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Craig O. Thompson (born 26 September 1944; age 79) is an author, speaker, educator, and anti-terrorism expert, who from 1966 through 1969 has worked as office manager post-production on Star Trek: The Original Series, while employed by Desilu Productions, which later became Paramount Television. In an interview given by him to William S. McCullars in 1997 for McCullars' now defunct website The IDIC Page, he has described his duties in post-production, "Production is everything from conceptualizing to actually filming a show. But the minute the film is pulled from the camera, it becomes the property of the post production office. That means we handled all the physical dailies through shooting, as well. Then, when the film left the camera, we would handle all of the film processing, cutting , editing, SFX, sound editing, music editing, and commercial integration, right down to the contract prints that were sent to the network." Template:Brokenlink His responsibilities were not restricted to Star Trek, but were also applied to the other productions, Desilu was involved with, Mannix, and Mission Impossible. Apart from his duties in post-production, Thompson also worked as producer/artistic director of Lucille Ball’s Studio Theater.

Hailing from Los Angeles, Thompson interrupted his education to work for the U.S. Peace Corps as the first 18-year old volunteer to serve overseas in Sri Lanka, before he took on his position at Desilu. He left Desilu after The Original Series wrapped and completed his education at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff, Arizona with a degree in education. After graduating Thompson did not return to the motion picture industry, but opted to pursue a career in education as teacher, his first teaching job being at the Navajo Reservation. In 1971 he took on a position at Golden West College, Huntington Beach, California as director of student activities. It was in this capacity that he organized an exhibition for the college with had as theme the space program of NASA. Through a series of chance contacts (involving among others former executive producer Herb Solow), Thompson was given the opportunity to have the original eleven-foot studio model of the USS Enterprise included in the exhibition as well. Only too happy to help out a former colleague, the studio had the model shipped out to the college were it was reassembled and on display for several weeks in April 1972, arguably the very first time a Star Trek studio model was on tour.

Over the next decades, Thompson developed a growing interest in the threats of nuclear, biological, chemical, and radiological warfare and the potential effects of terrorism on democratic soils and has specialized in these subjects, giving lectures and speeches for a multitude of institutions and organizations, concerned with these themes, as well as writing a multitude of articles about them. On 10 September 2001, one day before the 9/11 attack on New York City, he gave a three hour radio interview on KFI radio, Los Angeles, predicting a major terrorist attack while identifying Al Qaida as a likely perpetrator. In 1999, Thompson published his first fiction novel, Omar, which deals with global terrorism.

The McCullar interview has been, in edited form, published in Star Trek: Communicator issue 120.

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