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History of Star Trek Television Series

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O...@psuvm.bitnet

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Feb 5, 1986, 10:44:19 AM2/5/86
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This is a list of startrek episodes that was sent to me via a co"worker". It's
origin is unknown.....


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Space, the final frontier.

These are the voyages of the starship Enterprise.
Its five-year mission: to explore strange new worlds,
to seek out new life and new civilizations,
to boldly go where no man has gone before.






----------------------------------------------------------------------


Classifications of the Star System:


*/2: The best part is the opening credits.

*: Poor, scientifically-unsound plot, with mediocre acting.

* 1/2: Mediocre plot and acting, scientifically sound but highly
implausible.

**: Average Star Trek, typical acting, not especially
intriguing.

** 1/2: A two-star show with some novel twist added.

***: A minimal "entertaining" episode.

*** 1/2: Fair, scientifically-sound plot, good acting. Usually has
at least one outstanding scene.

****: Good plot, damned good acting, no major flaws. To see such
an episode, a hard-core Trekkie would be willing to miss a
midterm in a non-departmental course.

**** 1/2: Excellent, well-developed plot, unparalleled acting. Only
flaw is in falling slightly short of full development of the
theme, or containing a minor error important to the plot. A
Trekkie would be willing to miss any midterm to see it.

*****: To see a 5-star episode, a Trekkie would be willing to skip
a final, to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous
fortune, to cross into the Romulan Neutral Zone, to boldly
go where no man has gone before.


The various classifications of the Star System were assigned
between stardates 1974.3 and 1975.5 by a general consensus
among members of the Bridge Crew, the regular Trek-watchers
of Stevenson Hall, at Princeton University.

[ I got this from the sflovers directory at Rutgers
over the summer of 1985. I disagreed with some of
the ratings, so my own rating follows the original
one in parens. I have also added notes to some of
the episodes.]

----------------------------------------------------------------------






FIRST SEASON


"THE MAN TRAP" [**]

First aired September 8, 1966. The Enterprise is ravaged by a creature that
sucks the salt from its victims' bodies, and that is capable of assuming any
identity.


"CHARLIE X" [***] (*1/2)

First aired September 15, 1966. A teenager, raised by aliens and possessing
some of their unusual powers, proves incapable of adjusting to human society
and emotions.


"WHERE NO MAN HAS GONE BEFORE" [****]

First aired September 22, 1966. In passing through an energy barrier at the
edge of the galaxy, some Enterprise crew members find their ESP powers
enormously heightened.


"THE NAKED TIME" [*** 1/2] (***)

First aired September 29, 1966. A strange malady strikes the crew of the
Enterprise, causing them to succumb to their innermost desires.


"THE ENEMY WITHIN" [* 1/2] (**)

First aired October 6, 1966. A transporter malfunction splits Kirk into two
personalities, one brutal and incapable of control, the other gentle and
incapable of command.


"MUDD'S WOMEN" [** 1/2] (**)

First aired October 13, 1966. Jack-of-all-illegal-trades Harry Mudd is
transported aboard the Enterprise along with his cargo, three irresistibly
beautiful women.


"WHAT ARE LITTLE GIRLS MADE OF?" [**]

First aired October 20, 1966. Nurse Chapel's long-lost fiance turns up in
control of a mechanism capable of producing android replicas of live beings.


"MIRI" [**] (**1/2)

First aired October 27, 1966. The landing party contracts a disease that
strikes after puberty, while the children still alive on the planet refuse to
let them contact the ship for help.


"DAGGER OF THE MIND" [***] (**1/2)

First aired November 3, 1966. A deranged escapee from a penal planet causes
Kirk to investigate the psychiatric treatments being administered there.


"THE CORBOMITE MANEUVER" [***] (***1/2)

First aired November 10, 1966. To stave off an attack by an alien vessel,
Kirk concocts the now-famous "Corbomite" bluff.


"THE MENAGERIE (part I)" [**** 1/2] (***1/2)

First aired November 17, 1966. Spock risks the death penalty by hijacking his
old commander, Captain Pike, to Talos IV. Court-martial testimony (actually
scenes taken from "The Cage", Star Trek's original pilot episode) recreates
the story of Pike's earlier encounter with the Talosians.


"THE MENAGERIE (part II)" [****] (***)

First aired November 24, 1966. The conclusion to the previous episode, in
which the remainder of the earlier visit to Talos IV is shown, and Spock makes
clear why he felt it necessary to return there with Pike.


"THE CONSCIENCE OF THE KING" [*/2] (***)

First aired December 8, 1966. The star of a Shakespearean acting company may
be the infamous "Kodos the Executioner".


"BALANCE OF TERROR" [*** 1/2] (****1/2)

First aired December 15, 1966. Kirk matches wits against a Romulan commander
in the first encounter between the species to occur in several decades.


"SHORE LEAVE" [**]

First aired December 29, 1966. The crew of the Enterprise takes shore leave
on a planet where their every thought is immediately converted to reality.


"GALILEO SEVEN" [* 1/2] (**)

First aired January 5, 1967. Spock finds himself in command of the
shuttlecraft Galileo, stranded on a hostile planetoid.


"THE SQUIRE OF GOTHOS" [** 1/2]

First aired January 12, 1967. The crew of the Enterprise are made unwilling
guests of the powerful but capricious General Trelane (retired).


"ARENA" [***] (****)

First aired January 19, 1967. Kirk and a reptilian alien (The Gorn) must duel
to the death to determine whose ship will survive.


"TOMORROW IS YESTERDAY" [****] (***)

First aired January 26, 1967. The Enterprise is accidentally flung back to
the year 1967, where they find they must take desperate measures in an attempt
to avoid changing history. You get to see the Enterprise from the bottom.


"COURT-MARTIAL" [**] (*1/2)

First aired February 2, 1967. Kirk is placed on trial when the ship's record
tapes show he committed an error that cost a man's life.


"RETURN OF THE ARCHONS" [**]

First aired February 9, 1967. An entire planet is under the total mental
control of a mysterious being known as "Landru".


"SPACE SEED" [*** 1/2] (****1/2)

First aired February 16, 1967. The Enterprise runs across a "sleeper ship"
full of supermen fleeing their defeat in the Eugenics Wars.


"A TASTE OF ARMAGEDDON" [***] (***1/2)

First aired February 23, 1967. The Enterprise and its crew are declared
casualties in an interplanetary war entirely simulated by computers.


"THIS SIDE OF PARADISE" [*** 1/2] (**)

First aired March 2, 1967. Strange spores cause the entire crew of the
Enterprise to mutiny and beam down to a planet where all work is done in unity
and contentment. Interesting encounter between Spock and an incredibly
beautiful blond.


"THE DEVIL IN THE DARK" [***] (****)

First aired March 9, 1967. A mining operation is ravaged by a monster that
dissolves men's bodies. The classic "Horta" bit.


"ERRAND OF MERCY" [*** 1/2] (**1/2)

First aired March 23, 1967. Kirk and Spock, stranded on Organia, attempt to
interfere with the Klingon occupation of the planet, despite the Organians'
insistence upon the necessity of non-violence.


"THE ALTERNATIVE FACTOR" [*] (**)

First aired March 30, 1967. A schizophrenic personality named Lazarus seems
to be the key to an anomaly in the space-time fabric of the universe.


"THE CITY ON THE EDGE OF FOREVER" [**** 1/2] (**)

First aired April 6, 1967. McCoy, suffering from an overdose of cordrazine,
vanishes through a time portal and somehow changes the past. Kirk and Spock
follow in an effort to rectify whatever it is that McCoy has done. Written by
Harlan Ellison, starring the bitch of bitches, Joan Collins.


"OPERATION--ANNIHILATE" [**] (***1/2)

First aired April 13, 1967. The Enterprise faces an onslaught by parasitic
creatures that invade the nervous system to take control of their hosts.






SECOND SEASON


"AMOK TIME" [****]

First aired September 15, 1967. Spock is forced by the instinctive Vulcan
mating cycle to return to his home planet and take a wife.


"WHO MOURNS FOR ADONAIS" [**] (***)

First aired September 22, 1967. The Enterprise is seized by a being claiming
to be the god Apollo, who requires their worship to sruvive.


"THE CHANGELING" [***] (*1/2)

First aired September 29, 1967. Nomad, an ancient Earth probe, has combined
with an alien probe (The Other) to form an incredibly powerful mechanism that
is determined to destroy all "imperfect" life forms.


"MIRROR, MIRROR" [***]

First aired October 6, 1967. Kirk, McCoy, Scott, and Uhura are accidentally
exchanged with their counterparts in a parallel universe, where instead of the
Federation they find a violent, dictatorial Empire.


"THE APPLE" [**] (**1/2)

First aired October 13, 1967. The Enterprise finds itself under attack by
Vaal, a machine that guides the actions and even the environment of a
primitive populace.


"THE DOOMSDAY MACHINE" [**** 1/2] (***1/2)

First aired October 20, 1967. The starships Enterprise and Constellation
battle an enormous machine that destroys planets and consumes them for fuel.


"CATSPAW" [* 1/2] (**1/2)

First aired October 27, 1967. Amidst an atmosphere of witches and dungeons, a
pair of aliens use seemingly magical powers in an attempt to trick further
scientific information from the people of the Enterprise.


"I, MUDD" [*** 1/2] (***)

First aired November 3, 1967. The Enterprise is forced to a planet populated
by androids and ruled by their old nemesis, Harcourt Fenton Mudd.


"METAMORPHOSIS" [*] (**)

First aired November 10, 1967. A shuttlecraft is forced down to a planet as
company for a stranded spaceman, who has been kept young by a gaseous alien
called the "Companion".


"JOURNEY TO BABEL" [***]

First aired November 17, 1967. Crisis piles atop crisis when the Enterprise is
in charge of transporting a volatile cargo of Federation diplomats, including
Spock's parents.


"FRIDAY'S CHILD" [***] (***1/2)

First aired December 1, 1967. Negotiations over mining rights become a battle
for survival when McCoy unintentionally violates a tribal taboo.


"THE DEADLY YEARS" [****] (**)

First aired December 8, 1967. Kirk is relieved of command when he and other
officers contract a disease that results in senility and death by old age
within days.


"OBSESSIONS" [*** 1/2]

First aired December 15, 1967. Kirk disregards all other responsibilities in
an effort to destroy a gaseous cloud that absorbs red corpuscles from human
bodies.


"WOLF IN THE FOLD" [* 1/2] (**)

First aired December 22, 1967. Scotty appears to be the only logical suspect
in a bizarre series of murders.


"THE TROUBLE WITH TRIBBLES" [*****] (***)

First aired December 29, 1967. Kirk must put up with Federation bureaucrats
and hordes of hungry tribbles while protecting a shipment of quadrotriticale
(wheat) against Klingon sabotage.


"THE GAMESTERS OF TRISKELION" [**]

First aired January 5, 1968. Kirk, Uhura, and Chekov are captured for use in
gambling conflicts.


"A PIECE OF THE ACTION" [*****] (***)

First aired January 12, 1968. Kirk must figure out a way to counteract the
effects of an earlier expedition, which caused a planet's civilization to
pattern itself after the Chicago mobs of the Twenties. Features Vic Tayback.


"THE IMMUNITY SYNDROME" [*** 1/2] (**)

First aired January 19, 1968. A gigantic single-celled creature, which feeds
on the energy necessary to our form of life, invades our galaxy.


"A PRIVATE LITTLE WAR" [***] (*****)

First aired February 2, 1968. When the Klingons hasten the arms development of
one faction on a hitherto peaceful planet, Kirk must arm the other side in
order to maintain a balance of power.


"RETURN TO TOMORROW" [** 1/2] (**)

First aired February 9, 1968. Highly advanced alien minds "borrow" bodies,
including those of Kirk and Spock, in order to build permanent android bodies.
One of them, however, does not wish to leave his borrowed body. With
Mariette Hartley.

"PATTERNS OF FORCE" [**] (**1/2)

First aired February 16, 1968. A Federation historian ignores the Prime
Directive and reshapes a planet's society along the lines of Nazi Germany.


"BY ANY OTHER NAME" [** 1/2] (***)

First aired February 23, 1968. A group of aliens from the Andromeda galaxy
commandeer the Enterprise to make the journey back home.


"THE OMEGA GLORY" [*] (**)

First aired March 1, 1968. Captain Tracy, believing he has found a planet
containing the secret of eternal youth, interferes in the struggle between the
two planetary cultures, the Yangs and the Kohms.


"THE ULTIMATE COMPUTER" [*** 1/2] (**)

First aired March 8, 1968. The Enterprise is put under total control of a new
type of computer, which then refuses to relinquish control.


"BREAD AND CIRCUSES" [*] (**)

First aired March 15, 1968. The Enterprise encounters a civilization that
combines the features of the Roman Empire with 20th-century technology.


"ASSIGNMENT: EARTH" [****] (***)

First aired March 29, 1968. On a historical fact-finding mission to 1969, the
Enterprise accidentally intercepts an interplanetary agent out to sabotage an
orbiting nuclear platform. Terri Garr in a classic bimbo role.






THIRD SEASON


"SPOCK'S BRAIN" [*]

First aired September 20, 1968. A mysterious woman surgically removes Spock's
brain.


"THE ENTERPRISE INCIDENT" [****] (***)

First aired September 27, 1968. Kirk goes mad and Spock turns traitor in an
attempt to steal an improved cloaking device from the Romulans.


"THE PARADISE SYNDROME" [*** 1/2] (****1/2)

First aired October 4, 1968. In a state of amnesia, Kirk marries and finds
happiness with Miramanee, an Indian maiden. Meanwhile, Spock must find a way
to save her planet from an impending meteor collision.


"AND THE CHILDREN SHALL LEAD" [*] (1/2)

First aired October 11, 1968. A group of children, under alien domination,
play on the crew members' secret fears in order to gain control of the ship.


"IS THERE IN TRUTH NO BEAUTY?" [** 1/2] (*1/2)

First aired October 18, 1968. Miranda, a telepath, is jealous of Spock's
greater abilities in forming a mind-link with Kollos, an alien so ugly that the
very sight of him can drive a man insane.


"SPECTRE OF THE GUN" [***] (* 1/2)

First aired October 25, 1968. Kirk et al find themselves on the losing side of
the gunfight at the OK Corral.


"DAY OF THE DOVE" [** 1/2] (**)

First aired November 1, 1968. Klingons and the Enterprise crew must unite to
overcome an alien who feeds on the hatred between them.


"FOR THE WORLD IS HOLLOW, AND I HAVE TOUCHED THE SKY" [**] (***)

First aired November 8, 1968. McCoy, suffering from a fatal disease, finds
himself romantically entangled with the priestess governing a planetoid/
spaceship on a collision course with another planet.


"THE THOLIAN WEB" [**] (**1/2)

First aired November 15, 1968. The Tholians entrap the Enterprise, not
believing that the crew is merely trying to save Kirk from a hyperspace warp.


"PLATO'S STEPCHILDREN" [*] (**)

First aired November 22, 1968. The dwarf Alexander's lack of mind-over-matter
abilities may be the only clue to aid Kirk in defeating a band of telekinetics.

"WINK OF AN EYE" [* 1/2] (**)

First aired November 29, 1968. The Enterprise is invaded by beings who move
too fast for human eyes to detect.


"THE EMPATH" [*/2] (**)

First aired December 6, 1968. Kirk, Spock, and McCoy are manipulated by aliens
who use them to teach compassion to a girl capable of absorbing the pain and
injuries of others.


"ELAAN OF TROYIUS" [** 1/2] (***)

First aired December 20, 1968. The Enterprise's task of transporting an
imperious woman to another planet for marriage is complicated by Kirk's falling
in love with her. Problems arise because this wench's tears are cause any man
touching them to fall madly in love with her, and guess who goes and does it --
none other than Kirk.

"WHOM GODS DESTROY" [* 1/2] (*)

First aired January 3, 1969. Captain Garth, having taken over the penal planet
where he was being treated, uses his ability to change shape in an attempt to
get aboard the Enterprise.


"LET THAT BE YOUR LAST BATTLEFIELD" [*/2] (1/2)

First aired January 10, 1969. Two two-toned beings try to get Kirk to take
sides in their racial disputes. I think one of these guys also was the
Riddler of Batman fame.

"THE MARK OF GIDEON" [** 1/2] (*1/2)

First aired January 17, 1969. Kirk is decoyed into a replica of the
Enterprise. While Spock searches for him through a maze of diplomatic red
tape, the people of Gideon are using him as a source of alien infection.


"THAT WHICH SURVIVES" [** 1/2] (*1/2)

First aired January 24, 1969. A mysterious woman whose touch is death
threatens the landing party.


"THE LIGHTS OF ZETAR" [***] (*)

First aired January 31, 1969. An electrical cloud formed by the life-essences
of the long-dead Zetarians seeks to possess the body of Scotty's new-found
sweetheart.


"REQUIEM FOR METHUSELAH" [**] (***1/2)

First aired February 14, 1969. Flint, an immortal, uses Kirk to rouse emotions
in Rana, an android, so that she will become fully human and can be a suitable,
immortal mate.


"THE WAY TO EDEN" [*/2] (*)

First aired February 21, 1969. A group of space hippies are searching for the
legendary planet of Eden. Doc Severin (ears) and Adam. Spock jams.


"THE CLOUD MINERS" [**] (**1/2)

First aired February 28, 1969. Kirk's attempt to pick up a shipment of a vital
mineral embroils him in the demands of the oppressed miners against the rulers.


"THE SAVAGE CURTAIN" [**] (*1/2)

First aired March 7, 1969. Lincoln of Earth and Sarek of Vulcan join Kirk and
Spock in battle against a group of villains, while alien observers examine the
distinctions between good and evil.


"ALL OUR YESTERDAYS" [***] (**1/2)

First aired March 14, 1969. A rescue mission to a planet whose sun is about to
nova results in Kirk, Spock, and McCoy being sent to various eras in the
planet's past.


"TURNABOUT INTRUDER" [* 1/2] (***)

First aired March 28, 1969. A woman bitterly jealous of Kirk uses an alien
device to exchange her consciousness with his, and then attempts to kill her
body and thus Kirk's mind.
__________________________________
...Well that's the list, As you can see I don't exactly follow the party
line when it comes to rating the episodes. But I hope this answers any question
about when any episode of StarTrek was first aired.

Kevin M. O'Boyle OH6.@PSUVM.BITNET

Jennifer Longstaff

unread,
Feb 11, 1986, 4:59:56 PM2/11/86
to
>Path: ....ulysses!burl!clyde!cbosgd!ukma!psuvm.bitnet!oh6
>From: O...@PSUVM.BITNET
>Subject: Re: History of Star Trek Television Series

>This is a list of startrek episodes that was sent to me via a co"worker".
> .............

>
> "RETURN TO TOMORROW" [** 1/2] (**)
>
>First aired February 9, 1968. Highly advanced alien minds "borrow" bodies,
>including those of Kirk and Spock, in order to build permanent android bodies.
>One of them, however, does not wish to leave his borrowed body. With
>Mariette Hartley.

Sorry, but I believe Mariette Hartley appeared as Zarabeth in "All Our
Yesterdays." Diana Muldaur was Felesa in "Return to Tomorrow."

- Jennifer Longstaff

Sean Yoda Rouse

unread,
Feb 12, 1986, 8:56:04 PM2/12/86
to

Here's the lastest stuff on Diane Duane's work.

She has finished her third "Door" novel, "Wizard" novel, and Thieves'
World stories. They're due to come out "soon." The protagonist of the third
door novel is Freelorn, and she's toying with making Sunspark the protagonist
of the fourth. (The "five" in 'Tale of the Five' are Herewiss, Freelorn,
Segnbora, Hasai and Sunspark) She also mentioned something about Hasai being
pregnant. (?!!!!)
Diane Duane also mentioned that she's writing another wizard novel that
has an adult heroine. She's a television reporter who has let her wizard
practice slide for a while, but suddenly wakes up one day to find herself on
active duty with stuff to take care of inbetween the interview and the
garden party. Her cameraman is her quasi-apprentice. She said it was going
to be weird.
The third Wizard novel (I forgot to ask for a title) has Nita's little
sister Dairine as the main character. She takes off for Mars from the lady's
room of one of those big New York Museums. (Forgive this Southern-Californian
view of the East Coast, I have a lousy memory for details.) To give you an
idea of what this book will be like, Diane Duane mentioned the following two
scenes:
Nita goes to Tom Swale when her little sister goes missing.
"Did she mention where she was going?" says Swale.
"She said something about going to find Darth Vader ...
And your first instinct is to feel sorry for Darth Vader.

Dairine has been through alien ports, and slimy things with tentacles
and guns and nastiness have been chasing her all along. She's very nearly{
overloaded. She ducks into a bar trying to find a back way out. There isn't
one, and then this hand falls down on her shoulder. She shrieks at the top
of her lungs, and whirls around to find herself faced with a tall, blonde
man. Normal-looking, with a coat that has "?"s on the lapels. (Reminds you
of "My Enemy, My Ally", don't it?)...

In case you're unfamiliar with the wizard novels, "So YOu Want to Be
A Wizard?" and "Deep Wizardry", take heart. They're due to come out in
paperback by the end of the year. But you may have to search through the
juveniles section in the bookstore.

Duane also said that she probably won't be doing anything with the
comic book for a while, because of the editorial change on the book, and
that there are no Star Trek novels on the near horizon, although she has
been approached to due a Romulan history/culture type of work, similar
to the Romulan Dictionary. Nothing definite. She also said something offhand
about how issue #28 of the comic book would be about Dr. McCoy and was
entirely crazed.

She's signed the contract for the fourth Door book, and she should
be finished with it next year, sometime.

She also mentioned a new computer game coming out (in which she
gleefully ignores anything Paramount has to say) dealing with Star Trek.


The rest of this article isn't news, it's just miscellaneous junk I picked
up during out conversation.

Chris Claremont has finally turned in his novel. There was also
mention of Dairine's being an extensive X-Men fan saving her in certain
situations.
(Boast time!!) She also mentioned that I was the first to pick up
on the author of the Wizard's manual being "Hearnssen" (Herewiss, Hearn's
Son...).
She's unmarried, has never been married, and is an expert cat tail-
cracker.
I also discovered one more work that wasn't on my completeist
list, which is a short story in an anthology. "Midnight Snack". The book
is something weird, like "Sixteen Short Stories For Young People by
Modern Authors." Duane mentioned that this story is the first time she
ever set out to write a killer first line. (the line is :"Dad came down
with the flu last Tuesday, so I had to go down the subway to feed the
unicorns.")

Anyways, that's about all I can remember from off the top of
my head. I hope this has been of some use to someone.

--Kathy Li

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
ARPA: cc...@cory.berkeley.edu
UUCP: ucbvax!cory!cc-30

Ford, there's an infinite number of monkeys here that want to talk to us about
this script for Hamlet they've worked out.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

Roger J. Noe

unread,
Feb 13, 1986, 6:05:28 PM2/13/86
to
In article <4329OH6@PSUVM> Kevin M. O'Boyle writes:
> "TURNABOUT INTRUDER" [* 1/2] (***)
>
> First aired March 28, 1969. A woman bitterly jealous of Kirk uses an alien
> device to exchange her consciousness with his, and then attempts to kill her
> body and thus Kirk's mind.

The episode "Turnabout Intruder," the last Star Trek episode to air on
network TV, was originally shown on June 3, 1969 rather than March 28, 1969.
This is verified by both Trimble's Concordance and Asherman's Compendium.
--
Roger Noe ihnp4!riccb!rjnoe

j m deacon

unread,
Feb 18, 1986, 8:40:50 AM2/18/86
to
> Sorry, but I believe Mariette Hartley appeared as Zarabeth in "All Our
> Yesterdays." Diana Muldaur was Felesa in "Return to Tomorrow."

Diana played Anne Mulhall who was taken over by Thalassa.
She also played Miranda in "Is There in Truth No Beauty?"
--
Jim Deacon
ihnp4!ihu1g!deacon

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