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- ### GUIDE ### [3][Background] [4][Synopsis] [5][Credits] [6][Episode
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- _Contents:_ [9]Overview - [10]Backplot - [11]Questions - [12]Analysis
- - [13]Notes - [14]JMS
-
- _________________________________________________________________
-
- Overview
-
- Sheridan's search for his father leads him into danger on Mars.
- Lyta warns Franklin of an impending clash between telepaths and
- mundanes. Garibaldi chooses between loyalty to Sheridan and to
- Edgars. [15]Richard Gant as Captain MacDougan. [16]Denise Gentile
- as Lise. [17]Walter Koenig as Bester. [18]Marjorie Monaghan as
- Number One. [19]Mark Schneider as Wade. [20]Efrem Zimbalist Jr. as
- William Edgars.
-
- [21]P5 Rating: [22]9.26
-
- Production number: 417
- Original air week: June 9, 1997
-
- Written by J. Michael Straczynski
- Directed by Mike Vejar
-
- _Warning: This episode reveals a lot of information, and there are
- spoilers below. Think twice before reading on if you haven't seen the
- episode._
-
- _________________________________________________________________
-
- Plot Points
-
- * Clark's ship commanders have been convinced that if they surrender
- to Sheridan, they'll be killed and their crews replaced by
- Minbari. Perceiving they have nothing to lose, they are therefore
- willing to fight the rebel forces to the death.
- * Sheridan has been captured by Clark's forces. Garibaldi personally
- sprung the trap, which earned him a commendation from ISN and
- condemnation from Ivanova: she has ordered B5's personnel to shoot
- him on sight.
- * Ivanova is now in command of the rebel fleet, and has vowed to
- keep up the fight with or without Sheridan.
- * Sheridan's old ship, the Agamemnon ([23]"Points of Departure") has
- joined the rebel fleet. (See [24]Notes)
- * The telepath virus described by Wade and Lise in [25]"Conflicts of
- Interest" is indeed real, as is the drug to suppress it -- but the
- virus was developed by Edgars' company. It is airborne, 100%
- contagious, and completely harmless to normals. Telepaths have to
- take the cure every two weeks, or they'll die. Edgars' plan was to
- release it on Earth and use control of the cure to effectively
- enslave all the telepaths, preventing them from ever gaining the
- upper hand over normals. Bester believes the virus was developed
- with the help of the Shadows, who had a vested interest in wiping
- out telepaths.
- * When Justin told Sheridan that the Shadows wouldn't kill him
- because someone else would come along and take his place
- ([26]"Z'ha'dum") he had specific people in mind: Delenn, Ivanova
- and Garibaldi. The Shadows decided that given his innate paranoia,
- Garibaldi would be easiest to cause to turn away from Sheridan's
- cause, thus sabotaging the Army of Light in Sheridan's absence.
- The Psi Corps was given the assignment of programming Garibaldi.
- They took him to a secret facility on Mars, where Bester
- intervened and added some programming of his own.
- Bester was aware that some kind of action was being planned
- against the Corps, but he didn't know what or by whom. Given
- Garibaldi's proven track record at ferreting out conspiracies,
- Bester instructed his colleagues to leave Garibaldi's personality
- largely intact, and to accentuate his natural sense of paranoia
- and distrust. Garibaldi's resignation was an unexpected bonus that
- put him in a perfect position to infiltrate Edgars' organization.
- Garibaldi's mission was to gather information about the threat to
- the Psi Corps if the opportunity arose, then signal Bester.
- * Bester has removed Garibaldi's programming, leaving him with full
- memory of what was done to him and what he's done to Sheridan.
- * Bester's people have murdered Edgars and Wade and may have taken
- the virus. Lise's whereabouts are unknown.
- * The Corps has engaged in clandestine operations in the past. While
- Lyta was interning with the Psi Cops ([27]"Divided Loyalties")
- someone started murdering telepaths. The Corps engaged in illegal
- scans of civilians, and eventually found the killer. Rather than
- simply kill him, they twisted his mind. According to Lyta, he's
- now in a cell in a secret facility on Beta 2, straitjacketed 24
- hours a day to keep him from clawing out his own eyes to stop the
- nightmare visions only he can see.
- * The Corps has gone even further with the establishment of
- "bloodhound units," special undercover detachments of the Earth
- military who are accompanied by telepaths. Their mission is to
- perform random scans of the public and arrest any members of the
- resistance they come across.
- * Lyta believes there's likely to be a war between telepaths and
- mundanes some day, when word of such operations gets out and the
- trust the Corps has managed to build up evaporates as a result.
-
- Unanswered Questions
-
- * Where is Lise?
- * What does Bester plan to do with the virus, assuming he has it?
- * Does Franklin know the full extent of Sheridan's plans for the
- frozen telepaths, and can he carry them out with Sheridan out of
- the picture?
- * Why didn't Franklin detect Garibaldi's false tooth during his
- medical exams?
- * Now that Ivanova is leading the fleet, will she continue her Voice
- of the Resistance broadcasts?
- * Is the Agamemnon's defection to the resistance what it seems?
-
- Analysis
-
- * The resolution of the battle between Sheridan and Clark's forces
- points out what may be Sheridan's most potent weapon against
- Clark: not White Stars or superior strategy, but the presence of
- previously loyal human commanders who lend credibility to the
- rebel cause.
- * The White Stars appear to have adapted to Earth's weapons; a hit
- from an Earth heavy cruiser only disables a White Star until the
- auto-repair systems come online. Even without the defection of so
- many Earth ships, Ivanova is in command of an unstoppable military
- force.
- * Sheridan told the Agamemnon's captain that the rebel forces had
- lost some battles, but had kept the news to themselves. ("We've
- lost a few. We just made damned sure nobody heard about it.") How
- is that possible? Wouldn't Clark jump at the chance to spread news
- of victory over Sheridan's forces? And for that matter, would
- Ivanova participate in covering up any losses, given her
- insistence on telling the truth in her Voice of the Resistance
- broadcasts? ([28]"Rumors, Bargains and Lies")
- Perhaps Sheridan simply has a more specific definition of
- "victory" than most other people. He didn't seem to consider the
- outcome of the Proxima 3 battle a victory ([29]"No Surrender, No
- Retreat") so perhaps he'd consider it a loss if he wound up having
- to fight Clark's forces to the death.
- Or maybe Sheridan wasn't referring to his current campaign, but
- was speaking in general of his military career.
- * Sheridan demonstrated a lack of caution in this episode, first
- going over to the Agamemnon on a moment's notice (it could easily
- have been sent by Clark as a trap) then agreeing to go to Mars by
- himself. He even walked straight into a public place without
- attempting to obscure his face, which has no doubt been featured
- daily on ISN. That can be seen as evidence of what Garibaldi
- referred to as a "God complex" -- Sheridan appears to have
- disregarded his own fallibility.
- It's possible that this stems in part from the glimpse of his own
- future in [30]"War Without End, Part Two," which might lead
- Sheridan to believe that no matter what he does now, he'll be
- alive and free in 17 years.
- * Sheridan's capture was similar to G'Kar's in [31]"Whatever
- Happened to Mr. Garibaldi?" Both of them left a place of relative
- safety to try to rescue someone they cared about, and both were
- captured by a regime that was oppressing their people. Both were
- tortured after capture.
- * The Agamemnon, according to its captain, had been modified to
- track Sheridan's forces down. What, specifically, were the
- modifications? And more importantly, how likely is it that Clark
- would equip a ship specifically to seek Sheridan out without being
- very sure of its loyalty?
- The Agamemnon would make a perfect plant. Clark's people might
- have figured that Sheridan's emotional attachment to it would
- likely prompt him to put it in a position of trust, all the better
- to sabotage Sheridan's efforts at a critical juncture. Of course,
- Ivanova isn't biased toward trusting the Agamemnon, but at the
- time the Agamemnon was sent out to find the rebel fleet, Clark had
- no idea Sheridan's capture was imminent.
- Its arrival just after the battle was also very convenient; its
- captain could claim to be joining up with the rebels without
- actually having to fire on Clark's forces. If it had indeed been
- chasing after Sheridan for weeks, emerging from hyperspace at just
- that moment was quite a coincidence.
- * Was the Agamemnon's captain the one in command when it fired on
- the White Star? ([32]"Messages From Earth")
- * The Agamemnon has been involved in skirmishes with raiders near
- Io. Who are the raiders? Are the Drakh ([33]"Lines of
- Communication") encroaching on Earth's territory? Or are the
- raiders simply opportunists out to take advantage of Sheridan's
- campaign and its likely effect of drawing Earth forces away from
- their home system?
- * The Shadows were apparently right about Ivanova; she is indeed
- taking Sheridan's place, just as Bester says they feared.
- * Bester's manipulation of Garibaldi was foreshadowed in [34]"Dust
- to Dust." Bester told Garibaldi, "I enjoyed working with you. We
- made a good team. Perhaps we'll do it again sometime."
- It was also foreshadowed, if obliquely, in [35]"Divided
- Loyalties," in which Garibaldi _pretended_ to have a personality
- implant, if only as a joke.
- And before then, ironically, in [36]"The Quality of Mercy," Talia
- and Garibaldi shared a moment of mutual foreshadowing when she
- said to him, "Things that live inside us, Mr. Garibaldi. Terrible
- things. Terrible."
- * Bester referred to the Corps as "my telepaths." This echoes his
- comment to Ivanova in [37]"Ship of Tears" that he had plans for
- Earth's telepaths and didn't want the Shadows interfering.
- Apparently he considers himself responsible for Earth's telepaths,
- even if he's not officially in charge of the Corps.
- * Did Bester's people get the virus? It's possible Lise took it when
- she fled Edgars' compound. She wanted Garibaldi to help her stop
- him, and taking the virus would be a big step in that direction.
- Of course, that's assuming she could get to it; the Psi Cops could
- presumably take control of Edgars and force him to use the
- handprint reader, but Lise would have had a harder time getting to
- the vials.
- Garibaldi did see blast marks around the secret compartment,
- though, suggesting that it was opened by force.
- * The ISN broadcast showed investigators picking up a necklace from
- the floor of Edgars' residence. That necklace, or one like it, was
- being worn by Lise when she listened in on Edgars' conversation
- with Garibaldi, suggesting she was in the room after Edgars and
- Garibaldi left.
- * Bester's supposition that the virus was developed with the help of
- Shadow technology is consistent with the courier's claim in
- [38]"Conflicts of Interest" that coming up with the cure was a job
- beyond the capabilities of Earth's biologists, and that alien help
- had been enlisted.
- * If Bester is right about the Shadows helping create the virus, it
- means Edgars was in contact with the Shadows, even if indirectly.
- And indeed, Edgars and Wade seemed to espouse something like the
- Shadow philosophy: the enslavement of normals by telepaths or vice
- versa was a natural consequence of evolution.
- * References to the Nazis abound: Edgars described his plan as a
- solution to "the telepath problem," an echo of Hitler's "Jewish
- problem." Bester told Garibaldi that he had just prevented a
- Holocaust. Edgars even referred to the Nazis directly, though he
- misspoke a date; he claimed they came to power in 1939, but in
- fact Hitler was appointed Chancellor in 1933.
- * Garibaldi's line about the last person with his job being paid 30
- pieces of silver is a [39]Biblical reference. Judas was paid 30
- pieces of silver to betray Jesus to the Romans. Even under the
- influence of his altered personality, Garibaldi apparently has
- moral qualms about betraying Sheridan.
- * After Edgars told Garibaldi the full extent of his plans, Wade
- told Garibaldi he wouldn't be allowed to leave Edgars' compound.
- The implication was that any passing telepath (e.g. one of the
- "bloodhound units") would be able to scan Garibaldi and learn
- about the virus.
- Why, then, was Wade allowed to travel to Babylon 5, and stay there
- to recruit Garibaldi? Was Wade unaware of the big picture until
- his return to Mars? The laboratory scene near the end of [40]"The
- Exercise of Vital Powers" doesn't give the impression that Wade
- just found out what Edgars was up to; he seemed to have witnessed
- similar experiments in the past.
- Perhaps Wade was drugged or brainwashed in some way that made him
- more difficult to scan or that caused him to believe the story he
- told Garibaldi in [41]"Conflicts of Interest."
- * Bester's release of Garibaldi was, in some ways, an act of
- arrogance; in essence, Bester was saying that he didn't consider
- Garibaldi a threat. Given Garibaldi's determination in the past,
- he'll likely seek revenge or justice, and he won't rest until he
- has it.
- * Despite Bester's apparently accurate warning that Garibaldi's old
- comrades wouldn't want to have anything to do with him any more,
- Garibaldi did try to get in touch with Babylon 5. How will he be
- able to prove his story to them, and prove that he's no longer
- under Bester's influence? One obvious answer is to submit to a
- scan by Lyta, whose Vorlon-enhanced powers appear to far exceed
- Bester's. She would easily be able to verify Garibaldi's story,
- and her word might be enough to convince the others.
- Edgars' order to Garibaldi to fire Lyta ([42]"Moments of
- Transition") may, ironically, have been his downfall. If Edgars
- hadn't forced Garibaldi to get rid of her, she might have
- eventually detected Bester's handiwork and removed it, and Edgars
- would still be alive.
- * Why didn't Edgars release the virus? What was he waiting for? In
- [43]"The Exercise of Vital Powers," he seemed satisfied that the
- virus worked, and even asked that a test of its effectiveness be
- terminated.
- Since his aim was to control the telepaths, not simply wipe them
- out, perhaps he needed to wait until he had enough of the cure
- manufactured to supply to millions of victims.
- Edgars said he was waiting for Clark to drop his guard, but it's
- not clear what difference that would have made; Clark's level of
- paranoia would presumably have little effect on the spread of the
- virus and the demise of the telepaths.
- * Edgars' plans didn't amount to anything in the end. He was the
- only known credible threat to the Psi Corps. Now that he's dead
- and the Corps has control of his weapon against them, and Ivanova
- is continuing the rebel advance even in the face of Sheridan's
- capture, Edgars' fear of Clark panicking and giving increasing
- amounts of control to the Psi Corps may well become a reality.
- Of course, Sheridan may have anticipated that problem, and the
- frozen telepaths may be his answer.
- * In [44]"The Exercise of Vital Powers," Edgars implied that there
- were other powerful megacorps dissatisfied with Clark, and that
- his company was one of several planning to move against the
- government. Will any of the others act now that Edgars is out of
- the picture?
- * The problem may have gotten even worse thanks to Edgars: if the
- Corps has the virus, they'll presumably spend a good deal of
- effort studying it. The virus selects its victims via the presence
- of the telepathy genes. Developing that selectivity from scratch
- may have required the aid of the Shadows, but it might not be
- beyond Earth's biotechnology to use it as a blueprint and produce
- a modified version that selects for the _lack_ of the telepathy
- gene -- thus giving the Corps the same power over normals that
- Edgars wanted to gain over telepaths.
- Or the Corps could use the virus to cement its own control over
- all human telepaths. By releasing the virus and only giving the
- cure to members of the Corps, they'd eliminate the problem of
- rogue telepaths overnight. Latent telepaths like Ivanova would no
- longer be able to hide themselves from the Corps.
- * Bester could possibly also use the virus on Lyta; death by the
- virus might be considered natural causes under the terms of her
- contract ([45]"Moments of Transition.") Of course, such an
- operation would be very risky, since Lyta would be contagious.
- * Assuming Edgars kept detailed personnel records, the police will
- most likely look to Garibaldi as a prime suspect in the murders.
- Lise might also be a suspect. Both of them disappeared suddenly at
- the time of the murder, and given their past history, the police
- might conclude that Edgars' murder was a crime of passion
- committed by two old lovers who wanted to be together again.
- * The bloodhound units may have been in evidence before this
- episode. In [46]"Conflicts of Interest," the two telepaths chasing
- Garibaldi, Wade and Lise seemed to fit the description pretty
- well. And, more speculatively, they could have been the ones to
- plant the Keeper on Captain Jack in [47]"Racing Mars," since they
- presumably would have had little trouble learning of his personal
- association with Number One.
- * Lyta's description of the Corps' treatment of the murderer is
- strikingly similar to her threat to Londo in [48]"Passing Through
- Gethsemane." Perhaps she was present when the murderer was
- implanted and knows firsthand how to do such things. Maybe she was
- even involved in the process; that could be the secret about her
- Bester threatened to reveal in [49]"Epiphanies."
- * Number One said that when Lyta passed through Mars a year and a
- half earlier ([50]"Divided Loyalties") she made no mention of
- being a telepath on the run from the Corps. That's inconsistent
- with Lyta's story in that episode. She told Sheridan and the
- others at that time that she'd been helping out the resistance,
- and implied that they'd hired her for her telepathic skills.
- * Number One apparently really _does_ treat all her former lovers
- like she treated Phillipe ([51]"Lines of Communication.")
-
- Notes
-
- * Harlan Ellison has a cameo appearance in this episode. He's the
- Psi Cop Bester instructs to alter Garibaldi's personality.
- * Bester's parting salute to Garibaldi, "Be seeing you," is a
- reference to the 60s TV show "The Prisoner." Bester first used the
- salute in [52]"Mind War."
- * Garibaldi is now missing a molar.
- * The appearance of the Agamemnon contradicts the attack scene at
- the end of [53]"Moments of Transition," in which the Agamemnon can
- be seen attacking civilian targets. However, as JMS noted in
- response to comments on that episode, the use of the Agamemnon was
- a slipup on the part of the production team.
- * The Cadmus, the ship that surrendered to Sheridan and MacDougan,
- is named after a mythological hero. Cadmus slew a dragon, and when
- he sowed the dragon's teeth, a race of warriors sprang from the
- ground.
- * This is the series' second attack on someone using a skin tab. The
- first was the poisoning of Kosh in [54]"The Gathering."
- * The Sheridan fight scene, shot in slow motion, was interspersed by
- editor David Foster with shots taken by still photographer Byron
- Cohen, who does most of the B5 publicity stills sent out to TV
- stations.
- * The shot of Garibaldi shown on the ISN broadcast is from the
- season-three opening credits.
-
- jms speaks
-
- * I agree that it's probably one of the best we've done. I've now
- watched it at least a dozen times in finished form, and it still
- works for me.
- * One thing I've been doing with the latter part of season 4 is to
- experiment a little more, try different things. I feel that we
- need to push visually to try new things, the sort of visual
- techniques you don't see much in SF-TV, which for the most part is
- fairly prosaic as these things go. And to push the writing, to try
- some things that may succeed, or may fail, but you learn something
- either way. In its way, next week's ep is just as experimental,
- but in a very different direction.
- Mike Vejar definitely did a great job with this episode.
- * Zimbalist did a great job for us...he took huge gobs of exposition
- and not only delivered them, he made them interesting.
- * _Was he a fan of the show?_
- Nope, just figured he'd be great for the job, and cast him without
- audition. He didn't know anything about the show before that.
- * _What was the shimmering wall Sheridan stood near on the White
- Star bridge?_
- Those were the autorepair systems at work.
- * ""The Face of the Enemy" might represent the flipside of young
- Delenn's claim in "Atonement" that the most dangerous enemy is the
- one you know nothing about. Now the face of the enemy is the one
- you know all too well, one which you take for granted until it's
- revealed that the face is actually a mask."
- Yep. It's one thing facing implacable, vast enemies...it's quite
- another when you friend betrays you. That's personal.
- * There isn't that much direct, personal violence in the show. My
- feeling is that if you do that a lot, it loses any potential for
- impact. You only pull out that card when you really need it, to
- best effect...don't waste it. It's like harsh language, after
- you've heard someone going on using all the more remarkable
- Anglo-Saxon words for a while, it loses all impact.
- * "I thought the fight was a bit too long for much the same reason
- as you. All I can suggest is that John's metabolism isn't "normal"
- any more, and perhaps this had an effect. (And maybe the bullyboys
- were doing less damage than we think, simply to prolong the
- "fun".)"
- 1) It was for dramatic/stylistic effect. Not everything done with
- some style has to have a scientific explanation.
- 2) Having been mugged myself, time expands and slows down.
- 3) It's the TV cliche that fights are over in a second. Ask anyone
- who's ever been in a real knock-down fight. It goes on a heck of a
- lot longer than we showed here. When I got mugged it went on for
- 10 minutes.
- One of the ironies in other messages on this (not this one here
- specifically) is that some have noted the fast-paced editing,
- which is supposedly associated with music video/short attention
- span material...and then turn around and say it wasn't over fast
- enough.
- * _Was Lyta's story the secret from her past alluded to by Bester in
- [55]"Epiphanies?"_
- No, Franklin's comment to Lyta didn't involve her past, though we
- will find out more about that in a bit.
- * _Was Bester's salute a "Prisoner" reference?_
- Nope, not a Prisoner homage at all, in any way.
- * _Why mess Edgars' place up so thoroughly?_
- They wanted it to look like it was done by the Resistance; too
- much "attention" to his death would've drawn attention to the
- Corps.
- * Wade specificially says Lise wasn't there when they got back, so
- that eliminates her from the scenario.
- * _Why haven't the other races had conflict between their telepaths
- and their normals?_
- Obviously some, like the Minbari, dealt with it more easily than
- others; and in some places it came through Vorlon interference,
- while in others it came about naturally.
- * "Wade had a great line about the clash of homo sapiens and
- Neanderthals in Carthage. Was this line inspired by some of the
- recent Neanderthal finds? Or was this part of your orignial
- conception for the story?"
- Not recent stuff, just a general knowledge of this area.
- "Did Edgars really believe the Earthgov propaganda that Sheridan
- was operating under the malignant influence of aliens?
- Nope.
- "Is Bester really done with Garibaldi?"
- For the moment.
- "One of the captains of the Earth vessels is named Leo Frank. Was
- this a deliberate historical reference?"
- Not intentionally.
- "Franklin and Number One seem to have cooled their relationship.
- Any further developments in the works here?"
- Any more personal stuff got set aside when Franklin showed up a)
- with another female, and b) she was a teep. When #1 calms down,
- they might take another shot at it.
- "Lastly, there is a bit of irony in the fact that the stage for
- Sheridan's capture is set when he steps aboard his old ship, the
- Agamemnon. Agamemnon was the supreme commander of the Greek forces
- at Troy, who survived that long war, but who was betrayed and
- murdered by his wife when he returned home. He blindly and
- arrogantly stepped into a trap, as Sheridan also seemed to do."
- Yeah...that's one of many reasons why I picked that
- image/reference. It plays on a LOT of levels in the story.
- * _Wasn't Edgars' complex guarded to keep people from leaving
- without permission?_
- If anybody could slip away, Garibaldi could.
- * _Ivanova quoted Sheridan as saying, "The person is expendable. The
- job is not." But in fact, it was Sinclair who said that, in
- [56]"War Without End."_
- But then, if I did everything perfectly, wouldn't it be boring?
-
-
- [62][Next]
-
- [63]Last update: September 14, 1997
-
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- 36. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/021.html
- 37. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/058.html
- 38. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/078.html
- 39. http://bible.gospelcom.net/bible?Matthew+26:14-16
- 40. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/082.html
- 41. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/078.html
- 42. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/080.html
- 43. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/082.html
- 44. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/082.html
- 45. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/080.html
- 46. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/078.html
- 47. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/076.html
- 48. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/048.html
- 49. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/073.html
- 50. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/041.html
- 51. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/077.html
- 52. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/006.html#NO.13
- 53. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/080.html
- 54. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/000.html
- 55. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/073.html
- 56. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/060.html
- 57. file://localhost/lurk/lurker.html
- 58. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/083.html#TOP
- 59. file://localhost/cgi-bin/uncgi/lgmail
- 60. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/episodes.php
- 61. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/082.html
- 62. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/084.html
- 63. file://localhost/lurk/lastmod.html
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