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Inouye's first wife was Margaret "Maggie" Shinobu Awamura, who was working as a speech instructor at the University of Hawaiʻi when Inouye was attending as a prelaw student after the war. The two married on June 12, 1948, at the Harris Memorial Methodist Church in Honolulu. [39] She died of cancer on March 13, 2006.
Dolphin was designed under project SCB 207. [3] Her keel was laid on 9 November 1962 at the Portsmouth Navy Yard, Kittery, Maine.She was launched on 8 June 1968, sponsored by Mrs. Maggie Shinobu Inouye, (née Awamura), wife of U.S. Senator Daniel K. Inouye, and commissioned on 17 August 1968 with Lieutenant Commander J.R. McDonnell in command.
Shinobu Agata (縣 忍, Agata Shinobu, June 30, 1881 – January 6, 1942) was Director of the Karafuto Agency (1929–1931). He was Governor of Yamagata Prefecture (1922–1924), Kagoshima Prefecture (1924–1926), Chiba Prefecture (1926–1927), Gunma Prefecture (1927–1928), Osaka (1932–1935) and Mayor of Nagoya (1939 – January 6, 1942).
Margaret Smagorinsky (23 December 1915 – 14 November 2011) was an American statistician, computer programmer, and pioneering weather technologist. [1] She was the first female statistician hired by the US Weather Bureau and the wife of meteorologist Joseph Smagorinsky .
27th Japan Academy Prize. [2]Won: Best Director - Yoshimitsu Morita; Won: Best Screenplay - Tomomi Tsutsui; Won: Best Actress in a Supporting Role - Eri Fukatsu; Nominated: Best Picture
Bessatsu Margaret (別冊マーガレット, Bessatsu Māgaretto, "Margaret additional volume"), or Betsuma (別マ) for short, is a shōjo manga magazine published monthly in Japan by Shueisha since 1964.
Iwashita was born in Tokyo, Japan, as the eldest daughter of Kiyoshi Nonomura and Miyoko Yamagishi, both stage actors. [1] In 1958, while still attending high school, she made her first television appearance in the NHK series Basu tōri ura. [1]
Margaret Avery is an American actress. She began her career appearing on stage and later had starring roles in films including Cool Breeze (1972), Which Way Is Up? (1977), Scott Joplin (1977) which earned her an NAACP Image Award nomination, and The Fish That Saved Pittsburgh (1979).