 Ŀ
                   The STAR TREK: DEEP SPACE NINE LogBook                    
                         "Emissary" - "Life Support"                         
  1993  1995 
                             written by Earl Green
          special thanks to Joe Siegler, Robert Heyman and Cindy Hill

     "Star Trek: Deep Space Nine" created by Michael Piller and Rick Berman
              based upon "Star Trek" created by Gene Roddenberry


                             Ŀ
                              Season One:  1993 
                             

01      EMISSARY
        teleplay by Michael Piller
        story by Rick Berman & Michael Piller
        directed by David Carson
        music by Dennis McCarthy  (Crescendo GNP cassette & CD # GNPD 8034)
  Stardate 46379.1:  Commander Ben Sisko and his son Jake, both survivors of the
    Wolf 359 Borg massacre, arrive at the planet Bajor as part of a Starfleet
    team taking over the abandoned Cardassian space station Deep Space 9.  The
    station, which was inentionally damaged by the Cardassians before they left
    it behind, is being pieced together by newly-transferred Operations Chief
    O' Brien from the Enterprise.  Sisko also meets Major Kira, his Bajoran
    first officer who doubts the ability of the provisional government of Bajor
    to avert a civil war and trusts the Federation even less; Odo, a mysterious
    shapeshifter in charge of station security; and Quark, the suspicious
    Ferengi kingpin who's eager to get out of town before the regulatory hand of
    the Federation clamps down on his shady "business" affairs.  Sisko is
    summoned to the Enterprise for a briefing with Captain Picard, whom he still
    remembers as the man responsible for the death of thousands, including
    Sisko's wife, in the Borg invasion attempt.  Picard gives Sisko the
    Federation's orders regarding management of Deep Space 9 - to do everything,
    short of violating the prime directive, to get the struggling Bajora back on
    their feet so they can join the Federation.  Sisko, however, is considering
    resigning from Starfleet to raise his son in a better environment.
       Soon afterward, the Enterprise departs to undertake other duties as the
    station's new doctor, the brilliant but inexperienced Julian Bashir, and
    science officer Jadzia Dax arrive.  Dax, a Trill who has lived in a number
    of bodies, is an old friend of Sisko's.  Sisko, at the suggestion of Kira,
    travels to Bajor and visits Bajoran spiritual leader Kai Opaka, who tells
    Sisko that he is to be the emissary of the people to the temple of their
    gods.  Opaka reveals an Orb, a mystic object of a type which has appeared
    throughout Bajoran history.  The Orb envelops Sisko in a brief recollection
    of his first meeting with his wife, and then releases him.  Opaka gives him
    the Orb, and the news that Sisko - whether he likes it or not, whether he
    even knows it or not - will find the temple.  He returns to Deep Space 9 and
    hands the Orb over to Dax for further study.  The Cardassians return,
    ostensibly to make use of the station's amenities.  Dax discovers that
    reports of the Orbs' appearances correspond to a certain area of space near
    Bajor.  She and Sisko set out in a Federation Runabout to investigate, and
    stumble across a wormhole that shoots them 70,000 light years across the
    galaxy.  Trying to return to the station, their ship is halted.  Dax is
    taken back to the station by an Orb, while Sisko is kept and studied by
    noncorporeal beings who built the wormhole.  These beings have no conception
    of linear time, existing simultaneously in the past, present and future, and
    they ask Sisko questions about the ephemeral nature of humans, which they do
    not comprehend.
       Dax, back on Deep Space 9, fills the crew in on details of the wormhole.
    Major Kira orders O' Brien to shift the station's position so that it stands
    in front of the wormhole.  A Cardassian ship, however, enters the wormhole,
    but is damaged by the wormhole life forms.  When another Cardassian flotilla
    arrives and finds no sign of the missing ship, they threaten to open fire on
    Deep Space 9 unless Kira agrees to surrender the station.  In the wormhole,
    the aliens' study of Sisko reaches an end when they discover the human drive
    for knowledge, and they are puzzled by Sisko's inability to live down the
    death of his wife.  At the station, Kira's brinksmanship abilities and her
    feisty confrontations with the Cardassians result in a firefight, damaging
    the station heavily.  The solution to the confrontation lies with Sisko, if
    he can overcome the wormhole beings' manifestations of his inner barriers
    and escape from the wormhole.
  Season 1 Regular Cast:  Avery Brooks (Commander Benjamin Sisko), Rene
    Auberjonois (Odo), Siddig El Fadil (Dr. Julian Bashir), Terry Farrell (Lt.
    Jadzia Dax), Cirroc Lofton (Jake Sisko), Colm Meaney (Chief O' Brien), Armin
    Shimerman (Quark), Nana Visitor (Major Kira Nerys)
  Guest Cast:  Patrick Stewart (Captain Picard/Locutus of Borg), Camille Saviola
    (Kai Opaka), Felecia M. Bell (Jennifer Sisko), Marc Alaimo (Gul Dukat), Joel
    Swetow (Gul Jasad), Aron Eisenberg (Nog), Stephen Davies (Tactical Officer),
    Max Grodenchik (Ferengi Pit Boss), Steve Rankin (Cardassian Officer), Lily
    Mariye (Ops Officer), Cassandra Bryam (Conn Officer), John Noah Hertzler
    (Vulcan Captain), April Grace (Transporter Chief), Kevin McDermott (Alien
    Batter), Parker Whitman (Cardassian Officer), William Powell-Blair
    (Cardassian Officer), Frank Owen Smith (Curzon Dax), Lynnda Ferguson
    (Doran), Megan Butler (Lieutenant), Stephen Rowe (Chanting Monk), Thomas
    Hobson (young Jake), Donald Hotton (Monk #1), Gene Armor (Bajoran
    Bureaucrat), Diana Cignoni (Dabo Girl), Judi Durand (Computer Voice), Majel
    Barrett (Computer Voice)

02      PAST PROLOGUE
        written by Kathryn Powers
        directed by Winrich Kolbe
        music by Jay Chattaway
  Stardate not given:  Shortly after Dr. Bashir excitedly reports to Sisko a
    meeting with a merchant who happens to be the only remaining Cardassian on
    the station, a Bajoran ship is detected with hostile Cardassians hot in
    pursuit.  The single occupant of the damaged Bajoran vessel is beamed aboard
    and is discovered to be a member of a group of violent Bajoran extremists
    who have not yet ceased their terrorism against the Cardassians.  Requesting
    asylum, all Tahna does is invite Sisko's suspicion.  Sisko is further put in
    a tenuous situation when the Cardassian ship's commander demands that Tahna
    be turned over for his crimes against the Cardassians.  Kira, herself a
    former member of Tahna's underground, tries to convince Tahna to give up his
    violent tactics, but he refuses, and it turns out that his visit to Deep
    Space 9 is all part of another of his inevitably bloody gambits for revenge.
    This time, however, Tahna plans action not only against the Cardassians, but
    the Federation as well - and he expects Kira to help him.
  Guest Cast:  Jeffrey Nordling (Tahna), Andrew Robinson (Garak), Barbara March
    (Lursa), Gwynyth Walsh (B'etor), Vaughn Armstrong (Gul Dunar), Susan Bay
    (Admiral)

03      A MAN ALONE
        teleplay by Michael Piller
        story by Gerald Sanford and Michael Piller
        directed by Paul Lynch
        music by Jay Chattaway
  Stardate 46421.5:  During routine banter with Quark on the Promenade, Odo
    spots Ibundan, a Bajoran man he jailed months ago for murder, and the old
    enemies get into a fight almost immediately.  Not long afterward, Ibundan is
    found dead in one of the Promenade's holosuites, and evidence has been
    carefully placed to lead a trail to Odo, a suspicion which spreads among the
    station's populace along with rumors of Odo being a Cardassian agent and a
    growing paranoia.  Bashir and Dax begin putting together pieces of a puzzle
    which include DNA traces from Ibundan's ship, but in the meantime, the
    station's residents grow restless and demand that Odo be handed over to be
    punished for a crime they believe he committed.  While Sisko and his crew
    are working full-time on finding the solution to the crime, the denizens of
    Deep Space 9 seem to have no intention of allowing Odo to survive long
    enough to stand trial.
  Guest Cast:  Rosalind Chao (Keiko), Edward Laurence Albert (Zayra), Max
    Grodenchik (Rom), Peter Vogt (Bajoran Man #1), Aron Eisenberg (Nog), Steven
    James Carver (Ibundan), Tom Klunis ("Old Man" Ibundan), Scott Trost (Bajoran
    Officer), Patrick Cupo (Bajoran Man), Kahtryn Graf (Bajoran Woman), Hana
    Hatae (Molly O' Brien), Diana Cignoni (Dabo Girl), Judi Durand (Computer
    Voice)

04      BABEL
        teleplay by Michael McGreevey and Naren Shankar
        story by Sally Caves and Ira Steven Behr
        directed by Paul Lynch
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate 46425.8:  Business as usual is keeping O' Brien the busiest man on
    DS9, as systems continuously break down almost at random, mainly food
    replicators.  In the course of his repairs, O' Brien accidentally activates
    a concealed Bajoran device designed to release an adaptive virus into the
    food generated by that replicator.  He is immediately stricken with the
    disease, which scrambles his brain's ability to connect language, stimuli
    and responses.  Quark, impatient to get service back on schedule at his bar,
    unwittingly spreads the virus to all of his patrons, and a stationwide
    epidemic ensues.  Bashir, before falling victim to the virus himself,
    discovers that the plague was created by the Bajora in an attempt to prevent
    the construction of the station years ago, and it is eventually fatal.  Most
    of the population is rendered useless, with a few exceptions, among them
    Odo, Major Kira and Quark.  They must find an antidote to the virus and try
    to ensure the station's safety until a cure can be found.
  Guest Cast:  Jack Kehler (Jaheel), Matthew Faison (Surmak Ren), Ann Gillespie
    (Nurse Jabara), Geraldine Farrell (Galis Blin), Bo Zenga (Asoth), Richard
    Ryder (Bajoran Deputy), Frank Novak (Businessman), Kathleen Wirt (Aphasia
    Victim), Lee Brooks (Aphasia Victim), Todd Feder (Federation Male)

05      CAPTIVE PURSUIT
        teleplay by Jill Sherman Donner and Michael Piller
        story by Jill Sherman Donner
        directed by Corey Allen
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate not given:  The first ship from the Gamma Quadrant emerges through
    the wormhole and arrives at DS9.  Its single occupant is convinced to dock
    at the station to allow the crew to repair his battle-damaged vessel.
    O' Brien tries to get acquainted with the alien, who identifies itself only
    as Tosk.  As soon as no one is watching, however, Tosk begins trying to
    determine how to fight and hide on the station.  Odo discovers Tosk
    tampering with a security junction and Tosk winds up in the brig.  A second
    ship arrives from the wormhole.  Sisko gives the new visitors every chance
    to make friendly contact, but they instead disrupt the station's shields and
    beam into the Promenade without permission.  Armed, they begin searching for
    Tosk and hold the crew at bay.  It turns out that they are game hunters
    searching for Tosk, and advise the crew of DS9 to stay out of their way.
    O' Brien decides to take the rules of the hunt into his own hands to prevent
    Tosk from having to be bagged in captivity and disgrace.
  Guest Cast:  Scott MacDonald (Tosk), Gerrit Graham (The Hunter), Kelly Curtis
    (Miss Sarda)

06      Q-LESS
        teleplay by Robert Hewitt Wolfe
        story by Hannah Louise Shearer
        directed by Paul Lynch
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate 46531.2:  A Runabout barely returns from the Gamma Quadrant after
    experiencing a power loss on its way back to DS9.  The crew must be rescued
    by Sisko, Kira and O' Brien on arrival, and they have brought a passenger
    back from the other side: Vash, Captain Picard's old flame from a vacation
    on Risa, last seen going off to explore the universe with Q.  Vash has
    apparently been wandering through the Gamma Quadrant on her own for two
    years, and once she gets settled in on the station, begins making plans to
    sell several artifacts from the Gamma Quadrant.  In the meantime, power
    failures begin occurring on DS9, coinciding with the arrival of Q, who is
    pestering Vash to continue her travels with him.  Q also introduces himself
    to Sisko and the station crew and delights in irritating them as much as he
    has always enjoyed badgering the Enterprise crew.  In the meantime, Vash
    meets Quark and they begin planning an auction of her Gamma Quadrant loot -
    off of which they both expect to make a fortune.  Power failures and Q
    continue to plague the station, climaxing with a gravitational force sucking
    DS9 straight toward the wormhole.  Sisko is unsure whether an unknown
    natural phenomenon is dragging the station to its doom, or if Q is simply
    playing another of his infamous pranks.
  Guest Cast:  John de Lancie (Q), Jennifer Hetrick (Vash), Van Epperson
    (Bajoran Clerk), Tom McCleister (Kolos), Laura Cameron (Bajoran Woman)

07      DAX
        teleplay by D.C. Fontana and Peter Allan Fields
        story by Peter Allan Fields
        directed by David Carson
        music by Jay Chattaway
  Stardate 46910.1:  A small group of Klaestrons try to kidnap Lt. Dax from the
    station, but Sisko snags their ship in the station's tractor beam before
    they can escape with their hostage.  The leader of the Klaestron party,
    Ilon Tandro, claims to be carrying out the extradition of Dax on charges of
    treason and the murder of Tandro's military father 30 years before, when Dax
    inhabited the host body Curzon.  Sisko, not believing the charges and unable
    to comprehend Dax's silence regarding the situation, stalls the Klaestrons'
    plans by calling for an extradition hearing overseen by a Bajoran judge, and
    sends Odo to Klaestron 4 to find out as much as he can about Curzon Dax's
    activities 30 years ago.  Meanwhile, time, and possibly the letter of the
    law, are against the case for Dax's freedom and survival.
  Guest Cast:  Gregory Itzin (Ilon Tandro), Anne Haney (Arbiter Els Renora),
    Richard Lineback (Selin Peers), Fionnula Flanagan (Enina Tandro)

08      THE PASSENGER
        teleplay by Morgan Gendel, Robert Hewitt Wolfe and Michael Piller
        story by Morgan Gendel
        directed by Paul Lynch
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate not given:  As Odo and Starfleet newcomer Lt. Primmin irritate each
    other while trying to coordinate security for the transfer of a deuridium
    shipment due to arrive at DS9, a Runabout is sent to aid a crippled Kobliad
    prison ship, containing investigator Ty Kajada and two corpses, one of which
    was a notorious Kobliad criminal known as Rao Vantika, who, even after being
    pronounced dead by Bashir, is still considered a major threat by Kajada.
    Dax discovers, during post-mortem investigations, that Vantika was capable
    of transferring his consciousness into the mind of any other being without
    the recipient's consent or even their knowledge.  The vital shipment may be
    lost to Vantika, whoever his evil ambitions inhabit now - and he has
    henchmen waiting to assist him on the station.
  Guest Cast:  Caitlin Brown (Ty Kajada), James Lashly (Lt. Primmin),
    Christopher Collins (Durg), James Harper (Rao Vantika)

09      MOVE ALONG HOME
        teleplay by Frederick Rappaport, Lisa Rich and Jeanne Carrigan-Fauci
        story by Michael Piller
        directed by David Carson
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate not given:  A group of Gamma Quadrant aliens led by Falow makes first
    contact with the station, an event which Sisko intends to treat with the
    utmost seriousness and ceremony.  Sisko is surprised, however, when Falow
    and his fellow travelers seem to be interested only in games.  After Sisko
    leaves the proceedings out of boredom and mild disappointment, Quark cheats
    Falow in his casino, and Falow means to get even by introducing Quark to a
    game from the Gamma Quadrant.  At the same time, Sisko, Dax, Major Kira and
    Dr. Bashir vanish from the station without a trace, finding themselves in a
    surreal maze occupied by images of Falow and others.  As they try to work
    out the puzzle and help each other survive, Quark continues to play the
    game, only gradually becoming aware of who his pawns are.
  Guest Cast:  Joel Brooks (Falow), James Lashly (Lt. Primmin), Clara Bryant
    (Chandra)

10      THE NAGUS
        teleplay by Ira Steven Behr
        story by David Livingston
        directed by David Livingston
        music by John Debney
  Stardate not given:  Quark receives a surprise - and something of a dubious
    honor - when Grand Nagus Zek, a Ferengi business mogul, arrives at DS9.
    After some customary patronizing at Quark's, Zek insists on holding a
    conference of Ferengi profiteers there, while Quark fears that Zek plans on
    buying out his bar on the station.  To everyone's surprise, especially
    Quark's, Zek announces his retirement and declares that Quark will succeed
    him to the coveted position of Grand Nagus.  Many of the visiting Ferengi
    are jealous, as would be expected of them.  But Quark discovers - after a
    close call - that someone among the Ferengi is jealous enough to try gaining
    the position of Nagus by killing him.
  Guest Cast:  Max Grodenchik (Rom), Aron Eisenberg (Nog), Tiny Ron (Maihar'du),
    Lee Arenberg (Gral), Lou Wagner (Krax), Barry Gordon (Nava), Wallace Shawn
    (Zek)

11      VORTEX
        written by Sam Rolfe
        directed by Winrich Kolbe
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate not given:  Quark and Rom are involved in a shady deal with a pair of
    twin Miradorns when a recent visitor from the wormhole interrupts, kills one
    of the Miradorn brothers, and tries to steal a valuable item.  Odo turns out
    to have been present all along and intervenes before the surviving Miradorn
    can exact vengeance, but Croden, the visitor from a distant planet Rakhar
    troubles Odo even more, for he may have a clue to the shapeshifter's origins
    in the Gamma Quadrant.  Odo must decide whether or not to trust the criminal
    when Sisko orders him to transport Croden back through the wormhole to
    Rakhar - and the surviving Miradorn brother leaves DS9 to follow the
    Runabout carrying his brother's murderer.
  Guest Cast:  Cliff DeYoung (Croden), Randy Oglesby (Ah-Kel), Max Grodenchik
    (Rom), Gordon Clapp (Hadran), Randy Oglesby (Ro-Kel), Kathleen Garrett
    (Vulcan Captain), Leslie Engelberg (Yareth)

12      BATTLE LINES
        teleplay by Richard Danus and Evan Carlos Somers
        story by Hilary J. Bader
        directed by Paul Lynch
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate not given:  On a routine day at the station, Kai Opaka, the Bajoran
    spiritual leader who helped lead Sisko to discover the wormhole when he
    first arrived at DS9, pays a surprise visit.  Sisko, Kira and Bashir take
    Opaka on her first trip through the wormhole.  Before they can return to the
    station, a signal is detected from a series of satellites orbiting a moon in
    the Gamma Quadrant.  When Sisko's Runabout investigates, it is fired on by
    one of the satellites, forcing the ship to crash-land on the moon.  Opaka
    dies on impact, but before Kira has long to grieve, warriors appear and take
    the crash survivors back to their camp.  It is discovered that two groups of
    combatants have been stranded there for centuries, fighting a war in which
    no one ever dies - not even newcomers who find themselves in the line of
    fire.
  Guest Cast:  Camille Saviola (Kai Opaka), Paul Collins (Zlangco), Jonathan
    Banks (Shel-la), Majel Barrett (Computer Voice)

13      THE STORYTELLER
        teleplay by Kurt Michael Bensmiller & Ira Steven Behr
        story by Kurt Michael Bensmiller
        directed by David Livingston
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate 46729.1:  As the leaders of two Bajoran factions arrive on the
    station where Sisko hopes to diplomatically steer them away from solving
    their differences in combat, O' Brien and Dr. Bashir depart to Bajor in
    response to a distress call which vaguely stated that an entire community is
    jeopardized.  Bashir is puzzled to find all of the villagers except one -
    the elderly Sirah - in perfect health, yet the locals still insist that they
    are in mortal danger.  They discover, when the Sirah makes his appearance at
    a yearly festival (against Bashir's recommendation), that the threat comes
    from the legendary Dal'Rok, a mythical creature which descends upon the
    village for five nights of each year in an attempt to destroy it.  But every
    year in the past several generations, the village Sirah told a Story,
    somehow halting the Dal'Rok's onslaught.  This year, the Sirah will not
    complete his Story...
  Guest Cast:  Lawrence Monoson (Hovath), Kay E. Kuter (The Sirah), Gina
    Philips (Varis), Jim Jansen (Faren), Aron Eisenberg (Nog), Jordan Lund
    (Woban), Amy Benedict (Woman)

14      PROGRESS
        written by Peter Allan Fields
        directed by Les Landau
        music by John Debney
  Stardate 46844.3:  With the aid of the station crew, the Bajoran provisional
    government prepares to convert a moon into part of a power system needed to
    help Bajor overcome the damage caused by decades of Cardassian rule.  On a
    final inspection flyover of the moon, Kira and Dax detect humanoid life on
    the suface.  Kira beams down and finds stubborn old Mullibok, who has been
    living on the moon almost since the Cardassians arrived to take over Bajor.
    Mullibok and his two neighbors rendered mute by Cardassian torture years ago
    refuse to leave the moon, even when Kira warns that the conversion of the
    moon into a power facility will kill all life there.  But when Kira begins
    the first steps of the provisional government's orders to remove the
    settlers by force, she finds herself sympathetic with Mullibok's plight and
    joins in their fight to stay until the imminent end.
  Guest Cast:  Brian Keith (Mullibok), Aron Eisenberg (Nog), Nicholas Worth
    (Alien Captain), Michael Bofshever (Toran), Terrance Evans (Baltrim), Annie
    O' Donnell (Keena), Daniel Riordan (First Guard)

15      IF WISHES WERE HORSES
        teleplay by Neil McCue Crawford & William L. Crawford and Michael Piller
        story by Neil McCue Crawford & William L. Crawford
        directed by Robert Legato
        music by Jay Chattaway
  Stardate 46853.2:  The strange behavior of space near the wormhole and the
    sudden appearance in Chief O' Brien's quarters of a character from a bedtime
    story read to Molly signal the beginning of an alien study of the station's
    crew from the vantage point of manifestations of their imaginations, ranging
    from a favorite baseball player of Sisko's to a pair of ravishing beauties
    (appearing, naturally, on Quark's arms) to the girl of Bashir's dreams -
    Dax, but with a far different personality.  At first the apparitions seem
    harmless, but it then seems that they are capable of posing danger to the
    crew.
  Guest Cast:  Rosalind Chao (Keiko), Hana Hatae (Molly), Keone Young (Buck
    Bokai), Michael John Anderson (Rumpelstiltskin)

16      THE FORSAKEN
        teleplay by Don Carlso Dunaway and Michael Piller
        story by Jim Trombetta
        directed by Les Landau
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate 46925.1:  A handful of Federation ambassadors boards Deep Space 9 on
    a fact-finding mission - one which is failing to get off the ground since
    the delegates seem unable to cope with the fact that the station isn't
    exactly a proper Federation starbase.  Among the delegates is Lwaxana Troi,
    who becomes enamoured of Odo after he retrieves a stolen item of hers from a
    thief at Quark's bar.  As she begins scheming to snare the constable, a
    small probe emerges from the wormhole, and to O' Brien's surprise, the
    station computer actually works well enough for once to download information
    from the probe.  The probe's effect on the station computer is inexplicable,
    including stranding Odo in a stuck turbolift with Lwaxana Troi...
  Guest Cast:  Majel Barrett (Lwaxana Troi), Constance Towers (Ambassador
    Taxco), Michael Ensign (Ambassador Lojal), Jack Shearer (Ambassador
    Vadosia), Benita Andre (Anara)

17      DRAMATIS PERSONAE
        written by Joe Menosky
        directed by Cliff Bole
        music by Jay Chattaway
  Stardate 46922.3:  A Klingon ship makes an unexpected return from a scientific
    mission in the Gamma Quadrant and self-destructs.  A single member of the
    ship's crew beams himself into Ops, dying shortly after cryptically
    announcing "victory."  As Dax and O' Brien start trying to piece together
    the mystery of the Klingon ship, divisions take place between members of
    DS9's crew.  Kira, still unsatisfied after losing an argument with Sisko
    about security arrangements for a shipload of possible allies of the
    Cardassians, begins to plot against the commander, quietly gathering loyal
    followers among the crew and threatening those who don't sympathize with her
    cause.  Sisko, in the meantime, goes into hiding supposedly for security
    reasons, as he and Chief O' Brien prepare for Kira's imminent mutiny.  Odo
    remains the only officer who hasn't taken up arms with either side yet,
    since he has his own motive.
  Guest Cast:  Tom Towles (Klingon), Stephen Parr (Valerian), Randy Pflug
    (Guard), Jeff Pruitt (Ensign)

18      DUET
        teleplay by Peter Allan Fields
        story by Lisa Rich & Jeanne Carrigan-Fauci
        directed by James L. Conway
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate not given:  A Federation freighter arrives and delivers a passenger
    who needs medical attention.  At the mention of the passenger's disease,
    Kira realizes that whoever it is, they were at a forced labor camp operated
    on Bajor by the Cardassians which Kira helped to liberate years ago.  But
    the patient turns out to be a Cardassian.  Kira places him under arrest and,
    against Sisko's advice, interrogates him.  Under questioning, the Cardassian
    suddenly proclaims himself to be Gul Darhe'el, who commanded the labor camps
    and authorized genocidal killings of Bajorans.  Kira, along with the Bajoran
    provisional government, takes a more vested interest in proving him guilty
    of past atrocities...even if he isn't who he says he is.
  Guest Cast:  Harris Yulin (Marritza), Marc Alaimo (Gul Dukat), Ted Sorel
    (Kaval), Tony Rizzoli (Kainon), Norman Large (Captain), Robin Christopher
    (Neela)

19      IN THE HANDS OF THE PROPHETS
        written by Robert Hewitt Wolfe
        directed by David Livingston
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate not given:  Vedek Winn, a Bajoran spiritual leader who is a prime
    contender for the position of Kai, appears in Keiko's classroom and declares
    that Keiko's scientific teachings about the wormhole are in conflict with
    Bajoran beliefs.  Winn's announcement divides the Federation officers and
    Bajorans on the station who follow Winn.  Sisko attempts to enlist the aid
    of Vedek Bareil, the quiet leader in the race to become Kai, but initially
    meets with no cooperation.  When terrorist acts begin, it becomes apparent
    that Bajoran political interests may also be deeply involved - and the
    Federation crew of Deep Space 9 may have outstayed their welcome.
  Guest Cast:  Rosalind Chao (Keiko), Louise Fletcher (Winn), Philip Anglim
    (Vedek Bareil), Robin Christopher (Neela), Michael Eugene Fairman (Vendor)


                           Ŀ
                            Season Two: 1993-1994 
                           

20      THE HOMECOMING
        teleplay by Ira Steven Behr
        story by Jeri Taylor and Ira Steven Behr
        directed by Winrich Kolbe
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate not given:  A visitor to DS9 gives Quark the earring of a legendary
    Bajoran POW, and Quark hands it over to Kira.  Kira recognizes it as the one
    belonging to Li Nalas, the greatest freedom fighter in Bajoran history and
    legend.  Kira convinces Sisko to loan her a Runabout - and Chief O' Brien as
    pilot - to travel to Cardassia IV.  Recovering Li Nalas and a handful of
    other Bajorans from a forced-labor camp, Kira and O' Brien rush back to DS9.
    Though the Bajoran provisional government officially condemns Kira's
    cabalier rescue operation, the Bajorans on the station and everywhere
    rejoice in Li's return.  Sisko hopes Li can reunite the gradually dissolving
    Bajoran government, which is splitting into many factions, including the
    extremist reactionary Circle, isolationists who mean to evict all
    non-Bajorans from Bajor or DS9.  The Circle is, in fact, beginning to make
    its presence known aboard the station, as is Li Nalas, when he winds up
    replacing Kira as the Bajoran liaison officer on DS9.
  Season 2 Regular Cast:  Avery Brooks (Commander Benjamin Sisko), Rene
    Auberjonois (Odo), Siddig El Fadil (Dr. Julian Bashir), Terry Farrell (Lt.
    Jadzia Dax), Cirroc Lofton (Jake Sisko), Colm Meaney (Chief O' Brien), Armin
    Shimerman (Quark), Nana Visitor (Major Kira Nerys)
  Guest Cast:  Richard Beymer (Li Nalas), Max Grodenchik (Rom), Michael Bell
    (Borum), Marc Alaimo (Gul Dukat), Frank Langella (Minister Jaro), Leslie
    Bevis (Freighter Captain), Paul Nakauchi (Tygarian Officer)

21      THE CIRCLE
        written by Peter Allan Fields
        directed by Corey Allen
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate not given:  Kira has been recalled to Bajor, and accepts an
    invitation from Vedek Bareil to spend some time at his monastery.  There,
    she encounters the Third Orb, which gives her a strange vision including
    Dax, Vedeks Winn and Bareil, Minister Jaro, and the Bajoran Chamber of
    Ministers.  In the meantime, as Li Nalas tries to fit into his role as DS9's
    first officer, the crew stumbles across evidence that the Circle is not just
    an isolated faction, but is instead a well-organized and surprisingly
    well-armed movement which is waiting in the wings to overthrow the
    provisional government of Bajor by force.  Unknown to the Circle's members,
    however, they are being provided weapons by the Cardassians, who anticipate
    correctly that Starfleet will order Sisko and all other Federation personnel
    to evacuate DS9 and leave Bajor to its own political machinations, wide open
    for a renewed Cardassian occupation.  The Circle launches assault ships to
    take over the station, and many of the Starfleet occupants have no choice
    but to stay behind and fight for their survival.
  Guest Cast:  Louise Fletcher (Vedek Winn), Richard Beymer (Li Nalas), Stephen
    Macht (Krim), Philip Anglim (Vedek Bareil), Frank Langella (Minister Jaro),
    Bruce Gray (Admiral Chekote), Mike Genovese (Zef'no), Eric Server (Peace
    Officer), Anthony Guidera (Cardassian)

22      THE SIEGE
        written by Michael Piller
        directed by Winrich Kolbe
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate not given:  DS9 is being abandoned, and everyone from the Starfleet
    contingent to civilians are evacuating to various places of safety.  In the
    meantime, Sisko and some others decide to stay and fight it out with the
    Bajoran assault squadrons.  Kira is determined to get proof of the
    Cardassians' interference in Bajoran affairs to the Chamber of Ministers,
    even if it means walking into the assembly and showing the evidence to them
    herself.  Li tells her where to find hidden fighter craft left over from the
    Cardassian occupation, and with Dax's help, Kira sets out on her mission.
    Bajorans General Krim and Colonel Day, along with several shiploads of
    soldiers, take over the station, cautious because there is no resistance.
    Sisko, Li, Odo, and many other crew members begin to wage guerilla warfare
    upon DS9's new occupants.  Kira and Dax, after a quick dogfight with Bajoran
    assault ships, crash-land on Bajor and are rescued by Vedek Bareil, who gets
    them into the Chamber of Ministers with the damning evidence intact.  As the
    Circle's popularity dissolves before the eyes of its high-ranking
    supporters, the Bajoran troops on DS9 are ordered to stand down - but some
    of them insist on bearing a deadly hatred that will cost the Bajora one of
    their greatest legends.
  Guest Cast:  Louise Fletcher (Vedek Winn), Rosalind Chao (Keiko), Steven Weber
    (Day), Richard Beymer (Li Nalas), Stephen Macht (Krim), Max Grodenchik
    (Rom), Aron Eisenberg (Nog), Philip Anglim (Vedek Bareil), Frank Langella
    (Minister Jaro), Katrina Carlson (Bajoran Officer), Hana Hatae (Molly)

23      INVASIVE PROCEDURES
        teleplay by John Whelpley and Robert Hewitt Wolfe
        story by John Whelpley
        directed by Les Landau
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate 47182.1:  DS9 is evacuated to avoid endangering any personnel due to
    the passage of a plasma storm.  A handful of renegades infiltrates the
    nearly-abandoned station with the aid of Quark, who doesn't know what
    they're really after.  The leader of the intruders is Verad, a candidate for
    Trill host who was rejected by the symbiosis evalutation board as unfit for
    the joining, and he intends to steal the symbiont Dax.  As the crew is held
    hostage, Bashir is coerced into performing the operation to implant Dax into
    Verad.  As Bashir struggles to keep Jadzia alive long enough to reunite her
    with Dax, Sisko tries to keep the newly integrated Verad Dax talking in hope
    of appealing to his mentor's better nature.
  Guest Cast:  John Glover (Verad), Megan Gallagher (Mareel), Tim Russ (T'Kar),
    Steve Rankin (Yeto)

24      CARDASSIANS
        teleplay by James Crocker
        story by Gene Wolande and John Wright
        directed by Cliff Bole
        music by Jay Chattaway
  Stardate 47177.2:  A Bajoran man arrives on DS9 with his adopted son, a young
    Cardassian who was abandoned when his people withdrew from Bajor.  This
    draws the attention of the Cardassian government, particularly Gul Dukat,
    who claims he is eager to solve the dilemma of Cardassian war orphans left
    behind on Bajor.  DS9's resident tailor, Garak, seems to find Dukat's sudden
    pledge to resolve the abandoned children's situation ironic, since the boy
    in question is really the son of one of the civilian assembly who voted to
    pull the Cardassian military out of Bajoran space - one of Dukat's political
    adversaries.  Sisko and Dr. Bashir, aided and abetted by Garak's cryptic
    advice, must decide the fate of the Cardassian youth, possibly deciding the
    end result of an internal power struggle whose combatants couldn't care less
    about the boy's situation.
  Guest Cast:  Rosalind Chao (Keiko), Andrew Robinson (Garak), Robert Mandan
    (Kotan Pa'Dar), Terrance Evans (Proka), Dion Anderson (Zolan), Marc Alaimo
    (Gul Dukat), Sharon Conley (Jomat Luson), Karen Hensel (Deela), Jillian
    Ziesmer (Asha)

25      MELORA
        teleplay by Evan Carlos Somers and Steven Baum
                    and Michael Piller & James Crocker
        story by Evan Carlos Somers
        directed by Winrich Kolbe
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate 47229.1:  The first Elaysian officer in Starfleet, Ensign Melora
    Pazlar, is assigned to DS9.  Bashir and O'Brien have had to modify various
    passageways to permit Melora - whose low-gravity home world leaves her body
    reliant on a wheelchair in normal gravity - access to as much of the station
    as possible.  In the meantime, Quark's former partner, who he once sold out
    to the Romulans in order to save his own skin, has finally been released by
    his captors and has come aboard the station to exact vengeance upon Quark.
    Bashir decides to make an effort to cut through Melora's oversensitivity and
    defensiveness in order to help her, and even discovers that there may be a
    way to reverse her handicap.
  Guest Cast:  Daphne Ashbrook (Melora), Peter Crombie (Fallit Kot), Don Stark
    (Ashrock), Ron Taylor (Klingon Chef)

26      RULES OF ACQUISITION
        teleplay by Ira Steven Behr
        story by Hilary Bader
        directed by David Livingston
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate not given:  Grand Nagus Zek once again plans to use DS9 as the launch
    pad of Ferengi business opportunities in the Gamma Quadrant, and again he
    sees Quark as a valuable agent in securing the financial future of the
    Ferengi Alliance - or a scapegoat should his efforts to make commercial
    inroads through the other side of the wormhole fail.  A newcomer to Quark's
    is another Ferengi named Pel, who is especially savvy to Ferengi rules of
    commerce and materialism - but flies in the face of the rules of traditional
    Ferengi customs, since Pel is a female in disguise who, in Ferengi society,
    could be jailed for stepping out of her house with clothes on.
  Guest Cast:  Helene Udy (Pel), Wallace Shawn (Zek), Tiny Ron (Maihar'du),
    Brian Thompson (Zyree), Max Grodenchik (Rom), Emilia Crow (Inglatu)

27      NECESSARY EVIL
        written by Peter Allan Fields
        directed by James L. Conway
        music by Jay Chattaway
  Stardate 47282.5:  Quark is hired to retrieve a list of names hidden on DS9 by
    a Bajoran five years ago, but when he gets curious about the list's
    contents, a Bajoran man enters his bar and shoots him.  As Quark fights for
    his life in the infirmary under guard, Odo realizes that this incident is
    somehow linked to the murder of a Bajoran five years ago, when Odo was
    assigned to investigate his first crime on DS9 by Gul Dukat.  The Bajoran
    whose murder Odo never solved turns out to be the husband of the woman who
    paid Quark to get the list.  Five years ago, she accused Kira of the crime,
    claiming that the then-resistance fighter was having an affair with the
    woman's husband.  Though the woman is currently involved in some suspicious
    activities, she was correct in one of those assumptions.
  Guest Cast:  Katherine Moffat (Pallra), Max Grodenchik (Rom), Marc Alaimo (Gul
    Dukat), Robert Mackenzie (Trazko)

28      SECOND SIGHT
        teleplay by Mark Gehred O' Connell
                and Ira Steven Behr & Robert Hewitt Wolfe
        story by Mark Gehred O' Connell
        directed by Alexander Singer
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate 47329.4:  On the fourth anniversary of the Wolf 359 attack and the
    death of his wife, Commander Sisko tries to evade the painful reminder by
    walking around the station.  On the Promenade, he meets a woman who
    identifies herself as Fenna, and though a spark of fascination ignites
    between them, she disappears without a trace moments later.  The next day,
    despite Fenna's vanishing act, Sisko carries out his duties, including the
    preparation of the USS Prometheus to carry out a hazardous stellar ignition
    experiment under the auspices of Dr. Seyetik - whose wife, as it so happens,
    turns out to be Fenna...or a duplicate of her.  En route to the potentially
    deadly site of a dead star via the Prometheus, Sisko struggles to decipher
    Fenna's secret.
  Guest Cast:  Sally Elise Richardson (Fenna/Nidell), Richard Kiley (Seyetik),
    Mark Erickson (Piersall)

29      SANCTUARY
        teleplay by Frederick Rappaport
        story by Gabe Essoe and Kelley Miles
        directed by Les Landau
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate 47391.2:  A damaged ship emerges from the wormhole carrying four
    members of an unknown race from the Gamma Quadrant.  The station's universal
    translator takes a good deal of time to decipher the aliens' language, but
    when it does decode their incomprehensible speech, they are able to tell
    Sisko and Kira that there are three million others on the other side of the
    wormhole, referrred to in their native Skrreean mythology as the eye of the
    universe, looking for Kentaana, their destiny according to legend.  As it
    turns out, Kentaana is known in the Alpha Quadrant as Bajor, and the
    Skrreeans intend to emigrate there.
  Guest Cast:  William Schallert (Varani), Andrew Koenig (Tumak), Aron
    Eisenberg (Nog), Michael Durrell (General Hazar), Betty McGuire (Vayna),
    Robert Curtis-Brown (Vedek Sorad), Kitty Swink (Rozahn), Deborah May
    (Haneek), Leland Orser (Gai), Nicholas Shaffer (Cowl)

30      RIVALS
        teleplay by Michael Piller & Jim Trombetta
        story by Joe Menosky
        directed by David Livingston
        music by Jay Chattaway
  Stardate not given:  A new face arrives on DS9's Promenade, an open face with
    an apparently big heart, enough to listen through any hard luck story and
    comfort the person telling it.  Unknown to his increasingly large number of
    friends, however, Martus is simply gathering information and awaiting his
    opportunity.  When he finds a way to open an entertainment center that
    steals Quark's clientele, Quark begins to suspect that his luck has run out.
    Little does he know...
  Guest Cast:  Chris Sarandon (Martus), Lawrence Monoson (Hovath), Rosalind Chao
    (Keiko), Barbara Bosson (Roana), K. Callan (Alsia), Max Grodenchik (Rom),
    Albert Henderson (Cos)
    
31      THE ALTERNATE
        teleplay by Bill Dial
        story by Jim Trombetta and Bill Dial
        directed by David Carson
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate not given:  Dr. Mora Pol, the Bajoran scientist who studied Odo and
    first discovered that Odo is a living creature, arrives on DS9 to enlist the
    shapeshifter's help in another research endeavor - this time a journey into
    the Gamma Quadrant to investigate a world that may once have harbored beings
    similar in nature to Odo.  Finding only the ruins of some past civilization
    at first, the away team also find some local flora that appear to bear some
    resemblance to Odo.  A geological upheaval on the planet sends the members
    of the away team scrambling for cover from suffocating natural gases.  After
    returning to their runabout and going back to the station, most of them wind
    up recovering in the infirmary recovering from gas inhalation.  Only Odo
    appears to be unaffected, which is fortunate since something the away team
    has brought back from the Gamma Quadrant would appear to be lose aboard DS9
    - something with abilities remarkably similar to Odo's...
  Guest Cast:  James Sloyan (Dr. Mora Pol), Matt MacKenzie (Dr. Weld Ram)

32      ARMAGEDDON GAME
        written by Morgan Gendel
        directed by Winrich Kolbe
        music by Jay Chattaway
  Stardate not given:  Bashir and O' Brien are on attachment to a research
    vessel in the Gamma Quadrant, attempting to help the Kelleruns and T'lani
    destroy their bumper crop of biological weapons known as Harvesters.
    Shortly after finally discovering a means of rendering the Harvesters inert,
    the scientists on the alien ship are stormed by a squadron of armed troops.
    Only Bashir and O' Brien escape, beaming down to nearby T'lani III when they
    are unable to contact their Runabout.  O' Brien has been infected by
    material from a Harvester and will die within days if he doesn't receive
    treatment that Bashir cannot provide without the station's medical
    facilities.  In the meantime, Sisko and the crew have been informed that
    Bashir and O' Brien died in an accident aboard the research ship - but
    unknown to the crew, those who Bashir and O' Brien were helping in good
    faith are deliberately responsible for the attack.
  Guest Cast:  Rosalind Chao (Keiko), Darleen Carr (E'tyshra), Peter White
    (Sharat), Larry Cedar (Nydrom), Bill Mondy (Jakin)

33      WHISPERS
        written by Paul Robert Coyle
        directed by Les Landau
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate 47581.2:  After returning from a briefing on security measures that
    will be needed aboard DS9 for a summit between leaders of warring factions
    of the Paradans, O' Brien feels that something strange is happening, though
    he can't quite place a finger on what it could be.  Gradually, he discovers
    that everything he says and does is being double-checked by Sisko and the
    crew.  His own wife and daughter don't seem comfortable around him, and even
    the most innocent questions he asks are evaded by everyone.  As the time of
    the Paradan meeting draws near, O' Brien gets desperate for answers - but
    everyone else on the station seems intent on stopping him.
  Guest Cast:  Rosalind Chao (Keiko), Todd Waring (DeCurtis), Susan Bay
    (Admiral), Philip LeStrange (Coutu), Hana Hatae (Molly), Majel Barrett
    (Computer Voice)

34      PARADISE
        teleplay by Jeff King and Richard Manning & Hans Beimler
        story by Jim Trombetta & James Crocker
        directed by Corey Allen
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate 47573.1:  Surveying planets in the Gamma Quadrant for potential
    colonization by the Federation, Sisko and O' Brien discover a world which is
    already inhabited by humans - to be precise, survivors of a Starfleet
    shipwreck who have been living on the other side of the wormhole for over a
    decade.  Led by the charismatic Alixus, the survivors have had to rely on
    basic skills to stay alive, since an energy field prevents any form of
    technology from functioning.  Alixus presses Sisko and O' Brien to abandon
    any hope of rescue and stay with the colony, but when the two refuse to give
    up so easily, they discover that their hostess is not above relying on the
    darkest tactics to convince them...
  Guest Cast:  Gail Strickland (Alixus), Julia Nickson (Cassandra), Steve
    Vinovich (Joseph), Michael Buchman Silver (Vinod), Erick Weiss (Stephan),
    Majel Barrett (Computer Voice)

35      SHADOWPLAY
        written by Robert Hewitt Wolfe
        directed by Robert Scheerer
        music by Jay Chattaway
  Stardate 47603.3:  Detecting the emissions of a matter/antimatter reactor from
    an uncharted planet in the Gamma Quadrant, Dax and Odo beam down into a
    village whose simple inhabitants have been disappearing without a trace or
    any kind of explanation.  At first the visitors from the Runabout are prime
    suspects, but once they prove that they have nothing to do with the series
    of disappearances, Dax and Odo are entrusted with the task of finding the
    guilty party.  However, someone else in the village already knows the answer
    to the puzzle - the one person who is guaranteed not to vanish.
  Guest Cast:  Philip Anglim (Vedek Bareil), Kenneth Mars (Colyus), Kenneth
    Tobey (Rurigan), Noley Thornton (Taya), Trula M. Marcus (Female Villager),
    Martin Cassidy (Male Villager)

36      PLAYING GOD
        teleplay by Jim Trombetta and Michael Piller
        story by Jim Trombetta
        directed by David Livingston
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate unknown:

  Guest Cast:  Geoffrey Blake (Arjin), Ron Taylor (Klingon Chef), Richard Poe
    (Gul Evek), Chris Nelson Morris (Alien Man), Majel Barrett (Computer Voice)

37      PROFIT AND LOSS
        written by Flip Kobler & Cindy Marcus
        directed by Robert Weimer
        music by Jay Chattaway
  Stardate not given:  A damaged Cardassian starship docks at DS9 and its pilot
    makes an urgent request for repairs so she and her passengers can continue
    on their way as soon as possible.  She turns out to be Natima, a member of
    the Cardassian anti-military underground and an old lover of Quark's from
    seven years ago.  Her ship has been damaged while trying to escape from the
    Cardassians with her precious cargo: followers of her pacifist movement.
    Quark is overjoyed to see Natima again, but her own enthusiasm about the
    reunion seems much more restrained.  Garak, the station's only remaining
    resident Cardassian, is also happy to see Natima - but only in the same way
    that a hunter revels at the sight of prey...
  Guest Cast:  Mary Crosby (Natima), Andrew Robinson (Garak), Michael Reilly
    Burke (Hogue), Heidi Swedberg (Rikelan), Edward Wiley (Gul Teran)

38      BLOOD OATH
        television story and teleplay by Peter Allan Fields
        based upon material by Andrea Moore Alton
        directed by Winrich Kolbe
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate not given:  Three elderly Klingons whose days of glory passed into
    history and legend with the conclusion of Federation-Klingon hostilities
    have arrived at DS9 in search of their old friend Curzon Dax.  Decades ago,
    after the three Klingons led a victorious assault on a ruthless enemy, their
    first sons were murdered in an act of revenge.  The bereaved fathers made a
    pact, along with their mutual friend Dax, to avenge their sons' deaths.
    After years of searching, the murderer has been found - and they wonder if
    Jadzia Dax will still honor an oath of vengeance made by Curzon Dax.
       The principal Klingon guest stars each made their debut appearances in
    episodes of the original "Star Trek" - John Colicos' Kor appeared as the
    first Klingon in Trek history in 1967's "Errand of Mercy"; William Campbell
    stirred up "The Trouble With Tribbles" as Koloth later that same year, and
    Michael Ansara locked horns with Captain Kirk in 1968's "Day of the Dove."
  Guest Cast:  John Colicos (Kor), William Campbell (Koloth), Michael Ansara
    (Kang), Bill Bolender (The Albino), Christopher Collins (Albino's Aide)

39      THE MAQUIS, PART I
        teleplay by James Crocker
        story by Rick Berman & Michael Piller & Jeri Taylor and James Crocker
        directed by David Livingston
        also see Next Generation #171 "Journey's End"
        music by Jay Chattaway
  Stardate not given:  A Cardassian ship is destroyed moments after leaving dock
    at DS9, and evidence is discovered pointing to sabotage - committed not by
    Bajorans, but by someone in the Federation.  Gul Dukat arrives on the
    station, telling Sisko that things are heating up along the recently
    realigned Cardassian/Federation border, along which a demilitarized zone has
    been erected.  Also present on the station is the Federation attache' to the
    Federation colonies on the border, Commander Hudson, who also happens to be
    an old friend of Sisko.  Dukat and Sisko travel to one of the border
    colonies, witnessing a furious battle between Federation and Cardassian
    colonists' vessels along the way.  On arrival, they discover that the human
    responsible for the destruction of the Cardassian vessel has been captured
    on DS9, interrogated and then killed, enraging the human colonists.  After
    returning to the station, Dukat is kidnapped and taken from the station.
    A message is received from a group who call themselves the Maquis, claiming
    responsibility for the abduction.  Sisko, Kira and Bashir track down the
    ship that must have taken Dukat from the station, and Sisko discovers that
    Hudson, who has voiced sympathies for the displaced Federation colonists, is
    the leader of the colonists in their war against their Cardassian neighbors.
  Guest Cast:  Bernie Casey (Commander Cal Hudson), Marc Alaimo (Gul Dukat),
    Tony Plana (Amaros), Bertila Damas (Sakonna), Richard Poe (Gul Evek),
    Michael A. Krawic (Samuels), Amanda Carlin (Kobb), Michael Rose (Niles),
    Steven John Evans (Guard)

40      THE MAQUIS, PART II
        teleplay by Ira Steven Behr
        story by Rick Berman & Michael Piller & Jeri Taylor and Ira Steven Behr
        directed by Corey Allen
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate not given:  The Cardassian Central Command is up in arms about the
    abduction of Gul Dukat, and Hudson has declared his intention to help the
    Maquis with all his resources.  A visit from a high representative of
    Cardassia puzzles Sisko when he declares that Dukat is responsible for
    smuggling weapons into the demilitarized zone and, if returned to Cardassia,
    will be executed.  Sisko goes after Dukat, rescuing him from the Maquis and
    sending a message to Hudson through renegade colonist Amaros.  Dukat, as it
    happens, has been kept in the dark, and agrees to help Sisko prove the
    source of the Cardassian colonists' arms in exchange for Sisko's help in
    bringing Maquis violence to a halt.  A captured Vulcan members of the Maquis
    reveals a plan to attack a hidden Cardassian weapons depot, and Sisko
    launches DS9's fleet of Runabouts to intercept the Maquis' two vessels.
    Sisko is pressured by Starfleet and Dukat to hunt Hudson down and stop him
    at any cost to prevent a full-scale war.
  Guest Cast:  Bernie Casey (Commander Cal Hudson), Marc Alaimo (Gul Dukat),
    Tony Plana (Amaros), John Schuck (Legate Parn), Natalija Nogulich (Admiral
    Nechayev), Bertila Damas (Sakonna), Michael Bell (Xepolite), Amanda Carlin
    (Kobb), Michael Rose (Niles)

41      THE WIRE
        written by Robert Hewitt Wolfe
        directed by Kim Friedman
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate not given:  During a lunchtime disagreement with Bashir over the
    relative merits of Cardassian literature, Garak begins to loose his plain,
    simple demeanor and concerns Bashir immensely.  Garak finally collapses, and
    Bashir discovers the source of the mysterious Cardassian's ailment - some
    kind of implant is connected to his brain.  Quark, having been contacted by
    Garak to acquire something related to his problem, stumbles across the party
    responsible for the implant - Cardassia's Obsidian Order, a feared secret
    police organization which has been known to obtain information by means even
    darker than the Cardassian military's interrogators.  Bashir risks delving
    into the mysteries of the Obsidian Order in a race against time to find a
    cure for Garak - and perhaps to learn some of his secrets.
  Guest Cast:  Andrew Robinson (Garak), Jimmie F. Skaggs (Glinn Boheeka), Ann
    Gillespie (Nurse Jabara), Paul Dooley (Enabran Tain)

42      CROSSOVER
        teleplay by Peter Allan Fields and Michael Piller
        story by Peter Allan Fields
        directed by David Livingston
        also see Classic Trek #34 "Mirror, Mirror"
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate not given:  When a Runabout's warp field doesn't completely shut off
    as it enters the wormhole, Kira and Bashir are detoured into an alternate
    universe generated by the consequences of previous travelers' interference.
    The station, still operating under its Cardassian name Terok Nor, and
    Intendant Kira Nerys lords over the station and its inhabitants with the
    help of first officer Garak and her Klingon cronies.  Bashir is immediately
    forced to labor in the ore processing facility, while Kira meets her
    tyrannical, avaricious counterpart.  Sisko and O' Brien are also to be found
    in this universe, as downtrodden humans living lives of virtual slavery
    under Kira's whip.  Treachery abounds aboard the station, and Kira and
    Bashir can only try to play all sides against each other in order to find a
    way back to their own universe.
  Guest Cast:  Andrew Robinson (Garak), John Cothran Jr. (Telok), Stephen
    Gevedon (Klingon #1), Jack R. Orden (Human), Dennis Madalone (Marauder)

43      THE COLLABORATOR
        teleplay by Gary Holland and Ira Steven Behr & Robert Hewitt Wolfe
        story by Gary Holland
        directed by Cliff Bole
        music by Jay Chattaway
  Stardate not given:  The choosing of Bajor's new Kai draws near, and some
    candidates are not above resorting to hardline tactics to discredit their
    rivals.  When one of the top Bajoran traitors of the Cardassian occupation
    turns up on the station and is promptly pardoned by Vedek Winn, Kira's
    suspicions are aroused, as is her anger when Winn accuses Vedek Bareil, the
    leading candidate in the race and Kira's lover, of collaborating with the
    Cardassians.  Kira makes every attempt to clear Bareil's name as the
    election looms, but only discovers more evidence pointing him out as a
    traitor to the Bajora.  By the time Kira learns the truth about Bareil's
    involvement in a massacre that cost the lives of 43 Bajoran freedom fighters
    including the late Kai Opaka's son, Winn has become Bajor's new Kai.
  Guest Cast:  Louise Fletcher (Vedek Winn), Philip Anglim (Vedek Bareil), Bert
    Remsen (Kubus), Camille Saviola (Kai Opaka), Charles Parks (Eblan), Tom
    Villard (Prylar Bek)

44      TRIBUNAL
        written by Bill Dial
        directed by Avery Brooks
        music by Jay Chattaway
  Stardate not given:  O' Brien and Keiko depart in a runabout to enjoy some
    vacation time alone, but their plans are cut short when a Cardassian ship
    intercepts the runabout, sends a boarding party, and takes custody of
    O' Brien, sending Keiko back to the station.  On Cardassia Prime, O' Brien
    is jailed and assigned a lawyer, even though he has already been charged,
    convicted and sentenced to execution.  Cardassian law allows the spouse and
    counsel to attend the trial, and Odo, with his background in law enforcement
    under the Cardassian reign over Bajor, volunteers to be O' Brien's counsel.
    Both are frustrated when no one will clarify what crime O' Brien is being
    accused of, and the Cardassian system of justice promises a speedy trial..
  Guest Cast:  Rosalind Chao (Keiko), Caroline Lagerfelt (Mokbar), Fritz Weaver
    (Conservator Kovat), John Beck (Boone), Richard Poe (Gul Evek), Julian
    Christopher (Clerk), Majel Barrett (Computer Voice)

45      THE JEM'HADAR
        written by Ira Steven Behr
        directed by Kim Friedman
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate not given:  Sisko decides to take Jake and Nog to the Gamma Quadrant
    so they can survey an unexplored planet for a school science project, but is
    not so happy when Quark tags along to try to curry favor with the station
    commander.  But even Quark becomes a minor inconvenience when a female of an
    unknown species stumbles across Sisko's camp while the boys are off
    collecting firewood.  Alien warriors known as the Jem'Hadar appear out of
    nowhere using personal cloaking devices and take Sisko, Quark and the
    fugitive Eris prisoner.  Eris reveals that the Jem'Hadar are the most feared
    and ruthless soldiers in the Dominion, a Gamma Quadrant government which has
    oft been spoken of by those from the other side of the wormhole, but has yet
    to make a personal appearance.  One of the Jem'Hadar visits the station and
    delivers an ultimatum to Kira - the Dominion will no longer tolerate
    unwanted guests from the Alpha Quadrant in their territory.  Starfleet sends
    the Galaxy class starship Odyssey to retrieve Sisko and the others, but even
    the tallest ship of the fleet cannot withstand the brute force of the
    Jem'Hadar.
  Guest Cast:  Alan Oppenheimer (Captain Keogh), Aron Eisenberg (Nog), Cress
    Williams (Telon), Molly Hagan (Eris), Michael Jace (1st Officer), Sandra
    Grando (2nd Officer), Majel Barrett (Computer Voice)


                          Ŀ
                           Season Three: 1994-1995 
                          

46      THE SEARCH, PART I
        teleplay by Ronald D. Moore
        story by Ira Steven Behr & Robert Hewitt Wolfe
        directed by Kim Friedman
        music by Jay Chattaway
  Stardate 48212.4:  Preparations are being made aboard DS9 for an inevitable
    visit from the Dominion, but no one can escape the fact that the station
    would wither under an attack from the Jem'Hadar.  Commander Sisko, having
    gone to Earth for Starfleet briefings on the threat from the Gamma Quadrant,
    arrives in the experimental Federation vessel Defiant, a small ship
    originally created to do battle with the Borg.  Carrying more firepower than
    any other Starfleet ship and a cloaking device loaned by the Romulans, the
    Defiant is to go to the Dominion before the Dominion arrives in the Alpha
    Quadrant; if need be, the ship is also to take the fight to the other side
    of the galaxy.  Another innovation brought about by Starfleet Command is the
    transfer of a Starfleet security officer to the station, relieving Odo of
    all but station-bound security matters.  The shapeshifter withdraws in anger
    while Sisko assembles a crew for the Defiant's mission to seek out the
    Dominion for negotiations, but joins the Defiant crew at the last minute.  A
    trade contact of Quark's offers some information but little help in the
    search for the Founders of the Dominion, but does point the crew out to a
    planet through which most Dominion communications pass.  When the Defiant
    arrives there, Dax and O' Brien beam down and find the possible coordinates
    of the Dominion command center - and are captured by the Jem'Hadar, who have
    also arrived in force in orbit.  The Defiant manages to take out only one
    Jem'Hadar ship and barely survives the withering assault of the remaining
    attackers.  The Defiant is boarded and Kira is blasted unconscious in the
    ensuing melee.  Odo takes her and evacuates in an escape shuttle, heading
    not back to the station, but to a planet in the Omarian Nebula with which he
    has been preoccupied since arriving in the Gamma Quadrant.  The planet turns
    out to be the home of a race of life forms very like Odo himself, one of
    which welcomes him home.
  Season 3 Regular Cast:  Avery Brooks (Commander Benjamin Sisko), Rene
    Auberjonois (Odo), Siddig El Fadil (Dr. Julian Bashir), Terry Farrell (Lt.
    Jadzia Dax), Cirroc Lofton (Jake Sisko), Colm Meaney (Chief O' Brien), Armin
    Shimerman (Quark), Nana Visitor (Major Kira Nerys)
  Guest Cast:  Salome Jens (Female Shapeshifter), Martha Hackett (SubCommander
    T'rul), John Fleck (Karemma), Kenneth Marshall (Lt. Commander Eddington)

47      THE SEARCH - part II
        teleplay by Ira Steven Behr
        story by Ira Steven Behr & Robert Hewitt Wolfe
        directed by Jonathan Frakes
        music by Jay Chattaway
  Stardate not given:  Odo has arrived on his home world, greeted by his fellow
    shapeshifters.  He at last learns of his origins - he, along with hundreds
    of other newly-formed shapeshifters, were dispelled into the far reaches of
    space and genetically programmed to return home with their knowledge later;
    Odo is the first to make it back.  But his homecoming is not without its
    complications - his fellow shapeshifters consider him tainted by the many
    years he has spent in the comapny of "solids," and he has much to learn
    about his heritage.  In the meantime, Sisko and Bashir, having escaped the
    Defiant in a shuttle, are picked up by Dax and O' Brien, who return them to
    DS9.  Negotiations are now apparently underway between the Dominion and the
    Federation, but some of the proposed treaty's stipulations have sinister
    undercurrents; the Romulans are being excluded from the talks, though the
    Cardassians, Ferengi and Klingons are being welcomed, and it is revealed to
    Sisko that the station - and Bajor - are being handed over to the Dominion.
    As the Jem'Hadar being walking over the station's inhabitants, Sisko and his
    crew - and unlikely ally Garak - take up arms to try to take DS9 back from
    its new owners.  Meanwhile, on the planet of the shapeshifters and unknown
    to all, the Founders lie in wait, conducting a terrifying experiment.
  Guest Cast:  Salome Jens (Female Shapeshifter), Andrew Robinson (Garak),
    Natalija Nogulich (Admiral Nechayev), Martha Hackett (SubCommander T'rul),
    Kenneth Marshall (Lt. Commander Eddington), William Frankfather (Male
    Shapeshifter), Dennis Christopher (Borath), Christopher Doyle (Jem'Hadar
    Officer), Tom Morga (Jem'Hadar Soldier), Diaunte (Jem'Hadar Guard), Majel
    Barrett (Computer Voice)

48      THE HOUSE OF QUARK
        teleplay by Ronald D. Moore
        story by Tom Benko
        directed by Les Landau
        music by Richard Bellis
  Stardate not given:  A drunk Klingon named Kozak tries to kill Quark in a
    dispute over his bar tab, and winds up falling on his own knife by accident.
    Quark, attempting to boost business, tells Odo that he bravely killed Kozak
    in self-defense.  Odo warns that Kozak's family will come after Quark to
    claim the right of vengeance, which springs to mind very quickly when a new
    Klingon arrival who claims to be Kozak's brother D'Ghor accosts Quark on
    the station.  But D'Ghor doesn't want revenge, he wants Quark to keep quiet
    about the true nature of Kozak's death to avoid dishonoring his family.
  Guest Cast:  Rosalibd Chao (Keiko), Mary Kay Adams (Grilka), Carlos Carrasco
    (D'Ghor), Max Grodenchik (Rom), Robert O' Reilly (Gowron), Joseph Ruskin
    (Tumek), John Lendale Bennett (Kozak)

49      EQUILIBRIUM
        teleplay by Rene Echeverria
        story by Christopher Teague
        directed by Cliff Bole
        music by Jay Chattaway
  Stardate not given:  During an informal home-cooked dinner held by Sisko for
    the senior staff, Dax picks up a musical instrument of Jake's and begins to
    pick out, seemingly at random, a tune which she becomes preoccupied with,
    and it follows her into some disturbing hallucinations of masked figures.  A
    medical checkup reveals some deficiencies in the chemical links between
    Jadzia and the Dax symbiont, necessitating a trip to the specialized medical
    facilities on the Trill planet.  Though she shows favorable response to her
    initial treatments, Dax goes into shock when the computer aboard the Defiant
    displays a picture of the Trill composer of the song that has been on her
    mind.  Sisko and Bashir try to seek out the mysterious link with the
    long-dead musician and Dax only to have all the official channels closed in
    their faces to protect a devastating secret, the cost of which will be
    Jadzia's life.
  Guest Cast:  Lisa Banes (Dr. Rinha), Jeff Magnus McBride (Joran Belar),
    Nicholas Cascone (Tanor), Harvey Vernon (Yolan Belar)

50      SECOND SKIN
        written by Robert Hewitt Wolfe
        directed by Les Landau
        music by David Bell
  Stardate not given:  Kira sets off for Bajor when it is revealed that her
    memories of a specific event in the Cardassian occupation differ with the
    official records of the Bajoran central archives.  She never makes it to the
    archives, however, because she is captured and transported to Cardassia
    Prime, where she wakes up with the features of a Cardassian.  She is told
    time and again that she is, in fact, a Cardassian by birth whose deep cover
    spying assignment necessitated her cosmetic alteration to look like a
    Bajoran rebel named Kira Nerys who was captured and killed.  But she begins
    to worry when the Cardassians' efforts to make her believe this story seem
    to go above and beyond their normal brainwashing techniques, including the
    arrival of a high-ranking Legate who claims that Kira is his daughter.  Kira
    doesn't have any information that the Cardassians would go to these lengths
    to retrieve and begins to wonder if perhaps the history of which she has
    just learned is true.
  Guest Cast:  Andrew Robinson (Garak), Gregory Sierra (Entek), Tony Papenfuss
    (Survivor), Cindy Katz (Nurse), Lawrence Pressman (Ghemor), Christopher
    Carroll (Gul Benil), Freyda Thomas (Alenis Grem), Billy Burke (Ari)

51      THE ABANDONED
        written by D. Thomas Maio & Steve Warnek
        directed by Avery Brooks
        music by Jay Chattaway
  Stardate not given:  Quark obtains the salvaged wreckage of a ship from the
    Gamma Quadrant and discovers an alien infant in some kind of container.  The
    child is handed over to Bashir, who finds that its metabolic rate is
    incredibly accelerated.  Within hours, the child seems to be at least eight
    years old and can already talk to and understand others.  Later, as the boy
    evolves even more rapidly, it is discovered that he is an infant Jem'Hadar -
    and a chance encounter with Odo reveals that the boy is genetically
    programmed to respect changelings.  Odo hopes that he can demonstrate to the
    boy that, just as Odo is not the same as the Founders of the Dominion, the
    child does not have to follow in the violent footsteps of his fellow
    warriors.
  Guest Cast:  Bumper Robinson (Jem'Hadar Boy), Jill Sayre (Marta), Leslie Bevis
    (Freighter Captain), Matthew Kimbrough (Alien High Roller), Hassan Nicholas
    (Young Jem'Hadar Boy)

52      CIVIL DEFENSE
        written by Mike Krohn
        directed by Reza Badiyi
        music by Jay Chattaway
  Stardate not given:  O' Brien accidentally triggers an automatic security
    program in one of the defunct ore processing plants.  The pre-programmed
    subroutine was programmed by Gul Dukat to halt any uprising by the Bajoran
    slave workers years ago, but its countermeasures are still potent, ranging
    from force fields and bulkheads to deadly gas.  When these obstacles are
    thwarted by the crew, "Dukat" has an ace up his sleeve: the station's self
    destruct routine.  Dax discovers that only Gul Dukat himself can abort this
    program.  It just happens that Dukat has learned of the situation aboard the
    station and has decided to pay a visit so he can gloat over Kira.  But when
    he tries to leave DS9 to its fate, he finds that his superiors predicted
    that Dukat would try to flee the situation, and he too is trapped on the
    doomed station.
  Guest Cast:  Andrew Robinson (Garak), Marc Alaimo (Gul Dukat), Danny Goldring
    (Legate Kell)

53      MERIDIAN
        teleplay by Mark Gehred O' Connell
        story by Hilary Bader & Evan Carlos Somers
        directed by Jonathan Frakes
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate 48423.2:  Exploring the Gamma Quadrant, the Defiant arrives at a
    planetless star just in time to see an entire planet appear from nowhere.
    Its inhabitants seem friendly, and invite Sisko, Dax and O' Brien to beam
    down and visit.  They discover that the planet Meridian and its peaceful
    inhabitants spend sixty years in a non-corporeal form, and emerge into
    solidity for only a few days at a time.  The crew sets about trying to find
    out why Meridian disappears, and discover a possible way of keeping the
    planet around longer the next time it reappears in physical form.  During
    the extended visit, Dax falls in love with Daral, but Meridian will be gone
    again before its existence in either plane can be stabilized, and Dax wants
    to stay with Daral - whether it means him leaving Meridian, or Dax shifting
    into a non-corporeal life form with the rest of the planet's residents.
  Guest Cast:  Brett Cullen (Daral), Christine Healy (Selten), Jeffrey Combs
    (Teron), Mark Humphrey (Child)

54      DEFIANT
        written by Ronald D. Moore
        directed by Cliff Bole
        also see Next Generation #149 "Second Chances"
        music by Jay Chattaway
  Stardate 48467.3:  DS9's crew welcomes Commander Riker aboard, stopping off at
    the station en route to Risa.  He gets a tour of the station from Kira,
    ending up at the Defiant - which he hijacks, with Kira as his prisoner.
    This "commander" is Thomas Riker, now a member of the Maquis on the run from
    Starfleet.  His target is a secret Cardassian installation which, as Gul
    Dukat and Sisko find when they go to Cardassia to coordinate the search for
    the Defiant, is apparently an operation of the Obsidian Order, Cardassia's
    widely-feared secret police and intelligence wing.  Kira doubts that Riker's
    motives are the same as those of the Maquis, but are instead sparked by an
    obsession to dinstinguish himself in the annals of history from the
    Enterprise's first officer.  In the meantime, Riker's discoveries in the
    secret depths of Cardassian space surprise everyone, including Dukat.
  Guest Cast:  Jonathan Frakes (Riker), Marc Alaimo (Gul Dukat), Tricia O' Neil
    (Korinas), Shannon Cochran (Kalita), Robert Kerbeck (Cardassian Soldier),
    Michael Canavan (Tamal)

55      FASCINATION
        teleplay by Philip Lazebnik
        story by Ira Steven Behr & James Crocker
        directed by Avery Brooks
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate not given:  The annual Bajoran Gratitude Festival brings mixed
    feelings for all.  Jake's girlfriend has given him up to enroll at a science
    academy, O' Brien is nervous about Keiko's first visit to the station in two
    months, Kira eagerly awaits Bareil's arrival, and Odo is filled with utter
    dread when Lwaxana Troi boards the station just to visit him.  O' Brien's
    situation worsens by the minute when Keiko just wants to rest, and Odo
    simply can't escape Lwaxana.  And neither can anyone else.  Thanks to a
    slight telepathic ailment being suffered by the Betazoid ambassador, her
    feelings for Odo are projected onto others, amplifying some subconscious
    attractions.  Jake tries to woo Kira, who is busy wondering why Bareil has
    apparently left her for Dax, who's hot on Sisko's trail...
  Guest Cast:  Majel Barrett (Lwaxana Troi), Philip Anglim (Vedek Bareil),
    Rosalind Chao (Keiko), Hana Hatae (Molly)

56      PAST TENSE, PART I
        teleplay by Robert Hewitt Wolfe
        story by Ira Steven Behr & Robert Hewitt Wolfe
        directed by Reza Badiyi
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate 48481.2:  The Defiant ferries Sisko and his senior staff to Starfleet
    HQ on Earth for a Gamma Quadrant symposium.  A strange phenomenon intercepts
    the transporter beam carrying Sisko, Dax and Bashir to Earth, sending them
    into the early 21st century, though they still arrive in San Francisco.
    Sisko and Bashir are picked up and sent to a sanctuary district, a large
    high-security ghetto occupied by the unemployed, homeless and mentally ill.
    Dax befriends information mogul Chris Brynner, who assists her in the search
    for her friends.  Sisko and Bashir learn that they have arrived mere days
    away from a historical event known as the Bell Riots, sparked when a violent
    uprising in the San Francisco sanctuary district was quashed with even more
    force by the National Guard, though the hostages taken by the sanctuary
    dwellers were kept safe by a man named Gabriel Bell.  Trying not to
    interfere, the two time travelers stumble into the street brawl that
    initiates the riots - and due to their presence, Gabriel Bell winds up dead
    trying to keep Bashir from being hurt.  The violence escalates, and the
    sanctuary's residents begin their rebellion.  Hostages are taken from the
    local government office, and only one man can keep them from harm at the
    hands of the angry sanctuary denizens: Commander Sisko, assuming the role of
    Gabriel Bell.
  Guest Cast:  Jim Metzler (Chris Brynner), Frank Military (B.C.), Dick Miller
    (Vin), Al Rodrigo (Bernardo), Tina Lifford (Lee), Bill Smitrovich (Webb),
    Henry Hayashi (Male Guest), Patty Holley (Female Guest), Richard Lee Jackson
    (Danny), Eric Stuart (Stairway Guard), John Lendale Bennett (Gabriel Bell)

57      PAST TENSE, PART II
        teleplay by Robert Hewitt Wolfe & Rene Echevarria
        story by Ira Steven Behr & Robert Hewitt Wolfe
        directed by Jonathan Frakes
        music by David Bell
  Stardate not given:  "Bell" takes charge of the hostage situation, insisting
    that the sanctuary's residents demand more than just a way out for
    themselves.  He meets with a government official and demands that employment
    acts be reactivated that would allow the unemployed to be productive members
    of society, eliminating the need for the sanctuary districts.  In the
    sanctuary, tensions rise between the hostages and their captors, and Sisko
    and Bashir have to keep both parties in check.  When the government storms
    the sanctuary district, Sisko finds himself in the same position as Gabriel
    Bell did, according to the history books - he will mostly likely be killed
    in the raid and become a martyr.
  Guest Cast:  Jim Metzler (Chris Brynner), Frank Military (B.C.), Dick Miller
    (Vin), Deborah Van Valkenburgh (Preston), Al Rodrigo (Bernardo), Clint
    Howard (Grady), Richard Lee Jackson (Danny), Tina Lifford (Lee), Bill
    Smitrovich (Webb), Mitch David Carter (SWAT Leader), Daniel Zacapa (Henry
    Garcia)

58      LIFE SUPPORT
        teleplay by Ronald D. Moore
        story by Christian Ford & Roger Soffer
        directed by Reza Badiyi
        music by Dennis McCarthy
  Stardate 48498.4:  Vedek Bareil is severely injured in an accident aboard a
    Bajoran transport ferrying him and Kai Winn to groundbreaking peace
    negotiations with the Cardassians.  Bareil dies, but Bashir is able to jump-
    start the Vedek's brain again, reviving him with some very unconventional
    surgical techniques.  Winn needs Bareil's advice, as only he is fully
    conversant with the treaty being discussed, but the prospects of keeping
    Bareil alive without putting him in stasis are not hopeful, and despite
    Bashir's strictest protests Bareil will not rest or allow himself to be put
    into stasis.  As the peace talks reach a critical stage, the only option
    left to keep Bareil's knowledge of the treaty available will rob him of his
    humanity and eventually his life.
  Guest Cast:  Philip Anglim (Vedek Bareil), Louise Fletcher (Kai Winn), Aron
    Eisenberg (Nog), Lark Voorhies (Leanne), Ann Gillespie (Nurse Jabara),
    Andrew Prine (Legate Turrel), Eva Loseth (Riska), Kevin Carr (Bajoran)

================================================================================
revision: 3M                                    updated & compiled:  30 Jan 1995

All text in this file (c)1993,'94,'95 Earl Green - see the file READTHIS.TXT for
                  acknowledgements and distribution site info.

