|
|
|
[1][ISMAP]-[2][Home]
|
|
|
|
### GUIDE ### [3][Background] [4][Synopsis] [5][Credits] [6][Episode
|
|
List] [7][Previous] [8][Next]
|
|
|
|
_Contents:_ [9]Overview - [10]Backplot - [11]Questions - [12]Analysis
|
|
- [13]Notes - [14]JMS
|
|
|
|
_________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
Overview
|
|
|
|
Talia's old Psi Corps instructor, the victim of a secret
|
|
experiment, is the target of a manhunt involving the Psi-Cops.
|
|
Catherine wants to survey a promising planet for possible mining,
|
|
but G'Kar warns her to stay away. [15]Walter Koenig as Bester.
|
|
[16]Felicity Waterman as Kelsey. [17]William Allen Young as Jason
|
|
Ironheart.
|
|
|
|
[18]P5 Rating: [19]8.44
|
|
|
|
Production number: 110
|
|
Original air date: March 2, 1994
|
|
|
|
Written by J. Michael Straczynski
|
|
Directed by Bruce Seth Green
|
|
|
|
Watch For:
|
|
|
|
* A peculiar [20]salute.
|
|
|
|
_________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
Backplot
|
|
|
|
* Jason Ironheart was Talia's instructor and lover at the Psi Corps
|
|
Training Academy. After she graduated and went into commercial
|
|
telepathy, they kept in touch by letter - until a year ago when
|
|
his letters stopped. As Ironheart recounts, he volunteered to
|
|
undergo genetic and biochemical modification he thought was
|
|
intended to make him a stronger telepath. The experiment turned
|
|
out to be an attempt to make him [21]a stable telekinetic, and it
|
|
after many months and hundreds of injections it worked -
|
|
stunningly! Ironheart became able to see through any mind like
|
|
glass, and manipulate matter and energy both. He discovered then
|
|
that those in charge were after offensive military applications
|
|
for TK, like secret assassination. So, he killed the head
|
|
researcher (the only person who could duplicate the work) and fled
|
|
to Babylon 5, still undergoing changes to his mind and body.
|
|
* What is it like to be a telepath?
|
|
_Talia:_ "It's like staying in a hotel room where you can just
|
|
hear the people talking next door. You can try and shut it out,
|
|
but it's always there. The key is not to eavesdrop unless you're
|
|
invited... casual thoughts are very easy to block, but strong
|
|
emotions have a way of slipping through."
|
|
"Do you know what it's like when telepaths make love, commander?
|
|
You drop every defense, and it's all mirrors, reflecting each
|
|
others' feelings, deeper and deeper, until somewhere along the
|
|
line your souls mix, and it's a feeling so profound it makes you
|
|
hurt. It's the only moment in a telepath's life when you no longer
|
|
hear the voices."
|
|
* _Ironheart:_ "We all thought Psi Corps was controlled by the
|
|
government, but that's changing. The Corps is starting to pull the
|
|
strings behind the scenes; they're more powerful than you could
|
|
begin to imagine. Telepaths make the ultimate blackmailers..."
|
|
"The Psi Corps is dedicated to one thing: control. Control over
|
|
telepaths, the economy, the courts, over matter, over thought
|
|
itself."
|
|
A [22]transcript of Ironheart's meeting with Sinclair is
|
|
available.
|
|
|
|
Unanswered Questions
|
|
|
|
* How much of what Ironheart said was true? He _was_ mentally
|
|
unstable, to say the least. He was also very motivated to gather
|
|
fast allies.
|
|
* _G'Kar_ (to Catherine): "Let me pass on to you the one thing I've
|
|
learned about this place. No-one here is exactly what he appears.
|
|
Not Mollari, not Delenn, not Sinclair. And not me." What does
|
|
G'Kar know that we don't? (cf [23]"And The Sky Full Of Stars"
|
|
[Delenn, Sinclair], [24]"By Any Means Necessary" [G'Kar])
|
|
* Just before he departs, _Ironheart_ says to Talia: "In memory of
|
|
love, I give you a gift, the only gift I have left to give." The
|
|
gift, as she soon discovers, was at least the beginnings of
|
|
telekinesis. What manner of telepath has she become?
|
|
* What did Ironheart mean by his final words to Sinclair? "Good-bye
|
|
commander. I will see you again, in a million years."
|
|
|
|
Analysis
|
|
|
|
* If Ironheart's figures are true, and if there are 20 billion human
|
|
beings in existence, then there should be a thousand people who
|
|
are (or will become) stable telekinetics. If the Psi Corps'
|
|
pursuit of a stable TK justified the extreme measures they
|
|
attempted with Ironheart, then something about naturally occurring
|
|
TK's must make them unusable. It could be that use of TK
|
|
invariably drives one insane, or perhaps natural TK is
|
|
insufficiently fine-controlled enough for their purposes.
|
|
* Whatever it was that the Psi Corps scientists did to Ironheart, it
|
|
wasn't more than physical alterations to his brain and body. Yet
|
|
those alterations started a process that led to his essentially
|
|
becoming a demigod. This could represent a latent potential in
|
|
humanity as a whole, of which iceberg telepathy is merely the tip.
|
|
Or perhaps not - "This is a power that we were never meant to
|
|
have," Ironheart tells Sinclair, "we're not ready for it."
|
|
* Ivanova hates the Psi Corps with a passion (understandably - cf
|
|
[25]"Midnight on the Firing Line") "Good ol' Psi Corps. You never
|
|
cease to amaze me - all the moral fiber of Jack the Ripper. What
|
|
do you do in your spare time, juggle babies over a fire pit? Oops,
|
|
there goes another calculated risk!"
|
|
* In spite of this, Ivanova gives Talia a glass of water after she
|
|
comes through the ordeal of being scanned by Bester and Kelsey.
|
|
Ivanova's hatred is tempered with compassion for individuals. (see
|
|
[26]"jms speaks")
|
|
* By threatening to hold him accountable for endangering the station
|
|
and causing the death of his partner, Sinclair strong-arms Bester
|
|
into omitting from his report mention of Ironheart's real fate and
|
|
Talia's willful collaboration. However, this can only be an
|
|
agreement about what gets made _official._ Just as folks on
|
|
Babylon 5 know full well that Something happened to Ironheart
|
|
(with the willing help of both Talia and Sinclair) the right folks
|
|
in the Psi Corps should know the same through Bester's _unofficial_
|
|
report.
|
|
|
|
Notes
|
|
|
|
* Sinclair mentions to Catherine in the morning that he's got a
|
|
budget meeting with the construction guild that day, in which
|
|
he'll have to make some cuts to which he's not looking forward.
|
|
([27]"By Any Means Necessary")
|
|
* Universal Terraform: a mega-corporation that explores and prepares
|
|
new worlds for colonization or exploitation.
|
|
* The procedure for evaluating a newly discovered planet: first, an
|
|
unmanned sensor probe launched by the exploring ship assesses
|
|
gross features and composition. If that's promising, a manned
|
|
survey is undertaken to determine its value for various purposes.
|
|
Finally, if the corporation wants to continue, a life sciences
|
|
probe is sent out to determine the legality of exploitation. (If
|
|
there are sentient species present then the planet is off-limits.)
|
|
(see [28]"jms speaks")
|
|
* Due to an EA shortage of the material "Quantium-40," jumpgate
|
|
construction is backed up 6 months. Catherine's survey mission to
|
|
Sigma 957 is largely to determine whether this material is present
|
|
on the planet.
|
|
* The being that appeared at Sigma 957 appeared to enter and leave
|
|
through its own jumpgate. It may have been there for the Q-40.
|
|
* Just as the Narn fighters match up with Catherine's ship, part of
|
|
it sloughs off as it burns up in the atmosphere. The fighters are
|
|
unaffected; presumably they are atmosphere-capable ships.
|
|
* Rent for a spartan studio on Babylon 5 is 500 credits per week.
|
|
* Psi corps ratings:
|
|
_P5_ - level of commercial telepaths. Can easily detect deception
|
|
and other surface thoughts at close range. Deeper probing is
|
|
possible but difficult.
|
|
_P10_ - level of Psi Corps trainers. Can observe the mental
|
|
actions of other telepaths, block some scans, cut through some
|
|
blocks, perform long-range scans, and may have some fringe skills.
|
|
_P12_ - level of Psi Cops. Can communicate smoothly with normals
|
|
via telepathy. Two Psi Cops can invasively probe a P5.
|
|
* Stronger telepaths have a _harder_ time shutting out "the voices".
|
|
* Upon graduation from the Academy all telepaths take a telekinesis
|
|
test - it's a much sought-after skill. .1% of human beings have
|
|
some level of telepathic ability, and only .01% of _them_ have TK,
|
|
half of whom are clinically insane. (see [29]Analysis)
|
|
* Most telepaths have _fewer_ human rights than normals. They're
|
|
forbidden to possess psi abilities unless they're in the Psi Corps
|
|
or in prison ([30]"Midnight on the Firing Line"). They're required
|
|
to submit to scans by Psi Cops, and aren't even allowed to have
|
|
fleeting bodily contact with normals, since that would raise the
|
|
chance in inadvertent scans. (see [31]"jms speaks")
|
|
* Psi Cops are afforded greater latitude than other telepaths, "in
|
|
the interest of efficiency." For example, they can perform at
|
|
least surface scans on normals without permission.
|
|
* As he leaves, Bester gives Sinclair an odd salute - a circle of
|
|
thumb and forefinger at the forehead - and says, "Be seeing you,
|
|
commander." This is tribute paid to one of jms's favorite shows,
|
|
"The Prisoner," in which the line was identical but the
|
|
hand-motion framed the eye instead. An appropriate twist for a
|
|
telepath salute!
|
|
* Continuity glitch: After Ironheart arrives in his quarters, he
|
|
pours some water into a cup. When the cup is knocked over by his
|
|
mindquake a few seconds later, it's empty.
|
|
|
|
jms speaks
|
|
|
|
* In a tip of the cap to an SF writer, the Koenig character in "Mind
|
|
War" is named Bester.
|
|
* The direction and intent and background of the Psi Corps is *very*
|
|
different from Bester's "The Demolished Man." What may cause some
|
|
of the confusion is that when I decided to name the Psi Cop we'll
|
|
be seeing, knowing of Alfie's work in the genre in general, and
|
|
knowing that he was a close friend of Harlan's, I decided it would
|
|
be a nice testimony to the man to name the Psi Cop Bester. There's
|
|
nothing beyond that.
|
|
* Re: my favorite thing about this episode...it's that when all is
|
|
said and done, *nobody knows anything*. Bester doesn't know what
|
|
Ironheart is turning into; Sinclair doesn't know if Ironheart was
|
|
really telling the truth or not; nobody knows where Ironheart
|
|
went; nobody knows what the alien ship is/who they were...the
|
|
closest I can come to is to compare it to writing a mystery novel,
|
|
without revealing the killer, but *without* frustrating anyone in
|
|
the process, because there's *closure*.
|
|
* ...it was my intent to imply in the scene with the guard and
|
|
Bester ("nothing, just a drill") that he DID scan the guard's
|
|
mind. He found out what he was hiding (which is how he managed to
|
|
show up to try and cut Ironheart off from his escape), exchanged a
|
|
glance with Kelsey, and headed away quickly.
|
|
* Bester wasn't killed because a) it took a *lot* out of Ironheart
|
|
to take out Kelsey, and b) Bester *shot him* prior to being taken
|
|
down, and the pain and trauma of being shot has a tendency to have
|
|
an adverse effect on one; it took all his strength just to knock
|
|
Bester down before collapsing to the floor, his energy (as you can
|
|
see in the film) fading away....
|
|
* We'll definitely see Bester again, probably twice next season, in
|
|
one capacity or another. (And we'll *hear* about him once more
|
|
this season.) ([32]"Eyes")
|
|
* Nope, Jason Ironheart will not be seen again, insofar as I know. I
|
|
don't like beings with that much power running around the
|
|
plotline....
|
|
* Telepaths are the ultimate minority, and when it comes to the use
|
|
of their talents, and the protection of the rights of the
|
|
hysterical majority, their rights don't mean a whole hell of a
|
|
lot.
|
|
* Thanks for noticing that. Yes, it *was* very important (to me, at
|
|
least, whether or not anyone noticed it), that Ivanova was the one
|
|
who handed Talia the water, and had that brief moment with her.
|
|
For those who understand their relationship, it adds a tiny layer;
|
|
for those who don't, because the dialogue keeps on going over it,
|
|
it's not obtrusive.
|
|
* The episode of "Mind War" broadcast henceforth will be the one
|
|
with slight alteration.
|
|
* In the pursuit in the teaser, you could see one of the binary
|
|
stars THROUGH Ironheart's ship; we deleted that shot and replaced
|
|
it.
|
|
* We discovered, when we went to put in the revised CGI, that the
|
|
international versions had already been made and transferred, and
|
|
it would be nearly impossible to recall that part of the
|
|
process...so it was left alone rather than have multiple versions
|
|
of the same episode floating around.
|
|
* Funny incident today, though, also at lunch. Walter Koenig joined
|
|
some of the cast members at their table for lunch, and as he came
|
|
to the table, they all stood up at attention. When asked why, they
|
|
explained that it's protocol for junior officers to stand when a
|
|
senior officer comes to the table. It was kind of a nice moment.
|
|
* Today, Walter Koenig's 2nd day working in the B5 universe, as a
|
|
Psi Cop in "Mind War." He's doing well, taking part in some very
|
|
difficult scenes (fight scenes and the ilke), and it's a very
|
|
powerful performance, not at ALL what people have seen before.
|
|
He's a terrific performer when given a role with some meat to it.
|
|
And the dailies look great. I think this episode will wake up a
|
|
lot of people who have never seen Walter as anything other than
|
|
Chekov.
|
|
* Walter decided that an interesting character trait for Bester
|
|
would be if this skilled psi cop had a useless left hand.
|
|
* It's a funny thought, but knowing Walter as I do, I can say
|
|
without fear of contradiction that he was *not* doing Shatner.
|
|
Given the chance here to do something *utterly* outside ST, which
|
|
was his hope, and our pleasure to provide, he wouldn't do this,
|
|
and having spoken with him at some length about his character and
|
|
his performance, know that he *didn't* do this.
|
|
* Chekov is just one character, which was created by another, and
|
|
played by Walter. Agreed, too many people have seen him as just
|
|
this one person; but there's a talented actor with a great range
|
|
behind that character, able to do *many* other things. I'm glad
|
|
we've been able to let him show that range a little.
|
|
* "JMS is on an anti-typecasting crusade."
|
|
That's actually true, in a lot of ways. My sense is that here we
|
|
have many actors who created enduring works because they were good
|
|
at what they did; they're *good actors*. But because they were so
|
|
good at it, they got typecast as only able to play that. How many
|
|
people snickered, wrongly, when they heard Walter was going to be
|
|
Bester? "Chekhov in the Psi Corps," was the usual lament.
|
|
Until they *saw* him. And saw what he could do.
|
|
To work against the typecasting is simply payment on a debt to
|
|
those who created enduring characters. And I'll continue to do it
|
|
wherever and whenever I can. (Look for Robert Englund in an
|
|
[33]upcoming episode playing a very different sort of character
|
|
than he's played elsewhere lately.)
|
|
* We'd initially offered Walter the role of Knight Two in "Sky," but
|
|
when his health prohibited using him, we went to Patrick McGoohan,
|
|
who loved the script, wanted to do it, but was going to be out of
|
|
the country at the time of shooting. We then shifted Walter to
|
|
"Mind War."
|
|
* "Commander" wasn't dubbed onto Walter. That was Ironheart speaking
|
|
with his back to us.
|
|
* We'll see more on Talia's additional talents in year two.
|
|
* Ironheart was created, as one of many reasons, to exemplify a
|
|
problem that is growing within Psi Corps. There will be other
|
|
symptoms, though not as grand as that one.
|
|
* The Psi Corps doesn't exist just to help telepaths avoid
|
|
infringing on the privacy of others. They service the business
|
|
community, the military, some other governmental agencies...it's
|
|
important that they control, regulate, and profit from telepaths.
|
|
You can't just leave the corps.
|
|
* "Mind War" is important to the arc because Psi Corps, and certain
|
|
aspects of it, is important to the arc.
|
|
* Some of the events in "Mind War" are significant indeed.
|
|
* The ant was paid strictly according to SAG rules (Screen Ants
|
|
Guild).
|
|
* But for the other stuff...no, there's no in-joke in Sigma 957, but
|
|
***CONGRATULATIONS!*** You are the FIRST person to pick up on the
|
|
Native American line that Ironheart quotes when he goes up against
|
|
Kelsey. (And yes, I believe it is ojibwe in origin.) I've always
|
|
considered it a very powerful line (a prayer of protection against
|
|
one's enemies), and wanted to use it. That seemed the perfect
|
|
opportunity to do so.
|
|
* "Who watches the watchmen" is an old Latin phrase, sometimes
|
|
translated as "who guards the guards?" Given sufficient time I
|
|
could probably dig up the origin of the phrase; it's fairly
|
|
common.
|
|
* My source on this was the original, classical quotation.
|
|
* Congratulations. I was wondering when anyone was going to hit on
|
|
the CSICOP reference. I was looking for a good name for the pit
|
|
bulls of the Psi Corps, and thought it made for a great play on
|
|
words, and a very obscure almost-pun, to name them Psi-Cops.
|
|
* _Talia's stress during Psi Cop scan_
|
|
It's because they dig *deep*. And to another telepath, who is
|
|
sensitive to begin with...it hurts bigtime.
|
|
* A Psi-rating comes through training and examination of a person's
|
|
skills over time. Ivanova's mother never went through the full
|
|
sequence to get rated. (Although they generally don't bother with
|
|
P1s through P2s, so she was at least a P3 or above, in terms of
|
|
raw ability.) A psi rating isn't hereditary.
|
|
* Talia is a P5, as Lyta was in the pilot.
|
|
* The number of psi's in each category, from 1-12, gets rarer as you
|
|
get higher. Lots of folks have a minimal tendency, very few have
|
|
any real talent.
|
|
* Yes, the abilities are often discrete; a TK may not be able to
|
|
scan anyone's thoughts.
|
|
* You don't have to read another book to "get it" re: psi's making
|
|
love. Perhaps her problem was more with the making love part than
|
|
the psi part. Haven't read Julian May's book. It's just the
|
|
obvious answer to what happens if and when telepaths make love: if
|
|
they truly open up, then you're going to get a mirror effect. Have
|
|
your lady friend stand between two mirrors and look at the effect.
|
|
This ain't rocket science.
|
|
* Scanning only hurts if it's a deep scan, trying to dredge out lost
|
|
or buried thoughts, or if the other person is resisting. It can be
|
|
anything from a headache to a migraine in intensity in general..
|
|
* There will be no more Ironhearts, and that character will not
|
|
return.
|
|
* The vaporized Starfuries *weren't* from B5, they were a separate
|
|
wing not attached to this station. Black Omega is a special forces
|
|
unit.
|
|
* Ironheart blew out the Omega starfuries.
|
|
* No, this [the alien] isn't the mysterious sixth race.
|
|
* And in the case of Sigma 957, one can put in a gate, start to
|
|
explore that sector of space...and discover to your chagrin that
|
|
there is one planet where you don't dare go near. It's not like
|
|
they *knew* that there was a problem on Sigma 957 before they (the
|
|
Narns) put the gate in; that was discovered only afterward. Sort
|
|
of like buying a house and then discovering that one room is
|
|
haunted; you seal off the room and tell the kids not to go near
|
|
it.
|
|
* You don't leave one gate and fly light years to another; you use
|
|
the same gate for going in and going out. Explorer Ship A comes
|
|
out of hyperspace; looks around; decides that there are planets in
|
|
this area that are worth possible colonizing, exploitation, that
|
|
sort of thing; it's a very quick overview. (Or they go to systems
|
|
that have been already selected.) They construct a gate, finish
|
|
the job, and move on. Other ships can now use this gate for
|
|
entering and leaving this system. Is this clearer?
|
|
* The gate was set up in what was believed to be a reasonably
|
|
fertile and useful sector of space; the explorer craft can't take
|
|
too long in any one area. They find likely areas for exploitation,
|
|
take a fast look around, drop a gate, and move on. This allows
|
|
other ships to come in and scope out the place in detail. That's
|
|
when they ran into whatever's walking around Sigma 957. (And it's
|
|
not there all the time, only from time to time.)
|
|
* An Explorer-class vessel looks for areas that look like likely
|
|
prospects for exploitation, or which are good for logistical or
|
|
other reasons, do a fast survey, drop a gate and move on. Nobody
|
|
*knew* about the problems in Sigma 957 until well after the gate
|
|
was in place.
|
|
Generally, the race that builds the gate, owns it.
|
|
* Re: the difference as to why Sinclair reacted the way he
|
|
did...they SPOKE to him in his head, the same way they did to the
|
|
guard in customs. This is different than just "listening" to
|
|
someone's thoughts, so to speak.
|
|
* The one thing that to me always typified SF was the sense of
|
|
*wonder*. Of something mysterious out there. And that is the one
|
|
thing that I feel is so missing from much of TV SF; not to pick on
|
|
ST, but the reality is that going from world to world seems like
|
|
going from 7-11 to 7-11. It's all established, there's not much
|
|
mystery. (Not in all cases, I'm sure that one or two could be
|
|
found, but in general.) There should be *differences*, and things
|
|
we don't understand and will *never* fully understand. (For me,
|
|
one of the best episodes in this regard is "Mind War,"
|
|
specifically the tag of the episode, which still gives me a shiver
|
|
even though I've now seen it over a dozen times.)
|
|
* Actually, no...Catherine Sakai is based more closely on another
|
|
woman of my acquaintance, with whom I was involved for quite some
|
|
time. And that's all you'll get out of me on the subject.
|
|
* Incidentally..."Mind War" has come out so well that it looks like
|
|
we're going to move it up in the schedule a bit. It was originally
|
|
slated to run about episode 10 or so, but the studio is so hot on
|
|
it that it'll probably run #6, right after "Parliament." And
|
|
Walter has agreed to be the voice-over and on-camera narrator for
|
|
the Behind the Scenes/Making of Babylon 5 documentary.
|
|
* Re: moving "Mind War" up...no, doesn't affect continuity at all.
|
|
If it did, it wouldn't have gotten moved. It's what's called in
|
|
the biz a "moveable piece," able to go *almost* anywhere in the
|
|
schedule, as long as it's after episode 3 and before episode 15,
|
|
since stuff in the first few set it up, and 15 pays off part of
|
|
it.
|
|
|
|
_________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
Originally compiled by Matthew Ryan _matt@uhs.uchicago.edu_
|
|
|
|
[39][Next]
|
|
|
|
[40]Last update: January 13, 1998
|
|
|
|
References
|
|
|
|
1. file://localhost/cgi-bin/imagemap/titlebar
|
|
2. LYNXIMGMAP:file://localhost/lurk/maps/maps.html#titlebar
|
|
3. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/background/006.shtml
|
|
4. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/synops/006.html
|
|
5. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/credits/006.html
|
|
6. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/episodes.php
|
|
7. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/005.html
|
|
8. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/007.html
|
|
9. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/006.html#OV
|
|
10. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/006.html#BP
|
|
11. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/006.html#UQ
|
|
12. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/006.html#AN
|
|
13. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/006.html#NO
|
|
14. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/006.html#JS
|
|
15. http://us.imdb.com/M/person-exact?+Koenig,+Walter
|
|
16. http://us.imdb.com/M/person-exact?+Waterman,+Felicity
|
|
17. http://us.imdb.com/M/person-exact?+Young,+William+Allen
|
|
18. file://localhost/lurk/p5/intro.html
|
|
19. file://localhost/lurk/p5/006
|
|
20. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/006.html#NO.13
|
|
21. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/006.html#AN.a
|
|
22. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/006.ironheart.html
|
|
23. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/008.html
|
|
24. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/012.html
|
|
25. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/001.html
|
|
26. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/006.html#JMS.8
|
|
27. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/012.html
|
|
28. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/006.html#JMS.9
|
|
29. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/006.html#AN.1
|
|
30. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/001.html
|
|
31. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/006.html#JMS.7
|
|
32. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/016.html
|
|
33. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/063.html
|
|
34. file://localhost/lurk/lurker.html
|
|
35. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/006.html#TOP
|
|
36. file://localhost/cgi-bin/uncgi/lgmail
|
|
37. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/episodes.php
|
|
38. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/005.html
|
|
39. file://localhost/home/woodstock/hyperion/docs/lurk/guide/007.html
|
|
40. file://localhost/lurk/lastmod.html
|