at a most providential time—just after the conclusion of a vitally important test series. It caused much devastation but it and its after effects were admirably coped with by the permanent personnel at Eniwetok. There were few injuries during the actual storm, the most serious being a broken knee; damage to government property was extensive but repair was not beyond the capability of garrison personnel; and most important of all, the damage and subsequent disruption were not allowed to postpone the accomplishment of the CAS TLE mission. The Army Task Group was confronted with a mjor pro- blem after the passing of the typhoon, Its success in accomplish- ing the rehabilitation without causing appreciable delays in the overall missions of the Task Group and the Task Force is a credit to the organization and its personnel who performed their special tasks with such dispatch while meeting their regular responsibilities with the maximum efficiency that might be expected, Simultaneously with the consideration of the three matters just discussed, the various divisions of the Task Force Headquarters were individually pursuing studies of their own distinctive problems, Once reestablished in Washington there had occurred cer- tain upper-level personnel changes. Though the Task Force had been redesignated as Joint Task Force SEVEN (JTF SEVEN) in Janvary, the internal organization of the Headquarters, itself, remained essentii_ly the same as it had been during IVY. General Clarkson was con- tinuing as the Task Force Commander and Dr. Graves as his Scientific “~ Deputy, as well as the Scientific Director for Operation CASTLE. 25