Two major incidents occurred in the collision of the space shuttle by the Challenger in 1986 and the disaster in San Francisco in 1979. These disasters include failure of communication among general experts and jobs in most bureaucratic companies. Two memos, "Smoking Gun Memorandum" by R. M. Boisjoly of Morton Thiokol and D. F. Hallman of Babcook and Wilcox are always associated with these two events.
This will be very clear with the two 'smoking gun' files that will check this job. The first note comes from D. F. Hallman, Babcock, and Wilson's Factory Performance Manager. The second note came from R. M. Boisjoly of Morton Thiokol. Both memos point out "ignored problems" and eventually they are called "smoking guns" to play an important role leading to disastrous consequences. Question question What is the rhetorical situation in each case? Research Challenger Disaster and Sanli Island Incident
A young district prosecutor in California, Richard Ellis, while reading the document he got from JP Morgan, discovered a note about sucking a gun. He contacted Fleischmann and got all the bloody details. Fleischman was impressed with the understanding of Ellis and was waiting for a big hit to declare a criminal complaint - this never happened. One morning, when I was walking through the shopping mall, the headline of the newspaper pulled her attention. According to internal letters from former female employees, it published a potential civil lawsuit against JP Morgan Chase. She was surprised because she had not listened to it for so long. How can they sue in Washington without talking to their main witnesses?
Sections 9 and 10 of this memo are called "smoking guns" by Gore Vidal in Stinnet's book, suggesting that this is the center of advanced planning that attracts Japanese attacks ing. In fact, the Memorandum of Understanding or derivative work has actually reached evidence of Roosevelt President, government officials, or the highest level command of the highest and indirect US Navy. In any case, the US government has all followed the recommendations of McCollum Memorandum, the Japanese notes to McCollum indicate that it could attack the United States and the evidence that Roosevelt did not see it Absent.