"Here, the community supports saving this structure and it would be an unfortunate irony if it were to be razed."
It is an unfortunate irony that music-making intended in part to attract new listeners is usually the least well rehearsed and motivated.
They happen to be the crucial words and concepts of American liberalism, and therein lies a neglected story - and an unfortunate irony.
Some professors at the horticulture center here in Seattle said they found a particularly unfortunate irony in the damage.
"The unfortunate irony is that drugs heavily promoted as correcting unproven biochemical imbalances may be, in fact, causing imbalances and brain damage," he asserts.
The unfortunate irony for field staff, however, is that immediate changes in water quality are almost certainly changes for the worse which follow a major pollution incident.
The President demonstrated an unfortunate irony: a panel conceived to help Americans accommodate diversity has itself become an illustration of the problem.
To the Editor: I am obligated to point out the unfortunate irony of your statement that ". . . every reform seems to threaten some hitherto unnoticed prerogative.
But the sale, whose completion was announced Wednesday, has been attended by some unfortunate ironies.
It was an unfortunate irony.