THE BUZZ Hey folks, welcome back! Here at Now Voyager, it's been a very busy couple of months. We discovered that in fact it is possible to put out a newsletter despite obsolete computers and lack of important equipment with a little help from people around the country. Our scanner's in Orlando, our video spigot's in Denver, our graphics come from Rochester (as does the lovely new masthead you see above) and Miami, our promoter's in Texas. The photos in this newsletter came from people all over the place, and we're not even sure whether some of our reviewers have actual homes or just terminals. [MISSING PHOTO] (That's Kate at the Grand Slam convention in Pasadena, obviously having a good time; photograph by Lillie Deans.) We have reason to believe that Kate read the first issue of this newsletter, as there's a copy of it lying under her left arm in many of the Grand Slam photos we've seen--THANK YOU KIMBERLEY! We're going to try to get this one under her left arm in Seattle... So, you want to know who "we" are? We'll tell you what we know, although we really think we're going to have to put out a yearbook if we want to get the full dirt on all our members--anyone want to volunteer to compile all the stuff if we promise to get it printed up? Anyway, a LOT of us are students--undergraduate and graduate, in fields from literature to math to philosophy. At least six people reading this new sletter have Ph.D.s in English, and at least three have Ph.D.s in physics. A tenth of our members hail from Canada and several more come from Germany, whereVoyager isn't even ON yet. We have a couple of Aussies and a South African member. The largest concentration of Kate fans in the U.S. seems to be in Florida, but there are a goodly number of Texans as well. As far as we can gather, our youngest members are under five and our oldest are above sixty. Right now the women out number the men two to one, but there's been a slight shift in the last few days, as someone apparently unleashed a whole slew of nightgown stills from "Eye of the Needle" at that con in San Francisco. Since March 15, we gained almost 100 members and gotten official sanctioning. We're working on getting you all those things you've said you wanted--photos, Kate's convention schedule, reviews of old movies she was in, all that kind of stuff. We're still having financial difficulties and discovering that our hard drives are not big enough to hold the amount of information a fan club generates. Plus, believe it or not, the contacts we need at Paramount are Very Busy People. So it may be another couple of months before we can deliver on everything--but rest assured, we're doing our best. Hope YOU all are having a great spring and enjoying Voyager! ALL ABOUT NOW VOYAGER Welcome to the Official Kate Mulgrew Appreciation Society. This newsletter is published bimonthly by Michelle Erica Green and Paul Anderson, 15613 Ambiance Drive, North Potomac, MD 20878. You can reach us online at tigger@cais.com or thepooh@aol.com. Send SASE for information or $5 for sample issue. Dues are subject to change without notice as rising printing and mailing costs affect our ability to produce this newsletter. This is a not-for-profit, amateur publication and is not intended to infringe upon the rights of Paramount Pictures or its licensees. All material herein is copyrighted by the authors, except for the copyrights, trademarks, and patents of Paramount Pictures and its affiliates. You may not reproduce any part of this newsletter without permission of the editors and/or writers. If you received this newsletter electronically, you may not forward it, excerpt any part of it, post the illustrations, nor disseminate it in any other manner. The opinions expressed herein are not necessarily those of the editorial staff, Kate Mulgrew, Star Trek: Voyager, or Paramount Pictures. Photo Credits Masthead--Graphic by Janet Coleman. 1--Copyright Lillie Deans. 2--Copyright Paramount Pictures 1995. 4--Copyright Paramount Pictures 1995. 6--Copyright Paramount Pictures 1995. 8--Copyright E! Entertainment Television 1995. Used without permission. 9--Copyright Paramount Pictures 1995. 10--Copyright Orion Pictures 1988. 11--Photo copyright Paramount Pictures 1995. Unauthorized alterations by Janet Coleman. 12--Copyright E! Entertainment Television 1995. Used without permission. 13--Photo by Cheryl Burch. Courtesy Eric Stillwell. 15--Courtesy Lolita Fatjo. 16--Copyright Jo Beth Taylor. Please contact the club for information about obtaining color reprints from Ms. Taylor. 17--Copyright Jo Beth Taylor. 18--Copyright Jo Beth Taylor. 19--Copyright Maureen McGowan. 21--Copyright E! Entertainment Television 1995. Used without permission. 22--Illustration by Galen Wise. 27--Illustration by Anne Davenport 30--Photos copyright Paramount Pictures 1995. Unauthorized alterations by Janet Coleman. Illustration by Anne Davenport. It is illegal to reproduce or scan any art from this newsletter. CREDIT WHERE CREDIT IS DUE DEPARTMENT Lolita and Eric: Thanks so much for talking to us, for sending us photos, and for caring what wild Trekkers like ourselves think about the show. And thanks for being part of what makes Voyager happen. We love your work. Larry Goldman: Just wanted to remind you that we appreciate you! Reviewers: We grovel at your feet. We kiss each of your toes. We humbly beg for more. People who sent us pictures & video from cons (Kimberley, Maureen, Lillie, Jo Beth, Cheryl, Pam): THANK YOU! Gentle readers: We thank you for your patience as we get the kinks in this newsletter ironed out, and as we struggle for new and interesting mixed metaphors to tell you about it. A.S.F.S.ers: Senators Exon and Gorton shall not prevail against us. The First Amendment still stands... Dee: You are truly amazing. Are you still working on three stories at once? When do we get the next one? Ruth and Emily: Our sides still hurt from laughing. And some of our other parts hurt from the hot fudge sauce. BeccaO: "Oh, Kathryn!" "Oh, Heathcliff!" Come hear the band play your song at the jubilee...my partner in crime. See you on AOL around 11! Kate: Happy birthday. We promise never to discuss whether or not you're a feminist again. We wouldn't want to enhance our image as annoying loudmouths--which we were before we became feminists! [MISSING PHOTO] WWW users: Look for Now Voyager on the web at: http://umbc8.umbc.edu/~mpanti1/kate/kate.html . REVIEWZZZZZZ We reiterate: we'll run any reviews you send in, you don't have to be a staff reviewer to have an opinion! We still need someone to compile a running list of directors and guest stars for various episodes... PARALLAX The newly assembled crew of the U.S.S. Voyager is forced to confront their underlying animosity and determine whether or not they can work as a team to remove themselves from a potentially fatal situation. The episode is filled with tension and excitement from the first moment until he final credits begin to roll. As the crew begins to take on its new shape, we are treated to suspense and adventure in the classic Star Trek form of unanswered questions and unforseen outcomes.If "Parallax" is any indication of the course the journey Voyager is on will take, we can be assured that it will not be a boring one. Captain Janeway makes it clear in her dealings with her First Officer, Chakotay, that she is the leader aboard this vessel and that she expects to be treated as such. In a quiet but forceful way, the First Officer creates his own place as he confronts the Captain's predisposed attitudes toward the Maquis crew members and encourages her to put prior assumptions aside in order to evaluate the personnel in question. Her use of his suggestions impresses in our minds the picture of a fair authority figure willing to put aside personal opinions in favor of making the best choice for the ship. Throughout this episode, the scenes between Kate Mulgrew and Robert Beltran hold our rapt attention; these two are a well matched pair and the combination promises much to look forward to in future episodes. We also see Janeway in the role of the nurturing mentor for the troubled B'Elanna Torres. Resisting her initial urge to remove Torres from consinderation for the engineering chief's position immediately, Janeway delves deeper into the workings of the half-Klingon, half-human woman. The two find a common ground in temporal mechanics and from there make their way to a working partnership. It is thrilling to see this powerful two-woman team take off in the shuttlecraft to perform the maneuvers that will free Voyager from the quantum singularity. Kate Mulgrew gives a powerful performance. If there were questions in the minds of the viewers as to whether or not a female captain can make it in uncharted space, Mulgrew's portrayal here puts an end to them. It is certain that none of the crew members aboard Voyager question her ability to perform her duties or to lead effectively. This leaves the viewer anxiously awaiting the next installment of Voyager's journey and the hard-hitting, action-packed adventure that lies waiting in the Delta Quadrant. --Siobhan Wolf TIME AND AGAIN I have a lot of trouble with "time" stories and always get confused. However, this one wasn't too bad (as long as one doesn't start thinking too hard about it). I thought it was done convincingly, at least enough that I could follow it. I liked Janeway's "take charge" manner when the chips were down, both when they were about to be played as pawns (to get into the facility) and later when she confronts the leader of the demonstrators. This is one no-nonsense Captain! She is quick to figure out a problem and decisive in her actions. I also rather liked the suggestion here that there is more to Kes than shows on the surface. She is almost "Guinan-like" here in her perceptions when things aren't normal. Paris acquits himself quite well as a supportive confidante and a man-of-action. By putting himself at risk to save the boy, a selfless act, he proved that he is not just full of himself. I especially liked the twist that it was their own rescue attempt that caused the disaster. That was nice and quite unexpected! And nice that Janeway was the one to figure it out. She is not only an action-oriented Captain, but has knowledge and experience with science as well. Kim, Chakotay and Torres seem to work well together at solving problem situations, although Tuvok still remains aloof and somewhat disagreeable. --Marguerite Petersen PHAGE Overall, I would rate this episode as very good. The plot was interesting and not stupid like "Spock's Brain" to which this episode has been compared, a nice change from the spatial anomaly as the villain of the week stories. Some of the dialogue was quite funny and almost made me spit out my toothpaste at the TV screen. Also, the flashlights on the wrist were quite cool and logical. It keeps both hands free with which other things can be done. The opening teaser gladdens this Janeway/Chakotay fan's heart. Then when Janeway walks into her private dining room and beholds what Neelix has done to it, the expression of horror is priceless, as is the look of relief on her face as she leaves. Everybody's motivations were quite clear and logical. Neelix's disregard for orders and protocol have both comical and disastrous consequences. It makes sense that someone who is used to being on his own would likely disobey orders. Kes is very strong, standing up to the Doctor in no uncertain terms. The Doctor, an appropriate characterization of a hologram who has not had much time to develop a bedside manner, has the best one-liners in the episode--no doubt his "I'm a doctor, not a decorator" is a tribute to another crusty ship's surgeon. Paris acts his usual horny self and puts some moves on Kes. Yet this episode belongs to Janeway. When she finds out about Phage virus, she goes from being angry to disgusted to sympathetic to confused to some certainty. All these emotions play across her face to show us the moral dilemma she finds herself in. Nowhere does Janeway become mushy. After having made her decision to spare the aliens, she makes clear that she will not tolerate any such actions against her crew again. But through it all, she remains true to her ideals and values. Mulgrew's performance really brings to light the quandary that Janeway finds herself in. --Shalini Gupta EYE OF THE NEEDLE [MISSING PHOTO] We have no new reviews. We just thought we'd run a gratuitous nightgown shot for all you loyal readers. EMANATIONS One of the things that always bothered me about TOS and TNG was that even though the mission of the Enterprise was to Seek Out New Life and New Civilizations, Kirk and Picard never seemed to be all that surprised when they found one. Kirk was a master at trashing the Prime Directive and "correcting" the problems of civilizations that had flourished for generations before he showed up, and Picard had a kind of stuffiness, a certain "ah, yes. We were once like you." In Emanations, there are no real answers to the question that haunts a society obsessed with death. Kim, Janeway, and Kes are all asked that most serious of all questions: what is there after life--and they just don't know. Harry is probably the best performer in the episode. His uncertainty on how to go about treating the cultural problem he finds himself in is completely refreshing and thoroughly honest. Even though he becomes bewildered over the ease with which these people turn to death as a solution, he never turns pompous or preachy. Chakotay sets up the situation nicely and develops his own background in the process. Even though he hasn't gotten nearly the exposure I'd like to see for him, Chakotay is already becoming far more "knowable" than Frakes' Riker. Janeway's conversation with Harry at the end is a wonderful example of the sensitivity and humanity that Mulgrew brings to the character. I was struck by the way her voice and her eyes drifted off as she reminisced about how easy it is to lose one's past without taking the time to reflect on it. Her decisiveness about the problems in the episode are again combined seamlessly with a very believable committment to the well-being of her crew. Some small problems and inconsistencies: where the heck is Neelix just when you stumble on one of those civilizations he's supposed to know so much about? Also, seeing as how Harry Kim is supposed to be Paris' best friend, it would have been nice to see some concern on Tom's part. I expected Torres to be the first to say, don't you think it's time to leave, but not one word from Tom? Harry, you should choose your friends more carefully. Emanations is full of questions with no easy answers. At the end of it, we know only that these people might survive after death or they might not. We know that the Federation has discovered 246 elements, and that warp cores attract subspace vacuoles. Most importantly, we know that this crew will encounter situations it doesnít have the answers for. It is not all that well prepared for the unknown. For me at least, that's exciting. --Richard Hanson In this episode, we see a very delicate topic being intellectually and sensitively addressed. One always has to be very careful when discussing religion and views of the afterlife are governed by religious beliefs. There was a very open discussion of afterlife theories, especially between Piteira and Kes in the Mess Hall, when we learned that Piteira believes that after death they move as a whole, body and all, into a higher level of existence, while Kes reveals the Ocampa belief that after death, the soul moves onto the next plane. We also learn from Chakotay and Torres that Klingons believe in an afterlife as well. Kim, on the other hand, showed the reaction that too many people have regarding the beliefs of others. When he commented to his roommate "so they make you wrap yourself in your own death shroud" there were obvious signs of disapproval in both his face and his tone. Captain Janeway makes him realize that maybe the Vinarey are not as wrong in their beliefs as he thought in a wonderful scene at the end of the episode. This episode also adds to the further growth of characters, some at the expense of others. We do see some growth in Kes, who is becoming a very capable assistant to Holodoc--he asked her for a drug, she quickly slapped it into his outstretched hand like a good operating room nurse--and expands her role as counselor in a sense different to that of Deanna Troi. Hers is a more commonsense as opposed to the "empathic" approach. Here's hoping that Kes does not turn into a Keebler Elf in the coming episodes. We also get to see how much of a science junkie Torres is--excited by the possibility of a new element, frustrated by the fact that they can only do visual scanning of the corpses on the asteroid. When Chakotay asks what she found, she replies "just some naked dead people," further evidence of her surprisingly dry sense of humor. I hope we get to see some more of this. Finally we get to see learn more of Chakotay. He gets to lead an away team again, and it is evident that he cares as deeply about the Starfleet crew as the Maquis. He is very sensitive to other cultures, yet drops his deference quickly when it comes to the safety of the crew. Captain Janeway, like Torres, is a science junkie, and like Chakotay, her instincts can be reversed if the situation calls for it. Instead of agreeing with Kim about by doing a full blown study of the corpses, she sides with Chakotay, visual only. The situation did not call for a full blown study, therefore the moral side, the side that said 'we really shouldn't be playing in a cemetery', won out over the techie side. This shows a real balance to the character. I also like the fact that there was further evidence of the hands on breed of Captain that she is. Janeway could have easily stayed on the bridge or in her Ready Room while Torres figured out the problem of the subspace vacuoles using Voyager as another depository, yet she was down in engineering getting her hands dirty along with everyone else. The best development of this episode is Mulgrew's blending of both parts of the role, the Captain side and the sensitive side--not to say that either is mutually exclusive. In the scene with Piteira in sickbay, she switched naturally from the soft, almost motherly comforting of this scared alien woman to the no-nonsense, unmistakable tone of command when the ship was jolted: "Janeway to Bridge. Report!" In the scene with Kim in the empty mess hall , she did a remarkable job of showing just how much of a nurturing person Janeway can be yet there is no sense that Kim will follow her orders with any less respect. This development in Janeway's character has me further applauding Paramount and Mulgrew for finally giving us a truly balanced female character. --Risa Phillips Kovac We see early on in "Emanations" that Captain Janeway is becoming more comfortable delegating authority to senior crewmembers. However, once questions arise, it becomes clear that she continues to hold the final word. Her willingness to hear out the opposing opinions of crew members and the decision to forego archeological information to honor the remains at the burial site are admirable and the sign of a competent captain. When the alien woman appears in the transporter room with Commander Chakotay and Chief Torres and the decision is made to revive her in hopes of finding out where Ensign Kim is, it is of concern that the Captain is not shown to be involved in the apparent decision to violate the Prime Directive. The viewer is left to assume that Janeway weighed the consequences and chose to go after her missing crewman. Janeway's growning concern for her crew and her protective feelings toward Ensign Kim in particular make this decision in keeping with the development of her character. Kate Mulgrew continues her superb portrayal in the scenes with Captain Janeway and the alien girl. She brings to her performance a level of emotion usually found in stage productions and film rather than in television series. That these attributes are seen here in a Starfleet Captain are to Mulgrew's growing credit. The depth to which she portrays Captain Janeway's honesty is one of qualities that puts her in a league of her own. This captain is willing to put her knowledge on the line with that of her crew to eliminate a potentially deadly problem. When it appears that no way to locate and retrieve Ensign can be found before the ship is fatally damaged, she visibly regrettably does what all captains must do and puts her ship and crew's safety ahead of the continued search for one individual. In the episode's final scene between Janeway and Kim, we glimpse a side of the captain we have not seen before. We see a woman and an officer who recognizes her own regrets, admits to them, and works to assist a younger officer by allowing him the time she herself had not taken to fully incorporate experiences. Her encouraging Kim to express himself in some way shows us her sensitivity as well as her ability to gently guide the less experienced. Although "Emanations" left questions in places, it succeeded in further rounding out the character of Captain Janeway. Mulgrew continues to rise to the occasion with an insightful and heart felt portrayal. --Siobhan Wolf PRIME FACTORS Those who have hungered for a more DS9-like blend of tension and darkness on Voyager got a plateful in "Prime Factors." When the crew first beamed down to Sikarian homeworld, I took one look at all the fun everyone was having and wondered when Wesley Crusher was going to show up and show everyone how to play baseball [Justice; TNG, 1987]. Although there were some of the same elements, this is a far from idyllic place, and this is a far from idyllic story. And this is a story with a lot of undercurrents. Janeway dallied with an alien [you think the crew ever sat around questioning Kirk's jumping on every bipedal female he met? There'd have been a mutiny every week]. B'Elanna agonized over whether to commit mutiny. The truth emerged that at least some of the crew are only going to obey orders as long as the ship's heading in their direction. We got to explore the dangers of unchecked logic. the dangers of unbridled hedonism. the fact that Janeway likes to be the one to decide when and who's going to get touched, the amazing absence of Chakotay whenever anything serious is happening. the amazing absence of Neelix and Kes for all but two minutes of the episode. Some serious moments: Janeway's difficulties in dealing with the demands of her own principles and her responsibility to the crew. Heavy hangs the head that wears the little cufflinks on the collar, and aneway shows us that being a captain just isn't all itís cracked up to be. Scenes like this hearken back to the good old days of Kirk, except that Kate does it without overacting. As a result of which, I ended up almost feeling ashamed that I was having such a good time. Nice, nice plot twist with Tuvok suddenly revealed as part of the conspiracy, so hard to believe that I started thinking: "Dallas, dream sequence...naaah." Russ did a great job in a difficult role. Vulcans DO get out of hand sometimes, the problem is making it all seem logical. The final dressdown of Torres and Tuvok was classic Trek all the way. Here is the stern quality of naval justice set in space. Janeway is absolutely flawless in her reactions, and every feeling of betrayal flits across her face with us along for the ride. Letís face it, folks: Captains donít have to be fair, and in my opinion, she's taking quite a personal risk to go so lightly on one so close to her own counsels. (Best Line: "You can use logic to justify anything. That's its strength AND its flaw.") "Prime Factors" sets a benchmark that Voyager will have to work hard to surpass. It has served notice that all is not sweetness and light aboard the good ship Voyager. And we haven't even been voyaging that long. A final thought: Kate! What's with this Gath guy? So he makes a okay plate of finger food. I can bend a coat hanger and put it around my head too, and I can cook... --Richard Hansen In "Prime Factors" we are treated to a further look into the motivations and characterological make up of many of the crew members. We see for the first time Ensign Kim's struggle to decide whether to follow protocols or take the risk that might lead them home. Lieutenant Paris makes a leap and gives Kim the advice to be forthcoming with the Captain. Chief Engineer Torres battles between loyalty to her Maquis crew members and the responsibility she has agreed to take on when she was given the senior staff position on Voyager. Lieutenant Tuvok shows his willingness to stand behind Captain Janeway to the point where he is willing to put that above Starfleet principles. This is an episode filled with tension and emotion, truly the stuff that Star Trek is made of. Janeway is faced with possibly her toughest decision yet as she struggles to follow proper channels to obtain technology that might assist her in fulfilling her mission of getting her ship and crew back to the Alpha Quadrant. In her interactions with the alien leader, we see that she, as well as her crew, is feeling the depth of her group's isolation and distance from all that is comfortable and familiar. Having those feelings while also being faced with the challenge of a forbidden technology that might just get them closer to what they know and love and being able to continue to balance those feelings with the protocols and principles for which she stands is the sign of a strong and competent captain. Although she does not look forward to doing what she knows she must, she makes the decision that is in keeping with her background and her sense of proper leadership. Kate Mulgrew puts on a stunning performance with this episode being her most powerful to date. Having grounded herself in the character of Captain Janeway, Mulgrew shines through in this episode with such feeling and powerful, conflicting emotions that the viewer has no doubt the depth to which this character must reach to maintain her balance and objectivity. Yet she succeeds convincingly. From her initial curiosity toward the alien leader and his in- vitations to her relaxing in the pursuit of activities other than that of running the ship to the anger that accompanies the realization that she has been used, Mulgrew pulls us in and keeps us there as we travel this path with Janeway. We feel her angst as she makes the only decision she can which is to leave without the technology. When the ship has almost been destroyed by a warp core breach and Janeway is made aware of all that has gone on behind her back, Mulgrew brings through with absolute certainty that this captain will not tolerate having her orders second-guessed or disobeyed. The intensity of her eye contact and the steely-edged control in her voice leave the viewer cringing right along with the reprimanded Torres and Tuvok. "Prime Factors" highlights the desire to get home and the battle between being willing to do so at any cost and being able to do so with a clear conscience. The growth of the characters of Kim and Torres, the depth we see in Tuvok, and the breadth of feeling in Captain Janeway all make for a must see episode. Kate Mulgrew's performance is in a class of its own. --Siobhan Wolf [MISSING PHOTO] Including "Caretaker," we have now seen nine episodes and think this one was the best so far. It was a well written story and very well acted by all cast members. Tuvok's inclusion of himself into the conspiracy was quite a surprise (though upon rewatching the episode for the umpteenth time it is not so surprising if you look at his expression after Janeway orders the recall of the landing parties and tells him that she cannot accept Jared's offer to bend the rules). One of the more interesting points to the story is the fact that a culture tells representatives of the mighty Federation that they cannot have something that they want as the Federation has done to others on thousands of occasions. As Janeway notes in the Officer's Mess, there is finally an interaction between the two crews; however it is this newly found interaction that is the heart of the group who go against order. It's no coincidence that the group who trades the Federation library for the space-folding matrix is comprised of an even number of Starfleet and Maquis members once Tuvok joins the group. There are also signs that some of the crew are beginning to believe that it is going to take a while to get home. Harry is no longer holding out for his girlfriend back home that he was devoted to in "Time and Again." In the mess hall scene we learn that he was on the holodeck with one of the infamous Delaney sisters from Stellar Cartography. Then, he's getting awfully chummy with alien female. We almost saw the Kirk Syndrome reborn--Captains kissing aliens--in this episode, had it not been for Kim's well timed interruption. What is it with the producers: can't a female captain have any fun, or is Hollywood still so far behind the rest of our culture that they fear a liberated woman? What could be wrong with one stinking kiss? Yeah, that boyfriend at home, but if Kim could forget his love... Worst Line: "The Captain is so infatuated with the Sikarean magistrate, she can't think straight. We can't trust that she's going to make the best decision for all of us." Also the most infuriating line, especially coming from a woman--Seska. By far the best part of this episode and what has me so enamored to it is the final scene in the Captain's ready room. It was probably one of the most powerful scenes I have ever seen on television. The acting was so incredible that you can't help but feel the Captain's sense of betrayal, anger and sadness at what was presented to her. Up until this episode, if asked I would what my favorite serious Voyager scene was, I would hands down answer the transporter room scene in "Phage." There Kate Mulgrew conveyed a whole range of emotions that I couldn't help but be impressed by her abilities. This scene just blows that one away. After seeing something like this, I am truly convinced that our Captain is like no other and I thank the gods everyday that Genevieve Bujold and Paramount parted ways. STATE OF FLUX One of the early complaints about Voyager was that it was not as 'dark' as DS9. This has never been a particular problem for me, but I have sometimes wondered if it would be possible to add some darkness to the show and still retain the other qualities I've found so attractive. "State of Flux" deals with the darkness of treachery, and it does a credible job. Seska has been cruising for a bruising since the last episode, and goes out in fine form as a very modern kind of traitor--no simpering, mustache twirling Iago here. Seska doesn't see herself as a traitor and so makes it very hard for us to see it also. Her relationship with Chakotay makes it even harder for Chakotay and the viewer to believe that somehow it isn't going to come out right in the end. In many ways this is Chakotay's episode. Finally we get to see something more than just the stereotypical First Officer. His sense of humor: "Chief Inspector Tuvok will leave no stone unturned." His self doubt: "Was anybody on my ship working for me?" Even a bit of plain old impatience as in when he essentially tells Tuvok that Vulcan honesty is just so much bull. We see also that Voyager isn't above riffing on its own character devices when it makes fun of the now notorious animal spirit guides. (Seska: "Why don't you ask your animal guide?" Chakotay: "I will." Seska: "Well, get back to me.") As far as the plot goes, I suspected at first that this was going to be plotted as a 'crew seeks scapegoat' story (TOS: "Balance of Terror," TNG: "The Drumhead"). But the writers chose to treat it as a mystery with just the smallest hint of paranoia. For a moment, Chakotay challenges Janeway to eliminate the possibility that he is himself the traitor, and for a moment we wonder if Janeway might just be considering it, but then the plot moves quickly on to complications involving the suspense of a possible face-off with the Kazon, treknobabble in getting the Federation equipment off the derelict ship, and Chakotay's concerns over Seska and doubts as to why he keeps making the wrong decisions. I must admit that I never saw Seska revealed as Cardassian double agent coming, and I was perfectly set to accept that sniveling little toady, Carey, as the real traitor. Since both were in on convincing B'Elanna to steal the alien transporter device in "Prime Factors," he would be just as logical a choice as Seska, and the writers knew it. Hence I for one got taken. And I'm glad. For me, it added just a small element of mystery to the plot. There are some great lines and a few mileposts in this episode. B'Elanna finally gets past the dreaded 'engineer's curse' when she tells Janeway that she doesn't make inflated estimates: "if I say tomorrow, I mean tomorrow." Tuvok and Chakotay add to the never-ending debate over Vulcan veracity, topped off with the wonderful line: "How may I be honest with you today?" Finally, Janeway tops herself again in the most quotable quotes department with: "I'm usually pretty easy to get along with, but I don't like bullies, I don't like threats, and I don't like you." Dirty Harry, get out of town. Above all, somehow Voyager managed to add a little darkness without extinguishing the brightness which is so characteristic of the show. Janeway was rather frightening in the role of Grand Inquisitor in the questioning of Kerry, but she was also believable as she patiently explained to Neelix that, dangerous and not, Voyager had to try to help the crippled Kazon ship. Taken together, "Prime Factors" and "State of Flux" actually make one rather dark story; a story which proves that Voyager can deal with the darker side of the human experience without losing itself in the shadows. --Richard Hanson "State of Flux" finds the Voyager crew once again with internal security problems. While on an away mission gathering foods from the surface of a planet, the Kazon make another appearance, undetected for some time. Once their presence becomes known, Captain Janeway recalls her crew. Before the internal rift is discovered, we see that the crew is functioning more as a whole than ever before. Chakotay takes Neelix's advice seriously regarding the foods with which only he is familiar, and Janeway also takes seriously his warnings regarding the danger of the Kazon Nistrum. It is a calculated risk that brings Voyager to the assistance of a troubled Kazon ship. Finding the cause of the explosion that destroyed all but one of the Kazon crew to have been Federation technology brings the internal problems on Voyager to the forefront. The meeting in the halted turbolift between Janeway, Tuvok, and Chakotay gathers the three officers together for the first time with no apparent Starfleet-Maquis conflict. Though she first turns to Tuvok with instructions to investigate this incident, it becomes clear that she trusts Chakotay implicitly when, even after he has defended Ensign Seska, the Commander has to remind Janeway that he, too, was Maquis. The interactions between various members of the crew throughout this episode show the cohesion that has been established. Putting crewmembers who are not often on screen at the same time together is an effective method of portraying the workings of the crew. It is effective in portraying the bonding that has occurred between various members of the crew and the working relationships and respect that has been established. The scenes involving Tuvok and Torres, Chakotay and Carey, Neelix and Chakotay, Kes and Seska, and the interrogation scene with Janeway, Tuvok, and Chakotay all give the viewer a deeper sense of the stronger bonds that have grown between the crew members and the cohesiveness they have achieved in working toward their common goal--finding a way back to the Alpha Quadrant. Kate Mulgrew gives another fantastic performance bringing through the more stern and serious qualities of Janeway. The scene in which she interrogates Carey, as well as the scenes where she interacts with the Kazon leader, are representative of what the viewer has come to expect of her. Mulgrew's ability to bring through the impartial investigation and deep concern of the Captain are fast becoming her trademarks. Her barely disguised contempt for the Kazon leader hearkens back to Captain Kirk and his convictions against those who would attempt to control or manipulate him or his ship and crew. Remaining impartial to the end, Janeway hesitates to give Chakotay what he asks for immediately when he requests to be the one to confront Seska's Cardassian heritage. Out of respect for her First Officer and the position that he finds himself in having been betrayed by one of his own, she grants his request in the end, but only after having clearly established the truth. It is obvious that she is angry at Seska's escape through defection to the Kazon, but she removes her ship and crew from danger rather than engage in war to take back a prisoner. The viewer is left with little doubt that the Kazon may come back to haunt Voyager later. We are left waiting to see how this turn of events will effect the morale and functioning of the crew as they continue to try to find their way home. --Siobhan Wolf "State of Flux" is a pretty dynamic episode, starting off with a fairly good teaser and then delving straight into some surprising plot twists which hearken back to DS9's "Tribunal." Though Seska is focused on at the expense of some of the regular characters, it seems that almost everyone has a worthwhile part. And the writers have apparently remembered that Chakotay exists and can add a lot to the show! The Kazon, too, come to the forefront in "State of Flux" and continue to cause trouble for Captain Janeway and crew, though her handling of the imperious Kazon captain is excellent. We get to learn a bit more about the Kazon this time around: their society is a collective that is divided into sects, they have the ability to render their ships invisible (this could cause some problems in the future!), and they have no qualms about murdering one of their crewmates. I welcome this last piece of information, for it means that the Kazon are not simply Delta Quadrant carbon-copies of the Klingons. Though the episode was a good one overall, there were some problems with Seska. First of all, she was pretty dumb to loot the food reserves and expect to get away with it. Secondly, Seska and Chakotay? Romantically linked?? Even assuming that Chakotay really does have poor taste in women, would a Cardasian spy really allow herself to becomes attached to a Maquis officer? And finally, where did Seska *get* the food replicator that she gave to the Kazon? I would assume that with the energy shortage on the Voyager, the replicators are closely monitored. (While I'm on the subject, doesn't it seem that Federation technology is incompatible with anything in the Delta Quadrant? All attempts to integrate technologies so far have failed, which could be a major problem!) The points about Seska aside, "State of Flux" gave a strong showing from both the actors and the writers, a feat which I hope will be repeated many times over in the next seven years! --Jen Gartner [MISSING PHOTO] There are several very good elements to this episode. Finally Chakotay is givena larger role. He has fully accepted the fact that he now is on a Federation ship and a Federation officer, much to the chagrin of some of the other Maquis, witness his reaction to Seska's breaking into the kitchen and making his favorite soup. Chakotay has also joined forces with Tuvok in becoming ship's detective. Chakotay was the one who questioned Seska about her possible involvement in selling technology to the Kazon, he was also the one who set the trap for Seska to fall into if she were in fact guilty and he was also down in Engineering monitoring the ship's manifest to find the traitor. Like Janeway, Chakotay isn't afraid to get into the action. Easily he could have remained on the Bridge and let some underling monitor the board with Tuvok, but he went down there himself for potentially hours of sheer boredom. Flux also answers the question as to what type of Engineer Torres is. I wondered whether her estimates would be more in line with Scotty who also multiplied by a factor of four in order to maintain his reputation as a "miracle worker" or like Geordi who never overestimated anything. She bluntly informed the Captain that when she says tomorrow, she means tomorrow. She's obviously on the Geordi side of the estimate spectrum which would be much to the chagrin of Scotty (Relics). However, she shows a lot more guts than Geordi who would never have turned to Picard and said "No, Captain!". If the shows are taken in order, Flux also maintains that Torres hasn't lost her moxie when dealing with the Captain after the reprimand she received in Prime Factors, and judging from the Captain's reaction, Janeway was quite impressed with her Engineer. In Flux, we might have seen the birth of Voyager's big three: Tuvok, Chakotay and Janeway. Not having watched much of TNG I'm not really too sure if they had a big three, but there is no doubt that TOS had a triumvirate namely Spock, McCoy and Kirk. Spock represented the logical side and was countered by McCoy who was the emotional side. Kirk would use both of them as sounding boards and the three of them created a balanced triangle with Kirk in the middle. Kirk represented a combination of both elements. This triangle can be easily applied to the Voyager three. Tuvok is obviously in the Spock role and diametrically opposed to him is Chakotay in the McCoy role. There are also some elements of the conflict between Spock and McCoy present in the relationship between Tuvok and Chakotay, witness Chakotay's "you damn vulcans" in the Mess Hall scene at the end of the episode. Further we have the friction between the two for Tuvok's serving as a spy in Chakotay's crew. In the middle is Janeway. Like Kirk, she has both the logical side, the scientist in her, and an emotional side. Here again, we have a perfectly balanced triangle whereby Janeway can turn to two people to see diametrically opposed views of a single situation, and like Kirk, watch out when the two agree! Here also is the episode answers the naysayers that "Janeway isn't tough enough" to deal with aliens, Capt. Kate certainly is. The two scenes where she faced down the Kazon leader, first in Voyager's Sickbay and then when Torres went aboard the other Kazon ship to retrieve the console, she left no doubt in the Kazon's mind that there was no way that she would let him interfere in getting what she wanted. I loved when she said to the Kazon guy "You know, I'm really easy to get along with most of the time, but I don't like bullies and I don't like threats and I don't like you...you can try and stop us from getting to the truth, but I promise you, if you do, I will respond with all the unique technologies at my command, Janeway out." You could sense the real fear from the Kazon leader at that prospect just by how quickly he stood his weapons down. However, her order to power down the tractor beam on the Kazon ship faced with the imminent arrival at two more Kazon ships as a sign of weakness by some. Their argument is that the same situation, Kirk would have tractor beamed or blasted the Kazon ship and not turned tail and ran. I would tend to disagree. Capt Kate cannot be seen as weak here, but intelligent. She knew there was no chance to beat all three ships. Plus she has considerations that no other Federation captain we have seen has had to deal with, great distance from Starfleet repair facilities and supplies. Sure Kirk would have fired on the Kazon and maybe had the Enterprise damaged, but he could have limped to a repair facility in a few short days. Janeway doesn't have that option open to her. Voyager in peak shape will take some 75 years to get to Federation space and she has no idea as to where they are going to find even the most common place parts for the ship, let alone where to get major repairs done. Because of the unique circumstances under which she is operating, comparisons between Janeway and the other captains, Kirk and especially Picard, are unfair. By the time of TNG, the galaxy seemed much smaller and his Picard's Enterprise very rarely seemed to be out of touch with Starfleet, backup was never far away, therefore Picard could act much differently than Janeway is forced to. Who knows what kind of response would have been evoked from Janeway if the Kazon were Alpha Quadrant denizens, I suspect that Seska would have been retrieved in the Alpha Quadrant, but because she wasn't Captain Janeway is no weakling. Best line: "You (Tuvok) were working for her, Seska was working for them, was anyone aboard that ship working for me?" --Chakotay. I don't know about you, but when Doc announced "He's dead", I fully expected to hear "Jim" at the end, or at the very least, "Captain." --Risa Phillips-Kovac [MISSING PHOTO] This one's from "Eye of the Needle," too... THE KATE MULGREW FILM FESTIVAL COLUMN REMO WILLIAMS: THE ADVENTURE BEGINS... By Anonymous [MISSING PHOTO] Cast: Fred Ward as Remo Williams, Joel Grey as Chiun, Wilford Brimley as Harold Smith, J. A. Preston as MacCleary, George Coe as General Scott Watson, Charles Cioffi as George Grove, and Kate Mulgrew as Major Rayner Fleming. Written by Christopher Wood. Produced by Larry Spiegel. Directed by Guy Hamilton. Music by Craig Safan. Based on The Destroyer series by Sapir and Murphy. 1985, Orion Pictures. Video by Thorn EMI HBO Video. Summary: The movie starts with a police officer being shoved into a river. While officially 'dead', he is recruited by a secret governmental organization and gets a new identity as Remo Williams. Chiun, a Korean martial arts master, teaches him the skill of unarmed combat. Smith and MacCleary, Remo's vigilante bosses, are trying to destroy George Grove, the leader of the nefarious Grove Industries, because he's cheated the government, made life in the military unsafe, and because he's a blackmailer, tax evader, and murderer. At the same time, Major Fleming suspects that there is something wrong with a star wars satellite which Grove industries is supposed to deliver to the army: she cannot access information about the satellite on the computer network, and Grove keeps on delaying its delivery. When her questions start to become uncomfortable for Grove, he accuses her of working for an enemy organization. Fortunately for Major Fleming, Remo's bosses decide that Grove must be killed because he puts their organization in danger of being exposed while they still have no evidence for their accusations. Suffice to say that none of the plot developments come as a big surprise. At the end of the movie, and after some unique fighting sequences, Remo not only succeeds in killing Grove but also rescues Major Fleming from a horrific fate in a gas chamber. When it turns out that the satellite never existed, Fleming returns to her troops and Remo and Chiun disappear. The movie is not bad, but for an action-adventure there isn't enough action. Do not expect beautifully choreographed fighting scenes a la Van Damme. The long first part of the film is just about Remo's training, which is sometimes quite amusing, but oftentimes scenes which are supposed to be funny are just ridiculous. Chiun, Remo's Korean instructor, is stereotyped and not very realistic: he is both the reason for some of the funny scenes and for the ridiculous ones. I didn't like that he has inbelievable skills like bullet dogging and running on water. Of course my reason for watching the movie was Kate Mulgrew as Major Fleming. In the first half of the movie Major Fleming is a tough and intelligent woman. (Cool dialogue: General Watson: 'Let me give you a word of advice - never feel you have to overdo it. It makes no difference to me that you're a woman.' Major Fleming: 'That's good news, sir. ...and it makes no difference to me that you're a man!') She is the only one in the army who does not trust Grove and his products (or at least the only one who is not corrupt) and who dares to question Grove about the satellite. When she is accused of working for an enemy organization she stays cool and just walks out of the room. In contrast, as soon as she gets together with Remo and is rescued by him (of course!), she starts to behave like the typical female in an action movie: She is scared, screams, admires her rescuer, walks through the wilderness in a short skirt and high heeled shoes. Naturally that's not Kate's fault, it's the director's or writer's. She is a fine actress; in the first half, she reminded me somewhat of her future role as Captain Janeway. In summary: If you like Kate, the movie is worth seeing. And by the way, she looks great in a combat dress. [MISSING PHOTO] THE FUNNY PAGES [MISSING PHOTO] ONE OF THESE DAYS I'M GOING TO SURPRISE YOU, TUVOK Janeway's Ten Greatest Lines so far (from the Internet): 1. "There's coffee in that nebula!" 2. "Over the years, I've learned that sometimes you just have to punch your way through." 3. "I'm usually pretty easy to get along with, but I don't like bullies, I don't like threats, and I don't like YOU." 4. "You've got a date!" 5. "At ease, Ensign, before you sprain something." 6. "Ohhh, and I thought you were a man of unlimited talents." 7. "This is a VERY old trick." 8. "Who authorized this???" 9. "Oh, right! Pool's the one with the pockets." 10. "Dismissed. That's Starfleet for 'Get out.'" LAST OF THE MAQUIS-HANS Ruth and Emily, the Gifford Sisters, are worried about poor Chakotay. First he doesn't get any good lines, then he does get Seska's mushroom soup! His gripe to Tuvok was definitely the best: "You were working for [Janeway], Seska was working for the Cardassians. Was anyone on that ship working for ME?" And now, the Gifford Sisters' Top 10 Reasons We Haven't Seen Enough of Chakotay: 10. He's been trying to explain quantum filaments to Tom Paris for the last six weeks. 9. Kes whomped him over the head with a frying pan for calling her "Chiquita," then Neelix cooked him for dinner. 8. He's been dragged into Stellar Cartography by the Delaney Sisters. He's trying REALhard to escape though. 7. Paramount's holding him hostage until everyone in the country sees The Brady Bunch movie at least three times. 6. Marathon Risk games in the officer's mess. 5. He's on the holodeck rehearsing his speech to ask Janeway to the Starfleet/Maquis Mixer. 4. He's also busy filing a sexual harassment suit against Janeway because she can't seem to stop touching him. 3. Ate one too many of Neelix's Anta'Narlian cocktail sausage fingers and got sick. 2. O.J. Fev er ---and the #1 reason we haven't seen more of Chakotay--- 1. Jeri Taylor finds him as fascinating as we do and keeps him all for herself! WHAT'S ON YOUR POWERPADD? Also courtesy the Gifford Sisters, whom we'd suspect of secretly being the Delaney sisters except they'd both have better taste than to date Tom Paris. Kathryn Janeway, Commanding Officer, USS Voyager: Replicator code for dog's favorite kibble mix. List of tactful phrases to describe Neelix's food. Strategies for stomping Maquis. Her holodeck re-enactment (with solution) of the Battle of Wolf 359. Mark's golf games. Addresses of Badlands coffee shops. Long, loving descriptions of Mark's cooking. Notes for the great Terran Novel. Nude .gifs of Captain Jean-Luc Picard. Victoria's Secret Catalog (and backorder rain check). Warranty (and registration card) for the ship's Nav-I-Comp (tm) Custom navigation software. Copy of letter home. Chakotay, Executive Officer, USS Voyager New face tattoo patterns. Secret Maquis plans/strategies. Fan letter to Princess Leia of the Rebel Alliance. Nude .gifs of the Delaney sisters. Notes for the great Dovanian Novel. Spec script for Babylon 5. Janeway's credit card number. Mystic crystal revelations. List of tactful ways to tell Torres to straighten up and fly right. Study of Janeway's pool game. Recipe for killer chocolate cake. Copy of letter home. DON'T TELL ME NO LIES, AND KEEP YOUR HANDS TO YOURSELF We regret to report that we had to fire most of our Voyager Voyeurs for losing track of how many times Janeway got her paws on people during "Emanations" (shoulder feeling better yet, Commander?). Look at it this way: at least she didn't let that skanky guy from "Prime Factors" kiss her! Here's the Touchy-Feely Count as it stands now: Chakotay: 6 Tom Paris: 5 Harry Kim: 3 Gath: 3 Tuvok: 2 Kes: 2 Torres: 2 If Janway has ever touched Neelix, we missed it. OFFICER'S MANUAL EXCERPTS Richard Hansen fortunately intercepted the following subspace transmission to Kathryn Janeway, Captain, U.S.S. Voyager, from Starfleet HQ a few months ago: Captain: As per your request, please find the attached sections of the current Officer's Manual. I was always rather strict about such things myself, but I have complete confidence in your judgment. Nevertheless, I understand your concerns although (as we discussed) I don't see a long journey in the cards, just a romp through the badlands. See you soon. Signed: Alynna Necheyev, Vice-Admiral, Starfleet Command Article 16. Personal Appearance 4.2 ) Bridge officers shall take steps to insure that cosmetic effects do not interfere with ability to perform assigned duties. Bangs, fur, feathers, scales, and other epidermal extensions (hereafter referred to as "hair") will be trimmed so as to avoid conflicting with hand-eye coordination. Hair will be worn up if at all possible. Styles will be left to personal taste with an eye toward efficiency . Article 24. Comportment 1.1) Standing Bridge postures (especially in the case of the captain or the first officer) will be optional save in moments of tactical crisis when all bridge personnel will be expected to fall down. Whether the captain is the first or the last to fall down will be a matter of personal choice, with the understanding that, if the captain is seated during a collision or a weapons strike, the captain will first get out of the command chair and then fall down. 1.3) If utilizing the hands on hips posture, females must place the hands on the hips, fingers out. Males must place hands on hips, fingers in. Captains of sexually neutral species may use their own discretion. Article 36. Command Protocol 5.1) In the case of female commanding officers: it is the tradition of Starfleet to maintain naval protocol. Under normal circumstances, all commanding officers are addressed as "Sir" by lower officers. "Mr." is to be used in all circumstances by all officers of equal rank in addressing one another, and may be used by a senior officer to refer to any officer of lower rank. 5.2) A female officer of senior rank may also (at her discretion) be referred to by her rank or as "Ma'am." 5.3) Senior female officers, captains, and admirals may not be referred to as "mom," "momma," or any other term other than listed in 5.0 or 5.1. Hence: "Yes, ma'am," would be considered correct, whereas: "Yo, momma," would not. CAPTION THIS PHOTO and win a"JANEWAY/CHAKOTAY IN '96" t-shirt! (Please, no more "Commander Chakotay, your stick" jokes...) [MISSING PHOTO] VOYAGER PEOPLE Lolita Fatjo is the preproduction coordinator on the Trek shows, as was Eric Stillwell before her; now he writes episodes when he isn't running Horizon Conventions. They graciously agreed to talk to us about their work (and each other). Here's the scoop! ERIC STILLWELL By Paul Anderson In many ways, Eric Stillwell is living a Trek fan's ultimate dream. He has done everything from organizing an international Trek fan club to working as script coordinator on Next Generation to producing conventions, and now he has co-written the episode "Prime Factors" for Voyager. Eric's storywriting skills are not new to Trek viewers. Many may recognize Eric as being one of the writers on the popular TNG episode "Yesterday's Enterprise." This legacy actually left Eric anxious about "Prime Factors." "My greatest fear was that being associated with "Yesterday's Enterprise," I wouldn't be able to live up to expectations." As is often the case in the television production world, Eric works with a writing partner, David R. George III. The two of them began developing on story ideas for Voyager long before even the actors had been cast for the crew members. When they had come up with three or four ideas, they went in to Michael Piller to pitch them. What eventually became "Prime Factors" was the first story they pitched. "We were thinking about stories that might have some remote connection with the original series," Eric describes the process he and David went through for coming up with their stories. For "Prime Factors," Eric found inspiration in the long range transporter which sent Gary Seven from a mysterious part of the galaxy to earth in the TOS episode "Assignment: Earth." He and David speculated that the transporter originated in the Delta quadrant, and they began to extrapolate the implications of this technology and the alien race which had created it. "But for some reason they had stopped using it," Eric explains. "There had been some kind of catastrophe, and the aliens had created their own prime directive" to prevent others from using it. They turned their backs on their technology and decided instead to pursue pleasure and experiencing life to the fullest. [MISSING PHOTO] As is often the case in Hollywood, the original story had significant differences from the finished production. In early drafts, Voyager comes to a planet under construction as a new pleasure sight for the aliens. While investigating the planet, Chakotay and Harry are transported to the aliens' home planet, leaving Janeway and the rest of the crew to search for them. Harry and Chakotay make first contact, and Chakotay finds himself the love interest of an alien woman. There were even scenes "where Chakotay said he would consider staying because the planet reminded him of the colony he came from." Voyager finally finds them, and they decide to bargain for the transporter technology. Originally they weren't going to be able to transport the ship, only the crew. So they are going to offer to trade the ship for transportation. The aliens refuse. Eventually, Harry, Tuvok, B'Elanna, and Paris become involved in stealing the transportation technology. From its inception, the story maintained the same ending, with Janeway facing down B'Elanna and Tuvok. In early versions, Janeway actually threw B'Elanna in the brig, but then let her out. Eric found the ending to be particularly tough, especially Tuvok's rationalizations. "One of the difficulties was in coming up with an argument that made sense logically and was in character." This wasn't the biggest challenge Eric faced in writing the episode. "It was really quite difficult to do anything without really knowing a lot about the characters or the actors who would play them." When they pitched the story, Eric and David didn't mention that the story had been derived from TOS. Piller was immediately interested in the story. "Michael Piller just bought into the whole pleasure-loving, hedonistic aspect of the aliens." This left Eric feeling some trepidation. "We were afraid he'd turn it into the "Justice" of Voyager." In addition, Piller "saw a link to Treasure of the Sierra Madre - the gold rush kind of thing. How far will these characters go to acquire something they want badly enough?" They then fleshed out the story and pitched it Jeri Taylor. She sent them off to take several drafts through several story meetings. They were soon "cut off," Hollywood parlance for a studio decision to bring in someone else to work on it. "They wanted to see if other guys could flesh it out to their satisfaction." During this phase of the writing, Janeway became more central to the episode. The other writers were also responsible for the romantic attentions of the host alien on Janeway. Eventually, Jeri was brought in. She cleaned up the script and brought it closer to their original ideas. Being no stranger to the Hollywood production process, Eric was not at all turned off by the gyrations his story went through. He and David were quite satisfied with the finished product. "We thought it was fantastic. We thought the work of the other writers, especially Jeri Taylor, was fantastic. And the actors, the crew, production values were all great." Eric had the opportunity to meet Kate Mulgrew on the set during shooting of the episode. In person, "she's incredible," he says. "I'm normally not starstruck. I mean, I've worked with all of the Next Generation cast...and I wasn't expecting it to be any different. But Kate has a very gracious and powerful presence. When she starts talking, I lose all sense of reality." Showing no bias, Eric also considers his episode a "tour de force episode for [Kate]." Even before Kate had been cast, Eric was excited with Paramount's intentions that Voyager's captain be a woman. "I was thrilled from the very beginning that a woman was the captain." Eric says it had been his idea to make the Enterprise's captain in "Yesterday's Enterprise" a woman. Originally, the captain had been Richard Garrett and was changed to Rachel Garrett at his suggestion. "The description of Janeway's character never changed from the 'bible' to the pilot," Eric says. He finds Kate Mulgrew "exactly the way the part was described." As a seasoned insider, Eric has a unique perspective on the cast of both TNG and Voyager. He is particularly impressed with the job the actors on Voyager have done. "These people have walked into these characters as if they've been doing them for years. With TNG, it took them several seasons. Even then, I always found it hard to believe that Deanna and Riker had had a relationship before joining the Enterprise." Eric is no stranger to Star Trek or its fandom. He organized Starfleet, an international Trek fan club, while a teenager. Although Eric was an avid Trek fan, his career aspirations were in production in Hollywood. TNG was merely another rumor of a potential Trek TV series when Eric went to work as a production assistant on the TV movie "Promise" in his home state of Oregon. Soon after "Promise," he set off to seek his fortune in Los Angeles. "It was just a coincidence that when I made it down to California that Next Generation was starting production." Once he heard of job opportunities available on the set, he couldn't resist. "It seemed it would be icing on the cake." He started out as a production assistant on the set, eventually becoming script coordinator. He also contributed as a writer on "Yesterday's Enterprise." Eric has currently left the production studio to start up Horizon Conventions, which producers Trek conventions. He was a co-producer on the recent Generations extravaganza held at the Royal Albert Hall in England. When Michael Piller introduced Voyager at the convention, he used clips taken from shooting of Eric's episode. Eric hasn't given up Trek writing, however. He and his partner have sold two stories to Malibu Comics for a Deep Space Nine celebrity series. They are also writing with Armin Shimerman, who, unlike many of his fellow actors, is more interested in writing than in directing. Eric and his partner had approached Malibu with the idea of writing for them. During this conversation, the idea of the celebrity series came up, in which actors and others affiliated with Star Trek would be recruited to write stories. Eric went back and talked to Armin, and they have now come up with several story ideas. If Eric still harbors any fears about tarnishing his track record for Trek stories, glowing fan reactions to "Prime Factors" should put them to rest. The episode is already being praised as one of the best so far in the series. And if his past performance is any indication, Eric may soon become a major force in the Star Trek convention circuit. LOLITA FATJO By Michelle Erica Green Other than getting an invitation to guest star on Star Trek, the fondest dream of many Trekkers is to sell a script to the show and see it produced. "We got over 5,000 spec scripts for the final season of Next Generation," reveals Lolita Fatjo, pre-production coordinator for Star Trek: Voyager. "When Voyager starts reading spec scripts, we'll probably get buried in them." Lolita--also the script coordinator for Deep Space Nine, and formerly for TNG and Generations--supervises the processing, printing and distribution of all Trek scripts. Since Michael Piller initiated the television industry's only open submission policy for scripts in 1989, Star Trek has received tens of thousands of screenplays by amateur writers. It's Lolita's job to coordinate the evaluation of these scripts, which have to be logged, sent to union script readers, then passed on to the producers, with the rejected material going back to the authors with a letter from Lolita. So if you're planning to try to write for Voyager, hers is a name which will become familiar to you. "We have a hotline for writers: 213-956-8301. After first season has completely aired, we'll start looking at Voyager scripts," Lolita reports. Only complete scripts which meet the show's established guidelines will be considered; story ideas and partial screenplays don't make it past the readers who evaluate the material for the show's producers. "You can't just call Paramount with an idea. You have to be invited in to pitch a story, either through a spec script or because you're an established professional writer whose agent gets you in," Lolita adds. While guidelines have not yet been established, Lolita has some advice for would-be-Voyagers: "Don't try bringing back characters from the other series! If and when they decide to do that, the producers will make the decision. They know what they want to do when they want to do it. Our readers look for a good story first and foremost. They write a synopsis, give a recommendation about whether or not the material is suitable, and then the writing staff reads the coverage and will make a decision based on that. Sometimes they don't want a particular story, but they're impressed enough with a writer to invite that person in to pitch new story ideas." Lolita readily states that "some of the writing is horrible!" She has been involved in writer's workshops for the show, but confesses that she can't always answer writers' questions because she never watched the original series. "Neither did [executive producer] Jeri Taylor," she adds. "But Jeri did her homework. I don't know what a Gorn is." Although she claims that some of the staff now call her a "Trek geek" because she vetoed a title that sounded too much like "The Enemy Within"--a popular Classic Trek episode--she also admits that the first time someone asked her at a convention about a possible connection between "Voyager" and "V'Ger," the ship from Star Trek: The Motion Picture, she had no idea what the person was talking about. "Fandom intrigues me. I'm not a Trekkie, but I really admire the show," says Lolita. "I just got lucky to happen to be here. I like to do cons and writer's workshops." She does like to remind herself that "there are a lot of people watching who aren't Star Trek fans per se--which is kind of nice--lots of people who would never go to conventions or write letters to Paramount or anything." Most of her friends don't even watch, Lolita confesses; and as for the staff, "It's definitely just a job to some of the people who work here." Lolita says she really can't compare the audiences for TNG, DS9, and Voyager. "They may have been trying to get a more female audience by having a female captain on Voyager, but I don't think they sat around talking about it," she says. "Rick and Jeri and Michael wanted a woman, but studio wanted them to read men too--just to keep their options open." She is aware that much criticism has arisen over the decision to have a woman in command of the ship--"There are people on the lot who can't stand the female captain, I hear it all the time"--but she thinks that the producers take it in stride. "I can't imagine any major changes in the next couple of years; they're happy with Voyager's numbers for now," she asserts, referring to the Nielsen ratings. "And I don't think they're going to mess with anything when it's making money." The show's producers, she stresses, are not idealists so much as professionals; they never lose sight of the need for marketability. While she thinks that executive producers Rick Berman and Michael Piller "have tried to hold onto Gene Roddenberry's beliefs," she adds that "some of the newer, younger writers for the show are of a different generation--they're in it for the money. The ones who were fans of the show before they started working for it probably feel more idealistic about it." Lolita doesn't like to name her favorite writers or episodes, but she did mention a fondness for Brannon Braga. "His episodes are the weird ones," she laughs. "Any time you see Braga's name on an episode, you say uh-oh, here we go, a little dark and eerie." She denies that the producers set out to address specific political issues in 20th century America, but admits that some scripts probably do so anyway. "Sometimes it does seem like we're paralleling things, but it is not a conscious thing. But writers write about certain important themes, and some of those are going to seem similar." [MISSING PHOTO] Of the upcoming Voyager episodes, she has particular praise for "Learning Curve," which she compares to TNG's "Lower Decks," since it primarily deals with characters who are not at the top of the command chain. "It's about Tuvok training four Maquis officers who are not fitting in well," she reveals. "I like that we get to see some non-regular characters." The writers for Star Trek are at quite a distance from what happens to their scripts on the set; they are housed in the building that Gene Roddenberry's office used to be in, while production is in a different building, and the six sound stages where filming takes place are across the lot. "It still has a lot of the old Hollywood feeling," Lolita says. "But the writers don't even interact on the set--the only person who deals directly with both the writing staff and the actors is Jeri Taylor. Rick Berman's office deals day to day, minute to minute with the set, while Jeri handles what goes between writers and actors." If it sounds as though the writers have little individual power, Lolita reveals that the actors have even less. "You don't want them to have too much power over their lines and things," she chortles. "In the structure of the show, actors don't usually get things changed; it's up to the producer." She adds that television directors often don't "direct" in the same way as movie directors: "They do the blocking, but a lot of the directors don't deal with emotion or even with the words." Nonetheless, she notes, "different directors have different styles. Rick Kolbe (who directed TNG finale "All Good Things" and Voyager premiere "Caretaker") is an actor's director; he gets more into discussions of motivation." Although the vast fan network fascinates her, Lolita does have a few gripes with Trekkers. "Our legal department takes script leaks very seriously," she says. "We don't have enough time or manpower to really crack down on every single theft, but attention is being paid. She believes that the distribution of the Generations script on the Internet caused a change in attitudes; "Until Generations, there were blind eyes turned everywhere. Now there are Paramount employees looking out for it. I mean, people in dealer's rooms at cons make fortunes off stuff the writers never make royalties off of--and only Majel Barrett Roddenberry has the rights to sell the scripts." She also gets "a little irritated" at some of the nitpicking that fans do. "The complaining really gets old," she says plaintively. "Most people don't have the slightest idea how much very hard work goes into making the show happen. They try to do two different series at 26 episodes a year, and it's a lot of effort!" Despite her claims, her predecessor at her job says that Lolita exaggerates the amount of work she really does. "All those tasks take up about 5 hours of time per week," confides Eric Stillwell. "The rest of the week they just sit around and talk about sex. You can quote me on that one!" "I'm sure that was true when Eric was here," Lolita snorts. "But we're doing two shows now...so we have to put in a little more time!" KATE MULGREW'S STAND-IN This was on the net in alt.tv.star-trek.voyager--since so many people asked us if we knew, we thought we'd reprint it: Kate's stand-in is Sue Henley...she's from Billings, Montana, but that's not why I know who she is. She happens to be my daughter! She's also been a "far-off" member of the crew on Deep Space 9. In fact in the recent (Volume 11) of the "Star Trek Deep Space Nine" Official Magazine by Starlog ... Sue is pictured on page 45 sitting next to the character called "Morn." She's the red-head on the right in the "red" DS9 uniform. --BigSkyMac [MISSING PHOTO] CONVENTION INFORMATION This is what we have confirmed, with correct addresses and phone numbers, at press time. We know she's doing a con in Orlando the weekend of July 7 and have heard rumors of cons in Texas and the Midwest, but no one has come forth with actual data. Do us a favor: if you see advertising with concrete information about Kate's scheduled con appearances, LET US KNOW so we can tell people! May 7, 1995 Creation Convention Meydenbauer Center, Belluvue WA Guest: Kate Mulgrew Write: Creation, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 300, Glendale CA 91203 (include SASE) Call: (818) 409-0960 (9-3 Pacific Time) May 27-28, 1995 Creation Sci-Fi Mega-Show Anaheim Convention Center, Anaheim, CA Guests: Kate Mulgrew, Mark Hamill, Marina Sirtis. Garrett Wang, Stan Lee, Claudia Christian, several others Write: Creation, 411 North Central Avenue, Suite 300, Glendale CA 91203 (include SASE) Call: (818) 409-0960 (9-3 Pacific Time) KATEWATCH Ladies and Gentlemen--WE HAVE CON REPORTS!!! If you're going to Seattle in May or Orlando in July, we expect you dutifully to tell the rest of us about it! And send photos! GRAND SLAM III: MARCH 18, 1995 [MISSING PHOTO] The Creation Grand Slam Con sold out its Saturday show that morning. And the buzz in the line to get in was not about Nana Visitor, nor was it Marina Sirtis, nor John deLancie. It was Kate. The first time she actually got to see her hordes of fans face to face. Her first time into the fray. She was scheduled to appear in the auditorium at 4:45, and sign autographs from 5:25 to 6:25. Of course, how could anything POSSIBLY go as scheduled? The lines to meet Kate Mulgrew began forming a little after 1 p.m., over four hours before she was scheduled to sign. The spirit in line was upbeat and friendly, at first. But as the day crept on, and the line began to balloon in front with people cutting in, a few fans began to get agitated. Still, entertainment was provided for those waiting in line in the form of Klingons, walking back and forth, informing us that Kate Mulgrew would only sign one item per person with no personalization. Then, one of the Klingons tried to get the line to sing Kum-ba-ya.... Meanwhile, the show inside the auditorium was running late. Still, for as many people as were inside to watch Kate go on stage, there were as many already staking their spots outside to meet her. Nervousness ensued, because Mulgrew was only scheduled to sign for one hour. Yet inside, after some badgering from her friend John deLancie, she reportedly agreed that she would sign for everyone. The show inside ran late, and Kate Mulgrew didn't come out to the plaza to greet her fans face to face until 6:10pm. There, she was greeted by approximately 2000 fans, standing in line, cheering her as she came out and started to sign autographs. In line, we noted that she was signing extremely quickly. So, we reasoned, her autographs were probably going to be messy, plus she probably would barely take any time to look up and make eye contact with the fans she was signging for. Were we wrong. Mulgrew wore her hair up, wore white clothes, and wore her biggest smile. When I gave my photograph to the attendant, who passed it to her, Kate Mulgrew made eye contact with me TWICE. In addition, her autograph was VERY legible and neat. I don't know exactly how many of the two thousand fans she signed for, but she signed for a LOT. If she was the least bit intimidated with the daunting task of facing 2000 fans face-to-face, she didn't show it. Just like we see Captain Janeway do it every week, she simply faced the task head on. Her fans went away smiling, and so did she. --Eugene Son Kate Mulgrew was scheduled to appear both Saturday and Sunday. On Saturday, she did her con presentation and was scheduled for an hour of autograph signing. Apparently the Creation folks were able to talk her into another hour and a half! So, Kate got her initiation into autograph signing in a lengthy way...mind you, this was her first ever Con appearance too! On Sunday, I was able to attend her Con appearance. The first thing that struck me was, "Wow, what a classy lady!" Ms. Mulgrew had on a smart suit comprised of a beige skirt that fell about knee level with a matching longsleeved jacket that clasped together in the front with a button and a white silk blouse underneath. To top it off, she had her hair pulled into a chignon. I couldn't tell if she had hose on, but she had matching beige heels. One of the questions from the audience was, "Why is Captain Janeway always in peoples faces?" Her comment went the lines of, this is the way Janeway is, somewhat like Kate herself is. Another question was, "You look so much better with your hair down, why don't you get rid of that bun?" She replied back that a woman's hair represents much about herself--even to the effect of it being her crown. So she thanked the questioner for the compliment, but said the hair was staying up and that is the way she likes it! (On Thursday, earlier in the week, I saw Kate Mulgrew on the Voyager lot at Paramount, in full costume, and yes indeedie, she had her "crown" on....looked wonderful too!) Ms. Mullgrew went on to answer several other questions, but the above were the ones that stuck with me. In my opinion she gave a 10 out of 10 in her first con appearance. Hope to see more of this caliber presentation. --Gail Pickens-Barger {MISSING PHOTO} The good news: She looked great. She walked into the room during the middle of John de Lancie's time on stage, about 4 rows from where I was sitting. She was either wearing the same dress she has on in the TV Guide special Star Trek issue or something very similar to it, a cream colored dress, about knee length, with matching heels and a long sleeved sweater/jacket over it that was the same length as the dress. Her hair was up in the back much like Janeway's hair. Also, her voice sounded absolutely normal from the stage, just deep and very sexy. John de Lancie introduced her as his long time friend. They go back a long way together, in fact his episodes on TNG were the only Star Trek she had ever seen before being cast. Given the nature of Hollywood, I think this bit of information ensures that we will see Q on Voyager. She received a very loud and very boisterous welcome from the crowd. The not so good news: The first and second questions asked of her were: "Will Janeway develop a more flirtatious side?" and "Will she develop a love interest?" Her response to both was the same. "No, Janeway is the Captain and she is also a lady." She's talked to the writers a lot about this and she feels that as a woman captain she has to be very careful. Besides that, we've seen that she has a relationship back home. Therefore nothing can happen until we see Janeway let him go--give up on ever seeing him again. Then, if something were to happen, it would have to be true love and therefore it would be tragic love--the man she loved would have to die. Kate is one of these actresses who is very serious about her acting, making statements like "I love Kathryn Janeway. I met her at just the right time in my life." She will be very popular at conventions, because she takes the show and her character very seriously. Here are two examples: She was asked about her favorite episode so far. She felt that the plight of the aliens in "Phage" was very complex. The scene in the transporter room really got to her as she tried to express the compassion she felt. This answer went over very well with the crowd as many of the other actors downplay their role in character development. At about this point, Garrett Wang came on stage to suprise Kate. That was very nice. They hugged and seem to genuinely like each other. She said that soon every woman in America will be in love with Harry Kim. The bad news: Toward the end of her time, she was asked, "Now that you are a household name, will you be lending your time and efforts to feminist causes?" She replied, "I must say, get out your phasers ladies, that I am not a feminist." Horribly enough, this pronouncement was greeted by a very enthusiastic round of applause. Kate continued by saying something to the effect that progress in this world will only be made through compassion," thereby implying that feminists are not compassionate. She said we have to get beyond labels and pigeonholing: "I am not a feminist. I am not a conservative. I am not a mother." (I was unclear, since she obviously is a mother, whether or not she was saying that she had conservative views but did not want to be called a conservative...) Someone down front who was obviously hurt by this said, "You are where you are today because of feminism." Kate said, "Where I am today has nothing to do with feminism. It is because of who I was at 10 years old, little Katie Mulgrew, and I wanted to be an actress, so I went to work. I didn't want to be a man." Very scary. She continued on to say to the person in front, "See this little discussion between us has this edge of anger to it. I think we will only listen to each other when there's peace." She introduced her son and left the left the stage shortly thereafter. I realize that the term "feminist" is in crisis today, but I did not get the impression that Kate was referring to the debates within the women's movement about where we go from here. To my ears she sounded like a misinformed outsider with a knee-jerk reaction to feminists as angry, negative women who want to be men. At least Patrick Stewart is a raving liberal. I read one interview with him where he said something to this effect that he was sensitive to the charge that women were not treated equally on TNG, because as long as women are oppressed, he is not free. This is only my interpretation of what Kate said. With 3000 people in the room, I'm sure others may have a different take on her. --Kimbuk3 KATE STOLE OUR HEARTS IN SAN FRANCISCO [MISSING PHOTO] Here's what happened: 1. She said this was her second convention. 2. She said she will be 40 in a couple of weeks [April 29]. 3. She said she is Irish Catholic, one of eight children. 4. She said Janeway is her FAVORITE role EVER. She loves Janeway and has a lot to learn from her. She said she was too young to play Mrs. Columbo and it showed, she was 23 playing 37. She also said she loves working with the whole cast, crew, all that it takes to make the show happen. 5. She did not know a lot about Star Trek before this role. 6. She felt the part was hers when she auditioned. She emphasized several times that she loves Janeway. 7. During the Q-&-A, her common comment was "That question was from a male, under 12 years old," when the kids asked her about weapons, etc. (i.e. "What are the differences between the weapons on the Enterprise and Voyager?") She said she didn't know details, but Voyager had superior weapons. One kid asked how the transporters work. She deferred this question to a man who was with her, the director of several episodes [sound of chorus asking, "Rick Kolbe??"]. He explained about how they roll tape with the lights, actors move in stand there, lights go up, lights go down, then actors move out, they keep rolling, lights go up, lights go down, then they fix it all later. 8. Question about Janeway's marital status: She is not married, the writers needed that room because she would NEVER betray wedding vows. Janeway will have romantic entanglements--"But of course he has to DIE..."-- laughter. 9. Janeway will punch someone in a future episode but only because she is POSSESSED... (mysterious pause, no more details). And the doctor has already gotten a name, we haven't seen the episode yet. 10. There were questions about whether or not Janeway should get together with Chakotay. She seemed to agree with those in the crowd who thought it might be unbecoming to date an officer under her (so to speak). Chakotay should have bigger parts in the future, she wants to see him expand his role and character. 10. She feels closest to Robbie McNeill, who plays Tom Paris--probably because they are both Irish Catholic; his trailer's next to hers so he's always dropping by to bug her. 11. She talked about being a single mom, and having respect for those in similar situations. 12. She talked about how she respected Genevieve Bujold for recognizing that the role was not right for her, and for leaving the role. Kate said that took a lot of courage. When asked if it would damage Bujold's career, Kate said probably not, since Bujold is a great movie star. 13. Question about how she found out she got the job: She explained how you negotiate the contract before you get the job and then you wait. She waited with 4 others, then a woman came in and told them all to go home. She said she drove home very slowly. When she drove into her driveway, her boys came flying out the door, and the housekeeper of 11 years was shouting "Señora, Señora, you MUST listen to the phone." When Kate listened to the answering machine, she heard Rick Berman on the other end, "Hello Captain Janeway, Welcome aboard." She says the first thing she said was "Down on your knees all of you. Our Father..." "Then we opened the champagne." 14. Actresses she admires: Meryl Streep because she is happy and has her career. She was asked specifically about Katherine Hepburn and replied that she felt Hepburn was a great actress but did not have a happy life. 15. She explained that she thinks the fans of Star Trek are very intelligent and have a lot of creativity. She understands that the fans are part of Star Trek and help make it what it is. She said that what the fans tell them is taken to heart. 16. She also talked a little about the female captain role. She said she understands that people do not have to accept her, but that she will win them over. 17. A couple people gave her gifts: a drawing of her and some books (Celestine Prophecies). She gave hugs to a couple people who flattered her into it (one guy asked if he could hug the most powerful woman in the galaxy). 18. She was asked if she is a feminist and she said that question got her into trouble at her first con. She said she believes women have a strength inside them but that no organization or title gives them that, it is part of them . --Kelly Noonan KATHRYN JANEWAY, FEMINIST HEROINE We are fairly certain that Kate Mulgrew does not approve of this column. To paraphrase the immortal James T. Kirk in "Trek 3"--we are therefore running it anyway. "GET OUT YOUR PHASERS, LADIES" by Michelle Erica Green Let's think for a moment about what Janeway would have been like thirty years ago, as a character on classic "Star Trek"--a series I still love. Picture her in a tight red minidress and black boots, all that hair up in a bird's nest 'do. Schwing. "Captain," she'd sigh in that throaty voice, gazing up at an imperious Kirk. "I'm afraid we'll never get home..." "Don't worry, Yeoman," Kirk would leer, slipping an arm around her waist. "They taught us in command school that maneuvering a lady like the Enterprise is a very delicate matter--Kathryn, isn't it?--but over the years I've learned that sometimes you just have to punch your way through..." In my fantasies, Janeway then whips out a phaser and shoots him in the...just kidding, of course! KIDDING! Kate said that line about getting out our phasers at a con. Someone had asked whether she would support feminist issues now that she's a household name, and she didn't like that label one bit. I've heard feminists stereotyped as nasty, angry women before, but it hurts more coming from someone who plays an icon of female accomplishment. Kate probably did me a favor by reminding me how negatively many smart women perceive feminism; I get deceived into assuming that the majority of people understand the difference between real feminism--women and men united for a better world, with a better understanding of the role gender plays in our lives and livelihoods--versus what Rush Limbaugh calls "feminazism." I certainly believe that it's every woman's right to choose her own affiliations. We get boxed in enough by labels that aren't of our own making, which categorize us by gender and race and age and sexual preference and social position and family and appearance and career and attitude. It's fine with me if Kate doesn't consider herself a feminist: I can very much relate to the desire not to get put into yet another box. Plus, there are enough issues which separate women from one another and from men without turning feminism into a point of divisiveness. So I don't want to talk about Kate, except to add that I'm grateful she changed her tone at the next con. I do want to talk about feminism, and about Janeway, and about us. Take me, for instance. I'm a mother and teacher and Trekker and grad student and wife and writer and nice Jewish girl--and, I declare proudly, I am a feminist. But some people hear the "f" word, and red alerts go off in their heads. Look at how they describe us: sometimes as dressed-for-success, briefcase-carrying executives whose children languish in day care, and sometimes as hairy-legged lesbians who'd sooner get cancer than stand naked in front of a man. They accuse us alternately of yelling too much and crying too much. They imagine us as either coveting some man's job or sabotaging the entire capitalist system he works for. They don't want us to be frigid workaholics yet they don't trust us to have independent sexuality. They call us baby-killers regardless of our varying stances on reproductive rights. The backlash is not consistent, but it's vicious, and it's everywhere. So, you may be asking, what does any of this have to do with Captain Janeway? Maybe nothing. Maybe the criticisms we hear about Janeway are just an extension of the usual nitpicking which Trek fans seem to relish. Or maybe we should discuss whether Janeway is too bitchy or too wimpy with mutineers, and if she should stop looking like she's going to cry when she doesn't look like she's going to bite someone's head off. Then we can move on to the issues of how long her hair should be, how we feel about her wearing nightgowns off duty and lipstick on duty, and how she flirts too much with bridge officers. Maybe these are legitimate dilemmas for all fans, and have nothing to do with sexism. I wish. We don't really have a standard by which to evaluate Janeway as a female captain because we have so few role models to go by--in Trek, on TV, and in the U.S. army. I've seen people quote everyone from Sun Tzu to General MacArthur to Captain Kirk to demonstrate that Janeway doesn't bond with her troops in proper fashion. I've listened to comparisons with Patrick Stewart, Avery Brooks and Bruce Boxleitner by people who don't think Janeway can command. I was startled most by some of the comments on the Internet, which either relegate Janeway to insignificant status or portray her as a domineering shrike. These oft-repeated, contradictory gripes aren't the true problem with Janeway. Moreover, I don't think I've read one criticism about the character that really has to do with the actress who plays her. The whining about her voice and how she puts her hands on her hips only serves to evade the crux of the matter: There are a lot of people who don't like Janeway commanding a starship. Not because it's Kate. Not because it's Janeway. Because it's "her." Even in this enlightened age, when a woman succeeds in an area dominated by men, she often finds herself the target of extreme criticism and name-calling. It's happening to Janeway, and I suspect it will happen to Kate Mulgrew as well. I have a feeling Kate will learn that because she embodies Voyager's captain, she's going to get called a feminist heroine whether she considers herself one or not--and the term won't always be used as a compliment. I'm sure that even some of you progressive Trekkers are sitting around saying, "It's just a TV show!" Well, if I thought that were true, I wouldn't be bothering with any of this. Janeway is going to be a role model for thousands of children, male and female. They're going to grow up taking it for granted that a woman can command a starship without her gender ever becoming an issue. And adults who hated the idea of a woman captain are going to find themselves liking her--and more important, believing in her. And if you think feminism had nothing to do with the Janeway we all love or we wouldn't be here, go watch Star Trek circa 1966-9 and enjoy Janice Rand or Janice Lester. Janeway may be going where no man has gone before, but she's definitely going where no woman has gone before. CAPTAIN KATHRYN JANEWAY: FINALLY! by Risa Phillips-Kovac Like others of us, I have also been waiting for Captain Kathryn Janeway my entire life. I have been a Trekker all of my life as well. I do not remember the original series during in first run, having been born in July of 1966, but I grew up with the show airing in syndication. When I discovered online services and the Star Trek discussion areas in particular, I naturally wanted to use a Star Trek character's name as my user i.d. or screen name. However, as I ran through all the female Trek characters in my head, I discovered that none of them were complete, balanced women whom I respected enough to borrow their names. So I settled for something useful but both boring and unoriginal, RisaK (my first name and last initial). This decision would haunt me. Not having seen certain episodes of The Next Generation, I jumped into a Trek discussion room on America Online and to my great surprise, I found out that my name was the same as Riker's Pleasure Planet! Having a small but strong streak of feminism running through me, this discovery did not sit to well with me. I vowed not to re-enter the chat rooms until I could decide on a proper name. I did not for almost three years. Periodically, I would try to find a substantial female character whose name I could use. Not Uhura--her role was diminished to switchboard operator. Troi? She was the sex kitten on the ship who really had no place being on the bridge, not the name for a feminist lawyer. Dr. Crusher had a decent position, but never really showed any fire and was not a strong character. Kira? No, to me she either had no feminine side or she fought too hard to suppress it. She reminded me very much of a Linda Hamilton type character in Terminator 2. I knew the type of character I was looking for, essentially it was a female Kirk I was questing for. For all of Shatner's hamminess in acting the part, Kirk is a good role model to have. He is strong (and I do not mean this physically), compassionate, fiercely dedicated to his ship and crew, and not emotionally suppressed (for a man that is). Most of all, his authority was never questioned and he was respected by those he commanded. But alas, the Trek universe was lacking a Kirkette. So without a new name, I continued to stay away. Until that fateful night in January of 1995 when Captain Kathryn Janeway entered the universe. As soon as the first three scenes were over, I knew I had finally found a new name. That very night, I signed onto America Online and proudly created a new user i.d., CaptJanwy (now captjanwy on gbn.net) and with new confidence entered a Star Trek chat room and have pretty much been there since. I tell you, I had truly missed being there. This 28 year quest for a female role model made me begin to analyze television in general over the same time period. I also wondered if anyone else noticed the lack of a three dimensional female character in a leadership position on television. So I posed this question to my co-workers one day at lunch: "Name me a regular female character on a television show from 1966 to the present, not including Janeway, who would be a good role model for young girls. She cannot be a sex kitten, overly emotional and weepy, or a Linda Hamilton T2-type character. It would have to be a balanced portrayal in a position of authority, whose authority is not questioned at every turn, yet not be an ice princess, there has to be some femininity left to her." In forty-five minutes, these people struggled and struggled to name me one who fit all the above conditions. They finally came up with four candidates and I believe that none of them truly fit the conditions as compared to what we women have finally be given in Captain Kathryn Janeway. Now if you take a look at male roles on television over the same time period, you will find that young boys did not lack in choices for role models or someone to realistically emulate. All you have to do is sit down with a television bible (The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network TV Shows: 1946-Present) and flip to the network lineup charts and you would probably find a "Kirk" type or "Picard" type on at least once a week on each network. There was always at least one strong male leader in the network lineup somewhere. [MISSING PHOTO] The converse for women is not true. My co-workers were able to name just four, Barbara Stanwyck's Victoria Barkley on Big Valley, Mary Tyler Moore, Sharon Gless and Tyne Daly as Cagney & Lacey ,and then some jokers threw in the Bionic Woman and Wonder Woman for fun. I respect Stanwyck's strong portrayal of Barkley, but growing up in the 70's, I learned that women had a larger role than just running a home. Sure the ranch was also the family business, but her sons did all the "running the ranch" business. But for a change it was a "real" character. She was strong yet feminine and certainly had the respect of her sons, but she was not quite a role model. There aren't too many ranches here in northern New Jersey and I wanted to see someone who worked outside the home. Enter Mary Tyler Moore. Yes, she was a working single woman. But she had to start out as a secretary and work her way up. Since women entered the workforce, when was the last time you have heard of a man starting at a company as a "secretary" and working his way up? Her upward mobility within WGN is something to be impressed by, but I also wanted to see a woman who did not have to start her climb up the corporate ladder from a historically "pink" collar position. The show also broadcasted the message that if a woman was successful at work, she could not have a successful home life. This implied that a woman had to make a choice between career and family. Society never expects men to make the same choice. Even in today's age after the women's movement has come and we are all "equal," I can tell you as a lawyer that in a law firm a woman is either on the partnership track or the "mommy" track. You cannot have both unless you choose partnership first a la Jill Eikenberry's Ann Kelsey on L.A. Law. Additionally, take a look at what is happening to Marcia Clark right now. Her ex-husband is suing for custody of the children because she is spending too much time at work! But I digress. Cagney and Lacey are not bad choices. They were the first female police we saw on television that were not meter maids. The ladies were detectives! [Just like Mrs. Columbo? ;)] But they had to seriously fight for respect and recognition. They had to contend with the chauvinism of the male officers, as well as their friends who could never understand their career choices. Additionally, Gless' character falls in the Mary Tyler Moore trap, she has no successful long term relationship, not to mention her alcoholism. Finally, there is Earth2. NBC is straining their arms patting themselves on the back because they beat Star Trek in have a female in the lead. However, there is a major difference between Janeway and Devon Adair, a difference which also separates Janeway from just about every other female character in a leadership position. Janeway is undeniably in control. All other women are fighting to gain or keep their positions. They are always struggling to gain the respect, allegiance or loyalty of those they command. In watching Earth2, you sense that Devon is hanging on by a thread. Janeway on the other hand is undoubtedly in charge. Chakotay tells us so in "Caretaker" when he simply states "she's the captain." There is no doubt as to his loyalty. "Prime Factors "exemplified Torres' newfound loyalty as well. Torres very grudgingly went along with the other and when it did not work, confessed to the captain. She was obviously upset with the revelation of Janeway's disappointment in her. The most important aspect of Janeway's character is that while she is in command, she has not lost her approachability or femininity. She is still a woman. She has long hair--before you flame me, I know you don't have to have long hair in order to be feminine, but she shows you can still have long hair and be professional at the same time. Most business women have the Grace Van Owen L.A. Law short haircut. She wears lipstick, sleeps in satin p.j.'s. Even in the middle of a crisis she has the ability to encourage or praise the efforts of others. There is no "ice princess" quality to her which is refreshing. There is also no MTM trap occurring with her either. In "Caretaker," we meet Mark, obviously a serious relationship, especially if you read the novelization, so we know that Janeway actually has both a successful career and a successful home life. Television is a reflection of our society (as rotten as that may be, it is), and because of this I believe that it isn't something trivial that Voyager has a woman captain, I believe it is very important in the larger scheme of things. It shows that a woman first can be in a position of leadership (without jokes about it being her time of the month and all those other insults we had to deal with when Geraldine Ferraro ran for VP) and not have to be "manly". It also gives hope to thousands of young girls out there that they too can now strive for something bigger and better in the future. Young girls finally have what their male counterparts have had for a long time, a female on television to emulate. [MISSING PHOTO] BOOKS, COMICS, CARDS, AND AUDIO Kate Mulgrew has recorded two audiobooks, Taboo and Everything To Gain. Review of the latter next issue. Anyone want to find and review the former? Anyone want to review Robert Picardo's audio recording of "Caretaker"? At last report the comic adaptation of Voyager was being held up indefinitely by Malibu/Marvel. Meanwhile, Skybox targets a June release for Voyager Trading Cards, according to trading card publications. Skybox has plans for two series of Voyager cards to be printed this year with each set containing 90 - 100 cards. The Escape, the first official Voyager fiction from Pocket Books, hit the shelves in early April. We hope the covers get better. Our favorite pages were 88 and 226....we can smell a former fan writer from miles away... Star Trek: Voyager #2: THE ESCAPE by DEAN WESLEY SMITH and KRISTINE KATHRYN RUSCH Presently there are two great pleasures in my life (other than my husband and cats). The first is Star Trek: Voyager. I watch it religiously and with complete and undivided attention. My husband knows to not even speak to me unless there is a commercial break. The other is reading. I love books. I am always reading at least one book, sometimes I have two or three going at a time. My reverence for books is so great and I treat them with such care that when I finish a paperback there isn't a single crease in the spine. Now when Pocket Books released this newest Voyager adventure, I was in heaven. I could combine two great passions into one. For the first fictional work of a brand new series, this one was pretty good. The story follows Voyager's never ending search for resources so that she may continue her voyage home. At the suggestion of Neelix, Janeway sets course for a planet that supposed contains either materials or parts for the repair of the warp engines. When they reach the planet, an away team consisting of Torres, Neelix and Kim disappear without a trace. The remainder of the novel is dedicated to Janeway's desperate search for the missing away team and their struggle to get back to Voyager. The story sounds like it is the "typical" Voyager story, carrying on the themes established in the actual episodes. I wasn't particularly surprised that it also involved an element of time travel. It seems that everyone has been saving up their time-travel stories for use in the Voyager universe All nine of the Voyager characters have pretty sizable roles in this book, including Doc Zimmerman. This novel does not sacrifice any of the regulars in favor of say giving Tuvok a large part. But this is the difference between 45 minutes of episode time and 244 pages. Besides giving everyone something to do, the writers were able to include something from the series that is extremely valuable, a sense of humor. There are certain passages in the novel that will have you in stitches. Neelix and the Doc are the usual comic relief and you can't help but laugh. Most actions and reactions are as we expect from viewing the episodes, even though we have not seen as much of certain characters as we would like, i.e. Chakotay. For those of you in the "Captain should never lead an away team" camp you will be relieved in reading this novel. Unlike the Captain Janeway we saw in early episodes of the series, Janeway remained onboard Voyager for most of this story, even though you know she was itching to go see things for herself. There is even a line in the book where she acknowledges that "[s]he had thought of going herself, but knew that while her scientific knowledge was valuable, her abilities as captain were even more so." Those of you in my camp who were very happy to see a captain beam around the galaxy, like Kirk, don't despair; Janeway does leave Voyager, though she does so in circumstances unlike in the series. You may have noted that others get to lead an away team when the situation seems pretty safe. In Escape, we get to see Chakotay as something other than the supreme defender of the Maquis constituent aboard Voyager. For a change he is doing something typical of a first officer. Additionally, Janeway consults with him about possible members of an away team. He and Tuvok lead an investigation of an alien. The writers have given him what we already suspect, that he has some incredible insight into others. Let's get the inevitable nitpick out of the way. One paragraph reads "four hundred forty four million years, she couldn't fathom that number. It was little more than a collection of zeros to [Janeway]." You would think a former science officer would be able to grasp this figure. At present our national debt is a higher number with oodles more zeros. This kind of comment or thought process from the Captain reduces her into the rest of the bubble-headed female stereotypes that many of us are trying to fight. Please writers, leave this kind of comment out. The book is well written and the authors did not overload us with the technobabble that is endemic in Star Trek. There are no great long passages discussing some new technology like in some of the Trek novels. There is a greater focus on the characters, their thought processes, reactions and interactions. This is the heart of Star Trek as the Great Bird of the Galaxy designed it and which has been lost on more than a number of writers, both on the television and in novels. Many people tune in not to see new technologies, but what their favorite characters are going to do and say next. Will Tom finally break down ask the Captain to join him in the Officer's Mess? Will Torres get back in the Captain's good graces? Will Janeway continue to turn to Tuvok for counsel or will she turn to someone else (Chakotay perhaps)? Who will be the first character to call Janeway by her first name? It's things like this that keep me watching and reading. Roddenberry's original concept of the show was that it was good fiction that happened to be set in outer space. Fortunately, this concept was not lost upon the writers of Escape. There is story aplenty here and I would recommend it. --Risa Kovac COPYRIGHT VIOLATION CORNER Disclaimer: Paramount owns these characters, but we love them. The story's all Dee's. CHESS by Dee Jones "You wanted to speak with me?" Janeway tried to keep her voice even as Neelix gave her his usual earnest look. She clasped her hands and leaned forward over her desk. "Yes, Captain. As morale officer, I thought it might be beneficial to the crew if I was to offer some cooking classes--I know how much it helps me to relax, and it would be a constructive form of recreation for everyone involved." "I see. So you're telling me that members of my crew have asked you to share your recipes?" A certain sparkle shone in her eyes that she wouldn't let travel to her lips--at least not yet. "Well--not exactly." Neelix shifted, and then his eyes brightened. "But if you ask me, the benefits to your crew would be enormous." "I think you've made quite an impact with your cooking already." She nodded her head gracefully. "If you can get a group of willing participants, I'll agree. In fact, wouldn't it be nice if everyone in the class were to share their favorite dishes? I think," she continued with a smile, "that would be a benefit to everyone involved, don't you, Mr. Neelix?" "Captain. We're picking up a possible distress signal from a small M-class planet. If we choose to respond, it would take us 32 minutes to get there at our present speed." Chakotay's interruption was a pleasant surprise, and Janeway stood immediately. "Get your volunteers, then we'll talk. Dismissed." She waved her hand at Neelix to get her point across. He left with the confused look he usually wore after their conversations. She briskly went from her ready room to the bridge, glad to have more important duties to attend. "You aren't by any chance familiar with this system, Mr. Neelix?" Janeway called out smoothly to his escaping figure. "This part? Well..." He began to draw himself up and shifted his feet uneasily. "That will do. Thank you." She glanced at Tuvok. Then, sinking down into her chair, she turned to Chakotay. "Now. About this possible distress signal." "Or warning. It is repetitive, and not on a frequency normally used," Tuvok interjected. Janeway turned and gazed at him silently, with a slight frown. "Which leaves our interpretation of it quite open. At warp six, when would we reach orbit?" "Approximately fourteen minutes," he replied. She turned to see Paris looking at her, and nodded her head. "Do it." She stood and began her usual thoughtful pacing. "Mr. Kim--respond to the signal. I want all scan reports immediately--we don't want to rush headfirst into someplace we're not wanted. Commander, assemble an emergency away team, just in case." Chakotay nodded and left. Janeway threw herself back down into her chair and leaned forward, checking the center console. "Let's hope we can clarify this message before it's too late--for us or for them." The doors slid open and Chakotay re-entered the bridge, carrying a padd in his hand. "Away team is ready, Captain." He handed her the padd and she glanced at it quickly. A hailing blip rang throughout the bridge and she quickly handed the padd back. "I'm on it. Trying to establish a visual." Kim frowned studiously at his console. Janeway turned towards the viewscreen expectantly, crossing her arms. A few lines ran across the screen and then a young woman appeared, petite in stature, with a distinct olive hue to her skin. Her clothing was of a loose gold and white material, and she wore a small gold band in her hair. She crossed her arms as well and a curious smile appeared on her face. "Greetings of health and fortune to you. I am Ali, leader of the Dalence. And you are?" "I am Captain Kathryn Janeway of the Federation Starship Voyager. We received a signal from your planet but are unsure of its meaning. Now that--" "It was meant to get your attention," Ali interrupted pleasantly. "For what purpose? You don't appear to be under any form of attack." She glanced back at Tuvok, who nodded his head in agreement. "At the present moment, no. But in a few days, when the truce ends...we have been unable to stop the war with a rebel group, the Jexi, on our planet. All our negotiations have broken down. We need your help." "It would be against our laws to become involved in your conflict. We can't provide you with weapons or technology," Janeway flatly stated. The woman's eyes widened with surprise. She rose from behind her console, almost indignant. "I wasn't thinking of that at all. What we need is someone to help us who has no ulterior motive, no future interest here--what we need, Captain, is a mediator. " "Arbitration? To negotiate some form of settlement that would be fair to both sides." Chakotay's voice faded as he spoke and he glanced at Janeway. She looked at him silently, then turned back to the viewscreen. Her voice was gentler as she waved her hand to make her point. "In order for arbitration to work, both parties must agree to abide by it. If your negotiatons with the Jexi have deteriorated so badly, why would they trust us? I would like to be assured of their cooperation in this matter before I consider it further." "Do you have a way we could contact them?" Chakotay eagerly asked. Janeway stared at him briefly. "We agreed some time ago that objective interpretation might be helpful. I can give you a hailing frequency to contact them. Hopefully they have not changed their minds." She began to brighten. "If you can reach them, and they agree, we could finally, finally put an end to all this bloodshed. Will you help us?" "We'll contact you after we have reached the Jexi, and let you know our final decision." Janeway spoke quickly and nodded her head to Kim to cut transmission. "Commander, I'd like to see you in my ready room." She turned quickly and was almost in the door by the time the last word left her lips; Chakotay followed her, a grim look on his face. When the door closed, she turned to face him, arms crossed. "I have a feeling that this--'opportunity'--means a great deal to you, and given your recent history, I can understand your wanting to intervene. But put your personal feelings aside and think. We don't know these people or their history. Whatever time we take to resolve things here is time we could spend getting ourselves home. That's our primary objective." Her voice dropped and she lightly put her hand on his arm. "We're not here to change the balance of power on this planet. It's none of our business. We don't belong here, Chakotay." He averted his eyes from hers and drew back his arm, then himself, almost rudely. "You sound so--Starfleet." His voice was low with anger. "I am Starfleet." She met his gaze steadily. "And so are you." She saw him clench his fist at her last statement. "Starfleet has a history of arbitration and negotiation. There's no reason not to do that now." The tone in his voice was poorly restrained, and unpleasant to hear. "We have only interceded under Federation law, with Starfleet orders," she snapped back at him. He stepped forward and took her shoulders under his hands, leaning into her face. Surprised, she glared back at him. "We are Starfleet now. We make the decisions. You certainly made one about the Ocampa..." Janeway had enough and took his hands down, shaking her head. "We were already involved. The Ocampa would have been annihilated, the whole civilization!" "And how do you think the conflict will end down there?" Chakotay swung his arm out, pointing. He sighed, exhaling his anger, and resumed with a deadly calm. "In a few days, their war will resume. We have a chance to prevent that, to save countless lives." Their eyes locked together, and there was a long silence. "You have two days. " She strode past him and went to sit at her desk, suddenly looking tired. "Commander, I don't need you to remind me that we are the embodiment of Starfleet in this quadrant. Dismissed." He nodded his head appreciatively in her direction and left. According to Chakotay, all communication between Voyager and the Jexi had gone well, with all parties agreeing to arbitration. The Dalence had asked to beam aboard to be able to give a brief history of the dispute; the Jexi had declined, preferring to meet on the planet's surface. Janeway and Chakotay made their way down the corridor to the transporter room where Ali was to meet them. She still seemed reserved from their earlier confrontation. "Now, why did the Jexi not want to meet here?" Janeway asked, strolling with her arms behind her. "I believe that they don't trust us entirely. I think they are afraid of being captured by us if they board the ship. I can certainly understand that point of view," he said dryly, emphasizing the word "that". They cast a sideways look at one another, and a shadow of a smile flitted across his face, while she arched her eyebrows. Janeway went through the transporter room door and called out, "Energize." Ali appeared before them, dressed in a blue gown that had so many folds it almost hid how tiny her body really was. She was about the same size as Kes, but a fierce energy radiated from her eyes. Despite her petite stature, she had a distinct air of authority. "Captain. We appreciate your hospitality." She grasped Janeway's hand briefly, then turned to Chakotay. A smile played on her face as she took his hand. "What a fine first officer you have. You must consider yourself very lucky." "Indeed." Janeway's voice was toneless. "Well, you can consider yourself lucky now. He'll be the mediator for your conflict. And I'm sure he'd be happy to take you on a tour of the ship." A hint of a smile was on her lips as she turned to leave. "I'll be on the bridge, Commander." An hour had passed before Chakotay returned to the bridge with Ali. Both had serious looks on their faces, and when Paris attempted to get up from conn to introduce himself to their guest, Chakotay pushed him back into his seat. "Now is not the time." he admonished. "Captain, I wonder if I might have a word with you privately," Ali spoke, casting a glance at Chakotay, who nodded his head to her. "In my ready room." Janeway motioned, and Ali gathered up the folds of her gown and followed her. Janeway marched to her desk and sat down as Ali casually picked up and examined the flowers on the table. With a sigh, she set them down. "It is so peaceful here. So quiet." She looked around, for a moment almost seeming to drop her guard. A dark smile crossed her small face. "I almost envy your position." "Almost. But you have your own duties." Janeway tried to draw back the conversation. Ali's eyes and face hardened, and her voice was hard when she next spoke, pacing slowly about the cabin. "Captain, your Commander has an interesting past. I believe he was once considered a rebel himself." "If you're thinking that Chakotay will not be fair to you on account of his past actions..." Janeway started, but was interrupted by Ali. "You ask us to trust him. Our lives, our future, will be in his hands. Obviously you must trust him a great deal." She looked at Janeway intently, then walked over to grip the edge of the desk, leaning over until she met Janeway's gaze at eye level. "You don't think he'd ever betray you, do you?" Ali said evenly. Janeway's eyes narrowed. "What's your point?" "I'm asking you," Ali said grimly, "if you trust him with your life." A silence fell between them as Janeway stared back at Ali for a brief moment before giving her answer. "Yes." Their gaze lasted a second longer, then Ali drew back and crossed her arms. "Then we accept your decision. He will beam back with me." Chakotay materalized under a blazingly hot sun in an apparent desert. The light was blinding at first, so he squinted his eyes shut for a moment. As he did so, he felt his comm patch ripped from his chest. Before he had a chance to move or speak, the familiar feel of a weapon pressed into his cheek. Peering through narrowed eyes, he realized that he was sitting in some sort of hovercraft. "It's set to kill." Ali spoke evenly, digging the weapon into his jaw. He became aware of several other figures seated around him. A surly young man next to him pointed his phaser casually in his direction. "What's happening here, Ali?" He tightened his lips. "We're going for a little ride, and then you're going to help us, just like you promised."she said lightly. "If you think that by taking me hostage you will get the Captain to give you any weapons, you're mistaken. " "That's not our goal. We've already found the perfect weapon, Chakotay." Ali's eyes were cold and she had a dark, satisfied smile. "It's you." "Janeway to Chakotay. Anything to report?" Janeway stood on the bridge, hands on her hips. "Nothing yet," he answered rather abruptly. She arched her eyebrows for a moment, then shrugged noncommitally. "Captain, we'll be meeting with the Jexi in about an hour--we need time to travel to our destination point. If you will excuse us, it is important that we appear on time," Ali's voice broke in impatiently. "I understand. Anything else, Commander?" "Not at this moment. Chakotay out." After the exchange, Janeway turned to Kim. "I want a transporter lock on him at all times, in case we have to bring him back here in a hurry. Understood?" She went towards her ready room, head bowed in thought. "Acknowledged." After throwing his comm badge over the side of the hovercraft, Ali had placed a dark sack over Chakotay's head, and he was flown for what felt like a short distance. He heard the rumble of large doors opening, then the hovercraft came to a halt. Someone yanked him crudely from his seat and threw him to the ground. He managed to stand without interference, other than a plasma rifle poking him occasionally. Ali gave a low laugh as she jerked the sack off quickly, and pushed him into a chair. "That was too easy." she smiled triumphantly. Chakotay fastened his gaze on her, his face emotionless. "I doubt the Jexi will appreciate the delay," he said evenly. "Oh, they appreciate it very much--it is the Dalence who are going to be sorry. And may none of them live to regret it," she snarled. "What are you?" he asked. "Some sort of mercenary?" "My name you know. But I am the leader of the Jexi." She waved her hand to one of her soldiers. "Does this man look familiar to you? He should--he posed as the Jexi leader on the frequency I gave you!" She gave a snort of amusement. "You were so anxious to get involved. Well, your wish has come true. You ignored the warning signal the Dalence sent out and came to our world, and we have taken advantage of that. I doubt the Dalence even know you are here." She crossed her arms and smirked at him. "Soon, we will have control of this planet." "What do you want with me?" He was outwardly calm, not moving a muscle. "The Dalence have erected an energy barrier in the forest around their city. It is designed to detect our life pattern, but lets wild creatures through it without harm. It will not be able to identify you as a threat. Therefore, you are perfect for the mission." "Mission?" "You are going to be our assassin. We will use you to destroy their power generators. When the field comes down, we will attack." She clasped her hand together and her face twitched with hatred. "We will destroy them...revenge is ours, at last!" "I won't do it. If you have to kill me, so be it--but I will not help you." Chakotay spoke loudly enough that several Jexi turned from their consoles to scowl at him. "I had thought you might say that, so I've made it impossible for you to refuse." Ali moved aside and pointed to a nearby console attended by a young woman. "We are tracking your ship's movements, and with good reason. I've planted a small explosive device in your Captain's ready room. If you do not reconsider your previous statement, we will activate that device now. Your ship will be destroyed." She stepped in front of him and leaned forward, her eyes burning into his. "Your Captain told me she trusted you with her life, Chakotay. Was she right to do so? What will it be?" Her voice was low and sinister. They stared intently at one another for a few moments of uncanny silence. "All right, you'll have my cooperation," Chakotay said grimly, knowing he had to stall for time. "But you haven't given me any reason to trust you." "I'll swear by whatever is sacred to you, if you want. When that field comes down, we will be too busy to worry about what happens to your ship--or you, if you are still alive." She spoke smoothly and rose quickly, clapping her hands together. "Get the suit and the pack!" She looked sharply at Chakotay. "Take off that uniform, you'll need to wear this. It will make it impossible for your ship to track you. We wouldn't want you to disappear without finishing your mission, would we? Then we'd just have to destroy you and your ship." She placed a silver collar around his neck, and he looked at her with contempt, his nostrils flaring. She took his face in her hands and smiled. "Not enjoying your chance to be a rebel again?" Kim leaned over his console, looking confused. His fingers flew rapidly, as if trying by sheer speed to outwit the puzzle before him. "Captain. I'm losing the lock on him." He sighed in frustration. "Now it's gone. But I've still got his communicator lock. Should I beam him back?" "Let's ask him first. Perhaps they've gone underground." She tried not to sound worried. "Janeway to Chakotay. Are you all right? We've lost our transporter lock on you." She pursed her lips in the silence that followed. "Mr. Kim, try to beam him back. Tuvok, I want you to come with me to the transporter room." She gave the orders impatiently as she headed for the turbolift, and Tuvok had to run to keep up with her. They were in the corridor when Kim's voice came again. "I'm sorry, Captain, but all we've got in the transporter room is his comm badge." Janeway grabbed Tuvok's arm. "Mr. Tuvok, take a security team down to the last coordinates we have for him and see what you can find." She walked back down the corridor towards the bridge. "Mr. Kim, I want those people hailed immediately. Use all the frequencies they've given us." Tuvok and his away team materialized under the blanching sun of the desert. Tuvok flipped open his tricorder, as did the others. "Curious. I would suggest..." The dirt beneath one his crewmen suddenly blew up, throwing the man into the air. "Stay where you are! Don't move!" Tuvok called loudly."Voyager, beam away team back immediately--and beam Ensign Dawes to sickbay." The wounded man lay where he had fallen at Tuvok's feet. Tuvok leaned quietly over him, and the away team disappeared in a haze. [MISSING ART] Chakotay stood stiffly, now dressed in a metallic gray-blue suit. Two guards helped him shoulder a light pack that had a distinct hum to it. It was snugly fastened over his shoulders and around his waist and chest. A small timing device was clipped on the front, and Chakotay could see the red readout counting backwards. Ali stepped forward and handed him a device similar to their tricorders. "You're to use this to detect the land mines. They cover the desert floor. We'll keep in touch with you via your communication collar. " She smiled as Chakotay shifted the pack uncomfortably. "I do hope you don't intend to dispose of the pack before I tell you to. The weight sensors attached will let us know if you do. Now, as you can see, time is running out." They both looked down at the chronometer clicking softly on his chest. She waved her hand to the guards. "Take him to the drop-off point." She placed a smug hand on his chest. "I'm counting on you, my rebel soldier. You're going to change history today." "I'm going to destroy a civilization. There's no honor in that for me," Chakotay said quietly, and walked away. He trotted quickly, eyes on the tricorder in his hand, weaving a pattern over the hidden mines. The metallic suit actually provided him with some protection from the relentless sun, as it covered him entirely, with only his face exposed. There was no sound other than the soft ticking of the chronometer mingling with his footsteps. The landscape changed rapidly, and he could see from the corners of his eyes that a forest lay ahead. "See anything yet, my rebel soldier?" Ali's voice rang out from the collar around his neck. He wrinkled his face with disgust at the sound of her voice. "The woods are still a few moments away." "Remember, when you get through the barrier, lock onto the main energy source. That's what we want to hit." "I know that. I could move along faster if you wouldn't distract me with conversation," he added curtly, although his pace had not slowed at all. "Your dedication will be rewarded," Ali said, a touch of derision in her voice. "Land mines?" Janeway stared at Tuvok, eyebrows knotted. "Without a doubt, these people do not travel by foot. He was probably transported directly into a waiting craft." Tuvok said calmly. "Or taken underground," Janeway said, thinking aloud. She began to pace. "Let's consider the use of a shuttlecraft to complete a better scan of the area, see if there's any way we can track him. On the other hand, if they are armed, the shuttle could be captured..." "Captain. I think we may be getting a response--I've sent a hail along the same frequency as the original distress call. I noticed that the call is still being sent, even though we've responded." Kim was spinning quickly between his fore and aft consoles, determination set in his face. Janeway turned quickly to Tuvok. "I think we ignored a warning." Tuvok nodded his head in silent agreement. "But from whom?" The viewscreen fizzled and squealed, and a blurry picture started to form. "Come on..." Kim muttered under his breath, never slowing his frantic pace. Janeway cast a glance back at him before returning to her usual stance in front of the screen. A last round of intense flicker gave way to reveal an opulent setting with a tall, sticklike figure looking angrily back at them. His skin was so pale as to be translucent, with eyes that protruded prominently from his head. When he spoke, his voice sounded thin and hollow. "Why are you here? And what sort of warning do you send us? Our only known enemies are on this planet, unless you are to become one of them. State your intent!" "My intent is to find a missing member of my crew." Janeway took a deep breath, and after introducing herself, asked to be allowed to explain. The creature curled his lips with obvious distaste, but agreed. "I believe that my first officer has been taken hostage by a group called the Dalence." Janeway's mouth was still open to further explain, when he cut in with a snarl. "That is a lie." He pointed a thin finger at her. "But if he is with the Jexi, then we both have a serious problem." "But he communicated with both the Dalence and Jexi before beaming down, to try to arbitrate a treaty. And..." "You are fools! And it will cost lives. We are the Dalence. We haven't spoken with the Jexi in many years. There is nothing to be said. We have sent out a warning signal to keep outsiders from interfering in our affairs; unfortunately for all of us, you chose to ignore it!" He shook his fist, and his voice was strident with emotion. "You will beam us up immediately so that we may obtain a life-pattern reading for your species. It will be necessary to eliminate the problem." He crossed his arms and waited. "I don't like the sound of that at all. Permission denied." Janeway crossed her arms and stared back without flinching. "Quite frankly, since I don't trust anyone at this point, we'll handle this ourselves." "As will we. The assassin will not complete his task." "What are you saying?" Her voice was alarmed. "A member of your crew would be the perfect assassin for the Jexi. Our force-barriers will not detect him. But he will be found- and eliminated." He waved his hand, and the screen went blank. "Not if we find him first." Janeway said through clenched teeth. Chakotay had not seen or heard the barrier field, and passed through it with a minor shock to his body that made him suck in his breath. He reset the tricorder to search for the generators and sighed heavily, then began to look around. The trees were incredibly tall, and thickly bunched together, almost blocking out the sun. He listened for a moment, adjusting himself to the sound of the forest around him. It was hauntingly peaceful. "Chakotay." Ali's snide voice cut through the air. Static filled the woods with her voice. "Quiet!" Chakotay hissed. "If you don't want me to be caught, keep quiet. I know what I'm doing." He shook his head sadly. "I know exactly what I'm doing." "Just don't change your mind." Ali whispered, her voice almost drowned out by static interference. Chakotay looked back at the spot where he had passed through the barrier and touched his finger to the collar, thinking. Suddenly the sound of childish laughter rang out and he instinctively crouched down and hid behind a bush. He saw two children chasing one another, their pale skin glimmering when the sun caught it, blond hair flopping behind them. Within a few seconds, they had gone. Still crouching, he leaned forward and put his head in his hands. "I won't," he whispered. He raised his head slowly and stared up through the tops of the trees, intently searching for something he knew he would not see. "I don't believe it. He wouldn't do it." Janeway was in her ready room with Tuvok. "They must have threatened him somehow, forced him." "He could also be acting voluntarily. He did communicate with us after reaching the planet, and gave no hint of any distress at that time. Also, we were not present during his discussions with Ali. In addition, you yourself have noted that his feelings toward this matter were particularly strong." Tuvok turned his head to keep up with Janeway's pacing. "We have got to find him before they do. Somehow he's been cloaked from our sensors." She paused, hand on her chin. "Or perhaps he does not wish for us to find him." "That's enough, Tuvok." She spoke sharply, and the Vulcan arched his eyebrows slightly. Noticing that, she waved her hand apologetically. "For now, we will assume that he is not doing this voluntarily." She hit her comm badge. "Mr. Kim, I want you to scan all subspace frequencies. Lock onto anything that may appear to be a transmission of any sort and let me know immediately." She looked hard at Tuvok. "Now that the Dalence are involved, we've got a race on our hands. And I don't intend to lose." Chakotay had resumed his trot, although more cautiously, ears and eyes taking in everything around him, occasionally glancing down at the tricorder to confirm his bearings. He stopped for a moment as he heard a droning sound from overhead. The skin at the back of his neck prickled uneasily. It was definitely a craft of some sort approaching. "Ali--there may be some trouble here." He twisted the collar, and waited, tension growing as the hum drew nearer. His face became grim. "Ali!" His hands went up to the collar, trying to find controls he could not see and was unfamiliar with. "The barrier field." he muttered to himself. The overhead craft was moving slowly, and was quite near. He ducked under a large thicket, trying to hide. At the same time, he started to undo the straps binding the pack to him. Suddenly a phaser blast burned into the brush from above, narrowly missing him. Chakotay burst out of the thicket and began to run, weaving in and out between the trees, jumping over fallen limbs. He frantically tried to undo the straps as he ran, dodging phaser fire, panting with exertion. The woods rushed by in a blur, and the blood was pounding in his head. He knew he would not be able to last much longer. Ali slapped the console operator so hard the sound echoed. "Impossible! Let me try--" she tapped a few buttons. "Ali to Chakotay--you rebel traitor! You've failed us!" She straightened with a look of pure hatred on her face. Her next words came out in a low growl. "Destroy the ship." "The ship is in far orbit. Estimated time to detonation range--ninety seconds." The console operator rubbed her sore cheek, warily giving out her news. Ali drew herself up but seemed satisfied. "I will at least have revenge on those pathetic fools," she smiled. "I think I would like the honor of doing the detonation myself." She tapped her fingers impatiently. "Captain- I've got a weak signal. Definitely between two parties." Kim's excitement was barely contained. "Run a voice pattern scan. If we can do a blind beam out, I don't want the wrong company. Do you think we can match it to send our own transmission?" She was at his console, fingers gripping the edge with tension. "We can do that while I'm running the scan. That will take a few minutes." Kim answered. "Good." She started off the bridge, nodded her head to Tuvok, who silently followed her. "You don't think this will put him in any further danger, do you?" she whispered. "At this point, I cannot imagine so." he replied. They entered the ready room, and she marched to her desk. "Are we ready, Mr. Kim?" "Go ahead, Captain." After his reply, she sucked in her breath, and hesitated before starting to speak. A blinding flash of phaser fire next to Chakotay singed his arm as he managed to drop the pack and dive under an outcropping of rock that lay close to the ground. The craft hung above the treetops, as if waiting. He could faintly hear shouting in the distance, shouting that was getting closer by the second. Now trapped, he could see the chronometer laying at the entrance. Time was almost out. If he wasn't captured first, he was going to be blown to pieces. Curled under the overhang, he grabbed a sharp stone and began to cut into his suit. Were they even bothering to keep looking for him? "Janeway to Chakotay. We're trying to beam you back. We've got to get some kind of lock on you." The rest fizzled into static as the stone cut through the collar and continued down his neck. The shouts were nearer. Frantically he tore at the suit, trying to remove it. The chronometer started to flash a warning. "I think we've got something..." Kim started. "Whatever it is, take it!" Janeway was out the door, on her way to the transporter room. "Mr. Tuvok, get a security team down there, now!" He heard the click as the chronometer went out. Panting with effort, he leaned into the wall, grimacing, bracing himself for the blast. He'd gotten the suit down to the waist- it just hadn't been enough. It was all over. He held his breath. The blast tore through the rock just as the transporter beam took him, and his anguished yell was left hanging in the forest air. Janeway scooped up Chakotay's blackened, barely concious body from the floor. Blood seeped from numerous shard-like cuts on his body. "Beam him to sickbay!" she snapped. "Wait--wait." he choked weakly. "There's an explosive device hidden in your ready room..." he passed out, head hanging limply. Janeway's eyes widened and she turned towards the transporter operator. "Transport the contents of my ready room outside the ship now!" she barked. "Tuvok, shields at full strength! Go to red alert!" "Acknowledged." Tuvok spoke. Just then the ship rocked with such force that everyone in the transporter room was sent spinning across the floor and into the wall. Janeway grunted and tapped her comm badge. "Report!" She leapt over Chakotay, glancing down at him and then at the ensign fallen by the console. She struggled to her feet, leaned over the console, and in a few seconds Chakotay's body had disappeared from the room. "He's sustained severe internal injuries as well as the obvious external damage," the doctor commented as he and Kes continued to work on the still body of Chakotay. "If he had been beamed back any later, I'm not sure we could have saved him." "I think he was lucky to arrive at all. Let me know when he regains conciousness." Janeway's voice, on audio, sounded tired. The doctor rolled his eyes. "That could be a while. And judging from the tone of your voice, I would advise you to rest." He was his usual brusque self, no matter how busy. "Thank you for your advice. My original request still holds. Janeway out." The doctor shook his head at Kes. "I thought I was the only one here not to require sleep. Perhaps 'rest' is a four-letter word to our Captain." Later, the doctor tapped his comm badge. "Captain, our patient is coming around." Janeway appeared momentarily, and Chakotay, who had overheard the last conversation, gave her a weak smile. "Well, that was fast." His voice was hoarse from the anesthesia. "I haven't had time to turn in yet. I did lose the entire contents of my ready room, remember?" It was meant to tease, and said lightly, but a look of disappointment crossed his face, and he winced with regret. "I'm sorry. All this was my fault." "Don't be ridiculous. I made the decision. I trusted the wrong people, and you wound up a pawn in their game. " "Trust." he murmured. "Ali said you told her you trusted me with your life." Janeway straightened up, crossing her arms, and nodded her head. "I have a great deal of confidence in you, Commander. To the point where if my life depended on it...yes." She smiled, almost seeming uncertain of what to say. "Well. You need to rest. Goodnight." Janeway turned to leave, but Chakotay reached out and grabbed her wrist. She stopped and gave him a curious look. "What is it, Commander?" Her voice was concerned. "When we get back--will I be able to say the same thing to you? That I can trust you with my life?" He stared at her intently, and for a moment there was silence. "You have my word." she said quietly. She saw the doctor approaching and stepped back, giving him room. "Really, Captain, if there's anyway this can wait until tomorrow..." he began. "It's all right," Chakotay interjected. "I'll be able to rest, now." END [MISSING PHOTOS AND GRAPHICS]