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  1. The Moscow Higher Party School was the party school with the highest standing. The school itself had eleven faculties until a Central Committee resolution in 1972 which demanded a shake-up in the curriculum.

  2. HIGHER PARTY SCHOOL. 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.

  3. 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.

  4. The Central Party School of the Chinese Communist Party (Chinese: 中共中央党校), officially the Party School of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China and commonly known as the Central Party School (中央党校), is the higher education institution which trains Chinese Communist Party (CCP) cadres.

  5. Higher Party School Under the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. the highest Party-political educational institution in the USSR; located in Moscow. The forerunners of this school were the la. M. Sverdlov Communist University, the courses for agitators and instructors set up in June 1918 and affiliated with the ...

  6. 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.

  7. Anxious to prevent such a development of events, the CPSU Central Committee suggested talks with the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China. These took place in Moscow in September 1960. But then, too, it was impossible to resolve the differences due to the stubborn unwillingness of the CPC delegation to heed the opinion of a fraternal party.