Radiological Safety Regulations CJTF SEVEN No. 3-53 and Medicine, AEC, indicating, in general, the action taken to dispose of individual dose records, comments on over-exposures if applicable and any pertinent remarks considered of interest to the above offices. 20, Training. The inclusion of radiological safety organizations through- out the task force will require two general levels of training; basic indoctrination and technical training. The scope of instruction within each of these levels will vary in accordance with the requirements of different cperational and staff levels. Basic indoctrination will inelude primary, non-technical instruction in radiological safety measures and techniques. This must be imparted to all personnel of the task force to enable them to perform their assigned duties efficiently within the allowable low exposures, regardless of the presence of radioactive contaminants. Technical training will include the training of the majority of the personnel who will be required to staff the task force radiological safety organizations and perform the technical operations involved. This will be accomplished through the utilization of existing Service courses and establishment of suitable courses at task group level. This instruction will be designed to train radiological defense monitors, decontamination per= gonne] and radiological instrument repairmen. 21. These regulations have the concurrence of the Surgeon General, USA; the Chief of Naval Operations; the Surgeon General, USAF and the Director, Division of Biology and Medicine, AEC. 22, This appendix has been designed for reduced security classification in order to facilitate wide dissemination and may be downgraded to RESTRICTED = SECURITY INFORMATION provided all references to Joint Task Force SEVEN and its subordinate units are deleted. P. W. CLARKSON Major General, U.S. Army Commander OFFICIAL: Hidbelark, WILLIAM S. COWART, mf Colonel, U.S.Air Force, Assistant Chief of Staff, J-3 N-I=8