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Vernal galaxy

Falconer

Commander
Red Shirt
talos.png


It’s a simple goof, right? I reckon they meant the ventral galaxy — down/south/negative on the Z-axis. :cool:
 
Vernal means "pertaining to spring." "Vernal galaxy" would mean literally the galaxy or part of the galaxy associated with springtime. Yeah, obviously someone just ate and regurgitated an astronomy lexicon (cf "vernal equinox").

As to whether "ventral" taken to indicate a particular direction would make more sense than "vernal," it most certainly would not, since a specific direction in space can be inferred from the vernal (or March) equinox, namely such as the position vector of the center of the Earth relative to the center of the Sun when it occurs (or its opposite, if looking at things from an Earthbound perspective). If you want to read the terms in question as referring to a certain part of the Milky Way within some cone or half-space defined by some direction, such is the direction.
 
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My guess is whoever made the sheet assumed Star Trek to be literally intergalactic, and "The Cage" was set in another galaxy. And anyone who knew otherwise likely realised the prop was done, would be visible for like a second and certainly wouldn't be examined by a bunch of ageing nerds 55 years later.

Get a load of "Half Vulcan Science Officer Spock", Starfleet being shamelessly racist.
 
In astronomy, the vernal point is where the Sun crosses the celestial equator on the vernal (spring) equinox, and this is often used as an origin point in celestial coordinate systems. Maybe "vernal galaxy" was supposed to mean the part of the galaxy in that direction. Though how that works with "third quadrant" is beyond me. I think they were just throwing random astronomical terms together.


My guess is whoever made the sheet assumed Star Trek to be literally intergalactic, and "The Cage" was set in another galaxy.

Seems unlikely, since "Where No Man Has Gone Before" depicted what was explicitly the first starship probe outside our galaxy. But I guess we don't know who wrote the page. Was it Roddenberry or someone else? Did the script contain the entire text of the page?

In my experience, TV and movie writers have a very poor understanding of what the word "galaxy" actually means and what the difference is between a galaxy and a solar system. There was that episode of the original Battlestar Galactica where they supposedly left their home galaxy for another one, and they were literally directly adjacent, like crossing a state line. And by the end of the season, they said they'd been through multiple galaxies, even though the speed of light was stated to be their maximum speed.
 
Space Patrol had a burning micro planet in space that was about to collide with earth, and they called it a supernova :lol:
 
They even had a xenophobic signature line for Spock. Ridiculous. And why wouldn't Number One have been the second signatory?
 
My thoughts on "Half Vulcan Science Officer Spock":

The text of the page reads thusly:

_____________________________________________________
TOP SECRET

For eyes of STARFLEET Command only

Subject: TALOS IV in third quadrant of
vernal galaxy.

Known factor: Detailed information cross
referenced with 3XY phagrin level - mass
computer.

The only Earthship that ever visited planet
Talos IV was the U. S. S. Enterprise com-
manded by Captain Christopher Pike with
Half-Vulcan Science officer Spock.

Recommendation: Be it hereby noted that
said following instructions be incorpora-
ted into STARFLEET policy...

NO ONE WILL EVER VISIT TALOS IV..

The following officers have visited Talos
IV and recommend that no human
should ever visit it again..

Captain Christopher Pike
Half-Vulcan Science Officer Spock

STARFLEET COMMAND
BY ORDER OF
(Signature)
Robert L. Conrad (?)
(illegible)
_____________________________________________________________


Spock and Pike are the officer who's reports are being referenced, not every officer would have necessarily filed reports. Just the commander and the Science officer. Also, the Enterprise is explicitly called out as an "Earthship" suggesting that Starfleet is formally an Earth-only outfit, so an officer having dual citizenship, or possibly being an allied foreign national might be relevant information. Also, the fact that Vulcans are recognized telepaths might have weight given the nature of the contact with the Talosians.

What I really want to know is what the heck is an "3XY phagrin level - mass
computer?"

--Alex
 
As Christopher and Alex say, "vernal" is a plausible-sounding astronomical buzzword (and we would need new buzzwords when starting to find our way around the Milky Way), and "half-Vulcan" is pertinent data for dealing with the Talosians (and especially for whether to allow humans to deal or not: an outside view, from a telepath no less, would appear absolutely vital).

"3XY phagrin level-mass computer" in turn probably is "Afghanistan Banana Stand" - a simple string of nonsense that allows one to access supersecret documentation archived elsewhere, as obviously Starfleet wouldn't print "this document typed on a Remington Noiseless Model 7 Typewriter" there...

But the document is a piece of bullshit anyway. There's no information content, and nobody in his right mind would put that many bouts of ellipsis in an official document. And "Be it hereby noted that said following instructions be incorporated" isn't acceptable even in Civil Service English.

...Perhaps the [...] thing is the future way of marking a clickable link through which more information can be accessed? Or the sign for heavy redaction?

Timo Saloniemi
 
What I really want to know is what the heck is an "3XY phagrin level - mass
computer?"
One of those ridiculously big sci-fi computers, like those scenes in Forbidden Planet where the tiny people are walking by the massive machinery.

That or a Christian robot designed to say Mass every sunday but also dictate Starfleet policy throughout the week.
 
The only Earthship that ever visited planet Talos IV was the U. S. S. Enterprise

...Does the document mean Starfleet now knows that there never was any SS Columbia? That the Talosians did not just fake the survivors, but indeed the whole crash and the existence of the entire mission, inserting it into the minds (and thus databanks, which the minds would then falsely think they are checking) of our heroes simultaneously with inserting that fake distress call that made the viewscreen go ping?

Or do crashes not count as visits?

Timo Saloniemi
 
FYI the script does not specify the exact content of the report. But the signature and name at the bottom sure looks like Robert L. Comsul or Cornsul.
Screen Shot 2021-08-26 at 2.17.24 AM.png


INSERT - THE REPORT IN KIRK I S HANDS
Letters boldly in center: "TALOS IV" • At the bottom: "TOP SECRET--For Eyes of' Starfleet Staff Only".

[...]

KIRK​
[...]General Order Four: "No vessel under any condition, emergency
or otherwise, is to visit Talos IV."​
[...]

Mendez silently indicates the report, Kirk opens it, begins reading. Then he looks startled, quickly turns a page, is startled again.

KIRK​
The Enterprise! ·
(looks up)​
Commanded by Captain Pike...

MENDEZ​
With a half-Vulcan Science Officer
named Spock.​
So the exact contents are not specified in the script. One can see how someone could have cobbled the text together from the dialog. Maybe the exact text came over as a memo, but we've seen so sign of it.
 
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Our loss. The fact that the text eventually got written and shown, that is.

The paper we see isn't a rule or a regulation, but a mere recommendation for making a rule. Then again, Mendez never argues otherwise. Instead, he seems to be lamenting that the only piece of documentation he can access on the issue is this silly piece of paper that explains nothing. Supposedly, this would be an internal memo that was supposed to be shredded after use, but was carelessly archived instead, for people-who-don't-need-to-know to see.

For a back-of-the-cigarette-pack note, the text and its "herebies" and "said followings" is particularly inappropriate. But possibly Comsol or his secretary was a regular Herbert.

Timo Saloniemi
 
At the end of Part 1, when Uhura relays the order that Kirk has been relieved of duty, she says "Message signed Comsol, Starfleet Command." The Concordance said "it is thought" that "Comsol" was an abbreviation for "Commander, Solar Forces," and that was accepted for decades until the HD release of "The Menagerie" let us read the signature as "Robert L. Comsol."

So either it was meant to be a name all along, or it was meant as an abbreviation but whatever production staffer whipped up the memo misconstrued it as a name.
 
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