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								|   | Dateline #28 info on ST:TNG and DS99210.15                 DATELINE:  STARFLEET                      #28
 Reporting for Duty!
 -------------------
 If they happen to see this, greetings to the MacQuarium BBS in
 Austin, TX, where I was recently told that Dateline shown up!  This
 info came to me over the Internet from Bruce Gimble -- thank you
 Bruce!  Remember, my Internet address along with other means to
 contact me are at the end of this issue, should you wish to comment
 on what you read here.  (Dateline also showed up recently on the
 Boston Computer Society BBS.  Hello to anyone there who happens to
 see this as well!)
 A special hello goes out to Tracy Litherland, for reaching out
 all the way from Germany and offering greetings!
 As I finish this issue, Dateline #27 had been read by 466
 America Online-ers, as well as who knows how many others out there
 who find copies.  If you see Dateline on some other BBS or network,
 and have some idea of how many people read it there, I'd love to
 know!  Drop me a note with the info!  Your support is humbly
 appreciated.
 --Bill Mason
 
 News from Over the Hailing Frequencies....
 ------------------------------------------
 TNG: NEW SET ALERT!  (AND OTHER NEWS)
 A new vertical Jeffries tube set, three stories tall, was built
 for use on TNG this season.  It debuted in "Realm of Fear."
 Marina Sirtis did a stint on QVC on October 11th.  She did
 report that whatever legal hassles TNG was having with the Sir Arthur
 Conan Doyle estate have been resolved, so there are plans to have
 another Sherlock Holmes episode on TNG.  A few clips from an upcoming
 episode, "A Fistful of Datas," were also shown.  Patrick Stewart has
 directed this one, which has some sort of Western theme (Worf and
 Troi were shown in appropriate cowboy gear).  I think Alexander was
 mentioned in the clip of dialogue, and Marina reported that Data
 plays SIX roles in this episode.
 The upcoming TNG schedule is (dates are 'the week of...'):
 10/05/92: Man of the People (the Troi got old episode)
 10/12/92: Relics (Scotty guest-stars)
 10/19/92: Schisms (Mr. Mott returns; a new semi-regular, Ensign
 Rager, is introduced; plot: another alien force threatens the crew)
 10/26/92: Q-Me (Q returns; may be including Olivia D'Abo as a
 female Q Continuum member)
 11/02/92: Rascals (?)
 11/09/92: A Fistful of Datas
 11/16/92: The Quality of Life (?)
 11/23/92: Time's Arrow Part II (rerun of cliffhanger)
 11/30/92: Realm of Fear (rerun of Barclay episode)
 12/07/92: Man of the People (rerun)
 
 DEEP SPACE NINE EPISODES!!
 It is being reported that the new premiere date for DS9 will be
 January 11, 1993 (or the week thereof).  With mini plot summaries,
 here are the planned DS9 episodes!  All titles are tentative.  If the
 DS9 season opener is delayed, some of these episodes may not air
 until the second season.  DS9 currently plans a 14 episode opening
 season.
 "To The Victor": Premiere episode, guest-starring Captain
 Picard.  When a stable wormhole is discovered near DS9, the
 Cardassians decide they want their station back.
 "In Thy Name": Examines the Bajoran religious beliefs and how
 they tie into the existence of the wormhole.
 "Odo": The Cardassians try to sabotage the station.  As the
 title indicates, the show focuses on Odo, the shape-shifter security
 chief.
 "Boys Will Be Boys": An episode on station Commander Sisko's son
 Jake, as he pokes around the station.
 "Ferengi Holiday": Examines why the Ferengi bartender Quark is
 here on DS9 in the first place.  Scheduled to include a holodeck
 Ferengi "mating nest."
 "Sabbath":  Bajoran workers go on strike when Commander Sisko
 and Quark violate a Bajoran religious custom.
 "Beauty, Thy Name Is Lwaxana": Look out, here comes Mrs. Troi!
 [Untitled]: A scheduled crossover with Next Generation.
 "The Missionary": A fervent religious figure comes to Deep Space
 Nine to hunt out moral depravity, convert the Bajorans, and who knows
 what else.
 "Appearance":  An alien ship arrives through the wormhole and
 threatens the area (this may be the TNG crossover episode).
 "Darkness Comes": Pro-Cardassian factions try to cause trouble
 on the station.
 "The Jeffries Incident": Scotty turns up on Deep Space Nine.
 "Tyranny": Playing on a legal loophole, the Cardassians again
 assume ownership of the space station.  Gives background history on
 the station.
 "Battlefield":  Will reportedly be a FOUR-part storyline that
 ties into the season finale of TNG.  The plot: the start of the
 Second Federation-Cardassian War.
 
 ONCE AGAIN, THE DS9 STATIONS....
 A repeat of a list from 4 months back, with a few additions
 since then: the stations currently committed to carrying Deep Space
 Nine.
 Abilene (KRBC), Albany [NY] (WXXA), Albuquerque (KGSW), Amarillo
 (KCIT), Atlanta (WGNX), Augusta (WRDW), Baltimore (WNUV), Birmingham
 (WTTO), Boise (KTRV), Boston (WLVI), Buffalo (WUTV), Cedar Rapids
 (KCRG), Charleston (WVAH), Charleston [SC] (WTAT), Chicago (WGN),
 Cincinnati (WXIX), Cleveland (WUAB), Colorado Springs (KOAA),
 Columbus [SC] (WLTX), Corpus Christi (KDF), Dallas (KTXA), Dayton
 (WRGT), Denver (KWGN), Des Moines (KDSM), El Paso (KVIA), Eugene
 (KEZI), Fargo (KVRR), Fayetteville [AR] (KHOG), Fort Myers (WFTX),
 Fort Smith (KHBS), Gainesville (WOGX), Grand Rapids (WXMI),
 Greensboro (WNRW), Greenville [NC] (WFXI), Greenville [SC] (WHNS),
 Greenville [TN] (WEMT), Harlingen (KRGV), Harrisburg (WPMT), Hartford
 (WTIC), Honolulu (KHNL), Houston (KTXH), Huntsville (WZDX),
 Indianapolis (WXIN), Jacksonville [MS] (WDBD), Kansas City (KSHB),
 Las Vegas (KVVU), Little Rock (KTHV), Los Angeles (KCOP), Louisville
 (WDRB), Lubbock (KJTV), Madison (WISC), Memphis (WLMT), Miami (WCIX),
 Milwaukee (WCGV), Minneapolis (KMSP), Monterey (KNTV), Nashville
 (WZTV), New York (WPIX), Norfolk (WGNT), Oklahoma City (KOKH),
 Orlando (WCPX), Philadelphia (WTXF), Phoenix (KNXV), Portland [OR]
 (KPTV), Providence (WNAC), Raleigh (WLFL), Reno (KAME), Richmond
 (WRLH), Roanoke (WSET), Rochester [NY] (WUHF), Rockford (WQRF),
 Sacramento (KTXL), Saint Louis (KDNL), Salt Lake City (KSTU), San
 Antonio (KRRT), San Diego (XETV), San Francisco (KBHK), Savannah
 (WJCL), Shreveport (KMSS), Spokane (KXLY), Syracuse (WSYT), Tacoma
 (KCPQ), Tampa (WTOG), Toledo (WUPW), Tucson (KMSB), Waco (KWTX),
 Washington DC (WDCA), Wichita Falls (KJTL), Wilkes-Barre (WOLF)
 
 UPCOMING BOOK RELEASES
 Not all of these (mostly the later listings) are confirmed.
 Listed roughly in expected order of publication:
 Classic Trek 62 -- "Death Count" by L.A. Graf
 Classic Trek Hardcover -- "Best Destiny" by Diane Carey
 "TNG Companion" by Larry Nemecek
 Next Generation 24 -- "Night Shade" by Laurell Hamilton
 Classic Trek -- paperback of "Probe" by Margaret Wander Bonnano
 Deep Space Nine #1 -- a novelization of the premiere episode
 Classic Trek 63 -- "Shell Game" by Melissa Libatcher
 New revision of the "Star Trek Compendium" by Allan Asherman
 Next Generation 25 -- "Grounded" by David Bishosff
 Classic Trek 64 -- "A Better Mousetrap" by Mel Gilden
 TNG Hardcover -- "The Devil's Heart" by Carmen Carter
 Next Generation 26 -- "Guises of the Mind" by Rebecca Neason
 Classic Trek 65 -- "Windows on a Lost World" by V.E. Mitchell
 These books are completely in the rumor mill:
 A Star Trek timeline supposedly written by Mike Okuda.
 "Sarek," a TNG novel by A.C. Crispin.
 "Through the Glass, Darkly," a TNG hardcover by Diane Duane that
 harkens back to the "Mirror, Mirror" universe.
 Meantime on the hardcover front, there is a report that the
 Michael Jan Friedman hardcover "The God Thing" has been cancelled due
 to objections from the Roddenberry estate (the manuscript is from an
 unfinished Gene Roddenberry work).
 
 A PEEK AT ODO
 Those who want to get a sneak preview of actor Rene Auberjonois
 (slated to play Security Officer Odo in Deep Space Nine - a shape
 shifter) can watch the USA cable premiere movie "Wild Card" which
 airs 9-11 pm (EST) on Wednesday, October 28 and will be repeated at 8
 pm (EST) on Sunday, November 1 and again at 2 pm (EST) on Saturday,
 November 7.  Auberjonois plays an Episcopalian priest, Father Jake,
 in the story of murder, greed and corruption in a small New Mexico
 town.  In an interview provided by the USA people, Auberjonois
 describes his character, Jake, as similar to M*A*S*H's Father Mulcahy
 character.  He says "I relish getting characters like that (caring
 people).  I often play officious twits."  We'll see if Odo is a twit.
 (Thanks to Tripp F for this info.)
 
 A PEEK AT VIDEO
 On the October 3rd Billboard Video Rentals Chart, Star Trek VI
 was at number 33.  But by October 10th, "The Undiscovered Country"
 was out of the top 40.
 
 A PEEK AT PATRICK
 Patrick Stewart will be hosting a six part PBS space documentary
 on space entitled "Space Age".  The first part actually aired on
 October 12th (at 8pm ET here -- check your local listings), so I hope
 everyone noticed!  The subsequent parts will be airing weekly.
 
 SCI-FI CHANNEL KICKS OFF
 Leonard Nimoy was one of the attendees at a kick-off party for
 the Sci-Fi Channel at the Hayden Planetarium.  And fellow Trekker
 Nichelle Nichols is hostess for the Channel's "Inside Space" program.
 
 COMING TO A STORE NEAR YOU?
 Edison Brothers Entertainment Inc. has been granted a license by
 Paramount to create Next Generation "virtual-reality entertainment
 centers" to be placed in shopping malls.  The first ones are supposed
 to open in 1993.
 
 Editorial: One Year Later
 by Bill Mason (Data1701D)
 -------------------------
 It's now been almost a year since the sudden death of Gene
 Roddenberry.  He remains fondly remembered by all of Star Trek's
 fans, including this one.
 When Gene died, there were naturally many questions about the
 future of Star Trek.  It would be nice to say that those questions
 have been resolved, but I think it's still early to say that.
 Star Trek VI, of course, came out shortly after Gene's death and
 was a success with fans and critics.  The impact of "The Undiscovered
 Country" as a farewell film for the Classic cast has been tempered,
 though, by the continuing possibility that it won't be the final
 film.  I still hold that there shouldn't be another Classic cast
 film, but I won't quibble the point here.  Suffice to say that the
 waiting game continues.
 Meanwhile, TNG has moved into season six.  So far as I write
 this we've had three episodes: a pretty fair cliffhanger resolution
 in "Time's Arrow, Part II," a very strong character story in "Realm
 of Fear," and a rather weak story in "Man of the People."  The first
 full season without Gene playing any role in it has started off
 unevenly.  But it's still early.
 And finally, of course, it's still very early to make any
 judgement about "Deep Space Nine"!  The lengthy, almost last-minute
 casting process has rattled some nerves early, but now we just wait
 on developments there.
 What's the upshot?  Well, it seems that while I'd like to write
 a little bit on what direction Star Trek has gone since Gene's
 passing, it looks like it's too early to predict what direction it's
 going in!  So rest in peace, Gene -- and we'll check back next year.
 
 The Boston Museum of Science ST Exhibit
 by Eli Sherer
 ---------------------------------------
 I had the privilege of attending the press opening of Star Trek:
 Federation Science at the Boston Museum of Science.  In addition to
 the exhibit itself (and the planetarium show) I had the honor of
 speaking with James Montgomery Doohan for a few moments as he was
 also in town speaking at a Trek convention over the weekend and was
 beamed in to help kick off the museum exhibit.
 First, the exhibit: an interactive exhibit allowing participants
 to play about a half-dozen computer simulations using touch screen
 computers (probably Macintoshes, though they're well hidden) to
 perform such functions as atmospheric checks for inhabitable planets,
 docking with dying space stations and using the tractor beam to
 change the course of an asteroid before it impacts a planet -- all
 the time being guided by the voices of Riker, Worf and Data.  Your
 actions on the computer are acknowledged by the voice of Majel
 Barrett.  (Who else?)  Winning one of these simulations lets you
 select two sequences (from either film or TV series) for the Main
 Viewscreen (the whole thing is set up like the Bridge).  You can pick
 firing phasers, going to warp speed, orbiting a planet, or blowing up
 a Romulan battle cruiser.
 There are also numerous other scientific displays (it is a
 museum of science after all).  You can step into the transporter
 room, which sets off a sequence where you can watch yourself and
 others on a life size screen beaming down (Chroma-key and virtual
 reality interactive video) to a planet where you can play with the
 jungle underbrush and little birds, etc.  They have worked in some
 real outer space stuff, what it's like to walk on the moon and the
 like, but most of that is what you might find in any science museum
 displays on space flight.
 There are a number of costumes and props on display both from
 TOS and TNG as well as some from the movies.  A number of other
 museum staffers around the exhibit show different types of Trek props
 (tricorders and hypos) and real 20th century versions (in-the-ear
 thermometers and paramedic through the clothes hypodermics) for
 comparison.
 The planetarium show (voiced by LeVar Burton) takes a trip
 through a wormhole to visit different stellar communities including
 the latest pictures of the Orion Nebula from the Hubble Space
 Telescope.  It's a 45 minute display that really can't be described
 here.
 Taking questions in the engineering section of the display, Mr.
 Doohan spoke of being the only person to name his own character
 (Montgomery after his own middle name, Scott after his lineage)
 though he himself is Canadian.  Regarding his upcoming role on TNG,
 he wasn't given the choice of being old as DeForest Kelley was; when
 he transports aboard he's only a few seconds older than in his most
 recent movie appearances.  However, Scotty does get to take a trip
 (via the holodeck) back to the bridge of the old Enterprise!  Though
 he didn't say much more about the episode itself, he had nothing but
 high praise for the cast and crew of TNG, and noted that his trip
 back to the original bridge really helped him (and should help us
 all) to realize just how far Star Trek has come.  He mentioned
 looking around (when he was doing the movies) at the first film set
 and saying to the set design crew, "Now you've given me something
 that looks like it will really fly!"  Finally, Mr. Doohan likes Star
 Trek VI the best of the films.  His second choice is Star Trek II,
 though he liked the ABC-TV version better, saying that it included
 more of his story line due to the extended play time of TV.  He has
 no idea why, when the longer version explained more, the video
 release wasn't the longer one (again a Paramount decision).
 Finally, of course, there is the Star Trek Store.  Long a
 fixture, in a smaller version at Boston's Museum of Science, the
 store has been expanded and is located in the exhibit (which lasts
 through the first of the year).  It really has nothing on any
 conventions, and should be avoided for fear of disappointment by
 those who have been to any Trek conventions in the recent past.
 My fingers are tired, and I must go review this past week's TNG
 episode.  (I have to tape them here in Boston, the Saturday night
 showing is unreliable due to football games, and the rerun is now
 until 11:35 on Sunday night!  Adieu, EliS.
 
 The Franklin Mint Museum's ST Exhibit
 by Bill Mason (Data1701D)
 -------------------------------------
 Out here in the wilds of Pennsylvania is the Franklin Mint,
 known to Trekkers for its line of quite catchy (but quite expensive!)
 Star Trek products.  Next door to the Mint proper is the Franklin
 Mint Museum, which I dared to visit for the first time in a long
 while, because they added a room devoted to Star Trek.
 I took my time as I went in, though, and moved through the
 exhibition halls in order instead of starting at Star Trek.  |)  It
 was possible to forget about Trek entirely while wandering through
 rooms of porcelain works, pewter statuettes, stamps, precision
 models, jewelry, and half a zillion other things.  My mind did return
 briefly to Trek when I happened upon a pewter Norman Rockwell work
 that presented a scene from "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer."  (How
 many people have rediscovered Mark Twain after seeing "Time's
 Arrow"?)  My resolve not to head to the Trek area weakened again
 while checking out some dolls of the characters from "Gone with the
 Wind"; the Trek theme could be heard playing nearby!
 Finally, I rounded a corner and was confronted with an open
 holodeck door.  Guess this is the place!  Outside the door were two
 plaques.  One was a replica of the Enterprise-D's commissioning
 plaque, the other (mounted next to a red alert light) was a
 dedication plaque; the exhibition is dedicated to Gene Roddenberry.
 Entering, I found myself in a relatively small room; probably it
 would hold a half-dozen comfortably at most.  The whole room is laid
 out in Next Generation style -- the walls and displays are decorated
 with TNG-ish console panel readouts.  But the sound-effects were pure
 TOS -- snips from different episodes.  (When anything that had to do
 with a transporter played, a round plate on the floor lit up as if to
 beam you away.)
 The exhibit naturally included all of the Franklin Mint Trek
 pieces: the ships, the chess sets, the tankard, the watch, etc.  It
 included a few pieces I didn't even know they made: a checkers set
 (one set of checkers had the TOS Enterprise on one side, the
 Starfleet insignia on the reverse; the other had a TOS Klingon
 cruiser/the Klingon Empire logo), a sculpture of McCoy leaping
 through the Guardian of Forever while Kirk and Spock try to stop him
 (Spock just reaches out with a hand; Kirk, that action-packed hero,
 dives through the air in a futile attempt to tackle McCoy), and a
 coin collection (and I still have no idea what all the symbols on the
 coins were).  A few prop replicas from Trek filled out the display:
 TNG and movie phasers, Klingon disruptors and daggers, a TNG
 tricorder, and a copy of Geordi's VISOR.
 One amusing thing mounted on the wall was a copy of the large
 cut-away drawing of the Enterprise-D -- the one found in Engineering
 and reproduced in the "TNG Technical Manual."  It was just the right
 size to see the duck and Nomad and all the other silly things that
 were snuck into the drawing!
 As I left, I amusedly noted that everything was labeled
 correctly -- no boo-boos by the Mint staff!  As a final irony, just
 down the hall from the Trek room was an exhibition of stamps.
 Included in the "History of Transportation" series was the space
 shuttle Enterprise.  Don't you love little ironies like that?
 
 More for Windows
 by Dreamer E
 ----------------
 There were not as many AOL uploads this month as there have been
 in the past months.  This may be due to school/colleges starting up
 again.  Still, it gave me time to download most, if not all, of this
 months offerings.  Most seemed to be stories or scripts, none of
 which really captivated me yet.  Also, there were some sound files
 and while you can usually never go wrong with sound files, it is also
 really easy to create them on your own, if you have a sound card with
 a mic input.  Nonetheless, here are my top recommendations for the
 month of September, as of September 29, 1992:
 2. Klingon Symbol (9/11, 9/13 ZIPPED) - This bitmap by Eric
 Gangloff can be easily compared to the Romulan and Starfleet Academy
 logos that I recommended last month.  It is in the same league,
 artistically and almost technically.  It is one of the bitmaps that
 can be displayed on your Windows background when you wish to turn it
 into a Klingon Computer System!  It is also another in a growing line
 of quality bitmaps that emulate TNG displays.
 1. Enterprise over Earth - (9/13 in PIC and GIF format) - This
 is a beautiful video capture from an episode of ST:TNG, I expected it
 to be blurry or have distortions, but it is crisp, clear, and as its
 description says, "a must have".  It was originally made in a Mac and
 was uploaded in that format, but it can be downloaded on a PC, then
 converted using a Mac converter program (which can be downloaded from
 the AOL utilities library).  And despite its short 7-8 minute
 download time, you get a awe-inspiring GIF/PIC file of the
 "Enterprise over Earth".  HIGHEST RECOMMENDATION!
 
 Happy Birthday!
 ---------------
 November 5: Eric Menyuk (the Traveler)
 
 Trek-related Products/Happenings
 --------------------------------
 Upcoming in the comic book universe:
 "William Shatner's Tekworld" #4 (Marvel): Cardigan has
 re-encountered Warbride.  Now, will she help him or just kill him?
 "Star Trek" #41 (DC): A strange energy force overcomes the crew
 in "Runaway" by Howard Weinstein.
 "Next Generation" #41 (DC): Sztazzans threaten to attack both
 the saucer and battle sections of the Enterprise!
 "Debt of Honor" Trade Paperback (DC): The softcover version of
 Chris Claremont's graphic novel.  Features a new cover from the
 hardcover version.
 "New Crew" #11 (Friendly/Personality): Wil Wheaton is the latest
 subject in the b/w biographical series.
 "Original Crew" #12 (Friendly/Personality): Ricardo Montalban is
 the focus of this issue.
 
 Over in Starlog land, we have upcoming "Starlog" #185, which is
 scheduled to include a TNG article, and "STTNG Magazine" #21 -- the
 first issue of the sixth season; it includes several interviews and a
 wrap-up of the fifth season episodes.
 
 I've been meaning to note that Melinda Snodgrass, former TNG
 story editor, is now serving as executive story editor on NBC's
 "Reasonable Doubts."  And writing some strong stories; check 'em out.
 
 A strange new release (IMHO) from the Franklin Mint: the Star
 Trek Galaxy Globe.  Inside the globe is the TOS Enterprise, being
 enveloped in a Tholian Web by two Tholian ships, as in the "Tholian
 Web" episode.  The whole thing is a glass globe with a black enamel
 background.  One Tholian is drawn in the background; the other is
 made of gold-electroplated pewter and is set on the outside surface
 of the globe.
 Personally, I think the Mint is starting to scrape the bottom of
 the barrel for new Trek product ideas.  Anyway, the Globe is $195;
 contact the Franklin Mint, Franklin Center PA 19091 for more info.
 
 Scheduled for November is "Star Trek: Secrets of Deep Space
 Nine" by Cinemaker Press and co-authored by Carson Dyle and Bill
 Planer.  I'd love to know what they already know that we don't.
 Also in the Trek-related book world is the release of Whoopi
 Goldberg's new children's book, "Alice."
 
 And on the motion picture front this month, we have Whoopi
 Goldberg in "Sarafina!" and Julie Warner (formerly TNG's Kristi
 Henshaw) in the new Billy Crystal film "Mr. Saturday Night."  Now
 playing at a theatre near you.
 
 Personal Logs, Stardate Today
 -----------------------------
 "A Salute to Gene Roddenberry
 "This exhibition is dedicated to Gene Roddenberry, the creative
 energy and foresight behind the imaginary universe we know as STAR
 TREK.  Without his vision, Captain Kirk, Mr. Spock and the USS
 ENTERPRISE would never have had the chance 'to seek out new life and
 new civilizations.'
 "Mr. Roddenberry served as a bomber pilot in World War II, flew
 for a commercial airline and was a former police officer for the Los
 Angeles Police Department.  He created STAR TREK as a dramatic forum
 for important ideas and concerns.
 "Beyond the original television series, six feature films and
 the enormously popular television series, STAR TREK: THE NEXT
 GENERATION, perhaps Gene Roddenberry's most important legacy is that
 he has given us all a hopeful portrait of the future.
 "Gene Roddenberry
 "1921-1991"
 [Text of the Franklin Mint ST exhibit's dedication plaque]
 
 From the 9/27 "Garfield":
 [Garfield steps on one of those talking scales.]
 Scale: "BWEEP!  BWEEP!  BWEEP!"
 "Captain, our sensors have picked up something!"
 Scale [now holding a conversation with itself]: "Go to visual!"
 "Woah!  What is that thing?!"
 "It appears to be a hideous blob of fat, sir!"
 "Fire phasers!"
 "Phasers have no effect, sir!"
 Garfield [looking disgusted]: "I hate you."
 Scale: "Sir, I'm picking up some hostile readings."
 
 Credits where Credits are Due
 -----------------------------
 "Dateline: Starfleet" -- edited by Bill Mason.  Comments and
 submissions are invited via any of these avenues: America Online
 (E-Mail to Data1701D), Prodigy (mail to ID# WPHM91A), Internet (send
 to '[email protected]'), or the infamous US Postal Service (753
 Rively Ave, Glenolden PA, 19036-1118)
 The Away Team of Contributors -- Dreamer E, Eli Sherer, Tripp F
 Other Sources -- Billboard, the FIDONet Trek echoes, The
 Franklin Mint, Philadelphia Inquirer, TV Guide, The Westfield
 Newsletter
 Copyright and Trademark Notice: In no case is use of any
 copyrighted material and/or trademarks without identifying symbols
 intended as a claim of ownership to those copyrights and/or
 trademarks.  "Dateline: Starfleet" is a non-profit production
 reporting and commenting on the universe of Star Trek.
 STAR TREK is a Registered Trademark of Paramount Pictures.  All
 other copyrighted material, trademarks, and/or service marks cited
 herein are registered to their respective owners.
 Readers are granted permission to reproduce this file wherever
 they think there's an interest.  Just tell 'em where you got it from!
 If you read all this, remember: vote, vote, vote in November.
 Dateline #29 will be out November 15th.
 
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