1:[2,#BI],3:[27,#I]@1stasis unit@2Emergency medical device used aboard Federation starships. The device could hold a patient in a state of suspended animation until medical treatment could be rendered. (“Tapestry” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],7:[1,#B],87:[1,#B]@1static warp bubble@2A nonpropulsive toroidal subspace field. A static warp bubble was created in 2367 by Ensign Wesley Crusher from Kosinski's warp field equations, but something went wrong. Dr. Beverly Crusher was trapped inside the phenomenon, which became her own personal reality, shaped by her thoughts at the time the bubble was formed. Crusher had been thinking of lost friends, and her personal universe shrank until she was the only one left. Crusher was recovered through the efforts of her son, with assistance from the Traveler. (“Remember Me” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],9:[1,#BI],16:[1,#B],18:[2,#B],26:[1,#I],34:[1,#I]@1Station Lya IV@2A trade stop for the Jovis, following the kidnapping of Data by Zibalian trader Kivas Fajo in 2366. When queried by the Enterprise -D, Station Lya IV reported that the Jovis had been in orbit around the station for half a day. (“The Most Toys” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],7:[1,#I],13:[2,#B]@1Station Nigala IV@2Destination of the Enterprise -D following its mission at Bre'el IV in 2366. (“Deja Q” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],26:[35,#I]@1Station Salem One@2Site of an infamous sneak attack in which many Federation citizens were killed in a bloody preamble to war. (“The Enemy” [TNG]). Neither the adversary, the date, nor the circumstances of this sneak attack were established in the episode, although an early draft of “Family” (TNG) suggested that one of Wesley Crusher's ancestors was at Salem One.
~1:[2,#B],14:[2,#B]@1Statistical Mechanics@2A mathematics class, required at Starfleet Academy. Cadet Wesley Crusher tutored Joshua Albert in this class in 2368. (“The First Duty” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],15:[2,#B]@1steelplast@2Construction material used in the tunnel network beneath the capital city of planet Mordan IV. (“Too Short a Season” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],16:[2,#B],30:[1,#B]@1Steinman analysis@2 Medical test noting individual specific data such as voice analysis and brain patterns. Mira Romaine was given a standard Steinman analysis while under the influence of the Zetarians, showing that her brain wave patterns had been altered and now matched the patterns emitted by the aliens. (“The Lights of Zetar” [TOS]).
~
~1:[3,#B],16:[1,#B],18:[1,#I],26:[2,#B],31:[2,#B]@1stellar core fragment@2An extremely dense, massive piece of a disintegrated star, probably composed of neutronium. The Enterprise -D tracked such a fragment through the Moab Sector in 2368. SEE: Genome Colony. (“The Masterpiece Society” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],39:[19,#I]@1Stephan (TNG)@2A young soccer player who was the love of Beverly Crusher's life, when she was eight and he was eleven. She dreamed that they would be married, but he never knew she existed. (“The Host” [TNG]). At the time, Beverly's last name was Howard, although this maiden name has not been firmly established in dialog.
~1:[2,#B],8:[2,#I]@1Stiles, Lieutenant@2(Paul Comi). Navigator on the U.S.S. Enterprise during the Romulan incursion of 2266. Several members of Stiles' family had been lost during the Earth-Romulan conflicts of the previous century. (“Balance of Terror” [TOS]).
~1:[1,#BI],14:[3,#B],23:[1,#I],28:[1,#B]@1Sto-Vo-Kor@2 Klingon mythological place of the afterlife for the honored dead. The prophet Kahless the Unforgettable awaited those who were worthy of Sto-Vo-Kor. (“Rightful Heir” [TNG]). SEE: Fek'lhr.
~1:[2,#B],23:[2,#I],28:[1,#I],54:[1,#I],58:[3,#B],84:[1,#B]@1Stocker, Commodore@2(Charles Drake). Starfleet officer who assumed command of Starbase 10 in 2267. Stocker was transported to that post aboard the Starship Enterprise. While enroute, several Enterprise personnel including Captain Kirk became ill with a radiation-induced hyperaccelerated aging disease. Fearing the imminent loss of these valuable officers, Stocker assumed command of the Enterprise and violated the Romulan Neutral Zone in an effort to reach Starbase 10's medical facilities more quickly. Stocker's action nearly triggered an interstellar incident. (“The Deadly Years” [TOS]). SEE: corbomite.
~1:[2,#B],21:[2,#B],32:[1,#B],34:[1,#B]@1Stockholm Syndrome@2In psychology, the tendency for hostages to sympathize with their captors after extended captivity. Dr. Crusher believed that Jeremiah Rossa might have exhibited Stockholm Syndrome after spending years with Talarian captain Endar. (“Suddenly Human” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],22:[1,#I],25:[1,#B],39:[3,#B]@1stokaline@2Medication given to Spock after he put himself into a deep trace in an attempt to regain control of the Enterprise from the Kelvans in 2268. As a ruse, McCoy told the Kelvans that Spock suffered from Rigelian Kassaba fever and required the medication. (“By Any Other Name” [TOS]).
~
~1:[2,#B],7:[2,#B],19:[2,#B]@1Stone, Commodore@2(Percy Rodriguez). Commander of Starbase 11 when James Kirk was court-martialed for the apparent death of Ben Finney in 2267. When circumstancial evidence implicated Kirk, Stone urged him to resign for the good of the service. Stone had commanded a starship earlier in his career. (“Court Martial” [TOS]).
~1:[1,#B],9:[1,#B],17:[1,#B]@1Stonn@2(Lawrence Montaigne). Vulcan man who presumably married T'Pring in 2267. T'Pring had been bonded to Spock, but she chose Stonn after Spock freed her for daring to challenge the wedding. Spock warned him that having may not be quite so good a thing as wanting. (“Amok Time” [TOS]).
~1:[5,#B],15:[3,#B],61:[1,#BI],98:[1,#B]@1Story of the Promise, The@2Klingon gospel that tells of the pledge that prophet Kahless the Unforgettable gave the people of the Homeworld. After he had united the Homeworld to form the Klingon Empire, Kahless one day said it was time for him to depart. When the people begged him not to leave, Kahless said he was going ahead to Sto-Vo-Kor, and promised to return one day. He pointed to a star in the heavens and told the people to look for him there “on that point of light.” Klingon clerics later established a monastery on planet Boreth, orbiting that star, to await his return. (“Rightful Heir” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],3:[1,#B]@1Storyteller@2SEE: Sirah.
~1:[2,#B],6:[1,#B]@1straight nines@2High-scoring move in dom-jot. The play is extremely difficult to achieve. (“Tapestry” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],8:[2,#I],18:[1,#B],26:[10,#I]@1Straleb security ship@2Vessel that intercepted the Starship Enterprise -D shortly after stardate 42402, carrying Straleb secretary Kushell and his entourage. (“The Outrageous Okona” [TNG]). The miniature for this ship was designed by Rick Sternbach.
~1:[1,#B],6:[1,#B],43:[1,#B],50:[1,#B]@1Straleb@2Class-M planet, along with Altec, part of the coalition of Madena. Although it was technically at peace with Altec, relations between the two planets had been strained to the point that an interplanetary incident was created when it was revealed that Benzan of Straleb had been engaged to Yanar of Altec in 2365. (“The Outrageous Okona” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],37:[1,#B],44:[1,#B]@1strategema@2Challenging holographic game of strategy and wills. Played by two contestants, the game involves manipulating circular icons on a three-dimensional grid to gain control of one's opponent's territory while defending your own. Riker once challenged Zakdorn strategist (and grand master strategema player) Kolrami to a game, and was defeated in only 23 moves.
A later match between Kolrami and Data ended in Kolrami conceding defeat. Data later confided that his strategy had been to play not to win, but merely to maintain a tie until his opponent gave up. (“Peak Performance” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],8:[1,#B],43:[1,#B],59:[1,#B],80:[2,#B],98:[1,#B],109:[17,#I]@1Stratos@2Beautiful cloud city above the planet Ardana, believed to be the finest example of sustained antigravity elevation in the galaxy. Stratos was a study in the contrasts of Ardanan society: The Stratos city dwellers lived a life of leisure, while the Troglytes, who lived on the planet's surface, toiled under brutal conditions. By 2269, Troglyte activists, called Disrupters, were committing acts of terrorism and vandalism in the city to protest their plight. Their actions spurred the development of filter masks that were provided to the Troglyte miners to protect them from the harmful effects of the zenite gas found in the Ardanan mines. (“The Cloud Minders” [TOS]). The model of the cloud city of Stratos was designed by original series art director Matt Jefferies.
~1:[3,#B],5:[1,#I],24:[1,#B],53:[2,#B],64:[2,#I],71:[5,#I]@1Strnad star system@2The Enterprise -D delivered a party of Earth colonists to a planet in the Strnad system in 2364. The adjoining Rubicun star system contained another Class-M planet ruled by the Edo entity who disapproved of the colonists living in the Strnad system. Because this location caused conflict to the Edo god, the colony was removed and transplanted elsewhere. (“Justice” [TNG]). Named for Star Trek: The Next Generation production staff member Janet Strnad.
~1:[1,#B],9:[2,#I]@1Stroyerian@2One of the forty-plus languages spoken by U.S.S. Aries first officer Flaherty. (“The Icarus Factor” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],40:[1,#I],45:[2,#B]@1structural integrity field@2Shaped forcefield used on Federation starships to supplement the mechanical strength of the ship's spaceframe. Without the structural integrity field, a starship would not be able to withstand the tremendous accelerations involved in spaceflight. During the Enterprise -D's contact with the Tin Man life-form in 2366, Chief Engineer La Forge diverted structural integrity power to strengthen the inner deflector grid, damaged in a Romulan attack. (“Tin Man” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],9:[3,#I]@1strychnine@2Alkaloid poison derived from the Earth plant Strychnos nux vomica. The poison also acts as a central nervous system stimulant, and in large doses causes convulsions and death. (“Ship in a Bottle” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],12:[1,#I],20:[2,#B],43:[1,#I],67:[1,#B],116:[1,#B],119:[1,#I]@1Stubbs, Dr. Paul@2(Ken Jenkins). Eminent astrophysicist who came aboard the Enterprise -D in 2366 for transport to the Kavis Alpha sector, where he was to conduct a neutronium decay experiment. A complex individual, Stubbs had been regarded as something of a wunderkind in his youth, and the resulting social isolation left a lasting mark on him. Stubbs was an aficionado of the ancient game of baseball, and he was fond of daydreaming about the game's past glories. His landmark experiment at Kavis Alpha was the culmination of over 20 years of work, but the launch of an instrument probe he called “the Egg” for the experiment was jeopardized with the unexpected evolution of sentient nanites on the Enterprise -D. Although Stubs did not initially recognize the nanites as life-forms, they eventually agreed to cooperate with the execution of his experiment. (“Evolution” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],17:[2,#B],33:[2,#B],49:[1,#I]@1stunstick@2A meter-long, rodlike weapon that was used by cadre forces fighting for control of the Turkana IV colony. The weapon was capable of delivering a powerful electric shock to an opponent. Ishara Yar was injured by a stunstick during an away team mission with members of the Enterprise -D crew in 2367. (“Legacy” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],2:[1,#I],11:[1,#B]@1Sturgeon@2Enterprise crew member killed on the surface of planet M-113 by the salt vampire. (“The Man Trap” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],9:[1,#I],10:[1,#BI],27:[1,#I],31:[2,#B],33:[7,#I],46:[2,#B],53:[1,#I],65:[6,#I]@1Styles, Captain@2(James B. Sikking). Commander of the Starship Excelsior during its initial trial runs in 2285. Styles unsuccessfully attempted to stop Kirk from stealing the Enterprise to reach the Genesis Planet. (Star Trek III: The Search for Spock). Styles was later succeeded by Captain Hikaru Sulu, who assumed command of the Excelsior when it entered service as a deep-space exploratory vessel in 2290. (Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country).
~1:[2,#B],7:[2,#B],26:[2,#B]@1Styris IV@2Planet plagued by deadly Anchilles fever in the year 2364. Deaths in the millions were averted by the availability of vaccine from planet Ligon II. (“Code of Honor” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],27:[4,#B]@1styrolite@2Clear plastic-like material used for biologic quarantine of potentially hazardous life-forms. A sheath of styrolite was used to encase a genetically engineered child from the Darwin Genetic Research Station when it was feared that the child might carry a dangerous disease organism. (“Unnatural Selection” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],31:[1,#B],39:[2,#B]@1subcutaneous transponder@2Small device inserted under the skin and used by Starfleet as to track an individual. Dr. McCoy placed transponders in Kirk and Spock when they transported to planet Ekos in 2268. (“Patterns of Force” [TOS]). SEE: rubindium crystal.
~1:[1,#B],5:[2,#B],14:[2,#B]@1subhadar@2Angosian military rank. Roga Danar was awarded this position twice during the Tarsian War. (“The Hunted” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],9:[1,#I],52:[2,#B]@1sublight@2Scientific term describing space-normal speeds, slower than c, the speed of light. Sublight speeds do not require warp drive, and are generally achieved using impulse power. As a result, sublight travel is subject to relativistic effects such as time dilation and Fitzgerald-Lorentz contraction. Sometimes referred to as space-normal travel. SEE: impulse drive.
~1:[4,#B],43:[1,#B]@1submicron matrix transfer technology@2New technique for replicating existing neural net pathways in a positronic brain into another positronic brain. This technology was introduced at a cybernetics conference in 2366, attended by Data, and led to Data's construction of his android daughter, Lal. (“The Offspring” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],7:[1,#I],50:[2,#BI],58:[1,#B]@1Subroutine C-47@2Computer software on the Enterprise -D responsible for noncritical systems such as replicator selections and recreational programming. Subroutine C-47 was replaced by elements of Data's personal programming during an interface experiment in 2369. This caused malfunctions in food replicators, Captain Picard's music selections, and the holodeck program Ancient West. (“A Fistful of Datas” [TNG]). SEE: Spot.
~1:[2,#B],7:[3,#B],46:[4,#B]@1subsonic transmitter@2Device used on planet Omicron Ceti III to drive the spores from the surviving colonists' bodies in 2267. The subsonic transmitter broadcast an irritating frequency that was described as like spreading itching powder on the affected individuals. (“This Side of Paradise” [TOS]). SEE: spores, Omicron Ceti III.
~1:[1,#B],15:[2,#B],49:[2,#B],53:[2,#B],55:[31,#I],86:[3,#BI],89:[3,#I],93:[19,#I]@1subspace@2Spatial continuum with significantly different properties from our own, a fundamental part of warp drive. Warp-driven starships employ a subspace generator to create the asymmetrical spatial distortion necessary for the vessel to travel faster than the speed of light. Subspace is also used as a medium for subspace radio transmissions. SEE: Cochrane, Zefram. Einstein's theories suggest that light-speed travel is impossible in our universe, so subspace and warp drive were “invented” to explain how a starship might do it anyway. On the other hand, Professor Stephen Hawking, when visiting the Enterprise -D engine room at Paramount Pictures in 1993, said he was working on warp drive. We can hardly wait.
~1:[2,#B]@1subspace compression@2Phenomenon resulting from differential field potential values in nearby portions of the same warp field. Subspace compression can cause different parts of an object to have different inertial densities, resulting in structural strain on the object. In severe cases, subspace compression can tear an object apart at the subatomic level. Depending on relative field symmetries, subspace compression can also cause numerous other, often unpredictable, side effects. (“Deja Q” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],16:[1,#B],21:[1,#I]@1subspace field distortions@2Phenomena that generally indicate the presence of a warp propulsion system. The Cytherian probe encountered by the Enterprise -D in 2367 did not create any detectable field distortions and its method of propulsion remained a mystery. (“The Nth Degree” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],16:[1,#I],28:[2,#B],41:[2,#B]@1subspace field inverter@2A piece of equipment not normally included in the inventory of a Galaxy -class starship. This device is capable of generating low levels of Eichner radiation, which were found to stimulate growth of certain strains of deadly plasma plague. (“The Child” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],14:[1,#B],36:[2,#B],51:[1,#B],54:[3,#B]@1subspace proximity detonator@2Triggering mechanism employed by small explosive devices used in the Koinonian war a thousand years ago. Such a device, undetectable by a normal Starfleet tricorder, was responsible for the explosion that killed Marla Aster in 2366. (“The Bonding” [TNG]). Subspace proximity detonators were also used by the Talarians during the Galen border conflicts in the 2350s to booby-trap their ships. (“Suddenly Human” [TNG]).
~
~1:[3,#B],5:[3,#B]@1Subspace Relay Station@2SEE: Relay Station 47.
~1:[2,#B],7:[1,#I],16:[3,#B]@1subspace resonator@2Field manipulation device. The Enterprise -D supplied a subspace resonator to a disabled Romulan science vessel in 2368, enabling the Romulan ship to return home, albeit slowly. (“The Next Phase” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],15:[2,#B]@1subspace rupture@2Huge swirling anomaly that draws surrounding matter into its central vortex. A subspace rupture was discovered in the Hanoli System in 2169 by a Vulcan ship. An elevated thoron reading near Deep Space 9 in 2369 was initially theorized by Dax to be a similar phenomenon, but this was later found to be incorrect. (“If Wishes Were Horses” [DS9]).
~1:[3,#B],20:[1,#B],25:[2,#B],42:[1,#I],43:[1,#BI],44:[13,#I],60:[20,#I],81:[9,#I]@1subspace shock wave@2Powerful energy front generated by a massive energy discharge. A subspace shock wave was created when Praxis, a moon of the Klingon Homeworld, exploded in 2293, causing severe damage to the Homeworld, as well as to the nearby Starship Excelsior. (Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country). The energy wave at the beginning of Star Trek VI was described as a subspace shock wave as a means of “explaining” how an explosion on Praxis could affect the Excelsior, which was presumably several light-years distant at the time.
~1:[2,#B],7:[1,#B],9:[2,#B]@1subspace shunt@2Device used by the Kobliad criminal Rao Vantika to gain unauthorized control of computer systems such as those on Deep Space 9. Attached to a secondary system, the shunt could be used to bypass normal security lockouts. (“The Passenger” [DS9]).
~1:[3,#B],16:[1,#B],20:[2,#B]@1subspace transition rebound@2Phenomenon associated with the use of folded-space transport devices employed by the Ansata terrorists of planet Rutia IV. An adaptive subspace echogram was found to measure the rebound phenomenon with sufficient accuracy to locate the Ansata headquarters, despite the fact that folded-space transport was virtually undetectable with conventional sensors. (“The High Ground” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B]@1subspace transponder@2Device used to aid in the location of objects in space such as ships or flight recorders. (“Dramatis Personae” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B]@1suck salt@2To ingest sodium chloride in the form of a solid crystal stick. Considered to be a “nasty habit,” conducive to health risks. (“Unification, Part II” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],10:[2,#B]@1Sulu (mirror)@2Lieutenant Sulu was security chief in the mirror universe. (“Mirror, Mirror” [TOS])
~
~1:[2,#B]@1Sun Tzu@2Ancient Chinese philosopher whose writings on the art of warfare are still taught at Starfleet Academy. Among Sun Tzu's teachings were “Know your enemy and know yourself, and victory will always be yours.” (“The Last Outpost” [TNG]).
~1: [1, #b], 7: [2, #b], 16: [2, #b], 51: [1, #i], 60: [5, #b]@1Suna@2(Andrew Prine). Native of planet Tilonus IV who was seen as different characters by William Riker in a delusional world created in Riker's mind when he was brainwashed on that planet in 2369. Suna controlled the brainwashing equipment, and his image was projected as Lieutenant Suna on board the Enterprise -D and as the administrator of the imaginary Tilonus Institute for Mental Disorders. (“Frame of Mind” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],7:[1,#B],18:[2,#B],26:[1,#I],30:[2,#B],59:[4,#I],68:[7,#I]@1Sunad@2(Charles Dennis). Commander of a Zalkonian warship dispatched in 2366 to capture a fugitive Zalkonian named John Doe. Sunad, upon locating Doe aboard the Enterprise -D near the Zeta Gelis system, demanded Doe's extradition, alleging Doe to be an escaped criminal. It was later found that Doe was a member of a persecuted Zalkonian minority. (“Transfigurations” [TNG]). Sunad was named for Star Trek: The Next Generation staff writer Richard Danus. (Spell it backward).
~1: [2, #b], 17: [1, #i], 35: [1, #b], 39: [2, #b], 41: [20, #i]@1Supera, Patterson@2(Max Supera). One of the winners of the primary-school science fair held aboard the Enterprise -D in 2368. Young Patterson was also made an honorary officer in charge of radishes by Captain Picard. (“Disaster” [TNG]). SEE: Flores, Marissa. Patterson's last name was not given in dialog, but was printed on the plaque that the kids gave the captain.
~1:[2,#B]@1Supervisor 194@2Code name for Gary Seven when he was assigned to Earth in 1968. (“Assignment: Earth” [TOS]).
~1:[1,#B],7:[1,#B],35:[1,#B],57:[1,#B]@1Surak@2(Barry Atwater). Father of the Vulcan philosophy, a man of peace and logic who helped lead his people out of a period of devastating wars. A replica of Surak was created by the Excalbians in 2269 as part of their attempt to study the human concept of “good” and “evil.” (“The Savage Curtain” [TOS]). SEE: Yarnek.
~1:[2,#B],8:[1,#I],18:[3,#B]@1Surata IV@2Class-M planet surveyed by an Enterprise -D away team in 2365. During the away mission, William T. Riker was injured by contact with a native plant form. He lost consciousness for several hours, but eventually recovered. (“Shades of Gray” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],7:[1,#B],15:[1,#B],31:[1,#B]@1Surchid, Master@2Leader of the first Wadi delegation to Deep Space 9 in 2369. Falow announced that he was the Master Surchid of the Wadi, and was supervisor of the Chula game played at Quark's bar on Deep Space 9. (“Move Along Home” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B],11:[2,#B],82:[3,#I],86:[7,#I],96:[2,#I]@1Surmak Ren@2(Matthew Faison). Bajoran who worked with noted geneticist Dekon Elig. Surmak Ren, a member of the Bajoran underground, and medical assistant to Dekon Elig, claimed to know little about the deadly aphasia virus created by Dekon. In 2369, while serving as chief administrator of the Ilvian Medical Complex, he was contacted when the virus was spreading throughout station Deep Space 9. When Surmak refused to cooperate, Kira kidnapped him to the station to help develop a cure. (“Babel” [DS9]). The character was not named for anyone in Nickelodeon's animated series Ren and Stimpy. Heck, no.
~1:[3,#B],15:[2,#B],18:[1,#BI]@1Surplus Depot Zed-15@2Starfleet designation of the surplus depot located in orbit around planet Qualor II. The T'Pau was assigned to this depot in 2364, following its decommission. (“Unification, Part I” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],38:[6,#I]@1Susann, Jacqueline@2Popular 20th-century Earth novelist known for sensationalistic novels about that planet's rich and powerful. Spock read Susann's works during his study of Earth culture, and regarded her as one of the “giants” of human literature. (Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home).
~1:[2,#BI],5:[1,#I],12:[1,#I],17:[1,#B],29:[1,#B],34:[3,#B],43:[1,#I],45:[5,#I],51:[1,#I],52:[1,#BI],53:[1,#B],54:[11,#I],66:[1,#I],68:[23,#I]@1Sutherland, U.S.S.@2Federation starship, Nebula class, Starfleet registry number NCC-72015. The Sutherland was commanded by Commander Data for Picard's armada to blockade the Romulan supply ships supplying the Duras family forces during the Klingon civil war in 2368. (“Redemption, Part II” [TNG]). The Sutherland was a modification of the Nebula -class U.S.S. Phoenix. The upper sensor pod and supporting struts were changed for the Sutherland. The Sutherland was named for Horatio Hornblower's flagship in the classic C. S. Forrester novels that served as one of Gene Roddenberry's original inspirations for Star Trek.
~1:[2,#B],7:[1,#I],11:[2,#B],33:[1,#B]@1Sutter, Clara@2(Noley Thornton). Daughter of Enterprise -D crew member Daniel Sutter. Because she had changed starships and therefore homes so many times in her young life, Clara invented an invisible friend, Isabella, to keep her company. Clara was at first pleased, then frightened, when her imaginary companion suddenly became very real. (“Imaginary Friend” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],7:[1,#I],27:[1,#I],33:[2,#B]@1Sutter, Ensign Daniel@2(Jeff Allin). An Enterprise -D officer and part of the engineering staff. Sutter had served on several starships before his posting to the Enterprise -D in 2368. His daughter, Clara Sutter, lived with him. (“Imaginary Friend” [TNG]).
~1: [2, #b], 10: [1, #b]@1Suvin IV@2Planet where archaeologist Dr. Langford invited Captain Picard to join her in exploring the ruins. (“Rascals” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],4:[1,#I]@1Swenson, Science Officer@2Enterprise -D crew member who was scheduled to participate in a martial-arts competition aboard the ship just prior to Tasha Yar's death in 2364. (“Skin of Evil” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],13:[3,#B]@1Switzer@2A renowned Federation archaeologist who attended the annual symposium of the Federation Archaeology Council in 2367. (“QPid” [TNG]).