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He was a living weapon of destruction--immeasurably powerful, utterly invulnerable. There was only one question: Was he human?
Luke Skywalker returns for an all-new adventure in this thrilling upper middle grade novel. Set between Star Wars: A New Hope and Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back, the story finds Luke Skywalker, C-3PO, and R2-D2 stranded on a mysterious planet, and explores a dangerous duel between Luke and a strange new villain. Hidden in the story are also clues and hints about the upcoming film Star Wars: The Force Awakens, making this a must-read for fans old and new!
Investigates military missile development contracting procedures and industry profit justification for Nike, Ajax and Hercules systems.
We barely won the battle at Mercury's shipyards, but the war is just beginning. The Telestines, in control of Earth, now pursue us from planet to planet, moon to moon, leaving terrible destruction in their wake. And now, the unthinkable: a new alien weapon with the power to destroy a whole world. Thousands die on Jupiter's moon Io when a bomb detonates, sending apocalyptic storms of debris that threaten millions of people on Ganymede and Callisto. But that isn't the worst of it. The bomb was detonated by a human. A drone. And there are thousands of them scattered across the solar system, anonymous, undetectable, and waiting for orders from their Telestine masters. Our war becomes a race against time: find the bombs, find the drones, find our true enemy, all while under siege from within and without. Before we all perish.
Committee Print "Fifteenth Report to Congress on the Department of Defense Cataloging and Standardization Programs," submitted by the Special Investigations Subcommittee of the House Committee on Armed Services (Jan. 31, 1960. iii+6 p.). Committee Print "Defense Cataloging and Standardization Programs," submitted by the Special Investigations Subcommittee of the House Committee on Armed Services (July 31, 1960. iii+4 p.).
Traces the development of weapons through the lives of such inventors and their inventions as David Bushnell and the submarine, Samuel Colt and the revolver, John Ericsson and the battleship, Hiram Maxim and the machine gun, and Ernest Swinton and the tank.