Stand by for Mars! by Carey Rockwell (motivational novels for students TXT) ๐

Description
Inspired by Robert A. Heinleinโs 1948 novel Space Cadet, the Tom Corbett series started as a TV show in 1950. It stayed on the air for five years and, among other things, spawned a series of novels published by Grosset & Dunlap. Written by unknown authors, they were published under the pseudonym Carey Rockwell, with Willy Ley (the TV showโs technical director) listed as technical advisor.
Stand by for Mars! is the first of eight novels written between 1952 and 1956. It features a young Tom Corbett who is trying to fulfill his dream of becoming a Space Cadet on his way to joining the Solar Guard. But interpersonal conflicts stand in his way. Tom, along with his unit-mates Astro and Roger Manning, must find a way past their difficulties or else risk being washed out. Their adventure takes them from the rigours of the Academy on Earth to the rugged and deadly deserts of Mars where they need to learn that only by working together can they hope to survive.
An entire generation grew up on the adventures of Tom Corbettโit spawned radio shows, music recordings and a whole series of toys and tie-ins. Fans still maintain a Tom Corbett Space Cadet website and have held reunions as recently as 2006. Stand by for Mars! is a classic example of the space-crazy juvenile fiction of its era.
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- Author: Carey Rockwell
Read book online ยซStand by for Mars! by Carey Rockwell (motivational novels for students TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Carey Rockwell
She began handing out the tubes and, one by one, the green-clad candidates stepped to the front of the room to receive them.
โExcuse me, Maโam,โ said one cadet falteringly. โIfโ โifโ โI wash out as a cadetโ โas a Solar Guard officer cadetโโ โhe gulped several timesโ โโdoes that mean there isnโt any chance of becoming a spaceman?โ
โNo,โ she answered kindly. โYou can become a member of the enlisted Solar Guard, if you can pass the acceleration tests.โ
โThank you, Maโam,โ replied the boy and turned away nervously.
Tom Corbett accepted the tube and hurried back to his seat. He knew that this was the last hurdle. He did not know that the papers had been prepared individually, the tests given on the basis of the entrance exams he had taken back at New Chicago Primary Space School.
He opened the tube, pulling out the four sheets, printed on both sides of the paper, and read the heading on the first: Astrogation, Communications, Signals (Radar)
He studied the first question.
โโฆ What is the range of the Mark Nine radar-scope, and how far can a spaceship be successfully distinguished from other objects in space?โ โโ โฆโ
He read the question four times, then pulled out a pencil and began to write.
Only the rustle of the papers, or the occasional sigh of a cadet over a problem, disturbed the silence in the high-ceilinged room, as the hundred-odd cadets fought the questions.
There was a sudden stir in the room and Tom looked up to see Roger Manning walk to the slot and casually deposit his tube in the green-bordered slot. Then he leaned idly against the wall waiting for it to be returned. As he stood there, he spoke to Dr. Dale, who smiled and replied. There was something about his attitude that made Tom boil. So fast? He glanced at his own papers. He had hardly finished two sheets and thought he was doing fine. He clenched his teeth and bent over the paper again, redoubling his efforts to triangulate a fix on Regulus by using dead reckoning as a basis for his computations.
Suddenly a tall man, wearing the uniform of a Solar Guard officer, appeared in the back of the room. As Dr. Dale looked up and smiled a greeting, he placed his finger on his lips. Steve Strong, Captain in the Solar Guard, gazed around the room at the backs bent over busy pencils. He did not smile, remembering how, only fifteen years before, he had gone through the same torture, racking his brains trying to adjust the measurements of a magnascope prism. He was joined by a thin handsome young man, Lieutenant Judson Saminsky, and finally, Warrant Officer McKenny. They nodded silently in greeting. It would be over soon. Strong glanced at the clock over the desk. Another ten minutes to go.
The line of boys at the slots grew until more than twenty stood there, each waiting patiently, nervously, for his turn to drop the tube in the slot and receive in return the sealed cylinder that held his fate.
Still at his desk, his face wet with sweat, Astro looked at the question in front of him for the fifteenth time.
โโฆ Estimate the time it would take a 300-ton rocket ship with half-filled tanks, cruising at the most economical speed to make a trip from Titan to Venusport. (a) Estimate size and maximum capacity of fuel tanks. (b) Give estimate of speed ship would utilize.โ โโ โฆโ
He thought. He slumped in his chair. He stared at the ceiling. He chewed his pencil.โ โโ โฆ
Five seats away, Tom stacked his examination sheets neatly, twisted them into a cylinder and inserted them in the tube. As he passed the line of desks and headed for the slot, a hand caught his arm. Tom turned to see Roger Manning grinning at him.
โWorried, spaceboy?โ asked Roger easily. Tom didnโt answer. He simply withdrew his arm.
โYou know,โ said Roger, โyouโre really a nice kid. Itโs a shame you wonโt make it. But the rules specifically say โno cabbageheads.โโโ
โNo talking!โ Dr. Dale called sharply from her desk.
Tom walked away and stood in the line at the slots. He found himself wanting to pass more than anything in the world. โPlease,โ he breathed, โplease, just let me passโ โโ
A soft gong began to sound. Dr. Dale stood up.
โTimeโs up,โ she announced. โPlease put your papers in the tubes and drop them in the slot.โ
Tom turned to see Astro stuffing his papers in the thin cylinder disgustedly. Phil Morgan came up and stood in back of Tom. His face was flushed.
โEverything OK, Phil?โ inquired Tom.
โEasy as free falling in space,โ replied the other cadet, his soft Georgian drawl full of confidence. โHow about you?โ
โIโm just hoping against hope.โ
The few remaining stragglers hurried up to the line.
โThink Astroโll make it?โ asked Phil.
โI donโt know,โ answered Tom, โI saw him sweating over there like a man facing death.โ
โI guess he isโ โin a way.โ
Astro took his place in line and shrugged his shoulders when Tom leaned forward to give him a questioning look.
โGo ahead, Tom,โ urged Phil. Tom turned and dropped his tube into the green-bordered slot and waited. He stared straight at the wall in front of him, hardly daring to breathe. Presently, the tube was returned in the red slot. He took it, turned it over in his hands and walked slowly back to his desk.
โYouโre washed out, cabbagehead!โ Manningโs whisper followed him. โLetโs see if you can take it without bawling!โ
Tomโs face burned and he fought an impulse to answer Manning with a stiff belt in the jaw. But he kept walking, reached his desk and sat down.
Astro, the last to return to his desk, held the tube out in front of him as if it were alive. The room was silent as Dr. Dale rose from her desk.
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