单项选择题

Ford’s Assembly Line
When it comes to singling out those who have made a difference in all our lives, you cannot overlook Henry Ford. A historian a century from now might well conclude that it was Ford who most influenced all manufacturing, everywhere, even to this day, by introducing a new way to make cars—one, strange to say, that originated in slaughterhouses (屠宰场).
Back in the early 1900%, slaughterhouses used what could have been called a "disassembly line". Ford reversed this process to see if it would speed up production of a part of an automobile engine called a magneto. Rather than have each worker completely assemble a magneto, one of its elements was placed on a conveyer, and each worker, as it passed, added another component to it, the same one each time. Professor David Hounshell of the University of Delaware, an expert on industrial development, tells what happened:
"The previous day, workers carrying out the entire process had averaged one assembly every 20 minutes. But on that day, on the line, the assembly team averaged one every 13 minutes and 10 seconds per person."
Within a year, the time had been reduced to five minutes. In 1913, Ford went all the way. Hooked together by ropes, partially assembled vehicles were towed (拖,拉) past workers who completed them’ one piece at a time. It wasn’t long before Ford was turning out several hundred thousand cars a year, a remarkable achievement then. And so efficient and economical was this new system that he cut the price of his cars in half, to $260, putting them within reach of all those who, up until that time, could not afford them. Soon, auto makers over the world copied him. In fact, he encouraged them to do so by writing a book about all of his innovations, entitled Today and Tomorrow. The Age of the Automobile has arrived. Today, aided by robots and other forms of automation (自动化), everything from toasters to perfumes is made on assembly lines.

The invention of the assembly line enabled Henry Ford()

A. to create more jobs for the unemployed.
B. to write a book on history.
C. to reduce the price of his cars to $260.
D. to cut the production of his cars by 50%.

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A. failing B. leading C. inhibiting D. avoiding
Analysts are also divided on whether the issue of slavery was the primary cause of the war, or a symptom of other, more (55) differences—especially sectional interests and the doctrine of states’ rights—between the North and South which had been developing since the formation of the American republic.
The fundamental (56) was economic. In the early 1840s the Northern states began the process of industrialization, modernizing their society to meet the demands of economic change. In (57) , the slogan of Abraham Lincoln’s Republican party, "free labour, free land, free man" encapsulated the ideology of valuing the freedom of individuals to grasp the (58) for economic self-advancement in a booming, expanding society.
The Southern states remained stubbornly (59) both economically and socially. It was a backward-looking way of life of tall white mansions on great (60) dependent on a labour system which made slaves of approximately 4 million black Americans.America was (61) divided by economic structure, and was led into fratricidal(杀同胞的) warfare by a series of political clashes. The most common cause was the future of the West. The crises over California’s admission in 1850 and over Kansas-Nebraska in 1854 were (62) of the divergent economic interests of North and South in relation to the West.
The North wanted free land for independent labour in the same new territories where the South (63) to perpetuate its traditional way of life by extending slavery. The issue was not the slavery already practised, but the (64) of its extension (65) the West.