Byam Shaw commented " The one major setback the Sadler's Wells Opera Company suffered from its transplant was that unheeding taxi drivers kept on taking their patrons up to Rosebery Avenue ".
12.
One factor in this was that the approaches he advocated were worryingly often unhelpful-they frequently misrepresented sources, were non-neutral, or were unheeding of others'concerns, for example.
13.
These drawings defied classification; unheeding, for the most part, of the limitations of painting, they ushered in a very special type of the fantastic, one born of sickness and delirium ."
14.
:* The problem with this is, admins don't have time to babysit individual editors, and the problem / pattern is intransigent, years-long, resistant to a multitude of warnings, and completely unheeding.
15.
He was instantly surrounded by the rebels on horseback; but his son, Lord Willoughby, seeing his danger, flung himself alone among the enemy, and forcing his way forward, raised his father in his arms thinking of nothing else, and unheeding his own peril.
16.
In his criticism of the United States and its policies, there is more than a touch of the continental European view _ often articulated by the French _ that the " hyperpower " of the United States, with its enormous wealth and capacities, is often unconscious and unheeding of the dignity and interests of other nations.
17.
In 1975, while a graduate student in philosophy at Harvard, Ms . Piper took her performances into the street and had herself photographed in male guise " cruising " white women in Harvard Square, staging a fake mugging in a nearby park, and walking through crowds of unheeding pedestrians thinking murderous thoughts and itching for a fight.
18.
Brownlow's newspaper, the " copperheads " in the legislature, and described him as an " old patriot " who " stands like the pillars of the Alleghenies, unheeding the storms of copperheadism and treason, which beat in unrelenting fury above his head . " The " Cleveland Banner ", on the other hand, stated that Mullins was " making an ass of himself ."
19.
In 2008, Weingarten was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Feature Writing for his " Washington Post " story, " Pearls Before Breakfast, " " his chronicling of a world-class violinist ( Joshua Bell ) who, as an experiment, played beautiful music in a subway station filled with unheeding commuters . " The night Weingarten returned from accepting his Pulitzer Prize, he received an email from a librarian named Paul Musgrave from the Richard Nixon Presidential Library, who told him that he had recently seen an article about a similar experiment that the Chicago Evening Post did in May 1930 where they had the virtuoso Jacques Gordon play his Stradivarius violin outside a subway station to see if commuters would notice the music.