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Re: AD4s are what?
Carl W. Timmons (ctimmons@WANS.NET)
Wed, 30 Dec 1998 18:01:09 -0600
At 07:22 12/29/98 -0500, Steve Cobb wrote:
><snip>
>> I would like to know what button was pushed to get him started.
>>
>It was that one...right there... on the keyboard! Or maybe that one...
>or this... or the one over here... or that one... or.. or... or...
>Aw, c'mon.. I did get a real good laugh out of the whole thing!
><snip>
>
>
>In a way I was both anoid and amused.
>
><snip>
>(Steve, what are these " A D 4- " that keep appearing on your email?)
><snip>
>
>I don't know and it's really starting to bug me.
>They appear only in messages that contain "forward" or "reply" parts. On my
>screen they appear as ">" but when they come back they're "+AD4-". I have
>been trying to hunt this down for about a month, no luck so far.
>The only way I've found to get rid of them is to do what I did here, cut
>and paste and have to write <snip>. Not as easy as just hitting the reply
>button.
>
>Does anyone have any ideas how to stop this? Please post directly to me.
>Thanks.
>
>YIS
>Steve Cobb
>scobb@eznet.net
>SM Troop 42
>"I used to be an Eagle"
>OA Brotherhood
>Iroquois Trail Council
>District Boy Scout Training Chairman
>Webmaster Iroquois Trail Council
>http://freenet.buffalo.edu/~iroquois/
>Since light travels faster than sound, isn't that why some people appear
>bright until you hear them speak?
>
>-
You are using Microsoft Outlook and its default is html. It is inserting
special characters that do not convert to test etc. Find the setting and
set it to text mode only( or something like that). This has happened on
several mailing lists i am on. This mailing list has much nicer individuals
than others and just asked about the special characters if you know what I
mean.
Carl Timmons
Advancement Chair
Troop 708
Fenton, MO
--
*******************************************************************
* * The Moving Finger writes; and, having writ, *
* * Moves on: nor all your Piety nor Wit *
* ctimmons@wans.net * Shall lure it back to cancel half a Line, *
* * Nor all your Tears wash out a Word of it. *
* * Omar Khayyam(1048-1122) *
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