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That conclusion may be logical, but it does not get by as uncontested fact.
But there are actually precious few uncontested facts in circulation.
One uncontested fact in the struggle over national memory is the bloody trauma of the uprising.
The uncontested facts bear out these categorical denials of the three most involved people.
Well, that's what the chart says, but when you look at the uncontested facts, this isn't even smoke and mirrors; it's worse.
Amid the confusion and conflicting views, the one uncontested fact is the manatee death count.
The fact that the suspect knows the uncontested facts of the circumstance does not tell us which party's version of the intent is correct.
Delorme tucked the time of death away in her mental file labelled "uncontested facts" and wandered down to the pantry.
Disputed issues on sentence should be advanced under oath, but uncontested facts may be advanced from the bar without evidence.
The majority conceeded that "If we were to derive a rule exclusively to address the uncontested facts of this case, Atwater might well prevail."
(PL) Mr President, the common trading market within the European Union is currently an uncontested fact.
Given all five uncontested facts, I had to agree with Moreland that the Resurrection, and only the Resurrection, makes sense of them all.
One other uncontested fact: Despite a series of damaging and incriminating statements from unnamed Government officials, Mr. Bloch has not been formally charged with anything.
The document, called a joint stipulation of uncontested facts, does not contain any information that has not already been made public, according to the thrift office and Mr. Bush's attorney, James Nesland.
A well-written and kaleidoscopic account of the 1931 Alabama rape case that grew to become a symbol of the oppression faced by black Americans in a region where white supremacy was an uncontested fact of life.
The press called them the Scottsboro Boys, and for many in America their plight became a symbol of the oppression faced by black Americans in a region where white supremacy was an uncontested fact of life.
Since Hippocrates had first described the disease, in the fifth century Bc, it had been an uncontested fact that malaria, as its name applied, was transmitted by the foul airs of swampy ground and poisonous nights.
WHEN American Airlines reported on Tuesday that last month's five-day strike by flight attendants had cut its earnings by more than $160 million, it was one of the few uncontested facts to emerge from the dispute.
The Technology Assessment report quoted a document prepared by the reactor's developers acknowledging the "uncontested fact that it would be technically possible to make nuclear explosives from material extracted in some (unspecified) fashion from an I.F.R. process stream."
The court found that the religious nature of the course was clear from careful examination of the textbook, the expert testimony elicited, and the uncontested facts concerning the puja ceremony, which it found involved "offerings to deities as part of a regularly scheduled course in the schools' educational programs".
"O.T.S.'s direct testimony and the uncontested facts establish clearly that Bush's conduct was contrary to generally accepted standards of prudent operation, and that the possible consequence of its continuation - at any insured institution -is abnormal risk, loss or damage to the institution, its shareholders or the insurance fund."