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Exhibit J
Pag

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About eighty minutes, counting the entire operation. J did not work
all this time, I had the same gloves on from the first unit to the
last. The plansa were a good ten minutes apart. They seemed to take
a long time to came down.
Did anyone tell you there was a lot of radiation, gemma or other? .
No one said any amount -- they merely said it was “hot".
to get the filter units cut,

Did you Bee eny meter working?

Our job vas

And if so, who was carrying it?

There was one meter being carried around, but I don't know who was
carrying it.

I don't kmow any of the personnel.

Were you given pocket dosimeters?

We started out with a 200 milliroentgen dosimeter.

We walked near the

first plane and they assumed that the first two had discharged, so
they give us a 10 R. I don't know what happened to them. They didn't
went us to handie them. I didn't look at mine. We should heve had a lO o

20 R. dosimeter for that operation.
I did have a film badge.

The meter vas completely discharged.

How did you estimate the radiation if you had no meter?
They did go up to the planes and sey they were hot. They yelled out a
reading to someone at the tail of the plena. I didn't pay much attention
to

that.

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Who read your meters?
A group of Army men -- they took them out of our pockets and read then.
They replaced two 200 millircentgen meters; they were eitber discharging
or actually received that much.

Did you have a film badge on?
Yes.
How did you take that off?

The film badge was the metal type inserted into the pocket of the ehirt.
I took off my glove, then gave the monitor the Film beige.
Were any radiation measurements made on your pergon at any time that
you know of?

PRIVACY ACT MATERIAL REMOVED

Exhibit J

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