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<META HTTP-EQUIV="Expires" CONTENT="-1">
That sets an immediate expiration on the file. Thus it dies the moment is it born. Place it on your page in the same manner as above. Since you still have the 64k buffer problem to worry about, I would place it in both HEAD tag sections. Better to be safe than sorry. It should look like this:
<HTML>
<HEAD>
<TITLE>---</TITLE>
<META HTTP-EQUIV="Pragma" CONTENT="no-cache">
<META HTTP-EQUIV="Expires" CONTENT="-1">
</HEAD>
<BODY>
Text in the Browser Window
</BODY>
<HEAD>
<META HTTP-EQUIV="Pragma" CONTENT="no-cache">
<META HTTP-EQUIV="Expires" CONTENT="-1">
</HEAD>
</HTML>
<META HTTP-EQUIV="Expires" CONTENT="0">
<META HTTP-EQUIV="Pragma" CONTENT="no-cache">
<META HTTP-EQUIV="Cache-Control" CONTENT="no-cache">
As an aside, the <head> element should be unique on a page - that is, there should not be two <head> tags, only one. See this W3C reference for more:
Global Structure of an HTML Document [w3.org]