For “Grease” fans in Los Angeles, recent summer nights had a surprise in store. We’ll tell you more, tell you more.
John Travolta, who brought life to bad boy heartthrob Danny Zuko in the 1978 classic, crashed the Hollywood Bowl’s sing-along event Friday. He surprised not just the audience, but also fellow “Grease” alumni as he sauntered on stage in his character’s signature pompadour and leather jacket.
“No one knew, not even the cast,” Travolta, 71, recalled of the moment in an Instagram post shared Saturday.
The “Pulp Fiction” and “Hairspray” star on Instagram shared a closer look at his Danny Zuko-inspired styling and posted a video of him reuniting with co-stars Didi Conn, Barry Pearl, Michael Tucci, Kelly Ward and “Grease” filmmaker Randal Kleiser. Video from the sing-along shows audiences cheering and celebrating Travolta with a standing ovation. His surprise appearance came before the beginning of the sing-along, according to Entertainment Weekly.
“L.A.,” he says to fans before referencing a memorable line from the movie. “I thought you were going back to Australia!”
In that scene from “Grease,” Danny excitedly greets his summer sweetheart Sandy, before quickly playing it too cool and aloof, saving face for his T-Birds greaser squad. Olivia Newton-John indelibly played the role of Sandy. She died on Aug. 8, 2022, at age 73.
During Friday’s event, Travolta and his co-stars led fans in singing “A-womp-bop-a-looma-a-womp-bam-boom,” a line from the “Grease” finale number “We Go Together,” according to video from EW. He and his cast then left the stage and the sing-along began.
“Thank you for a great evening,” Travolta added in his Instagram post.
For a better way to stream from your laptop or attend online courses, meetings and interviews, a webcam is ideal. Today’s webcams have better color, AI features and even 4K resolution support, so you always have a clear video feed. And we’ve spotted the Insta360 Link 2 webcam bundle for just $150 at Amazon — that’s $50 cheaper — just ahead of this year’s major summer shopping events (Fourth of July and Prime Day). This price also represents a new low for this bundle.
The Insta360 Link 2 webcam is compatible with PC and Mac devices and requires a simple USB-C connection.
The Insta360 Link 2 webcam has AI algorithms that cancel ambient noises for clear sound and fewer distractions, which is perfect for online teaching, presentations and streaming. It focuses on you so that anyone in your online meetings or hangs gets crisp video, thanks to Phase Detection Auto Focus (PDAF).
Insta360’s Link 2 has three modes for optimal lighting and focus: whiteboard, desk view and portrait mode. Need more privacy? You can blur or change your background — which is especially handy for parents who don’t want toys or clutter to distract viewers. This bundle includes the webcam, a USB-C cable, a USB-C to USB-A adapter, a magnetic mount and four recognition markers.
On the lookout for a webcam but aren’t sure if this deal is for you? Check out our list of the best gear for online classes or meetings, where we’ve curated multiple webcams and accessories. We’re also keeping up with Fourth of July and upcoming Prime Day deals across all categories, so check back with us.
Why this deal matters
This Insta360 Link 2 webcam offers 4K resolution, clear images and distraction-free sound-canceling AI algorithms that can reduce extraneous noise while presenting or streaming. Plus, this bundle includes a USB-C cable, adapter and magnetic gimbal so you can start using it right away. At a massive $50 off, this deal is perfect for streamers, instructors and people who want to stand out during professional video calls.
President Asif Ali Zardari has officially signed the Finance Bill 2026 into law following its approval by both the National Assembly and the Senate. The signing took place after the bill was passed through the necessary legislative processes.
In accordance with the Constitution, the bill, which includes various fiscal measures for the upcoming financial year, was presented to President Zardari after being debated and passed in both houses of Parliament.
Following the president’s signature, the official Gazette notification has been issued, making the bill’s provisions effective immediately.
On June 10, Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb unveiled a Rs17.6 trillion federal budget for fiscal year 2025-26, laying stress on the government’s focus on economic stability and growth.
Read more: Govt has agreed to income tax exemption on annual salary below Rs1.2m: Bilawal
In his budget speech in the National Assembly marred by the opposition’s pandemonium, Aurangzeb outlined key economic achievements, saying that remittances have reached $31.2 billion, with projections to rise to $37-38 billion by the end of the current financial year.
Last week, National Assembly approved the budget with certain amendments, rejecting opposition calls for public consultation and clearing the way for a raft of tax reforms, revenue measures, and government spending plans for the coming year.
The session, chaired by Speaker Ayaz Sadiq, began with Aurangzeb moving the Finance Bill 2025, which was taken up for a clause-by-clause review.
Opposition members proposed an amendment to delay the approval of the bill and seek public consultation, but this amendment was overwhelmingly rejected.
After several acts at the U.K. festival Glastonbury led chants in support of Palestinian freedom and denouncing the Israel Defense Forces, U.K. police opened a criminal investigation into their performances.
Several outlets including the BBC cited a statement from Avon and Somerset police in the U.K. announcing an inquiry into sets by the rap-punk group Bob Vylan and the Northern Irish rap group Kneecap.
During Bob Vylan’s set, the band’s singer Bobby Vylan (born Pascal Robinson-Foster) led Glastonbury crowds in chants of both “free, free Palestine” and, more controversially, “death, death to the IDF.”
Though police did not cite specific actions that were being investigated, “This has been recorded as a public order incident at this time while our enquiries are at an early stage,” the statement read. “The investigation will be evidence-led and will closely consider all appropriate legislation, including relating to hate crimes.”
The BBC, which broadcast Bob Vylan’s set, said in a statement that “The antisemitic sentiments expressed by Bob Vylan were utterly unacceptable and have no place on our airwaves.” The network added that it “respects freedom of expression but stands firmly against incitement to violence.” Glastonbury’s organizers said in a statement that they were “appalled” by Vylan’s comments, which they said “crossed a line.”
The U.S. State Department also announced the the two members of Bob Vylan would have their U.S. visas revoked. “Foreigners who glorify violence and hatred are not welcome visitors to our country,” U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau said on social media.
The BBC did not broadcast the Glastonbury set from the acclaimed Belfast rap trio Kneecap, which has attracted worldwide attention for its outspoken criticism of Israel’s war on Gaza, including at its recent Coachella sets.
Kneecap instead reportedly roused the crowd in a profane chant against U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who had criticized their booking at the festival after the group’s Liam Óg Ó hAnnaidh, who performs as Mo Chara, was charged with supporting a proscribed organization for allegedly waving a flag from the terror group Hezbollah at a London concert in 2024 (Chara denied the charge).
U.K. prosecutors, citing time limits, recently dropped charges against the group after a 2023 concert where Chara allegedly said, “The only good Tory is a dead Tory. Kill your local MP.”
After the performance, talent agency UTA reportedly dropped Bob Vylan from its roster. Singer Bobby Vylan stood by his comments, writing on social media that “Teaching our children to speak up for the change they want and need is the only way that we make this world a better place.”
Prada has acknowledged that its new leather sandal design was inspired by India’s famous Kolhapuri “chappals” – handcrafted shoes known for their toe-loop design – after facing criticism over its failure to credit the footwear’s origins.
“We acknowledge the sandals … are inspired by traditional Indian handcrafted footwear, with a centuries-old heritage,” Lorenzo Bertelli, the corporate social responsibility chief at the Italian fashion house, said in a letter to the Maharashtra chamber of commerce.
The chamber had complained on behalf of thousands of Kolhapuri sandal-makers after images from Prada’s Milan runway show showed models wearing the open-toe footwear that was virtually identical to the unisex Indian original.
The chamber president, Lalit Gandhi, had said: “The collection includes footwear designs that bear a close resemblance to Kolhapuri sandals, a traditional handcrafted leather sandal that has been awarded ‘geographical indication’ status by the government of India in 2019.”
The geographical indication tag verifies that a product originates in a specific place. The sandals’ origins go back to the 12th century, to the city of Kolhapur in western Maharashtra state.
A model wears items from Prada’s spring-summer 2026 menswear collection, including leather sandals, at Milan fashion week on 22 June. Photograph: Alessandro Garofalo/Reuters
The buffalo-hide shoes with their distinctive braided T-strap are worn by everyone from farmers to millennials and business leaders.
The sight of models walking the runway last week in the footwear blandly described as “leather flat sandals” triggered a widespread backlash in India and charges of “cultural appropriation”.
The row tapped into a broader debate about how global fashion houses frequently repackage traditional craftsmanship as luxury goods without credit or compensation to the original artisans.
The sandals, known for their durability, cost about $12 (£8.75) in India, whereas Prada sandals retail for upwards of $800. Indian artisans “lose, while global brands cash in on our culture”, said Harsh Goenka, the chair of the pharmaceuticals-to-IT conglomerate RPG Group.
As photos of the show spread online, Indian outrage mounted. “From the dusty lanes of Kolhapur to the glitzy runways of Milan … will the world finally give credit where it’s due?” asked the news outlet DNA on X.
Gandhi asked Prada to seek ways for “collaboration or fair compensation that could benefit” Indian craftspeople. Bertelli replied the sandals were still in the “early” design stage, but that Prada was willing to open a “dialogue for meaningful exchange with local Indian artisans”.
“While Indian artisans and small-scale producers excel in craftsmanship, they rarely have access to capital or business acumen” to position their products globally as luxury goods, Dhanendra Kumar, an ex-World Bank executive director, said in India’s Economic Times.
“By not calling their new line of sandals ‘Kolhapuris’, Prada is guilty of monetising cultural appropriation,” Kumar said.
Still, some believe the row could have an unexpected upside. Sales of the sandals have plateaued in India in recent years, but local designers believe the spotlight could boost interest in the classic design, especially among younger consumers.
“Until now, it hadn’t been considered part of the ‘cool’ or aspirational footwear space in India’s luxury market … I truly believe in the ripple effect of what Prada has done,” said Shirin Mann, the founder of Needledust, a label known for its contemporary take on traditional Indian embroidered slip-ons.
Mann could be right. Since Prada’s runway show, Google Trends has shown a rise in searches for Kolhapuri sandals, and retailers report interest has surged, according to local media.
Workers repaint the NASA logo on the Vehicle Assembly Building at the Kennedy Space Center on May 28, 2020 in Cape Canaveral, Florida.
Joe Raedle | Getty Images
NASA’s live programming, including rocket launches, spacewalks and views of Earth from space, will begin streaming on Netflix this summer.
NASA said the move is part of its effort to reach a global audience, according to a press release. The agency noted that the content will remain free and ad-free on the NASA app and website, where it already has live programming.
NASA+ launched in 2023 as a way to give the public easier access to space content.
“The National Aeronautics and Space Act of 1958 calls on us to share our story of space exploration with the broadest possible audience,” Rebecca Sirmons, general manager of NASA+, said in the release.
NASA did not disclose financial details of the deal.
The partnership comes as there has been a surge in commercial rocket launches, led by Elon Musk’s SpaceX. SpaceX has had 81 launches in the first half of 2025, according to Space Explored. It also continues to be the only U.S. company with a spacecraft that’s certified to bring astronauts to the International Space Station.
Meanwhile, NASA has been supporting missions in low-Earth orbit.
Shares of Netflix, which has more than 700 million users, have been trading at all-time highs. The streaming service is up almost 51% since the beginning of the year.
MANCHESTER, United Kingdom, June 30, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Following the roaring success of its annual winter Comedy Tour over the last decade, one of the UK’s leading humanitarian aid charities, Human Appeal, today announces its first ever summertime Comedy Tour.
Taking place across three major UK cities – London, Manchester and Birmingham – Human Appeal’s summer Comedy Tour will feature some of the biggest names in the international comedy circuit: American actor and comic Omar Regan, who appeared in Hollywood films Rush Hour 2, American Sharia, and Five Thirteen; Ali Official, writer and comic best known for BBC Three show Muzlamic and for presenting the BBC 3 film Being British Bangladeshi; and Aatif Nawaz, writer and star of BBC Three comedy Muzlamic, who joins the Comedy Tour for the 9th year running.
Whereas Human Appeal’s winter Comedy Tour reaches every corner of the UK at large capacity venues, the summer Comedy Tour features intimate shows for a much more personal audience experience.
Proceeds of the ticket sales for the summer Comedy Tour will support the charity’s Gaza Emergency Appeal.
The dates and times of the summer Comedy Tour shows are as follows:
Early bird tickets are available from13th June 2025 at just £7. Standard tickets will go sale on 13th July at £10. Further ticket information, including ticket bundles and VIP packages can be found here.
Announcing the news, Razwan Faraz, UK Director of Fundraising at Human Appeal, adds, ‘Our annual winter Comedy Tour has just celebrated its 10th anniversary, and following its success spreading festive cheer year on year, we felt it was time to expand our much-loved event. This is the first time we are bringing the Comedy Tour to smaller venues for much more intimate shows, during the summer months and bring comedy cheer all year round.’
Tickets are available to purchase here.
About Human Appeal
Human Appeal is a fully independent British humanitarian charity based in Manchester, UK. It was established in 1991 as a registered and regulated UK charity that runs targeted aid relief programmes in collaboration with recognised global organisations such as the UN. Its purpose is to save and transform lives through emergency aid response and sustainable development programmes at home and abroad across 25 countries worldwide.
Advanced lab-grown tissues help show how special lung cells develop, shedding light on rare ACDMPV disease and suggesting potential ways to repair damage from viral infections such as COVID-19
CINCINNATI, June 30, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — A team of experts at Cincinnati Children’s reports another powerful step forward in organoid medicine: success at making human lung tissue that can produce its own blood vessels.
Their findings, published in the same month as a similar success involving liver organoids, reflect a new wave of advanced lab-grown tissues that can be used immediately in many research applications while moving ever closer to serving as living tissues that can directly repair damaged organs.
Whole-mount staining of embryonic mouse lung alveolar vasculature (white) and epithelium (pink). Source: Yifei Miao and Hill Chang.
Details were posted online June 30, 2025, in the journal Cell.
“Prior to our study, the development of lung organoids with organotypic vasculature had not been achieved,” says co-corresponding author Mingxia Gu, MD, PhD. “Notably, this method also could be applied to other organ systems such as intestine and colon.”
Gu, now at UCLA, was a member of the Center for Stem Cell and Organoid Medicine (CuSTOM) and Division of Pulmonary Biology at Cincinnati Children’s while this research was conducted. Co-first and co-corresponding author Yifei Miao, PhD, (now at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing) also was with Cincinnati Children’s for this work. Co-corresponding author Minzhe Guo, PhD, remains with Cincinnati Children’s along with several co-authors involved in this study.
Overcoming a major challenge
Researchers have been working for years to grow organoids — sometimes called “organs in a dish.”
Creating organoids involves converting mature human cells (such as blood or tissue cells) back into fetal-like stem cells that can be coaxed into growing a wide range of other tissue types. Unlike disconnected human cells kept alive in a dish, these are growing, developing mini-organs that form into seed-sized spheres that mimic the unique functions of full-sized organs.
Intestines that absorb and secrete. Stomachs that produce digestive acids. Hearts that pulse. Brain tissues with firing nerve cells and so on.
Cincinnati Children’s has been a leader in organoid development since 2010 when experts here produced the world’s first functional intestinal organoid grown from induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs).
More recently, the challenge has been learning how to grow organoid tissues that can connect with the rest of the body to integrate nerve connections, blood vessels, bile ducts, immune systems and more. During pregnancy, these differing tissue types naturally find each other as the fetus matures and becomes more complex. Organoid developers seek to re-produce these steps in the laboratory, which eventually may allow people to receive custom-grown tissues that could patch damage or boost disrupted functions.
Simpler forms of organoids have already begun transforming medical research, allowing many scientists to use living human tissue models to study disease while reducing current reliance on animal models to develop new medicines. But without the ability to make internal blood vessels, the tiny seeds lack the ability to grow into larger, more useful tissues.
How the team solved the vascular riddle
The new study thoroughly recounts the results of many experiments the team conducted to demonstrate success at inducing blood vessel formation. The work spanned four years and involved more than 20 people at Cincinnati Children’s plus collaborations with experts at several other organizations.
“The challenge in vascularizing endodermal organs, particularly the lung, stems from different signaling requirements for lung epithelial versus vascular differentiation,” says Miao. “Our success in this endeavor is attributable to our unique differentiation method.”
In essence, the team grew iPSCs from multiple cell types then found the right moment to introduce them to each other. The resulting cell signals helped flip a developmental switch so that progenitor cells that could have become either blood vessels or the outer walls of the lung wound up becoming blood vessels. In achieving this vital step, the team:
Produced lung organoids that include respiratory bronchial epithelial cells (RAS cells), a human cell type not previously reported in conventional lung organoid models.
Pinned down the developmental moments when a rudimentary gut tube begins to send some cells to form the lungs while sending other cells to form the stomach and intestine. While the basic steps of this transformation have been studied in animals, it had not been possible to study this stage of development in humans without killing fetuses.
Demonstrated that the rare disease ACDMPV occurs when cell signaling “crosstalk” gets disrupted during this early blood vessel formation stage. Within days of birth, infants born with Alveolar Capillary Dysplasia with Misalignment of Pulmonary Veins (ACDMPV) struggle to breathe because their lungs’ air sacs (alveoli) and blood vessels are malformed. Nearly all infants with this condition die within the first month of life, according to the National Organization for Rare Disorders.
Revealed key functional information about the cells involved in gas exchange inside the human lung. Their learnings help explain the damage within tiny blood capillaries that occurs in the lungs in response to injuries. These new clues offer fresh ideas for developing ways to protect and potentially restore affected lung tissues.
What’s Next?
Cincinnati Children’s has filed patent applications related to the methods developed here to produce organoids with blood vessel formation capabilities and the CuSTOM team is moving to further develop this technology.
“We look forward to continuing to learn more about the fundamental biology involved in organ formation and applying those discoveries to improving outcomes across a wide range of difficult human diseases and conditions,” says Aaron Zorn, PhD, co-director of CuSTOM and director of the Division of Developmental Biology.
In addition to publishing these findings in Cell, co-authors plan to present their work at the Keystone conference in Kyoto, Japan (iPSCs: Progress, Opportunities, and Challenges) in January 2026.
About the study
Cincinnati Children’s co-equal first authors were Miao, Nicole Pek, BS, and Cheng Tan, MD.
Contributing co-authors from Cincinnati Children’s were Cheng Jiang, MS, Zhiyun Yu, PhD, Kentaro Iwasawa, MD, PhD, Min Shi, MD, PhD, Daniel Kechele, PhD, Nambirajan Sundaram, PhD, Victor Pastrana-Gomez, MSTP student, Debora Sinner, PhD, Cheng-Lun Na, PhD, Keishi Kishimoto, PhD, Jason Tchieu, PhD, Jeffrey Whitsett, MD, Kyle McCracken, MD, PhD, Michael Helmrath, MD, James Wells, PhD, Takanori Takebe, MD, PhD, and Aaron Zorn, PhD.
Contributing co-authors included experts from Harvard Medical School, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, Sophia Children’s Hospital (The Netherlands), Boston University
This research also was supported by the Discover Together Biobank, the Bio-Imaging and Analysis Facility, and the Integrated Pathology Research Core at Cincinnati Children’s and the University of Cincinnati Proteomics Laboratory.
Funding sources for this work included: the National Institutes of Health (R01HL166283, DK128799-01, N01-75N92020C00005 and R01HL095993); an Endowed Scholar Award from the Cincinnati Children’s Research Foundation; the American Heart Association (1013861 and 906513); the Falk Transformational Awards Program; and the Brigham Research Institute.
Learn more about working with CuSTOM
Learn how donors can support ongoing organoid research at Cincinnati Children’s
SOURCE Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center
Every weekday, the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer releases the Homestretch — an actionable afternoon update, just in time for the last hour of trading on Wall Street. Market moves : The S & P 500 and Nasdaq were modestly higher Monday after logging record-high closes on Friday. They are both poised to close out June and the second quarter with strong gains. In the Homestretch of the last trading day of the month, we wanted to reflect on the first six months of the year as a perfect example of why you have to stay invested in the stock market — even when it is scary. Just three short months ago, the market started tanking on news that President Donald Trump was set on slapping major tariffs on U.S. trading partners to rectify what he believes to be unfair trade practices. While the “reciprocal” rates put on various countries were jaw-dropping, it’s pretty clear, in hindsight, that selling back then was the wrong move. There are a few lessons to be learned. 1. As it relates to Trump — and this is important because, love him or hate him, he is with us for another 3½ years — the dynamic is just another example of his negotiation style. The president likes to come out swinging when it comes to his demands — but in the end, he has shown a willingness to pull back on his asks in the pursuit of progress. If anything, the takeaway should be that the outcome of trade negotiations is almost assured to be less than what the president initially demanded. 2. This ties back to the first point; this style of negotiation, though perhaps not fun for investors, does tend to provide opportunities for the fundamental investors that can keep their focus on the longer term. It’s the idea of handicapping where negotiations will likely go after Trump’s initial shock and awe. Selloffs like the one at the beginning of April are broad-based and tend not to be very discerning, as big money investors look to unload exposure — selling first and asking questions later. As stock pickers, we have to be ready to game that, and the way to do that is to think less about the strong language, tough talk, and scary headlines — and instead, stick to our discipline and focus on what matters to stocks most: earnings. Yes, some companies will take direct hits due to tariffs, and all companies will be impacted in some way — be it through stresses on suppliers, partners, or consumer wallets. However, by focusing on longer-term trends and individual companies’ abilities to manage through the tariffs, we can find things to like in this market. Opportunities like those in cybersecurity, which will remain a high-priority spending category no matter what, given the costly implications of a data breach, or trends like artificial intelligence, which can provide an offset to rising costs, thanks to increases in efficiency. Jim Cramer talked about tech and other areas that look good in his Sunday column . While the consumer may take a hit, they are unlikely to stop shopping altogether. Instead, they will look for the best value around and shop in places like Club names Costco or off-price retailer TJX , or buy more stuff online from Amazon . The main point is, panic is not a strategy and as we noted a few weeks back in talking about the turmoil in the Middle East, as concerning as headlines might be, it’s not going to impact the market longer-term until investors start to sense that it will impact economic growth, inflation, and ultimately corporate earnings. While the trade war is ongoing, and the end-game is unclear, what is apparent is that many companies are going to be able to grow earnings regardless. As individual stock investors, that’s where we want to focus our buying power. Crypto craze : Robinhood hosted its “To Catch a Token” crypto event Monday, which was met with a positive reaction from investors. In addition to updates to the company’s crypto offerings, Robinhood laid out its plan to “tokenize” equity markets, essentially working to move much of the backend dynamics of equity trading to the blockchain. By moving to blockchain, Robinhood is not only revamping its platform to support 24/5 trading but setting the groundwork for 24/7 stock trading in the future. The move also sets up the ability for investors to store their stock tokens in cold storage wallets, similar to how some people currently store crypto when they want to move it off of an exchange and take full custody of the asset. Most exciting for financial markets, Robinhood is working on the “Robinhood Chain,” a blockchain that is “optimized for real-world assets from real estate, to art, to stocks,” according to the company. Apple news : According to a new Bloomberg article , Apple is thinking about using an outside firm’s AI to fix its efforts to deliver a new souped-up, conversation-like Siri. Anthropic or OpenAI are said to be under consideration, as in-house efforts have stumbled. Siri already punts to OpenAI’s ChatGPT to answer more elaborate questions. A recent Bloomberg report also said Apple was internally exploring a purchase of Perplexity AI. Apple had its first big theatrical win over the weekend, with “F1,” starring Brad Pitt, pulling $55.6 million in North America ticket sales and another $88.4 million internationally. It’s good to see the Club name’s movie studio grow and compete successfully on a larger stage, hopefully setting us up for more services growth. However, it’s far from enough to offset concerns about the iPhone maker’s AI strategy. Don’t expect much from the stock until investors gain more clarity on the company’s AI roadmap. Up next : Be sure to catch “Mad Money” on Monday evening for a free-ranging interview with Amazon CEO Andy Jassy. On Tuesday, we’ll be looking for updates to the shareholder return plans, buybacks, and dividends, from our financials, given the conclusion of the Federal Reserve’s positive stress test results. Club holdings Goldman Sachs and Wells Fargo are widely seen on Wall Street as the ones with the most improvement from last year. (See here for a full list of the stocks in Jim Cramer’s Charitable Trust.) As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust’s portfolio. If Jim has talked about a stock on CNBC TV, he waits 72 hours after issuing the trade alert before executing the trade. THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY , TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER . 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