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FLOWERS FOR PEACE.—Mrs L. Gordon, a New York housewife and a member of the "Women Strike for Peace” organisation in the United States, presents a bouquet of chrysanthemums to the leading Soviet disarmament negotiator, Mr Semyon Tsarapkin, at the State Department in Washington. Mrs Gordon met the negotiators as they completed a week of East-West test-ban talks. Behind Mrs Gordon to the Soviet Ambassador, Mr Anatoly Dobrynin, and in the middle to a Russian interpreter.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19630201.2.94

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume CII, Issue 30045, 1 February 1963, Page 9

Word Count
75

FLOWERS FOR PEACE.—Mrs L. Gordon, a New York housewife and a member of the "Women Strike for Peace” organisation in the United States, presents a bouquet of chrysanthemums to the leading Soviet disarmament negotiator, Mr Semyon Tsarapkin, at the State Department in Washington. Mrs Gordon met the negotiators as they completed a week of East-West test-ban talks. Behind Mrs Gordon to the Soviet Ambassador, Mr Anatoly Dobrynin, and in the middle to a Russian interpreter. Press, Volume CII, Issue 30045, 1 February 1963, Page 9

FLOWERS FOR PEACE.—Mrs L. Gordon, a New York housewife and a member of the "Women Strike for Peace” organisation in the United States, presents a bouquet of chrysanthemums to the leading Soviet disarmament negotiator, Mr Semyon Tsarapkin, at the State Department in Washington. Mrs Gordon met the negotiators as they completed a week of East-West test-ban talks. Behind Mrs Gordon to the Soviet Ambassador, Mr Anatoly Dobrynin, and in the middle to a Russian interpreter. Press, Volume CII, Issue 30045, 1 February 1963, Page 9