Kennedy was likely referring to the "Six S's" strategy for effective planning, which includes selection, simplification, standardization, spreading, synchronization, and sustaining. He may have made this reference to emphasize the importance of these principles in achieving successful outcomes in various endeavors by ensuring thorough planning and execution.
To reference a reference within a reference, you would cite the original source you used, followed by "cited in" and then the secondary source where you found the information. Make sure to acknowledge both sources in your references list to maintain academic integrity.
Please make sure to specify which Kennedy you are referring to next time. Jack (John F. Kennedy) was assassinated November 22nd, 1963. Bobby (Robert F. Kennedy) was assassinated June 6th, 1968.
When would I make a reference absolute
It was the foundation of the nation and he is referring to the founding fathers.
No Kennedy DOLLARS exist. But 7 Kennedy halves dated from 1965 to 1970 would have 1.0353oz of silver.
You would make the cell reference an absolute reference if you are putting the reference into a formula that is going to be copied.
The author would be guilty of using ambiguous pronoun reference. It creates confusion by failing to clearly identify the noun to which the pronoun is supposed to refer. This can make the sentence difficult to understand and disrupt the flow of the writing.
C is not a cell reference. C is a column reference, but you would need a row number to add to it to make a cell reference, like C2 or C35 or C527 etc.
to answer that I would need to know whom you are referring to please
C is not a cell reference. C is a column reference, but you would need a row number to add to it to make a cell reference, like C2 or C35 or C527 etc.
A matter of opinion. It is a decision the US citizens would have to make. Some would agree some would not.
You need to specify which historical period you are referring to if you want to make it possible to answer your question.