Yes Mark. But you should be aware of the fact that some of the national character set letters (accented characters, exclamation point, double quote, square brackets, etc - characters which don't exist in all languages, according to IBM's own private conception of foreign languages) are coded as control characters. I had trouble explaining to a student why he should not sign up with an "i trema" in his name, but with a regular "i". He could not understand why this i trema could hang up a PC 3270 emulator, and why it wouldn't display properly since the PC does have this character. More seriously, I could modify LSV822TO to quote these characters. But what the heck *is* an ASCII control character in EBCDIC? :-( This stupid standard should have said "nonprintable character" or something like that. What are the EBCDIC codes I should quote? X'00'-X'3F' can probably be considered control characters, but what about all the stuff between I and J, R and S, etc? :-( That's where IBM puts the accents usually. Wouldn't it be safer to just translate all the 00-3F range to blanks? I'm wondering what a gateway might do to these characters when bringing them into an ASCII world, and wouldn't be surprised to see them turned into something making the mailfile invalid. Eric