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HelloFresh 3rd Party Promotion - $177 Off Promo

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (HelloFresh Partner - HelloFresh Pa)
Tue Aug 22 12:38:47 2023

Date: Tue, 22 Aug 2023 18:37:46 +0200
From: "HelloFresh Partner - HelloFresh Partner - HelloFresh Partner Offer - HelloFresh Partner Offer - HelloFresh 3rd Party Offer - HelloFresh Partner Offer - HelloFresh Partner - HelloFresh 3rd Party Offer - $177 Off Promo77 Off Promo77 Off77 Off Promo77 Off77 Off77 Off Promo77 Off Promo" <HelloFresh3rdPartyOffer177OffPromo@metafastcare.services>
Reply-To: "HelloFresh Partner Offer - HelloFresh 3rd Party Offer - HelloFresh Partner Offer - HelloFresh Partner - HelloFresh 3rd Party Offer - HelloFresh Partner - HelloFresh Partner - HelloFresh 3rd Party Offer - $177 Off Promo77 Off Promo77 Off Promo77 Off Promo77 Off Promo77 Off77 Off Promo77 Off" <HelloFresh3rdPartyOffer177OffPromo@metafastcare.services>
To: <rumour-mtg@bloom-picayune.mit.edu>

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HelloFresh 3rd Party Promotion - $177 Off Promo

http://metafastcare.services/oKq6c5f3cdB23art5U6nEI4LytgO2sp-F1hQ2_KIg9HMkTVA-g

http://metafastcare.services/tPm6syHC_cNdP0DHUndEHIaalL72xmJcy8-ROs39dx_waiLqHg

Squadron RAAF which regularly provided rapid and precise insertion and extraction of patrols into jungle landing zones at tree top height. On occasion, SASR patrols were also deployed by M-113 armored personnel carriers (APCs) with a method devised to deceive the Viet Cong as to their insertion and the location of their drop-off point despite the noise they made moving through the jungle. An operational parachute jump was also undertaken.[Note 1]

A fourth squadron was raised in mid-1966, but was later disbanded in April 1967. The SASR operated closely with the New Zealand SAS, with a troop being attached to each Australian squadron from late 1968. Completing its final tour in October 1971, 2 Squadron was disbanded on return to Australia, with Training Squadron raised in its place. During its time in Vietnam the SASR proved highly successful, with members of the regiment known to the Viet Cong as Ma Rung or "phantoms of the jungle" due to their stealth.

In a six-year period the Australian and New Zealand SAS in Vietnam conducted nearly 1,200 patrols and inflicted heavy casualties on the Viet Cong, including 492 killed, 106 possibly killed, 47 wounded, 10 possibly wounded and 11 prisoners captured. Their own losses totalled one killed in action, one died of wounds, three accidentally killed, one missing and one death from illness. Twenty-eight men were wounded. During the period of its deployment 580 men served in the SASR in Vietnam. The remains of the last Australian soldier who went missing in action in 1969 after falling into the jungle during a suspended rope extraction were found in August 2008. Australian SASR personnel also worked with US Army Special Forces in Vietnam, and provided instructors to the MACV Recondo School, and then to the LRRP Training Wing at the AATTV-operated Van Kiep Training Centre from 1967. Some members of the regiment also served with MACV-SOG units, with soldiers often serving on

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<span style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:5px;">Squadron RAAF which regularly provided rapid and precise insertion and extraction of patrols into jungle landing zones at tree top height. On occasion, SASR patrols were also deployed by M-113 armored personnel carriers (APCs) with a method devised to deceive the Viet Cong as to their insertion and the location of their drop-off point despite the noise they made moving through the jungle. An operational parachute jump was also undertaken.[Note 1] A fourth squadron was raised in mid-1966, but was later disbanded in April 1967. The SASR operated closely with the New Zealand SAS, with a troop being attached to each Australian squadron from late 1968. Completing its final tour in October 1971, 2 Squadron was disbanded on return to Australia, with Training Squadron raised in its place. During its time in Vietnam the SASR proved highly successful, with members of the regiment known to the Viet Cong as Ma Rung or &quot;phantoms of the jungle&quot; due to their stealth. In a six-year period the Australian and New Zealand SAS in Vietnam conducted nearly 1,200 patrols and inflicted heavy casualties on the Viet Cong, including 492 killed, 106 possibly killed, 47 wounded, 10 possibly wounded and 11 prisoners captured. Their own losses totalled one killed in action, one died of wounds, three accidentally killed, one missing and one death from illness. Twenty-eight men were wounded. During the period of its deployment 580 men served in the SASR in Vietnam. The remains of the last Australian soldier who went missing in action in 1969 after falling into the jungle during a suspended rope extraction were found in August 2008. Australian SASR personnel also worked with US Army Special Forces in Vietnam, and provided instructors to the MACV Recondo School, and then to the LRRP Training Wing at the AATTV-operated Van Kiep Training Centre from 1967. Some members of the regiment also served with MACV-SOG units, with soldiers often serving on</span><br />
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