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Linked assets
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 
PENGUIN CAR FOR PRINCE
CP2873785 | PENGUIN CAR FOR PRINCE 
QUEBEC DEMO QUEEN
CP2873291 | QUEBEC DEMO QUEEN 
QUEBEC CONFEDERATION CONFERENCE
CP2781481 | QUEBEC CONFEDERATION CONFERENCE 
INTERNATIONAL CONVENTION AT QUEBEC
CP2781469 | INTERNATIONAL CONVENTION AT QUEBEC 
Herman M. Batten
CP2690362 | Herman M. Batten 
Herman M. Batten
CP2650531 | Herman M. Batten 
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Conceptually similar
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 
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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CP2STO49684 | 1964-10 
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.
Actress and model Lesley Hill pictured with the Aston martin DB5 used by James Bond in film 'Goldfinger', which is on display in a London showroom
 Built in the year before the Great Fire of London (1665), this windmill, said to be the oldest working windmill in England, is undergoing some minor repairs.
It is situated 400 feet above sea level and Outwood people were supposed to have been able to watch the City of London from 22 miles away as it burned during the Great Fire of 1666.
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CP2STO49683 | 1964-10 
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 
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 
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 
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 
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 
Gerry Marsden of Gerry and the Pacemakers at the 1964 New Musical Express Poll Winners awards concert. Mirrorpix/Courtesy Everett Collection (MPWA1387119)
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CP2STO49696 | 1964-04 
FILE - In this Feb. 8, 1964, file photo, coach Bob Beattie, center, hugs skiers Billy Kidd, left, and Jimmy Huega after Kidd finished second and Huega, third,  in the men's slalom competition at the Winter Olympics in Lizum, Austria. Beattie, a ski racing pioneer who helped launch the Alpine World Cup circuit more than 50 years ago, has died. He was 85. His son, Zeno, said Beattie died Sunday, April 1, 2018, in Fruita, Colorado, after dealing with health issues. (AP Photo/File)
FILE - In this Feb. 9, 1964, file photo, the Beatles perform on the CBS "Ed Sullivan Show" in New York. Sirius announced Tuesday, May 2, 2017, that it is achieving a long-sought dream with its own Beatles channel, starting on May 18, 2017. (AP Photo/File)
FILE - In this Feb. 25, 1964, file photo, Muhammad Ali, or Cassius Clay at the time, strikes a familiar pose as he shouts "I am the greatest," as he leaves the ring, arms raised, following his defeat of former heavyweight boxing champion Sonny Liston,  in Miami Beach, Fla.  Ali, the magnificent heavyweight champion whose fast fists and irrepressible personality transcended sports and captivated the world, has died according to a statement released by his family Friday, June 3, 2016. He was 74. (AP Photo/File)
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CP1STO579465 | 1964-02 
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1964-10

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1964-10 
Source name: 
The Canadian Press
Unique identifier: CP1STO579454 
Legacy Identifier: CP1STO1767_1964-10 
Type: Folder 
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