sandra smith. some are forced to drive to their destination instead. with 43 million americans expected to travel throughout the week, are the roads ready. bryan: jeff flock is heading down the pennsylvania turnpike as we speak. jeff, what are you seeing out there? you know, i don t think i ve ever seen a holiday travel day that s been any calmer and better than this. take a look at the pennsylvania turnpike. we are just approaching valley forge, which is appropriate, general washington spent some time there in 1777, but it s clear out here now, despite the fact that we are facing, we think, according to the aaa, at least, record travel both by car and by air. take a look at the numbers. 50 million people, they say, aaa. bigger than at any time pre-pandemic. 43 million of those as you point out by car. and you know, the numbers really seem to bear that out. if you look at the tsa checkpoint numbers, they came out this morning from the department of transportation. they sa
jon heffernan, professor of semiconductor materials and devices at the university of sheffield and director of the national epitaxy facility, tells us more. it s part of a global battle to control the semiconductor industry, which has been undertaken by many countries. the 21st century is going to be a technological century and it is completely underpinned by semiconductors. you ve got semiconductors everywhere, from lighting to computer chips, yourfridge to your car. and the pace of innovation is accelerating and it is going to be more and more important. so each country around the world is actually considering very carefully what its strategy in this technological area is and what its economic strategy is, its security strategy is. and so this is just the latest example, particularly between china and the us, but there are other countries involved. some countries control different aspects of the semiconductor industry. some control the natural resources, the minerals and th
julie: thank you. again, we will not stop until we find those cowards who decided to just shoot dozens of people causing two people to lose their lives and we are going to be here until we find them and hold them accountable. rich: brandon scott after police say at least two suspects opened fire at a block party in south baltimore killing two and injuring dozens more. welcome to a new hour of america s newsroom, i m rich edson. julie: i m julie banderas. thank you very much for joining us today. so it was part of a violent poll day weekend across the nation. in chicago at least 18 people were shot, two of them killed. mike tobin is live in chicago with more. mike. actually in chicago you saw 30 people shot can including baltimore as well. we aren t through the holiday weekend yet. in chicago multiple shootings. sad, familiar pattern. the first murder came just after 8:00 p.m. friday in a neighborhood called chicago. a dodge charger opened fire. is areas like river
a looming appeal in colorado. the fight to keep or kick the former president off the ballot across the country. 19 days out from the first votes of 2024, new ads and new strategies from trump s republican rivals. will it make a difference? a new frontier of one of america s biggest media companies now going to battle with artificial intelligence and what it means. i m kaitlan collins. this is the the source. tonight, two state supreme courts with two very different outcomes over whether or not donald trump is disqualified from seeking the presidency for a third time under the 14th amendment insurrectionist ban. in michigan, justices there rejecting an effort to boot trump from the primary ballot on procedural grounds. appearing to leave the door open for renewing the effort playing out in many states in the general election. the republican party in colorado has just asked the u.s. supreme court to overturn the state s unprecedented decision to kick trump off the pri
and a moderator. he praised each other and bashed the mainstream media. no shortage of hit pieces on you in the press over the last week or two. i thinks this is a function of these, the legacy media, these corporate journal they re in their little bubble. i saw a headline from the atlantic basically claiming that anyone who listens to this space on twitter basically a nazi. howard: but by then they d lost half their audience, so why did ron desantis roll the dice on twitter not blowing up like a spacex rocket? he s hardly a big fan of the mainstream media and not a great can orator, so he made the digital bet. the coverage of musk, who s been hated by left-wingers and admired by right-wingers. i mean, look at in this disgusting vanity fair headline, ron desantis the will formally announce with elon miss you can because apparently david duke wasn t available. i m howard kurtz and this is mediabuzz. howard: ahead, finally a debt ceiling deal, but is the press t