| 1978 - 924 頁
...be ascertainable from national economic statistics; it will show up only as a general unquantifiable drag on Chinese ability to press forward simultaneously...fortunes of the ideologues.7 Chou's speech of January yas followed by conferences on the iron and steel and railroad industries, two areas that had been... | |
| Minzhu Han, Sheng Hua - 1990 - 436 頁
...I'D LIKE TO KNOW Comrade Xiaoping, I'd like to know: You realized early on that it doesn't matter if a cat is black or white; as long as it catches mice, it's a good cat. Doesn't it follow that insistence on distinguishing between "red" [politically correct]... | |
| Kenneth Lieberthal - 1991 - 452 頁
...to echo such concerns. Deng Xiaoping himself set the tone of the reform era with his famous axiom: "It doesn't matter whether a cat is black or white, as long as it catches mice." Rural people interpreted this and other pronouncements as a sign that the ideological heat was off... | |
| Leslie Holmes - 1993 - 384 頁
...China exemplifies this problem particularly well. When Deng made his famous statement that 'it does not matter whether a cat is black or white as long as it catches mice' (that is, it is the end result that matters more than the method used to achieve it), he appeared to... | |
| Gregory C. Chow - 1994 - 292 頁
...have used the word "capitalist" in 1982. As Deng was quoted often since the late 1970s, "We don't care whether a cat is black or white as long as it catches mice." Of course the ideology of Communist Party members has changed greatly in the fifteen years of reform... | |
| Jonathan Mantle - 1995 - 300 頁
...Xiaoping, once condemned by Madame Mao and her Gang of Four as a "capitalist roader," had declared, "It doesn't matter whether a cat is black or white, as long as it catches mice." Major Hirst got up from his armchair. He signaled to his German interpreter. Through the German, the... | |
| Jonathan Mantle - 1995 - 872 頁
...Xiaoping, once condemned by Madame Mao and her Gang of Four as a "capitalist roader," had declared, "It doesn't matter whether a cat is black or white, as long as it catches mice." Major Hirst got up from his armchair. He signaled to his German interpreter. Through the German, the... | |
| Bruce Gilley - 1998 - 420 頁
...to Deng's use in the early 1960s of an old Sichuan proverb that encapsulated his pragmatic approach: "It doesn't matter whether a cat is black or white as long as it catches mice." 115 In the end, the new cat theory fell flat. The communique that emerged after the plenum stressed... | |
| James William Morley - 1998 - 410 頁
...proposed prolonging the concessions to the peasants allowed in 1961. Deng Xiaoping's famous saying, "It doesn't matter whether a cat is black or white as long as it catches mice," was a sign of his and others' pragmatic approach (Lieberthal 1997:122). Although his lieutenants tried... | |
| John Adair - 1998 - 100 頁
...be labelled 'leadership' or 'management' or both. As a Chinese proverb says, 'What does it matter if a cat is black or white, as long as it catches mice?' This is the book for such leaders. It is the first really successful synthesis of the concepts of leadership... | |
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