Recruiting Football Talk VIII

@mrMet

Georgia is +3.5 vs Texas. Carson Beck is a shell of himself from last season.Take the Longhorns -3.5 easy.

Nebraska vs Indiana. Nebraska is +7 Nebraska has a solid defense but seem to struggle scoring a lot of times. Indiana out fuels the Cornhuskers, take the -7.
I’m on both UGA and Nebraska this weekend 😬
 
I posted yesterday. It is worth a watch. He picked on Heard bad, but also showed a move to finish the game off where Heard was a freak. I think he’s just not in shape and learning on the job like Nico. The film showed clearly they both have to be a lot better. Both highly paid. Both highly scrutinized. Both with a lot of growing to do.

 
October 15, 1917

Execution of Mata Hari

Mata Hari was the stage name Dutch-born Margaretha Zelle took when she became one of Paris' most popular exotic dancers on the eve of World War I. Although details of her past are sketchy, it is believed that she was born in the Netherlands in 1876 and married a Dutch Army officer 21 years her senior when she was 18. She quickly bore him two children and followed him when he was assigned to Java in 1897. The marriage proved rocky. The couple returned to the Netherlands in 1902 with their daughter (their other child, a son, had died mysteriously in Java). Margaretha's husband obtained a divorce and retained custody of his daughter.

Margaretha then made her way to Paris where she reinvented herself as an Indian temple dancer thoroughly trained in the erotic dances of the East. She took on the name Mata Hari and was soon luring audiences in the thousands as she performed in Paris, Berlin, Vienna, Madrid and other European capitals. She also attracted a number of highly-placed, aristocratic lovers willing to reward her handsomely for the pleasure of her company.

With the outbreak of World War I, Mata Hari's cross-border liaisons with German political and military figures came to the attention of the French secret police and she was placed under surveillance. Brought in for questioning, the French reportedly induced her to travel to neutral Spain in order to develop relationships with the German naval and army attaches in Madrid and report any intelligence back to Paris. In the murky world of the spy, however, the French suspected her of being a double agent. In February 1917 Mata Hari returned to Paris and immediately arrested; charged with being a German spy. Her trial in July revealed some damning evidence that the dancer was unable to adequately explain. She was convicted and sentenced to death.

In the early-morning hours of October 15, Mata Hari was awakened and taken by car from her Paris prison cell to an army barracks on the city's outskirts where she was to meet her fate.

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The sad part is that she probably wasn't spying for Germany and at the very least wasn’t the masterspy double agent they executed her for being. MI5 files clear her of a lot of stuff but at the same time she’s kind of perfect to pin the blame on, especially since we were absolutely using women as spies and celebrities as spies in both wars. Did they get Mata Hari wrong?
 

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