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Star Trek 30th Anniversary Magazine (1996) comic books

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The Official Anniversary Magazine - From the Beginning! Into the Future! From 1966 to 1996 and Beyond! Incredible Adventures! Featuring: Star Trek, Star Trek: The Next Generation, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Star Trek: Voyager. Plus: Star Trek: First Contact & All the Movies. Also: Live the Star Trek Experience! And: Amazing Interviews. Bonus Gatefold: Spaceship & Space Station Blueprints. Cover price $12.99.

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Star Trek the Magazine Vol 3 Issue 7

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Friday 15 May 2015

1996: star trek the 30th anniversary magazine (starlog).

star trek magazine 1996

2 comments:

star trek magazine 1996

I have this one and many others from the golden era of trek saturation....or maybe not so golden.... as you can see from these links, the editor of STARLOG didn't have a very high opinion of his own mags : http://www.startrek.com/article/the-9-deepest-deep-space-nine-magazine-covers http://www.startrek.com/article/grading-the-star-trek-movie-tie-in-magazines http://www.startrek.com/article/six-strange-star-trek-covers

star trek magazine 1996

Hi Ed Thanks for these links. The articles are fascinating. Highly recommended. I remember owning both versions of the STAR TREK IV tie-in magazines... but always passed on the poster mags. In retrospect, The Voyage Home was probably the high point for Trek movie tie-in mags. After that, they seemed to limit themselves to just ONE magazine per movie.

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TV Guide August 24-30 1996 Star Trek Turns 30! Special Collectors' Series #1 of 4 Covers This Week Vol. 44 No. 34 Issue #2265

Steven reddicliffe, michael logan, patrick stewart, jose a. martinez, et al.

From biblioboy , North Providence, RI, U.S.A.

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[Radnor, PA]: [News America Publications Inc]. 1996. First Edition. Softcover Magazine. Pictorial [William Shatner / Captain Kirk featured] wrappers [about 5" x 7.5"], 198 + [A20] pages, illustrated. VG copy [light spine creasing, very small area of surface damage to the front cover, rear cover fold, paper starting to tan]. bx162. Seller Inventory # 73124

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Bibliographic Details

Title: TV Guide August 24-30 1996 Star Trek Turns ...

Publisher: News America Publications Inc, [Radnor, PA]

Publication Date: 1996

Binding: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

Edition: First Edition.

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Published Nov 28, 2015

Creating Official Trek Magazines (1983-2000)

star trek magazine 1996

My life, for 17 years (1983-2000), was haunted by licensed magazines. During that fabled era, I served as Editor of about 110 of them (84 of those Star Trek -related). I also assisted colleagues who edited another dozen+ of the nearly 150 total licensed magazines issued by Starlog Press (a.k.a. O'Quinn Studios, Starlog Communications, Jacobs Publications, Starlog Group). We'll get to the Trek stuff shortly. First, let's define terms.

star trek magazine 1996

Just what is a licensed magazine? It's a product little different from a T-shirt, toy or action figure (except you can read it). Like those types of merchandise, a publisher pays a studio (or other copyright/trademark holder) for the rights to exclusively issue tie-in publications (often one-shots for movies, ongoing periodicals for TV series). Publishers can't legally put out either a one-shot or an issue of a regular periodical focusing solely on a single Intellectual Property (owned by another entity) without risking courtroom retribution. In other words, if you don't bother to obtain any rights to that IP and just publish a Transformers one-shot or The Big Bang Theory Monthly, look for "Cease & Desist" letters in your in-box and the inevitable knock-knock on your door from lawyers smiling sharply.

However, there is the so-called "Rule of 60 Percent" (that's the percentage I was told)---i.e., one-shots and ongoing magazines are legally in the clear if they don't go all the way and instead devote no more than 60% (or whatever %) of their content to that single subject IP. You still see publications exploiting this "fair use" loophole today (most recently with Hunger Games and Harry Potter material). In fact, that's how Starlog Magazine itself started back in 1976---as a one-shot initially entitled Star Trek until legal concerns surfaced, other science fiction topics were added to the lineup and the name changed. Brisk sales subsequently sped Starlog from one-shot to quarterly and then monthly publication. And, a few years later, the company was actually licensing Star Trek from Paramount Pictures for Official Magazines.

To be far too specific about my licensed Star Trek output (1984-98), I served as Editor of nine publications showcasing five films (all Movie Magazines plus others as noted): Trek III (also a Poster Magazine ), Trek IV (also a Poster Mag & a Movie Special), Trek V , Trek VI , Generations (also a 3-D Cover Special Edition variant). I edited the Star Trek 25th Anniversary Special (1991). And I was Editor of three ongoing Trek TV titles: Next Generation (#1-#30, all seven seasons), Deep Space Nine (#1-#25, first six seasons) and Voyager (#1-#19, first four seasons). Additionally, I assisted Editor David Hutchison on his two licensed Next Generation projects ( The Technical Journal, The Makeup FX Journal ).

In 1982, I edited two non- Trek Paramount Movie Magazines: Explorers (1985) and The Phantom (1996, actually licensed from King Features, film made and distributed by Paramount). Grand totals: 91 Paramount projects published by Starlog Press, 86 edited by me; 87 of that Starlog Press output are Treks , 84 of them edited by me. I'm exhausted just listing all this stuff. How 'bout you?

star trek magazine 1996

With licensed magazines, the details can really give you the Devil. Unlike a regular publication (i.e., Starlog , Fangoria or Comics Scene ), being licensed also allows the licensor to see and approve every word, photo and layout (including the cover) of the entire magazine before it gets printed (the enigmatic "approval process") and change anything they wish. On my first such project ( High Road to China , December 1982-February 1983), I interviewed its director, Brian G. Hutton (who also helmed two of my favorite WWII adventures, Where Eagles Dare and Kelly's Heroes ). He told me that people had died in an air accident during the movie's making. Naively, I included that sad fact in my magazine licensed from the Golden Harvest Company---AND THEY LET ME! Had we (i.e., Golden Harvest and me) all been on the ball during the approval process, such tragic, controversial, possibily litigious incidents would never have seen print in a licensed product.

Two years later, there was Explorers , my Paramount-licensed publication showcasing that Joe Dante-directed fantasy adventure (which features a Starlog Magazine on-screen cameo and Voyager's Bob Picardo, a Dante cast regular, in wacky alien makeup). Randy Lofficier (an American writer who collaborates with her French husband, Jean-Marc) interviewed Dante, producer Mike Finnell and the film's then-kid stars (Ethan Hawke, River Phoenix, Jason Presson, Amanda Peterson). Quizzed separately, all six detailed the filming difficulties which arose when Hawke broke his foot. Those innocent quotes were included in the Lofficiers' six written profiles of them. We finished the project, sent the magazine layouts in for approval and waited. And waited. Finally, Finnell, the producer himself, rang to dictate changes.

star trek magazine 1996

In fact, Finnell called me less than 24 hours before we had to go to the printer or risk missing our new on-sale date (accelerated when the film shifted its premiere)...at home...on my birthday...just as friends arrived to take me out to dinner (and they impatiently waited while I attended to business on the phone). Finnell declared, "There's an over-emphasis on Ethan's broken foot." And he demanded we delete every quote noting Hawke's injury---including Finnell's own mentions of it. Wow! Note the devilish difference in licensed mags: Death is A-OK on the High Road to China , but a broken foot is forbidden to Explorers . I was so annoyed by this (in my view) silly alteration that I put Explorers on the cover of Starlog #98 ! Yes, that'll teach them!

Unlike Finnell (or producer Gale Anne Hurd on my Aliens publications in 1986), Paramount's Trek producers (Harve Bennett, Ralph Winter, Gene Roddenberry, Rick Berman)---with millions of dollars in production foremost on their minds---didn't personally attend to Official Trek Magazine approvals. The studio had people for that. And, over the years, I worked with several different licensing liaisons on all our Trek projects.

One of them---who I never dealt with directly regarding these matters, others forwarded his comments to me---requested numerous changes (some helpful in creating better issues, others not so much). Bizarrely, I already knew him, and we subsequently lunched together with two other folks at an event. He complained for several minutes about "how they do things at Starlog ," apparently not realizing that the "they" to which he referred was actually me! Or, devilishly, maybe he did know---and he was just messin' with me.

Another licensing guy had a military background---and suddenly all our Starfleet Naval/military terms in articles and episode synopses were made "shipshape and Bristol fashion." He also pointed out that we shouldn't have the Enterprise "radio" other starships since that medium (and any outdated language references to it) would be "long gone" in the 23rd Century. So, we used "contact" instead. Beyond regular Trek standards, all these Paramount Licensing people had different concerns like that, stylistic "hobby horses" we addressed despite the inconsistencies they might spawn overall (don't get me started on Bridge vs. bridge and other standing sets' capitalization concerns). Fortunately, everyone was united in wanting the best possible publications we could create at the time.

Two final Trek TV tales, one short, one not. An article we submitted for OKs was disallowed! Turns out the Trek interviewee---alerted to our intended publication by an innocent photo request---had actually granted that chat to the reporter involved for a different press outlet. When it got detoured into my devilish clutches instead, said interviewee was miffed and asked that the piece (which had nothing remotely controversial or negative about it, no deaths or broken actor parts) not be used. I was happy to comply; by the time I heard his objections, I didn't much want to run it anyway. Yes, that'll teach them!

On another occasion, I bought an interview done nine months previously by a writer new to me (I was ever-hungry for material since there was always space to fill in my Trek "books"). The piece was edited, designed and even approved by Paramount. Off it went with the rest of the issue to the printer! Another one done, on to the next! However, a day or two later, my liaison called with a problem. Merely as a courtesy, photocopies of that layout had been innocently sent to the person profiled who---uh-oh!---was disappointed because "the quotes were old." Now, this person had absolutely no contractual right to approve that article (or even see it pre-publication), but, nonetheless, we were now in a devilish situation.

star trek magazine 1996

To further complicate matters, it was (I'm not kidding!) the Cover Story. And if that Trek magazine, at the Midwest printing company (where it all already was), wasn't on press within 72 hours, that issue wouldn't make its on-sale date. And that would be---Death!

Let me pause here in anecdotal remembrance to explain that "Missing an On-Sale Date" is as forbidden in magazine publishing as broken body parts on Explorers. It creates a chaotic cascade of catastrophes! In English, that means, when issues printed late show up after the promised date (maybe a week or two later), it messes up computerized accounting (and cash flow). To simplify matters, the magazine's sub-distributors and/or individual sales outlets sometimes just "premature" that issue (simply refuse---or neglect---to go to the trouble of placing late copies on store shelves, thus giving them absolutely no chance at all to sell; instead, these undisplayed numbers are just "prematurely returned" for "not sold" financial credit).

Any delay also cuts into sales time (giving a bi-monthly like Deep Space Nine , Voyager or Next Generation just six or seven weeks of rack display, instead of the full eight, because, presumably, the next issue arrives on time). Falling sales due to prematuring and/or less shelf time cue decreased revenue (for Starlog ) and royalties (for Paramount). Enough of all that and pretty soon, there's no magazine anymore.

Was it even possible to pull a story back from the printer when the entire issue was already there? Never did that before! And I did point out to my liaison that the whole book had been OKed, so legally we could maybe, probably, possibly go ahead and just print it. But proceeding on that devilishly fine point might get my liaison in trouble (reprimanded or fired) and institute a more difficult future approval process for us all. We had to fix this problem.

To cut to the chase, here's what happened: The printer agreed to hold off "plating" that five-page Cover Story (while prepping the rest of the book for press). Paramount Licensing purchased for us the rights to another, newer interview that the protesting person "liked." Its content thus "pre-approved," this shorter story was either e-mailed or FAXed to me that very day. We copy-edited, typeset and proofread it. The old text was deleted from our duplicate layouts by my designer; he stripped the new text and byline into the old layout, all photos and previous captions remaining as is. However, there was less new text so it didn't fill all the space. Pragmatically, I coped with this unanticipated shortfall by simply killing one-page of the original layout and replacing that with an already OKed house ad. We FedExed the revised pages to the printer, printed on schedule and made that crucial on-sale date. And the person who prompted all these nightmarish, rapid-fire antics from everyone else ended up with a Cover Story that's actually one page shorter than once designed. Yes, that'll teach them!

Copyright 2015 David McDonnell

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Item description from the seller, shipping and handling, sales tax for an item #334851387056, return policy, payment details, cleonejr's magazines and more, detailed seller ratings, average for the last 12 months, popular categories from this store, seller feedback (254,463), more to explore:.

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N.F.L. Draft Had Some Style Winners

The next class of football stars has done some fashion homework, but the evening was pretty tame compared with the N.B.A. draft.

star trek magazine 1996

By Guy Trebay

“People want to sit around with the family and watch football,” Roger Goodell, the National Football League commissioner, said Thursday night before the 2024 N.F.L. draft. It is also increasingly the case that people want to sit around, alone or in groups, watching phenomenal athletes and physical specimens doing nothing more physically taxing than sauntering down a red carpet.

And, while the N.F.L. has a long way to go before it can stage a real challenge to the style dominance of N.B.A. tunnel-walk kings like Jerami Grant, Jarred Vanderbilt or Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, it was clear that this year’s football draft prospects had done some fashion homework.

Take the No. 1 draft pick, Caleb Williams, the U.S.C. quarterback chosen — to the surprise of almost no one — by the Chicago Bears. Mr. Williams dressed for his big night in a sophisticated dark blue, double-breasted zippered suit by Chrome Hearts, worn over a darker blue T-shirt. It was a sleek tone-on-tone look that was only improved when he donned his new team’s logo snapback.

Or consider the L.S.U. star Jayden Daniels, who wore a handsome dove-gray single-breasted suit, tieless, as he was chosen by the Washington Commanders. A player known for his ever-changing hairstyles, Mr. Daniels accessorized his look, impromptu, with a Commanders team cap perched atop his current coiffure, a head full of ropy twists.

Maybe the New England Patriots’ choice Drake Maye, wearing a single-breasted suit with a skinny tie, all in pale gray, was not flaunting a look you’ll ever see on the social media entity LeagueFits, where, as its author says, men who “used to go to war now post fit checks before prime time games.” But he made a strong case for the value of playing conservatively and sticking to your own sartorial lane.

For this critic’s money, some of the more compelling looks of this evening in Detroit belonged to Malik Nabers, the L.S.U. wide receiver who touchingly had his double-breasted suit lined with photo prints of “all the legends, all the people that made Malik what Malik is”; Marvin Harrison Jr., the Ohio State wide receiver who was the fourth pick and wore a jeweled pendant with a gridiron image of his dad, Marvin Harrison (19th pick in 1996), and who was additionally clad in sunglasses, a black suit, dark shirt and tie; and, finally, Taliese Fuaga, the 334-pound Samoan-American Oregon State offensive lineman, who wore a print shirt and floral lei.

One knock on the N.B.A. tunnel-walk stars is that they seldom look as though they are wearing clothes they’d have chosen without the guidance of agents and stylists or were not paid to wear. In that sense, N.F.L. draft night remained an oddly innocent affair.

star trek magazine 1996

Of course, there were inevitably abundant commercial tie-ins underpinning this display of fanfare, a hype night for a multibillion-dollar business. Still, compared with most widely cross-platform events these days, and considered in the light of an attention economy that often guarantees celebrities — newly minted or otherwise — a fortune for each post, the draft seemed almost quaint. A good percentage of the draft picks did not even trek to Detroit to be nominated. Like the rest of us, they watched the hoopla from home.

Guy Trebay is a reporter for the Style section of The Times, writing about the intersections of style, culture, art and fashion. More about Guy Trebay

Inside the World of Sports

Dive deeper into the people, issues and trends shaping professional, collegiate and amateur athletics..

Women’s Pro Hockey League: The fledgling league is booming — except in New York, where the team is in last place . But the players haven’t given up.

Aaron Rodgers’s Achilles’ Heel: The N.F.L. great was supposed to be the Jets’ savior. But since arriving in New York, he has spent more time voicing conspiracy theories  than playing quarterback.

A Key to Knicks’ Season: Jalen Brunson, Josh Hart and Donte DiVincenzo have been buddies since college , a situation that those who study the workplace say can foster success.

The Future of College Sports: A   National Labor Relations Board testimony, now in the hands of a judge, could have wide-ranging consequences  — positive and negative — for athletes and their institutions.

Voice of Problem Gambling: Craig Carton, the bombastic sports broadcaster, shows a different side on a weekly show  that focuses on the stories of gambling  addicts like himself.

American Pizazz Meets Sumo: At Madison Square Garden, New Yorkers got a rare look at an ancient Japanese sport , cheering and booing as though they were watching a Yankees game.

Memory Alpha

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Star Trek: the Magazine Volume #6 (October 1999)

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COMMENTS

  1. Star Trek 30th Anniversary Magazine (1996) comic books

    The Official Anniversary Magazine - From the Beginning! Into the Future! From 1966 to 1996 and Beyond! Incredible Adventures! Featuring: Star Trek, Star Trek: The Next Generation, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Star Trek: Voyager. Plus: Star Trek: First Contact & All the Movies. Also: Live the Star Trek Experience! And: Amazing Interviews.

  2. Star Trek Magazine

    Star Trek Magazine - known as Star Trek Monthly until issue 110 - was an official magazine, published eight times a year, featuring news, interviews and reviews covering all seven live-action series, Star Trek: The Animated Series and the movies. First published on 28 February 1995 as a monthly title, the magazine began life in the UK, but soon expanded to Ireland and Australasia, with ...

  3. Star Trek 30 Years special Collector's Edition

    In Celebration of Star Trek's 30th anniversary in 1996, Paramount proudly published the Star Trek 30 Years Special Collectors Edition. Featuring interviews with Leonard Nimoy and fascinating behind-the-scenes information, Nearly 400 episode descriptions, covering Star Trek, Star Trek The Next Generation, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Star Trek ...

  4. Star Trek the Magazine Vol 3 Issue 7

    Star Trek the Magazine Vol 3 Issue 7. Publication date 2002 Collection internetarchivebooks; americana Contributor Internet Archive Language English Volume 3 . Notes. glare on corners. Addeddate 2018-09-25 19:25:17 Boxid IA1167101 Camera Sony Alpha-A6300 (Control) ...

  5. 1996: STAR TREK THE 30th ANNIVERSARY MAGAZINE (Starlog)

    From 1996: STARLOG celebrates the thirtieth anniversary of the launch of STAR TREK with this one-shot magazine. From back in the day when the deep space franchise could still support multiple regular magazines and one-shots from Starlog, Titan, the Official Fan Club and other publishers (plus regular coverage in the likes of TV ZONE and ...

  6. Vintage 1996 Star Trek 30 Years Special Collectors Edition Magazine

    Ugly's Electrical References, 2023 Edition by Charles R. Miller (2023, Spiral) (6) $11.50 New. $10.50 Used. Find many great new & used options and get the best deals for Vintage 1996 Star Trek 30 Years Special Collectors Edition Magazine at the best online prices at eBay! Free shipping for many products!

  7. Star Trek Magazine

    256Mb RAM, 16× CD-ROM drive, 1024×768 hi-res graphics card and monitor. Star Trek Magazine - The Archives is a digital CD-ROM archive of Star Trek Magazine, from Titan Magazines and SDS Group. Each volume contains fully-searchable and printable PDF copies of the magazine 's issues (with the exception of comic book reprints that were in the ...

  8. Star Trek: The Magazine

    Star Trek: The Magazine was an officially authorized magazine published monthly from April 1999 to March 2003 by Fabbri Publishing (US), the US arm of UK publisher GE Fabbri, on behalf of end copyright holder Midsummer Books Ltd. Following four test issues, a total of 48 112-page issues were published in three volumes - 24 in Volume 1 and 12 each in Volumes 2 and 3. In addition, ten "special ...

  9. Star Trek Official Monthly Magazine (Issue No. 11 January 1996)

    Explore the fascinating world of Star Trek with this official monthly magazine. Delve into the latest news and rumours about the upcoming Star Trek film, or learn about the history of the franchise with features on classic episodes and characters.

  10. Cinefantastique Magazine Volume 27 #11/12 July 1996 (Star Trek The 30th

    The Original Series, season 1-3/30th anniversary edition Articles: - Star Trek The 30th Anniversary, Sue Uram, Classic Star Trek Episode Guide, Sue Uram, James Doohan, Scotty, Anna Kaplan, George Takei, Sulu, Anna Kaplan, Nichelle Nichols, Uhura, Anna Kaplan, Walter Koenig, Chekov, Anna Kaplan, Directing the Pilot, Robin Brunet, Story Editor D.C. Fontana, Dennis Fischer, Yeoman Janice Rand ...

  11. Star Trek: The Magazine

    Star Trek: The Magazine was an authorized monthly tabloid-size periodical published in the United States and Canada by Fabbri Publishing (US) devoted to the Star Trek franchise. It ran for 48 issues, from May 1999 through April 2003, covering nearly 5,000 pages. There were three volumes, the first with 24 issues, and the latter two with 12 ...

  12. TV Guide August 24-30 1996 Star Trek Turns 30! Special Collectors

    Softcover Magazine. Pictorial [William Shatner / Captain Kirk featured] wrappers [about 5" x 7.5"], 198 + [A20] pages, illustrated. VG copy [light spine creasing, very small area of surface damage to the front cover, rear cover fold, paper starting to tan]. bx162 - TV Guide August 24-30 1996 Star Trek Turns 30!

  13. TV+Guide+Magazine+Aug+24-30+1996+Star+Trek+Turns+30+Collector+Cover+

    TV Guide Magazine Aug 24-30 1996 Star Trek Turns 30 Collector Cover #1 of 4 Kirk. Be the first to write a review. Retrofit Apparel and More(234) 100% positive feedback; Price: ... 1996 Star Trek Turns 30 #2 of 4 Covers Patrick Stewart TV Guide August 24-30, 1996 Star Trek Turns 30 #2 of 4 Covers Patrick Stewart .

  14. Creating Official Trek Magazines (1983-2000)

    My life, for 17 years (1983-2000), was haunted by licensed magazines. During that fabled era, I served as Editor of about 110 of them (84 of those Star Trek-related).I also assisted colleagues who edited another dozen+ of the nearly 150 total licensed magazines issued by Starlog Press (a.k.a. O'Quinn Studios, Starlog Communications, Jacobs Publications, Starlog Group).

  15. Star Trek Communicator Magazine #108 August/September 1996: Dan Madsen

    Star Trek Communicator Magazine #108 August/September 1996 [Dan Madsen] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Star Trek Communicator Magazine #108 August/September 1996 ... Star Trek Communicator Magazine #108 August/September 1996. Skip to main content.us. Delivering to Lebanon 66952 Update location Books. Select the department ...

  16. Star Trek: First Contact

    Star Trek: First Contact is a 1996 American science fiction film directed by Jonathan Frakes in his feature film debut. It is the eighth movie of the Star Trek franchise, and the second starring the cast of the television series Star Trek: The Next Generation.In the film, the crew of the starship USS Enterprise-E travel back in time from the 24th century to the 21st century to stop the ...

  17. Star Trek: The Official Fan Club Magazine

    Star Trek: The Official Fan Club Magazine was the bimonthly magazine of the Official Star Trek Fan Club.Started by Dan Madsen as an unofficial newsletter in 1979, the magazine became officially licensed by Paramount Pictures in 1982.His company, FANtastic Media, was founded in 1986 to run the club and publish the magazine. Join for only $11.95! The magazine, in a smaller, newsletter-style ...

  18. Magazine: March 1996 Star Trek Communicator #106

    Find many great new & used options and get the best deals for Magazine: March 1996 Star Trek Communicator #106 - Sixth Issue at the best online prices at eBay! Free shipping for many products!

  19. Cinescape Magazine Star Trek & David Duchovny Sept-October 1996 ...

    Find many great new & used options and get the best deals for Cinescape Magazine Star Trek & David Duchovny Sept-October 1996 042023R at the best online prices at eBay! Free shipping for many products!

  20. STAR TREK: The Next Generation Official Magazine Series #12 (May 1990)

    STAR TREK: The Next Generation Official Magazine Series #12 (May 1990) [Robert Greenberger ; Mark A. Altman ; Michael McAvennie ; Christina Mavroudis ; Patrick D. O'Neill ; John Sayers, David McDonnell] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. STAR TREK: The Next Generation Official Magazine Series #12 (May 1990)

  21. N.F.L. Draft Had Some Style Winners

    Take the No. 1 draft pick, Caleb Williams, the U.S.C. quarterback chosen — to the surprise of almost no one — by the Chicago Bears. Mr. Williams dressed for his big night in a sophisticated ...

  22. Star Trek: Communicator issue 108

    Issue 108 of Star Trek: Communicator was the August/September 1996 issue. This article is a stub relating to real-world information such as a performer, author, novel, magazine, or other production material. You can help Memory Alpha by fixing it.

  23. Star Trek: the Magazine Volume #6 (October 1999)

    Star Trek: the Magazine Volume #6 (October 1999) on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Star Trek: the Magazine Volume #6 (October 1999)