Danik
Danik (ENT-21)
Danik was a Suliban male imprisoned in the Tandarans’ Dentention Complex 26 with his daughter, Narra. His grandfather had settled on Tandar Prime, and Danik was the Director of Research for an engineering institute in Querella Province before being imprisoned. In 2152, Captain Jonathan Archer convinced Danik and his fellow Suliban prisoners to escape from the Detention Complex.[1]
References
- 2. “Detained.” Star Trek: Enterprise, Episode 21. Television. 24 April 2002.
Damrus
Damrus (ENT-18)
Leader of a Eska hunting party encountered on the rogue planet Dakala by Captain Jonathan Archer and his crew in 2251.[1]
References
- 1. “Rogue Planet.” Star Trek: Enterprise, Episode 18. Television. 20 March 2002.
Dalby, Kenneth
Kenneth Dalby (VOY-116)
Kenneth Dalby spent his troubled youth on the Bajoran frontier, settling down for a time when he fell in love. His anger returned when the woman he loved was raped and murdered by Cardassians, and he joined the Maquis. Shortly after the U.S.S. Voyager NCC-74656 and Chakotay‘s Maquis ship was lost in the Delta Quadrant, he became regarded as a disruptive and unreliable worker. He constantly clashed with Tuvok during a field-training class, but fell into line after Tuvok risked his life to save Crewman Gerron.[1]
Portrayed by Armand Schultz.
References
- 1. “Learning Curve.” Star Trek: Voyager, Episode 116. Television. 22 May 1995.
D’Marr
D’Marr (ENT-20)
A trader who dined aboard the Enterprise NX-01 in 2151, D’Marr informed the crew about a crashed Kantare vessel in exchange for ten kilos of coffee.[1]
References
- 1. “Oasis.” Star Trek: Enterprise, Episode 20. Television. 3 April 2002.
D’Amato
D’Amato (TOS-69)
Lieutenant D’Amato participated in the search for the crashed Shuttlecraft Galileo on the surface of Taurus II in 2266.[1] In 2268, Lieutenant D’Amato was part of a landing party from the U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701 that became stranded on a Kalandan Outpost when the starship was thrown several light years away from the planetoid. D’Amato specialized in geology and was assigned to the landing party to survey the unusual planet, the vegetation of which was extraordinarily evolved in comparison with the age of the world. It was later discovered that the planet’s landscape was artificially created by the Kalandans, who were wiped out when they accidentally created a deadly microorganism. D’Amato, however, perished before this discovery was made—he was killed by contact with the computer-replicated image of the last surviving Kalandan, Losira. Her deadly touch killed by matching the victim’s chromosome pattern, causing individual cells to explode from within.[2]
Portrayed by Arthur Batanides.
References
- 1. “The Galileo Seven.” Star Trek, Episode 13. Television. 5 January 1967.
- 2. “That Which Survives.” Star Trek, Episode 69. Television. 24 January 1969.
Kirk, James T.
James T. Kirk (ST-06)
James T. Kirk (ST-05)
James T. Kirk (ST-03)
James T. Kirk (ST-01)
James T. Kirk (TOS-15)
James T. Kirk (TOS-05)
James T. Kirk (TOS-01)
Young James T. Kirk (TAS-22)
Young James T. Kirk (ST-11)
James T. Kirk mutated (TAS-13)
James T. Kirk disguised as a Romulan (TOS-59)
James T. Kirk disguised as a Nazi (TOS-52)
James T. Kirk disguised as an Iotian (TOS-49)
James Tiberius Kirk was one of the most celebrated captains in the history of Starfleet, and his exploits became required reading at Starfleet Academy. Kirk spent most of his life in Starfleet, from the age of 17 when he entered Starfleet Academy until his death in the 24th century, saving the Veridian star system.[36]
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Update: 26 June 2010
Added 43 entries to the Personnel section of the Library Computer.
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Cwan, Si
A prince exiled from the Thallonian Empire, he was beloved by some and targeted for death by others. But Si Cwan had his own agenda: a search for the one woman who meant the world to him.[1]
References
- 1. “House of Cards.” Star Trek: New Frontier, Book 1. Novel. Pocket Books. July 1997.
Compton
Compton (TOS-68)
Compton was part of a landing party which answered a distress call from the planet Scalos in 2268. When the young officer was exposed to the contaminated Scalosian water on the planet’s surface, he was phase-shifted to the level of the Scalosians in order to be used as a mate. The process quickly caused Compton to become passive and forget his Starfleet training; he tried to stop Captain Kirk, who had also been phase-shifted, from preventing the Scalosian sabotage of the U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701. Compton’s loyalty resurfaced when his captain’s life was threatened by one of the alien intruders. Unfortunately, Compton was injured by one of the Scalosians while leaping to Kirk’s defense; in his altered state, the smallest injury could prove fatal, and the lieutenant’s susceptibility to cellular damage caused him to rapidly age and die.[1]
Portrayed by Geoffrey Binney.
References
- 1. “Wink of an Eye.” Star Trek, Episode 68. Television. 29 November 1968.
Cochrane, Zefram
Zefram Cochrane (TOS-31)
Zefram Cochrane (ENT-01-02)
Zefram Cochrane (ST-08)
Zefram Cochrane was born on Earth, and lived through World War III before inventing the first warp-capable vessel. Of all the great inventors who have ever lived on the planet Earth, few can claim to have had as much impact on the course of human history as Zefram Cochrane. The amazing coincidence of choosing to make his first warp flight in his experimental ship, the Phoenix, on the same day that a Vulcan survey ship passed through Earth’s solar system, led to one of the most important moments in human history—the first meeting with an alien race. Cochrane’s discoveries ensured his place in history and ushered in a new era of peace and prosperity for mankind. In the following centuries, his theories and discoveries were taught in schools, some of which were named after him; his name was also given to units of measurement relating to warp physics.[2]
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