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<FONT COLOR=38E897>If you replace all your spaces with non-breaking spaces (use the &nbsp; HTML function), you can format it even better, so that everything you want to be on one line will fit on one line. I'd recommend that you lay out your links table with a word processor, set in the typeface you want to use, to make sure that you like the way the lines align with each other.
My <FONT COLOR="#00FFE8" :bou::bou::bou::bou::bou::bou::bou:Over="this.color='#BFFFFA';" :bou::bou::bou::bou::bou::bou::bou:Out="this.color='#00FFE8';" :bou::bou::bou::bou::bou::bou::bou:Down="this.color='#BFFFFA';" :bou::bou::bou::bou::bou::bou::bou:Up="this.color='#00FFE8';">current Holy Sword Legend 3 page</FONT>, which is very graphics-intensive and may take a long time to load, has an example of this technique; every space in the column is a non-breaking space, and the column is only slightly wider than the longest line of text. If you use <TD WIDTH=0> for such a column, then assuming every line is formatted with non-breaking spaces, it will be exactly as long as it has to be and no longer. In other words, every time there's a breakable space or a line break, a new line will start; words connected by non-breaking spaces, however, will stretch the length of the line if necessary.
Dunno if that'll help any, but it might make things look somewhat tidier. It's not particularly fun to change all your spaces into ASCII codes though, and it certainly doesn't look particularly pretty in the source view.
Peace
The Man<FONT COLOR=38E897>
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