Vista normal Vista MARC
  • Webb, James,

Webb, James, 1946 Febrero 9- (Autor Personal)

Forma preferida: Webb, James, 1946 Febrero 9-
Usado por/ver desde:
  • Cabecera anterior: Webb, James H.
  • Webb, Jim, 1946-
  • ווב, ג׳יימס, 1946-
  • Webb, James, Jr., 1946-
  • Webb, James H., Jr., 1946-
  • Cabecera anterior: Webb, James H., Jr
  • Webb, Henry, Jr

Machine-derived non-Latin script reference project.

Non-Latin script reference not evaluated.

Writer.

Data contributed by the Dance Heritage Coalition for the New York Public Library Dance Collection.

Micronesia and the U.S. Pacific strategy, 1974.

A country such as this, 1983: t.p. (James Webb)

Something to die for, c1991: t.p. (James Webb) jkt. (Marine Corps service in Vietnam, journalist; former Assistant Secretary of Defense)

Contemporary authors on CD, June 1999 (Webb, James H(enry) Jr., b. Feb. 9, 1946)

A time to fight, 2008: t.p. (Jim Webb)

Wikipedia, October 14, 2015 (Jim Webb; James Henry "Jim" Webb, Jr. (born February 9, 1946); American politician and author; he has served as a United States Senator from Virginia, Secretary of the Navy, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Reserve Affairs, Counsel for the United States House Committee on Veterans' Affairs and Marine Corps officer; Emmy Award winning journalist, a filmmaker, and the author of ten books (six novels). In addition, he taught literature at the United States Naval Academy and was a Fellow at the Harvard Institute of Politics; member of the Democratic Party; U.S. Senator in office January 3, 2007-January 3, 2013; United States Secretary of the Navy in office May 1, 1987-February 23, 1988; born St. Joseph, Missouri)

His website, October 14, 2015: home page (Jim Webb; books: I Heard My Country Calling (2014); Fields of Fire (1978); A Sense of Honor (1981); A Country Such as This (1983); Something to Die For (1991); The Emperor's General (1999); Lost Soldiers (2001); Born Fighting (2004); A Time to Fight (2008)) about Jim (former Senator from Virginia, has been a combat Marine, a counsel in the Congress, an assistant secretary of defense and Secretary of the Navy, an Emmy-award winning journalist, a film-maker, and the author of ten books; graduated from the Naval Academy in 1968; graduated from the Georgetown University Law Center in 1975; counsel to the House Committee on Veterans Affairs from 1977 to 1981; in 1984 he was appointed Assistant Secretary of Defense for Reserve Affairs, and in 1987 became Secretary of the Navy; traveling widely as a journalist, he received an Emmy Award for his PBS coverage of the U.S. Marines in Beirut in 1983, and in 2004 was embedded with the U.S. military in Afghanistan. A screenwriter and producer, his original story "Rules of Engagement" held the top slot in U.S. box offices for two weeks in April 2000) http://www.jameswebb.com/

OCLC, October 14, 2015 (access points: Webb, James H.; Webb, James H., Jr; Webb, Jim; usage: Jim Webb; James Webb; James Webb, Jr.; James H. Webb, Jr.; predominant usage: James Webb)

Dance magazine. June 1974, p. 3, 64.