Two equations that I think everyone should know:
V=IR
P=IV
And for those of you that don't know:
resistors in series --> add their values together.
resistors in parallel --> total resistance = (R1 x R2 x R3 ...)/(R1 + R2 + R3 ...)
It's explained here (although there is a slight typo in one of the parallel equations):
http://www.dummies.com/how-to/content/electronics-components-combine-resistors-in-series.html
When you have two resistors of the same value in parallel the effective resistance will be cut in half, the power in each will be the same (voltage across each is the same).
When you have those same two resistors in series the effective resistance will double, the current in the entire circuit will be cut in half (so will the power) and each resistor will dissipate half the power.
Better explained in this video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WNPFyqkDn6Q
So, if you put your resistors in parallel you'd only be cutting down on the resistance, the power in each would remain the same. Put them in series and you'll double the resistance and your resistors will each dissipate 1/4 the power (half the current and each resistor shares half the power).
If you need larger resistors I could send you some. Thought you were trying to make it look neat and not all jumbled together.