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Ford{{/B}} 1
Ford's great strength was the manufacturing process--not invention. Long
before he started a car company, he was a worker, known for picking up pieces of
metal and wire and turning them into machines. He started putting cars together
in 1891. Although it was by no means the first popular automobile, the Model T
showed the world just how creative Ford was at combining technology and
market. 2 The company's assembly line alone threw America's Industrial
Revolution into overdrive (高速运转). Instead of having workers put together the
entire car, Ford's friends, who were great toolmakers from Scotland, organized
teams that added parts to each Model T as it moved down a line. By the time
Ford's Highland Park plant was humming (嗡嗡作响) along in 1914, the world's first
automatic conveyor belt could turn out a car every 93 minutes. 3 The
same year Henry Ford shocked the world with the $5-a-day minimum wage scheme,
the greatest contribution he had ever made. The average wage in the auto
industry then was $2.34 for a 9-hour shift. Ford not only doubled that, he also
took an hour off the workday. In those years it was unthinkable that a man could
be paid that much for doing something that didn't involve an awful lot of
training or education. The Wall Street Journal called the plan "an economic
crime", and critics everywhere laughed at Ford. 4 But as the wage
increased later to daily $10, it proved a critical component of Ford's dream to
make the automobile accessible (可及的) to all. The critics were too stupid to
understand that because Ford had lowered his costs per car, the higher wages
didn't matter--except for making it possible for more people to buy cars.
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Paragraph 1 ______A. Ford's Followers
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Paragraph 2 ______
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Paragraph 3 ______
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Paragraph 4 ______
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The assembly line made it possible to ______A. criticized by the media
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Ford was the first to adopt ______
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Higher wages enabled many people to ______
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Ford's higher-wage and lower-cost strategy was strongly ______