Audiobook Reel
Description
Vocal Characteristics
Language
EnglishVoice Age
Middle Aged (35-54)Accents
North American (General)Transcript
Note: Transcripts are generated using speech recognition software and may contain errors.
as every team manager does. Toward the end of the season, I was looking around for a few good riders to fill out our squad in the autumn of 1997. Suddenly I came across the C V of a writer I'd never heard of yens void, and when I looked him up, I noticed that he was already one of the top 50 ranked riders in the world. I was dumbfounded. How does some unknown guy get into the top 50? Obviously, because he was in a small team. He didn't get into the big races that carry a lot of points. So that means he really had to have a lot of results in the races. He did dio. It was impressive he'd already won the peace race, one of the world's best amateur races. Normally, winning such a race would be a passport, a sort of guarantee for a big contract. But for whatever reason, Yin's didn't manage to find another team over and over again. Moriyama pauses in his tracks and just stands there, pressing the shutter button of his camera, looking around, continually alert, he points the lens towards whatever catches his interest occasionally He holds his camera at chest height and just presses the shutter button, keeping it pressed down, taking one shot after another in quick succession without bothering to look into the viewfinder, catching sight of an alleyway off the street. A little way ahead, he heads straight towards it at a run, as if already certain of what you'll find there. I know that it's not uncommon for him to get through a whole roll of film. 36 shots in less than 100 m. And today, even before we've got halfway along the street, he's had to stop for a few seconds to change his film. Several times I see him do something interesting while we're shooting, gazing into the viewfinder of his camera. He just stands there, stock, still doing nothing like a character in a film that's been paused. What am I waiting for? Well, nothing in particular. I'm really just seeing if something anything turns up, I never feel like I have to get someone or something specific in there to help with the composition. It's just that if you wait, maybe something will turn up the secret war. In any war, there are men who are unwilling to wait for the main offensive operations to be organized. They are restless under the mass training methods necessary to develop a major fighting force. Such men often work out schemes for raids on the enemy, usually at great risk to themselves, which are fashioned to strike a telling blow at an enemy strong point. This sort of raid not only causes damage, but, if publicized, earns psychological advantages for the Raiders and their country. During the early part of the Pacific war, raids were necessarily long range operations to make contact with the enemy and were launched from ships, submarines or aircraft.