Outlook 2003 Strips Carriage Returns off of Incoming Mail When Viewing the Item
Except this is an HTML message it is removing the line breaks from. I tried
this and resent the message to myself. The line breaks are removed when you
view the message, but reappear, for example when you forward it.
R
"Vince Averello [MVP-Outlook]" wrote in message
...
Do you have the option to remove extra line breaks checked he Tools
menu
Options Email
"John Smith" wrote in message
. ..
Note the article below. When I receive this article in my Outlook inbox,
it displays as if the carriage retruens are not there when in fact they
are. Compare this to Gmail where the aricle displays just as it does
below. Why and how to I fix this so the article displays with the
carriage returns.
Taking the Least of You
By REBECCA SKLOOT
Published: April 16, 2006
The Tissue-Industrial Complex
Anna O'Connell couldn't find Ted. She stood bent at the waist on a frigid
afternoon last December, her head and all its fuzzy red hair crammed into
an old stand-up freezer that looked like something you get milk from at
the corner sto tall, white with a bit of rust and a pull handle. That
freezer is the first thing you see when you walk into the Fox Chase
Cancer Center laboratory in Philadelphia, where O'Connell has spent
decades as a staff scientist. She pushed aside vial after vial. "I know
we still have him somewhere," she yelled, her head still inside the
freezer. "We've got serum from, like, 450,000 people."
O'Connell grabbed a ragged cardboard box the size of a paperback book.
"This is my treasure box," she said. "I bet Ted's in here." The box held
56 tiny glass vials filled with clear blood serum - some from patients,
others from laboratory animals, all taken and kept for hepatitis
research. Around each vial, on a thin piece of tape, someone had
scribbled information about each sample. "That's duck," O'Connell said,
raising a vial to eye level. She dropped it and grabbed the next one.
"Woodchuck." She shook her head. "Geez, somebody should organize this."
She lifted vials one at a time, reading labels, dropping them back into
the box and muttering, "Duck. . .duck. . .human, not Ted. . .duck. .
.woodchuck. . .human, not Ted.. . ."
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