> Sorry it won't work better for you, but your requirement is rather unique.
> As I understand the situation it would be very difficult to come up with an
> effective means of automating due to the variability involved. Even the
> techniques offered at this link won't do you much good for the graphics, but
> may come in handy if you're not already familiar with them:
>
>
http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/Formatting/CleanWebText.htm>
> The only other suggestion I can offer is to use the Browse Objects feature
> (bottom of the Vertical Scrollbar). Click the round button between the 2
> sets of arrows, select By Graphic, then use the arrows to navigate one
> graphic at a time through the doc. You'll still have to click the in-lines
> to select & delete them (or press Delete twice) but at least it will speed
> things up a little rather than having to manually scroll & search.
>
> HTH |:>)
> Bob Jones
> [MVP] Office:Mac
>
> On 6/23/07 12:02 PM, in article
> 1182614541.388633.258...[ at ]z28g2000prd.googlegroups.com, "Hari"
>
>
>
> <excel_h...[ at ]yahoo.com> wrote:
> > On Jun 23, 7:43 pm, CyberTaz <onlygeneralt...[ at ]com.cast.net> wrote:
> >> One of the "little-known secrets weapons" :)...
>
> >> Go to Tools>Customize - Commands, select Drawing in the Categories list,
> >> then locate the Select Multiple Objects command from the Commands list. Add
> >> it to a toolbar & see if that doesn't help - as long as the object isn't set
> >> to In Line With Text.
>
> >> HTH |:>)
> >> Bob Jones
> >> [MVP] Office:Mac
>
> >> On 6/23/07 9:55 AM, in article
> >> 1182606947.677756.291...[ at ]j4g2000prf.googlegroups.com, "Hari"
>
> >> <excel_h...[ at ]yahoo.com> wrote:
> >>> On Jun 23, 6:18 pm, "Shauna Kelly"
> >>> <ShaunaKe...[ at ]SendNoSpamToShaunaKelly.com> wrote:
> >>>> Hi Hari
>
> >>>> There's no easy way to select all graphics in a Word document at once, as
> >>>> one can in Excel.
>
> >>>> The little yellow things are an indication that there was script in the
> >>>> website at the point where the yellow scroll thing now appears. The script
> >>>> may have been creating part of the content on the page, or manipulating
> >>>> menus or doing other fancy stuff.
>
> >>>> If you only want the text from the web site, then use Edit > Paste Special
> >>>> and choose to paste as unformatted text. That will paste only the text of
> >>>> the web page, and you won't see the yellow icon things.
>
> >>>> Hope this helps.
>
> >>>> Shauna Kelly. Microsoft MVP.
http://www.shaunakelly.com/word>
> >>>> "Hari" <excel_h...[ at ]yahoo.com> wrote in message
>
> >>>>news:1182602569.451434.65990[ at ]d30g2000prg.googlegroups.com...
>
> >>>>> Hi,
>
> >>>>> Im pasting some text (containing links etc) from a web-page to a word
> >>>>> document.
>
> >>>>> It also pastes some graphic (yellow background with paper scroll like
> >>>>> sign) on to my word document. This graphic is not visible in the web-
> >>>>> page itself. When I right click on this grahic it offers Cut, copy,
> >>>>> Paste and View Script
>
> >>>>> I want to select all graphic at one go and delete from my doc.
>
> >>>>> a) How to do it in word?
> >>>>> b) Why are they coming in the first place
> >>>>> c) When I encounter such issue while pasting in excel, I use F5 -->
> >>>>> Special --> Objects and it selects all graphic at one go for
> >>>>> subsequent deletion. Is there no shortcut in word to select same type
> >>>>> object etc?
>
> >>>>> Please guide me (Word pro 2003)
>
> >>>>> hp- Hide quoted text -
>
> >>>> - Show quoted text -
>
> >>> Shauna,
>
> >>> Thanks a lot for the response. Actually I have some other graphic/
> >>> icons etc which are visible in the web-page and I need those in the
> >>> word document. So I cannot do a unformmated paste as I will lose the
> >>> valid graphics as well.
>
> >>> Is there a macro way to select (and delete) specifically the "script"
> >>> kind of a graphic. If the type of this graphic is known then one can
> >>> probably loop through the entire doc (what is the function for
> >>> counting the number of graphics in a word doc), select each one of
> >>> them in turn and check whether the type corresponds to the one I dont
> >>> want and delete it.
>
> >>> I selected the graphic and clicked on the control tool-box properties
> >>> but it seems to display the properties for entire document and not for
> >>> this particular script graphic?
>
> >>> Im asking this because many times I copy-paste stuff from web to word
> >>> and would like to have the ability to remove them quickly (possibly
> >>> macro)
>
> >>> hp- Hide quoted text -
>
> >> - Show quoted text -
>
> > Bob,
>
> > Thanks for the secret. It will be useful for me in cases where object
> > isnt inline. Sadly, in this case the annoying yellow scroll script
> > object is inline with text. Thats why when I use the select multiple
> > object feature no check-boxes are available for selecting the specific
> > objects.
>
> > hp- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -