1, 5, 7, 11, 35, 55, 77, 385.
Ar 385-10Ar 385-10DA Pam 385-1
Ar 385-10Department of the Army Pamphlet 385-10 Army Safety Program Dated 23 May 2008 The AR (Army Regulation) that covers safety is AR 385-10, The Army Safety Program (29 February 2000)AR 385-10, "The Army Safety Program"
Ar 385-10Department of the Army Pamphlet 385-10 Army Safety Program Dated 23 May 2008 The AR (Army Regulation) that covers safety is AR 385-10, The Army Safety Program (29 February 2000)AR 385-10, "The Army Safety Program"
Ar 385-10Department of the Army Pamphlet 385-10 Army Safety Program Dated 23 May 2008 The AR (Army Regulation) that covers safety is AR 385-10, The Army Safety Program (29 February 2000)AR 385-10, "The Army Safety Program"
Ar 385-10Department of the Army Pamphlet 385-10 Army Safety Program Dated 23 May 2008 The AR (Army Regulation) that covers safety is AR 385-10, The Army Safety Program (29 February 2000)AR 385-10, "The Army Safety Program"
Ar 385-10Department of the Army Pamphlet 385-10 Army Safety Program Dated 23 May 2008 The AR (Army Regulation) that covers safety is AR 385-10, The Army Safety Program (29 February 2000)AR 385-10, "The Army Safety Program"
The prime factors are: 5, 7 and 11 (5x7x11 = 385)
Ar 385-10Ar 385-10DA Pam 385-1
There is no AR 385-1. There is a TRADOC pamphlet 385-1 (The TRADOC Model Safety Program and Self-Assessment Guide), and an Army pamphlet PAM 385-1 (Small Unit Safety Officer/NCO Guide). A "385" Army document typically deals with safety matters.
Yes, that is correct. AR 385-10 is the US Army Safety Program regulation.
The positive integer factors of 385 are 1, 5, 7, 11, 35, 55, 77, 385 Each pair of factors below, when multiplied, equals 385: (1, 385) (5, 77) (7, 55) (11, 35)
These numbers all go into 385 evenly: 1, 5, 7, 11, 35, 55, 77, 385.