Over time, Yeltsin indulged in a more baronial taste—for hunting. As deputy chairman of the oblast government, his former guardian angel in the party apparatus, Fëdor Morshchakov, an avid marksman, organized the shooting of ducks in the spring and fall and wild elk in the winter. Yeltsin had a collection of guns, preferring a Czechoslovak-made Ceská Zbrojovka carbine—bought for him as a gift by obkom staff in Prague in 1977—and gave chase in a UAZ all-terrain vehicle fitted out with racks and heaters.33 He went over the guest list name by name, saw to the bird limit of five per person, and began the pleasantries at mealtime. It is not small-minded to agree with Viktor Manyukhin that the bonhomie likely had an ulterior political motive as well: “The tactic of keeping all under vigil . . . helped Boris Nikolayevich know everything about his colleagues [and] . . . see for himself that there were no groupings against him.”34
Liquor flowed at these events, especially when a session in the steambath was part of it for the males in the company. It was imbibed in the dressing room before and after and in the cooling-off intervals during the bath. The effects of alcohol are felt quickly in such heat. Yeltsin’s temperance had given way to drinking at or above the average level within the party elite. Thursday and Friday evenings were often taken up with banquets for “delegations” from Moscow or other provinces. It not infrequently fell to Yeltsin to act as
Did Yeltsin drink when he worked in the Urals? Yes, he drank, like all normal people, and perhaps a mite more. With his expansive nature and character, on festive occasions Boris Nikolayevich loved to sit down to a good table with friends and comrades. Sometimes this would happen when he was out hunting, as is the practice with hunters. Yet, even after a “blowout,” Boris Nikolayevich, healthy and youthful as he was, was fresh and cheerful the next morning and made it to work on time.36
There were exceptions. Ryabov noted in his diary in February 1976, when Yeltsin was still obkom secretary for construction, that he had been flat on his back in bed for a couple of days after “a tempestuous celebration of his [forty-fifth] birthday.”37 A deputy chairman of KGB central, Gelii Ageyev, was apoplectic when Yeltsin diverted him to interminable receptions and dinners after he landed at Sverdlovsk’s Kol’tsovo airport during the 1979 anthrax crisis. Local notables hypothesized this was his way to prevent Ageyev from obstructing and from holding Yeltsin accountable for the outbreak. The general considered a written report to Brezhnev on Yeltsin’s conduct but backed off the idea.38 To larger questions, the drinking was tangential. Yeltsin had no pity for office drunks, as Manyukhin points out, and fired several factory directors for inebriation.
There was some political dissent in Sverdlovsk in the Brezhnev years, by individuals and, rarely, by very small organizations. A memo sent to the Central Committee Secretariat by Yurii Andropov on June 12, 1970, detailed the arrests in Sverdlovsk of seven members of a Party of Free Russia, later renamed the Revolutionary Workers Party. In 1969 they had run off 700 anti-Soviet pamphlets, stuck some to walls, and pelted 200 of them, from a viaduct over Cosmonauts Prospect, onto the official parade during the November 7 festivities. Student A. V. Avakov was jailed in 1975 for distributing 300 leaflets at Urals State University and reading out a speech made by Leon Trotsky in the 1920s. Around the same time, a League for the Liberation of the Urals put out flyers calling for a popular referendum on “autonomy of the Urals.” No culprits were found. In February 1979, during the election campaign for the USSR Supreme Soviet, an unnamed Sverdlovsk group called on citizens to vote against the official nominees: “Comrades, let us cross out the names of the sellout candidates. They will forget about us right after the election. It doesn’t bother them that the party has put itself above the people and above the law, that prices are rising and the stores are empty.” This, too, went into the cold-case file.39