Difference between revisions of "2268"
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- Ceti Alpha VI explodes. The effect alters Ceti Alpha V's orbit slightly, transforming it from a luxurious garden world into an inhospitable desert.[1]
- Lieutenant Commander Willard Decker receives a short-term shore assignment on Delta IV.[2]
- Stardate 4040.7: Captain Kirk and a landing party are forced to fight in gladiatorial games on a planet modeled after the Roman Empire.[3]
- Stardate 4202.9: After losing his entire crew to an alien planet-eating machine, Commodore Matthew Decker pulls rank on Captain Kirk in order to play a game of cat-and-mouse with the mechanical adversary. His efforts to destroy the menace place the Enterprise in grave danger. In a tactic later known as the Kirk Defense, and following Decker's self-sacrificial example, the Enterprise crew disables the Doomsday Machine by setting the Constellation's engines for self-destruct, exploding the starship inside the Doomsday Machine.[4]
- Stardate 4211.4: Captain Kirk must decide how to save a primitive people from the technological interference of the Klingons.[5]
- Stardate 4307.1: The crew of the Enterprise encounters an energy-draining space creature.[6]
- Stardate 4372.5: Captain Kirk hosts a spoiled princess, who must bring peace to a star system at war.[7]
- Stardate 4385.3: For trespassing on an alien world, Captain Kirk and his companions are forced to re-enact the famous shoot-out at the O.K. Corral with themselves cast as the losing side.[8]
- Stardate 4513.3: Captain Kirk and the crew have another run-in with Harry Mudd, this time finding him as the king of a planet of androids.[9]
- Stardate 4523.3: Tribbles—purring, limbless, and fertile—disrupt the colonization of a disputed planet between the Klingon Empire and the Federation.[10]
- Stardate 4598.0: The Enterprise visits a planet with a violent culture based on America's 1920s prohibition era.[11]
- Stardate 4657.5: Beings from the Andromeda galaxy steal the Enterprise, modify it, and attempt to return home.[12]
- Stardate Unknown: Captain Kirk must battle a deadly virus and a treacherous fellow starship captain to stop an intertribal war.[13]
- Stardate 4729.4: A new computer system causes havoc while being tested aboard the Enterprise.[14]
- Stardate 4768.3: Telepathic aliens take control of Kirk and Spock's bodies with the intention to build new, mechanized bodies for themselves.[15]
- Stardate Unknown: During an historical research mission in 1968, the Enterprise encounters Gary Seven, a human with advanced technology who appears to be attempting to alter Earth's history.[16]
- Stardate 4842.6: A mysterious alien device on a planet with a predominantly Native American culture erases Captain Kirk's memory, and he begins a life with them as a member of their tribe.[17]
- Stardate 5027.3: The Enterprise participates in a Starfleet operation to seize a prototype of a new Romulan cloaking device. The Enterprise escapes with both the device and confirmation that the Romulans are using ships of Klingon design.[18]
- Stardate 5029.5: The crew of the Enterprise rescues a group of children stranded on a planet, along with their evil "imaginary" friend.[19]
- Stardate 5121.5: While visiting a doomed planet, an Enterprise landing party is subject to torturous experiments to test an empathic race.[20]
- Stardate 5423.4: An overpopulated race of aliens abduct Kirk to solve their population problem.[21]
- Stardate 5431.4: Captain Kirk pursues aliens who have stolen Spock's brain.[22]
- Stardate 5476.3: As Dr. McCoy discovers he is dying of an incurable disease, the crew of the Enterprise rush to stop an asteroid from colliding with a Federation world, only to discover that the asteroid is, in fact, a disguised alien vessel. They find an entire civilization living in the ship who believe they are actually on a planet, and a dictatorial "Oracle" who forbids any attempt to discover the truth.[23]
- Stardate 5630.7: The Enterprise transports an alien ambassador who must travel inside a special case, because his appearance causes insanity.[24]
U.S.S. Defiant in interphase (TOS 64)
- Stardate 5693.2: Captain Kirk is caught between dimensions while the Enterprise is trapped by an energy draining web spun by the Tholians.[25]
Notes and References
- ↑ Salin, Robert (Producer). Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan. Directed by Nicholas Meyer. Story by Harve Bennett and Jack B. Sowards. Screenplay by Nicholas Meyer (Uncredited). Paramount Pictures. 4 June 1982.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Producer). Star Trek: The Motion Picture. Directed by Robert Wise. Story by Alan Dean Foster. Screenplay by Harold Livingston. Paramount Pictures. 7 December 1979.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer). "Bread and Circuses." Star Trek, Season 2, Episode 14. Directed by Ralph Senensky. Written by Gene Roddenberry and Gene L. Coon. Desilu Productions, 15 March 1968.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer). "The Doomsday Machine." Star Trek, Season 2, Episode 6. Directed by Marc Daniels. Written by Norman Spinrad. Desilu Productions, 20 October 1967.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer/Teleplay). "A Private Little War." Star Trek, Season 2, Episode 16. Directed by Marc Daniels. Story by Jud Crucis. Desilu Productions, 2 February 1968.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer). "The Immunity Syndrome." Star Trek, Season 2, Episode 19. Directed by Joseph Pevney. Written by Robert Sabaroff. Desilu Productions, 19 January 1968.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer) and Freiberger, Fred (Producer). "Elaan of Troyius." Star Trek, Season 3, Episode 2. Directed by John Meredyth Lucas. Written by John Meredyth Lucas. Paramount Pictures Corporation, 20 December 1968.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer) and Freiberger, Fred (Producer). "Spectre of the Gun." Star Trek, Season 3, Episode 1. Directed by Vincent McEveety. Written by Lee Cronin. Paramount Pictures Corporation, 25 October 1968.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer). "I, Mudd." Star Trek, Season 2, Episode 12. Directed by Marc Daniels. Written by Stephen Kandel. Desilu Productions, 3 November 1967.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer). "The Trouble With Tribbles." Star Trek, Season 2, Episode 13. Directed by Joseph Pevney. Written by David Gerrold. Desilu Productions, 29 December 1967.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer). "A Piece of the Action." Star Trek, Season 2, Episode 20. Directed by James Komack. Written by David P. Harmon (Story and Teleplay) and Gene L. Coon (Teleplay). Desilu Productions, 12 January 1968.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer). "By Any Other Name." Star Trek, Season 2, Episode 21. Directed by Marc Daniels. Story by Jerome Bixby Teleplay by Jerome Bixby & D.C. Fontana. Desilu Productions, 23 February 1968.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer). "The Omega Glory." Star Trek, Season 2, Episode 25. Directed by Vincent McEveety. Written by Gene Roddenberry. Desilu Productions, 1 March 1968.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer). "The Ultimate Computer." Star Trek, Season 2, Episode 24. Directed by John Meredyth Lucas. Story by Laurence N. Wolfe. Teleplay by D.C. Fontana. Desilu Productions, 8 March 1968.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer). "Return to Tomorrow." Star Trek, Season 2, Episode 22. Directed by Ralph Senensky. Written by John Kingsbridge. Desilu Productions, 9 February 1968.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer/Story). "Assignment: Earth." Star Trek, Season 2, Episode 26. Directed by Marc Daniels. Story by Gene Roddenberry & Art Wallace. Teleplay by Art Wallace. Desilu Productions, 29 March 1968.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer) and Freiberger, Fred (Producer). "The Paradise Syndrome." Star Trek, Season 3, Episode 3. Directed by Jud Taylor. Written by Margaret Armen. Paramount Pictures Corporation, 4 October 1968.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer) and Freiberger, Fred (Producer). "The Enterprise Incident." Star Trek, Season 3, Episode 4. Directed by John Meredyth Lucas. Written by D.C. Fontana. Paramount Pictures Corporation, 27 September 1968.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer) and Freiberger, Fred (Producer). "And the Children Shall Lead." Star Trek, Season 3, Episode 5. Directed by Marvin Chomsky. Written by Edward J. Lakso. Paramount Pictures Corporation, 11 October 1968.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer) and Freiberger, Fred (Producer). "The Empath." Star Trek, Season 3, Episode 8. Directed by John Erman. Written by Joyce Muskat. Paramount Pictures Corporation, 6 December 1968.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer) and Freiberger, Fred (Producer). "The Mark of Gideon." Star Trek, Season 3, Episode 17. Directed by Jud Taylor. Written by George F. Slavin and Stanley Adams. Paramount Pictures Corporation, 17 January 1969.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer) and Freiberger, Fred (Producer). "Spock's Brain." Star Trek, Season 3, Episode 6. Directed by Marc Daniels. Written by Lee Cronin. Paramount Pictures Corporation, 20 September 1968.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer) and Freiberger, Fred (Producer). "For the World is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky." Star Trek, Season 3, Episode 10. Directed by Tony Leader. Written by Rik Vollaerts. Paramount Pictures Corporation, 8 November 1968.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer) and Freiberger, Fred (Producer). "Is There In Truth No Beauty?." Star Trek, Season 3, Episode 7. Directed by Ralph Senensky. Written by Jean Lisette Aroeste. Paramount Pictures Corporation, 18 October 1968.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer) and Freiberger, Fred (Producer). "The Tholian Web." Star Trek, Season 3, Episode 9. Directed by Herb Wallerstein and Ralph Senensky. Written by Judy Burns and Chet Richards. Paramount Pictures Corporation, 15 November 1968.