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Tom Metro wrote: >> I don't know why, but this email's title shows up with a subject line >> that includes a date, displayed roughly like so: >> >> AUG >> "... with pine, 18 Earthlink ...", except that the date is only about >> 1.5 lines high. >> 1994 > > > The subject line has an embedded newline. > > You can observe this if you view the source. (View | Message Source) > > >> This only shows up in the subject line when viewed in the Inbox of >> Thunderbird version 1.0.7 (20050923). > > > Thunderbird 1.5 on Windows displays it fine, though shows a special > character at the point where the newline appears. > > >> When I open the email, the subject line appears normally. > > > It appears Thunderbird scrubs the line before it displays the > individual message or copies the data to the reply form. > > Tom, Thanks for writing: I figured that there was _something_ there, but now I'm more puzzled than ever. Why would Thunderbird display a control character with a miniature "rubber stamp" version of a date? It's definitely not a single character I'm seeing: it's a glyph of a date with the month on top, the day in the middle, and the year on the bottom, and it occupies about 1.5 vertical lines and about 2 character widths. If it was a "smiley face" or some other artifiact of the IBM character set, I'd understand, but how could a single control character be translated into a specific date? Bill