I suppose most people who use screen readers have gotten used to the subtleties of their systems. For instance, I can tell the difference between a comma and a period because of the slightly longer pause after the period. I can't however, tell when there is a new paragraph.. When I press ALT R, the reader goes from the last sentence in one paragraph to the first of the next with the same delay as if there were no new paragraph. I suspect that if I were to listen to the cassettes that came with the program, I would find how to create that longer delay, or maybe how to have it making a clicking sound to indicate a new paragraph. But maybe the information isn't in those cassettes and I will spend a lot of time getting frustrated and searching. So, I usually don't bother and just don't make the change. Is this laziness? Do other people on this list doe the same thing, that is, you want to make a small change, but the hassle of making the change deters you? Anyway, my solution is to ask miscellaneous questions to this list, as the problems come up. Firstly, can somebody here tell me how to program Vocal eyes to pause when it reads two hard returns, with and without a period. For some purposes, I want to define a paragraph break regardless of the presence of a period. Secondly, and maybe this is related, how do I change the pronunciation of individual words in vocal Eyes. It currently reads Jesus as, "hey, Zeus," as if I'm summoning the Greek God. Christ is also pronounced to rhyme with grist. Thirdly, does anybody know how to search for a hard return or a tab in word perfect 6.1. In version 5.1, I simply pressed F2 and then the return button or the tab button. With 6.1, thos keys bring me to a menu choice. I haven't been able to figure out how to enter the hard return code after pressing F2. I just got an idea. Perhaps if I delete a hard return code, I can undelete it when I'm asked what to search for, but maybe that won't work. If somebody knows an easy way, please let me know as soon as possible for this third one. I have to fix a document by tomorrow. Thank you. Peter Seymour