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Max Domi opens up about his life with diabetes on and off the ice

Max Domi opens up about his life with diabetes on and off the ice

CTV News05-06-2025
Max Domi opens up about his Type 1 Diabetes diagnosis at age 12, shares advice for kids, talks tech advances, and his book.
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Giving back to his community, Muskoka man donates $1M to local hospital foundation
Giving back to his community, Muskoka man donates $1M to local hospital foundation

CTV News

timean hour ago

  • CTV News

Giving back to his community, Muskoka man donates $1M to local hospital foundation

Bob Jacob donated $1M to his community hospital's foundation. Thu., July 31, 2025. Photo: Bob Jacob and Leah Walker of South Muskoka Hospital Foundation. SUBMITTED Asa cottager turned full time resident, Bob Jacob took his commitment to his community one step further when he donated $1 million to the South Muskoka Hospital Foundation. Inspired by the idea that we can be 'Kinder, Braver Together' as in the quote by Lady Gaga, Jacob explained his thoughts behind his donation. 'Investing in your community is an act of kindness,' said Jacob, 'I want to help ensure that our community has the technology and support it needs for better, faster answers when health is on the line.' The donation will not only support the improvement of care and access to care, Jacob says it will also contribute to better testing, improved diagnostic capabilities and better access to specialists. 'This extraordinary gift is not only an investment in equipment, it's an investment in hope and health for our region,' said Leah Walker, executive director of the South Muskoka Hospital Foundation. 'We are deeply grateful for Bob's vision and compassion.'

Rose's Garden: a sunflower tribute for ALS research
Rose's Garden: a sunflower tribute for ALS research

CTV News

timean hour ago

  • CTV News

Rose's Garden: a sunflower tribute for ALS research

Rose Shaddock and her family are soaking up the yellow glow of thousands of sunflowers planted in Rose's honour. 'I grew sunflowers every year, and had a contest with a neighbour, so this makes me very happy,' says Rose, through her interpretive voice device. Rose lost the use of her voice, shortly after being diagnosed with ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig's Disease, last year. Since 1998, Shaddock worked for Claussen Farms near Brucefield as a financial coordinator, but over time, she became more than just someone who helped with their books. 'She became a friend to the family and she's very close to us, and she has done a lot for us, and this mean disease is really devastating. We really didn't know what else to do to help her and support her,' says Sonke Claussen of Claussen Farms. ROSES GARDEN - SUNFLOWERS - JULY 2025 Claussen Farms near Brucefield has planted a sunflower field in honour of their employee, Rose Shaddock, who was recently diagnosed with ALS. (Scott Miller/CTV News London) So, the Claussen's created Rose's Garden on their farm. More than an acre of sunflowers for people to come and pick and take pictures with, as a fundraiser for the ALS Society of Canada. 'It's really nice seeing all the cars stopping by and getting out and really picking flowers. Sometimes I let them know, please also pick some. Just don't be shy and enjoy them. You know, sunflowers just make you smile,' says Anne Claussen of Claussen Farms. The field of sunflowers in her name was more than Rose could have asked for from the Claussens, who hold a special place in her heart, as well. 'It means a lot to me for ALS research, too. We just did a walk and raised $8,000. And this just makes it better. The Claussen's mean so much to me,' said Shaddock. ROSES GARDEN - SUNFLOWERS - JULY 2025 Claussen Farms near Brucefield has planted a sunflower field in honour of their employee, Rose Shaddock, who was recently diagnosed with ALS. (Scott Miller/CTV News London) Donations from the sunflower field have been flowing in, surpassing the $2,000 the Claussen's will match, for a minimum donation in Rose's honour, of more than $4,000 to the ALS Society of Canada. 'People have been donating which is really nice to see, and also, just the messages that we've been getting online, it's very heartwarming and very touching. People [are] telling their stories about how they have a relative with ALS. It's been overwhelming but in a good way,' says Rike Stoltenberg, of Claussen Farms. Rose's Garden can be found on the Claussen's farm at 76402 Airport Ln. near Brucefield, in Huron County.

Quebec judge authorizes class action by victims of Montreal brainwashing experiments
Quebec judge authorizes class action by victims of Montreal brainwashing experiments

CBC

timean hour ago

  • CBC

Quebec judge authorizes class action by victims of Montreal brainwashing experiments

A Quebec Superior Court judge has authorized a class-action lawsuit brought forward by victims of brainwashing experiments conducted at the Allan Memorial Institute in Montreal — experiments infamous for their affiliation with the CIA-funded MK-Ultra program. The lawsuit names the Royal Victoria Hospital, McGill University and the Government of Canada as defendants. It alleges that the government funded, and the Royal Victoria Hospital and McGill University enabled, "depatterning treatments" that violated the patients' bodies and minds. The patients who submitted the class-action request claimed that the Cold War-era experiments, conducted by Dr. Ewen Cameron at the Allan Memorial Institute and known as the Montreal Experiments, were carried out without their consent or even their knowledge. Judge Dominique Poulin said in her decision, issued Thursday, that two of the three applicants for a class action met the criteria to bring forward the lawsuit. She authorized the two patients, Julie Tanny and Lana Ponting, to represent all persons who underwent depatterning treatments at the Allan Memorial Institute between 1948 and 1964 and their successors, family members and dependents. Poulin's approval of the class action means the case can proceed. The patients were seeking punitive and compensatory damages for the harm they say they experienced as a result of the experiments. Poulin authorized the patients and their families to seek compensation, but not punitive damages. Depatterning, described in the lawsuit and also a central topic of a 2020 CBC podcast and report titled Brainwashed: The echoes of MK-ULTRA, was among the experimental treatments conducted on patients at the Allan Memorial Institute. It sought to "erase a patient's thoughts" first by immobilizing them, rendering them helpless while subjecting them to electric shocks, sensory isolation and massive amounts of sedatives and barbiturates. Depatterning was followed, according to the class-action lawsuit, by a "repatterning procedure" during which patients were subjected to looped audio messages often while under the effects of paralytic drugs. The messages first repeated a negative feeling the patient had expressed about themselves, like "you are selfish," followed by a positive statement like "you are lovable," repeated between 250,000 to 500,000 times. The patients intend to argue that the Montreal Experiments consisted of unlawful human experimentation, "enabled by the Government of Canada as well as by the Royal Victoria Hospital and McGill University." They also intend to argue that the three institutions are liable for damages they suffered as a result of these experiments. Poulin said the factual allegations presented by the patients are "taken as true." Poulin's approval of the class action noted that the patients' burden at this stage of the proceedings is not onerous. They only needed to demonstrate a "mere possibility of success on the merits of the case, nothing more." Cameron, the Scottish doctor who oversaw the Montreal Experiments, began conducting psychiatric experiments early in his career. In 1943, he was invited to set up a research laboratory at the Allan Memorial Institute, located in a mansion on the slopes of Mount Royal formerly known as Ravenscrag. That property is now the subject of a dispute between McGill University, which wants to expand its downtown Montreal campus onto the land, and the Kanien'kehá:ka Kahnistensera, who allege the potential presence of human remains on the grounds. Cameron gained a reputation as a respected psychiatrist who, at one point in his career, held the title of head of the Canadian and American psychiatric associations and even the World Psychiatric Association. The McGill University Health Centre has previously said Cameron acted independently and was not considered by law to be an employee of the Royal Victoria Hospital. Cameron also researched on behalf of the Central Intelligence Agency, which, between 1957 and 1960, paid him $60,000 US, equivalent to more than $500,000 today. But Cameron's experiments, often conducted on vulnerable subjects, repeatedly showed a callous disregard for the well-being of his patients and informed torture techniques used by the CIA for decades.

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