The only reason I am telling him to start the first half of his partitioning procedure in windows is to avoid complications that Window$ will cause him. In genereal, Dressler seems a little uncomfortable with the whole idea of partitioning, so I'll try to explain it for him. Plus, he didn't post a very clear picture of his partitioning scheme that he has going.
When you boot Window$, go into Explorer. If you have anything else besides a C: drive, and Explorer is showing it (like if you have a D; and E: drive), it would probably be best for him to startout with Partition Magic. If you need room on your harddrive, move everything from one of those partitions (either D: or E:) over to C: (with Explorer) and delete one of those partitions with Partition Magic, which will keep it as Unpartitioned Space. Like everything else M$, this is going to require you to reboot into XPee so that XPee can apply the changes to your partitioning scheme, and so XPee will no longer read the Drive D: and Drive E:
If all you have is a C: drive, then you have two options. Either delete the two Red Hat partitions (they will showup in Partition Magic as ext2 or ext3) and Swap with Partition Magic, which will save them as unpartitioned space, or use the Expert Option on DiskDrake. If you have Partition Magic downloaded, just use that. Plus, if you make a mistake, you can boot back into XPee and just run Partition Magic to fix your problem.
One you have Unpartitioned Space after where your C: drive is, reboot into XPee, and then put the Mandrake CD into the tray, and reboot so that Mandrake runs the installer. When you get to DiskDrake, now you can just run the "Auto" or "Recommended" partioning schema that it gives you. (This will create a swap space that is twice the amount of RAM that you have, and a root partition.) The Auto feature will not overwrite your Window$ drive. Unlike M$, Linux recognizes and respects other filesystems that have data on them. Linux doesn't take the Nazi Germany approach like M$ does by erradicating all 'inferior' filesystems, so you will be good to go with the auto-partitioner. It will also set your mount point for you (/), and it should choose either an ext2 or ext3 filesystem for you.
The main reason I am telling you to run Partiton Magic is so you don't do what I did when I first installed Linux. I actually just ran Mandrake, and used DiskDrake to delete my D: drive and installed Linux there. Big no on. Once I rebooted Windows$, it hung for like 10 minutes because it was searching for that D: drive and the FAT filesystem that was on there. Since Window$, and its infinite might, only recognizes three filesystems, it didn't know what to do except to repeatedly fuck itself when it came across an ext2 filesystem. However, sice I had Partition Magic, I went in, deleted the Linux drives I created, applied the changes, rebooted into Window$, and everything worked fine. Then, I gave it another shot, this time using Unpartioned Space to install Linux.
All of the methods posted here are good, and applicable. There are a million ways to do this. I, however, like to do things in the most failsafe manner when I am attempting them for a first time
. I don't like problems. I already have enough of them