1:[2,#B],5:[1,#B],24:[2,#B]@1Maris, Roger@2Twentieth-century American baseball player (1934-1985). Maris played for the New York Yankees and broke Babe Ruth's one-season home-run record. Twenty-fourth-century collector Kivas Fajo had an ancient baseball trading card, circa 1962, bearing Roger Maris's likeness, the only such card to have survived into that century. (“The Most Toys” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],28:[2,#BI],45:[1,#I]@1marker beacon@2Brilliant strobe lights located on the hulls of Federation starships, intended to aid other ships in visually locating that vessel. The marker beacons of the U.S.S. Lantree were activated around stardate 42303 to warn other ships to avoid contact with the contaminated Lantree. (“Unnatural Selection” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],7:[1,#B]@1Markoffian sea lizard@2A life-form that Q claimed he could have chosen to become when he was stripped of his powers in 2366. He instead chose to become human. (“Deja Q” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],19:[1,#I]@1Marlonia@2Planet that Captain Picard, Ensign Ro, Keiko O'Brien, and Guinan visited in 2369. While returning to the Enterprise -D, the shuttlecraft was enveloped by an energy field and its occupants reduced to children. (“Rascals” [TNG]).
~1: [1, #b], 24: [1, #b], 71: [1, #b]@1Marouk@2(Nancy Parsons). The Sovereign of planet Acamar III, under whose leadership a century-old rift between the Acamarian government and the nomadic Acamarian Gatherers was ended. This aristocratic woman had very little tolerance for the Gatherers, but nevertheless agreed to help Captain Picard attempt to end the Gatherer piracy, by extending an offer of amnesty to the Gatherers, allowing them to return to Acamar III. (“The Vengeance Factor” [TNG]). SEE: Yuta.
~1:[1,#B],10:[2,#B],16:[1,#B],59:[1,#B]@1Marphon@2(Torin Thatcher). Member of the society on planet Beta III during the end of Landru's rule in 2267. Although Marphon was a high-ranking official in the Landru regime, Marphon was immune to absorption and was a member of the underground resistance against the will of Landru. Marphon rescued Kirk and Spock when they were captured by Landru's Lawgivers. (“Return of the Archons” [TOS]).
~1:[1,#B],10:[1,#I],19:[3,#B]@1Marple@2(Jerry Daniels). Security guard aboard the original Starship Enterprise and member of the landing party to planet Gamma Trianguli VI. He was killed in 2267 when one of the inhabitants of that planet struck him on the head with a heavy club. (“The Apple” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],3:[1,#I],13:[2,#B]@1Marquez, Lieutenant@2Enterprise -D crew member sent to the surface to planet Bersallis III in 2369 to track the deadly firestorm. (“Lessons” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],16:[2,#B],24:[2,#B],29:[2,#B],66:[1,#I]@1Marr, Dr. Kila@2(Ellen Geer). Renowned Federation xenologist who had made the study of the Crystalline Entity her life's work. Marr's only child, Raymond Marr, was killed on Omicron Theta when the entity attacked and destroyed that colony in 2336. She devoted all of her studies thereafter to the entity. Her work culminated in 2368 when she located the entity while she was aboard the Enterprise -D. Seeking revenge against the life-form that had killed her son, Marr used a projected graviton pulse to destroy the entity, despite orders to the contrary. (“Silicon Avatar” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],9:[2,#B],13:[2,#B],27:[3,#B]@1Marr, Raymond@2Science student (2320-2336) killed by the Crystalline Entity at the Omicron Theta colony. Marr, called Renny by his family, was survived by his mother, Dr. Kila Marr. (“Silicon Avatar” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],8:[2,#B]@1Marrab Sector@2Area of space where planet Devidia II is located. (“Time's Arrow, Part I” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B]@1marriage@2SEE: wedding.
~1:[2,#B],6:[1,#B],11:[1,#B],26:[2,#B],42:[1,#B],60:[2,#B],100:[3,#B],206:[1,#B]@1Marritza, Aamin@2(Harris Yulin). Minor Cardassian officer at the infamous Gallitep labor camp during the Cardassian occupation of Bajor. He served as file clerk to Gul Darhe'el, the brutal commander of the camp. Marritza's inability to stop the atrocities against the Bajoran prisoners caused him great guilt. After Gallitep, Marritza moved on to other duties and settled on planet Kora II in 2364, where he was an instructor at a military academy for five years. There he underwent a cosmetic alteration to look like his old commander, Gul Darhe'el, and set into motion a ruse that brought him to Deep Space 9 in 2369. As he planned, he was incarcerated as a Cardassian who was at Gallitep and let his captors discover, then believe, he was indeed the infamous Darhe'el. It was later discovered that he was not the camp commander, but simply a file clerk. Marritza protested the discovery, saying that he was Darhe'el and that he must be punished so that his race would be forced to hear the terrible atrocities committed against the Bajoran people and perhaps feel the terrible guilt he felt. With the truth known, Marritza was freed to be returned to Kora II. While being escorted to a ship, Kainon, a Bajoran, took justice into his own hands, killing Marritza not because he was “the Butcher of Gallitep,” but simply because he was a Cardassian. (“Duet” [DS9]).
~1:[3,#B]@1Mars Defense Perimeter@2A Starfleet defense border designed to protect the inner Solar System. The Mars Defense Perimeter was guarded by unmanned pods capable of tracking and destroying intruding enemy space vehicles. The Borg craft passed easily through the perimeter on its way toward Earth in early 2367. (“The Best of Both Worlds, Part II” [TNG]).
~1: [2, #b], 16: [2, #b]@1Marta community@2A settlement of the southern continent of Malcor III. William Riker, masquerading as Rivas Jakara, listed this as his home. (“First Contact” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],7:[2,#B],19:[3,#B]@1Marta@2(Yvonne Craig). Inmate at the Elba II penal colony in 2268 who was killed by fellow inmate Garth of Izar. Marta, a green Orion woman, was Lord Garth's consort during his takeover attempt and was fond of quoting Shakespeare. (“Whom Gods Destroy” [TOS]).
~1:[1,#B],11:[2,#B],27:[2,#B],29:[6,#I],36:[1,#B]@1Martia@2(Iman). Chameloid (shape-shifting) inmate at the Klingon prison asteroid Rura Penthe at the time Kirk and McCoy were imprisoned there for the murder of Klingon chancellor Gorkon. (Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country). SEE: shape-shifter.
~1:[6,#B]@1Martian Colonies, Fundamental Declarations of the@2Important legal document addressing the subject of individual rights. (“Court Martial” [TOS]).
~1:[3,#B],6:[2,#I],10:[3,#B]@1Martian Colony III@2Birthplace of Starship Enterprise crew member Lieutenant Mira Romaine. (“The Lights of Zetar” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],9:[1,#I],35:[3,#B]@1Martin, Dr.@2(Rick Fitts). A member of the Enterprise -D's medical staff. He was left in charge of sickbay when Dr. Crusher succumbed to a mysterious coma, later found to be caused by a telepathic memory invasion rape. (“Violations” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],15:[1,#BI],16:[1,#B],17:[1,#BI],18:[1,#I],23:[1,#I],28:[3,#B],32:[1,#B],34:[1,#B],83:[1,#I],95:[2,#B],119:[1,#I]@1Marvick, Dr. Laurence@2(David Frankhan). Federation engineer, one of the designers of the original Constitution -class Starship Enterprise. Marvick traveled aboard the Enterprise in 2268 while accompanying Dr. Miranda Jones and Medusan ambassador Kollos on a diplomatic mission. Marvick, who exhibited signs of emotional instability, was in love with Jones and became jealous of her interest in Kollos. During the journey, Marvick made direct visual contact with Kollos and was driven dangerously insane by the encounter. In his delirium, he programmed the Enterprise to travel beyond the rim of the galaxy, across the dangerous galactic barrier. Marvick died shortly thereafter, unable to live with what he saw in Kollos. Ironically it was the Medusan ambassador who guided the Enterprise back to Federation space with his advanced navigational knowledge after mind-melding with Commander Spock. (“Is There in Truth No Beauty?” [TOS]).
~1:[1,#B],6:[2,#BI],16:[2,#B]@1Masada@2Science officer of the U.S.S. Constellation, killed when that ship was destroyed by the planet killer in 2267. (“The Doomsday Machine” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],35:[6,#I]@1Masefield, John@2English poet (1878-1967) who wrote such classics as “Sea Fever,” from which Kirk quoted, “All I ask is a tall ship and a star to steer her by.” (“The Ultimate Computer” [TOS]; Star Trek V: The Final Frontier).
~1:[2,#B],24:[3,#B]@1Masiform D@2Powerful injectable stimulant. McCoy administered Masiform D to Spock after several thorns from a poisonous plant rendered him unconscious on planet Gamma Trianguli VI in 2267. (“The Apple” [TOS]).
~1:[3,#B],17:[1,#I],20:[16,#I],42:[3,#I],47:[8,#I]@1master systems display@2Information display and control console used by starship personnel in Main Engineering of Galaxy -class starships. The master systems display console was built from the video display table from Starfleet Command in Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home. For obvious reasons, Star Trek production personnel have nicknamed it the Pool Table.
~1:[3,#B],12:[1,#I],39:[16,#I],57:[10,#I],68:[71,#I],146:[10,#I]@1master situation monitor@2Large wall-mounted display in Main Engineering of a Galaxy -class starship. The master situation monitor features a large cutaway diagram of the ship, used for monitoring the overall status of the ship and its departments. The master situation monitor also includes a number of very small “in-jokes.” These include the official U.S.S. Enterprise duck, the ship's mouse, a Porsche, a DC-3 airplane, the Nomad space probe, and the hamster on a treadmill that is alleged to be the true source of power for the ship's warp engines. Naturally, these items are far too small to normally be seen on television, but the sharp-eyed viewer can occasionally glimpse them in a close-up, if they haven't been covered up for that shot.
~1:[2,#B],11:[2,#I],21:[1,#B]@1Masters, Lieutenant@2(Janet MacLachlan). Staff engineer who served aboard the Starship Enterprise in 2267 during the confrontation with the entity Lazarus. (“The Alternative Factor” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],5:[2,#B]@1Mataline II@2Planet where Neela Daren purchased a flexible piano keyboard that rolled up into a compact round shape. (“Lessons” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],4:[1,#I],16:[2,#B]@1Matthews@2(Vince Deadrick). Enterprise security officer killed when he fell into the caverns at planet Exo III. (“What Are Little Girls Made Of?” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],23:[4,#B]@1matrix diodes@2The array of omnidirectional holographic diodes embedded in the walls of holodecks. The matrix diodes were suspected of malfunctioning in Sherlock Holmes program 3A in 2369. (“Ship in a Bottle” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B]@1matter stream@2In the operation of the transporter, the matter stream is the beam of phased (or dematerialized) matter that is transported from the transport chamber to the destination (or the reverse). (“Realm of Fear” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],6:[1,#I],23:[1,#B],28:[1,#I]@1matter-antimatter integrator@2Component of a Constitution -class starship's warp-drive system. The emergency bypass control valve to the matter-antimatter integrator was fused by Losira in 2268, causing the Enterprise to travel at dangerously accelerated speeds up to warp 14.1 before the problem was solved. (“That Which Survives” [TOS]).
~
~1:[1,#B],6:[2,#B],12:[3,#B],20:[2,#B],24:[2,#B]@1Maura@2Beloved pet dog of Aquiel Uhnari. Maura was killed at Relay Station 47 in 2369 by the same coalescent organism that killed Keith Rocha. (“Aquiel” [TNG]).
~1: [1, #b], 7: [5, #b], 21: [2, #b], 50: [3, #bi]@1Mavek@2(Gary Werntz). Attendant at the Tilonus Institute for Mental Disorders created in Riker's mind while being brainwashed on planet Tilonus IV in 2369. Mavek was large in stature and seemed to gather delight in forcing Riker and other inmates to obey his orders. (“Frame of Mind” [TNG]). SEE: Frame of Mind.
~1:[4,#B],8:[3,#B],13:[2,#BI],20:[2,#B]@1Maxia Zeta Star System@2Location of the Battle of Maxia where the U.S.S. Stargazer, under the command of Captain Jean-Luc Picard, suffered a devastating sneak attack from an unidentified ship that was later identified as Ferengi. (“The Battle” [TNG]).
~1: [3, #b], 16: [1, #i], 28: [1, #i], 34: [2, #b], 40: [4, #b], 51: [1, #i], 65: [2, #b], 90: [1, #i], 112: [2, #b]@1Maxia, Battle of@2A battle that occurred in the year 2355 between the Federation starship Stargazer and an unknown spacecraft, later identified as a Ferengi vessel. The Stargazer, under the command of Captain Jean-Luc Picard, was traveling through the Maxia Zeta Star System when it was attacked without provocation. The Stargazer survived because of a brilliant tactic devised by Captain Picard, later called the Picard Maneuver, permitting the ship to escape damage long enough to fire a full phaser and torpedo spread. The Ferengi ship was destroyed, but the Stargazer crew was able to escape in shuttlecraft and escape pods. Among the casualties aboard the Ferengi vessel was the son of DaiMon Bok, making his first voyage as DaiMon. (“The Battle” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],11:[2,#BI],15:[1,#B],41:[2,#B],98:[2,#BI],123:[1,#I],126:[2,#B],145:[1,#I]@1Maxwell, Captain Benjamin@2(Bob Gunton). Starfleet officer who commanded the U.S.S. Rutledge during the Cardassian wars. Maxwell received the Federation's highest citations for courage and valor during the conflict, but he lost his family in the Cardassian attack on the Setlik III outpost, a loss made even more bitter because his ship was not able to reach Setlik in time to prevent the massacre. Maxwell carried bitterness toward the Cardassians for many years and in 2367 mounted an unauthorized offensive against the Cardassians, in direct violation of the peace treaty of 2366. Maxwell, in command of the U.S.S. Phoenix, destroyed a Cardassian outpost and two Cardassian ships, because he believed the Cardassians were planning for a new attack against the Federation. Former Rutledge crew member Miles O'Brien was able to convince Maxwell to discontinue his attack, and Maxwell was relieved of command of the Phoenix. (“The Wounded” [TNG]).
~1:[4,#B]@1May you die well@2A Klingon parting phrase. (“Redemption, Part II” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],10:[3,#B]@1Maylor, Sev@2(Susan French). A woman who traveled with Ambassador Ves Alkar on his diplomatic missions. Alkar identified Maylor as his mother, but it was later learned that she was not. Maylor was found to be much younger than she appeared, but Alkar had been using her as an empathic “receptacle” for his negative thoughts and emotions. As a result, she became extremely bitter and hostile, and aged at a highly accelerated rate. Maylor died in 2369 at about age 30 from the stress of this empathic abuse. (“Man of the People” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],9:[2,#I],27:[1,#I],34:[1,#B],52:[1,#I],56:[2,#B]@1M'Benga, Dr.@2(Brooker Bradshaw). Physician aboard the original Starship Enterprise who interned in a Vulcan ward during his medical training. He cared for Spock when the Enterprise first officer was critically wounded on Tyree's planet in 2267. (“A Private Little War” [TOS]). M'Benga supervised the autopsies surrounding the mysterious deaths of Enterprise personnel near the Kalandan outpost in 2268. (“That Which Survives” [TOS]).
~1:[3,#B],10:[1,#B],17:[2,#B]@1McAllister C-5 Nebula@2Protostellar cloud located seven light-years inside Cardassian space, some eleven light-years from planet Minos Korva. In 2369, a Cardassian invasion fleet hid inside the nebula while apparently preparing to attack the Minos Korva sector. The fleet's time inside the nebula was limited due to the intense particle flux within, which caused degradation of the spacecraft hulls. (“Chain of Command, Part II” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],6:[1,#I],20:[2,#B],30:[1,#B]@1McClukidge, Nurse@2Member of the Enterprise -D medical staff. Dr. Beverly Crusher suggested that McClukidge could fill in for Nurse Ogawa, so the latter could take a vacation on Risa. (“Imaginary Friend” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],11:[2,#B]@1McCoullough, Captain@2Starfleet officer who wrote the revised procedures for first contact operations. (“Move Along Home” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B],7:[1,#I],10:[2,#B],34:[13,#I]@1McCoy, David@2(Bill Quinn). Father of Enterprise medical officer Leonard McCoy. The elder McCoy suffered from a painful, terminal illness, and his son eventually pulled the plug to spare his father further pain. (Star Trek V: The Final Frontier). David McCoy's first name was established in Star Trek III.
~1:[4,#B],13:[2,#I],116:[6,#I],128:[1,#I],137:[2,#B],147:[1,#I],165:[6,#I],203:[1,#I],238:[5,#B],250:[1,#B],265:[1,#B],270:[1,#B],306:[1,#I],324:[1,#B],328:[5,#I],345:[2,#B],363:[1,#B],377:[6,#I],395:[1,#I],410:[143,#I],555:[10,#I]@1McCoy, Dr. Leonard H.@2 (DeForest Kelley). Chief medical officer aboard the original Starship Enterprise under the command of Captain James Kirk, who gave him the nickname “Bones.” (“The Corbomite Maneuver” [TOS]). As of 2267, McCoy had earned the Legion of Honor, and had been decorated by Starfleet surgeons. (“Court Martial” [TOS]).
Early in his medical career McCoy's father was struck with a terrible, fatal illness. Faced with the prospect of suffering a terrible, lingering death, McCoy mercifully “pulled the plug” on his father, allowing him to die. To McCoy's considerable anguish, a cure for his father's disease was discovered shortly thereafter, and McCoy carried the guilt for his father's possibly needless death for many years. (Star Trek V: The Final Frontier). Prior to his assignment to the Enterprise, McCoy had been romantically involved with the future Nancy Crater. (“The Man Trap” [TOS]).
McCoy first joined the Enterprise crew in 2266, and remained associated with that illustrious ship and its successor for some 27 years. (Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country). In 2267, McCoy suffered a serious overdose of cordrazine in a shipboard accident. In the paranoid delusions that followed, McCoy fled the ship, then jumped through a time portal being studied by Enterprise personnel. In the past, McCoy effected serious damage to the flow of time until Kirk and Spock followed him to restore the shape of history. (“The City on the Edge of Forever” [TOS]). SEE: Guardian of Forever; Keeler, Edith. In 2268, McCoy was diagnosed with terminal xenopolycythemia and chose to resign from Starfleet so that he could marry a woman named Natira, high priestess of the Yonadan people. McCoy rejoined Starfleet after a cure was found in the Yonadan memory banks. (“For the World is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky” [TOS]).
McCoy retired from Starfleet after the return of the Enterprise from the five-year mission, but he returned to Starfleet at Kirk's request when the ship intercepted the V'Ger entity near Earth. (Star Trek: The Motion Picture). McCoy, along with Kirk, was wrongly convicted for the murder of Klingon chancellor Gorkon in 2293, a conviction that was later overturned. McCoy was scheduled to retire shortly after the Khitomer peace conference, but he either changed his mind, or later returned to Starfleet. (Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country). As a retired Starfleet admiral, McCoy made an inspection tour of the Enterprise -D in 2364 at the age of 137. (“Encounter at Farpoint, Part I” [TNG]).
An unofficial part of McCoy's back story was developed by Original Series story editor Dorothy Fontana, who had written a story entitled “Joanna,” which would have established that McCoy had been married and later endured a bitter divorce, and it was the aftermath of this experience that drove him to join Starfleet. The episode would have introduced Joanna, McCoy's now-grown daughter from that failed marriage. “Joanna” was written for the Original Series' third season, but was so heavily rewritten (becoming “The Way to Eden” [TOS]) that Fontana removed her name from the final version.
Since the McCoy back story was never incorporated into an episode, it isn't “official,” at least for the purposes of this encyclopedia. On the other hand, it is mentioned here because it offers insight into the McCoy character, and because of Fontana's pivotal role in the development of many Star Trek characters. McCoy's first appearance was in “The Corbomite Maneuver” (TOS).
~1:[2,#B],5:[1,#I]@1McDowell, Ensign@2(Kenneth Meseroll). Enterprise -D crew member who served at Tactical during the ship's rescue of a Romulan science ship in 2368. (“The Next Phase” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],15:[3,#B]@1McFarland@2A renowned Federation archaeologist who was present at the annual symposium of the Federation Archaeology Council in 2367. (“QPid” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],10:[2,#I],17:[3,#B],44:[1,#I],70:[3,#B],103:[3,#B],106:[7,#I]@1McGivers, Lieutenant Marla@2(Madlyn Rhue). Historian aboard the original Starship Enterprise in 2267 when former dictator Khan Noonien Singh attempted to commandeer the ship. McGiver's fascination for bold men of the past clouded her judgment when it came to Khan. She betrayed the Enterprise crew and helped Khan's takeover attempt. Marla was later given the choice of a court-martial or accompanying Khan and his group into exile on planet Ceti Alpha V. She chose to stay with Khan and live on that desolate world. (“Space Seed” [TOS]). McGivers married Khan, but she was later killed by the parasitic eel creatures indigenous to Ceti Alpha V. (Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan).
~1:[2,#B],19:[2,#B],56:[2,#B],60:[2,#B]@1McHuron, Eve@2(Karen Steele). Beautiful woman recruited by Harry Mudd as a bride for a settler on planet Ophiucus III. Eve had been raised on a farm planet, caring for her two brothers. Although Eve was attracted to Kirk, she eventually realized that Kirk was married to his ship, so she ended up with miner Ben Childress at the Rigel XII mining station. (“Mudd's Women” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],9:[3,#B]@1McKenzie, Ard'rian@2(Eileen Seeley). Young member of the Tau Cygna V colony, Ard'rian was very interested in Commander Data's abilities as an android, and grew very fond of him personally. She supported Data's efforts to evacuate the Tau Cygna colony in 2366. (“The Ensigns of Command” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],11:[1,#B],13:[2,#B]@1McKinley Park@2Located on planet Earth, a favorite place of Keiko and Miles O'Brien. Miles presented Keiko with a gold bracelet there. (“Power Play” [TNG]).
~1:[3,#B],76:[39,#I]@1McKinley Rocket Base@2American military space launch facility on Earth. In 1968, a large orbital nuclear weapons platform was launched from McKinley Rocket by the United States to counter a similar launch by a rival power. In an effort to demonstrate the foolhardy nature of such weapons, extraterrestrial agent Gary Seven secretly armed the platform's warheads shortly after launch, then caused the launch vehicle to malfunction, before disarming it just before impact. (“Assignment Earth” [TOS]). The scenes of McKinley Rocket Base were a combination of stock film of NASA's Kennedy Space Center and footage shot at Paramount Pictures. The vehicle launched from McKinley Rocket Base was stock footage of an early Saturn V booster.
~1:[2,#B],4:[3,#B]@1McKinley Station@2SEE: Earth Station McKinley.
~1:[1,#B],17:[2,#B]@1McKinney@2Starfleet officer who was apparently killed by the unknown alien intelligence that attempted to infiltrate Starfleet Headquarters in 2364. (“Conspiracy” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],5:[1,#I],15:[1,#I],19:[2,#B]@1McKnight, Ensign@2(Pamela Winslow). Enterprise -D crew member who was at conn while the Enterprise -D explored the Ngame Nebula in 2367. (“Clues,” “Face of the Enemy” [TNG]).
~1:[2,#B],42:[1,#B]@1McLowery, Frank@2(Leonard Nimoy). Outlaw from Earth's ancient American West, and a member of the Clanton gang who was killed at the famous gunfight at the OK Corral in 1881. Spock represented Frank McLowery in a bizarre charade created by the Melkotians in 2268. (“Spectre of the Gun” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],49:[1,#B]@1McLowery, Tom@2(DeForest Kelley). Outlaw who sided with the Clanton family against the Earps at the historic gunfight at the OK Corral in 1881. Tom McLowery and his brother, Frank, were both killed in the battle. McCoy was cast as Tom McLowery in a drama created by the Melkotians in 2268 for the purpose of causing their death. (“Spectre of the Gun” [TOS]).
~1:[1,#B],8:[2,#B]@1McNary@2(Gary Armagnal). Fictional character from the Dixon Hill detective stories. McNary was a homicide detective and a good friend of Hill, despite Dixon's tendency to work both sides of the law. A holographic version of McNary was part of the Dixon Hill holodeck programs. (“The Big Goodbye” [TNG]).
~1:[1,#B],7:[2,#B],14:[3,#B],25:[3,#BI],38:[2,#I]@1McPherson@2Genetically engineered survivor of Earth's Eugenics Wars. McPherson and other followers of Khan Noonien Singh escaped Earth in 1996 in the sleeper ship, S.S. Botany Bay remaining in suspended animation until revived by personnel from the U.S.S. Enterprise in 2267. (“Space Seed” [TOS]).
~1:[2,#B],8:[2,#B],13:[1,#I],31:[1,#B],57:[1,#I],64:[43,#I]@1Mea 3@2(Barbara Babcock). Official of planet Eminiar VII who greeted the Enterprise landing party in 2267. Mea 3 was declared a casualty of war during an attack by planet Vendikar. She was expected to report to a disintegration chamber under the terms of her planet's agreement with Vendikar, but was prevented from doing so by Enterprise personnel. (“A Taste of Armageddon” [TOS]). Barbara Babcock also played Philiana in “Plato's Stepchildren” (TOS), and provided the voice of Trelane's mother in “The Squire of Gothos” (TOS), the voice of Isis the cat in “Assignment: Earth” (TOS), and the voice of Commander Loskene in “The Tholian Web” (TOS).
~1:[2,#B],8:[2,#BI],16:[2,#B],21:[1,#I]@1Mears, Yeoman@2(Phyllis Douglas). Member of the Shuttlecraft Galileo crew when it crashed on planet Taurus II in 2267. (“The Galileo Seven” [TOS]).
~1:[3,#B]@1mechanical rice picker@2Device that supposedly caused Spock's ears to be pointed, at least in a tale fabricated by Kirk in Earth's past. Kirk was trying to explain Spock's alien appearance to a police officer of Earth's 1930s. (“The City on the Edge of Forever” [TOS]).
~1:[1,#B],3:[2,#B],52:[1,#I],55:[1,#B]@1Medusans@2Intelligent noncorporeal life-forms whose minds are among the most beautiful in the universe. By contrast, Medusans' physical appearance is so hideous that one look at a Medusan by a human will cause total madness in the human unless the human is wearing a protective visor. While traveling on board the Enterprise, Medusan ambassador Kollos shielded himself in a protective container in order to protect the human members of the crew. Medusans' sensory systems are radically different from those of humanoid life-forms, and their ability to orient themselves in subspace makes them well-suited for navigational tasks aboard star-ships. (“Is There in Truth No Beauty?” [TOS]).
~1:[1,#B],6:[2,#B],11:[2,#B]@1Mediators@2Law-enforcement officials on planet Rubicun III. (“Justice” [TNG]). SEE: punishment zones.