The guidance comes amid a resurgence of the disease in the United States and abroad.
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Read Online  |  June 3, 2025  |  E-Paper  | 🎧 Listen

 

“A people that values its privileges above its principles soon loses both.”

— Dwight D. Eisenhower

The Headlines

  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is urging all Americans traveling internationally, regardless of destination, to get vaccinated against measles amid a resurgence of the disease in the United States and abroad.
  • The U.S. Supreme Court has declined to hear two high-profile challenges to state gun-control laws—one in Maryland banning semiautomatic rifles such as the AR-15, and another in Rhode Island prohibiting magazines that hold more than 10 rounds.
  • Delegations from Ukraine and Russia ended their second round of cease-fire negotiations in Turkey after just an hour. The two sides were preparing for a new prisoner swap, and the Ukrainian delegation delivered to the Russian side a list of deported Ukrainian children that Kyiv wants returned home.
  • Xu Qiliang, a former Chinese air force general who once commanded China’s army, has died in Beijing at age 75, according to Chinese state media. His death came as the communist regime’s military saw a series of high-profile purges.
  • 🍵 Health: New research finds toxic dust carries virulent, drug-resistant bacteria and chemicals. Here’s how you can reduce the chemical burden on the dust microbiome.

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National Editor

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🏛️ Politics

An AR-15 rifle at FT3 Tactical shooting range in Stanton, Calif., on May 3, 2021. (John Fredricks/The Epoch Times)

Supreme Court Declines to Challenge Maryland ‘Assault Weapons’ Ban

The U.S. Supreme Court has declined to hear two high-profile challenges to state gun-control laws—one in Maryland banning semiautomatic rifles such as the AR-15, and another in Rhode Island prohibiting magazines that hold more than 10 rounds.

 

Both denials came in a list of orders released on Monday. The list did not provide an explanation for the denials. However, three justices—Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Neil Gorsuch—dissented, indicating that they would have taken up the cases.

 

In the Maryland case, sometimes referred to as an “assault weapons” ban, Justice Brett Kavanaugh concurred with the majority in its decision to deny review, but said the Supreme Court “should and presumably will” address the constitutionality of AR-15 bans within the next term or two.

 

The case involved a 2013 law enacted in the aftermath of the Sandy Hook massacre, which bars the sale and possession of 45 named semiautomatic rifles and similar “copycat” weapons. The challengers of the ban argued in court filings that rifles such as the AR-15 are among the most popular firearms in the country, lawfully owned by millions for self-defense and sporting purposes, and therefore are protected under the Second Amendment.

 

The Rhode Island case, Ocean State Tactical v. Rhode Island, challenged a 2022 state law banning large-capacity magazines, passed shortly after a mass shooting in Uvalde, Texas. The law gave owners six months to modify, surrender, sell, or transfer such magazines.

 

A federal district court and the First Circuit Court of Appeals both declined to block the law. According to filings, the appeals court found that even assuming that the magazines are covered under the Second Amendment, the law imposes no “meaningful burden” on self-defense, arguing that civilians almost never need more than 10 rounds in a defensive scenario. The court also pointed to historical analogues for similar bans, such as restrictions on dangerous weapons and gunpowder storage. (More)

 

More Politics:

  • The Department of Energy issued an emergency order over the weekend directing a major power grid operator to continue running two fossil fuel power generation units beyond their scheduled end date in a bid to safeguard electric grid reliability.
  • The Department of the Interior formally proposed rescinding a 2024 rule that imposed new limits on oil and gas activity across Alaska’s National Petroleum Reserve, calling the Biden-era policy an overreach that hinders domestic energy production.
  • A day after a top White House aide said the Trump administration wanted to increase illegal immigrant arrests to 3,000 per day, more than 100 illegal aliens working at Florida construction sites were taken into custody.

🇺🇲 U.S.

All Americans Traveling Abroad Should Get Measles Vaccine, CDC Says

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has issued a major update to its measles vaccination guidance, urging all Americans traveling internationally, regardless of destination, to get vaccinated amid a resurgence of the disease in the United States and abroad.

 

“All international travelers should be fully vaccinated against measles with the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine,” the CDC said in a May 28 update. 

 

The agency recommends two doses for everyone aged 12 months or older, spaced at least 28 days apart, and a single early dose for infants aged 6 to 11 months who will be traveling.

 

“Most people who bring measles into the United States are unvaccinated U.S. residents who get infected during international travel,” the agency added.

 

The new travel alert marks a significant shift from previous CDC guidance, which prioritized vaccination only for those heading to outbreak-prone regions. Experts say the expanded recommendation reflects a growing risk of infection in transit—especially on airplanes and in airports.

 

“We’re seeing a shift from localized outbreaks to transmission in transit,” said Ashley Darcy-Mahoney, a professor at George Washington University’s nursing school.

 

That risk was recently illustrated in Colorado, where state health officials linked six confirmed measles cases to a single infected passenger aboard a Turkish Airlines flight that landed at Denver International Airport on May 13. Among the infected are three Colorado residents who were on the flight, including a vaccinated adult from Arapahoe County, and two unrelated unvaccinated adults from El Paso County who were at the airport the following day and likely exposed to the virus there. A fourth case from the flight involved an out-of-state passenger. (💬 Comment)

 

More U.S. News:

  • The suspect accused of a firebombing attack on peaceful pro-Israel demonstrators in Boulder, Colorado, over the weekend has been charged by federal officials with 16 counts of attempted murder, hate crimes, and a list of other charges. 
  • Here’s what we know about the attack.
  • U.S. manufacturing activity declined in May, marking the fourth straight month of contraction, while import levels fell to their lowest point since 2009, according to the monthly survey from the Institute for Supply Management.
  • School choice in Nevada, and potentially the rest of the nation, recently got a boost from a 9-year-old art prodigy with a 170 IQ.
  • Pregnant women should consult their doctors about COVID-19 vaccines, according to the commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration.

🌎 World

Russia and Ukraine Conclude Second Round of Talks, Prepare Prisoner Swap

Delegations from Ukraine and Russia ended their second round of cease-fire negotiations in Turkey after just an hour. 

 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Monday that the two sides were preparing for a new prisoner swap, and the Ukrainian delegation delivered a list of deported Ukrainian children to Russia that Kyiv wants returned home.

 

The previous round of direct talks in May also led to a swap of prisoners, with 1,000 on both sides being exchanged.

 

Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said before the talks began that the aim of the June 2 meeting, the second of its kind, was to evaluate the two sides’ conditions for a cease-fire, to facilitate more prisoner exchanges, and to discuss a possible meeting between the Russian and Ukrainian presidents.

 

“The eyes of the whole world are focused on the contacts here,” Fidan said.

 

Ukrainian Defense Minister Rustem Umerov led negotiations for Kyiv.

 

Russian presidential aide Vladimir Medinsky headed the Kremlin team.

 

“We are insisting on a full and unconditional end to the killing now,” Umerov said in a press conference following the talks. He noted that Ukraine had delivered its conditions to Russia days in advance of the talks but received nothing from Russia until June 2.

 

Kyiv will now take a week to review Moscow’s demands, according to Umerov.

 

He said real peace talks could only take place at the level of national leadership and welcomed the involvement of foreign leaders in the process, including the president of the United States.

 

“This war must end, and the whole world supports us in that,” Umerov said. (More)

 

More World News:

  • A long-range Ukrainian attack on multiple strategic airbases throughout Russia could have profound significance for ongoing cease-fire negotiations and the trajectory of the war. The Ukrainian drone attack presents the most far-reaching assault on Russian territory to date and may have caused billions of dollars in damage to Russia’s nuclear bomber fleet.
  • British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said that the government will spend $20.3 billion on nuclear warheads and build six new munitions factories in a bid to improve its “warfighting readiness.”
  • The European Union said it would make a strong case for tariff cuts with the United States this week, while also readying countermeasures should a deal be unreachable.

☀️ A Few Good Things

📷 Photo of the Day: Smoke rises from the crater of the Etna volcano as it erupts, on Mount Etna near Catania, on June 2, 2025. A huge plume of ash, gas and rock spewed forth on June 2, 2025, from Italy's Mount Etna, Europe's largest active volcano, after a portion of its southeastern crater likely collapsed, authorities said. (Giuseppe Distefano/AFP via Getty Images)

Our photography editors comb through the best images in the world every day. See their picks for today here ➞ Etna Eruption, Rockfall in Indonesia, and Schwarzenegger in Austria

🎙️ Podcast: The new visa policy for Chinese international students marks another major shift in the U.S.-China decoupling. The potential impact is way bigger than tariffs. It’s getting personal. Join Terri Wu on China Watch as she unpacks the historical relationship between the two countries. (Listen)

 

✍️ Opinion: Central Planning Works for Rich People by Jeffrey A. Tucker (Read)

 

🎵 Music: Felix Mendelssohn - String Octet (Listen)

 

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🍵 Arts & Culture

A teenage Eisenhower (C) in a 1907 photograph indicates just how far West Point took him from his humble beginnings in Kansas.

Ex Libris: Dwight Eisenhower

Dwight David Eisenhower (1890–1969), also known by his nickname, “Ike,” grew up in a strict but loving Mennonite home in Abilene, Kansas. He and his brothers joined their parents daily in prayer, worked hard at their chores, and received the standard education of the time. 

 

From there, Eisenhower entered West Point, graduated, rose through the ranks, and eventually led the Allied forces in the June 6, 1944, invasion of Normandy and on to victory in World War II. In 1952, he won the presidency as a Republican. He ended the Korean War, served another term, and presided over both the beginning of the Cold War and the 1950s’ economic boom.

 

On his journey from Abilene to Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, where he retired, Eisenhower enjoyed a variety of hobbies. As a young man, he played football and baseball, and was a skilled pistol shot and poker player. He became an expert at bridge, developed a passion for golf, and was a lifelong fan of fishing and the outdoors. In his later years, Eisenhower took up painting as a means of pleasure and relaxation.

 

A final component in this mix of pastimes was his love for books and reading.

 

Of special interest to the young Eisenhower were the histories of ancient Greece and Rome, with Hannibal being a particular hero. Often he, his brothers, and their friends acted out these battles outdoors.


He became so enamored with history that he would steal away from his chores to read. At one point, his mother, Ida, locked his favorite books in a closet to keep his attention focused on work, yet in one of his rare acts of rebellion, Eisenhower found the key. Whenever Ida was out of the house, he would unlock the closet and sink again into those histories. (More)

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