/* Created using Style Master from Western Civilisation CSS1 { 2 2 558 625 } */

/* Make sure you've got a page with well-formed standards based HTML 4.01, link it to this style sheet and you should see the result straight away. */

/* The <html> element is just that, an element. So there's no reason why you can't give it its own style then make it appear around the <body> using a margin - that's all we do here. You might even like to add your own background image properties to this element to get an even more dynamic effect. */

html {
;
}

body {
;
}

/* The following gives a special effect for <h1> elements which works best if there is only one of them on at the top of each page - so they are a sort of title. */

h1 {
;
}

h2 {
;
}

h3 {
border-top: 1px #f6eaba solid;
border-bottom: 1px #f6eaba solid;
}

h4 {
border-top: 1px #f6eaba solid;
border-bottom: 1px #f6eaba solid;
}

/* The following four selectors allow you to select links when they are in the four different states: link - before they have been visited, visited - after it has been visited, hover - when the mouse is over the link, active - when the user clicks the link. */

a:link {
;
}

a:visited {
;
}

a:hover {
;
}

p {
;
}

blockquote {
border-left: 75px #974c35 solid;
}

/* This section of the style sheet has just a few selectors and properties to help you find your way around adding style to regular, standards-based HTML 4.01 tables (ie, a table to be used for presenting tabular information). */

/* The following selector selects the table as a whole and gives it a background color and a border. The last couple of properties might be unfamiliar to you. border-collapse allows you to specify that adjacent borders should collapse onto one another. border-spacing allows you to specify a gap between the borders of cells in a table, or in this case that there should be no gap. You'll find these properties in Style Master on the Display Type Editor. */

table {
display: table;
border-collapse: collapse;
border-spacing: 0px;
; clip:  rect(   )
}

/* Using the <th> element for cells in the top row of an HTML table means that it is easy to apply a different style to this row and make it stand out from the rest of the table. */

th {
text-align: justify;
}
th {
;
}.style1 {  font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 11px; font-style: normal; font-weight: 500; font-variant: normal; text-transform: none; color: #000000; text-decoration: none; line-height: normal}


td { 
;
 } 