You're Under Arrest! (Dub) Episode 1
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However in the anime, Zenigata does not want to kill Lupin and only to arrest him. In Part 1 Episode 1, Zenigata is so obsessed with arresting Lupin that he gets Fujiko to help him in exchange for her freedom; the first hint of him having some affection for the criminal is in a monologue he makes in his head where he believes that things wouldn't be different if Lupin weren't Arsene Lupin's grandson and he weren't a descendant of Heiji Zenigata. In Part 1 Episode 4 he arrests him and has him put on death row, but over time begins to panic when no-one appears to be breaking him out of prison, the first suggestion in the series that he enjoys the thrill of chasing Lupin more than anything. Jigen even says out loud to Lupin, \"If you die, Zenigata will put on a sad face, having lost his life's purpose and all.\" In Part 1 Episode 8, he respects Lupin, but still gets his squad to shoot at him when he makes a getaway, indirectly tries to light him on fire and stands idly by while Mr. Gold's personal police ambush the gang with clear murderous intent. For Part 1, he was just focused on the job to the point of conflict with the Commissioner and even though Lupin helped him stop art dealers with their beauty contest scam and saved Rie Makita, Zenigata was not interested. In Part 1 Episode 23, he finally realizes how much he actually cares about Lupin and is distraught when he thinks he's been killed in an explosion. From Part II, they talk to each other and had moments where they are forced to work together including when they were trying to escape from the Foreign Legion. Since then when they meet each other, they have some banter between them and, once in a while, he would come to Lupin for help, such as in Part 2 Episode 69. Depending on the episode, he either wants Lupin to serve a prison time, or he's following orders to try and have Lupin executed, even though he doesn't like it and is unhappy about it.
An extended track of the song \"Dangerous Zone\" begins with Zenigata worried sick about Lupin. \"Lupin, are you really dead\", he says. Lupin says, \"Pops, why are you crying\". Zenigata, with a mixture of surprise and relief, says, \"Oh, you're Lupin!\" Lupin says \"That's right.\" Zenigata says \"You're alive\" Lupin says \"Why wouldn't I be\" Zenigata says \"Right, then you're under arrest.\" Lupin says \"This is it.\" [4]
Of course,since Hashima is in this episode, not a single thing about his role in the dubmakes sense. The Director of DATS fires or arrests his entire workforce, thusputting himself out of a job, because the entire Data Squad (whichshould therefore include him) has turned against humanity.Sure.
A total of 23 people remain missing following the wreck, which led to 11 deaths, Italian officials said Tuesday. Capt. Francesco Schettino is under arrest and may face charges that include manslaughter, shipwreck and abandoning a ship when passengers were still on board, according to an Italian prosecutor.
Francesco Schettino is under arrest and may face charges that include manslaughter, shipwreck, and abandoning a ship when passengers were still on board, according to Italian prosecutor Francesco Verusio.
The song may be good, as to music, said the Captain; but I do not like the sentiments: especially the concluding couplet. It seems to me, that economy has become parsimony; the opposite extreme of prodigality; or extravagance. The one is odious; the other contemptible. All tax; or no tax. There is no medium. But no tax, and economy will as certainly destroy an administration, as all tax, and extravagance. The meanness of starving officers; establishments; improvements, will attach disreputation to the agents; and operate a removal from the body politic; or the debilitation of the body politic itself. But in all things there is a tendency to extremes. The popular mind does not easily arrest itself when descending upon an inclined plain of opinion. Popular ballads are an index of the public mind. Hence we see that an antipathy to laws, lawyers, and judges, is the ton at present; and also that economy is the ruling passion of the time. Yet in all these things, there may be an excess. For the people are not always right. Unless in the sense of the English law, that “The King can do no wrong.” Doubtless whatever the people do is legally right; but yet not always politically right. For do we not find from the voice of history, that those men are thought to have deserved best of their country, who have occasionally withstood the intemperance of opinion. Self-seekers only “are all things to all men.” Three things are necessary to constitute a great man. Judgment, fortitude, and self-denial. It is a great thing to judge wisely. Perhaps this may be said to comprehend the whole. For judging wisely upon a large scale, will embrace fortitude, and self-denial. Hence, in the Scripture phrase, bad men are called fools. It is but cutting down the fruit tree, to hark in with a popular cry for the moment. All is gained for the present; but there is nothing for the next year. Such a man may get into a public body, but will not long retain his seat; or, if he does, he loses all, in the esteem of the virtuous, and the wise. But I doubt whether the people are so mad for economy. It originates with those who are conscious to themselves that they cannot please them by great actions: and therefore attempt it by small. The extreme has been that of unnecessary expenditure; and it is popular to call out economy; which the people-pleaser gets into his mouth and make it the shibboleth of just politics. But the people-pleaser is not always the friend of the people. Do we find him in war the best general who consults the ardour of his troops, wholly, and fights when they cry out for battle Pompey yielded to such an outcry, and lost the field of Pharsalia. A journal was published in France, by Marat, under the direction, or, with the assistance of Robespierre, entitled “L’ami du peuple.” There could not be a more seducing title; and yet this very journal was the foe of the people. I have no doubt but that Marat meant well to the people; but he had not an understanding above the public, and judgment to correct the errors of occasional opinion. He was of the multitude himself, and did not overtop them by having higher ground from whence to observe. He had not been a sage before he became a journalist. Hence he denounced the Girondists, the philosophers of the public; Condorcet, and others who had laid the foundation of the revolution. He denounced them because they suggested a confederate republic, such as Montesquieu projected, and America has realized. Marat took up with the simple, the one and indivisible; the populace understood this, but not the complication, and it prevailed; but the republic went down.
From the cache! Until an all-new episode premiers this October, please enjoy this recast on the legendary Edmund Fitzgerald that originally aired in 2020. In 1975 the gales of November billowed out a monster storm over the waters of Lake Superior, and the crew of the Edmund Fitzgerald met it head on. By the time the sky cleared, the crew and their ship had become an inseparable part of the history and lore of the Great Lakes. In this very special episode of the History Cache, we uncover the history behind the shipwreck, try and understand what happened the night it disappeared, and hear some of the haunting audio of the search captured through Coat Guard transmissions on that fateful night. This is the story of the wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald. 781b155fdc