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Trueman's and RAF
Trueman's first overseas tour, to the West Indies, took place the following winter after he was demobilised by the RAF.

Trueman's and was
It was Fred Trueman's last test and Snow's Sussex teammates Ted Dexter and wicket-keeper Jim Parks were also in the side.
Dexter was put back in charge ( and drew against Fred Trueman's Players ), but found another rival in the old Sussex captain the Reverend David Sheppard, who was willing to take a sabbatical from his church mission in the East End in order to tour Australia.
Her maiden name was Sewards and Trueman's parents decided to honour her by naming him Frederick Sewards Trueman.
Trueman's grandfather had been a horse dealer and his father worked primarily with horses too, though for a time he was a coalface worker at Maltby Main.
Trueman's first wicket was that of opening batsman Robert Morris, who was caught by Ellis Robinson for 19.
Trueman's 8 – 70 against the Minor Counties was his best performance and he took 31 first-class wickets in all at 23. 19.
Trueman's first match in the 1950 season was for Yorkshire against the West Indies tourists at Park Avenue.
But Trueman's inclusion was designed to give the England batsmen practice against fast bowling even though, at this period of his career, Trueman was inaccurate in both length and direction.
The next stage in Trueman's development was to harness his speed and exercise full control of the ball.
Yardley was again the captain and the other mainstays were Hutton, Lowson, Lester, Halliday, Wilson, Watson, Sutcliffe, Brennan, Wardle, Leadbeater and the fast-medium bowler Bill Holdsworth who was effectively Trueman's stand-in.
Trueman's value to the team was illustrated by them " having to wait for wickets " when he was not in action.
Trueman's overall achievements in 1964 did not meet his own high standards and his tally of exactly 100 wickets was well down on his totals in recent seasons.
Trueman's overall performance in the season ( his last in Test cricket ) was 127 wickets in 30 matches at only 14. 25 and a best analysis of 8 – 36.
But this was a controversial tour and its ramifications had an adverse impact on Trueman's international career during the next few years.
Hutton discouraged fraternisation with the West Indies players and this went decidedly against Trueman's grain, given that he was a gregarious character who liked nothing better than to fraternise.
That was Trueman's only Test in 1955 as Frank Tyson was recalled for the Third Test at Old Trafford.
Brian Statham returned for the now legendary Fourth Test at Old Trafford, taking Trueman's place and opening the bowling with Bailey, but no pace bowlers were needed here for this was " Laker's Match ", the Surrey off-spinner taking an unparalleled 19 wickets in the match.

Trueman's and Trueman
While Yorkshire thought Trueman would need two more seasons " before he can do everything asked ", England certainly possess " the best fast bowling prospect in years " and Wisden followed this comment with a direct comparison of Trueman's attributes with those of Larwood.
In 1952, after Trueman's early success against India, Len Hutton commented that he needed another five years to mature as a bowler ; and it was in 1957 that Trueman returned to the fore and finally became an established England player.
* It was also used in a 2008 episode of the British medical drama Casualty, when character Dr. Ruth Winters attempted suicide, and again in January 2010 when Dr. Adam Trueman's son, Harry Trueman, dies after a car accident.

Trueman's and .
Kropp mixed Trueman's name up with that of expedition member Mike Burns and thereby made false allegations about Trueman's character.
Trueman's education began at the village school in Stainton where his teachers recognised his talent for cricket.
All four of Trueman's career hat-tricks were taken for Yorkshire and this is a county record he shares with George Macaulay.
Yorkshire by contrast had a poor season, though it could partly be excused by the impact of Test calls, injuries and Trueman's National Service.
For the first time in Trueman's career, Yorkshire won the County Championship outright in 1959.
Trueman's bowling by then contributed the team's main strength.

identity and RAF
He maintained that Australian airmen in Europe and the Mediterranean should serve in RAAF units to preserve their national identity, as per Article XV of the Empire Air Training Scheme, rather than be integrated into RAF squadrons, but in practice most served in British units.
On 24 November 1941, two German pilots, held at POW Camp No 15 at Shap in a former hotel and now again the Shap Wells Hotel, escaped with flying jackets over their Luftwaffe uniforms and carrying forged identity documents that purported them to be Dutch airman attached to the RAF.
In December 2007, No. 78 Squadron reverted to its previous identity of No. 1564 Flight and a new No. 78 Squadron formed at RAF Benson as part of the Joint Helicopter Command, flying the Merlin HC3 and the new Merlin HC3A helicopters purchased from Denmark.
* 9 June 1972: Mohnhaupt was arrested in Berlin in connection with the RAF and sentenced to prison for involvement with a criminal organization, identity document forgery, and illegal weapon possession.

identity and was
It was a trick they used to try and conceal their identity when they followed trucks to check their speed.
Henrietta's feeling of identity with Sara Sullam was crowned by her discovery of the coincidence that Sara's epitaph in the Jewish cemetery in Venice referred to her as `` the Sulamite ''.
Or was he now taking the role -- the gesture and the suffering -- because it was the only way to affirm his history and identity in the torpid, befogged loneliness of this land.
It was because of this chain-reaction as much as for any other reason -- that is, because of the growing independence of the planar unit in collage as a shape -- that the identity of depicted objects, or at least parts of them, re-emerged in Braque's and Picasso's papiers colles and continued to remain more conspicuous there -- but only as flattened silhouettes -- than in any of their paintings done wholly in oil before the end of 1913.
It is the similarity between Estella's hands and Molly's ( `` The action of her fingers was like the action of knitting '' ) that provides Pip with a vital clue to the real identity of both and establishes a symbolic connection between the underworld of crime and the genteel cruelty of Satis House.
Jewish identity was often confused with social and economic strivings.
If Arthur Williams was involved in the fraud or the murder, then he too had another identity.
Korzybski's remedy was to deny identity ; in this example, to be aware continually that " Elizabeth " is not what we call her.
Originally, the Church of England was self-contained and relied for its unity and identity on its own history, its traditional legal and episcopal structure and its status as an established church of the state.
Its intent was to provide the basis for discussions of reunion with the Roman Catholic and Orthodox Churches, but it had the ancillary effect of establishing parameters of Anglican identity.
Many scholars see the persistence of Germanic Arianism as a strategy that was followed in order to differentiate the Germanic elite from the local inhabitants and their culture and also to maintain the Germanic elite's separate group identity.
A popular legend, originating from 12th century chronicles, tells how when he first fled to the Somerset Levels, Alfred was given shelter by a peasant woman who, unaware of his identity, left him to watch some cakes she had left cooking on the fire.
While the precise identity of the author is debated, the consensus is that this work was composed by a ( Koine ) Greek speaking Gentile writing for an audience of Gentile Christians.
Temples were still being dedicated to the national god Ashur in his home city and in Harran during the 4th century AD, indicating an Assyrian identity was still strong.
Achaemenid Assyria ( 539 BC – 330 BC ) retained a separate identity ( Athura ), official correspondence being in Imperial Aramaic, and there was even a determined revolt of the two Assyrian provinces of Mada and Athura in 520 BC.
Abd al-Rahman was the father of several sons, but the identity of their mother ( s ) is not clear:
Some have speculated that this was to allow multiple persons to use the same identity.
A species of Paranthropus, such as Paranthropus robustus, with its crested skull and bipedal gait, was suggested by primatologist John Napier and anthropologist Gordon Strasenburg as a possible candidate for Bigfoot's identity, despite the fact that fossils of Paranthropus are found only in Africa.
The midrashic book of Jasher argues that prior to revealing his identity, Joseph asked Benjamin to find his missing brother ( i. e. Joseph ) via astrology, using an astrolabe-like tool ; it continues by stating that Benjamin divined that the man on the throne was Joseph, so Joseph identified himself to Benjamin ( but not the other brothers ), and revealed his scheme ( as in the Torah ) to test how fraternal the other brothers were.
For exilic and post-exilic readers, the land was both the sign of Yahweh's faithfulness and Israel's unfaithfulness, as well as the centre of their ethnic identity.
Holly was depicted in the Quantum Leap episode entitled " How the Tess Was Won " although his identity isn't revealed until the very end of the episode.
Shortly after 20: 00, a dismasted hulk was spotted drifting in front of Swiftsure and Hallowell initially ordered his men to fire before rescinding the order, concerned for the identity of the strange vessel.
A new identity and culture was born that incorporated elements of the various ethnic groups and of European cultural heritage, resulting in fusions such as the Black church and Black English.
This new identity was based on African ancestry and slave status rather than any one ethnic group.

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