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  1. The Higher Party School (Russian: Высшая партийная школа, abbreviated HPS (Russian: ВПШ)) was the organ responsible for teaching cadres in the Soviet Union. It was the successor of the Communist Academy which was established in 1918.

  2. Letter of the Central Committee of the CPSU to the Central Committee of the CPC (July 30, 1964) World Communist Unity. Resolution of the Plenary Meeting of the CC of the CPSU adopted on February 15th, 1964, and the full text of the report deliverd by Mikhail Suslov (1964) ꟷ 1980's ꟷ. Report of the CC of the CPSU to the XXVI Congress of the ...

  3. The Higher Party School was created in 1939 under the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. It was tasked with training future leaders (known in Soviet parlance as "cadres") for Party and state positions. The purpose was to prepare them for propaganda work with the masses and for supervising managers and state officials ...

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    What is the substance of the differences between the CPC on the one hand, and the CPSU and the international communist movement, on the other? That question will undoubtedly be asked by everyone who reads the CPC Central Committee letter of June 14. At first glance, many of its propositions may set one wondering: whom are the Chinese comrades actua...

    There are serious differences between the CPC and the CPSU and the other Marxist-Leninist parties on the question of combating the consequences of the Stalin personality cult. The CPC leaders have taken upon themselves the role of defenders of the personality cult and peddlers of Stalin's erroneous ideas. They are trying to impose upon other partie...

    The next important issue of difference concerns the ways and methods of the revolutionary struggle of the working class in capitalist countries, of the struggle for national liberation, and the ways of transition of all mankind to socialism. This is how the Chinese comrades depict our differences on this issue: one side -- they themselves -- stands...

  4. membership at the Communist Party of the Soviet Union's (CPSU) Twenty-fourth Congress. He, too, was representative of candidates elected at that Congress: he was fifty years old and had been a party member for twenty-six years. He had graduated from a railroad engineering institute and later from the CC's Higher Party School.

  5. The governing body of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU) was the Party Congress, which initially met annually but whose meetings became less frequent, particularly under Joseph Stalin (dominant from the late 1920s to 1953). Party Congresses would elect a Central Committee which, in turn, would elect a Politburo and a Secretariat.

  6. The CPSU was the sole governing party of the Soviet Union until 1990 when the Supreme Soviet annulled the law which granted the CPSU a monopoly over the political system. The party was founded in 1912 by the Bolsheviks. The party was dissolved on in August 1991 soon after a failed coup d'état.