To answer the 3 questions:

1.) These includes are located on the same server.
2.) Yes, all the other includes do work.  They are pointing to .htm files.
3.) Yes, we would have considered it, but we looked at the proposition of 
changing everything over to php and using the SSI seemed to be the cleaner 
option at the time.  I realize this may not be possible in IIS, but is there 
any way to permit certain file extensions to work as SSI files?  I know you 
can set this on non-IIS web servers with the httpd.conf. and this is how we 
got them to work on Netscape Server.

Note:  I also wanted to include in this e-mail that what this php file 
actually does is that it detects which web browser and OS platform a visitor 
is using in order to render up the correct Cascading Style Sheet.  We have 
incorporated this in order to have our site be more accessible and useable 
to those who are visually and audibly impaired.  The CSS's are to close the 
gap in difference between how Netscape, Opera, Mozilla, IE, etc. display the 
same font size.  We are currently using PHP 4.1.2.  Thanks again to all for 
the insight on this subject!

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