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== How I Met and Married a Romulan Princess == | == How I Met and Married a Romulan Princess == | ||
<small>by [[Chance Raschen|Charlie Raschen]]</small> | <small>by [[Chance Raschen|Charlie Raschen]]</small> | ||
'''Editor’s note:''' ''This is a fictional piece of creative writing from one of our members about his character, Chance Raschen.'' | |||
When I first met T’Lela, she was a Sub-Centurion in the Romulan military, and I was on one last job before starting classes at Hardy-Knox University to become a licensed ship’s captain.[[Image:Chance Raschen uniform.jpg|250px|left|thumb|Chance Raschen is played by Charlie Raschen on the USS Rosenante]] | |||
Some folks have asked me how I could have married a Romulan, let alone get her father’s blessing, considering how xenophobic, as a society, Romulans are. Well I tell you what; it sure as hell wasn’t easy. My mother, Margaret, was on a business trip to secure licensed shipping privileges from the magistrate inside a Romulan Province. I traveled with her and served as her bodyguard. Coincidently, T’Lela served as a bodyguard for the Magistrate S’Adashiv, who happened to be her father. | Some folks have asked me how I could have married a Romulan, let alone get her father’s blessing, considering how xenophobic, as a society, Romulans are. Well I tell you what; it sure as hell wasn’t easy. My mother, Margaret, was on a business trip to secure licensed shipping privileges from the magistrate inside a Romulan Province. I traveled with her and served as her bodyguard. Coincidently, T’Lela served as a bodyguard for the Magistrate S’Adashiv, who happened to be her father. | ||
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When my mom and I left Romulus after she got the shipping permits, she and S’Adashiv continued to keep their physical relationship a matter of convenience but pursued an active business relationship. T’Lela and I continued to court until we got married the week I graduated from Hardy-Knox University. Unfortunately the next week the Cardassian-Federation War started. | When my mom and I left Romulus after she got the shipping permits, she and S’Adashiv continued to keep their physical relationship a matter of convenience but pursued an active business relationship. T’Lela and I continued to court until we got married the week I graduated from Hardy-Knox University. Unfortunately the next week the Cardassian-Federation War started. | ||
== That's a Wrap! == | == That's a Wrap! == |
Revision as of 20:37, 10 February 2009
Newsletter for the Star Trek: Freedom Wiki, Winter 2009 edition. To obtain a larger view of any of our pictures in this issue left click on the picture you wish to see. To post feedback click on the Discussion tab. To see previous editions of the newsletter, visit The Archive
Fleet Updates and Missions
- USS Spectre Mission: The Gates of Prometheus
"Captain's supplemental log, Stardate 2408.06.06. 20:09 hundred hours."
"After encountering the Borg vessel whilst still under phased cloak, we dispatched an EVA team of marines to covertly board the ship by way of a portable boarding tube, the 'Can Opener' as the Marines affectionately like to term it. The operation was a success but during their mission to incapacitate the Borg communications array and main power systems, a small Sphere ejected in an attempt to remotely re-establish a link with the collective. I gave the order to pursue the sphere but despite our best efforts to destroy it, it seems that it may have initiated a time jump."
"The unusually configured Borg vessel, however, has now been secured and a small number of drones taken aboard the Spectre for further data retrieval. Attempts are also under way by Doctor Gunnell, our mission specialist, to establish data linkup with the Borg ships main database. My thoughts though, are still of the Sphere and where, or when it might re-emerge."
"End log... append to existing."
- USS Rosenante Mission: Fields of Elysium
"Our survey of the Beltanis Stellar Nursery has been anything but boring. Our situation turned from one of simple exploration to survival when we encountered a massive alien artifact known as The Harvester. The Rosenante was captured by this massive device when it trapped us in a powerful tractor beam and then transported the entire ship and her crew inside a massive neutronium sphere. We are not the only ones who have been trapped in this manner either. It seems that there are at least five other species who have befallen the same fate. The Nechani, Sky Spirits, Kobali, Hur'q, Hunters and B'zz'tz have all found themselves here for one reason or another. All but the B'zz'tz seem to be prisoners here. In addition to the dire circumstances, we have also discovered the wreckage of the USS Epiphany which disappeared nearly two-decades ago. Despite two clashes with the Hur'q we are hopeful to forge a cooperative alliance with the others here, to better organize and plan how we can make our escape. The depths of the alien vessel await us, and it is my belief that we must explore them in order to find our way out of here and return home to Federation Space."
- USS Boudicca Mission:
- USS Mithrandir Mission:
- USS Hades Mission:
Dynamic Architecture: Buildings in Motion
by Nicesociety
Dynamic Architecture, the very words seem to be mismatched, yet they are suddenly and unexpectedly linked. This unusual marriage of art and technology is expected to revolutionize modern architectural building techniques and thrust the Human race forward into a more efficient and ecologically friendly era of low carbon emissions and biosphere co-habitation. This will be done with the creation of the most revolutionary and unique architectural design ever conceived. They call it Dynamic Tower
The tower is expected to be architecturally innovative for several reasons. Uniquely, each floor will be able to rotate independently. This will result in a constantly changing shape of the tower. Each floor will rotate a maximum of 6 meters (20 ft) per minute, or one full rotation in 90 minutes. It will also be the world's first prefabricated skyscraper. 90% of the tower will be built in a factory and shipped to the construction site. This will allow the entire building to be built in only 18 months. The only part of the tower that will be built at the construction site will be the core. Part of this prefabrication will be the decrease in cost and number of workers. The total construction time will be more than 30% less than a normal skyscraper of the same size. The majority of the workers will be in factories, where it will be much safer. The entire tower will be powered from wind turbines and solar panels. Enough surplus electricity should be produced to power five other similar sized buildings in the vicinity. The turbines will be located between each of the rotating floors. They could generate up to 1,200,000 kilowatt-hours of energy. The solar panels will be located on the roof. Construction of the Dynamic Tower is expected to be completed in 2010.
Dubai has well earned its reputation for architectural extravagance and excess. Not a cent has been spared as various developers vie to produce the biggest, the most stunning, the most luxurious and the most outrageous projects ever undertaken. And while this next project is right up there in terms of luxury, exclusivity and head-spinning architectural genius, it adds a fascinating extra dimension; the ability to generate ten times as much power as it will use. Each floor of Dynamic Architecture's wind-powered rotating skyscraper is a single apartment with the ability to rotate independently, giving residents the ability to choose a new view at the touch of a button; quite a party trick
Wind turbines between each floor will generate a vast surplus of electricity capable of powering the whole surrounding neighborhood. The method of construction is also fascinating; each floor will be prefabricated in segments in a quality controlled factory before being lifted and secured into place on a concrete spine, bringing costs and construction times down significantly. Construction is set to begin soon in Dubai, with a second tower to follow in Moscow and numerous other sites around the world being considered. The genius in Dr. David Fisher's design of the Dynamic Architecture wind-powered rotating skyscraper is its powerful and unique appeal to so many stakeholders. With luxury and jaw-dropping architecture becoming so common in Dubai, and so many wealthy and impressionable people wishing for their homes to stand out from the crowd, the tower's unique ability for each floor to rotate independently will surely place it in high demand. It will also be a stunning landmark for the city, catching the sun as it quietly twists like a monolithic Rubik's cube.
The wind turbines between each floor make the tower an environmentally positive construction, generating a large excess of power to put back into the energy grid. Each turbine has the peak ability to produce around 0.2 megawatt hours of electricity. Given Dubai has an average of 4000 hours of wind annually, with an average wind speed of 16 km/h, the turbines are estimated to produce around 1,200,000 kilowatt-hours of energy per year. Four of the 48 turbines in the building will be enough to power the entire tower, leaving the other 44 to provide surplus energy back into Dubai's power grid.
The tower's unique properties allow for an equally innovative construction process. Instead of building the tower from the ground up, floor by floor as most skyscrapers are built, the rotating tower will be built in parallel stages. As a team on site builds the enormous concrete core, or spine of the building, complete with the elevators, a separate team will be working in a dedicated factory, prefabricating each floor in segments.
Once the core is complete, the segments will be lifted up the side of the building and each floor will be assembled and attached, from the top floor down, around the central spine.
This method holds a number of advantages over traditional construction schedules. Firstly, since the core and floor segments are being built in parallel, the construction can be much quicker, resulting in a time saving of around 30% for a similarly sized regular tower. Secondly, vastly fewer workers need to be on site at the tower, meaning only around 90 specialist workers will need to work in difficult and dangerous conditions at the tower itself, the remainder being in an optimal, safe and comfortable factory setting.
Thirdly, each modular apartment can be easily customized to the buyer's desires, and every small component can be finished and quality assessed much more easily than an on-site construction, leading to higher standards of quality control. Architect David Fisher sees the construction method as the equivalent of an industrial revolution in construction, bringing large-scale building practices into line with industrial practices in other areas. The first industrial prefabrication factory will be located in Italy.
The rotating tower is slated to begin construction in Dubai in early 2009 according to Dynamic Architecture - and the 420-meter, 80-floor Dubai tower will be followed by a 70-floor, 400-meter tower in Moscow which is currently in advanced design phase. The company is in preliminary talks with the cities of Milan, London, New York, Hamburg and Sao Paolo for further implementations.
For an incredible video showing you the amazing architecture in action, please check out the video on Youtube.
Get to Know
Star Trek Fans Mourn the Loss of Two Icons
by herbalsheila
Often named as the First Lady of Star Trek, Majel Barrett Roddenberry passed away from leukemia on December 18th, 2008 at age 76, in her Bel-Air California home.
Although she had other acting roles in Hollywood, Majel Barrett was most well known for playing Number One in the Star Trek pilot episode, Nurse Chapel during ST:TOS, Lawaxana Troi in ST:TNG and the voice of the computer system on the Enterprise throughout most of its incarnations. She also played the voice of the computer again in the upcoming JJ Abrams Star Trek movie due out in May 2009 prior to her death.
Born as Majel Lee Hudec, Barrett began her acting career in the 1950's with roles on popular television shows such as Leave It to Beaver, My Three Sons, Bonanza and The Lucy Show.
After Gene Rodenberry’s death in 1991 at the age of 70, Barrett continued his legacy by helping to bring to life one of his pet projects, the 1997-2002 series Earth: Final Conflict. But after his death, she had little to do with Star Trek other than a few appearances.
"Gene sold out all of his rights to Star Trek way back 15, almost 20 years ago," she told SciFiDimensions.com in 2000. "So, they ask nothing. I volunteer nothing. They invite me to a few of their shindigs. I'll bet you I haven't been on that lot in two years."
However, Barrett had welcomed the new remastering of TOS and the upcoming film release, choosing to see it as a validation of the late Gene Roddenberry’s vision. "What's nice is you know a Star Trek movie is still one that everybody wants," she had told The Hollywood Reporter in 2006.
Buried in Los Angeles' Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills Cemetery, Barrett was laid to rest on January 4th, 2009. The funeral service was open to fans. Attendees numbered approximately 300 and included fellow costars such as Walter Koenig (Chekov, TOS), Nichelle Nichols (Uhura, TOS), and George Takei (Sulu, TOS). A handful of fans showed up in Star Trek uniforms to pay tribute to a fine woman and a believable actor.
Eugene Roddenberry Jr. said on Roddenberry.com that his mother appreciated the role that Star Trek fans had in keeping his father’s legacy alive for over 40 years. “It was her love for the fans, and their love in return that kept her going for so long after my father passed away."
As Barrett was a lover of animals and their health and well being, the family had asked that in lieu of flowers, donations be made in her name to the CARE Organization or Precious Paws.
For some rare photos in the official tribute by her family and close friends, though there have been many posted on www.youtube.com by adoring fans, go to http://www.Rodenberry.com.
Ricardo Montalban: The Passing of a Great Star Trek Villain
An extraordinarily talented individual has departed from us. Ricardo Montalban passed away the morning of January 14, 2009 at the age of 88. Though the exact cause of death has not been identified, his son-in-law Gilbert Smith claims that he died from complications of advancing age.
The Mexican actor first came to Hollywood in 1943 and had a career spanning seven decades of multiple noteworthy roles including that of Mr. Roarke of Fantasy Island and as Khan Noonian Singh back in 1967 in ST:TOS which he reprised in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan in 1982. There are those Star Trek fans who feel that Montalban gave the franchise new popularity with his magnetic portrayal of Khan.
This gifted actor’s checkered career included radio shows, Broadway musicals, television, westerns, WWII films, and voice over work in commercials.
A spinal injury occurred caused by being thrown off a horse, knocked out and then walked on by another horse, all during the filming of Across the Wide Missouri in 1951.
The actor suffered terribly with pain that grew worse for the rest of his life, despite surgical procedures to attempt to correct the damage. He went from walking with a cane to delivering his lines from a wheelchair or in a sitting position during his later roles.
Ricardo Montalban later formed the Nosotros ("We") Foundation in 1970 to advocate Latinos in acting and the performing arts. The Foundation later created the Golden Eagle Awards, a televised annual award show that features and recognizes Latino achievements in the television and film industry. Having been himself a victim of stereotyped roles and prejudice, Montalban wished to show the world that Latinos could be exceptionally talented and gifted in the performing arts.
In 1980, Doubleday published his autobiography, Reflections: A Life in Two Worlds.
A devout Roman Catholic, he once said that his faith was the most important thing in his life. In 1998, the actor was named by Pope John Paul II as a Knight of the Order of St. Gregory the Great, one of the highest honors the Catholic Church can bestow upon a lay person.
Montalban’s last role was the voice of a cow in an episode of Seth MacFarlane's series Family Guy, in which he paraphrased lines from his role in Star Trek II.
Bartender's Galley Arcturian Fizz
by herbalsheila
A popular drink, the Arcturian Fizz is well liked for its pleasure enhancing qualities.
When Lwaxana Troi, her daughter Deanna, and Commander William Riker were held captive on a Ferengi starship, the Ambassador offered to make an Arcturian Fizz for the Ferengi DaiMon Tog. Claiming she needed Tog's access code to program the replicator to make the drink, Tog was about to give it to Lwaxana Troi until his suspicious counterpart Dr. Farek interrupted the two of them.
Here is a simple version that you can make yourself. We can, however, make no claims about how much pleasure is derived from it.
Ingredients:
- 1/2 cup Lemon Juice
- 3-3/4 Tbsp Grenadine Syrup
- 1 tsp Sugar
- 1 oz. Gin
- 1/4 cup Club Soda
Directions:
Dissolve sugar in lemon juice, syrup, and gin in a four to six ounce drinking glass of your choice. Add club soda last. Pop in three or four cubes of ice for a colder drink. Garnish as desired with a sprig of mint or rosemary or a fresh slice of fruit. For a non-alcoholic version, substitute gin with lime juice.
Chef's Corner Rokeg Blood Pie
Used with the Permission of the author K'Tesh
Rokeg Blood Pie (ro'qegh'Iwchab): A traditional Klingon dessert, desired often by Worf when he was growing up on earth ("Family"). It was first seen and mentioned in A Matter of Honor... though not in the same scene. For that reason it was believed that it never made an appearance on camera, but according to the book "Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion" it did. InStar Trek: KLINGON (interactive CD) it made an appearance, but looked radically different from its first incarnation (I do not have a recipe for this version). It has made an appearance on Voyager in "Day of Honor", and was last seen in DS9's "Resurrection", although it was not called rokeg blood pie in the episode. The recipe for this last version was apparently obtained somehow from THIS site. I have a couple of other recipes for theme parties as well as the two recipes that I know are accurate.
"Rokeg Blood Pie is a much favored Klingon dish , difficult to prepare properly. There are many regional variations of this dish. The Blood Feud between the House of Rengoth and the House of Dore began when warriors of each house claimed to have the better recipe.", according to Star Trek: KLINGON.
In the episode "A Matter Of Honor" The first version of this dish was made from several turnips that still had the roots attached, placed in pumpkin pie, died red, and displayed in a clear bowl.
A variation of this version could be made by using raw beets in a bowl of tomato soup. Before displaying I'd cut the stems off to make the beets more stable, and I retain them for other Klingon dishes.
K'Tesh's version
Rokeg Blood Pie, K'Tesh's version: This is my favorite version for appearance and taste. This is an almond gelatin recipe I modified to resemble (as best as I can tell) Klingon blood. (The idea worked like this: If fish blood resembles mammal blood... wouldn't Rokeg blood resemble Klingon blood?), apparently my idea worked, because in "Resurrection" [DS9] it appears that someone at Paramount liked my recipe. I admit however that it was not pointed to and called Rokeg blood pie by name, I presume that it is Rokeg blood pie, cause it strongly resembles my recipe.
Ingredients:
- 2 packages Knox unflavored gelatin
- 1 cup hot water
- 1 cup boiling water
- 6 tablespoons granulated sugar
- 1 1/2 cups 2% milk
- 2 teaspoons almond extract
- Less than 1/8 teaspoon Burgundy icing color
- Graham Cracker Crust mix
Preparation:
In the bottom of a large mixing bowl, prepare the graham cracker crust, careful to make sure that only in the bowl has the crust. When finished the crust will be on the top of the dessert, and the crust does not extend down the side. Carefully cover the top of the crust with butter, this is intended to seal the crust from the gelatin. (when graham cracker crust becomes wet, it swells, and tastes reprehensible.)
Soften gelatin in a 2-quart bowl with 1 cup hot water. Stir until gelatin is dissolved. Add 1 cup boiling water. Stir. Add Sugar, milk, **food coloring, and almond extract. Stir together. **Pour onto crust. Chill until firm.
When the gelatin is firm, cover the bowl with an upside down plate, and invert the dessert. If you happen to have a Parallel Universe's Bajoran thief , you should allow him to cut the dessert with a borrowed meqleH
(the original recipe 'Ha Nong Woo' has optional toppings: mandarin orange segments, maraschino cherries, and/or other canned fruit)
How I Met and Married a Romulan Princess
by Charlie Raschen Editor’s note: This is a fictional piece of creative writing from one of our members about his character, Chance Raschen.
When I first met T’Lela, she was a Sub-Centurion in the Romulan military, and I was on one last job before starting classes at Hardy-Knox University to become a licensed ship’s captain.
Some folks have asked me how I could have married a Romulan, let alone get her father’s blessing, considering how xenophobic, as a society, Romulans are. Well I tell you what; it sure as hell wasn’t easy. My mother, Margaret, was on a business trip to secure licensed shipping privileges from the magistrate inside a Romulan Province. I traveled with her and served as her bodyguard. Coincidently, T’Lela served as a bodyguard for the Magistrate S’Adashiv, who happened to be her father.
During one of their many meetings together my mom had convinced him to continue the meeting over dinner, just the two of them at an eatery of his choice. T’Lela and I sat at a table close at hand just in case one of them attacked the other. You see, being Scottish, my mom is very outspoken and has a temper to boot. As they spoke, T’Lela and I started talking about how our parents treated business like war.
Mom and I spent the night at the Magistrate’s estate. After my mom and her dad went to their rooms for the night, T’Lela and I stayed up drinking and talking. That was my introduction to Romulan Ale. She and I woke up the next morning curled up with each other without any clothes, under a blanket, on an animal skin rug in front of the fireplace. She wrapped the blanket around herself while I pulled my pants on. As we walked down one of the hallways toward our rooms, we were startled when the door to her father’s room suddenly swung open and almost hit me in the face.
T’Lela’s dad looked really peeved when he saw us, so you can imagine how the situation evolved when my mom walked out of his room wrapped in a blanket as well. My mom and I pointed at each other and neither one of us could keep from laughing. T’Lela and S’Adashiv started yelling at one another; basically demanding the same answers from the other. Come to find out, S’Adashiv had been a widower for the better part of a decade and well, as mom explained it to me, one thing led to another. Hey, they were both consenting adults, why not? For that matter, the same could be said for T’Lela and me.
T’Lela’s side however, turned out to be a little different. It so happened that I turned out to be the first male to be interested in her that didn’t give a damn about her father’s power, wealth, or influence. I didn’t need or want his; my family had just as much of both as his family.
When my mom and I left Romulus after she got the shipping permits, she and S’Adashiv continued to keep their physical relationship a matter of convenience but pursued an active business relationship. T’Lela and I continued to court until we got married the week I graduated from Hardy-Knox University. Unfortunately the next week the Cardassian-Federation War started.
That's a Wrap!
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen
Directed by Stephen Norrington
Writers (WGA): Alan Moore (comic books) and Kevin O'Neill (comic books)
Released July 2003
Starring Sean Connery as Alan Quartermain, Naseeruddin Shah as Captain Nemo, Peta Wilson as Mina Harker, Tony Curran as Rodney Skinner, Stuart Townsend as Dorian Gray, Shane West as Tom Sawyer, Jason Flemyng as Dr. Henry Jekyll and Edward Hyde, and Richard Roxburgh as M, this action packed movie smacks of science fiction at the turn of the century before the first World War.
Her Majesty and the British government request the legendary African hunter Allen Quartermain to participate with others of extraordinary talents to stop the coming chaos caused by a masked madman calling himself the Phantom.Fighting their own personal demons and, often each other, this group of unlikely and reluctant heroes saves the day against dangerous odds.
The movie ends up being a rollercoaster ride of special effects, high drama with unexpected heroes and villains along with a lovely plethora of late 1800’s details. The Nemomobile and the Nautilus alone are so gorgeous in decorative touches that they are almost characters in and of themselves.
If one can overlook the obvious gaffs of a naked invisible man in northern Siberia not freezing to death outside, that former evil villains can suddenly decide to do an about face personality change to become do gooders, or that Tom Sawyer could know how to drag race an automobile before the Model T, the movie is fun and dramatic, the special effects well done and believable, and the acting credible.
Counselor's Corner
Our Klingon Counselor is played by Frank Truelove
Story #4
Star Trek Book Review The Romulan Way
by Diane Duane and Peter Morwood
Novel Review by Charlie Raschen
Originally published by Simon and Schuster 1987 with subsequent reprints, 254 pages
ISBN 10 0743403703
ISBN 13 978-0743403702
From the back cover: They are a race of warriors, a noble people to whom honor is all. They are cousin to the Vulcan, ally to the Klingon, and Starfleet's most feared and cunning adversary. They are the Romulans – and for eight years, Federation Agent Terise LoBrutto has hidden in their midst.
Now the presence of a captured Starfleet officer forces her to make a fateful choice between exposure and escape. Between maintaining her cover – and saving the life of Dr. Leonard McCoy.
Here, in a startlingly different adventure, is the truth behind one of the most fascinating alien races ever created in Star Trek – the Romulans.
We all should understand by now that the idea of a story in the Star Trek universe being considered canon is purely a matter of speculation and argumentation. The book I am reviewing fits well into the “questionable canon” category. That being said, The Romulan Way by Duane and Morwood can be very informative about the history of the Vulcan and Romulan peoples and the political history of the two, not to mention what brought about their subsequent separation.
Ever been curious to know how the Romulans acquired Klingon built D-7 battle cruisers, or how the Klingons got Romulan cloaking devises? And yes people, even more political intrigue, and this time between the Federation, Klingons, and Romulans. Like spies? Got them all over the place; and assassins too. Of course, let us not forget about how our dear Doctor Leonard “Bones” McCoy developed his taste for Romulan Ale.
This one book contains three good separate stories. I personally didn’t like the way the stories in this book were intertwined; primarily because of how the shift from one story to another took place. I’d be reading one story, then “BANG!” I’d find myself in a different story and get confused because of the sudden change. I’m a little slow like that at times. Overall, I really enjoyed this book; I read it at least four times; once front to back, then flipping through in order to read each individual story by itself. If you are not concerned with canon facts, this book makes a very good reference. Enjoy it; I did.