Barb,
Try this:
http://www.maxdesign.com.au/jobs/css/ppc.htm

It is rough as hell and there are many other ways you could do it but it
meets your basic needs. Keep in mind that the recent IE's do not support
min-width.

Russ


> You have all been so patient and immensely helpful as I've waded through
> the creation of the new section of our site.  Here I go again --
> 
> This is probably only going to reveal my total lack of understanding the
> basics of CSS positioning, but you're such generous teachers, I'm going
> to just go out on a limb and reveal my ignorance.
> 
> Here's a sample page:
> 
> www.pcc.com/benchmark/
> 
> The challenge (s):
> 1) keep the page as 'liquid' as possible
> 2) make the #navcontainer and #rh-col line up at the top edges,
> regardless of how deep the #hdr div gets when someone decides to
> increase font-size.
> 3) maintain a minimum width on the #rh-col so images that appear in some
> of the other pages using the same layout don't get messed up.  (I think
> the min-width should be about 450px)
> 
> I'm getting the feeling that there's something very basic about absolute
> vs relative positioning that I am just missing.
> 
> Thanks in advance for all advice.
> 
> Barb
>

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