Captain Picard reluctantly allows him to join the away team.
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Data notes that his android body has a phase discriminator that would allow him to see the aliens. The crew determine that the aliens are slightly out of phase with time. Though no life forms are visible, Deanna Troi senses the presence of suffering humans. Upon arrival they discover a temporal disturbance on the planet. The Enterprise leaves for the planet, taking Data's second head. Investigation reveals cellular fossils native to the planet of Devidia II, indicating a race of shapeshifters were visiting Earth's past. They are shown a cavern near Starfleet Headquarters in San Francisco containing 19th century relics, and the disembodied head of Data. The Enterprise is recalled to Earth on a priority mission regarding evidence of aliens on the planet 500 years before. The second part of the episode was nominated for three Creative Arts Emmy Awards, winning two: Outstanding Individual Achievement in Costume Design for a Series, and Outstanding Individual Achievement in Hairstyling for a Series. In this episode, an engineering team finds evidence that aliens visited Earth in 19th century San Francisco: Data's severed head, buried five hundred years ago.
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Set in the 24th century, the series follows the adventures of the Starfleet crew of the Federation starship Enterprise-D. A two-part episode of Star Trek: TNG, the first episode was a cliffhanger season finale for the fifth season and the second episode was the premiere for the sixth season. " Time’s Arrow" is the 26th episode of the fifth season and the first episode of the sixth season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: The Next Generation, it comprises the 126th and 127th episodes overall. Star Trek: The Next Generation (season 5) William Boyett - San Francisco policeman.Sheldon Peters Wolfchild - Joe Falling Hawk.You may link to this article or portions of it on your site, but copying is prohibited without permission of Peltier Technical Services. Peltier Technical Services, Inc., Copyright © 2017. Remove each legend entry from the legend by clicking once to select the legend, then clicking again to select the individual legend entry, and pressing Delete (click to select the text label, not the marker, or you will delete the entire series).Īs with the data labels in the earlier example, if the data changes, the markers still highlight the maximum and minimum points. The arrows are ineffective as legend keys, because the arrow/circle shape is shrunk to fit in the space of the original marker. The circle used to make the custom markers now has a faint outline, so you can see how each entire marker is centered on its point, even though the arrows are offset. The purpose of the circle is further illustrated in the chart below. If you select just a point, only that point will use the shape.Ĭopy the grouped shape with the red arrow, then select the Min series in the chart, and paste, to apply the copied shape to the series. Note: If you select a series before pasting the shape, the entire series takes on the shape as its markers. Select the red arrow and its circle, and group them.Ĭopy the grouped shape with the green arrow, then select the Max series in the chart, and use Ctrl+V or Paste from the Edit menu, and the series will use the copied shape as the custom marker for the series. Select the green arrow and the corresponding circle, and group the shapes.
Select just the circles, and hide them by changing their formats to No Line and No Fill. The first step is to select the shapes.Īlign the shapes using the Align Center button on the menu. The floating command bar is the Align or Distribute tear-away menu from the Drawing toolbar. In this example, the green and red arrows are one row tall, and the circle two rows in diameter. The shapes will be aligned (and grouped) so that the point of the arrow will be in the center of the circle, and therefore centered on the point. Make arrows of the size and format that you need, and circles of twice that size. Start with the last chart in the Min/Max example, using small square markers, no lines, and no labels for the Min and Max series. This example is based on the Special Format for Minimum and Maximum example.
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This technique shows how to attach an indicator (arrow) to a point by creating custom markers for the Min and Max series. Even if the chart does not change, an AutoShape is not guaranteed to be in exactly the same position the next time the file is opened. If you draw an arrow, or any AutoShape, in a chart, it is not in any way tied to the data or to the chart axes, so it will not move to keep up with a point as the axes change or the chart resizes. People often want to use an arrow or other symbol to indicate a point in a chart.