|   | Star Trek:TOS Episode Guide (1 of 5)Startrek:TOS Guide Part I (of 5)
 
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 Star Trek
 Episode Guide
 
 - Edited and updated by Saul Jaffe (Moderator, Sf-Lovers)
 
 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.
 
 FIRST SEASON
 
 "THE MAN TRAP"  [**]
 Writer: George Clayton Johnson
 Guest Cast: Jeanne Bal, Francine Pyne, Alfred Ryder, Michael Zaslow, Bruce
 Watson, Vince Howard
 
 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"  [***]
 Writer: Dorothy Fontana
 Guest Cast: Robert Walker, Jr., Abraham Sofaer, Patricia McNulty, Charles
 J. Stewart, Dallas Mitchell
 
 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"  [****]
 Writer: Samuel A. Peeples
 Guest Cast: Gary Lockwood, Sally Kellerman, Paul Carr, Paul Fix, Andrea
 Dromm, Lloyd Haynes
 
 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.
 
 [Note: although this was the third episode aired, it was actually filmed
 before the others and was the 2nd pilot made for the show.  The first, "The
 Cage" was later made into the two-part episode, "The Menagerie"]
 
 "THE NAKED TIME"  [*** 1/2]
 Writer: John D. F. Black
 Guest Cast: Bruce Hyde, Stewart Moss, John Bellah
 
 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]
 Writer: Richard Matheson
 Guest Cast: Jim Goodwin, Edward Madden, Garland Thompson
 
 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]
 Writer: Stephen Kandel
 Guest Cast: Roger C. Carmel, Keren Steele, Susan Denberg, Maggie Thrett,
 Gene Dynarski, Jim Goodwin, Jon Kowal, Seamon Glass
 
 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?"  [**]
 Writer: Robert Bloch
 Guest Cast: Michael Strong, Sherry Jackson, Ted Cassidy, Harry Basch, Vince
 Deadrick, Budd Albright
 
 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"  [**]
 Writer: Adrian Spies
 Guest Cast: Kim Darby, Michael J. Pollard, Jim Goodwin, John Megna, Ed
 McCready, Dawn Roddenberry
 
 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"  [***]
 Writer: Shimon Wincelberg
 Guest Cast: James Gregory, Morgan Woodward, Marianna Hill, Suzanne Wasson
 
 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"  [***]
 Writer: Jerry Sohl
 Guest Cast: Anthony Hall, Clint Howard
 
 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]
 "THE MENAGERIE (part II)  [****]
 Writer: Gene Roddenberry
 Guest Cast: Jeffrey Hunter, Susan Oliver, Malachi Throne, Julie Parrish,
 Hagan Beggs, Peter Duryea, Meg Wylie, John Hoyt, Majel Barrett
 
 First part aired November 17, 1966; second part aired November 24, 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.
 
 End of Part I
 
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