Former Vice President Mike Pence was in town Tuesday to speak with a young conservative student group at the University of Virginia. CBS19's Sarah Robinson had an exclusive interview with Pence as well as the reaction from students to him being at UVA.
Former Vice President Mike Pence was in Charlottesville on Tuesday speaking to hundreds of people at the University of Virginia. The event was hosted by the Young America’s Foundation at UVA and allowed Pence the chance to speak about the ‘woke left.’
Former Vice President Mike Pence played coy when asked about his 2024 presidential ambitions. The former vice president has shown an increasing willingness to break from former President Donald Trump, setting up a potential in-party showdown as Pence courts establishment Republican voters ahead of a 2024 contest that could feature several high-profile GOP contenders. "I'll keep you posted," a smiling Pence told students at the University of Virginia on Tuesday when asked about the 2024 election.
(Full video and transcript) Former Vice President Mike Pence was the featured speaker at an event hosted by the University of Virginia’s chapter of the Young America’s Foundation. Mr. Pence spoke in a historic venue on the University’s campus, and talked about a number of issues, including free speech on campus, the role of parents in public schools, and his four years serving as vice president. Following his remarks, Mr. Pence answered questions from some of those in the audience
Former Vice President Mike Pence spoke at the University of Virginia Tuesday in Charlottesville. Pence spoke exclusively to 7News about why he thinks gas prices are so high as well as inflation -- and what needs to be done to help lower prices.
Students, politicians, faculty and community members filled Old Cabell Hall on Tuesday night to hear former Vice President Mike Pence share thoughts and advocate for freedom at a speech at the University of Virginia.
Former Vice President Mike Pence has said that during his time in the White House he stood "toe to toe" with Vladimir Putin, and now insists that "American strength" is needed to help defeat the Russian leader following the invasion of Ukraine. Speaking at a Young America's Foundation at the University of Virginia on Tuesday, Pence also praised Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelensky for his "courageous" and "inspiring" stand.
(Video) Former Vice President Mike Pence spoke at the University of Virginia Tuesday night amid speculation he is eyeing a White House run in 2024. CBS News chief election and campaign correspondent Robert Costa joined CBS News' Jamie Yuccas with details.
On Tuesday evening, former Vice President Mike Pence praised Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelenskyy, criticized President Biden and "cancel culture" and said he would tell his child "I love you" if his son or daughter came out as gay. His remarks at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, more than four years removed from a violent white nationalist rally in 2017, revealed a political figure trying to at once embrace and set himself apart from former President Donald Trump, as he begins to chart a course for his own potential presidential bid in 2024.
Former vice president Mike Pence talked about the fight for freedom in a speech at the University of Virginia, an event that had sparked heated debate about free speech before he arrived, but proceeded calmly and respectfully Tuesday night.
In a 127-121 loss to the Milwaukee Bucks, Boston Celtics’ undrafted rookie Sam Hauser turned in the best performance of his young career. With All-Star Jayson Tatum out of the lineup, last Thursday night was a perfect opportunity for Boston’s two-way player to strut his stuff. Hauser netted a career-high 11 points on 4-of-5 attempts, including three 3-pointers in 18 minutes. Hauser’s outside touch gives Celtics head coach Ime Udoka an intriguing option for the postseason. Playing in 26 games with Boston, Hauser made 43.2% of his 3-pointers, according to Basketball-Reference.com. This season, t...
Sonja Hoel Perkins, an alumna of Albemarle High School and University of Virginia’s McIntire School of Commerce, is the winner of the Emily Couric Leadership Forum’s annual Women’s Leadership Award. Perkins founded Broadway Angels, a network of top venture capitalists and executives who all happen to be women.
Jack W. Chen, professor of Chinese literature at the University of Virginia, delivered a webinar Monday to discuss ghost poetry in the classical Chinese tradition. Chen’s webinar was one of the many lectures held and funded by the UT Humanities Center within their Distinguished Visiting Scholars Lecture Series.
A new consensus statement from the American Head and Neck Society Endocrine Surgery Section and International Thyroid Oncology Group focuses on a definition of advanced thyroid cancer and outlines strategies for mutation testing and targeted treatment. "This may be the first time that an expert group of physicians has attempted to define what advanced thyroid cancer is," said Dr. David Shonka, who is a coauthor of the consensus statement, which was published online in Head & Neck. He is an associate professor of otolaryngology/head and neck surgery at the University of Virginia.
The 10th anniversary celebration of the American Civil War Museum in Appomattox allowed guests to take a deep dive into history. On Sunday, historians and UVA professors Caroline Janney and Elizabeth Varon discussed “Appomattox and its Legacies” as the theme of the panel headlining the event. The day concluded a weekend of commemoration for the events from the final days of the Civil War, which took place in Appomattox.
“In the U.S., ever since the 1960s, public officials, and then public-figure plaintiffs, have been required to show, first of all, that what was said about them was false,” said Frederick Schauer, professor of law at the University of Virginia, referring to the standards established in the landmark New York Times Co. v. Sullivan and Curtis Publishing Co. v. Butts cases. “Second, that the person who said it knew it was false at the time of saying it. And third, that they have to show all of this with, as the Supreme Court put it, ‘convincing clarity,’ which is a more stringent standard of proof...
This is a generation that grew up with online video as a given part of their daily lives. These consumers are more diverse than their predecessors, in terms of race, gender identity and sexual orientation. These viewers demand material that reflects their values, and they’re good at spotting fakes and calling them out. “You’re seeing these forces at play where people just want realness,” said Anthony Palomba, an expert in audience behavior at the University of Virginia’s Darden School of Business. “It is a very well informed, very engaged, very plugged-in generation, and a very hard one to sat...
Recently, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine gathered an interdisciplinary committee of scientists to assess the feasibility of altering the oceans to enhance carbon export. “There’s increasing interest from businesses [and] entrepreneurs in carbon dioxide removal,” Scott Doney, an oceanographer from the University of Virginia and chair of the committee, said during a seminar describing the committee’s recent report. The committee’s work could help turn this interest into action, but altering the way the oceans work is also worrisome. While enhancing carbon export co...
“I would probably be horrified if guests at my Seder pulled out their cellphones to access information from a Haggadah with QR codes, not because it was ‘against Jewish law’ but because I would feel it makes them less fully present as human beings,” said Vanessa Ochs, a rabbi and a professor in the religious studies department of the University of Virginia, who does a family Seder every year. “Especially after spending two years of having my iPad open at the Seder table so I can communicate with family,” she said, “I want this year to be a much more pristine experience.”
The bonds in question were issued under English law, which allows a borrower to defend itself by saying that an external force made it impossible to honour obligations, so the court may postpone the payment, said Mitu Gulati, professor of law at the University of Virginia. "So I think Russia is going to argue this but ... this is a war ... caused by Russia," said Gulati, also an expert on debt restructuring, adding: "This is not a completely implausible legal argument."