VP Debate live stream and fact check, courtesy of Capital News Service
Watch the U.S. vice presidential candidate debate live tonight at 9 p.m. The debate will be fact-checked by UR's bureau of the Capital News Service.
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Watch the U.S. vice presidential candidate debate live tonight at 9 p.m. The debate will be fact-checked by UR's bureau of the Capital News Service.
Let’s pretend for a second that the other things surrounding Donald Trump don’t matter: not the xenophobia, his refusal to release tax returns nor the lack of factual knowledge and preparation. None of it.
Contact videographer Josh Grice at josh.grice@richmond.edu
Twenty years ago, on Oct. 15, 1992, X-lot was a maze of satellite trucks, work trailers, generators and media equipment strung together by miles of cable that gathered into a mass the size of a tree trunk and entered the back of the Robins Center gymnasium.
The 1992 presidential debate held at the University of Richmond was ground-breaking because it was the first time people other than journalists had a chance to ask the candidates questions, said panelists, who took part in the debate, at a 20th anniversary celebration held Thursday in the Alice Haynes Room.
Welcome to The Collegian's blog about the final 2008 presidential debate. This is the fifth live blog for The Collegian during the election.
Hello, everyone. I'm Dan Petty, the online editor of The Collegian. I'll be live-blogging alongside Collegian news assistant Stephanie Rice. We're being joined by conservative commentator Timothy Patterson, a blogger for The Collegian's Election '08 blog. Dan Colosimo is back again, giving the liberal perspective. Their comments are at the bottom of this post.
By Zachary Stewart, Megan Stephenson and Kimberly Leonard
University of Richmond students and faculty gathered in Whitehurst living room at 9 p.m. on Thursday for a vice presidential debate viewing party and post-debate reaction forum, where some students said they thought Gov. Sarah Palin had been talking down to them.
Welcome to The Collegian's blog about the 2008 vice presidential debate. This is the third live blog for The Collegian during the election.
By Jarrett Dieterle
Online managing editor Kimberly Leonard and online reporter David Larter will be live-blogging during the vice presidential debate from Whitehurst Living Room, beginning just before the debate's 9 p.m. EDT scheduled start.
While Senator McCain made it clear that he wasn't winning any awards for "Mr. Congeniality", and he may need a new hire to pick out his ties, when the debate moved to foreign policy 45 minutes in, things finally got interesting. Initially the moderator, Lehrer, focused a large amount of time on the economy. Now while I see the merit in doing so, with such a great deal of national attention on the issue - this debate is supposed to be about foreign policy.
Welcome to The Collegian's Live-Blog! Feel free to add commentary about the debate.
The blog recently posted with the title "Battlefield Shifts to the Economy" may seem factually sound and intellectually logical on the surface; but the underlying argument beneath the complicated tax talk is false. The following is a rough outline of how the argument veered off track.