
@charset "UTF-8";

li a{text-decoration:none; color:white;}

ul.rMenu, ul.rMenu ul, ul.rMenu li, ul.rMenu a
{
	display: block;		/* make these objects blocks so they're easier
				   to deal with */
	margin: 0;
	padding: 0;		/* get rid of padding/margin values that these
				   elements may have by default */
}
ul.rMenu, ul.rMenu li, ul.rMenu ul
{
	list-style: none;	
}
ul.rMenu ul
{
	display: none;		/* hide the sub-menus until needed */
}
ul.rMenu li
{
	position: relative;	/* so sub-menus position relative to their 
				   parent LI element */
	z-index: 1;
}
ul.rMenu li:hover
{
	z-index: 999;		/* make sure this and any sub-menus that pop 
				   appear above everything else on the page */
}
ul.rMenu li:hover > ul/* hide from IE5.0 because it gets confused by this selector */
{
	display: block;		/* show the sub-menu */
	position: absolute;	
}

ul.rMenu-hor li
{
	float: left;
	width: auto;
}
ul.rMenu-hRight li
{
	float: right;		/* horizontal, right menus need their LI
				   elements floated to get them over there */
}
ul.rMenu-ver li
{
	float: none;		/* clear this so vertical sub-menus that are
				   children of horizontal menus won't have
				   their LI widths set to auto. */
}
ul.rMenu-ver, ul.rMenu-ver ul
{
	width: 10em;		/* sub-menus need a defined width, especially
				   vertical sub-menus. salt to taste. */
}
ul.rMenu-wide
{
	width: 100%;	
}
ul.rMenu-vRight
{
	float: right;		/* use this to float a vertical menu right. */
}
ul.rMenu-lFloat
{
	float: left;		/* use this to float a vertical menu left. */
}
ul.rMenu-noFloat
{
	float: none;	
}

div.rMenu-center ul.rMenu
{
	float: left;
	position: relative;
	left: 50%;
}
div.rMenu-center ul.rMenu li
{
	position: relative;
	left: -50%;
}
div.rMenu-center ul.rMenu li li
{
	left: auto;
}

ul.rMenu-hor ul
{
	top: auto;		/* a value of 100% creates a problem in IE 5.0 
				   and Opera 7.23 */
	right: auto;
	left: auto;		/* typically want a value of 0 here but set to
				   auto for same reasons detailed above */
	margin-top: -1px;	/* so the top border of the dropdown menu 
				   overlaps the bottom border of its parent
				   horizontal menu. */
}
ul.rMenu-ver ul
{
	left: 100%;
	right: auto;
	top: auto;
	margin-top: -1.6em;	/* i prefer top: 80% but this creates a problem
				   in iCab so negative top margin must be used.
				   salt to taste. */
}
ul.rMenu-vRight ul, ul.rMenu-hRight ul.rMenu-ver ul
{
	left: -110%;
	right: auto;
	top: 0;
	margin-top: -0.1em;	/* i prefer top: 80% but this creates a problem
				   in iCab so negative top margin must be used.
				   salt to taste. */
}



ul.rMenu-hRight ul
{
	left: auto;
	right: 0;		/* this doesn't work in Opera 7.23 but 7.5 and
				   beyond work fine. this means right-aligned
				   horizontal menus break in Opera 7.23 and
				   earlier. no workaround has been found. */
	top: auto;
	margin-top: -1px;	/* so the top border of the dropdown menu 
				   overlaps the bottom border of its parent
				   horizontal menu. */
}




ul.rMenu li a
{
	border: solid 0px #99f	/* border around all anchor tags */
}

/*I added this code and chaned above line to 0px to remove highlighting between each item on menu*/
ul.rMenu ul
{
	border: solid 8px #ccf;	/* border around all anchor tags */
	border-bottom: solid 9px #ccf;
	border-top: solid 9px #ccf;
}


ul.rMenu-hor li
{
	margin-bottom: -1px;	/* this is so if we apply a bottom border to 
				   the UL element it will render behind, but
				   inline with the bottom border of the LI
				   elements. */
	margin-left: -1px;	/* negative borders on LIs to make borders on
				   child A elements overlap. they go here and
				   not on the A element for compatibility
				   reasons (IE6 and earlier) */
}
ul.rMenu-hor
{
	padding-left: 1px ;	/* compensate for the 1px left jog created by
				   the above negative margin. */
}
ul.rMenu-ver li
{
	margin-left: 0;
	margin-top: -1px;	/* same thing above except for vertical
				   menus */
}
ul.rMenu-ver
{
	border-top: solid 1px #fff;	/* ditto */
}
ul.rMenu li a
{
	padding: 2px 5px 3px;	/* 2px top, 3px bottom always seems to
				   provide the most visually balanced 
				   padding */
}
ul.rMenu li a:link, ul.rMenu li a:hover, ul.rMenu li a:visited, ul.rMenu li a:active
{
	text-decoration: none;
}
ul.rMenu li.sfhover a:active,
ul.rMenu li:hover a:active
{
	color: black;
	background-color: #fff;
}
ul.rMenu li
{
	color:black;
	background-color: #181840;	/* default background color of menu items */
}



ul.rMenu li:hover,
ul.rMenu li.sfhover
{
	color:black;
	background-color: #ccf;	/* background color for parent menu items of
				   the current sub-menu. includes the sfhover
				   class which is used in the suckerfish hack
				   detailed later in this stylesheet. */
}
ul.rMenu li a:hover
{
	color:black;
	background-color: #ccf;
}

/*******************************************************************************
 * PRESENTATION : Expand
 *
 * the bits below implement a graphic to appear on those anchor elements which 
 * have the rMenu-expand class assigned. this is something you have to do
 * manually on any LI element containing a UL element that is to be a dropdown 
 * menu. there is no mechanism to do this automatically.
 *
 * the seemingly redundant CSS is done for reasons similar to the suckerfish
 * css. it's to deal with all sorts of nested menu issues. it'll work as far
 * as three levels deep, after that all bets off.
 */
ul.rMenu li.rMenu-expand a,
ul.rMenu li.rMenu-expand li.rMenu-expand a,
ul.rMenu li.rMenu-expand li.rMenu-expand li.rMenu-expand a
{
	padding-right: 25px;
	background-image: url("images/expand-right.gif");
	background-repeat: no-repeat;
	background-position: 100% 50%;
}
ul.rMenu-vRight li.rMenu-expand a,
ul.rMenu-vRight li.rMenu-expand li.rMenu-expand a,
ul.rMenu-vRight li.rMenu-expand li.rMenu-expand li.rMenu-expand a,
ul.rMenu-hRight li.rMenu-expand a,
ul.rMenu-hRight li.rMenu-expand li.rMenu-expand a,
ul.rMenu-hRight li.rMenu-expand li.rMenu-expand li.rMenu-expand a
{
	padding-right: 5px;
	padding-left: 20px;
	background-image: url("images/expand-left.gif");
	background-repeat: no-repeat;
	background-position: -5px 50%;
}
ul.rMenu-hor li.rMenu-expand a
{
	padding-left: 5px;	/* reset padding */
	padding-right: 15px;
	background-image: url("images/expand-down.gif");
	background-position: 100% 50%;
}
ul.rMenu li.rMenu-expand li a,
ul.rMenu li.rMenu-expand li.rMenu-expand li a,
ul.rMenu li.rMenu-expand li.rMenu-expand li.rMenu-expand li a
{
	background-image: none;
	padding-right: 5px;	/* reset padding */
	padding-left: 5px;	/* reset padding */
	text-align:center;
}

/*******************************************************************************
 * HACKS : General
 *
 * These are rules specifically targeted to resolve bugs/quirks that some
 * browser exhibit.
 *
 * REFERENCES:
 *	http://www.webdevout.net/css-hacks
 *	http://www.satzansatz.de/cssd/onhavinglayout.html
 *	http://www.communis.co.uk/dithered/css_filters/css_only/index.html
 */
* html ul.rMenu
{
	display: inline-block;	/* this is for IE/Mac. it forces IE/Mac to 
				   expand the element's dimensions to contain 
				   its floating child elements without a 
				   clearing element. */
	/* \*/ display: block;	/* override above rule for every other 
				   browser using IE/Mac backslash hack */
	position: relative;	/* IE 5.0/Mac needs this or it may clip the
				   dropdown menus */
	/* \*/ position: static;/* reset position attribute for IE/Win as it
				   causes z-index problems */
}
* html ul.rMenu ul
{
	float: left;		/* IE/Mac 5.0 needs this, otherwise hidden 
				   menus are not completely removed from the
				   flow of the document. */
	/* \*/ float: none;	/* reset the rule for non-Macs */
}
ul.rMenu ul
{
	background-color: #fff;	/* IE/Win (including 7) needs this on an object 
				   that hasLayout so that it doesn't "look through"
				   the menu and let any object (text) below the 
				   menu to gain focus, causing the menu to 
				   disappear. application of this rule does not
				   cause any rendering problems with other browsers
				   as the background color his covered by the
				   menu itself. */
}
* html ul.rMenu-ver li,
* html ul.rMenu-hor li ul.rMenu-ver li
{
				/* the second selector above is there 
				   because of problems IE/Mac has with 
				   inheritance and what rules should take
				   precedence. and to serve as a reminder on
				   how to work around the issue if it's 
				   encountered again down the road. */
	width: 100%;
	float: left;
	clear: left;		/* IE likes to stick space below any LI
				   in :hover state with a sub-menu. floating
				   the LIs seems to work around this issue. But
				   note that this also triggers hasLayout 
				   because we need a width of 100% on floats. */
}
*:first-child+html ul.rMenu-ver > li/* hide from IE5.0 because it gets confused by this selector */
{
	width: 100%;
	float: left;
	clear: left;		/* same as previous rule set except this is
				   for IE7 and the direct child selector 
				   make inheritence much easier and obvious */
}
ul.rMenu li a
{
	position: relative;	/* trigger hasLayout for IE on anchor 
				   elements. without hasLayout on anchors
				   they would not expand the full width 
				   of the menu. this rule may not trigger
				   hasLayour in later versions of IE and
				   if you find this system broken in new
				   versions of IE, this is probably the
				   source. */
	min-width: 0;		/* triggers hasLayout for IE 7 */
}
* html ul.rMenu-hor li
{
	width: 6em;		/* IE Mac doesn't do auto widths so specify a width 
				   for the sake of IE/Mac. Salt to taste. */
	/* \*/ width: auto;	/* now undo previous rule for non Macs by using 
				   the IE Mac backslash comment hack */
}
* html div.rMenu-center
{
	position: relative;
	z-index: 1;		/* IE 6 and earlier need a little help with
				   z-indexes on centered menus */
}

* html ul.rMenu ul
{
	display: block;
	position: absolute;	/* ovewrite original functionality of hiding
				   element so we can hide these off screen */
}
* html ul.rMenu ul,
* html ul.rMenu-hor ul,
* html ul.rMenu-ver ul,
* html ul.rMenu-vRight ul, 
* html ul.rMenu-hRight ul.rMenu-ver ul,
* html ul.rMenu-hRight ul
{
	left: -10000px;		/* move menus off screen. note we're ovewriting
				   the dropdown position rules that use the 
				   LEFT property, thus all the selectors. */
}
* html ul.rMenu li.sfhover
{
	z-index: 999;		/* not totally needed, but keep the menu 
				   that pops above all other elements within
				   it's parent menu system */
}
* html ul.rMenu li.sfhover ul
{
	left: auto;		/* pull the menus that were off-screen back 
				   onto the screen */
}
* html ul.rMenu li.sfhover ul ul, 
* html ul.rMenu li.sfhover ul ul ul
{ 
	display: none;		/* IE/Suckerfish alternative for browsers that
				   don't support :hover state on LI elements */
}
* html ul.rMenu li.sfhover ul, 
* html ul.rMenu li li.sfhover ul, 
* html ul.rMenu li li li.sfhover ul
{
	display: block;		/* ^ ditto ^ */
}

* html ul.rMenu-ver li.sfhover ul
{
	left: 60%;		/* dropdown positioning uses the left attribute
				   for horizontal positioning. however we can't
				   use this property until the menu is being
				   displayed.

				   note that all ULs beneath the menu item 
				   currently in the hover state will get this
				   value through inheritance. however all sub-
				   menus still won't display because
				   two rule sets up we're setting the 
				   DISPLAY property to none.
				 */
}
* html ul.rMenu-vRight li.sfhover ul, 
* html ul.rMenu-hRight ul.rMenu-ver li.sfhover ul
{
	left: -60%;		/* ^ ditto ^ */
}
* html ul.rMenu iframe
{
	filter: progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.Alpha(style=0,opacity=0);
	position: absolute;
	left: 0;
	top: 0;
	z-index: -1;		/* this is the IFRAME that's placed behind
				   dropdown menus so that form elements don't
				   show through the menus.

				   these values can be assigned programatically
				   via the javascript used to create this
				   element, but that creates lag in the display
				   of the dropdown menus. */
}

/*******************************************************************************
 * HACKS : Clearfix
 *
 * Clearfix provides a means to for an element to contain all it's floated 
 * children even if it's not normally tall enough to do so. For more information
 * on clearfix please see:
 * http://www.positioniseverything.net/easyclearing.html
 */
.clearfix:after
{
    content: "."; 
    display: block; 
    height: 0; 
    clear: both; 
    visibility: hidden;
}
.clearfix
{
	min-width: 0;		/* trigger hasLayout for IE7 */
	display: inline-block;
	/* \*/	display: block;	/* Hide from IE Mac */
}

/*  * html .clearfix
/*  {
/*  	/* \*/  height: 1%;	/* Hide from IE Mac */ 
/*  }

/******************************************************************************/

