STAR TREK Comics Timeline Project – 2263 – Part 2

2263

Dwarf Planet
Stardate: 19:24.8
Comic: Star Trek #25
Publisher: Gold Key
Date: July 1974

Synopsis:

Writer: Unknown / Artist: Alberto Giolitti

The Enterprise comes across a planet where strange rays from the local star are causing each generation of the population to grow progressively smaller. Fearful that they may one day shrink to microscopic size and disappear, the rulers of the planet agree to the Enterprise’s help. The ship heads for the nearby star to collect samples of the "shrinking rays." While outside the ship erecting a collector dish, Scotty rips his space suit and is exposed to the full strength of the rays. He soon shrinks down to microscopic size and faces the perils of vicious germs and falling dust flakes. Using Scotty as a test subject, Spock develops an "anti-shrink" ray. The Enterprise builds several of the machines and delivers them to the planet so that they can restore their population to the correct size.

Ice Journey
Stardate: 20:27.3
Comic: Star Trek #27
Publisher: Gold Key
Date: November 1974

Synopsis:

Writer: Unknown / Artist: Alberto Giolitti

The Enterprise has been sent to Floe, the coldest planet in the Federation, to conduct a population survey. On the surface, they are greeted by blue-skinned "turtle people" who appear to have developed a natural adaptation to deal with the cold. However, they do not want their true numbers reported and capture Kirk and Uhura (depicted in this issue as a white woman) and force them to submit a false report. Meanwhile, Spock and a Federation scientist have been sacrificed to the planet’s fire pits. Their environment suits protect them from the heat, and they discover a race of subjugated red-skinned people. With Spock’s help the red-skins escape the fire pits and attack the blue-skinned people. The Enterprise crew escapes, having instigated a civil war!

The Mimicking Menace
Stardate: 34:21.7
Comic: Star Trek #28
Publisher: Gold Key
Date: January 1975

Synopsis:

Writer: Unknown / Artist: Alberto Giolitti

The Enterprise sends a shuttle down to investigate an apparently dormant volcano on an asteroid. After they land, the landing party is stunned to see another identical shuttle alongside. As they investigate, more duplicates appear as the crew encounters strange dancing lights. Kirk orders the Enterprise to fire a stream of negative ions into the volcano crater. The crater turns out to be home to an energy creature that is a parasite who drains energy sources to feed. The duplicates are a by-product of the energy absorption process.

The Death of a Star
Stardate: 33:33.3
Comic: Star Trek #30
Publisher: Gold Key
Date: May 1975

Synopsis:

Writer: Unknown / Artist: Alberto Giolitti

The Enterprise, sent to monitor the final hours of the star Isis, detects traces of life on a nearby planet. On beaming down, the crew encounters a woman who claims to be the Sun-Goddess Isis. On further investigation they discover an ancient underground city and an archive library, where they learn that Isis was once a living star who seeded the planet with her "eyes"—which grew into living beings—but that the Isisian civilization has been extinct for 25 million years. As the crew return to the surface, Isis goes nova, but in a last act transports the landing party back to the Enterprise and pushes the ship through a "space pocket" to save it from destruction

The Animal People
Stardate: 19:26.11
Comic: Star Trek #32
Publisher: Gold Key
Date: August 1975

Synopsis:

Writer: Unknown / Artist: Alberto Giolitti

Responding to a distress call, the Enterprise finds a civilization apparently threatened by a race of violent "animal people." Spock discovers that the so-called "animals" are intelligent humans who appear to have lost the ability to vocalize, with the exception of their leader, a beautiful woman. It is later revealed that the “animal people” are in fact the indigenous population of the planet, who had been conquered and enslaved thousands of years before, and that each child has to undergo an operation to prevent them from speaking. When their leader is captured, the "animal people" revolt. The ensuing civil war is ended only when the leader of the "animal people" and the crown prince of the ruling family marry, and then commit a ritual joint suicide. The symbolic gesture stops the war, and the barbaric operations are banned, sowing the seeds for the two races to live together in harmony going forward.

The Psycho Crystals
Stardate: 19:27.4
Comic: Star Trek #34
Publisher: Gold Key
Date: October 1975

Synopsis:

Writer: Unknown / Artist: Alberto Giolitti

On the planet Alpha 23-C the Enterprise landing party encounter strange crystals that seem to reflect different facets of their emotional makeup. The crystals turn out to be the young of a race of crystalline people who live in a city below ground (what a surprise). The landing party is accused of kidnapping the young and are sentenced to death. The crew get a reprieve when they stop an attack on the city from a crystalline monster via Spock concentrating his logic through one of the baby crystals and focusing it on the rampaging beast.

NEXT POST: 2263- Part 3

Previous Entries
– 1953
– 2056
– 2063
– 2250
– 2251 – Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4.
– 2253-2259
– 2262 – Part 1, Part 2, Part 3.
– 2263 – Part 1.

—————
NOTES:
(1) This timeline covers Star Trek comics published in the USA and UK between 1967 to 2007 (i.e. from Gold Key to TokyoPop) – it does not include any stories from current Star Trek comics publisher IDW.
(2) Check out the first post in this series for the Time Line Introduction explaining the background, definitions and considerations for this Star Trek Comics Time Line project.
(3) For more information on the history of Star Trek in comics check out my book STAR TREK: A Comics History. now available in stores.

STAR TREK Comics Timeline Project – 2263 – Part 1

[CORRECTION: The last two stories listed in the previous entry "The Brain Shockers" (Gold Key: Star Trek #11) and "Flight of the Buccaneers" (Gold Key: Star Trek #12) actually take place in 2264, not 2262. The correct entries for the last two stories set in 2262 should have been:
– "Enterprises Mutiny" (Gold Key: Star Trek #14)
– "Uhura’s Story" (DC Comics: Star Trek #30) ]

2263

The Cosmic Cavemen
Stardate: 19:24.3
Comic: Star Trek #17
Publisher: Gold Key
Date: February 1973

Synopsis:

Writer: Unknown / Artist: Alberto Giolitti (& Giovanni Ticci?)

A landing party from the Enterprise beams down to the newly discovered plant Neesan, where they find that the local inhabitants are only at a stone-age level of development. Despite trying to follow the Prime Directive and stay unobserved, the landing party is attacked. They surrender to avoid unnecessary bloodshed and are brought before the tribe’s ruler. The landing party is accused of trespassing on sacred ground and is brought before the sacred statue of the tribe’s god to face punishment. The landing party is astonished to discover that the statue is of Spock!

The Hijacked Planet
Stardate: 32:48.6
Comic: Star Trek #18
Publisher: Gold Key
Date: May 1973

Synopsis:

Writer: Unknown / Artist: Alberto Giolitti (& Giovanni Ticci?)

The Enterprise is transporting a sphere containing bio-magnetic recordings of the inhabitants of a dying planet when it comes across a small wrecked spacecraft with a single occupant. Spock rescues the craft’s crew member, a beautiful girl who soon bewitches Spock. A few days later the Enterprise is attacked by an unknown vessel, and the sphere and the girl disappear. The thief, who is the girl’s partner, contacts the Enterprise demanding a ransom. The Federation goes through the motions of discussing his terms to give Kirk time to track him down and recover the sphere. Once the thieves have been located, Spock tricks them by using a similar sphere that contains the bio-recordings of Kirk, Scotty, and several security guards.

The Haunted Asteroid
Stardate: 24:92.5
Comic: Star Trek #19
Publisher: Gold Key
Date: July 1973

Synopsis:

Writer: Unknown / Artist: Alberto Giolitti

The Enterprise is sent to investigate reports of a supposedly haunted asteroid that had been transformed 600 years ago into a mausoleum for a poisoned princess. On arrival they find that although the top portion of the asteroid is a veritable paradise, it is also home to strange apparitions and the bones of many dead travelers. Eventually they discover that the asteroid is not a mausoleum, but a palace for the still-living and near-immortal princess.

A World Gone Mad
Stardate: 32:47.2
Comic: Star Trek #20
Publisher: Gold Key
Date: September 1973

Synopsis:

Writer: Unknown / Artist: Alberto Giolitti

The Enterprise and crew are acting as escort returning Crown Prince Raviki to resume his throne, but are concerned that the regent, General Vlas, will not give it up so easily. When they arrive on the Prince’s planet, they narrowly escape what appear to be several assassination attempts. Spock realizes that the whole planet is suffering from a madness resulting from the passage of a strange comet just a few days before. He believes that the comet’s tail contained a gas that invoked violent thoughts. Vlas hopes to use the unrest to seize control of the throne. Scotty and McCoy use the Enterprise to track down the comet, collect samples of its tail gases and develop an antidote. Scotty then overflies the planet with a shuttlecraft, dispersing the antidote into the atmosphere and quelling the unrest.

Siege in Superspace
Stardate: 36:24.3
Comic: Star Trek #22
Publisher: Gold Key
Date:January 1974

Synopsis:

Writer: Unknown / Artist: Alberto Giolitti

The Enterprise is sucked through a black hole and emerges in orbit around a planet in another universe. While repairs are made, Kirk and McCoy beam down to the planet’s surface, which they discover is guarded by a species of plant creatures. They rescue a girl from the plant creatures and follow her down to an underground city, but they are followed by the creatures, who attack. Kirk eventually realizes that a piece of jewelry that that the girl wears is attracting the creatures, so he destroys it with his phaser. Meanwhile, Spock has discovered a nearby star that is due to collapse and will provide them with another black hole that will return the Enterprise to the correct universe.

The Trial of Captain Kirk
Stardate: 36:24.3
Comic: Star Trek #24
Publisher: Gold Key
Date: May 1974

Synopsis:

Writer: Unknown / Artist: Alberto Giolitti

The Enterprise is sent to investigate reports of illegal mining in an asteroid belt and discovers a pirate ship at work, which it then destroys. Back on Earth, Kirk is accused of collaborating with the pirates and is scheduled for court martial. Kirk goes undercover to find out who is framing him, while the Enterprise returns to the asteroid belt in search of evidence. In the asteroid belt, they discover another pirate ship and chase it. When the pirate ship fires a torpedo down to the surface of a poisonous planet, Spock and McCoy go to retrieve it by placing their brain patterns in "cerebots." Back on Earth, Kirk uncovers a plot between the smugglers and the Vice Chairman of the Supreme Council. Kirk’s findings are corroborated by the evidence that Spock and McCoy retrieved, and he is exonerated.

NEXT POST: 2263- Part 2

Previous Entries
– 1953
– 2056
– 2063
– 2250
– 2251 – Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4.
– 2253-2259
– 2262 – Part 1, Part 2, Part 3.

—————
NOTES:
(1) This timeline covers Star Trek comics published in the USA and UK between 1967 to 2007 (i.e. from Gold Key to TokyoPop) – it does not include any stories from current Star Trek comics publisher IDW.
(2) Check out the first post in this series for the Time Line Introduction explaining the background, definitions and considerations for this Star Trek Comics Time Line project.
(3) For more information on the history of Star Trek in comics check out my book STAR TREK: A Comics History. now available in stores.

STAR TREK Comics Timeline Project – 2262 Part 3

The Voodoo Planet
Stardate: 24:17.9
Comic: Star Trek #7
Publisher: Gold Key
Date: March 1970 (Reprinted in #45, July 1977)

Synopsis:

Writer: Unknown / Artist: Alberto Giolitti

On the other side of the galaxy, the crew of the Enterprise comes across a perfect replica of Earth. When they beam down to investigate, they are surprised to discover that the streets are empty of people and vehicles and that the buildings are made of papier-mâché. As Kirk and Spock investigate the fake Eiffel Tower, a beam lashes out, striking the tower, which collapses. Back on the Enterprise the two officers discovers that at the exact time the fake Eiffel Tower fell, so did the real one back on Earth. McCoy and Spock surmise that it is some sort of "deep space voodoo." A crewman gets a track on the source of the destructive beam, and the Enterprise follows it to a nearby planet. Beaming down, Spock, Kirk and McCoy discover that the scheme is the work of Count Dressler, a mad former ruler of a tiny kingdom on Earth who was forced to flee and is now taking revenge on his home planet. Dressler, using voodoo dolls, turns his arcane skills on Kirk and Spock and captures them. They are rescued by McCoy and beam back to the Enterprise. Spock remembers a cult similar to Voodoo on Vulcan and, after some research, discovers the rituals of the Vulcan Pain Casters. Spock and Kirk put themselves through the Pain Caster ritual to make themselves immune to Dressler’s voodoo. Once back on the planet surface, they turn the tables on Dressler and capture him. Kirk then decides to maroon Dressler on a deserted planet where he can do no more harm.

The Youth Trap
Stardate: 31:09.4
Comic: Star Trek #8
Publisher: Gold Key
Date: September 1970

Synopsis:

Writer: Unknown (Dick Wood?) / Artist: Alberto Giolitti

While exploring Galaxy Zekbran, the Enterprise sights an uncharted planet and goes into orbit to investigate. While in orbit the number two engine is attacked, burning out all the "filament parts." Spock reports that to rebuild the filaments they will need a source of Zutotanium. An engineering team is sent down to look for the ore, and is attacked by a mysterious beam that reduces them to small boys. Spock, Kirk and McCoy beam down to investigate, whereupon they are also fired on by two aliens. The strange beam hits McCoy, who is transformed into a teenager. Suddenly the two aliens start fighting each other and one is pushed off a cliff. The Enterprise crew gets to the injured alien, who tells them that he has invented a de-aging machine and that they had hoped to use it to freeze their ages until a rescue ship could arrive. They had been testing it on the Enterprise crew, but the other alien had decided to use it to gain power. After capturing the landing party, the evil alien decides to use the Enterprise as his ride home and forces Spock to beam him onboard. He then uses the de-aging ray on the whole crew by transmitting it via the ship’s closed-circuit TV screens. Meanwhile, back on the surface, Kirk and the friendly alien use trickery to escape and beam back up to the Enterprise. Once onboard they overpower the evil alien and use the aging machine to reverse the process. With everything restored, the Enterprise crew mines the Zutotanium, repairs the engines and returns to their mission.

The Legacy of Lazarus
Stardate: 10:26.3
Comic: Star Trek #9
Publisher: Gold Key
Date: February 1971

Synopsis:

Writer: Len Wein / Artist: Alberto Giolitti

The Enterprise is sent to planet Gamma Alpha V to verify readings from a probe sent 10 years earlier. Although the probe classified the Class M planet as uninhabited, the Enterprise sensor readings show an occupied city. When the landing party beams down, they are amazed to find the city populated by famous people from Earth history. Spock becomes separated from the landing party and is captured. He finds out that the man at the center of the mystery is Earth historian Alex Lazarus, who fled Earth with his psi-androids years before. On the planet, he transferred his knowledge of historical figures to the androids. But now he wants to learn the history of Vulcan by tapping into Spock’s brain. When Sulu discovers the entrance to Lazarus’ headquarters, he orders the androids to attack the landing party. The besieged landing party beams up, while Spock, who has freed himself from Lazarus, is still below ground. Scotty doubles the power of the transporter and manages to beam Spock up just as Lazarus’ cavern explodes

Sceptre of the Sun
Stardate: 12:48.6
Comic: Star Trek #10
Publisher: Gold Key
Date: May 1971

Synopsis:

Writer: Len Wein / Artist: Alberto Giolitti

En route to Starbase 10 the Enterprise suddenly comes to a stop and appears to be in the grasp of a giant genie. McCoy, Spock, Scotty, and Kirk are mysteriously transported to an ornate palace. There they are coerced by a sorcerer named Chang into recovering the so-called "Sceptre of the Sun" that he needs in his war against another sorcerer named Xanadu. The crew heads out on its quest and meets a group of barbarians, who claim that they are in fact humans who left Earth in suspended animation during the Eugenics Wars of the 1990s. Chang was originally one of them, but turned against the others. The crew and the barbarians find the Sceptre guarded by a giant robot that Spock disables. With the Scepter in their control, the Enterprise crew storm Chang’s castle. Spock shows all Chang’s tricks to be illusions, and the "genie grip" turns out to be a tractor beam. Unable to disable the beam, the officers radio the Enterprise and have it destroy Chang’s castle with its phasers

The Brain Shockers
Stardate: 11:26.1
Comic:[[b]/b] Star Trek #11
Publisher: Gold Key
Date: August 1971

Synopsis:

Writer: Len Wein / Artist: Alberto Giolitti

In orbit around the planet Pollux II while investigating the disappearance of several ships in the area, the Enterprise is subjected to attacks from the surface. The attacks rock the ship, breaking a collection of sacred Vulcan artifacts that contained the bottled emotions of Vulcan’s founders. Those emotions are set loose among the Enterprise crew. On the surface, Spock discovers a bored immortal called Malok who has been luring passing starship crews to his jungle maze so that he could experience their terror through his telepathic powers. Malok tries to ensnare the Enterprise crew but is overwhelmed by the hidden Vulcan emotions. With their composure restored, the crew return to the Enterprise and leave Malok to wrestle with these newfound emotions.

The Flight of the Buccaneer
Stardate: 32:46.3
Comic: Star Trek #12
Publisher: Gold Key
Date: November 1971

Synopsis:

Writer: Len Wein / Artist: Alberto Giolitti

Spock, McCoy, Scotty, and Kirk go undercover as interstellar pirates to uncover a stash of stolen dilithium crystals. They make contact with the notorious pirate Black Jack Nova, who agrees to team up with Kirk to find the stash. Nova’s first officer discovers that Spock and Scotty are Federation spies, but before he can tell his captain, Kirk denounces them. Nova pushes the two out of an airlock and then leaves in search of the crystals. The floating Spock and Scotty are rescued by the Enterprise, under the command of Sulu, which has been waiting nearby using a captured Romulan cloaking device. The Enterprise warps to the planet where the crystals are hidden, arriving before Kirk and Nova in Nova’s ship Windjammer. Here they find Ben Cannon, the original captain of the Windjammer, who helps them against Nova. Kirk and Nova face off in an electron-cutlass duel which ends when Kirk throws his cutlass at the escaping Nova, hitting an engine generator tube on his shuttle, which explodes. With Nova destroyed, Cannon gives the Enterprise crew a stash of dilithium crystals that he had dug up earlier.

NEXT POST: 2263

Previous Entries
– 1953
– 2056
– 2063
– 2250
– 2251 – Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4.
– 2253-2259
– 2262 – Part 1, Part 2

—————
NOTES:
(1) This timeline covers Star Trek comics published in the USA and UK between 1967 to 2007 (i.e. from Gold Key to TokyoPop) – it does not include any stories from current Star Trek comics publisher IDW.
(2) Go to the first post in this series for the Time Line Introduction explaining the background, definitions and considerations for this Star Trek Comics Time Line project.
(3) For more information on the history of Star Trek in comics check out my book STAR TREK: A Comics History. now available in stores.