roel García
Communications Secretary
(SCT): Emilio Mújica Montoya
Education Secretary
(SEP):
Víctor Bravo Ahuja
/
Porfirio Muñoz Ledo
Secretary of Defense
(SEDENA):
Hermenegildo Cuenca Díaz
/Félix Galván López
Secretary of Navy
: Ricardo Cházaro Lara
Secretary of Labor and Social Welfare
: Pedro Ojeda Paullada
Secretary of Welfare
:
Luis Enrique Bracamontes
/
Pedro Ramírez Vázquez
Tourism Secretary
(SECTUR):
Julio Hirschfeld Almada
/
Guillermo Rossell de la Lama
Supreme Court
edit
See also:
National Supreme Court of Justice
President of the Supreme Court: Mario G. Rebolledo Fernández
Governors
edit
Aguascalientes
:
José Refugio Esparza Reyes
Baja California
:
Milton Castellanos Everardo
Baja California Sur
:
Ángel César Mendoza Arámburo
Campeche
:
Rafael Rodríguez Barrera
Chiapas
Manuel Velasco Suárez
(until November 30)
Jorge de la Vega Domínguez
(starting December 1)
[
citation needed
]
Chihuahua
:
Manuel Bernardo Aguirre
Coahuila
:
Oscar Flores Tapia
Colima
:
Arturo Noriega Pizano
[
citation needed
]
Durango
:
Héctor Mayagoitia Domínguez
[
citation needed
]
Guanajuato
:
Luis H. Ducoing Gamba
[
citation needed
]
Guerrero
:
Rubén Figueroa Figueroa
[
citation needed
]
Hidalgo
:
Jalisco
:
Alberto Orozco Romero
[
citation needed
]
State of Mexico
:
Jorge Jiménez Cantú
Michoacán
:
Carlos Torres Manzo
[
citation needed
]
Morelos
Felipe Rivera Crespo
(PRI), until May 18
Armando León Bejarano
(PRI), starting May 18
Nayarit
:
Nuevo León
:
Pedro Zorrilla Martínez
[
citation needed
]
Oaxaca
:
Miguel Zárate Aquino
[
citation needed
]
Puebla
:
Toxqui Fernández de Lara
[
citation needed
]
Querétaro
:
Antonio Calzada Urquiza
Quintana Roo
:
Jesús Martínez Ross
San Luis Potosí
:
Guillermo Fonseca Álvarez
[
citation needed
]
Sinaloa
:
Alfonso G. Calderón
[
citation needed
]
Sonora
:
Alejandro Carrillo Marcor
[
citation needed
]
Tabasco
:
Mario Trujillo García
Tamaulipas
:
Enrique Cárdenas González
Tlaxcala
:
Emilio Sánchez Piedras
[
citation needed
]
Veracruz
:
Rafael Hernández Ochoa
Yucatán
Carlos Loret de Mola Mediz
(until January 31)
Francisco Luna Kan
(starting February 1)
Zacatecas
:
Fernando Pámanes Escobedo
Regent of Mexico City
Octavio Senties Gomez
[
1
]
Carlos Hank González
Events
edit
Instituto Tecnológico de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey (Campus Estado de México)
founded.
Organizacion Editorial Mexicana
founded.
Universidad Intercontinental
established.
March 15:
Autonomous University of Baja California Sur
established.
July 4:
1976 Mexican general election
September 7 – 11:
Hurricane Kathleen
September 29 – October 8:
Hurricane Madeline
October 1:
Instituto Tecnológico de Nuevo León
established.
November 6: first issue of
Proceso (magazine)
published.
December 15: The
Trolleybuses in Guadalajara
start operating.
Awards
edit
Belisario Domínguez Medal of Honor
–
Jesús Romero Flores
Births
edit
June 7:
Nora Salinas
, actress
June 10:
Mariana Seoane
, model, singer, and actress
July 8:
Grettell Valdez
, television and film actress and former fashion model
[
2
]
December 3:
Arleth Terán
, soap opera actress
Film
edit
List of Mexican films of 1976
Sport
edit
1975–76 Mexican Primera División season
Diablos Rojos del México
win the
Mexican League
Mexico at the 1976 Summer Olympics
Mexico at the 1976 Summer Paralympics
1976 Central American and Caribbean Junior Championships in Athletics
in
Xalapa
.
References
edit
^
"Octavio Sentíes Gómez 1915-1996, veracruzano distinguido | Versiones"
(in Spanish). Versiones. September 30, 2016. Archived from
the original
on August 31, 2020
. Retrieved
August 28,
2020
.
^
"Grettell Valdez"
,
Las Noticias Mexico.com
(in Spanish)
, retrieved
Aug 24,
2019
External links
edit
Wikimedia Commons has media related to
1976 in Mexico
.