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ron toddの例文

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  • Morris was elected general secretary when Ron Todd retired in 1992.
  • After two rounds Ron Todd to kick ten goals in a final, the Bulldogs were beaten comprehensively.
  • Park played in the back pocket and was a premiership player with Carlton in Ron Todd to three goals.
  • "They're horrible, " says Ron Todd, director of tobacco control for the American Cancer Society.
  • Smith planned to stand for the general secretaryship a third time in 1984, but ultimately endorsed Ron Todd, a fellow left-winger.
  • Most people fail because they haven't planned ahead, said Ron Todd, director of the American Cancer Society's Tobacco Control office.
  • Ron Todd, director of tobacco control for the American Cancer Society, agreed that higher cigarette prices should result in fewer smokers of high school age.
  • The Seagulls continued their recruiting raid on the VFL, recruiting star players Ron Todd and Des Fothergill, and won the first post-war premiership in 1945.
  • Ron Todd, director of tobacco control for the American Cancer Society, praised the idea of using " image-based campaigns " to reach young people but said the study results are not conclusive enough to warrant starting an anti-smoking campaign using cartoon characters.
  • Bob Pratt, who crossed from the VFL without a clearance early in the throw-pass era, kicked 183 goals in the 1941 VFA season for Coburg, which was then the highest number of goals kicked in a VFA season until Ron Todd of Williamstown ( VFA ) beat that record and kicked 188 goals in 1945.
  • "We've got no business in somebody else's wars, " snapped Ron Todd, 40, who sat in a cloud of cigarette smoke at Mitch's diner, near Fort Leonard Wood, an Army base in a rural, working-class district represented in Congress by Ike Skelton, a conservative Democrat.
  • Ron Todd, director of tobacco control for the American Cancer Society, says, " It's incredibly important that physicians constantly ask patients whether or not they're smoking or use tobacco products, and that they encourage those who use tobacco products, whether they're light or heavy smokers, to stop, and to provide some kind of assistance as to where they can get help ."
  • The next year, 1950, was his most prolific season, with Coleman kicking 120 goals ( his feat of kicking more than 100 goals in consecutive seasons had only been matched by Collingwood's Gordon Coventry, South Melbourne's Bob Pratt, and Collingwood's Ron Todd, and all three of those had done it much later in their careers when they were much older, far stronger, and much more experienced ), despite missing one match with the flu, and being a major factor Essendon's premiership win over North Melbourne.
  • Coleman's feats were even more impressive by virtue of the fact that he achieved them at a time when the rules of the game were less favourable to full-forwards : between 1925 1939, a free kick was always awarded against the last team to play the ball before it went out of bounds, which resulted in teams of the era adopting a direct game-plan which favoured strong full-forwards, and it was an era which produced many of the league's heaviest goalscorers, including Pratt, Gordon Coventry, Bill Mohr and Ron Todd; but Coleman played after the boundary throw-in had been re-introduced, resulting in more play along the wings and less prominence from full-forwards.