[net.tv] Trek Episode List Request

dwhitney@uok.UUCP (01/11/85)

/***** uok:net.startrek / dwhitney /  2:04 am  Dec 23, 1984 */
This is in fulfillment of a request in net.tv for a list of
all the titles of Star Trek episodes.

First Season:
"The Man Trap" by George Johnson.  Salt creature kills people
for salt and can masquerade has humans.

"Charlie X" by D.C. Fontana.  Young boy from alien expedition
has great powers, but does not know how to use them.

"Where No Man has Gone Before." by Sam Peeples.  Enterprise
exits galaxy, and crewmembers with high ESP become supermen.

"The Naked Time" by John D.F. Black.  Strange disease causes
latent emotions to come to forefront, infecting crew of Enterprise.
Good one for Spock.

"The Enemy Within" by Richard Matheson.  Malfunction on Enterprise
transporters causes doubles to be created of Capt. Kirk/ one good,
one evil.

"Mudd's Women" by Stephen Kandel.  Space pirate carries cargo of
three hypnotically beautiful women.

"What are LIttle Girls Made of" by Robert Bloch.  Genius scientist
attempts immortality by creating perfect mechanical replicas of
bodies.

"Miri" by Adrian Spies.  Earth twin's failed attempt in life-pro-
longation results in disease among the planets remaining children.

"Dagger of the Mind" by Shimon Wincelberg.  Insane patient at
psycopath hospital uses treatment machine to drive people crazy.

"Corbomite Maneuver" by Jerry Sohl.  Enterprise plays cat-and-mouse
with huge spacecraft.

"The Menagerie" by Gene Roddenberry.  Hailed as the best of them
all, the story is a compilation of what was the original ST pilot,
"The Cage."  Spock wrests control of Enterprise to take its previous
captain to strange and forbidden world for unexplained reasons,
resulting in a bizarre court martial.

"The Conscience of the King." by Barry Trivers.  Shakesperian acting
troupe has as a member Anton Karidian, a man who previously ordered the
execution of virtually an entire race, and Kirk is among the only living
people who can identify him.

"Balance of Terror."  by Paul Schneider.  Romulans attack Federation
outposts, and Enterprise is sent to prevent war.

"Shore Leave" by Theodore Sturgeon.  Recreation planet turns into terror
as thoughts of its visitors instantly become bizarre reality.

"Galileo Seven" by Oliver Crawford and S. Bar David.  Shuttlecraft
is stranded on hostile planet with Spock, McCoy, Scott and others.
Enterprise attempts seemingly futile rescue attempt under Star Fleet
pressure to abandon search.

"The Squire of Gothos" by Paul Schnieder.  An adult man, really a 
child, creates havoc for the Enterprise by kidnapping Kirk.

"Arena" by Gene Coon.  Aliens destroy peaceful Earth outpost, and
Kirk sends Enterprise on revenge mission, only to find himself and
the opposing captain in a fight-to-the-death.

"Tomorrow is Yesterday" by D. C. Fontana.  Enterprise, caught in a
time warp, is trapped in 1960's Earth and is spotted as a UFO.

"Court Martial" by Don Mankiewicz and Stephen Carabatos.  Kirk is
accused of negligence in the death of a crewmember.

"The Return of the Archons" by Boris Sobelman.  Enterprise is sent
to investigate planet run entirely by computer called "Landru."

"Space Seed" by Gene Coon.  The basis for the second theatrical film,
the "Wrath of Khan", a 20th century Earth Superman attempts to wrest
control of the Enterprise.

"A Taste of Armagaeddon" by Robert Jammer and Gene Coon.  A computer-run
war between planets is turned into the real thing by Captain Kirk.

"This side of Paradise" by D.C. Fontana.  Strange spores infect planet
inhabitants with sense of euphoria, but no sense of purpose.  Enterprise
crew mutinies, Spock falls in love.

"The Devil in the Dark" by Gene Coon.  Mysterious creature on mining
planet is responsible for several deaths in protection of her children.

"Errand of Mercy" by Gene Coon.  Enterprise is sent to protect Organia
from imminent Klingon attack, but the Organians forbid the inevitable war
between Earth and the Klingon empire, forging the now-famous Organian
peace treaty.

"The Alternative Factor" by Don Ingalls.  Two identical beings from
;opposite universes battle for mutual destruction.  Kirk must decide
which is right; shoves them both out an airlock.

"City on the Edge of Forever" by Harlan Ellison.  Another of Star
Trek's best, Joan Collins co-stars as social worker in 1930s USA.
Kirk and Spock are sent back in time as McCoy changes history and
wipes out Enterprise; Kirk falls in love with Collins character,
Edith Keeler; but to set history straight, finds she must die.

"Operation, Annihilate" by Stephen Carabatsos.  Strange red objects
invade and kill humans, including Kirk's brother.  Kirk must find way
to destroy objects before further spread.

Second Season
"Amok Time" by Theodore Sturegon.  Spock finds himself in need of mating,
and ends up nearly killing Kirk.

"Who Mourns for Adonais" by Gilbert Ralston and Gene Coon.  Apollo
commandeers the Enterprise and her crew.

"The Changeling."  by John Lucas.  20th century earth-probe returns
and wipes out all "imperfect life forms" on its return trip, looking
for "launch point Earth," and mistakes Kirk for its creator.  Much
like the premise for the much-maligned "Star Trek-The Motion Picture."

"Mirror, Mirror" by Jerome BIxby.  Command Crew of Enteprise is beamed
into violent opposite universe.

"The Apple." by Max Ehrlich.  Naive soceity is guided by creature called
"Vall."

"The Doomsday Machine."  by Norman Spinrad.   Retelling of Ahab and
the Whale, Commodore goes on mad rampage to destroy machine which killed
his ship and crew.

"Catspaw" by Robert Bloch and D. C. Fontana.  Star Trek's Halloween tale, with
cats and witches, ghosts and goblins.

"I, Mudd" by Stephen Kandel.  Harry Mudd now lives on planet of androids,
and plans to strand Kirk and crew there in his place.

"Metamorphosis" by Gene Coon.  Inventor of space-warp is discovered
alone on a remote planet, but his "companion" in the form of an energy
being is discovered.

"Journey to Babel" by D.C. Fontana.  Spock's father, Sarek is the Vulca
representative to an important Federation meeting.  Espionage results
in murder, and Spock must choose between saving his father or his duties
as commander while Kirk is injured.

"The Deadly Years." by David Harmon.  Kirk, Spock and Scotty are afflicteed 
with radiation poisoning, and age rapidly

"Obsession" by Art Wallace.  Strange, murderous mist obsesses Kirk for its
destruction.

"Wolf in the Fold" by Robert Bloch.  Scotty is the only suspect in three
murders on a peacful planet, but it turns out to be Jack the Ripper.

"Trouble with Tribbles" by David Gerrold.  Another one of ST's best.
Strange, peaceful little creatures called Tribbles wreck havoc with a
grain project on Space Station K-7.

"The Gamesters of Triskelion" by Margaret Armen.  Kirk, Chekov and Uhura
are kidnapped to a slave planet and are trained for a life of slavery.

"A Piece of the action" by John Kingsbridge.  Campy tale of an Earth-like
planet in which Chicago-like gangs became dominant form of government.

"A Private Little War" by Gene Roddenberry.  Kirk is forced to aid peaceful
planet in its defense against Klingon insurgents.

"Immunity Syndrome" by Robert Sabaroff.  Strange "hole" is space destroys
Vulcan starship and nearly destroys the Enterprise.

"Return to Tomorrow" by John Kingsbridge.  Mental forces of three
beings are stored in a chamber and ask to be held in the bodies of
Kirk, Spock and a ships scientst while mechanical bodies are built.

"Patterns of Force" by John Lucas.  Federation scientist inadvertently
steers planet on course of Nazi government and war-hatred.  Kirk and
crew sent to right wrongs.

"By any other name."  by D.C. Fontana and Jerome Bixby.  Beings in human
form take over the Enterprise.

"The Omega Glory." by Gene Roddenberry.  Planet with rival Cooms and
Yangs fight for control; turns out to be parallel with Earth's Communist
and Yankees.  Kirk salutes the American Flag, and everyone bows to him.

"The Ultimate Computer" by D. C. Fontana.  Supercomputer attempts to prove
itself able to more efficiently handle the job of starship captain.

"Bread and Circuses" by Gene Roddenberry and Gene Coon.  Kirk, Spock and
McCoy are trapped in Roman gladiator-like society.

"Friday's Child" by D.C. Fontana.  Enterprise is sent to negotiate for
the Federation, but finds collusion among the planets government with
Klingons.

"Assignment: Earth", by Art Wallace.  Enterprise, again back in 20th
century, encounters another transporter beam of alien attempting to
block the launching of sub-orbital nuclear platform.

Third Season
"Spectre of the Gun" by Lee Cronin.  Kirk and company are forced into
reenactment of Gunfight at the OK Corral.

"Elaan of Troyius" by John Lucas.  Woman betrothed to man she hates for
the peace of two planets tries to enslave Kirk with her tears and prevent
her marriage.

"Paradise Syndrome" by Margaret Armen.  Kirk falls into strange obelisk
and loses memory, and is hailed as a god by members of planet tribesmen

"Enterprise Incident" by D. C. Fontana.  Kirk sent on espionage mission
to steal Romulan cloaking device.

"And the children shall lead" by Edward Lasko.  Small children call upon
strange being to control Enterprise after the deaths of their parents on
outpost planet.

"Spock's Brain" by Lee Cronin.  One of Star Trek's most unfortunate episodes
a woman steals Spocks Brain, and Kirk goes in desperate search for it.
McCoy puts it back, and it works.

"Is there in truth no beauty?" by Jean Aroeste.  Blind woman is bethrothed
in a way, to Medusan ambassador, one so hideous to look at as to cause
instant madness.

"The Empath" by Joyce Muskat.  Empath must prove to her keepers that her
race has earned the right of survival by saving a near-dead McCoy, captured 
and tortured by the keepers for the experiment.

"The Tholian Web" by Judy Burns and Chet Richards.  Kirk is caught in
"spatial interphase," and cannot be rescued.  Enemy Tholians attempt to
entrap Enterprise before Kirk's rescue.

"For the World is Hollow, and I have Touched the Sky" by Rik Vollaerts.
Winner of the longest title award, the Enterprise discovers the inhabitants
of a strayed asteroid are acutally living within a spacecraft.  McCoy falls
in love with their leader.

"Day of the Dove" by Jerome Bixby.  Alien creature which lives off of violent
emotions sets up armageddon atmosphere between Klingons and Enterprise.

"Plato's Stepchildren" by Meyer Dollinsky.  Greek-era beings with strange
telekinetic powers enslave Kirk, Spock, and crew.

"Wink of an Eye" by Lee Cronin.  Inhabitants of a planet trapped in an
"accelerated" state attempt to turn Enterprise into "deep freeze" to aid
in their propagation.

"That Which Survives" by John Lucas.  Strange woman appears on Enterprise
killing any one she touches, while Kirk, McCoy, Sulu and others are trapped
on an unknown planet millions of miles away where the same women appears.

"Let that be your last battlefield."  by Oliver Crawford.  Two men of a
dying planet seek each other for destruction.

"Whom Gods Destroy," by Lee Erwin.  Crazed escapee of mental hospital attempts
to capture Enterprise after taking over the hospital; he can also assume
other identities.

"Mark of Gideon" by George Slavin and Stanley Adams.  Kirk is trapped in
duplicate of Enterprise by planet government for a disease his blood carries,
as a remedy for the planets tremendous population problems.  Spock goes on
search for Kirk against federation and planetary official orders.

"The Lights of Zetar" by Jeremy Thatcher and Shari Lewis.  This time,
Scotty falls in love and the mental energies of a dead race inhabit the
womans body, nearly killing her to ensure their own survival.

"The CLoud Minders" by Margaret Armen.  Story of haves and have-nots, rulers
of cloud city violently conflict with mineworkers of planet below.

"The Way to Eden" by Arthur Heinemann.  Insane scientist takes troupe of
followers on wild search for a planet called "Eden," only to find it a deadly
place.

"Requiem for Methuselah" by Jerome Bixby.  Kirk and a scientist both fall
in love with an android woman, who then becomes human and dies of a broekn
heart.

"The Savage Curtain" by Arthur Heinemann and Gene Roddenberry.  Faces
from the best and worst of humanity are brought face-to-face for a do
or die battle.

"All our Yesterdays" by Jean Lisette Aroeste.  Kirk, Spock and McCoy
are trapped in the history of a dying planet, and Spock finds himself
in love with a woman from the planet's ice age.

"Turnabout Intruder" by Arthur Singer.  Final ST TV episode.  Vengeful
and sick female scientist swaps bodies with Kirk so she may be captain
of a starship, denied her as starfleet did not permit female captains.

That's the list.  

David Whitney
ctvax!uokvax!uok!dwhitney
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