Answer:Tactical Plan, Operational Plan
Explanation:
A tactical plan is a strategic plan involving tactics and plans to achieve a desired goal or target. For example, if a company wants to be a market leader, then they have to increase their spending on advertising and marketing.
An operational plan is a comprehensive plan used to depict the role of each team or department in a clear context in order to achieve the target .
This plan includes how can one achieve the target, what resources are required to achieve a goal while resource allocation is made by Tactical plan.
Answer:
The majority of cactuses are found in the hottest, driest areas on Earth. However, certain species of cacti grow in rain forests, on mountain ranges, and even in Alaska and parts of Antarctica. Cactuses can survive on very little water and thrive in the temperature extremes found in deserts around the world.
Explanation:
this is for all your questions
<span>according to the five-factor model of personality, estelle would score: </span><span> high on extraversion and high on neuroticism
on the five-factor model of personality, people are considered as an extrovert if they love interracting with people and became the center of attention (we can see that Estelle is outspoken and lover parties & crowds)
And people will be considered as a neurotic if they're cautious and take everything seriously (which cause Estelle to constantly worry)
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<span>ART BY THOMAS POROSTOCKY</span>PRO: RESEARCH ON GENE EDITING IN HUMANS MUST CONTINUE
By John Harris
<span>John Harris is professor emeritus in science ethics at University of Manchester, U.K., and the author of How to be Good, Oxford University Press 2016.</span>
In February of this year, the Human Fertilization and Embryology Authority in the United Kingdom approved a request by the Francis Crick Institute in London to modify human embryos using the new gene editing technique CRISPR-Cas9. This is the second time human embryos have been employed in such research, and the first time their use has been sanctioned by a national regulatory authority. The scientists at the Institute hope to cast light on early embryo development—work which may eventually lead to safer and more successful fertility treatments.
The embryos, provided by patients undergoing in vitro fertilization, will not be allowed to develop beyond seven days. But in theory—and eventually in practice—CRISPR could be used to modify disease-causing genes in embryos brought to term, removing the faulty script from the genetic code of that person’s future descendants as well. Proponents of such “human germline editing” argue that it could potentially decrease, or even eliminate, the incidence of many serious genetic diseases, reducing human suffering worldwide. Opponents say that modifying human embryos is dangerous and unnatural, and does not take into account the consent of future generations.