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Page "J.E.B. Stuart" ¶ 21
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misjudged and advance
But he had misjudged the time needed for a campaign so far into the Armenian Tablelands, where the good weather was unusually short lived, and when the first snows fell around the time of the autumn equinox his army mutinied and refused to advance any further.

misjudged and force
The tide of the campaign had turned but Napoleon misjudged the strategic situation, thinking that the force that had fought Davout was only a flank guard and that the main force lay before him ; in reality it was the opposite.
A French cavalry force, which had come to succour the besieged town of Therouanne, suddenly found itself opposite the Anglo-Imperial army, the size and position of which it had misjudged.

misjudged and from
Additionally, features from the improved Kickstart 2 operating system were used in subsequent software, and since these two technologies largely overlap, some users misjudged the significance of ECS.
On the other hand, heroin users are at a much greater risk of death from a misjudged dose due to varying drug purity, individual tolerances, and influence-affected judgment.
During practice for the 500 Mile race, Reg Parnell misjudged an overtaking move, lost speed, slid down the banking and hit her Austin Seven from behind.
It was beaten only by Ed Wood's Plan 9 from Outer Space, a film that generally receives a warmer response from its audience than this terribly misjudged sequel.
Unlike the earlier Great Famines of 1740-1741 and 1845-1849 the 1879 famine ( sometimes called the " mini-famine " or An Gorta Beag ) caused hunger rather than mass deaths, due to changes in the technology of food production, different structures of land-holding ( the disappearance of the sub-division of land and of the cottier class as a result of the earlier great famine ), income from Irish emigrants abroad which was sent to relatives back in Ireland, and in particular a prompt response of the British government, which contrasted with its seriously misjudged Laissez faire response to the earlier Great Famine of 1845-1852.
Although he took a wicket with his first ball in ODIs ( the first Englishman to achieve this feat for three decades ) he had a poor match overall, being bowled behind his legs for a duck after playing a totally misjudged sweep and conceding 41 runs from his 7. 2 overs.
The event ended in disaster when a misjudged take-off distance from the obstacle resulted in a fall for O ' Connor.

misjudged and .
Solomon Chandler hadn't misjudged the strength of his lungs, not at all.
`` We misjudged you '', he said slowly.
A Soviet team investigating the incident was not able to determine the cause of the crash, but hypothesized that the plane was flying low to evade radar and misjudged the plane's altitude.
Van Meegeren felt that his genius had been misjudged, and set out to prove to the art critics that he could not only copy the style of the Dutch masters in his paintings, but produce a work of art so magnificent that it would rival the works of master painters.
However, the Progressive Conservatives had misjudged the electorate, since they had not commissioned any polls since August.
" After seeing the film a second time and noticing the enthusiastic audience, he wrote a second article saying he had misjudged it and praised the film.
" Macmillan knew President Eisenhower well, but misjudged his strong opposition to a military solution to the issue.
I know of only one person that he misjudged.
According to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, a veteran pilot for Alpine Valley suspected that Brown attempted to fly around the ski hill, but misjudged the location.
When Buckland first discovered the skeleton in 1823, he misjudged both its age and its sex.
But they had completely misjudged the mood of the German people, and the uprising remained mainly isolated to central Germany.
Redmond misjudged them as merely bluffing.
The new venture focused on the plays of George Bernard Shaw and Henrik Ibsen, including the latter's The Vikings in 1903, with Terry as the warlike Hiordis, a misjudged role for her.
Well, they misjudged me completely.
They also misjudged Charles Martel, who was determined to prevent the expansion of the Caliphate over the Pyrenees into the heart of Christian Europe.
He won a poetry contest in 1912 hosted by The Lyric Year, despite competing against Edna St. Vincent Millay's famed " Renascence ", a victory he felt was misjudged.

misjudged and Hill
* ( 1996 ) Hines Hill train collision ( Hines Hill, Australia )-driver appears to have misjudged distance to starting signal

Union and routes
The road between Lubango and Namibe, for example, was completed recently with funding from the European Union, and is comparable to many European main routes.
However, in 1948, when the Western Allies extended the currency reform in the Western zones of Germany to the three western sectors of Berlin, the Soviet Union imposed a blockade on the access routes to and from West Berlin, which lay entirely inside Soviet-controlled territory.
Another change was made on November 10, 1963, when Broadway became one-way southbound from Herald Square to Madison Square ( 23rd Street ) and Union Square ( 14th Street ) to Canal Street, and two routes — Sixth Avenue south of Herald Square and Centre Street, Lafayette Street, and Fourth Avenue south of Union Square — became one-way northbound.
During the Cold War, the main role of the CVBG in case of conflict with the Soviet Union would have been to protect Atlantic supply routes between the United States and Europe, while the role of the Soviet Navy would have been to interrupt these sea lanes, a fundamentally easier task.
The system opened on 11 October 1906 operating two routes from Flemington Bridge — one to Essendon via Mount Alexander Road, Pascoe Vale Road, Fletcher Street and onto Mount Alexander Road again ( with a short branch line along Puckle Street ), and the second to Saltwater River via Mount Alexander Road, Victoria Street, Racecourse Road, Epsom Road, Union Road and Maribyrnong Road.
From here, there are two routes, both part of the Grand Union Canal.
The new waterway would create a new cruising ring connecting through from the Grand Union to the waterways of East Anglia which are beneficial to leisure cruising as boat hirers are able to take circular routes.
Trains on the Bristol and South Wales Union and the Midland routes operated from the terminal platforms while GWR services used the new through platforms.
Major transportation routes near / through Cabot are the railroad ( currently owned by Union Pacific ), the " old highway to St. Louis " ( currently Arkansas Highway 367 ), US Highway 67 / 167, and Interstate 40.
West Point sits at the confluence of the Ohio and Salt Rivers, a strategic position that led Union forces to construct a fort here during the Civil War to protect their supply routes.
Oregon routes 211, 214, 219, and 99E also serve the city, as does a freight rail line from Union Pacific.
It was an important location because the railroad and Cumberland River were significant transportation routes which the Union Army wanted to control.
In the beginning, with multiple speculated routes, the Union Pacific was serious enough to start digging tunnels in the hills of both major cities: Tacoma and Seattle.
The deregulation process, which would eliminate the need for concessions for routes, was driven by Norway's application for membership of the European Union.
Mannheim's first major work published during this period was Man and Society in an Age of Reconstruction 1935, in which he argues for a shift from liberal order of laissez-faire capitalism, " founded on the unregulated trade cycle, unextended democracy, free competition and ideas of competitive individualism " to planned democracy In Diagnosis of Our Time, Mannheim expands on this argument and expresses concern for the transition from liberal order to planned democracy, according to Longhurst, arguing "... the embryonic planned democratic society can develop along democratic or dictorial routes ... as expressed in the totalitarian societies of Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union ".
In February 1864, Major General Quincy A. Gillmore, commander of the Union's Department of the South at Hilton Head, South Carolina, ordered an expedition into Florida to secure Union enclaves, sever Confederate supply routes ( especially for beef and salt ), and recruit black soldiers.
It can be reached from the city centre by bus routes 1, 2, 13, 19 and 20 operated by First Aberdeen and from northern Aberdeenshire or the bus station at Union Square by various routes operated by Stagecoach Bluebird.
This agreement, under which Lufthansa contracted up to seven of Pan Am's Tegel-based Boeing 727-200s operated by that airline's flightdeck and cabin crews to ply its scheduled routes to Munich, Nuremberg and Stuttgart until mid-1991, also facilitated Pan Am's orderly exit from the internal German air transport market after 40 years ' uninterrupted service as European Union ( EU ) legislation prevented it from participating in the internal air transport market of the EU / European Economic Area ( EEA ) as a non-EU / EEA headquartered carrier.
Finally, the demand from Ireland's migrant workers, principally those from Eastern Europe, has resulted in a large number of new routes opening to destinations in the European Union accession states.
The region was fortified in November 1953 by the French Union force in the biggest airborne operation of the 1946-1954 First Indochina War, Operation Castor, to block Việt Minh transport routes and to set the stage to draw out Việt Minh forces.
Most GO Train routes operate only in peak rush-hour periods towards Union Station, which accounts for over 90 % of its train ridership.

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