Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 July 2011
“As an orchestra conductor sees to it that all the instruments sound harmonious and in proportion, so in social and political life does the Party direct the efforts of all people toward the achievement of a single goal.
1 Reported in Prdvda and Izvestiia, March 10, 1963; translation from Current Digest of the Soviet Press, XV, No. 11 (April 23, 1963).Google Scholar
2 Feldmesser, Robert A., “Equality and Inequality under Khrushchev,” Problems of Communism, IX (March-April 1960), 38.Google Scholar
3 Arcadius Kahan, “The Peasant, the Party and the System,” ibid., IX (July-August 1960), 34.
4 Ritvo, Herbert, “The Dynamics of Destalinization,” Survey, No. 47 (April 1963), 27–36.Google Scholar
5 Pavlenko, V., “Ekonomicheskoe raionirovanie v novykh usloviiakh” [Economic Regionalism under the New Conditions], Ekonomicheskaia gazeta, October 19, 1963, 12–13; translation from Current Digest of the Soviet Press, XV, No. 42 (November 13, 1963).Google Scholar
6 Komsomol'skaia pravda, April 18, 1962, 3. A detailed discussion of the youth organizations since Stalin is given in the author's forthcoming study, The Soviet Youth Program (Harvard University Press).
7 Pravda and Izvestiia, March 10, 1963; translation from Current Digest of the Soviet Press, XV, No. 11 (April 23, 1963).Google Scholar
8 Whyte, William H., The Organization Man (New York 1956).Google Scholar
9 Riesman, DavidGlazer, Nathan, and Denny, Reuel, The Lonely Crowd (New Haven 1950).Google Scholar
10 Recent developments in Soviet sociology are reviewed in Labedz, Leopold, “Sociology as a Vocation,” Survey, No. 48 (July 1963), 57–65.Google Scholar