Doug Davis News
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Russell Peters is a junior at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, one of the top U.S. flight-training schools, who has no intention of taking to the skies.
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Pilot groups are raising safety concerns about letting small unmanned aircraft fly in U.S. skies as Congress orders regulators to speed up introduction of drones for domestic, non-military use.
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Canadian stocks fell, capping a weekly decline, as gold and silver mining companies fell amid signals of growing confidence in a European economic recovery.
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Canadian stocks rose to a 26-month high, led by energy and bank shares, after faster-than-forecast growth in Chinese manufacturing and U.S. private payrolls and earnings from National Bank of Canada that topped estimates.
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Canadian stocks advanced for the first time in four days, led by energy and raw-materials companies, as European leaders drafted a framework for the region’s bailout fund and U.S. Thanksgiving-weekend retail sales jumped to a record.
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Canadian stocks rose to a seven-week high as banks and commodity producers rallied after European leaders agreed to increase the size of their rescue fund and persuaded bondholders to take 50 percent losses on Greek debt.
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Canadian stocks fell, led by precious-metal producers, as gold dropped the most since July.
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Bank of Montreal, the first Canadian bank to report third-quarter results, said profit rose 19 percent on higher investment-banking earnings, beating analysts’ estimates.
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Canadian stocks fell, led by producers of uranium and other raw materials, as a new stimulus package from the Bank of Japan failed to stem the impact of the March 11 earthquake on global equity markets.
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Canadian stocks rose for a second day, led by raw-materials and energy producers, as an index of commodities rebounded from its biggest weekly drop since 2008.
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