Friday, May. 24, 1963
A Long, Hot Summer
For months, dozens of speakers in scores of Soviet cities had been readying their ponderous lecture texts for the most anxiously awaited date on the Kremlin's spring calendar of events, May 28, when a special meeting of the Communist Party Central Committee Plenum would lay down the ideological law to restless intellectuals. Last week the long-scheduled meeting was put off until June 18.
The last-minute breakdown in the Kremlin's usually well oiled machinery naturally touched off a wave of speculation. Could Nikita Khrushchev be having second thoughts over unleashing a wave of neo-Stalinism? Was the delay caused by the reported heart attack of the party's second secretary, Hard-Liner Frol Kozlov (TIME, May 10), whose tough hand might be needed on the spot to draft the orders for a cultural crackdown? Was it another ploy against Red China?
Who knew? Whatever was behind postponement of the Plenum, the abrupt switch served to delay Moscow's coming confrontation with its rivals in Peking. Two weeks ago, the Red Chinese finally got around to answering the Soviet invitation to discuss their nasty ideological quarrel face to face, suggested a mid-June meeting in Moscow. But since the Soviets could scarcely conduct two showdowns at the same moment, they suggested a new date, July 5. For once, Peking said yes.
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