PEKING’S REACTION
(N.Z. Press Assn—Copyright> NEW YORK, July 21. China today reported without comment the end of the Moscow “peace talks." but Peking newspaper* left little doubt that the meeting had ended on a sour note. A Moscow dispatch of the New China News Agency gave no bint M to the outcome of the talks.
Peking newspapers emphasised new Chinese grievances against the Russians “All papers give prominence." said the New China News Agency, “to the report that the central committee ot the Communiat Party of the Soviet Union in a new wave of opposition to the Communist Party of China, has set in motion all its propaganda media to launch unbridled slanders and vilifications agamat the Communist Party of China."
The “New York Times" said today that Washington was getting more optimistic that “the results of two parallel negotiations held in Moscow may yet lead the world to a momentous turning point that could make it a safer place to live in.”
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Press, Volume CII, Issue 30190, 23 July 1963, Page 12
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163PEKING’S REACTION Press, Volume CII, Issue 30190, 23 July 1963, Page 12
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