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Linked assets
Harold Wilson British Prime Minister is driven back to Downing Street in a police car. Mirrorpix/Courtesy Everett Collection (MPWA1642769)
Antonio and his Spanish Dance Company open a four week season at the Theatre Royal Drury Lane.  Dancing here are Antonio and Rosario. Mirrorpix/Courtesy Everett Collection (MPGL3696648)
American singer Roy Orbison at the Microphone  at ATV House in London where he has signed a TV contract worth £10,000 for 2 shows on ITV  October 1964. Mirrorpix/Courtesy Everett Collection (MPWA1895635)
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CP2STO47671 | 1964 
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Sean Connery visiting his wife, Diane Cilento, and Harry H Corbett, left, on the set of the film 'Rattle of a Simple Man' at Elstree.
The Merseybeats (l-r) Tony Crane, John Banks and Aaron Williams.
The hounds take to the water of the River Medway to pick up the scent
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CP2STO49694 | 1964-05 
FILE - In this May 24, 1964 file photo, cast and crew of the television comedy series "The Dick Van Dyke Show" from left, Richard Deacon, Mary Tyler Moore, Outstanding Continued Performance by an Actress in a Series, Lead; Dick Van Dyke, Outstanding Continued Performance by an Actor in a Series, Lead; Sheldon Leonard, producer of the show, which was named best comedy series; Carl Reiner, Outstanding Writing Achievement in a Series; and Jerry Paris, Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Comedy. pose with their awards at the 16th Annual Emmy Awards in Los Angeles.  Variety reported that Reiner died of natural causes on Monday night, June 29, 2020, at his home in Beverly Hills, Calif. He was 98. (AP Photo, File)
FILE - This May 8, 1964 file photo shows Linda Brown Smith standing in front of the Sumner School in Topeka, Kan. The refusal of the public school to admit Brown in 1951, then nine years old, because she is black, led to the Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas. In 1954, the U.S. Supreme Court overruled the "separate but equal" clause and mandated that schools nationwide must be desegregated. From the time Americans roll out of bed in the morning until they turn in, and even who they might be spending the night with, the court's rulings are woven into daily life in ways large and small. (AP Photo, File)
FILE - In this May 11, 1964, file photo, masked National Guardsman with their bayonets held at the ready surround the jeep of Brig. Gen. George Gelson, head of the guard unit, as Stanley Branche, chairman of the Committee for Freedom Now, left, and Gloria Richardson, second from left, stands beside him in Cambridge, Md. Richardson, an influential yet largely unsung civil rights pioneer whose determination not to back down while protesting racial inequality was captured in a photograph as she pushed away the bayonet of a National Guardsman, died Thursday, July 15, 2021, in New York, according to Joe Orange, her son in law. She was 99.   (AP Photo/William Smith, File)
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CP1STO906538 | 1964-05 
Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson shakes hands with flag-toting Jim Soni, 19, in May of 1964 outside the Parliament buildings in Ottawa. The university of Toronto student presented Pearson with a petition supporting his proposal for a maple leaf flag. The flag he is carrying was one of the three final designs to be considered. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Files
Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson shakes hands with flag-toting Jim Soni, 19, in May of 1964 outside the Parliament buildings in Ottawa, ON. The university of Toronto student presented Pearson with a petition supporting his proposal for a maple leaf flag. The flag he is carrying was one of the three final designs to be considered. (CP PHOTO)
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CP1STO579462 | 1964-05 
FILE - In this Dec. 10, 1964 file photo, U.S. civil rights leader the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King receives the Nobel Peace Prize from Gunnar Jahn, chairman of the Nobel Committee, in Oslo, Norway. (AP Photo, File)
FILE - In this photo taken on Nov. 6, 1964, salvage work are underway on the colossal 32-century-old temple of Abu Simbel, built by King Ramses II and dedicates to the worship of four prominent gods, as scores of determined archaeologist rally for the "last big dig" to save Nubia's invaluable relics before they disappear beneath waters rising behind the Aswan Dam. The global campaign that saved the ancient Egyptian temples of Abu Simbel from inundation by the Aswan Dam 50 years ago was remembered this week as an unprecedented engineering achievement and a turning point in the perception of cultural treasures as a responsibility of all humanity.  (AP-Photo)
FILE - In this Oct. 14, 1964 file photo, New York Yankees pitcher Jim Bouton takes aim as he holds two balls in the right hand that his teammates hope will lead them to victory in the sixth World Series game in New York. Jim Bouton, the New York Yankees pitcher who shocked the conservative baseball world with the tell-all book "Ball Four," has died, Wednesday, July 10, 2019. He was 80.(AP Photo/File)
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CP1STO577926 | 1964 
Dr Martin Luther King in the pulpit of St Paul's Cathedral, where he became the first Free Church Minister to preach at a statutory service in St Paul's. He spent a few days in Britain on his way to Oslo to receive the Nobel Peace Prize.
Sonny Liston uses a punch bag during a training session.
Queen Elizabeth II arriving at the Canadian High Commissioner's residence in London for a farewell dinner prior to her departure two days later for a Canadian Tour.
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CP2STO47669 | 1964 
Harold Wilson British Prime Minister is driven back to Downing Street in a police car. Mirrorpix/Courtesy Everett Collection (MPWA1642769)
Antonio and his Spanish Dance Company open a four week season at the Theatre Royal Drury Lane.  Dancing here are Antonio and Rosario. Mirrorpix/Courtesy Everett Collection (MPGL3696648)
American singer Roy Orbison at the Microphone  at ATV House in London where he has signed a TV contract worth £10,000 for 2 shows on ITV  October 1964. Mirrorpix/Courtesy Everett Collection (MPWA1895635)
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CP2STO47671 | 1964 
Prime Minister Pearson (left) shares a joke with his British colleague Harold Wilson (right) before a formal dinner at Mr. Pearson's residence Dec. 9, 1964 in Ottawa, ON. Canadian high commissioner to Britain, Lionel Chevrier, looks on. (CP PHOTO)
Red Chinese newspapers Thursday, Nov. 13, 1964 paid a tribute to Canadian doctor Norman Bethune in commemoration of the 25th anniversary of his death. Dr. Bethume organized medical services for Chinese communist forces fighting the Japanese in the 1930s. He is shown eating a meal behind the Red lines in Shensi-Chakar Provinces in 1938, one year before he died of an infection, contracted while working on Chinese wounded. (CP PHOTO) 1999
Quebec, Quebec 27 October 1864 Quebec Confederation Conference - The Delegates of the Provinces at the Quebec Confederation Conference (CP PHOTO) 1998  (National Archives of Canada--Jules-Isaie Benoit dit  Livernois)  C-016588
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CP1STO577927 | 1964 
Sonny Liston uses a punch bag during a training session.
Queen Elizabeth II at the Cenotaph in Whitehall, London when she led the nation's homage to the dead of two world wars. Standing near the Queen on right is the Duke of Gloucester.
Sonny Liston in training.
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CP2STO49682 | 1964-11 
Lord Carrington, Minister without Portfolio, arriving at No 10 Downing Street, London, to attend a meeting of Ministers.
Former Prime Minister Harold Macmillan at the Earl of Swinton's Estate, Yorkshire, where he joined in as a guest at the grouse shooting party
Prince Charles - who has recently recovered from pneumonia in an Aberdeen nursing home - alongside Queen Elizabeth II  as they leave Smith's Lawn, Windsor Great Park, where they had watched the Duke of Edinburgh play for Windsor Park in a Bank Holiday polo match.
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CP2STO49687 | 1964-08 
FILE - In this Oct. 14, 1964 file photo, New York Yankees pitcher Jim Bouton takes aim as he holds two balls in the right hand that his teammates hope will lead them to victory in the sixth World Series game in New York. Jim Bouton, the New York Yankees pitcher who shocked the conservative baseball world with the tell-all book "Ball Four," has died, Wednesday, July 10, 2019. He was 80.(AP Photo/File)
FILE - In this Oct. 10, 1964, file photo, five interlocking Olympic rings are thrown high in the sky by jet planes drift over the stadium during the opening ceremonies for the 1964 Olympics at the National Stadium in Tokyo. Tokyo used its famous 1964 Olympics to show off a miraculous recovery from defeat in World War II. For the 2020 Summer Olympics the Japanese capital will use the games to showcase a clean, safe, and innovative city with great shopping and nightlife. (AP Photo/File)
The finish of the 100 meter dash at the Tokyo Olympic Games  Oct. 15, 1964 in Tokyo, with Bob Hayes, right, of Florida A& M, the gold medal winner in 10 seconds flat, equaling the world record. Others from left are Mel Pender, Atlanta, Ga., who finished in a tie for sixth; Thomas Robinson, Bahamas, eighth; Wieslaw Maniak, Poland, fourth; Harry Jerome, Canada, third; Gaoussou Kone of Ivory Coast, who tied with Pender for sixth place; Enrique Figerloa, Cuba, second; and Heinz Schumann, Germany, fifth. (AP Photo)
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CP1STO579453 | 1964-10 
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1964-05

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1964-05 
Unique identifier: CP2STO49693 
Legacy Identifier: Everett Collection_1964-05 
Type: Folder 
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