A subscriber, Mary Doe, set her subscription nomail while on vacation. When she returned she sent in a command to reset to Digest (she sent me a copy and it seemed fine). The problem was she started getting two copies of the Digest, where before she got only one. She realized she must have two subscriptions and asked me to deal with the extra one. I checked, and she did have two subs, one BITNET and one Internet. I thought it odd that one set digest command would effect both subscriptions, but figured she hadn't given me all the facts, so sent in a delete for the BITNET subscription, which is what she requested. Before going further, here are addresses that reflect the situation: mdoe@lttlcllg [log in to unmask] I sent in a delete for mdoe@lttlcllg (no wildcards) Both of her subscriptions were promptly deleted, which is not what I expected. I then sent in an add for [log in to unmask] , worrying that it would create both the old subscriptions again rather than just the one wanted, but it didn't. She now has just one subscription with the address she wants. I assume she had the old BITNET subscription, it was set nomail, she got a new Internet subscription which she set nomail for vacation. Then, when she returned and sent in set digest, it worked on both subscriptions. I now believe her account of sending only one set digest command and that it was from her Internet address. In theory as I understand it, it should have effected only the Internet subscription. As I said, both subscriptions were deleted when I sent in a delete specifying the BITNET subscription with no mention of the Internet one and no wildcards were used. I have never seen this happen before. Anyone have any ideas? (The list is at UBVM, running 1.8a) Douglas Winship Austin, Texas [log in to unmask] Secondary AUTOCAT Listowner